World News
‘What if Ukraine loses?’: Parliament member works to convert US holdouts on November 14, 2023 at 11:00 am

Support for further Ukraine aid has weakened in Congress, and Oleksandra “Sasha” Ustinova is working hard to boost it back up.
Ustinova, a member of the Ukrainian parliament, is making regular five-day visits to Washington, looking to convince as many lawmakers as she can to approve additional funding and weapons for her war-torn country.
“We’re trying to meet the leadership, we’re trying to meet the key committees and we’re trying to speak to as many people as we can. We literally have meetings every 30 minutes,” Ustinova, 38, told The Hill via phone recently while driving in western Ukraine.
Kyiv is currently contending with a grinding ground-based counteroffensive and artillery campaign to take back eastern territory from Russian troops. After several key advances, the fight has slowed, bogged down by mines and other defenses that Moscow’s forces have set up. With winter fast approaching, the aid is seen as even more vital.
But further U.S. support, which has wide bipartisan support, in recent weeks has faced an increasingly complicated road ahead thanks to House conservatives, who insist on the need to hold separate votes on the aid to Ukraine and Israel. Bipartisan talks on a border security package have also complicated the work.
New Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) has signaled a willingness to allow more Ukraine aid, even as his voting record shows a consistent “no” on more dollars for Kyiv.
“We can’t allow [Russian President Vladimir Putin] to prevail in Ukraine, because I don’t believe it would stop there, and it would probably encourage and empower China to perhaps make a move on Taiwan. We have these concerns,” Johnson said in late October, one day after he was voted Speaker. But he also argued the White House has not been clear on “what is the endgame in Ukraine.”
Ustinova has singled out those in Congress she believes can be swayed on funding. In her strong English — she studied at Stanford University and spent a year in the United States during high school — she speaks with as many as eight lawmakers a day, also meeting with whole panels or caucuses, including her biggest supporters in the Armed Services, Intelligence and Foreign Relations committees.
“People who are ready to meet are those who are open for a dialogue,” she said. “It’s difficult to persuade someone who has already made their decision.”
She specifically targets those who voted in favor of the first Ukraine support package but opposed another round of funding earlier this year.
“They’re not people who don’t like or don’t want to support Ukraine. Those are people who need more information; those are people that can be persuaded and those are people that you need to talk to,” Ustinova said.
“I’m trying to explain to them how it works, what our vision is, and I’m honestly telling them that everybody is very comfortable thinking Ukraine is winning. What if Ukraine loses? Do you understand that you’re gonna have Putin right next to Poland, Baltic countries, and he’s gonna invade?”
That was the attack plan when she was last stateside on Oct. 26 along with a cohort of other Ukrainians, meeting with House and Senate lawmakers, and officials at the Pentagon and U.S. Agency for International Development.
While there, she met with Johnson and others in the GOP, fielding questions about Kyiv’s goals.
“These people need something they can communicate with their own voters in their districts, and they need something to use even to persuade their own colleagues sometimes,” she said.
Ustinova usually visits Washington every three to four months, with Mondays reserved for government contacts, Tuesdays through Thursdays to meet with lawmakers on the Hill and Fridays a chance to speak with think tanks.
Her 14-hour days “used to be much worse” at the start of the war, when she would start at 6:30 a.m. to do television hits with Fox News, CNN or MSNBC and stay up until 11 p.m., all while nearly nine months pregnant.
She also happened to be the only member of the Ukrainian parliament in the United States when Russia attacked.
Days before the war began, she booked a flight to the United States to visit her husband who works in Texas, a trip where she also intended to reach out to her connections on Capitol Hill and warn them of the brewing situation along the Ukrainian border.
But after Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered the incursion on Feb. 24, 2022, when Ustinova was 8 1/2 months pregnant, she and her husband decided it was too dangerous to fly back to Ukraine and deliver their child in a war zone.
Instead, she booked a flight to Washington the same day.
She remained there for the next six weeks, staying in a borrowed bedroom and meeting with members of Congress, Biden administration officials and think tank experts daily.
She met with more than 50 lawmakers before she returned to Texas to have her child, a daughter born April 12, 2022.
Ustinova said she seriously considered naming the child Javelin after the U.S. missile provided to the Ukrainian military and used to great effect against Russian forces — but her husband begged her off.
Instead, they landed on Victoria, “because we needed a small victory.”
Since then, she spends most of her time back in Ukraine, where she’s been a member of the country’s parliament since 2019.
In October 2022, she took on the added role of chair of the Parliamentary Temporary Special Commission on monitoring arms supplies to Ukraine, a temporary oversight committee set to track the use and receipt of arms transfers to the country.
While home she meets defense attachés of other countries, takes meetings in multiple cities, works on national bills and visits the front lines. At the time of this interview, Ustinova was stopped at a gas station en route to a meeting with chairs of factions of the European Parliament.
In total, the United States has given Ukraine $44.2 billion in military assistance since February 2022, the most recent being a $125 million aid package to meet “immediate battlefield needs,” as well as $300 million for Ukraine’s air defenses, according to a Nov. 3 announcement.
Congress has also approved $113 billion in military, economic and humanitarian assistance for the country since the start of the invasion.
But the Pentagon last week warned it now must “meter out” its support for Kyiv, with 95 percent of its funds for the country exhausted.
“We’re going to continue to roll out packages, they just are getting smaller,” Defense Department deputy press secretary Sabrina Singh told reporters Thursday. “So we really implore Congress to pass the supplemental request that the President sent up so that we can continue to meet Ukraine’s battlefield needs.”
To that end, Ustinova has changed her messaging from that of the early days of the war, when she pressed U.S. officials and lawmakers for more advanced weapons to fight the Russian forces, asking the West to set up a no-fly zone, more economic sanctions against Moscow and humanitarian aid for her people. Now, with public support for Ukraine waning, she’s switched tactics, giving updates on the situation on the battlefield, laying out what they need and why and sharing expectations and plans.
“It used to be, ‘We’re gonna support Ukraine, as long as it takes.’ It’s something that people don’t take as it is anymore,” she explained. Now, “we’re trying to explain to them what the plans are, how the accountability is being done, how transparent we are with your government, stuff like that.”
She estimates that she’s spoken to more than 100 members of Congress so far.
As far as plans for the future, Ustinova is unsure whether she will run for parliament again, saying “it depends on how the war ends.”
For now, she just hopes to make it to Texas next month to spend time with her daughter and husband.
“All my plans broke on February ’24,” she said. “I was supposed to live with my baby, I already had a room for her and everything settled in Kyiv. I thought she would be going to work with me. I already had a nanny to help, and my mom was supposed to live with me, and it all collapsed.”
She added: “Ukrainians are used to living now, today. You don’t know what’s gonna happen to you tomorrow and you don’t know what tomorrow is going to look like. I’m just being honest. So I’m not planning anything.”
Support for further Ukraine aid has weakened in Congress, and Oleksandra “Sasha” Ustinova is working hard to boost it back up. Ustinova, a member of the Ukrainian parliament, is making regular five-day visits to Washington, looking to convince as many lawmakers as she can to approve additional funding and weapons for her war-torn country. “We’re…
Politics
Will Kim Ju Ae Become North Korea’s First Female Leader?

