100 Percent Fed Up Feed
100 Percent Fed Up Feed

100 Percent Fed Up Feed

@100percentfedupfeed

President Trump’s Trump Accounts Get MASSIVE $250 Million Boost Before July 4 Launch
Favicon 
100percentfedup.com

President Trump’s Trump Accounts Get MASSIVE $250 Million Boost Before July 4 Launch

For months, the Trump Accounts program sounded like a headline waiting for details. Now the details are here. On July 1, 2026, Treasury announced the investment lineup for the accounts, locking in exactly where the money will go once contributions open on July 4. A day earlier, chipmaker Micron committed $250 million to the program. And the IRS says millions of children have already been signed up before a single dollar has been deposited. This is what a policy looks like when it stops being a slogan and starts being an account with a ticker symbol attached. .@SecScottBessent: Trump Accounts are going to be invested in low-cost index funds. Everyone is going to participate in the American Dream. I think we are at the edge of an innovation wave here. pic.twitter.com/sJpE1kKkzq — Treasury Department (@USTreasury) June 30, 2026 Start with the investment plumbing, because that is what makes any savings program real. According to Treasury, every contribution at launch will default into SPYM, a State Street S&P 500 ETF chosen for broad exposure to the U.S. stock market, and Treasury says the choice keeps expenses well below the statutory fee limit while putting the account money into a broad-market fund from day one. The agency also selected IVV, VTI, SPTM, and ITOT as additional low-cost options for parents or guardians once the account-allocation tool is available, but until that tool goes live all launch contributions stay in the default fund, so families will not be forced to make an investment election before money can begin moving on July 4. The design is simple on purpose. Broad-market index funds, low fees, and a default that keeps money working instead of sitting idle. Then came the corporate money. On June 30, Micron announced a $250 million investment in Trump Accounts, also called 530A Accounts, describing it as the largest corporate commitment of its kind and saying it expects the effort to support up to one million children. The company says the plan includes employee matching up to $1,000 per child under 18, one-time $250 seed deposits for children with Trump Accounts in communities where Micron operates in Idaho, New York, Virginia, California, Colorado, Minnesota, and Texas, and a broader tie-in to its more than $200 billion U.S. memory manufacturing and R&D investment that Micron says will create more than 90,000 American jobs. The key caveat is simple: this is targeted money tied to Micron workers and eligible communities, not a blanket Micron payment to every child in the country. Today, Micron announced a $250 million investment to increase long-term savings opportunities for children and families through Trump Accounts (also known as 530A Accounts). As part of this initiative, Micron is launching an employee matching benefit and providing community seed… pic.twitter.com/gReuPEVv9V — Micron Technology (@MicronTech) June 30, 2026 That is the part to sit with. A company investing hundreds of billions in American plants is also seeding investment accounts for the children in those same towns. Manufacturing jobs and equity ownership landing in the same zip codes is a very different picture than the one Washington usually paints. .@SecScottBessent: Trump Accounts are a game changer. 38% of American households do not own equities. This administration’s goal is to push this out to teach financial literacy and to bring everyone into the American dream. pic.twitter.com/Qs8jeOg5LO — Treasury Department (@USTreasury) June 30, 2026 The demand is already there. Back in March, the IRS said more than 4 million children had been signed up for the tax-favored accounts through Form 4547 elections submitted with individual tax returns, with more than 1 million children covered by elections for the $1,000 federal pilot contribution created under the One Big Beautiful Bill. The agency says the pilot applies to eligible U.S. citizen children born from January 1, 2025 through December 31, 2028 with valid Social Security numbers, while contributions from parents, relatives, friends, employers, state governments, philanthropic organizations, and individuals can begin July 4, subject to annual limits. Treasury and the IRS also smoothed one of the practical hurdles. On June 29, they issued a gift tax reporting safe harbor for certain individual donor contributions, cutting filing friction for grandparents, relatives, and friends who want to chip in. Put the pieces together and the July 4 launch stops looking symbolic. The investment lineup is named, the first major corporate commitment is on the table, the filing rules are being cleared, and millions of accounts are already open. Trump Accounts are no longer a promise on paper. Come Independence Day, they are a working way for American families to start building ownership from day one. This is a Guest Post from our friends over at WLTReport. View the original article here. The post President Trump’s Trump Accounts Get MASSIVE $250 Million Boost Before July 4 Launch appeared first on 100PercentFedUp.com.

