A smaller subset of this knowledge — often known as the Xinjiang Police Recordsdata — was revealed final Might. Additional examination of the information then revealed their full extent, uncovering roughly 830,000 people throughout 11,477 paperwork and hundreds of pictures.
The police information had been hacked and leaked by an nameless particular person, then obtained by Adrian Zenz, a director of China Research on the Victims of Communism Memorial Basis, a US-based non-profit. Zenz and his staff spent months growing the search instrument, which they hope will empower the Uyghur diaspora with concrete details about their kinfolk, after years of separation and silence.
Utilizing the brand new on-line search instrument, CNN tracked down the information for 22 people after trialing it among the many Uyghur diaspora throughout three continents.
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For the primary time, exiled Uyghurs had been capable of see official Chinese language paperwork in regards to the destiny of their kinfolk, together with why they had been detained — and in some circumstances how they died. On seeing the information, some described a way of empowerment; others felt guilt that their worst fears had been confirmed.
The Chinese language authorities has by no means denied the legitimacy of the information, however state-run information outlet The World Occasions just lately described Zenz as a “rumor monger,” and known as his evaluation of the information “disinformation.”
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‘Tens of hundreds’ detained
The brand new web site represents the biggest knowledge set ever made publicly obtainable on Xinjiang. It permits individuals to seek for a whole lot of hundreds of people within the uncooked information, utilizing their Chinese language ID card numbers.
Many of the info is from two places — Shufu county in Kashgar and Tekes county in Ili — the place the researchers imagine they’ve virtually full inhabitants knowledge.
The Uyghur inhabitants of Xinjiang is round 11 million, together with round 4 million individuals from different Turkic ethnic minorities. As such, the info seemingly represents solely the tip of the iceberg.
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Zenz stated “tens of hundreds” of individuals had been listed as “detained” within the paperwork. The youngest was aged simply 15.
“(That is) an inside scoop on the workings of a paranoid police state, and that is completely scary. The character of this atrocity is changing into an increasing number of clear.” Adrian Zenz
CNN has despatched an in depth request for remark to the Chinese language authorities in regards to the information, and the households highlighted on this article, however has not acquired a response.
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The leaked police information largely cowl the interval between 2016 and 2018, which was the height of Chinese language chief Xi Jinping’s “Strike Laborious” marketing campaign in opposition to terrorism in Xinjiang.
The US authorities and UN estimated that as much as two million Uyghurs and different ethnic minorities had been detained in a large community of internment camps, described by the Chinese language authorities as “vocational coaching facilities” designed to fight extremism.
These information present a snapshot of that timeframe, however don’t mirror the present state of affairs.
After the primary set of knowledge was revealed in Might, the Chinese language authorities didn’t reply to particular questions in regards to the information, however the Chinese language embassy in Washington DC did difficulty a press release claiming Xinjiang residents lived a “secure, joyful and fulfilling life,” which it stated offered a “highly effective response to all kinds of lies and disinformation on Xinjiang.”
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At a press convention in late December, Xinjiang officers additionally claimed that “most” of the individuals recognized within the leaked pictures had been “residing a traditional life,” with out specifying the destiny of the remainder. A girl who appeared within the information additionally claimed that she had “by no means been detained,” however had graduated from “a vocational school in June 2022,” simply weeks after the paperwork had been revealed.
‘It haunts you day by day’
Over the previous 4 years, CNN has gathered testimonies from dozens of abroad Uyghurs and different ethnic minorities, which included allegations of torture and rape contained in the camp system. CNN additionally spoke to these overseas desperately looking for details about their family members.
Such info is normally extremely arduous for kinfolk to seek out. A complicated system of collective punishment threatens these in Xinjiang with detention if their households overseas even attempt to make a cellphone name.
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“The black gap is essentially the most terrifying factor,” Zenz stated. “And that’s a part of why the Chinese language state creates this black gap. It’s essentially the most terrifying factor that may be achieved. That you just don’t even know the destiny of a liked one, are they alive or lifeless.”
