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Scott Disick doesn't want to introduce his 3 kids with ex Kourtney Kardashian to another partner unless it's serious
- Scott Disick, 41, says he doesn't plan to introduce his kids to a new partner unless it's "the right person."
- He has been co-parenting his three kids with his ex, Kourtney Kardashian, since their 2015 split.
- Dating as a single parent can be difficult since it can bring up complex emotions for your child.
Scott Disick, 41, says he has no plans to get into a serious relationship until his children get older.
KhloΓ© Kardashian interviewed Disick on the first episode of "KhloΓ© in Wonder Land," her new podcast, which premiered Wednesday on X. Disick spoke about navigating the dating landscape as a single dad.
Disick has three kids β Mason, 15, Penelope, 12, and Reign, 10 β with his ex, Kourtney Kardashian. The former couple called it quits in 2015 but continue to co-parent.
"They'd like me to be with somebody, I think. And they do voice to me that they'd like me to be with someone," Disick told KhloΓ©, referring to his kids. "And I kind of say, until I find the right person, I don't really want to bring another person around unless it's like the end all, be all person."
The reality star said he didn't want his kids to "get attached" to somebody else in the meantime.
"But they're all starting to get older and it's not that much longer until they're of age, all of them," Disick said. "So for the next 5, 6, 7, years β if my attention is on them, I have the rest of my life to be a single guy."
He added that he likes that his focus is on his kids right now.
"And if I was with somebody else, I'd still be a good dad but I would have somebody that I'd be putting on a pedestal near them," Disick said.
Since his separation from Kourtney, Disick has been romantically linked to several other celebrities over the years β most notably Sofia Richie, whom he dated between 2017 and 2020.
Dating as a single parent can be difficult, especially since it can bring up complex emotions for your child.
"Children always respond with some confusion about their parent's new partner and what's different," Ron L. Deal, a licensed marriage and family therapist told Business Insider previously. "Confusion means 'I'm not sure what to do with you, where to put you in my heart, or what role you're going to play in my life.'"
A good way to manage the transition would be to talk your kids through the decisions you're making in the relationship and listen to their concerns, Deal said.
It can also be beneficial to reach out to professionals for support, such as through family therapy.
A representative for Disick did not immediately respond to a request for comment sent by BI outside regular office hours.
Beijing is subsidizing everything from microwaves to dishwashers to get people to spend more money
- China has expanded its trade-in program to boost consumer spending on home appliances.
- The program, launched in March, includes subsidies and has shown positive results.
- China faces economic challenges including deflation fears and low consumer demand.
China's cautious consumers are spending less, prompting Beijing to dish out incentives even for small home goods.
On Wednesday, China added home appliances, including microwave ovens, water purifiers, dishwashers, and rice cookers, in a trade-in program designed to spur demand.
The program, which was first rolled out in March, already included bigger appliances like refrigerators, washing machines, TV sets, and air conditioners. The Chinese government subsidizes up to 20% of the price of a new appliance.
The Chinese government, which had allocated 81 billion yuan, or $11 billion, for the trade-in program, said on Wednesday that the program had yielded positive results.
Li Gang, a Chinese commerce ministry official, said at a press conference on Wednesday that the trade-in program resulted in 920 billion yuan worth of auto sales and 240 billion yuan worth of home appliances sales last year.
China is trying to boost consumption in the world's second-largest economy, which is beset by multiple challenges including a property crisis and high youth unemployment.
China deflation fears
Economists are especially worried about a deflation spiral, which would result in a vicious cycle of dampened consumer demand and lower prices.
Official inflation data released on Thursday gave little cheer, with China's consumer price index last year inching up just 0.2% from a year ago.
In December, China's CPI edged up just 0.1% more than a year ago in its fourth straight month of decline, with food price declines dragging inflation down. In comparison, November CPI was 0.2% higher than a year ago.
The headline inflation figure did not fall into deflation territory thanks to non-food inflation β which edged up 0.2%.
However, the data about non-food prices "does not inspire too much confidence in an uptick of consumption yet," wrote Lynn Song, the chief economist for Greater China at ING, on Thursday.
Prices of clothing, education, and healthcare moved up in December.
However, prices of transportation, communications, daily use goods, and rent were in the deflationary zone.
Factory gate prices were in deflation for the 27th straight month.
