What's in Trump's

Main Image

<p>-

  • What's in Trump's "big, beautiful bill" nearing a final vote in the Senate</p>

<p>Kaia Hubbard July 1, 2025 at 2:23 AM</p>

<p>Washington — Senate Republicans released the latest version of President Trump's massive spending and tax bill late Friday as the GOP eyes an ambitious July 4 deadline to approve the centerpiece legislation of the president's second-term agenda.</p>

<p>After the House narrowly approved the legislation that addresses the president's tax, defense, border and energy priorities last month, Senate Republicans have been putting their imprint on the bill. But GOP leaders are seeking a middle ground to appease the upper chamber without alienating House Republicans, who will have to approve the Senate's changes before the bill can head to the president's desk for his signature.</p>

<p>The Senate voted Saturday to advance the measure, overcoming a key hurdle as the upper chamber works toward final passage, and will vote on amendments and then the overall bill on Monday.</p>

<p>At the center of the bill is an extension to Mr. Trump's 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, slated to sunset at year's end, seeking to make the cuts permanent in what has been a key priority for Senate Republicans. It also includes increased spending for border security, defense and energy production, which are offset in part by cuts to healthcare and nutrition programs.</p>

<p>Senate Majority Leader John Thune speaks with reporters following a Senate Republican luncheon in the U.S. Capitol on June 27, 2025. / Credit: Al Drago / Getty Images</p>

<p>But along with different dynamics in the Senate, Republicans have also been contending with input from the Senate's rulekeeper, known as the parliamentarian. She has been weighing in on the bill's components to determine whether they may fly under the reconciliation process, which allows the GOP to move forward with the bill without any support from across the aisle.</p>

<p>Here's what's in the Senate's version of the "big, beautiful bill," some of which remains in flux:</p>

<p>Medicaid restrictions</p>

<p>The legislation includes restrictions on Medicaid, which provides government-sponsored health care for low-income and disabled Americans. Like the House-passed bill, the legislation imposes work requirements for some able-bodied adults and more frequent eligibility checks. But the Senate parliamentarian determined that a measure cutting federal funds to states that use Medicaid infrastructure to provide health care coverage to undocumented immigrants, along with banning Medicaid from covering gender transition services, isn't in compliance with Senate rules.</p>

<p>The parliamentarian also weighed in on the provider tax, which states use to help fund their portion of Medicaid costs, in a blow to the Senate GOP's initial plan.</p>

<p>Senate Republicans have proposed steeper cuts to Medicaid funding, in part by incrementally lowering provider taxes from 6% to 3.5% by 2032. The timeline is delayed by one year from the Senate GOP's initial proposal, after the issue became one of the bill's sticking points in the Senate in recent weeks. It's a departure from the House-passed bill, which sought to lower federal costs by freezing states' provider taxes at current rates and prohibiting them from establishing new provider taxes.</p>

<p>The bill also includes a rural hospital stabilization fund after some GOP senators expressed concern over how rural hospitals could be impacted by the Medicaid restrictions, allocating $25 billion for rural hospitals over the same period that the provider taxes would be lowered.</p>

<p>Increasing the state and local tax deduction, or SALT</p>

<p>The package also includes an increase to the cap on the state and local tax deduction, raising it from $10,000 to $40,000. After five years, it would return to $10,000, a departure from the House-passed bill.</p>

<p>The issue was a major sticking point in the House, where blue-state Republicans threatened to withhold their support without the increase to the deduction. But with no Republicans hailing from blue states in the Senate, the upper chamber has been contending with its own dynamics.</p>

<p>Before the rule, taxpayers could deduct all their state and local taxes from their federal taxes, which some policymakers have said mainly benefits wealthy homeowners in states with high taxes, such as New York and California. But advocates for increasing the caps argue that the $10,000 cap is increasingly impacting middle-class homeowners who live in regions where property taxes are rising.</p>

<p>Restrictions on food stamps</p>

<p>The Senate bill still shifts the costs of the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, also known as SNAP, or food stamps, to some states. The program is currently fully funded by the federal government.</p>

<p>The federal government would continue to fully fund the benefits for states that have an error payment rate below 6%, beginning in 2028. States with error rates above 6% would be on the hook for 5% to 15% of the costs. States are also given some flexibility in calculating their share.</p>