From completely different corners of the globe, the search instrument enabled three Uyghur households to seek out detailed official knowledge on their kinfolk for the primary time.
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Mamatjan Juma
Lives in Virginia, USA
Age 49
Abduweli Ayup
Lives in Bergen, Norway
Age 49
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Marhaba Yakub Salay
Lives in Adelaide, Australia
Age 34
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For Mamatjan Juma, who lives simply south of Washington DC in Virginia, the information offered “immense” details about his household, but additionally confirmed his worst fears — that they had been discovered “responsible by affiliation” with him.
Because the deputy director for the Uyghur service of US-funded information group Radio Free Asia, Juma has been highlighting the state of affairs in Xinjiang for 16 years. He left China for the US in 2003, after being chosen for an instructional fellowship with the Ford Basis.
“They known as me a wished terrorist, to be deported again to China,” Juma stated. “My kinfolk (are) additionally demonized due to me, after which (they’re) not described as human beings.”
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The information present that 29 members of Juma’s quick and prolonged household had been detained — and in some circumstances sentenced to lengthy jail phrases — because of their connections to him.
Juma discovered that every one three of his brothers had been imprisoned, certainly one of whom was even pictured in a police mugshot.
“He appeared (like) he misplaced his soul. It broke my coronary heart. It broke… my coronary heart sank.” Mamatjan Juma, his brother Eysajan’s mugshot
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He described his youthful brother, Eysajan Juma, as “jubilant, very gregarious,” a sociable and likable one that was liked deeply, regardless of making “lots of errors.” However Juma might not see these acquainted traits in his brother’s eyes.
“I noticed a defeated individual,” Juma stated. “He misplaced any of his feelings.”
Within the information, Juma additionally found the small print of his father’s loss of life, which was described as the results of “numerous sorts of issues.”
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“It was a really heartbreaking state of affairs,” Juma stated, by tears. “He was so happy with us, (however) we weren’t capable of be with him on the time… it was very painful.”
Regardless of the disturbing revelations, Juma stated he felt a way of “aid” from seeing the information, which was “empowering” after years of not realizing.
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“The bitterness of desperation dissipates,” he stated. “The darkness of not realizing additionally disappears.”
However Juma remains to be coming to phrases with the enormity of the influence his departure from his homeland had on his household.
“Survivor’s guilt may be very painful,” Juma stated. “They’re tied to you and they’re persecuted; it’s not a straightforward feeling to digest.”
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“It haunts you day by day.”
Focusing on geography academics
Abduweli Ayup, a Uyghur scholar residing in exile in Norway, doesn’t really feel any aid from looking by the police information — solely grief.
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The truth is, he needs he had by no means seen them.
“In fact if I’ve this selection, I select to be ignorant, to not know. How can I dare to face this actuality?” Abduweli Ayup, on discovering relations’ information
Ayup, who ran a Uyghur language faculty in Kashgar, fled Xinjiang in August 2015 after spending time in jail as a political prisoner, the place he advised CNN he confronted torture and gang rape.
He had already heard that his brother and sister — together with a number of others — had been focused due to him, however the search database gave him the primary official affirmation.
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“This time the federal government doc advised me that sure, it’s associated to you, and it’s your fault,” Ayup stated, including that he now feels “responsible and accountable.”
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His sister, who taught geography at a highschool for 15 years, was listed within the police information as certainly one of 15,563 “blacklisted” individuals.
“I’ve discovered that my youthful sister, she acquired arrested,” Ayup stated. “The reason being, she (is) accused of (being a) ‘double-faced authorities official,’ and she or he (was) blacklisted due to me.”
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Uyghurs working in authorities jobs in Xinjiang whereas persevering with to observe their cultural beliefs had been usually accused of being “two-faced,” Ayup stated, categorized as “traitors, not 100% loyal to the federal government.”