BREAKING: President Trump Refuses To Rubber-Stamp USMCA, Sets Up New Trade Fight With Canada And Mexico
Favicon 
100percentfedup.com

BREAKING: President Trump Refuses To Rubber-Stamp USMCA, Sets Up New Trade Fight With Canada And Mexico

President Trump negotiated USMCA in his first term to replace the disastrous NAFTA deal. Now his team is refusing to rubber-stamp it. On July 1, 2026, U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer issued an official statement on the agreement’s required joint review. The bottom line was simple. The United States did not agree to renew USMCA in its current form. This was not an accident or a missed deadline. It was a deliberate move to keep the leverage in American hands and force Canada and Mexico to fix the problems Washington has been complaining about for months. The U.S. Trade Representative confirmed the joint review took place on schedule, with U.S., Mexican, and Canadian representatives meeting virtually to discuss how the agreement has been working. That matters because this was not a random press leak or vague negotiating threat. The agreement itself required the review on July 1, and Greer’s office used that formal checkpoint to say Washington would not renew the deal in its current form. Greer’s office said the United States would keep engaging with both countries to address the agreement’s shortcomings and the American trade deficits with each of them. One key detail matters here. USTR made clear the agreement remains in force while these issues get worked out or until termination. USMCA did not end on July 1. President Trump simply declined to lock it in place as-is, while keeping leverage over the next round of talks. USTR also said the United States will meet with Mexico the week of July 20 for a third round of bilateral talks tied to the review, which means this fight moves almost immediately from announcement to negotiation. JUST IN via USTR: "The United States did not agree to renew the USMCA in its current form. As a result, the USMCA is not renewed. The United States will continue to engage with Mexico and Canada to address the Agreement’s shortcomings and our trade deficits with these countries." — Rachel Aiello (@rachaiello) July 1, 2026 Fox Business reports the administration plans to seek separate deals with Canada and Mexico rather than continue treating them as one bloc. That is a smart play. Splitting the partners lets American negotiators press each country on its own bad behavior instead of hiding weak concessions inside a three-way package. Fox Business also laid out the history for anyone who forgot. USMCA replaced NAFTA, was negotiated during President Trump’s first term, was signed in December 2019, and took effect on July 1, 2020. The report also keeps the legal status clear: the agreement remains in force while talks continue, so companies that ship goods across North America still have a framework today. That matters because Canada and Mexico remain two of America’s biggest trading partners, so renewal terms ripple across farms, factories, ports, and supply chains. At the same time, the politics around the deal have changed. Fox also pointed to broader North American trade concerns, including Canada, China, electric vehicles, and the fear that weak regional rules can be used to sneak foreign advantages into the U.S. market. BREAKING: Trump won't renew USMCA, will seek separate Canada, Mexico deals, admin official tells Fox News' @EdwardLawrence — Fox News (@FoxNews) July 1, 2026 The Washington Examiner reports that Trump officials have been in bilateral talks with both countries since President Trump returned to office. A senior U.S. official told the outlet that trade deficits with the two partners were the main reason for the decision not to renew in current form. That is the center of the story. The administration is not treating USMCA as a museum piece from President Trump’s first term; it is treating it as a live agreement that still has to serve American workers, farmers, manufacturers, and consumers. The Examiner also notes the administration can still negotiate and sign a renewal later if the underlying problems get fixed. The door is open, but only on American terms. That is a very different posture from Washington’s old trade class, which usually treated renewal as the goal and American leverage as the inconvenience. The New York Post spelled out what non-renewal actually means. It does not trigger instant expiration. Instead, it kicks off a stretch of continued annual reviews and renegotiation, which keeps the pressure on Ottawa and Mexico City instead of handing them a clean extension. The Post also listed the sore spots. U.S. officials pointed to Canadian tariffs on American dairy, Mexican interest in tariffs on American corn, and a push for tighter rules on car and industrial-good origin. Those details are not small. Dairy hits American farmers, corn hits another core farm constituency, and origin rules decide whether manufacturers can route production through Canada or Mexico while still getting the benefits of a North American trade deal. There are also loopholes tied to production shifting into Mexico that American negotiators want closed. That is the core fight: whether USMCA actually protects American production, or whether it becomes another trade deal companies learn to game. Trump won't renew USMCA deal with Canada and Mexico, trade rep says https://t.co/vEeyBwT4fk pic.twitter.com/HI8XXDgumu — New York Post (@nypost) July 1, 2026 This is exactly how President Trump has always approached trade. He built USMCA to beat NAFTA, and he is not willing to let it drift into a bad deal that quietly bleeds American producers. Canada keeps barriers on American dairy. Mexico eyes tariffs on American corn while production keeps migrating south through open loopholes. The old Washington reflex was to sign whatever was on the table and call it free trade. This administration is doing the opposite by keeping the agreement alive while refusing to bless the parts that hurt American workers. The next test comes the week of July 20, when American and Mexican negotiators sit down again. Canada will be watching closely, because separate deals mean each capital has to answer for its own conduct. USMCA is still in force, but it is no longer on autopilot. President Trump put the whole arrangement back on the negotiating table, and he holds the stronger hand going in. This is a Guest Post from our friends over at WLTReport. View the original article here. The post BREAKING: President Trump Refuses To Rubber-Stamp USMCA, Sets Up New Trade Fight With Canada And Mexico appeared first on 100PercentFedUp.com.

