Trump’s new $1,776 ‘Warrior Dividend’ to troops is coming from Pentagon funding, not tariffs

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By JOSH BOAK and MICHELLE L. PRICE, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — The “Warrior Dividend” that President Donald Trump announced during his televised address to the nation Wednesday is not a Christmas bonus made possible by tariff revenues, as the president suggested.

Instead, the $1,776 payments to troops are coming from a congressionally-approved housing supplement — money they were already set to receive — that was a part of tax cut extensions and expansions bill signed into law in July. Trump’s administration identified the source of the “dividend” payments Thursday.

In his remarks, Trump alluded to his “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” playing a role, but suggested that tariffs were largely responsible for the payments already on the way to 1.45 million members of the military.

“We made a lot more money than anybody thought because of tariffs and the bill helped us along. Nobody deserves it more than our military,” he said in announcing what he described as a “dividend.”

Trump has teased the idea of using his sweeping tariffs on imports to give Americans dividends ever since he imposed them in April. But these new payments are being disbursed by the Pentagon from a $2.9 billion military housing supplement that was part of Trump’s “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” to augment existing housing allowances, according to a senior administration official who requested anonymity to describe the payments.

The amount of the payments is a nod to next year’s 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence in 1776. In total, the measure is expected to cost $2.6 billion.

Trump’s announcement comes as he’s faced pressure to show he’s working to address rising costs for Americans, with prices remaining stubbornly high as the president has imposed double-digit tariffs on imports from almost every country. Trump has promised to lower prices, but he has struggled to do so. Inflation hit a four-decade high in June 2022 during Joe Biden’s presidency and then began to fall. But inflation has stayed elevated under Trump in part because of his tariffs.

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It’s not the first time Trump has brandished ‘dividends’

Sending money to voters is a timeworn tool for politicians and one that Trump has repeatedly tried to use, including this year.

Trump has for months suggested every American could receive a $2,000 dividend from the import taxes — an effort that seemed designed to try to shore up support for tariffs, which the president has said protect American industries and will lure manufacturing back from overseas.

But that particular pledge appeared to exceed the revenues being generated by his tariffs, according to a November analysis by the right-leaning Tax Foundation. The analysis estimated that the $2,000 payments being promised to taxpayers could add up to between $279.8 billion and $606.8 billion, depending on how they were structured.

The analysis estimated that Trump’s import taxes would produce $158.4 billion in total revenue during 2025 and another $207.5 billion in 2026. That’s not enough money to provide the payments as well as reduce the budget deficit, which Trump has also claimed his tariffs are doing.

Earlier this year, as his Department of Government Efficiency was slashing the U.S. government and its workforce, Trump had briefly proposed sending a DOGE “dividend” back to U.S. citizens.

Neither the tariff dividend or DOGE dividend has come to fruition, and members of Trump’s own party as well as officials in his administration have expressed some skepticism about the idea. There is also the risk that the payments being promised by Trump could push up inflation, as they would likely spur greater consumer spending. Republican lawmakers argued in 2021 that the pandemic relief package from then-President Biden — which included direct payments — helped trigger the run-up in inflation.

Associated Press writers Konstantin Toropin and Lisa Mascaro contributed to this report.

In recorded message, Rob Reiner urges resiliency for Holocaust survivors at Hanukkah event

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By MELANIE LIDMAN, Associated Press

JERUSALEM (AP) — In a video message recorded weeks before he was killed, Hollywood icon Rob Reiner urged Holocaust survivors participating in a Hanukkah ceremony on Thursday to “be resilient” during difficult times.

Reiner and his wife, Michele, were found stabbed to death Sunday at their home in Los Angeles, law enforcement officials said. Their 32-year-old son, Nick Reiner, has been charged with two counts of first-degree murder and is being held without bail.

Reiner, who was Jewish, recorded the message for the Hanukkah event in the beginning of October. He noted that his wife’s extended family was killed at Auschwitz during the Holocaust, giving the ceremony special meaning for him.

“We’re living in a time where what’s happening in our country is scary and reminiscent of what we’ve seen happen in the past, and we just hope that we can all survive this and that we can hold on to our democracy,” Reiner, who was an outspoken advocate for liberal causes, said in his message.

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The video was broadcast as part of a virtual candle lighting ceremony honoring Holocaust survivors internationally on the fifth night of Hanukkah. The event is an initiative of the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany, an organization that advocates for Holocaust survivors.

Around 100 Holocaust survivors gathered at the Western Wall in Jerusalem on Thursday afternoon for a candle-lighting ceremony.

In Hebrew, Hanukkah means “dedication,” and the holiday marks the rededication of the Temple in Jerusalem in the second century B.C., after a small group of Jewish fighters liberated it from occupying foreign forces.

