Republicans push back against Trump’s call to end the Senate filibuster

Donald Trump, president of the United States, has urged the Senate to end the government shutdown and reopen it as a result of the ongoing debate over the issue.

Republican leaders, who have long opposed such a move, swiftly rejected that idea on Friday.

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The Senate rule calls for 60 votes to be overcome objections, and the filibuster makes reference to it. The Senate’s minority Democrats are currently in a position to limit the Republican Party’s influence.

Democrats have had enough votes to keep the government shut while reserving access to healthcare subsidies in the currently polarized chamber, which is currently split by 53 to 47. No party has yet to have a serious desire to end the rule.

In a late-night social media post on Thursday, Trump declared, “THE CHOICE IS CLEAR – INITIATE THE “NUCLEAR OPTION, GET RID OF THE FILIBUSTER.”

The Senate will be frightened by Trump’s sudden decision to assert himself in the now 31-day shutdown and his highly polarizing call for the end of the filibuster. It might encourage senators to reach a compromise or cause the chamber to experience a new crisis. Or it might be disregarded.

Few Republican leaders have dared to publicly criticize Trump, who they say is at odds with him.

Senate Majority Leader John Thune has stated on numerous occasions that he is not thinking about changing the rules to end the shutdown, arguing that it is essential for the Senate’s foundation and has allowed Republicans to veto Democratic initiatives when they are in the minority.

The leader’s “position on the significance of the legislative filibuster remains unchanged,” according to Thune spokesman Ryan Wrasse on Friday.

The Republican senator from Wyoming, John Barrasso, the second-most popular, said his position on a filibuster has not changed.

In addition, Mitch McConnell, a former Republican leader, is still in the Senate. He vehemently opposed Trump’s filibuster pleas in his first term.

House Speaker Mike Johnson also defended the filibuster on Friday, saying from his chamber across the Capitol, “it’s not my call.”

Johnson continued, “The filibuster has always been the safeguard in the Senate,” adding that Trump’s remarks reflect “the president’s anger at the situation.”

In the divided Senate, Thune would not currently have the votes necessary to change the filibuster.

Republican Senator John Curtis of Utah responded to Trump’s comments on Friday morning by saying, “The filibuster forces us to find common ground in the Senate.” Principles shouldn’t change, but power does. I’m not interested in reducing it.

Years of debate have surrounded the legislative filibuster. When they were in control of Washington, many Democrats pushed for its abolition, just as the Republicans do now, four years later.

However, enough Democratic senators ultimately opposed the motion, predicting that it would come back to haunt them.

Trump’s demands come as he has turned down negotiations with Democratic leaders to put an end to the longest shutdown in human history.

He claimed in his post that he gave his choice a “great deal” of thought on the trip back home from Asia, and that one question remained unanswered: Why do the Democrats continue to allow the Democrats to stifle some aspects of the government.

He returned to his Mar-a-Lago home later that day and did not mention the filibuster as he spoke to reporters from Washington and arriving in Florida for the weekend.

Trump has not been actively involved in any serious discussions, despite bipartisan senators’ ongoing quiet discussions.

Democrats won’t support reopening the government until Republicans agree to extend the healthcare subsidies. The Republicans claim they won’t engage in negotiations until the government is reopened.

Trump needs to start negotiating with Democrats, according to House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries, who claims the president has spent more time with international leaders than with the government shutdown in the United States.

The dysfunction of the shuttered federal government is causing a wave of concern from coast to coast. The SNAP food aid program is scheduled to stop. There are delays in flights. Without a paycheck, the workers are leaving.

And Americans are first to realize how much healthcare costs are rising in the current impasse.