<p>However, Alaska and Hawaii would receive temporary exemptions from the cost-sharing requirement. Both states would receive a two-year reprieve if the Department of Agriculture determines they are "actively implementing a corrective action plan."</p>

<p>The package also aligns with the House version on age requirements for able-bodied adults to qualify for SNAP benefits. Currently, in order to qualify, able-bodied adults between 18-54 must meet work requirements. Both the Senate and House bills would update the age requirement to 18-64, with some exemptions for parents.</p>

<p>Alaska and Hawaii could also receive waivers for the work requirements if it's determined that they're making a "good faith effort" to comply.</p>

<p>Addressing the debt limit</p>

<p>The legislation would raise the debt ceiling by $5 trillion, going beyond the $4 trillion outlined in the House-passed bill, as Congress faces a deadline to address the debt limit later this summer.</p>

<p>Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has urged Congress to address the debt limit by mid-July, outlining that the U.S. could be unable to pay its bills as early as August, when Congress is on recess.</p>

<p>By addressing the debt ceiling as part of the larger package, Republicans in Congress are aiming to bypass negotiating with Democrats on the issue. Unlike most other legislation in the Senate, the budget reconciliation process that governs the package requires a simple majority, rather than the 60-vote threshold to move forward with a bill.</p>

<p>Child tax credit</p>

<p>The current $2,000 child tax credit is set to return to the pre-2017 level of $1,000 in 2026. The tax credit would permanently increase to $2,200 under the Senate bill, $300 less than the House-passed hike. The House version reverts the increase to $2,000 after 2028.</p>

<p>Limits on overtime and tips deductions</p>

<p>The bill would allow individuals to deduct up to $25,000 for tip wages and $12,500 for overtime. But the provisions would expire in 2028. The Senate bill would reduce the deductions for individuals making over $150,000, while the House bill does not include income limits.</p>

<p>Changes to standard deduction</p>

<p>The Senate wants to permanently expand the basic standard deduction, which was nearly doubled in 2017. The increases will expire at the end of the year. The House bill, however, would expand the deduction only through 2028.</p>

<p>Asylum fee</p>

<p>The legislation also includes a minimum $100 fee for those seeking asylum, down from the $1,000 fee outlined in the House bill. The Senate parliamentarian ruled out the $1,000 fee for anyone applying for asylum and other fees on diversity immigrant visas.</p>

<p>Pause on AI regulations</p>

<p>A revised proposal on a pause on state regulations on artificial intelligence also made it into the Senate bill. The original provision called for a 10-year moratorium, but Republicans reached a compromise over the weekend that says states can only access $500 million in federal funds for AI infrastructure if they don't regulate the technology for five years. The compromise also includes exemptions to protect the safety of children online.</p>

<p>Saving money vs. saving lives</p>

<p>The true cost of the Senate spending bill</p>

<p>What does it mean to be cool?</p>

Read original article


Source: AOL General News

Читать на сайте


Source: AsherMag

Full Article on Source: Astro Blog

#LALifestyle #USCelebrities

What's in Trump's "big, beautiful bill" nearing a final vote in the Senate

<p>- What's in Trump's "big, beautiful bill" nearing a final vote in the Senate</p> <...

FBI arrests one man, searches laptops in 16 states in crackdown on North Korean tech-worker scheme

Main Image

<p>-

  • FBI arrests one man, searches laptops in 16 states in crackdown on North Korean tech-worker scheme</p>

<p>Hannah Rabinowitz and Sean Lyngaas, CNNJune 30, 2025 at 10:01 PM</p>

<p>This photo from the US District Court District of Massachusetts shows North Korean information technology workers on a multi-member team that the US Department of Justice says works with the North Korean government to fund its regime. Note: Parts of the image provided by the US District Court District of Massachusetts have been obscured. - US District Court District of Massachusetts</p>

<p>US law enforcement has arrested a New Jersey man and searched stashes of laptops in 16 states in a sweeping crackdown on North Korean efforts to use remote tech workers to covertly fund their weapons programs, the Justice Department said Monday.</p>

