Roula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.
US senate majority leader Chuck Schumer has submitted a stopgap budget measure aimed at postponing the threat of a costly government shutdown for a few more weeks.
Schumer said on Sunday that he would put a continuing resolution on the floor of the upper chamber of Congress this week to extend funding until early March.
Funding is due to expire for several parts of the federal government as soon as this Friday, with other departments set to face a shutdown on February 2.
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Top Republican and Democratic leaders have been running out of time to have their $1.66tn spending deal, agreed earlier this month, passed into law ahead of the January 20 deadline.
“The bipartisan, topline funding agreement reached ensures that America will be able to address many of the major challenges our country faces at home and abroad,” said Schumer. “It is clear that a continuing resolution is necessary to give the Appropriations Committee additional time to finish drafting their bills to reflect the new agreement.”
The new measure mirrors the structure of a continuing resolution agreed in mid-November.
That resolution separated federal departments’ funding into two tiers, with funds expiring on January 19 for one set of departments and on February 2 for the other.
Under Schumer’s latest proposal, funding for the first set would expire on March 1, and for the second on March 8.
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Passage of the $1.66tn deal is being delayed not only by the drafting process but also by discord among elements of the Republican party, which view the spending as profligate.
Schumer said the decision to table the continuing resolution, set to go to the Senate on Tuesday, followed talks with Mike Johnson, his Republican counterpart in the House of Representatives, along with senior Republican and Democratic officials Mitch McConnell and Hakeem Jeffries respectively, and White House staff.
Along with passing the Senate, the bill also needs to go through the Republican-controlled House of Representatives before going to the White House and being signed into law by President Joe Biden ahead of Friday’s deadline.
It is not yet clear whether Johnson is planning to present the stopgap measure on the floor of the lower chamber.
More hardline Republican lawmakers have repeatedly called for tougher spending cuts than those on offer. They think the latest proposal is little changed from the package agreed between Biden and Johnson’s predecessor Kevin McCarthy.
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That package, which averted a government shutdown in the autumn, cost the former House Speaker his job.
Johnson has defended the latest deal, which includes $10bn in cuts to the Internal Revenue Service and claws back $6.1bn in Covid-19 relief funds, as providing “real savings to American taxpayers and real reductions in the federal bureaucracy”.
Family visitation at the Delaney Hall immigration detention center is being restored to at least part of the facility, New Jersey’s governor and US homeland security officials confirmed on Sunday morning, after a week during which heated demonstrations at the site were met with aggressive policing tactics.
Meanwhile, families of detained immigrants grappled with conflicting information about exactly whom among them would get visitation after the announcement from governor Mikie Sherrill and the US Department of Homeland Security (DHS). And local officials by Sunday had also indefinitely imposed an overnight curfew beginning at 9pm for a blocked-off area including Delaney Hall.
Delaney Hall visitation had been canceled after detained immigrants began carrying out an ongoing hunger and labor strike inside the detention center – which prompted protests outside the facility in support of those striking.
New Jersey state police check names of family members on list for visitation detained at Delaney Hall detention center, in Newark, on Sunday. Photograph: Kyle Mazza/Shutterstock
Facility staff confirmed to the Guardian on Sunday that what are known as units 1 and 3 were given visitation beginning at about noon and 2pm local time, respectively.
Unit 1 is a women’s section of the facility. Unit 2 is where the majority of the hunger-striking detainees are based, and it was unclear on Sunday whether it would have access to family visitation.
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Sherrill’s office and the private prison company GEO Group, which runs the facility, did not respond to a request for comment. The road leading to Delaney Hall is now fully blocked by police, except for families attempting to visit detained loved ones, state officials announced on Sunday afternoon.
The governor’s announcement and subsequent confusion by families followed a night of violent clashes outside the facility between local officials and protesters. In the aftermath of that, Newark’s mayor, Ras Baraka, responded by activating a curfew for the area surrounding Delaney Hall.
Anti-ICE protesters gather on Sunday as members of the New Jersey state police close Doremus Avenue near the Delaney Hall detention center. Photograph: Kyle Mazza/Shutterstock
The curfew would be in place nightly from 9pm to 6am “until further notice”, said Baraka’s office, which threatened arrest or legal action if people did not disperse during that time.
On Sunday morning, Sherrill and other top New Jersey state officials said that three people were arrested on Saturday night as a result of clashes with police. State officials said those arrest happened after a group of protesters attacked police and a barrier.
The Delaney Hall protests and clashes have become the latest flashpoint in the growing opposition to the aggressive anti-immigrant tactics Donald Trump’s administration has implemented nationwide throughout his second presidency.
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Protesters clash with New Jersey state police outside the Delaney Hall immigration detention center late Saturday in Newark, New Jersey. Photograph: Anadolu/Getty Images
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detains immigrants in its network of facilities across the US while the cases of those detained play out in courts.
ICE detention centers have been repeatedly criticized for harsh conditions.
Hakeem Jeffries, the top US House Democrat of nearby New York, conducted an oversight visit of Delaney Hall on Sunday, and said the conditions of confinement “shock the conscience”.
On 22 May, a group of immigrants detained inside Delaney Hall detention announced a hunger and labor strike inside the facility, demanding improved conditions, medical care, a meeting with Sherrill and for their immigration cases to proceed. Between 300 and 400 detainees have since participated in the strike.
Protests began shortly thereafter, with lawmakers attempting to visit the facility. The facility gained further national attention after ICE officers pepper-sprayed US senator Andy Kim, a New Jersey Democrat, outside the facility during a skirmish there on Monday.
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ICE officers have used pepper spray as well as stun guns throughout the demonstrations. They have also shoved and arrested protesters.
A rightwing counterprotester holds a flag as they face off against anti-ICE protesters in front of Delaney Hall detention facility, in New Jersey, on Saturday. Photograph: Farhad Parsa/ZUMA Press Wire/Shutterstock
On Friday, Sherrill and other top New Jersey officials announced that state police would replace ICE officers outside Delaney Hall. The state police set up road blocks around half a mile on either side of the detention center.
That night clashes erupted after state police officers began moving in on protesters. State police officials on horseback moved through the crowd. Other state police officers in riot gear shot teargas canisters at protesters, aggressively shoving demonstrators and arresting six.
Advocates present at Delaney Hall on Saturday repeatedly criticized Sherrill, a Democrat, for her response to the protests.
“The escalation that happened [on Friday] was ten times worse than what ICE was doing to everyone prior nights,” Murad Awawdeh, the president and CEO of the New York Immigrant Coalition, said in an interview on Saturday outside of the facility. “If anything, the escalators were the state police.”
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A statement from Sherill on Saturday announcing the restoration of family visitation at Delaney Hall claimed DHS had “met our demand”. But DHS refuted the governor’s statement.
“To be clear: Visitation was only suspended because of violent riots,” a DHS spokesperson said. “Now that we have a secure perimeter, visitation can resume.”
The illustrations of the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool’s plumbing system were drawn from National Park Service documents produced as part of its renovations and reviewed by people with knowledge of the project. The layout of the expansion joints was derived from photographic evidence and a 2013 report released as part of a lawsuit against the Trump administration.