‘I’ll stay in concern’
When she first used the brand new search instrument, Marhaba Yakub Salay, a Uyghur residing in Adelaide, Australia, discovered police information for 2 kinfolk she didn’t count on: her younger niece and nephew, who had been aged simply 15 and 12 when the information had been made in 2017.
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The nephew was labeled as a “Class 2” individual on the blacklist, described as a “extremely suspicious confederate” in “public safety and terrorism circumstances.”
The information on Salay’s niece and nephew recommended they’d traveled to not less than certainly one of 26 “suspicious” nations which included Syria and Afghanistan. Salay stated that was not true — they’d solely ever traveled outdoors China to go on vacation to Malaysia.
“That is insane… that is horrible,” Salay stated as she learn by her nephew’s file. “He is turning 18 in a few months’ time. Are they going to arrest him?”
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Salay’s sister Mayila Yakufu — the mom of the youngsters — was sentenced to six.5 years in jail on the finish of 2020, after she had spent a number of years in different camps.
Yakufu is accused of financing terrorism after she wired cash to Salay and their dad and mom in 2013, so they may purchase a home in Australia — which the household has proved with banking information. Mayila and Marhaba’s brother left Xinjiang in 1998, and later died in an accident in Australia in 2007 — however his ID card was nonetheless cited as a suspicious connection to the youngsters.
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“I feel the suspicion degree (Class 2) is about my late brother, however they tried to attach my 12-year-(previous) nephew with my brother, who handed away 15 years in the past,” Salay stated. “These two individuals, they’ve by no means met one another.”
“My coronary heart is bleeding. I’ll stay in concern, within the fear about when they’ll take my niece and nephew.” Marhaba Yakub Salay, on discovering relations’ information
‘Like a virus of the thoughts’
The extension of “guilt by affiliation” to youngsters displays the paranoia which the Chinese language state holds towards the Uyghur inhabitants, in line with Zenz.
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“The state considers the complete household to be tainted,” Zenz stated. “And I feel that is per how Xi Jinping and different officers (in) inner speeches have described Islam like a virus of the thoughts that infects individuals.”
Because the households look by these information, their intuition is to seek for logic and causes for what occurred to their family members. However they discover solely confusion.
“Guilt by affiliation can work fairly extensively, and the logic behind it’s fairly fuzzy and the attain is pervasive,” Zenz stated.
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This “fuzzy” logic was defined by a former Xinjiang police officer turned whistleblower, who advised CNN in 2021 the thought had been to detain Uyghurs en masse first, and discover causes for the arrests later.
The ex-detective — who glided by the title Jiang — stated that 900,000 Uyghurs had been rounded up in a single yr in Xinjiang, regardless that “none” of them had dedicated any crimes. He admitted torturing inmates throughout interrogations, including that a few of his colleagues acted like “psychopaths” to extract confessions to varied crimes.
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“Door by door, village by village, township by township, individuals acquired arrested. That is the proof of crimes in opposition to humanity, that is the proof of genocide, as a result of (they) focused an ethnicity.” Abduweli Ayup
The US authorities has accused China of committing genocide in Xinjiang — and a report by the UN Excessive Commissioner for Human Rights concluded that China might have carried out crimes in opposition to humanity. China has vigorously denied these allegations.
With this new deluge of leaked knowledge, the researchers hope so as to add to the rising physique of proof on the insurance policies inside Xinjiang — they usually hope that offering widespread entry to the information will drive renewed efforts by governments and human rights organizations to carry China accountable.
“I sincerely hope that that is going to encourage some hope among the many Uyghurs,” Zenz stated.
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For Uyghur households world wide, determined to be reunited, every one of many 830,000 names represents a liked one.
“Stunning souls are being destroyed behind these numbers,” Mamatjan Juma stated. “There may be struggling with none purpose.”
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Have you ever managed to trace down your family members utilizing the brand new search instrument? Please contactUyghurFamilies@CNN.comfor those who’d prefer to share your tales.