<p>The scheme saw North Korean tech workers – with the help of people in the US, China and elsewhere – get hired at more than 100 US companies, prosecutors said. In one case, the North Koreans stole "export-controlled US military technology"; in another, they stole the equivalent of $740,000 from a Georgia-based tech firm, according to the Justice Department.</p>

<p>It's the latest in a series of national security cases that, FBI officials say, represents just a snapshot of North Korea's efforts to use tens of thousands of overseas workers to raise revenue for its sanctions-saddled regime.</p>

<p>Americans are emerging as key players in the alleged activity.</p>

<p>Just last year, prosecutors charged an Arizona woman in a scheme that compromised the identities of 60 Americans and affected 300 US companies, including a major national TV network, a "premier" Silicon Valley tech company, and an "iconic" American car maker. A few months later, the FBI arrested a Tennessee man who allegedly helped North Korean workers pose as a US citizen as part of an effort to get the North Koreans jobs at US and British tech firms.</p>

<p>In one of the cases announced Monday, prosecutors allege that several individuals inside the US, including one man from New Jersey, ran so-called laptop farms by logging into more than 100 organizations' company-issued laptops so that foreign IT workers could trick those companies into believing the workers were living in the US.</p>

<p>The foreign IT workers then obtained sensitive information from those companies' servers, the department said. One of those companies is an unnamed California-based defense contractor that specializes in developing AI-powered equipment and technologies.</p>

<p>Six Chinese nationals and two Taiwanese nationals are also charged in the scheme and remain at large, according to the Justice Department.</p>

<p>In the second case, prosecutors allege that four North Korean nationals conspired to steal more than $900,000 in virtual currency from one company based in the US and another in Serbia. The North Koreans then laundered that money through foreign accounts, the department alleged. Those four people also remain at large.</p>

<p>For years, North Korean workers have used fraudulent identities and sometimes passed interview screenings to infiltrate American companies big and small. A previous CNN investigation found that the founder of a California-based cryptocurrency startup had unwittingly paid tens of thousands of dollars to a North Korean engineer. The entrepreneur was unaware of the situation until the FBI notified him, he said.</p>

<p>The schemes have touched other parts of American culture.</p>

<p>North Korean illustrators and graphic designers appear to have helped produce work for US animation studios unbeknownst to those companies, independent researchers told CNN last year. The researchers discovered a trove of cartoon sketches on an open computer server on the North Korean portion of the internet.</p>

<p>For more CNN news and newsletters create an account at CNN.com</p>

Read original article


Source: AOL General News

Читать на сайте


Source: AsherMag

Full Article on Source: Astro Blog

#LALifestyle #USCelebrities

FBI arrests one man, searches laptops in 16 states in crackdown on North Korean tech-worker scheme

<p>- FBI arrests one man, searches laptops in 16 states in crackdown on North Korean tech-worker scheme</p> ...

Judges consider whether Trump can use wartime act against Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua

Main Image

<p>-

  • Judges consider whether Trump can use wartime act against Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua</p>

<p>NICHOLAS RICCARDI June 30, 2025 at 10:56 PM</p>

<p>President Donald Trump speaks with reporters as White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller listens before departing the White House on his way to attend the G7 Summit in Canada, Sunday, June 15, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)</p>

<p>Immigration and administration lawyers on Monday battled over whether President Donald Trump can use an 18th century wartime act against a Venezuelan gang in a case that is likely to ultimately be decided by the U.S. Supreme Court.</p>

<p>The attorneys sparred before a three-judge panel of the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans, the latest step in a tangled legal battle over Trump's March invocation of the Alien Enemies Act of 1798 against the Tren de Aragua gang.</p>

<p>The law has only previously been used during World Wars I and II and the War of 1812. ACLU attorney Lee Gelernt told the three-judge panel that Trump's use of it is inappropriate. "This has only been invoked three times in major, major wars, and now it's being invoked in connection with a gang," Gelernt said.</p>

<p>Deputy Assistant Attorney General Drew Ensign, arguing for the administration, said that courts cannot second-guess a president's determination that the U.S. faces a threat from abroad and requires extraordinary measures to protect itself. He noted that the only time the high court weighed in on the act was in a case that dates from after fighting in Europe ended in World War II, when the court said it could not second-guess then-President Harry Truman's assertion that suspected Nazis should still be held under the act because the war was still continuing.</p>