Russia-Ukraine war: List of key events, day 1,346

On Saturday, November 1, 2025, how things are going:

Fighting

  • According to Vadym Filashkin, head of the Donetsk Regional Military Administration, eight people were killed and 18 others were hurt in the Donetsk region of Ukraine in the past day.
  • Local police in the Zhytomyr region of Ukraine are “investigating the circumstances” of the “two car bombings in the border zone,” adding that five people were killed and three others were hurt when two different vehicles hit explosive devices on Friday.
  • In a day-long post on Telegram, governor Ivan Fedorov wrote in a post about the assaults on 19 settlements in the Zaporizhia region of Ukraine that at least three people were killed and 29 were hurt.
  • The Kherson Regional Military Administration wrote in a post on Telegram on Friday that a 56-year-old woman was killed and four others were hurt in Russian shelling of the Kherson region of Ukraine’s Kherson region.
  • According to Ukrainian news agency Ukrinform, Volodymyr Zelenskyy reported to reporters that 170 000 Russian troops are stationed close to Pokrovsk, but that the city is not encircled.
  • The Russian Defense Ministry claimed that the Ukrainian village of Novooleksandrivka in the Dnipropetrovsk region of Ukraine was under Russian control, according to TASS news agency. Al Jazeera was unable to independently verify the assertion.
  • More than 2, 000 households in Kamianka-Dniprovska, a town in Russian-occupied Zaporizhia, were without electricity as a result of Ukrainian shelling, according to TASS, citing local officials.
  • Neptune cruise missiles were fired at a Russian thermal power plant in the Oryol region and an electric substation in Novobryansk, according to the Ukrainian navy on Friday.

diplomacy and politics

    In support of Moldova’s efforts to acquiesce to Russia’s demands for its new leader, the country’s parliament named Alexandru Munteanu.

Sanctions

    Because of its significant reliance on pipeline networks for its energy supplies, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban said on Friday that he hopes to persuade US President Donald Trump that Hungary should be exempt from US sanctions on Russian oil. Additionally, Orban made note of a request by Germany for a refinery exemption.

  • In response to new European sanctions against Russia, the Russian Foreign Ministry announced on Friday that it had banned entry for more EU officials from entering Russia, but it had not provided a list of the individuals who had been banned.
  • Now that an updated EU-Ukraine free trade agreement has been in place, the European Commission declared on Friday that the EU’s export bans on Ukrainian foods were unjustifiable.

Regional security

Weapons

  • According to three unnamed US and European officials, the Pentagon has assured the White House that providing Tomahawk weapons to Ukraine won’t harm US stockpiles.

Trump places Nigeria on watch list over claims of anti-Christian violence

Based on flimsy claims that Christians in the nation are being “slaughtered” by Muslims, United States President Donald Trump has announced that Nigeria will be placed on a watchlist for religious freedom.

Trump stated in a social media post on Friday that the African country would be listed among the “Countries of Particular Concern” on the Department of State’s list.

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According to Trump, “Christianity is in danger of dying in Nigeria.” “There are countless Christians killed,” he said. This large-scale slaughter was carried out by radical Islamists. I designate Nigeria as the “COUNTRY OF PARTICULAR CONCERN.”

In the past, the Nigerian government has refuted these claims. However, critics warn that naming Nigeria as a “country of particular concern” might lead to a rise in sanctions.

Trump also appears to have skipped the customary course of action in these matters.

In order to monitor and advocate for the end of religious persecution, the 1998 International Religious Freedom Act established the category of “country of particular concern.”

However, the US Commission on International Religious Freedom, a bipartisan body established by Congress, and State Department experts, typically give that label.

Trump stated in a Friday post that he had asked the House Appropriations Committee, two congressmen, Riley Moore, and Tom Cole to “immediately look into this matter.” Both candidates are Republicans.

Trump’s claims appear to refute the language of right-wing lawmakers, which characterizes violent and contentious disputes in Nigeria as the result of violent attacks by radical Islamists on Christians.

However, experts claim that the framing is largely inaccurate, arguing that national strife cannot simply be explained by differences in religion.

Nigeria has a largely Christian north and a majority of its residents are Muslims. Boko Haram, a group that has caused unrest and displacement for more than a decade, has been conducting violent attacks against the nation.

Conflicts over resources, such as water, have also heightened tensions and occasionally caused violent clashes between predominantly Muslim shepherds and predominantly Christian farmers. However, Nigeria has refuted the claim that religious affiliation is the primary cause of these conflicts.

Representative Moore continued to express his thoughts on Friday’s announcement in a statement.

According to Moore, “I have been calling for this designation since my first floor speech in April, in which I highlighted the suffering of Christians in countries with Muslim majority.”

He added that he intended to “make sure Nigeria receives the international pressure, accountability, and attention it so desperately needs.”

