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GOP leaders forced to abandon signature veterans benefits bill amid intra-party dispute

(CNN) — Speaker Mike Johnson suffered another humiliating political defeat at the hands of his own party on Thursday when he was forced to abandon plans to pass a veterans benefits bill designed to be one of the GOP’s big legislative wins before the midterms.

Just minutes before the bill was slated to come to the floor, Johnson and his team were forced to pull it from the schedule as more than a half-dozen holdouts refused to back the measure.

The bill has been in trouble for weeks. It’s been a major source of tension in the military community, with powerful groups like the Veterans of Foreign Wars and Disabled American Veterans opposed to the measure because it reduces certain disability coverage — while others, like there American Legion, have backed it.

But Johnson and his deputies decided to go ahead with the vote. On Thursday, those concerns persisted and Johnson attempted to salvage it at the eleventh hour, holding a meeting just off the floor with a group of GOP moderates who had concerns about the bill but they could not get the votes needed.

The defeat for Johnson is the latest in a string of complications for leadership. Only days earlier, Johnson had struck a truce with GOP hardliners to reopen the floor after they’d effectively seized control and prevented the speaker from moving key bills for two weeks. Now, they are leaving Washington on Thursday without a clear path forward on the veteran benefits bill.

Those GOP centrists, among others, have opposed one piece of the sprawling measure — the plan to pay for expanded benefits by limiting payouts for future recipients’ disability claims. Critics say it would effectively eliminate compensation for tinnitus and sleep apnea from the government’s list of standalone disabilities to help pay for the expansion in other benefits.

And inside the room, the conversation grew so tense that one member, Rep. Zach Nunn, told his colleague, Rep. Anna Paulina Luna, to stop talking mid-conversation, according to two sources in the room. Luna — who has drawn the ire of the GOP for holding up the floor in recent weeks over an unrelated election bill — had been explaining why she wasn’t backing down from calling for the bill to be sent back to the committee level.

Luna ended up leaving the meeting, the sources said.

“As a combat vet, I’ve worked with veterans to deliver. APL walked in late, threw a temper tantrum, and then left. She’s interested in clicks, we’re working for disabled vets, military spouses, and suicide prevention — that’s what matters,” Nunn said in a statement to CNN.

Luna later explained that she would not vote for the veterans bill because it took away certain medical benefits for service members.

“I’m not going to vote for it because I think that it’s bad to cut sleep apnea and also tinnitus and then bundle it with other things. I don’t think that it makes sense,” Luna said.

Luna posted to X Thursday afternoon, “As a veteran, and more importantly as the representative of a veteran-heavy district, I will never vote to cut veterans’ benefits, nor will I vote to prevent current service members from filing claims in the future. Today, I found myself at the center of an unhinged meltdown and was told to ‘stop talking’ simply for pointing out how wrong it is to cut veterans’ benefits.”

Another one of the GOP defectors, Rep. Jeff Van Drew, was clear he would not change his mind: “I’m not changing my vote.”

“I love the bill 90% of it, but I don’t like dripping away benefits for veterans to help other veterans. You don’t separate people out that way and you also make sure veterans groups should be behind us,” Van Drew said.

The collapse of the veterans bill is a bad omen for Johnson in one of his final weeks before the House’s lengthy August recess, where he and his team are trying to muscle through a massive $95 billion emergency funding bill, most of which would go to the Pentagon.

Senate Majority Leader John Thune warned Thursday that the House GOP effort to pass a budget bill for defense, agriculture and state grants to promote voter ID requirements carries strategic risks.

The legislation would move through a complex process known as budget reconciliation that would allow the bill to pass in the Senate without Democratic votes. But Thune cautioned the unique rules governing passage of the bill in the Senate might subject Republicans to a slew of politically sensitive votes close to the midterm elections and allow Democrats to petition the Senate parliamentarian to strike key GOP priorities from the bill.

“It’s a risky proposition,” Thune told reporters. “Is the juice worth the squeeze?”

The-CNN-Wire
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Iceberg lettuce sold at Taco Bell linked to cyclospora outbreak

(CNN) — Shredded iceberg lettuce supplied by Taylor Farms and sold at some Taco Bell restaurants has been linked to a multistate outbreak of cyclosporiasis, a source familiar with the investigation said Thursday.Cases of the intestinal illness caused by a microscopic parasite are surging across the US, with nearly 7,000 cases confirmed or under investigation since May 1, according to data published Tuesday by the CDC. Confirmed cases alone are more than six times higher than they were at this time last year, and there have been at least 141 hospitalizations.The outbreak linked to the lettuce, however, is considered to be a regional one, centered in the Midwest.The CDC has identified at least 400 cases associated with the outbreak across four states – Michigan, Ohio, West Virginia and Kentucky – and the source told CNN that those states are where the affected Taco Bell locations are. However, they noted that the produce may have also gone to other places.The Michigan state health department has reported more than 4,300 cases of cyclospora during the outbreak investigation. Michigan said it has interviewed more than 1,000 people as part of its investigation and had previously noted that lettuce or salad greens may be a potential source for the outbreak.The state health department said that it “cannot say with certainty that every illness is linked to the same source of exposure” but that the concentrated, sharp increase in cases “strongly suggests that the vast majority of these illnesses are associated with the same outbreak.” This would make it the largest cyclospora outbreak in the US on record.Neither Taco Bell nor Taylor Farms has responded to CNN’s request for comment Thursday.Cyclosporiasis is not usually spread directly from person to person. Instead, people can become infected by consuming contaminated food or water. Previous outbreaks have been linked to fresh produce, the CDC says.People with cyclosporiasis may have symptoms that include watery diarrhea, cramping and bloating for weeks.Federal health officials said there are multiple investigations underway, some tied to the large outbreak in the Midwest, some involving single states and some involving cases not yet tied to any cluster.Taylor Farms supplies grocery stores and restaurants across the country, although it’s unclear exactly how many of its products and which locations may be affected.Taco Bell said Tuesday that it was removing some ingredients from its menu at some restaurant locations as a precaution.“While authorities continue their broader review, Taco Bell has voluntarily and temporarily removed limited ingredients at select restaurants as a precautionary measure,” Taco Bell Corp. said in a statement. “We will continue to closely monitor the situation and follow the guidance of public health authorities.”Taylor Farms produce has also been linked with previous illness outbreaks, including E. coli cases tied to slivered onions in 2024 and cyclospora cases linked with lettuce in 2013.The-CNN-Wire™ & © 2026 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.
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