Analysts generally expect China's inflation data to pick up this month thanks to seasonal factors as Chinese New Year, which starts on January 29.
However, official data about wholesale farm product prices in China so far this month point to food prices being "subdued and weaker than traditional seasonality suggests," wrote Nomura economists on Thursday.
Newly ignited L.A. fire triggers evacuation orders for over 100,000 in Hollywood
A fresh Los Angeles wildfire that ignited in the Hollywood Hills on Wednesday night is threatening homes and iconic L.A. landmarks, and it's prompted authorities to issue expanding evacuation orders.
The big picture: The rapidly growing Sunset Fire that's threatening Hollywood landmarks along with homes was one of multiple fires burning out of control across Los Angeles County on Wednesday night.
- Five deaths were confirmed in one of the blazes which have razed at least 1,000 structures, including the homes of Hollywood actor Billy Crystal and media personality Paris Hilton, and forced tens of thousands of resients to evacuate.
State of play: The fire started at 5:57pm local time and by 9:25pm had grown to an estimated 60 acres near Runyon Canyon, only a few miles from the Hollywood Boulevard and the Hollywood Walk of Fame.
- There were reports of heavily congested roads in the densely populated area as residents raced to flee the out-of-control Sunset Fire and L.A. Mayor Karen Bass said on X she's "deploying LAPD officers to respond to Hollywood to help alleviate evacuation traffic."
- Officials were "working urgently to close roads, redirect traffic and expand access for LAFD vehicles to respond to the growing fire," she added.
- The number of those affected by evacuation orders is estimated to be over 100,000.
- The Hollywood Bowl confirmed on X that the iconic amphitheater and public park was among those impacted by evacuation orders.
Go deeper: LA's wildfires sparked by rare collision of climate factors
Editor's note: This a breaking news story. Please check back for updates.
Jimmy Carter Was an Honest, Honorable Leaderβand an Even Better Man | Opinion
Here's the one question that Accenture's CEO asks potential staff to see if they make the cut
- Accenture CEO Julie Sweet said she looks for candidates who love to learn new things.
- Sweet said in a podcast interview that she would ask people what they have learned recently.
- The former lawyer said it didn't matter even if people just said they learned how to bake a cake.
Accenture CEO Julie Sweet said there's one key question she poses to people who want to work for her.
"There's one question that we ask everyone, regardless of you're a consultant or you're working in technology or whatever you do," Sweet said in an interview with Norges Bank Investment Management CEO Nicolai Tangen on his "In Good Company" podcast, which aired Wednesday.
"We say, 'What have you learned in the last six months?'" she added.
Asking this question, Sweet told Tangen, is a practical way for her to determine if candidates are interested in learning new things.
"If someone can't answer that question, and by the way, we don't care if it's 'I learned to bake a cake,' if they can't answer that question, then we know that they're not a learner," Sweet said.
This wouldn't be the first time Sweet has talked about her expectations for new hires at Accenture. The consulting firm said on its website that it employs around 799,000 employees and operates in more than 200 cities.
The former lawyer said in a 2019 interview with The New York Times that she looks for candidates who demonstrate two main traits.
"The first is curiosity. The new normal is continuous learning, and we look for people who demonstrate lots of different interests and really demonstrate curiosity," Sweet told The Times.
"The second piece is leadership. I don't care what level you are, there is the need to offer straight talk when you're working with clients. You have to have the courage to deliver tough messages," she added.
Representatives for Sweet at Accenture did not respond to a request for comment from Business Insider.
Sweet isn't the only C-suite executive who places a premium on learning.
JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon said that students should devote their time to learning and reading, and less time on social-media platforms like TikTok and Facebook.
Dimon was speaking at the Georgetown Psaros Center for Financial Markets and Policy's annual Financial Markets Quality Conference in September when he was asked if he had any advice for the students in attendance.
"My advice to students: Learn, learn, learn, learn, learn, learn, learn. If you're Democrat, read the Republican opinion, the good ones. If you're Republican, read the Democrat ones," Dimon said.
"Read history books. You can't make it up. Nelson Mandela, Abe Lincoln, Sam Walton. You only learn by reading and talking to other people. There's no other way," he continued.
A top Iranian general said Russia was actually bombing the empty desert while saying it was attacking Syrian rebels
- Behrouz Esbati, an Iranian general, partially blamed Russia for the fall of Bashar Assad in Syria.