<p>"The president is due the utmost deference" in matters of foreign affairs and security, Ensign said.</p>

<p>Trump's invocation has already been twice before the nation's highest court on more technical issues. First, the court found that those accused of being TdA members deserved a "reasonable" amount of time to challenge that designation in court, but that their deportations could only be challenged in the locations they were held. That eliminated a national bar against deportations under the act issued by a federal judge in Washington, who later found the administration possibly committed contempt when it disregarded his orders and continued to fly some held under the AEA to a prison in El Salvador.</p>

<p>Then, after the ACLU and its allies began filing suits all around the country and winning rulings barring deportations under the measure, the high court stepped in a second time. In April it issued an unusual post-midnight ruling stopping the administration from deporting people from a slice of north Texas where there was yet no active ruling against removal.</p>

<p>As multiple lower court judges found the AEA couldn't be used against a gang, the high court directed the 5th Circuit to consider the issue and how much time those held should have to challenge their designation.</p>

<p>The government, which initially provided minimal notice, now says the standard should be seven days to file an appeal. The ACLU argued for 30 days, the amount of time given to suspected Nazis held during World War II.</p>

<p>The panel that heard Monday's arguments was comprised of one judge appointed by Trump, one by former President George W. Bush and one by Biden. Whatever it rules can be appealed to either the entire 5th circuit — one of the most conservative federal appeals courts in the country — or directly to the high court.</p>

<p>Trump has argued that TdA is acting at the behest of Venezuela's government. The Act allows its use to combat either an "invasion" or a "predatory incursion."</p>

<p>But the ACLU argues that the connection between the gang and the Venezuelan government is tangential at best, and that an assessment by 17 different intelligence agencies found little coordination between TdA and the government in Caracas. Gelernt contended that, by the standards laid out by the administration, the AEA could have been used against the mafia or any other criminal organization with tangential ties to other countries that has operated in the United States over the past 200 years.</p>

Read original article


Source: AOL General News

Читать на сайте


Source: AsherMag

Full Article on Source: Astro Blog

#LALifestyle #USCelebrities

Judges consider whether Trump can use wartime act against Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua

<p>- Judges consider whether Trump can use wartime act against Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua</p> <p...

NHL trade tracker: Red Wings send Vladimir Tarasenko to Wild, plus other moves

Main Image

<p>-

  • NHL trade tracker: Red Wings send Vladimir Tarasenko to Wild, plus other moves</p>

<p>Mike Brehm, USA TODAY June 30, 2025 at 10:25 PM</p>

<p>NHL free agency is just around the corner on July 1.</p>

<p>But there are also trades to be made as NHL teams acquire or move players to improve their immediate future or get their salary cap situation under control.</p>

<p>The Detroit Red Wings made their second trade in several days, sending forward Vladimir Tarasenko to the Minnesota Wild on June 30. They earlier acquired goalie John Gibson from the Anaheim Ducks.</p>

<p>The Montreal Canadiens made a big trade on draft day when they acquired defenseman Noah Dobson from the New York Islanders for winger Emil Heineman and Montreal's first two first-round picks (16th and 17th overall).</p>

<p>Trades will pick up with free agency approaching. Tracking the latest NHL deals:</p>

<p>June 30: Red Wings trade Vladimir Tarasenko to Wild</p>

<p>Tarasenko has won two Stanley Cup titles, but he disappointed with 33 points in his lone season in Detroit, while averaging less than 15 minutes a game. He has another year on his contract at $4.75 million, so the Wild get secondary scoring at a reasonable price. Detroit gets future considerations in the deal.</p>

<p>June 30: Maple Leafs acquire Matias Maccelli from Mammoth</p>

<p>The Mammoth get a conditional 2027 third round pick in return. Maccelli, 24, gets a fresh start after dropping to 18 points in 55 games this past season. But he can provide secondary scoring for Toronto after totaling 106 points over the two seasons before that. If he gets 51 points this season and the Maple Leafs make the playoffs, the third rounder becomes a 2029 second-round pick.</p>