Jews celebrate the eight-day holiday, which this year began on Sunday, by lighting a nightly candle in honor of the tiny supply of ritually pure oil that they found in the Temple that lasted for eight nights, instead of just one.

Many Jewish communities are reeling from the attack on a Hanukkah event in Sydney, Australia, where 15 people were killed.

“Even in these difficult days, when antisemitism is rising and Jewish communities around the world are under attack — this very week on the first night of Hanukkah in Sydney, Australia — we draw strength and inspiration from you, the survivors, from your personal and collective resilience,” Greg Schneider, the executive vice president of the Claims Conference, told the group of survivors in Jerusalem.

In addition to Reiner, Barbra Streisand, Billy Crystal, Jason Alexander, Julianna Margulies, Debra Messing, Adam Arkin and Jamie Lee Curtis were among those who made prerecorded videos for the event. Journalists Wolf Blitzer and Dana Bash also recorded messages.

“If ever we needed to be resilient, it’s now,” Reiner said in his message. “Let’s be resilient.”

Reiner was a vocal critic of President Donald Trump, calling him in a 2017 interview with Variety “mentally unfit” to be president and “the single-most unqualified human being to ever assume the presidency of the United States.” In a shocking post after Reiner’s death, Trump suggested that Rob Reiner’s outspoken opposition was partially responsible for his murder.

Movie review: ‘The Housemaid’ a trashy treat for holiday season

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Director Paul Feig has proved himself to be the preeminent purveyor of the finest high-camp trash one can find at the movie theater these days — and that’s a compliment. If Feig is serving up the trash, then call me a raccoon, because I’m ready to dive in.

Feig’s special sauce when it comes to these soapy, female-driven thrillers like “A Simple Favor,” and now “The Housemaid,” adapted by Rebecca Sonnenshine from a “BookTok” sensation by Freida McFadden, is clearly his comedy background. Feig understands exactly the tone and tropes to deploy here, and you can feel his knowing winks and nudges to the audience with every loaded glance, stray graze or wandering camera movement. It’s as if he’s saying, to us, and all the tipsy ladies in the audience, “check this out — LOL right?” LOL indeed, Mr. Feig, LOL.

“The Housemaid” is an erotic crime thriller that plays off silly sexual stereotypes and fantasies like the naughty maid and then flips them on their head. In the opening scene, the drably dressed, bespectacled Millie (Sydney Sweeney) interviews for a live-in maid position with the warm and friendly wife and mother Nina Winchester (Amanda Seyfried) in her gorgeously appointed Long Island mansion designed by her wealthy husband, Andrew (Brandon Sklenar).

But all is not what it seems on the surface, for either applicant or employer. Both are hiding dark secrets, but Nina hires Millie nevertheless, and Millie, without any other options, gratefully accepts.

When Millie moves into the maid’s quarters in the attic, she discovers that the Winchester home isn’t as picture-perfect as it seemed. Little things are off: she can’t open her window, the groundskeeper Enzo (Michele Morrone) glowers at her constantly, items go missing, and CeCe (Indiana Elle), Nina’s daughter, is exceedingly cold.

Then there are the big things that are off, like Nina’s wild mood swings, requests that Nina then claims she never made, and the vicious gossip about her mental health among the other Stepford wives. Millie realizes she’s in over her head with Mrs. Winchester, but her saving grace is the warm and handsome Mr. Winchester. Is that where this is going? Of course it is, we all happily groan together.

“The Housemaid” is like “Gaslight” meets “Jane Eyre,” with a dash of “Rebecca,” with all the various roles lightly scrambled, and a much sexier, nastier streak than any of those mannered mindbenders. Feig stylishly waltzes us through this steamy, twisty mystery with ease, but not necessarily sophistication — this is the kind of frothy entertainment that you can still enjoyably comprehend after a glass or two, which in fact might enhance the experience.

But it doesn’t work without an actor of Seyfried’s caliber, who can summon unpredictable mayhem from her fingertips, or without Sweeney, who works best in a register somewhere between ditzy blonde and tough little scrapper. Both actors exude an element of the unhinged that simmers right below the doe-eyed blond surface, and we know we need to be a little (or a lot) afraid of these women. The film also doesn’t work without a heartthrob like Sklenar, as we need to fall in lust with his gorgeous exterior and intoxicatingly cuddly aura for this all to make sense.

There’s not much more to divulge without giving it all away, but prepare to titter, gasp, scream and cheer for this juicy slice of indulgent women’s entertainment. Go on, you deserve a little treat this holiday season.

‘The Housemaid’

3 stars (out of 4)

MPA rating: R (for strong/bloody violent content, sexual assault, sexual content, nudity and language)

Running time: 2:11

How to watch: In theaters on Friday, Dec. 19

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‘Industrial-scale’ fraud may have cost MN billions, feds say while announcing new charges

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Federal prosecutors on Thursday filed a new round of fraud charges against providers of Medicaid-funded programs administered by the state of Minnesota — and gave yet another hint at the scale of theft taking place under the watch of state agencies.