- In a speech in Tehran, Esbati accused Russia of bombing an empty desert instead of hitting Syrian rebels.
- While difficult to verify, his frank remarks are notable since Russia is one of Iran's strongest allies.
A top Iranian general has accused Russia of lying to Tehran by saying its jets were attacking Syrian rebels while they were instead bombing the open desert.
In a rare break from Iran's diplomatic line on Syria, Brig. Gen. Behrouz Esbati partially blamed Moscow for the fall of Bashar Assad's government during a speech at a mosque in Tehran.
An audio recording of the speech was published on Tuesday by Abdullah Abdi, a Geneva-based journalist who reports on Iran.
"We were defeated, and defeated very badly, we took a very big blow and it's been very difficult," Esbati said of Assad's fall, per a translation by The New York Times.
In the recording, Esbati, a senior commander of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps, said Russia told Tehran it was bombing the headquarters of Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, the rebel group spearheading Assad's ousting.
But Moscow's forces were instead "targeting deserts," Esbati said.
Esbati further accused Russia of turning off radars when Israel launched strikes on Syria in 2024, allowing Tel Aviv's forces to attack more effectively.
The general also largely blamed internal corruption for Assad's fall, saying that bribery was rife among Syria's top-ranking officials and generals.
He added that relations between Damascus and Tehran grew tense over the last year because Assad refused an Iranian request to facilitate attacks on Israel through Syria.
Business Insider could not independently verify Esbati's claims. But they represent an exceptionally frank assessment among Iran's top ranks of its position in Syria, where a new political leadership is still coalescing in Assad's absence.
Iran officially held a much milder tone as Assad's government fell, saying at the time that the fate of Syria would be up to its people and that it "will spare no effort to help establish security and stability in Syria."
Assad, a longtime ally of both Iran and Russia, fled Damascus in early December as Hayat Tahrir al-Sham forces stormed toward the capital from the northwest. International observers believe that the rebel advance largely happened as Moscow, a key source of military strength for Assad, found its resources stretched thin by the war in Ukraine.
The Russian Defense Ministry did not respond to a request for comment sent outside regular business hours by Business Insider.
Esbati's remarks came as a former senior aide to Assad told the Saudi government-owned outlet Al Arabiya on Monday that Russian leader Vladimir Putin had stalled military assistance for Syria.
Kamel Saqr said that Assad had asked Putin to personally approve airlifting military aid to Syria β and that the Russian leader agreed.
The aid was to be transported via Iranian aircraft, but Saqr said that Tehran told Assad it did not receive any requests from Moscow.
Assad then asked Moscow about this, but "no answer came," Saqr said.
Assad's fall, which neither Moscow nor Tehran stepped up to prevent, has brought deep implications for Russia's forces in the region. Moscow had previously relied on an airbase and a naval base, which it maintained under a deal with Assad, for its operations in Africa and the Mediterranean.
It's unclear if Russia will eventually be able to continue maintaining those two facilities, but reports show that it's preparing to move much of its equipment out of Syria. On January 3, Ukraine said that Moscow was planning to move its assets to Libya.
LA fires could hit $50 billion or more in damages. They're shaping up to be the most expensive in state history.
- The Los Angeles wildfires could cause up to $57 billion in damage, Accuweather estimates.
- The fires are destroying expensive real estate in Santa Monica, Malibu, and other neighborhoods.
- Insurance providers like State Farm pulled new coverage before the fire due to catastrophe risks.
The Los Angeles wildfires could cost between $52 billion and $57 billion in damages and economic losses, according to a preliminary estimate from weather forecasting service Accuweather.
The wildfires tearing through Santa Monica and Malibu, among other areas, are destroying some of the country's most expensive real estate, where median home values exceed $2 million, Accuweather said in a release on Wednesday. Wildfires in the Los Angeles Pacific Palisades neighborhood have destroyed the homes of celebrities including Paris Hilton and have evacuated actors Mark Hamill and James Woods.
The cost estimates include damages to homes and businesses, as well as negative impacts on tourism and health from smoke inhalation, Accuweather said. Property that has not been destroyed by the fire may also have smoke or water damage.
The company said that the estimate is early and may change as some areas have not reported damages and injuries.