Roula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.
The man who allegedly drove into a crowd of people at a Christmas market in the east German city of Magdeburg on Friday evening, killing four people, is a 50-year-old doctor from Saudi Arabia who came to Germany in 2006, according to authorities.
Reiner Haseloff, prime minister of the eastern state of Saxony-Anhalt, said the alleged perpetrator, Taleb al-Abdulmohsen, was not known to the police as an Islamist.
Al-Abdulmohsen’s profile on social media site X indicates that he is a fierce critic of Islam.
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German media reported that he is an activist who helped opponents of the regime in Saudi Arabia to flee the country and apply for asylum in Europe.
Abdulmohsen allegedly drove his black BMW X5 into the Christmas market in central Magdeburg shortly after 7pm on Friday evening, knocking over dozens of people before being arrested by police.
A video on social media showed officers surrounding him at a tram stop. He was seen lying on the ground next to his vehicle, a rented car with Munich number-plates, and later being led away for questioning.
Authorities in Saxony-Anhalt said four people died in the attack and more than 200 people were injured, 41 severely. Chancellor Olaf Scholz visited the scene of the attack on Saturday.
“This is a catastrophe for the city of Magdeburg and for the region and generally for Germany,” said Haseloff.
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Since the incident, a number of interviews with the alleged perpetrator have resurfaced, including one in the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung from 2019 in which he described himself as “the most aggressive critic of Islam in history”.
He has also expressed admiration for Alternative for Germany (AfD), a far-right, anti-immigration party which is polling second behind the centre-right CDU/CSU bloc ahead of Germany’s national elections in February, and accused Germany of not doing enough to fight Islamism.
“After 25 years in this business, you think nothing could surprise you any more,” wrote Peter Neumann, an expert in terrorism at King’s College, London, on X. “But a 50-year-old Saudi ex-Muslim who lives in East Germany, loves the AfD and wants to punish Germany for its tolerance towards Islamists — that really wasn’t on my radar.”
The incident comes almost eight years to the day since 12 people were killed and 49 injured in 2016 on Berlin’s Breitscheidplatz when an Islamic State terrorist ploughed a truck into a Christmas market.
Much remains unclear about al-Abdulmohsen and his possible motivation.
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According to German media reports, the alleged attacker was born in the Saudi city of Hofuf and came to Germany in March 2006 to study. In July 2016 he was given refugee status after claiming he had received death threats for turning away from Islam.
Authorities said he worked as a psychiatrist and psychotherapist in Bernburg, a town of 32,000 between Halle and Magdeburg.
Spiegel Online reported that he was an activist who helped people — women in particular — to flee Saudi Arabia and ran an Internet site providing information about the German asylum system. In 2019 he gave interviews about his activities to two German newspapers in which he expressed his hatred for Islam.
In one, he said he had “broken away” from the religion in 1997.
“I found life in Saudi Arabia an ordeal, you have to pretend you’re a Muslim and follow all the rituals,” he said. “I knew I could no longer live in fear and when I realised that even anonymous activism would put my life in danger as a Saudi ex-Muslim, I applied for asylum.”
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In the other, he said he had written posts criticising Islam in an internet forum run by the jailed activist Raif Badawi and subsequently received threats to his life.
“They wanted to “slaughter” me if I ever returned to Saudi Arabia,” he said. “It wouldn’t have made any sense to expose myself to the risk of having to return and then be killed.”
In recent months, he appeared to have moved away from activism and adopted a highly critical attitude to the German authorities that fed off conspiracy theories more often associated with the nationalist right.
In a post on X in November setting out the “demands of the Saudi liberal opposition” he called on Germany to “protect its borders against illegal immigration”.
“It has become evident that Germany’s open borders policy was [former chancellor Angela] Merkel’s plan to Islamise Europe,” he wrote. He also demanded Germany repeal sections of its penal code that he claims “limit . . . free speech” by “making it an offense [sic] to insult or belittle religious doctrines or practices”.