A New Face of Power in Pyongyang
In a country defined by secrecy and dynastic rule, the recent emergence of Kim Ju Ae—the daughter of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un—on the national and international stage has sparked intense speculation about the future of the world’s most isolated regime. For the first time since North Korea’s founding in 1948, the possibility of a female leader is being openly discussed, as state media and public ceremonies increasingly feature the teenage girl at her father’s side.

Kim Ju Ae’s Rise to Prominence
Kim Ju Ae, believed to be around 12 or 13 years old, first came to the world’s attention in 2013 when former NBA star Dennis Rodman revealed he had held Kim Jong Un’s daughter during a visit to Pyongyang. However, she remained out of the public eye until November 2022, when she appeared beside her father at the launch of an intercontinental ballistic missile—a powerful symbol in North Korean propaganda.

Since then, Ju Ae has become a regular fixture at high-profile events, from military parades and weapons launches to the grand opening of a water park and the unveiling of new naval ships. Her repeated appearances are unprecedented for a member of the Kim family so young, especially a girl, and have led South Korean intelligence officials to suggest she is being groomed as her father’s successor.
The Power of Propaganda
North Korea’s state media has shifted its language regarding Ju Ae, referring to her as “beloved” and, more recently, “respected”—a term previously reserved for the nation’s highest dignitaries. Analysts believe this is part of a carefully orchestrated campaign to build her public profile and legitimize her as a future leader, signaling continuity and stability for the regime.