"This is likely to end up being one of the most expensive wildfires in modern California history and it will also be one of the most damaging in terms of the numbers of structures that have been destroyed,"Jonathan Porter, AccuWeather's chief meteorologist, said in a statement.
A spokesperson for the company declined further comment.
The last major disaster was the Camp Fire, which destroyed Paradise, Califronia in 2018. German insurance company Munich Re estimated it caused overall losses of $16.5 billion.
"These fires will likely be the costliest in history, not the deadliest, and that is the only silver lining right now," Daniel Swain, a climate scientist with UCLA told LAList.
Five people have been reported dead and 100,000 were told to evacuate.
Health costs could stem from the inhalation of hazardous air from the burning of homes, vehicles, chemicals, and fuels.
Property insurance providers, such as State Farm, pulled new California homeowners' insurance services in 2023, citing risks from catastrophes. Last year, the company said it would end coverage for 72,000 homes and apartments in the state for the same reason.
Five separate fires hit the city and its region in recent days. High winds have hampered emergency services' responses.
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Justice Alito spoke with Trump hours before Supreme Court filing on hush-money sentencing
Justice Samuel Alito spoke with President-elect Trump the day before the Republican leader's lawyers asked the Supreme Court to halt Friday's sentencing in his New York hush money case, the judge confirmed Wednesday.
What they're saying: Alito said in a statement first reported by ABC News that he agreed to take the call from Trump on Tuesday afternoon after his former clerk William Levi asked him to recommend him for a job in the incoming administration.
- "We did not discuss the emergency application he filed today, and indeed, I was not even aware at the time of our conversation that such an application would be filed," Alito said.
- "We also did not discuss any other matter that is pending or might in the future come before the Supreme Court or any past Supreme Court decisions involving the President-elect."
Why it matters: It's not unusual for justices to give job recommendations for former clerks, but the timing of the call, hours before the filing of an appeal against the conviction of what would be the first-ever criminal sentencing of a living president, drew criticism from advocates who've campaigned for more transparency in courts and raised ethics concerns.
What they're saying: Gabe Roth, executive director of the advocacy group Fix the Court, called the call "an unmistakable breach of protocol," per AP.
- "No person, no matter who they are, should engage in out-of-court communication with a judge or justice who's considering that person's case."
- Roth told the New York Times what made the call particularly problematic was recent ethical issues concerning the Supreme Court and especially Alito.
The other side: Carrie Severino, president of the conservative advocacy group JCN, on X called the reaction to Alito's call "the newest manufactured 'ethics' scandal over a simple reference check."
- She added, "The Left is once again making up fake ethics rules as a way to smear a justice who they despise for authoring the Dobbs opinion and faithfully following the Constitution" βΒ in reference to the Supreme Court's majority decision to overturn Roe v Wade and end federal abortion protections.
- Representatives for Trump and the Supreme Court did not immediately respond to Axios' request for comment in the evening.
Go deeper: Supreme Court adopts code of conduct for justices amid ethical scrutiny
Two powerful labor groups joining up ahead of the incoming Trump administration
Two of the most powerful labor groups in the country are teaming up, with the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) rejoining the AFL-CIO after nearly 20 years apart.
Why it matters: Organized labor is consolidating power ahead of Donald Trump's return to office.
Where it stands: SEIU's 2 million workers will join 12.5 million represented by the AFL-CIO.
- "We think we will be more powerful than ever as joint forces," AFL-CIO president Liz Shuler told Axios Wednesday afternoon.
- This reunion has been in the works for nearly two years, SEIU president April Verrett said. The aim was to build enough power to organize workers and push for pro-labor policies.
- "It's not a reaction to, or a statement about, Trump," she added. But with his return to the White House it is "an affirmation that we're doing the right thing and that now is the time."
Zoom in: SEIU represents many low-wage workers across its three branches βΒ public sector employees, healthcare workers and those in building services (like janitors).
- Many are immigrants, including some who are undocumented and at risk under Trump's proposed deportation policies.
- "It's not just our undocumented or our immigrant workers that are worried about what a Trump administration can bring," says Verrett.
- There are other issues. About half the union's members depend on Medicaid, she said. Republicans have reportedly been considering cuts to the health insurance program to pay for an extension of the 2017 tax cuts.
Zoom out: The AFL-CIO is a huge federation of unions that includes all kinds of workers, from screen actors to teachers to miners. The organization provides policy and politics support to its affiliates βΒ so they can focus on organizing and bargaining.
