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Trump participates in White House roundtable

admin - Latest News - October 8, 2025
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Watch live coverage as President Trump convenes a roundtable at the White House.



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Oct. 8, 2025, 3:42 PM EDT / Updated Oct. 8, 2025, 3:50 PM EDTBy Steve KopackThe Internal Revenue Service said it is placing more than 34,000 employees, or about 46% of its workforce, on furlough starting Wednesday as the government shutdown stretches into its second week.The agency will also temporarily pause many taxpayer services, such as answering phone calls. The independent Taxpayer Advocate Service will also cease operations due to the lapse in funding.The agency added that most administrative functions will also come to a halt, as will many planning activities.”Today, due to the government shutdown the American people lost access to many vital services provided by the IRS when the agency furloughed thousands of employees,” national Treasury employees union president Doreen Greenwald said.Americans can now expect longer wait times, delays in changes to the tax code and backlogs, she said. “Taxpayers around the country will now have a much harder time getting the assistance they need, just as they get ready to file their extension returns due next week.”Filing deadlines still apply for taxpayers during a government shutdown. Oct. 15 is the deadline for those who secured an extension on their 2024 taxes.Greenwald said that many employees faced a “lack of planning” about their job status until supervisors and managers informed employees of the furloughs Wednesday.Furloughs are a temporary unpaid leave. Workers are expected to return to their roles once government funding is replenished by Congress. Historically, workers who remain on the job can be unpaid but receive back pay once the shutdown is resolved.President Donald Trump and his administration have threatened permanent job cuts and back pay denials in addition to furloughs. On Tuesday, a draft White House memo came to light in which the administration argued that federal workers may not be entitled to back pay. “This is not the way our government should treat its dedicated nonpartisan public servants,” she added.Few operations will continue, although nearly 40,000 employees will remain paid and on the job preparing for the coming tax season, according to a shutdown plan released Wednesday.IRS functions that are required to keep the Social Security Administration running will also continue.The IRS declined to comment beyond the shutdown plan.Steve KopackSteve Kopack is a senior reporter at NBC News covering business and the economy.
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Nov. 13, 2025, 4:50 PM ESTBy Jonathan Dienst, Tom Winter and Dareh GregorianFederal investigators are searching for a “disgruntled” man they say showed up at acting New Jersey U.S. Attorney Alina Habba’s office building with a baseball bat, two sources familiar with the matter said.The unidentified man was carrying a bat when arrived outside the Peter Rodino Federal Building in Newark on Wednesday night, the two sources said. The man was not allowed entry.He returned later without the bat and was allowed in after going through a security screening, the sources said.A senior official familiar with the incident said an early review shows the man went upstairs to the U.S. attorney’s office and told the receptionist, who was behind secure glass, that he was there to speak to Habba.He was told he did not have an appointment and waited in the foyer area for a short time before he stormed out into the public hallway and tore down two pictures that were hanging, the official said.He then fled the building.The official said the man never got into the actual prosecutors’ offices, which are behind a locked buzzer door. Law enforcement is reviewing security camera footage to try to identify him, the official said.In a post on X, Habba said Thursday, “I will not be intimidated by radical lunatics for doing my job.”“Thankfully, Alina is ok,” Attorney General Pam Bondi wrote in a pair of posts on X.“We will find this person, and the individual will be brought to justice,” the post said, adding, “Any violence or threats of violence against any federal officer will not be tolerated. Period.”Trump nominated Habba, formerly his personal lawyer, in March to serve as acting U.S. attorney in New Jersey, a position with a 120-day limit. The president nominated her in July to serve in the role permanently after her term expired but a federal judge ruled in August that the appointment was unlawful. The judge paused his decision while the appeals process plays out, so she has remained in the role.Jonathan DienstJonathan Dienst is chief justice contributor for NBC News and chief investigative reporter for WNBC-TV in New York.Tom WinterTom Winter is NBC’s National Law Enforcement and Intelligence Correspondent. Dareh GregorianDareh Gregorian is a politics reporter for NBC News.
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