<p>June 30: Predators-Golden Knights trade</p>

<p>The Nashville Predators acquire defenseman Nicolas Hague and a conditional third-round pick from the Golden Knights in exchange for forward Colton Sissons and defenseman Jeremy Lauzon. Nashville will retain 50 percent of Sissons' salary. If Vegas wins two rounds in the 2026 playoffs, the Golden Knights will move a second-round pick instead.</p>

<p>June 28: Red Wings acquire John Gibson from Ducks</p>

<p>The Detroit Red Wings acquire goalie John Gibson from the Anaheim Ducks for goalie Petr Mrazek, a 2027 second- round pick and a 2026 fourth-round pick. Gibson had been mentioned in trade rumors for years and the Red Wings have needed better goaltending for years. Lukas Dostal has emerged as a No. 1 goalie in Anaheim and needs a new contract as a restricted free agent. Mrazek is a better fit financially at $4.25 million than Gibson at $6.4 million. Gibson, who will get more playing time in Detroit, had a solid season with a 2.77 goals-against average and .911 save percentage, a little better than how Cam Talbot and Alex Lyon performed.</p>

<p>June 28: Senators acquire Jordan Spence from Kings</p>

<p>Spence's ice time had dropped, particularly in the playoffs, so the trade gives him more opportunity. The defenseman is only 24. Los Angeles had drafted a defenseman, London's Henry Brzustewicz, in the first round. The Kings receive a 2025 third round pick and a 2026 sixth-rounder.</p>

<p>June 28: Sabres, Penguins swap defensemen</p>

<p>The Buffalo Sabres acquire defensemen Conor Timmins and Isaac Belliveau from the Pittsburgh Penguins for defenseman Connor Clifton and a 2025 second-round pick.. The Sabres are changing up their defense after earlier acquiring Michael Kesselring. Clifton is entering the final year of his contract. Timmins is four years younger.</p>

<p>Also: The Washington Capitals acquire defenseman Declan Chisholm and a 2025 sixth-round pick from the Minnesota Wild for defenseman Chase Priskie and a 2025 third-rounder.</p>

<p>June 27: Blue Jackets acquire Charlie Coyle, Miles Wood from Avalanche</p>

<p>The Avalanche get back 20-year-old forward Gavin Brindley, a third-round selection (77th overall) in the 2025 NHL Draft and a conditional 2027 second-rounder. This move helps the Blue Jackets' depth. Wood has a lot of speed and kills penalties. Coyle, acquired by the Avalanche at the trade deadline, had 25 goals two seasons ago. The Avalanche clear cap space.</p>

<p>June 27: Canadiens acquire Noah Dobson from Islanders</p>

<p>Dobson, a restricted free agent, signed an eight-year, $76 million extension as part of the deal, according to Friedman. Dobson, a skilled offensive defenseman, had 70 points two seasons ago and joins a Montreal blue line that features rookie of the year Lane Hutson. Islanders general manager Mathieu Darche gets two picks in the middle of the first round. Could he use the 16th and 17th picks as part of a package to move up in the draft? He didn't, drafting Victor Eklund and Kashawn Aitcheson. Heineman, whom the Islanders acquired from the Canadiens as part of the deal, is known for his speed and two-way ability.</p>

<p>June 26: Mammoth acquire JJ Peterka from Sabres</p>

<p>The Utah Mammoth will be aggressive this offseason as they head into their second season in Salt Lake City. Peterka is coming off a career-best 68 points and totaled 55 goals the past two seasons. The 23-year-old was a restricted free agent and signed a five-year deal with the Mammoth after the trade.</p>

<p>The Sabres, who need to adjust their roster to try to end a 14-season playoff drought, get back defenseman Michael Kesselring and forward Josh Doan. Kesselring, 25, had a career-best 29 points as he got more ice time because of injuries on the Utah blue line. Doan, 23, is the son of former Arizona Coyotes captain Shane Doan. He has another year left on his contract.</p>

<p>June 26: Panthers acquire Daniil Tarasov from the Blue Jackets</p>

<p>The Panthers give up a 2025 fifth-round pick for Tarasov, 26, a restricted free agent who became available with Jet Greaves emerging in Columbus. Current backup Vitek Vanecek is a pending unrestricted free agent. Tarasov has a career 3.44 goals-against average but those numbers should come down while playing behind a better Panthers defense. Sergei Bobrovsky will be 37 next season and has a year left on his contract. General Bill Zito potentially has found his future No. 1 goalie.</p>