Flashback: SEIU split off from the group 20 years ago, as the service sector was becoming a bigger part of the economy. The unions' leaders had a pretty tense break-up. (The Teamsters also left the AFL-CIO at the time and haven't come back.)
- At the time, Democrats and union officials worried the schism would weaken the labor movement.
- Though unions have seen a resurgence recently βΒ and SEIU has had some big success, with Fight for 15 in particularΒ βΒ organized labor's power has diminished over the decades.
- The share of the workforce that is unionized is at historic lows.
- "This [reunion] means a more unified labor movement," says Patricia Campos-Medina, a former union organizer who is now executive director at Cornell's Worker Institute.
The big picture: During his campaign, Trump positioned himself as an ally to workers. Teamsters president Sean O'Brien spoke at the Republican National Convention, andΒ he's had some influence on the transition team.
- But both Shuler and Verrett were vocal supporters of vice president Kamala Harris.
- "SEIU would probably have benefitted from a Harris victory, and probably feels more threatened by a Trump administration than most other unions," says John Logan, a labor historian at San Francisco State University.
- Most union observers worry that the second Trump administration will follow the same sort of anti-labor roadmap as the first.
What's next: The unions will formally announce the move on Thursday afternoon in advance of a civil rights event in Austin.
Editor's Note: The headlines of this story have been updated to reflect details on the combination.
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What to know about Microsoft Azure, the cloud computing platform and computing, networking, and storage services
- Microsoft Azure is Microsoft's vaunted cloud computing platform.
- Azure offers a range of cloud-based solutions for the creation and management of applications.
- Most Azure products use a pay-as-you-go pricing model, but some products can also be used for free.
Microsoft Azure is Microsoft's cloud computing platform that offers a range of cloud-based computing, networking, and data storage services.
Microsoft Azure boasts "solutions that enable organizations to build, deploy, and manage applications and services through Microsoft's global network of data centers."
Crystal clear, right? Don't worry, we'll break it down for you, but first just to clarify, Azure is indeed a computing platform, not just a storage platform.
In short, Azure lets you do things that require much more processing power than your computer has because the computing is done far from your desk, couch, or that coffee shop table. Now for the longer view.
When was Microsoft Azure created?
The same company that brought you PowerPoint, Word, and more, launched Azure as Windows Azure back in 2010, rebranding it to Microsoft Azure in 2014. With the launch of the company's AI interface Copilot in 2023, using Azure became easier than ever, as the smart chat interface can help less tech-savvy users take advantage of Azure's many uses.
Azure is now used by a plethora of small and large businesses and organizations. Indeed, Azure has become such a valuable platform and suite of services that Microsoft offers certifications in dozens of different Azure features and softwares to help IT professionals, developers, and engineers learn the intricacies.
Azure has become a critical component of Microsoft's business model since its 2010 launch, with executives often boasting of Azure's revenues in earnings calls.
However, Azure has not been immune from the turbulence within the tech industry in the post-pandemic era. Large rounds of Microsoft layoffs tend to be a "when" and not an "if" sort of thing, so it was hardly a great shock when hundreds of Azure employees were laid off in early summer 2024.
The large round of job cuts specifically targeted workers in the Azure for Operators and Mission Engineering departments, and were part of a pattern of layoffs begun in 2023 and expanded in 2024.
Microsoft Azure Services
Azure allows you to use an already immense and ever-growing catalog of services; it would be way too heavy of a lift to cover them all here, so we will showcase a few of the things you can do via this cloud computing platform.
Azure AI Search: This service allows you to conduct advanced, tailored smart searches and build up a vectored database of relevant retrieved information.
Azure Open Datasets: Host and share curated datasets that are honed and refined through machine learning, growing more accurate over time.
Speaker Recognition: This service allows for the ever-improving recognition of speech and integrates spoken words into programming, documents, and more. It is multilingual, of course.
Azure AI Content Safety: Azure can automatically watch out for images, text, and video content that might be inappropriate β or simply irrelevant β and filter them out of your content.
How much does Microsoft Azure cost?
Most Azure products use a pay-as-you-go model rather than fixed rates for different products or a flat monthly fee. Your costs could be as low as pennies each month for basic cloud storage or the managed hosting of a simple website or well into the thousands of dollars for enterprise-level use of myriad AI-enabled products.