Presenting Ju Ae as the face of the next generation serves several purposes:
- Demonstrating dynastic continuity: By showcasing his daughter, Kim Jong Un assures elites and the public that the Kim family’s grip on power will persist.
- Minimizing internal threats: A young female successor is less likely to attract rival factions or pose an immediate threat to the current leadership.
- Projecting a modern image: Her presence at both military and civilian events signals adaptability and a potential shift in North Korea’s traditionally patriarchal leadership structure.

Breaking with Tradition?
If Ju Ae is indeed being positioned as the next leader, it would mark a historic break from North Korea’s deeply patriarchal system. The country has never had a female ruler, and its military and political elite remain overwhelmingly male. However, her growing public profile and the respect shown to her by senior officials suggest that the regime is preparing the nation for the possibility of her ascension.
The only other woman with significant visibility and influence in the regime is Kim Yo Jong, Kim Jong Un’s younger sister, who has become a powerful figure in her own right, especially in matters of propaganda and foreign policy.
A Nation Divided, a Dynasty Endures
While the Kim family’s hold on North Korea appears unshakable, the country remains divided from South Korea by a heavily militarized border. Many families have been separated for generations, with little hope for reunification in the near future. As the Kim dynasty prepares its next generation for leadership, the longing for family reunions and peace persists on both sides of the border.
The Road Ahead
Kim Ju Ae’s future remains shrouded in mystery, much like the country she may one day lead. Her carefully managed public appearances, the reverence shown by state media, and her father’s apparent efforts to secure her place in the succession line all point to a regime intent on preserving its legacy while adapting to new realities. Whether North Korea is truly ready for its first female leader is uncertain, but the groundwork is clearly being laid for a new chapter in the Kim dynasty.
Business
Pros and Cons of the Big Beautiful Bill

The “Big Beautiful Bill” (officially the One Big Beautiful Bill Act) is a sweeping tax and spending package passed in July 2025. It makes permanent many Trump-era tax cuts, introduces new tax breaks for working Americans, and enacts deep cuts to federal safety-net programs. The bill also increases spending on border security and defense, while rolling back clean energy incentives and tightening requirements for social programs.

Pros
1. Tax Relief for Middle and Working-Class Families
- Makes the 2017 Trump tax cuts permanent, preventing a scheduled tax hike for many Americans.
- Introduces new tax breaks: no federal income tax on tips and overtime pay (for incomes under $150,000, with limits).
- Doubles the Child Tax Credit to $2,500 per child through 2028.
- Temporarily raises the SALT (state and local tax) deduction cap to $40,000.
- Creates “Trump Accounts”: tax-exempt savings accounts for newborns.
2. Support for Small Businesses and Economic Growth
- Makes the small business deduction permanent, supporting Main Street businesses.
- Expands expensing for investment in short-lived assets and domestic R&D, which is considered pro-growth.
3. Increased Spending on Security and Infrastructure
- Allocates $175 billion for border security and $160 billion for defense, the highest peacetime military budget in U.S. history.
- Provides $12.5 billion for air traffic control modernization.
4. Simplification and Fairness in the Tax Code
- Expands the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) and raises marginal rates on individuals earning over $400,000.
- Closes various deductions and loopholes, especially those benefiting private equity and multinational corporations.

Cons
1. Deep Cuts to Social Safety Net Programs
- Cuts Medicaid by approximately $930 billion and imposes new work requirements, which could leave millions without health insurance.
- Tightens eligibility and work requirements for SNAP (food assistance), potentially removing benefits from many low-income families.
- Rolls back student loan forgiveness and repeals Biden-era subsidies.
2. Increases the Federal Deficit
- The bill is projected to add $3.3–4 trillion to the federal deficit over 10 years.
- Critics argue that the combination of tax cuts and increased spending is fiscally irresponsible.
3. Benefits Skewed Toward the Wealthy
- The largest income gains go to affluent Americans, with top earners seeing significant after-tax increases.
- Critics describe the bill as the largest upward transfer of wealth in recent U.S. history.
4. Rollback of Clean Energy and Climate Incentives
- Eliminates tax credits for electric vehicles and solar energy by the end of 2025.
- Imposes stricter requirements for renewable energy developers, which could lead to job losses and higher electricity costs.