REPORT: Mitch McConnell Was Found Unconscious Before Being Rushed To Hospital
Favicon 
100percentfedup.com

REPORT: Mitch McConnell Was Found Unconscious Before Being Rushed To Hospital

New reporting says Sen. Mitch McConnell was found unconscious before he was rushed to the hospital last month. That is a far more serious picture than the one the public got when the June 14 hospitalization was first announced. McConnell is 84, no longer Senate GOP leader, and is not seeking reelection. His current Senate term ends in January 2027. Sen. Mitch McConnell was found unconscious when rushed to the hospital. Details: https://t.co/l2gNF4GABx pic.twitter.com/urjstJ3fpl — TMZ (@TMZ) July 1, 2026 TMZ reported on July 1 that McConnell lost consciousness at his Washington, DC, home on the morning of June 14 after a 911 call was made. The outlet said the medical scare was more serious than first disclosed and pointed to emergency dispatch audio connected to the response. It also placed the new detail against the earlier public statement that offered no cause for the hospital trip. TMZ also reported that journalist Desirée Townsend first surfaced the call, and that McConnell’s team had previously said only that the senator was receiving excellent care. The report did not provide an official diagnosis or a full medical explanation. It left open several key questions, including what doctors ultimately determined and what his current status is. The important point is the contrast between the reported emergency response and the very limited public explanation that followed. This emergency dispatch recording was obtained from Washington, D.C. Fire and EMS dispatch and captures the call on June 14, 2026 at 8:36 a.m. requesting an Advanced Life Support (ALS) response after Senator Mitch McConnel was reported unconscious. According to the dispatch,… pic.twitter.com/ABv97WXJhz — Desirée Townsend (@Cheering4Change) June 30, 2026 Townsend’s X post said the dispatch recording came from Washington, DC, Fire and EMS and captured a June 14 call at 8:36 AM requesting an Advanced Life Support response after McConnell was reported unconscious. That audio is the reason the story moved from a vague hospitalization update to a much bigger transparency question. The claim remains framed around reported dispatch traffic and media accounts, so it should be treated carefully. Even so, the details now being reported are serious enough that McConnell’s office should be pressed for clarity. WKYT and WAVE 3 gave the Kentucky-local angle on the story and the thin public updates that followed. WKYT reported that McConnell was reportedly found unconscious before the June hospitalization, citing Punchbowl News and EMS radio traffic, and noted that his office did not originally disclose details behind the hospital visit. That matters because Kentucky voters were left with only broad assurances about his care. WAVE reported on June 22 that McConnell’s office said he was still working closely with staff as he continued recovery, but that he would not be voting that week. The station described the public updates as cryptic and short on detail for people trying to understand the senator’s condition and ability to serve. WAVE also noted that the update came after prior statements that still avoided specifics about why he had been hospitalized. WKYT also reported that McConnell’s office had not clearly confirmed whether he remained hospitalized, while Rep. Andy Barr said at a Kentucky Republican dinner that he had exchanged text messages with McConnell and that “he’s good.” That is a strange split-screen: public reassurance on one side, and newly surfaced emergency-response details on the other. When the news first broke, McConnell’s team kept it vague. Earlier national coverage from CBS News and the Associated Press shows how little the public was told at the time, even as McConnell’s age and recent health history made the silence more significant. CBS reported that spokesperson Dave Popp said McConnell had been admitted to the hospital and was receiving excellent care, but did not give a reason for the hospitalization. AP likewise reported that no details had been given about the cause or condition. CBS also reported that Popp later said McConnell was fully engaged with staff on Senate business and Kentucky matters. AP added broader context on McConnell’s prior falls, concussion, freezing