<p>Also: The Seattle Kraken acquired two-way center Frederick Gaudreau from the Minnesota Wild for a 2025 fourth-round pick. ... In a free agency move, the Dallas Stars re-signed captain Jamie Benn for one year at $1 million, plus an additional $3 million in potential performance bonuses</p>

<p>June 25: Oilers trade Evander Kane to Canucks</p>

<p>This was a salary cap move, saving more than $5 million with the Oilers needing to re-sign defenseman Evan Bouchard. The Oilers get back a fourth-round pick. Kane, a Vancouver native, adds help on the wing with the Canucks expected to lose Brock Boeser to free agency.</p>

<p>June 23: Flyers acquire Trevor Zegras from Ducks</p>

<p>Zegras wanted to play center and the Ducks didn't have room for him there in their top six. The Flyers land a creative forward who has scored several lacrosse-style goals but also has dealt recently with injuries. The Ducks get back center Ryan Poehling, who wins faceoffs and kills penalties, two areas where Anaheim needed improvement. They also receive a 2025 second-round pick and a 2026 fourth-rounder.</p>

<p>Also: The Seattle Kraken acquired two-way center Frederick Gaudreau from the Minnesota Wild for a 2025 fourth-round pick.</p>

<p>June 25: Oilers trade Evander Kane to Canucks</p>

<p>This was a salary cap move, saving more than $5 million with the Oilers needing to re-sign defenseman Evan Bouchard. The Oilers get back a fourth-round pick. Kane, a Vancouver native, adds help on the wing with the Canucks expected to lose Brock Boeser to free agency.</p>

<p>June 23: Flyers acquire Trevor Zegras from Ducks</p>

<p>Zegras wanted to play center and the Ducks didn't have room for him there in their top six. The Flyers land a creative forward who has scored several lacrosse-style goals but also has dealt recently with injuries. The Ducks get back center Ryan Poehling, who wins faceoffs and kills penalties, two areas where Anaheim needed improvement. They also receive a 2025 second-round pick and a 2026 fourth-rounder.</p>

<p>This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: NHL trade tracker: Updates, analysis of big hockey deals</p>

Read original article


Source: AOL Sports

Читать на сайте


Source: AsherMag

Full Article on Source: Astro Blog

#LALifestyle #USCelebrities

NHL trade tracker: Red Wings send Vladimir Tarasenko to Wild, plus other moves

<p>- NHL trade tracker: Red Wings send Vladimir Tarasenko to Wild, plus other moves</p> <p>Mike Breh...

Years after learning soccer in their basement, brothers Brenden and Paxten Aaronson both play for US

Main Image

<p>-

  • Years after learning soccer in their basement, brothers Brenden and Paxten Aaronson both play for US</p>

<p>RONALD BLUMJune 30, 2025 at 8:57 PM</p>

<p>1 / 5Aaronson Brothers SoccerUnited States midfielder Brenden Aaronson, left, poses for a photo with his brother forward Paxten Aaronson before the start of an international friendly soccer game against Turkey, Saturday, June 7, 2025, in East Hartford, Conn. (AP Photo/Mary Schwalm)</p>

<p>Brenden and Paxten Aaronson play on better soccer fields these days than the New Jersey basement known as "The Dungeon" where they used to practice penalties and free kicks.</p>

<p>"We had to put in special lights so they wouldn't kick the light bulbs and break them," mom Janell Aaronson recalled. "We had to do some padding on some of the poles that are in the basement so they didn't get hurt. We made it as safe as we could."</p>

<p>On June 10, she was in the stands at GEODIS Park in Nashville, Tennessee, watching them become just the fourth pair of brothers to start the same match together for the U.S. national team, the first since George and Louis Nanchoff against the Soviet Union in 1979.</p>

<p>"I played with this guy since, I don't know, 5 — he was probably actually 2 at that time," Brenden said. "Maybe 7, I was, and he was probably 4."</p>

<p>Brenden, 24, already is a World Cup veteran, appearing as a substitute in all four U.S. matches at Qatar three years ago, Paxten, who turns 22 in August, hopes to make the World Cup roster for the first time when the U.S. co-hosts next year's tournament.</p>