At a news conference announcing charges against six individuals who allegedly defrauded the state of more than $10 million in various schemes, Assistant U.S. Attorney Joe Thompson said he believed “a significant amount” of the $18 billion paid out by 14 “high–risk” Medicaid-funded programs since 2018 was lost to fraud — possibly half or more.

“Fraud is not small. It isn’t isolated. The magnitude cannot be overstated,” he said. “What we see in Minnesota is not a handful of bad actors committing crimes; it’s staggering, industrial-scale fraud.”

New charges filed Thursday included cases against one person accused of defrauding state autism services and five more individuals tied to the Housing Stabilization Services program, which helped people with disabilities and addiction issues at risk of homelessness pay for housing. Seven were charged in September.

‘Fraud tourism’

Thompson described one of the new housing stabilization cases as an instance of “fraud tourism,” where two defendants from Philadelphia who had no connections to Minnesota were drawn to the program after hearing it was “easy money.”

Anthony Waddell Jefferson, 37, and Lester Brown,53, established a business in Minnesota to collect Medicaid payments from the Department of Human Services, though neither lived in the state, according to federal prosecutors. Both are accused of collecting $3.5 million for services never provided and are charged with wire fraud.

The Minnesota U.S. Attorney’s office also announced new wire fraud charges against Hassan Ahmed Hussein, 28, and Ahmed Abdirashid Mohamed, 27. The pair allegedly claimed $750,000 for services through their company, Pristine Health, LLC, but only used a fraction for services, prosecutors allege.

Hussein and Mohamed are accused of using the money to finance their travels to London, Sydney, Dubai, Istanbul and several locations in Saudi Arabia.

Kaamil Omar Sallah, 26, was charged with wire fraud for allegedly making more than $1.4 million in fraudulent claims through his company SafeLodgings, $1.3 million of which he received between March 2023 and August 2025.

Sallah used some of the money to obtain $150,000 in cryptocurrency. Sallah fled the country in November after being served a subpoena for his company records by a grand jury, Thompson said.

Abdinajib Hassan Yussuf, age 27, is accused of stealing through the Early Intensive Developmental and Behavioral Intervention benefit, a program meant to support people under 21 with autism.

Yussuf, of St. Cloud, is accused of using his company, Star Autism Center, to submit millions in inflated and fraudulent claims for services never provided.

Cash kickback payments

Federal prosecutors allege that Yussuf and partners would recruit children and seek out autism diagnoses and approach parents with offers of cash kickback payments for enrolling their children in the program.

In all, Star Autism claimed more than $6 million. Prosecutors allege Yussuf used $100,000 to purchase a Freightliner semi-truck and sent $200,000 to Kenya.

The first autism services defendant, Asha Farhan Hassan, pleaded guilty to one count of wire fraud on Thursday for her role in a $14 million fraud scheme where she received $465,000.

Prosecutors also announced an investigation into a new fraud scheme. On Thursday morning, authorities served a search warrant on Ultimate Home Health Services, a Bloomington-based provider of “Integrated Community Services.”

The Medicaid-funded program helps people with disabilities live in a home rather than an assisted living facility, and it’s one of the 14 the state has identified as “high-risk.”

‘Explosive growth’

Ultimate Home Health Services claimed more than $1.1 million in reimbursements between June 2024 and August 2025 and claimed services for 13 clients, including multiple clients who did not get services, according to the warrant.

One of the clients was a person with “severe mental illness” who was found dead in the apartment, according to the warrant. Ultimate Home Health claimed it was providing 12 hours of service a day, though the client’s mother, who visited him once a week, said that was not true, the warrant said.

Integrated Community Services has seen “explosive growth” since it started in 2021, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office. When the program began in 2021, it paid out $4.6 million. By 2024, it paid out $170 million in just one year. The state has paid out more than $400 million in Medicaid reimbursements since the program started, according to prosecutors.

The pattern resembles other Medicaid-funded state programs that have seen significant fraud.

For instance, Housing Stabilization Services was projected to cost $2.6 million a year when it started. By 2024, it was paying out more than $105 million. A dozen now face federal charges in connection with fraud in that program, and more charges are likely to come.

Thompson said he believed the scale and type of fraud occurring in Minnesota was unique, and that it had been “allowed to go on far too long,” and that the state had not done a good job of overseeing Medicaid programs.

“There’s lots of levels of responsibility. There’s criminal culpability, obviously and then there’s other accountability,” he said. “I think all of us, as a state, have to grapple with that and that’s not just prosecutors and law enforcement agents but regulators and politicians and news media, community leaders … I think that process, that conversation is starting to happen.”

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