episodes, and mobility challenges. Senate Majority Leader John Thune said he had spoken with McConnell and that McConnell sounded good. AP reported that no details had been given about the cause or condition, while also summarizing McConnell’s broader health history, including falls, a concussion, freezing episodes, and mobility challenges. Taken together, the initial national reports show the same pattern: confirmation that McConnell was hospitalized, reassurance that he was receiving care or staying engaged, and almost no detail about what actually happened. The underlying concern is simple: when a sitting United States senator is reportedly found unconscious and taken to a hospital, voters deserve more than a carefully worded assurance that he is getting good care. No one should cheer for a medical crisis. McConnell is owed basic decency, privacy, and prayers as a human being. But he is also an elected official serving in one of the most powerful offices in the country. If the emergency was as serious as the dispatch reporting suggests, the country deserved more candor from the start. Featured image: Official Congressional photo of Sen. Mitch McConnell via Wikimedia Commons, public domain. This is a Guest Post from our friends over at WLTReport. View the original article here. The post REPORT: Mitch McConnell Was Found Unconscious Before Being Rushed To Hospital appeared first on 100PercentFedUp.com.

“Second Amendment Is Not A Second-Class Right” – Justice Department Files Lawsuit Against Blue State
Favicon 
100percentfedup.com

“Second Amendment Is Not A Second-Class Right” – Justice Department Files Lawsuit Against Blue State

The Justice Department on Wednesday filed a lawsuit against the Commonwealth of Virginia and the Virginia State Police, alleging that a “newly enacted Virginia law unconstitutionally bans the purchase and sale of ordinary semi-automatic rifles owned by millions of Americans.” “The Constitution is not a suggestion, and the Second Amendment is not a second-class right,” said Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche. “This Justice Department has done more to protect the Second Amendment than any administration in our nation’s history, and we will continue to do so whenever necessary,” he continued. “On April 10, I promised Governor Spanberger that we would sue Virginia if she signed this unconstitutional weapons ban into law. I keep my promises,” said Assistant Attorney General Harmeet K. Dhillon of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division. “Law-abiding Americans should not have to live under threat of criminal sanction for simply exercising their Second Amendment right to possess arms owned by millions of their fellow citizens,” she added. The Justice Department filed a lawsuit today against the Commonwealth of Virginia and the Virginia State Police alleging that a newly enacted Virginia law unconstitutionally bans the purchase and sale of ordinary semi-automatic rifles owned by millions of Americans. “The… pic.twitter.com/hZRNnBUhVo — U.S. Department of Justice (@TheJusticeDept) July 1, 2026 More from the Justice Department: The Virginia law makes the commercial purchase of AR-15-style rifles a crime. The AR-15 rifle is the most popular rifle in America. Virginia’s enforcement of the new ban is a pattern or practice of conduct by the commonwealth’s law enforcement officers that deprives the citizens of Virginia of their constitutional right to buy and sell arms protected by the Second Amendment. The Supreme Court on Tuesday agreed to consider whether bans on AR-15s and similar semiautomatic rifles violate the Second Amendment. In a brief order, the high court agreed to take up a pair of cases challenging local and state laws banning AR-15s and similar semiautomatic rifles. Supreme Court To Hear Major Second Amendment Case CBS News noted: One involves an ordinance in Cook County, Illinois, and the other centers on a Connecticut law. In two separate rulings last month, the Supreme Court struck down a law in Hawaii that restricted guns on private property that is open to the public and the high court sided with a Texas man who challenged the federal ban that barred certain drug users from having firearms. The post “Second Amendment Is Not A Second-Class Right” – Justice Department Files Lawsuit Against Blue State appeared first on 100PercentFedUp.com.