<p>"Completely different players. Both in different ways can perform," U.S. coach Mauricio Pochettino said.</p>

<p>Both are on the roster for the CONCACAF Gold Cup, where the Americans play Guatemala on Wednesday night and hope to advance to a final against Mexico or Honduras on Sunday. Both are midfielders and wingers who made their way up through the Philadelphia Union academy system and moved to Europe after two seasons in Major League Soccer, Paxten at age 19 and Brenden at 20.</p>

<p>At the start of their national team camp together, they reflected on learning the sport in their backyard and the downstairs room given its nickname by their dad, Rusty.</p>

<p>"We always played in the basement, right before or after dinner," Paxten said. "We had a basement with kind of like a mini-pitch that we built off of carpet and goals that we taped on the wall and stuff like that. So we would always just play down there and then come up for dinner, then after dinner go down and play, We broke a lot of lights."</p>

<p>And learned competition.</p>

<p>"Toes have been stepped on," Paxten said.</p>

<p>Their dad, Rusty, played college soccer at Monmouth, ran a risk management firm and is sporting director of Real Futbol Academy in Medford, New Jersey. In addition to the brothers, 18-year-old sister Jaden will be a freshman on Villanova's soccer team this fall.</p>

<p>"I don't know how these guys do it without having a younger brother or someone to train with," Brenden said. "When you're in a shooting drill, sometimes you can take times off. But you know he's going to want to beat me and I'm going to want to be him, so you go that extra mile to keep even getting better at it."</p>

<p>Brenden scored in his MLS debut with Philadelphia in March 2019 and has played for Salzburg (2021-22), Leeds (2022-25) and Union Berlin (2023-24). He made his U.S. debut in 2020 and has nine goals in 51 international appearances.</p>

<p>Paxten debuted in MLS with the Union in May 2021 and has played for Eintracht Frankfurt (2023-24), Vitesse (2024) and Utrecht (2024-25). He made his first U.S. appearance in 2023 and scored against New Zealand at last year's Olympics.</p>

<p>Before the match against Switzerland, they hadn't played on the same team together since the youth academy. They faced each other briefly on Nov. 4, 2023, when Brenden entered in the 83rd minute for Eintracht Frankfurt and Paxten in the 85th for host Union Berlin.</p>

<p>"There's been some fights throughout the years," Brenden said, with Paxten sitting adjacent and laughing. "It's more in the one v. ones when I would get beat by him. Because you're the older, you feel like you have to win. But he's beat me a handful of times where I had a temper tantrum. I was kicking the ball against the wall. I literally — I can't take it sometimes."</p>

<p>But afterward, they resumed playing the FIFA video game.</p>

<p>Having the common "E" in the names of the siblings was mom's idea.</p>

<p>"We spelled Brenden E-N. I just liked the spelling of that vs. 'A-N. Just visually. It looked better to me,'" Janell said. "When we ended up having our other kids, I just made sure that they all ended in E-N.' I don't know why. I just did that."</p>

<p>After the Gold Cup and brief time off, Brenden will return to England to prepare for the Premier League season with newly promoted Leeds. Paxten will report to Eintracht Frankfurt unless he's loaned again.</p>

<p>Trying to watch all their matches is daunting for their parents, who also will be at Villanova for Jaden.</p>

<p>"Sometimes when the games are on, I don't like to get the updates because I do like to go back and watch," Rusty said. "Sometimes I've looked at my phone, something good has happened and then the cat's out of the bag and there's no need to watch the game."</p>

<p>Streamed replays are not for mom.</p>

<p>"I don't even know how to work any of that," she said.</p>

<p>___</p>

<p>AP soccer: https://ift.tt/sZBQte2>

Read original article


Source: AOL Sports

Читать на сайте


Source: AsherMag

Full Article on Source: Astro Blog

#LALifestyle #USCelebrities

Years after learning soccer in their basement, brothers Brenden and Paxten Aaronson both play for US

<p>- Years after learning soccer in their basement, brothers Brenden and Paxten Aaronson both play for US</p> ...

 

ANIO AMAG © 2015 | Distributed By My Blogger Themes | Designed By Templateism.com