Many Azure products can also be used for free. New users can enjoy 25 services free for 12 months, while others remain free at all times to all people. These include API management, the Azure AI Bot Service, and the Azure AI Metrics Advisor, to name just a few.
Microsoft Azure vs. AWS and Google Cloud
Amazon Web Services (AWS) is the heavy hitter in cloud computing and storage, arguably leading the way in networking, cloud storage, mobile development, and cybersecurity.
Google Cloud Platform GCP is big on data analysis and arguably allows the easiest user experience and more seamless interaction with products created by other brands.
Microsoft Azure, for its part, provides vastly scalable and efficient software products, and it's usually cheaper than Google Cloud or AWS.
Schumer Will Work With Trump to Rename Gulf of Mexico on One Condition
Dems' 2024 losses fuel new openness to GOP bills
Fresh off their bruising 2024 losses, Democrats seem to more willing to engage with Republican legislation on issues like immigration and Israel.
Why it matters: The dynamic is putting some "messaging bills" that House Republicans passed in the previous Congress on a path to actually becoming law.
- The Laken Riley Act is picking up votes from Senate Democrats needed to overcome the 60-vote filibuster threshold.
- The bill would require the detention of undocumented immigrants arrested on theft-related charges and allow states to sue the federal government over crimes committed by immigrants.
- The legislation received 48 Democratic votes in the House on Wednesday, up from 37 when it was voted on last year. Seven Democrats who previously voted against it flipped to voting for it this week.
What they're saying: "You know, some of us have been talking about this for years," Rep. Henry Cuellar (D-Texas) told Axios. He's a centrist, border-district Democrat who voted both times for the bill.
- "I think after people saw what happened with the election, you definitely are seeing more people realize that what happens at the border is very important to the voters," Cuellar said.
- Sen. John Fetterman (D-Pa.), who is co-sponsoring the bill in the Senate, said Wednesday in a Fox News interview that if the bill can't get the seven Democratic votes it needs to pass the Senate, "that's a reason why we lost."
Yes, but: The election results were not the only factor that drove increased Democratic support for the bill.
- One House Democrat, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said some votes flipped because it "was not the same bill as last year" with the removal of language hammering the Biden administration for its immigration policy.
- Rep. Brendan Boyle (D-Pa.), a staunch Biden ally, cited that as the reason for him changing his vote.
- Still, the lawmaker who spoke anonymously also acknowledged: "Clearly the election will have some impact on how members see the world."
Zoom in: That dynamic could play out with a bill to sanction the International Criminal Court for issuing arrest warrants against Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu and Defense Minister Yoav Gallant.
- Several House Democrats told Axios it is possible the bill could get more Democratic votes than the 42 it received when it passed the House last June.
- Rep. Jared Moskowitz (D-Fla.) said there are "similar learning lessons for the Democratic Party" with each bill, noting that Democrats took a beating on Israel last year.
- "I think there will be Democrats that will look at it differently now," he said. "If you're asking people to take a side between Israel and the ICC, I think there will be more people than maybe previously that will vote for this."
The bottom line: "These message bills are hard, because the people at home believe the title and don't understand what's in them," said one senior House Democrat.
- "These are wedge issues, and we've got to really think about them ... it's all very complicated."
Scoop: Schumer's plan to fire back at Trump's Senate nominees
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) is privately pressing his senators to create fireworks when they question President-elect Trump's nominees in the coming weeks, Axios has learned.
Why it matters: "Republicans spent four years attacking the Democratic brand and we need to use the hearings to begin returning the favor," Schumer told his top committee Democrats in a meeting on Wednesday afternoon.
- Schumer told the Democratic caucus in a lunch on Tuesday that they should grill Trump nominees on the MAGA agenda, and what they say it means for the American people.
The big picture: Schumer reminded senators that they have an opportunity to seize the narrative from a GOP that is convinced the public is on its side on the economy, the border and cultural issues.
- The combative strategy is also an indication that Schumer has decided that there's more political upside in challenging the MAGA movement than finding common ground with it.
What to watch: Expect Democrats to zero in on some of Trump's most high profile nominees as they come through the Senate over the next few weeks.
- That includes the likes of Pete Hegseth, Trump's pick to lead the Pentagon, and RFK Jr., the GOP nominee for HHS.