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His X profile features a machine gun and claims “Germany chases female Saudi asylum seekers, inside and outside Germany, to destroy their lives”.
Earlier this month he was interviewed by an anti-Islam blog and accused the German authorities of carrying out a covert operation to hunt down Saudi ex-Muslims while granting asylum to Syrian jihadis.
WASHINGTON — Congress struck an 11th-hour deal to avert a government shutdown during the holidays, but in the process, it lengthened an already extensive to-do list for the first year of President-elect Donald Trump’s return to office.
The funding bill keeps the government open until March 14. Even though Republicans will control the White House, the House and the Senate, they’ll again need Democratic votes to stop a shutdown in less than three months.
In addition, Trump’s demand that Congress extend or abolish the debt ceiling to take it off his plate next year failed dramatically. On Wednesday, he threatened electoral primary challenges against “any Republican” who voted to fund the government without dealing with the debt limit. On Friday, 170 House Republicans defied him and did just that.
The turmoil of the week previews the legislative chaos that awaits Washington in the second Trump administration when the incoming president faces a wide range of major deadlines and ambitions.
Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., said Republicans made a mistake by punting funding to March 14, and instead should have approved a stopgap bill through the end of next September to clear their plate for Trump’s agenda.
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“I think it’s kind of stupid,” he said of the new deadline. “Don’t ask me to explain or defend this dysfunction.”
Rep. Andy Barr, R-Ky., said late Friday that the “lesson” of the last few days is: “Unity is our strength. Disunity is the enemy of the conservative cause.”
He advised Trump and his team to avoid such a situation in the future by presenting legislative demands “early” so the GOP can “air out whatever differences there are” well before a deadline.
“The House needs to over-communicate within our various factions,” Barr said. “The House needs to over-communicate with [incoming Senate] Majority Leader [John] Thune, and House and the Senate both need to over-communicate with the administration.”
In the last four days, the communication was particularly poor. A day after Speaker Mike Johnson released an initial bipartisan deal, Trump and his billionaire confidant Elon Musk blew it up. The speaker went through three additional iterations of his plan to prevent a shutdown, ultimately succeeding after nixing Trump’s most consequential — and last-minute — demand.
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“I’m concerned,” said Sen. Gary Peters, D-Mich., who faces re-election in 2026. “Obviously, we’ve seen this kind of chaos for the last two years. So I would fully expect we’ll see that continue in the next two years and probably get even worse.”
On Thursday night, Rep. Derrick Van Orden, R-Wis., downplayed what he called a “disjointed process,” saying it’s a natural way for House Republicans and Trump’s team to understand “how to communicate with each other.”
“It’s going to be awesome. You know why it’s going to be awesome? Because now we know how to work together,” Van Orden said just before Speaker Johnson’s Plan B went down in flames in the House.
Van Orden’s fellow Wisconsinite, Sen. Johnson, was less bullish about smoothly plowing through the early part of the 2025 agenda.
“We got a big mess on our hands, no doubt about it,” Johnson said. “That’s why I’m trying to underpromise and hopefully over-deliver.”
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In addition to another government funding deadline and a debt limit that must be addressed by mid-2025 to avert a calamitous default, Trump and Republicans need to confirm his personnel through the Senate, and they want to pass major party-line bills to beef up immigration enforcement and extend his expiring 2017 tax law.
“It’s not going to be boring,” Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, deadpanned when asked about the tasks facing Congress next year.
There’s also the question of Musk’s role after his part in scuttling the original bipartisan funding deal raised hackles across Capitol Hill.
“A lot of people on both sides of the aisle are deeply disturbed by a billionaire threatening people if they don’t vote the right way,” Rep. Debbie Dingell, D-Mich., said.
The tumult of the last week “foretells something very ominous about next year,” Rep. Gerry Connolly, D-Va., said after the House vote, noting that the Republican majority in the lower chamber will be even smaller next year.