DEVELOPING: Navy Helicopter Makes “Emergency Water Landing” In Arabian Sea, Aircrewman Remains Missing
Favicon 
100percentfedup.com

DEVELOPING: Navy Helicopter Makes “Emergency Water Landing” In Arabian Sea, Aircrewman Remains Missing

A U.S. Navy aircrewman is missing after a helicopter carrying four crew members made an “emergency water landing” in the Arabian Sea on Wednesday morning. The other three members of the four-person MH-60S Sea Hawk helicopter crew were rescued. “On July 1 at 3:30 a.m. ET, the aircrew of an MH-60S Sea Hawk helicopter assigned to USS George H.W. Bush (CVN 77) conducted an emergency water landing in the Arabian Sea. There is no indication the emergency was caused by hostile action,” the U.S. Naval Forces Central Command stated. “Three of the helicopter’s four crew members have been recovered and are in stable condition aboard George H. W. Bush. U.S. Navy assets in the region are currently searching for other aircrewman still missing. The cause of incident is under investigation,” it added. On July 1 at 3:30 a.m. ET, the aircrew of an MH-60S Sea Hawk helicopter assigned to USS George H.W. Bush (CVN 77) conducted an emergency water landing in the Arabian Sea. There is no indication the emergency was caused by hostile action. Three of the helicopter’s four crew… — U.S. Naval Forces Central Command/U.S. 5th Fleet (@US5thFleet) July 1, 2026 CBS News shared further: The USS George H.W. Bush has been in the Middle East since late April. It is one of two aircraft carriers remaining in the region. While the U.S. has rescinded its blockade of vessels traveling into and out of the Strait of Hormuz, it still has a sizable military presence. The U.S. had lost 42 fixed-wing or rotor aircraft in Operation Epic Fury as of mid-May, the last time an update was given to Congress. That does not include the U.S. Apache helicopter shot down by an Iranian drone in early June. The two crew members on that helicopter were able to be rescued. That incident precipitated the U.S. to undertake “self-defense strikes” against Iran. “USS George H.W. Bush (CVN 77) sails in the Arabian Sea. Two aircraft carriers continue to operate in the Middle East as U.S. forces remain present and vigilant,” U.S. Central Command said on June 23. USS George H.W. Bush (CVN 77) sails in the Arabian Sea. Two aircraft carriers continue to operate in the Middle East as U.S. forces remain present and vigilant. pic.twitter.com/IhQLCoV1YT — U.S. Central Command (@CENTCOM) June 23, 2026 USA TODAY noted: Tensions have continued to grow in the Middle East in recent days despite an tenuous ceasefire agreement between the U.S. and Iran. The war between the United States and Iran began Feb. 28, when the U.S. and Israel launched a joint bombing campaign in the Middle Eastern country. Thousands have died in the fighting, including 13 U.S. service members. Central Command shared images of sailors conducting nighttime operations, flight operations and maintaining an MH-60S Sea Hawk helicopter aboard the vessel. MH-60S Seahawk missions include anti-surface warfare, combat support, humanitarian disaster relief, and combat search and rescue, according to Naval Air Systems Command. The post DEVELOPING: Navy Helicopter Makes “Emergency Water Landing” In Arabian Sea, Aircrewman Remains Missing appeared first on 100PercentFedUp.com.