5. Potential Harm to Healthcare and Rural Hospitals
- Reduces funding for hospitals serving Medicaid recipients, increasing uncompensated care costs and threatening rural healthcare access.
- Tightens verification for federal premium subsidies under the Affordable Care Act, risking coverage for some middle-income Americans.
6. Public and Political Backlash
- The bill is unpopular in public polls and is seen as a political risk for its supporters.
- Critics warn it will widen the gap between rich and poor and reverse progress on alternative energy and healthcare.
Summary Table
Pros | Cons |
---|---|
Permanent middle-class tax cuts | Deep Medicaid and SNAP cuts |
No tax on tips/overtime for most workers | Millions may lose health insurance |
Doubled Child Tax Credit | Adds $3.3–4T to deficit |
Small business support | Benefits skewed to wealthy |
Increased border/defense spending | Clean energy incentives eliminated |
Simplifies some tax provisions | Threatens rural hospitals |
Public backlash, political risk |
In summary:
The Big Beautiful Bill delivers significant tax relief and new benefits for many working and middle-class Americans, but it does so at the cost of deep cuts to social programs, a higher federal deficit, and reduced support for clean energy and healthcare. The bill is highly polarizing, with supporters touting its pro-growth and pro-family provisions, while critics warn of increased inequality and harm to vulnerable populations.
Business
Trump Threatens to ‘Take a Look’ at Deporting Elon Musk Amid Explosive Feud

The escalating conflict between President Donald Trump and Elon Musk reached a new peak this week, as Trump publicly suggested he would consider deporting the billionaire entrepreneur in response to Musk’s fierce criticism of the president’s signature tax and spending bill.

“I don’t know, we’ll have to take a look,” Trump told reporters on Tuesday when asked directly if he would deport Musk, who was born in South Africa but has been a U.S. citizen since 2002.
This threat followed a late-night post on Trump’s Truth Social platform, where he accused Musk of being the largest recipient of government subsidies in U.S. history. Trump claimed that without these supports, Musk “would likely have to shut down operations and return to South Africa,” and that ending such subsidies would mean “no more rocket launches, satellites, or electric vehicle production, and our nation would save a FORTUNE”.
Trump also invoked the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE)—a federal agency Musk previously led—as a potential tool to scrutinize Musk’s companies. “We might have to put DOGE on Elon. You know what DOGE is? The DOGE is the monster that might have to go back and eat Elon,” Trump remarked, further intensifying the feud.

Background to the Feud
The rupture comes after Musk’s repeated attacks on Trump’s so-called “Big, Beautiful Bill,” a comprehensive spending and tax reform proposal that Musk has labeled a “disgusting abomination” and a threat to the nation’s fiscal health. Musk, once a Trump ally who contributed heavily to his election campaign and served as a government advisor, has called for the formation of a new political party, claiming the bill exposes the need for an alternative to the current two-party system.
In response, Trump’s allies have amplified questions about Musk’s citizenship and immigration history, with some suggesting an investigation into his naturalization process. However, legal experts note that deporting a naturalized U.S. citizen like Musk would be extremely difficult. The only path would involve denaturalization—a rare and complex legal process requiring proof of intentional fraud during the citizenship application, a standard typically reserved for the most egregious cases.
Political Fallout
Musk’s criticism has rattled some Republican lawmakers, who fear the feud could undermine their party’s unity ahead of the 2026 midterm elections. Meanwhile, Musk has doubled down on his opposition, warning he will support primary challengers against Republicans who back Trump’s bill.
Key Points:
- Trump has publicly threatened to “take a look” at deporting Elon Musk in retaliation for Musk’s opposition to his legislative agenda.
- Legal experts say actual deportation is highly unlikely due to the stringent requirements for denaturalizing a U.S. citizen.
- The feud marks a dramatic reversal from the pair’s earlier alliance, with both men now trading barbs over social media and in public statements.
As the dispute continues, it has become a flashpoint in the broader debate over government spending, corporate subsidies, and political loyalty at the highest levels of American power.
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