In today’s newsletter: Despite a lengthy government shutdown, Congress took major action in 2025 that will impact just about every American. Musicians cancel Kennedy Center shows after name change. And, meet the people putting their lives on the line to care for Gaza's desperate animals.
Here's what to know today.
What Congress accomplished in 2025
Despite the record 43-day government shutdown, the Republican-led Congress had a busy first year of President Donald Trump’s second term. The actions taken on Capitol Hill will impact just about every American.
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Here are four big things Congress did in 2025:
→ Made Trump tax cuts permanent: Republican leaders extended the Trump tax cuts from 2017, which were slated to expire at the end of this year. The “big, beautiful bill” — as Trump dubbed it — passed both chambers with only Republican votes and was signed into law on July 4. In total, the law is projected to slash taxes by $4.5 trillion over the next decade.
→ Boosted Pentagon and mass deportation spending: Alongside the tax cuts, the same bill allocates significant new funding, including $150 billion for the Pentagon and $170 billion for immigration enforcement to expand ICE staffing, raids, and deportations.
→ Slashed regulations: Republican leaders aggressively used a 1996 law known as the Congressional Review Act to fast-track repeal of a record number of federal regulations imposed under the Biden administration that applied to consumer protection, education, energy and cybersecurity.
→ Weakened minority power: In September, Senate Republicans used the “nuclear option” to change the body’s rules to now allow for one vote to confirm an unlimited number of presidential nominations for executive branch positions, rather than debating each one individually.
Read more about the year in Congress.
More politics news:
- FBI Director Kash Patel insists the Bureau had already "surged" investigative resources to Minnesota as part of a fraud investigation before a right-wing influencer’s viral video purporting to show day care facilities that aren’t operational but receiving state and federal funding.
- The Trump administration rolled out $10 billion for rural health care to help counteract budget cuts to hospitals in smaller communities - but the money has strings attached.
- A judge in California ruled that the federal government is allowed to share basic information about Medicaid participants with ICE.
Trump warns Iran and Hamas after meeting with Netanyahu

President Donald Trump issued new warnings for Iran and Hamas after a meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Florida yesterday, aimed at advancing the ceasefire deal he brokered in Gaza.
Trump said Hamas would have “hell to pay” if it didn’t disarm to advance the U.S.-brokered peace plan, as he seeks to move into its second phase. He said Hamas, which didn’t agree to the demilitarization of Gaza that Trump laid out as a key point in his peace plan, will be given a “very short period of time” to disarm.
The president also suggested Iran was trying to rebuild nuclear sites after the U.S. struck three of them earlier this year and threatened “very powerful” consequences if it is confirmed.
Iran swiftly responded to the threat. An adviser to Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ali Khamenei, said that “any aggression will receive a strong, immediate response that goes beyond what the attacker expects,” the state-run Nour News agency reported.
More musicians cancel Kennedy Center concerts over Trump's name on the building

More musicians have canceled upcoming concerts at the Kennedy Center after its board voted to rename the performing arts venue to include President Trump's name.
The canceled performances to date include shows previously promoted for Christmas Eve, New Year’s Eve and Jan. 14.
The Cookers, a jazz band that was scheduled to perform Wednesday night did not cite a specific reason for their cancellation, but said in a statement: “Jazz was born from struggle and from a relentless insistence on freedom: freedom of thought, of expression, and of the full human voice. Some of us have been making this music for many decades, and that history still shapes us.”
A new pope, political shake-ups and celebs in space: The 2025 news quiz
We hope you’ve enjoyed our weekly news quiz this year. It’s time to reward yourself with our year-in-review quiz.
Remember when 10 inmates brazenly escaped a Louisiana jail? How long did it take for authorities to re-capture all of them?
A. 8 daysB. 4 weeksC. 8 weeksD. 4 months
Find out the answer and test your knowledge of some of the year’s biggest stories. (The answer to the question is also at the bottom of this newsletter.)
Read All About It
- Russia promised to retaliate against Ukraine after it said nearly 100 drones targeted one of President Vladimir Putin’s residences.
- A judge ruled that transcript and audio be released from a previously sealed hearing in the murder case against the man accused of killing political activist Charlie Kirk earlier this year.
- A model who said he was recruited by Tyler Perry for movie roles accuses the film and TV producer in a civil suit of using his position “to abuse and sexually assault” him.
- Not long ago, NFL talking heads wanted the San Francisco 49ers to bench QB Brock Purdy. Now he’s on a winning streak and on the verge of clinching home field through the playoffs.
- Beyoncé, the most decorated artist in Grammys history, has officially reached billionaire status, Forbes reports.
Staff pick: The last hope for Gaza's injured and hungry animals

Since the Oct. 7 Hamas terror attacks on Israel and its military response in Gaza, NBC News has been covering the death and destruction that has defined the ensuing war. Through my work scouring videos on social media to support our reporting on the war, I discovered the Sulala Animal Rescue account on Instagram.
Despite enduring famine, repeated strikes from Israeli forces and the loss of loved ones, the animal rescue group has saved dogs, cats, donkeys and other animals living in the Gaza Strip. NBC News filmed the staff’s day-to day operations and heard their stories of hope through animals and of loss and pain through the death of a veterinarian vital to the group’s operations.
This story is a reminder of how, despite the dangers of war, some people see the need to put their lives at risk to help the most vulnerable, in this case, the four-legged creatures who so often desperately need the help.
— Tavleen Tarrant, associate reporter, social newsgathering
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