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“I think we’re in for a lot of turbulence on the Republican side of the House because of the instability and chaos and disruption that Trump embraces,” Connolly said.
He also wondered whether Republicans will be able to elect a speaker on Jan. 3 with a wafer-thin majority; it took 15 rounds of voting to elect a speaker at the beginning of the last Congress and some hard-right Republicans are wobbly on Speaker Johnson after his handling of the shutdown threat this week.
“So I leave very unsettled tonight in terms of what we just experienced,” Connolly said before the House adjourned for the holidays. “I think it’s very ominous, and it is portentous.”
Your guide to what the 2024 US election means for Washington and the world
The US House passed a stop-gap funding measure with just hours to spare on Friday, paving the way for Congress to avert a government shutdown after days of fighting on Capitol Hill.
The bill that passed the House did not include any change to the debt ceiling, defying Donald Trump’s call for the mechanism to be scrapped or increased.
But the measure gained bipartisan support in the chamber, with Democrats joining Republicans to pass the bill 366-34 just after 6pm in Washington — six hours before the deadline.
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The Democratic controlled Senate must now vote on the law before it heads to the desk of President Joe Biden, who will support the legislation, according to the White House press secretary.
Enacting the bill will end a week of volatility in Washington as Trump and his ally Elon Musk flexed their influence over hardline Republicans, pushing them to reject what they said were “giveaways” to Democrats.
Before the bill passed on Friday, Musk expressed his continued disdain for the bill: “So is this a Republican bill or a Democrat bill?”
The measure passed was House Speaker Mike Johnson’s third attempt to get a deal through the chamber after Trump torpedoed the first bipartisan agreement earlier in the week.
The new bill was almost identical to Johnson’s second one, but stripped out any move to raise or suspend the debt ceiling, despite Trump’s demands. It extends government funding at current levels, and provides aid for natural disaster relief and farmers.
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Johnson said after the bill passed that he had been in “constant contact” with Trump and spoken to Musk shortly before the vote and received their blessing.
Trump “knew exactly what we were doing and why and, and this is a good outcome for the country. I think he certainly is happy about this outcome as well”, he told reporters on Capitol Hill.
Johnson said he asked Musk: “‘Hey, you want to be Speaker of the House?’ . . . He said, ‘this may be the hardest job in the world’. It is.”
The passage in the House marked a victory for Johnson, who had vowed earlier in the day that the US would “not have a government shut down”.
A shutdown would temporarily close parts of the government and suspend pay for federal employees. Previous government shutdowns have forced hundreds of thousands of federal workers to be furloughed.
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Democrats also claimed victory, with House minority leader Hakeem Jeffries saying his party “stopped extreme Maga Republicans from shutting down the government”.
He added: “House Democrats have successfully stopped the billionaire boys club, which wanted a $4tn blank cheque by suspending the debt ceiling.”
Trump’s looming presence over the debate has been the biggest complicating factor in frantic negotiations to find a last-minute deal.
But as soon as the vote began, Musk changed his tune, saying that Johnson “did a good job here, given the circumstances. It went from a bill that weighed pounds to a bill that weighed ounces. Ball should now be in the Dem court.”
Democrats, angry that the earlier bipartisan deal was ditched, have blamed Musk for inserting himself in the process this week, triggering more turmoil in Congress just ahead of the US holiday season.
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“At the behest of the world’s richest man who no one voted for, the US Congress has been thrown into pandemonium,” said Democrat Rosa DeLauro about Musk on Thursday.
Some top Republicans also appeared to criticise the interventions by Trump and Musk.
“I don’t care to count how many times I’ve reminded . . . our House counterparts how harmful it is to shut the government down and how foolish it is to bet your own side won’t take the blame for it,” Mitch McConnell, the outgoing Senate Republican leader, said on Friday.
“That said, if I took it personally every time my advice went unheeded, I probably wouldn’t have spent as long as I have in this particular job.”