Trump’s decision was also applauded by Republican Senator Ted Cruz of Texas. In a press release, he stated, “I am deeply gratified to President Trump for making this determination.” “I have fought for years in Nigeria to stop Christians from being massacred and persecuted.”

Trump has attempted to bolster his support among the Christian right in the US since taking office for a second term in January.

He announced at a prayer breakfast in February that his administration would form a task force to combat anti-Christian bias in the federal government.

His administration later issued a memo allowing federal employees to conduct workplace evangelism in July.

Trump’s administration has recently been criticized for its approach to refugees, which includes those who are fleeing persecution or violence in their own countries, despite the alleged anti-Christian violence in Friday’s post.

Trump set the lowest-ever refugee admissions cap on Wednesday, limiting entry to just 7,500 for the entire fiscal year 2026.

He explained in a notice posted to the Federal Register’s website that the majority of those spots would be “primarily distributed among Afrikaners from South Africa” and “other victims of illegal or unjust discrimination.”

Critics pointed out that refugees are granted refuge from fear of systematic oppression rather than discrimination.

Trump has ratcheted up diplomatic ties with South Africa, falsely accusing white Afrikans of being the victims of a “genocide,” an assertion that is frequently supported by far-right figures.

White House restricts press office access citing sensitive material

UN Security Council supports Morocco’s plan for Western Sahara

According to a resolution from the UN Security Council, a 50-year conflict between Rabat and the Algeria-backed Polisario Front may lead to a legitimate autonomy for the Western Sahara under Moroccan control.

The longest-running territorial dispute in Africa, which spans the size of Britain and dates back to the colonial period when Morocco annexed the region in 1975, has affected Western Sahara, a desert region that spans the size of Britain.

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In a text written in the United States, the UNSC on Friday demanded that the parties engage in negotiations based on a Moroccan-led UN initiative to establish autonomy.

The Polisario Front wants to create an independent state known as the Sahrawi Republic, but Morocco views the region as its own.

After the vote on Friday, US ambassador to the UN Mike Waltz told the council, “We urge all parties to use the upcoming weeks to come to the table and engage in serious discussions.” We think regional harmony is possible this year, and we will make every effort to advance that direction.

Algeria did not cast a ballot, while China, Pakistan, and Russia all abstained. The resolution, which was approved by the remaining 11 council members, also renewed for a year the UN Mission for the Referendum in Western Sahara (MINURSO)’s mandate.

After the vote, Algeria’s UN ambassador Amar Bendjama told the council that “the final decision on the future cannot and must not be made by anyone other than the people who are under colonial dominance.” The Polisario Front’s proposals are ignored in this text because they are parties to the conflict and must be heard.

A “victory chapter”

The residents of Western Sahara would elect a local legislative, executive, and judicial body under Morocco’s proposal for autonomy, while Rabat would have exclusive authority over defense, foreign affairs, and religious matters.

Instead, the Polisario wants to conduct a referendum on whether to choose independence.

After the UN vote, Morocco’s King Mohammed VI declared that the country is seeking a “face-saving” solution for all parties involved in the conflict. He urged Algeria’s southwestern Algerian refugees who were held under the Polisario to support autonomy.

Morocco is committed to the Maghreb Union, according to the king, who also reiterated his call for a “brotherly dialogue” with Algeria.

In a speech where he expressed his “immense pride,” King Mohammed said, “We are opening a new and victorious chapter in the process of enshrining the Moroccan character of the Sahara.

In Morocco’s cities, thousands of people gathered to chant patriotic songs and flags while celebrating the election.

Sidi Omar, a representative for the Polisario Front, claimed that the resolution doesn’t mean that Morocco has any authority over the Western Sahara. He claimed that the Polisario Front leadership would review the UN resolution and publish a statement of intent soon.

In addition, the Security Council resolution directed UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres to provide a “strategic review regarding MINURSO’s future mandate, taking into account the outcome of the negotiations” within six months.

In July, US President Donald Trump reaffirmed his support for Morocco’s claim to have sovereignty over the Western Sahara and that the territory’s autonomous plan was the only option. Steve Witkoff, Trump’s envoy, claimed the US is pursuing an agreement involving Algeria and Morocco.

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