Sunday, May 25, 2025

Ron Johnson Predicts GOP Senators Will Put Up Roadblock To 'Stop The Process' On Trump's 'Big, Beautiful Bill'New Foto - Ron Johnson Predicts GOP Senators Will Put Up Roadblock To 'Stop The Process' On Trump's 'Big, Beautiful Bill'

Republican Wisconsin Sen. Ron Johnson said Sunday on CNN that he believes there will be enough GOP members to halt President Donald Trump's "big, beautiful bill" until their concerns are addressed. Despite Trump pushing Republicans to pass his budget reconciliation package, some GOP lawmakers have remained unconvinced. While on "State of the Union," host Jake Tapper asked the lawmaker if he could give a number on how many GOP members are willing to push back against the bill. "So, we're out of time, but I'm just wondering if you could just give me a number, how many other Republican senators do you think share your concerns and are willing to work to make major changes to this bill?" Tapper asked. "I think we have enough to stop the process until the president gets serious about spending reduction and reducing the deficit," Johnson responded. Trump's "big, beautiful bill" narrowlypassedthe House on Thursday by just one vote, 215-214-1. Republican Reps. Thomas Massie of Kentucky and Warren Davidson of Ohio joined Democrats invoting"no," with House Freedom Caucus Chairman Andy Harris voting "present."(RELATED: What Changed Thursday Night? Key Revisions To The 'Big Beautiful Bill' Explained) WATCH: Prior to noting how GOP senators would have enough support to block the bill, Tapper had asked Johnson "how determined" he is going to be to advocate for GOP members to block the bill unless there are "major changes." "This is our moment. We have witnessed an unprecedented level of increased spending, 58% since 2019, other than World War II. This is our only chance to reset that to a reasonable pre-pandemic level of spending," Johnson said. "Again, I think you can do it, and the spending that we would eliminate, people wouldn't even notice." "But you have to do the work, which takes time, that's part of the problem here is we've rushed this process, we haven't taken the time, we've done it the same old way," Johnson added. "Exempt most programs, take a look at a couple, tweak them a little bit, try and rely on a CBO score, and then have that score completely out of context with anything that really we ought to be talking about, like the $22 trillion of additional deficit over the next ten years." Prior to the bill being passed by the House, Johnsonwrotean op-ed for The Wall Street Journal on May 12, calling out its "unsustainable federal spending" and asking for Trump and Congress to reconsider its push. "By immediately passing a bill based on the Senate's original budget resolution, we can fund border security and defense priorities and bank $850 billion in real spending reductions. The next step would be to pass a bill that extends current tax law to prevent the automatic 2026 tax increase, and avoids default by including a smaller increase in the debt ceiling that maintains the pressure and leverage to achieve future spending reductions," Johnson wrote. Senate Majority Leader John ThunesaidThursday he believes there's a "workable path" to secure 51 votes by July 4, but he cannot afford to lose more than three GOP senators. In addition to Johnson, Senators Josh Hawley of Missouri, John Curtis of Utah, Rand Paul of Kentucky and Kevin Cramer of North Dakota are among those raising concerns over various issues in the bill. All content created by the Daily Caller News Foundation, an independent and nonpartisan newswire service, is available without charge to any legitimate news publisher that can provide a large audience. All republished articles must include our logo, our reporter's byline and their DCNF affiliation. For any questions about our guidelines or partnering with us, please contactlicensing@dailycallernewsfoundation.org.

Ron Johnson Predicts GOP Senators Will Put Up Roadblock To ‘Stop The Process’ On Trump’s ‘Big, Beautiful Bill’

Ron Johnson Predicts GOP Senators Will Put Up Roadblock To 'Stop The Process' On Trump's 'Big, Beautiful Bill' Republica...
Meet The Alleged Pro-Hamas Campus Radicals Scooped Up By Trump AdminNew Foto - Meet The Alleged Pro-Hamas Campus Radicals Scooped Up By Trump Admin

Following through on a campaign pledge to crack down on the massive anti-Israel student protests that swept universities across the United States in 2024, President Donald Trump has detained an increasing number of foreign student protesters accused of harassing Jewish students and promoting an extremist agenda. However, these arrests and other crackdowns on alleged criminal foreign students have been met with fierce resistance in the courtroom. A federal judge in California Thursdayblockedthe Trump administration from terminating the legal statuses of international students at universities across the country, dealing a blow to the crackdown on students "identified in a criminal records check and/or has had their visa revoked," according to court documents. As for students involved in anti-Israel activism, below are several of the most high-profile individuals detained by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) for alleged pro-Hamas and anti-Semitic activity. Mahmoud Khalil An Algerian citizen who entered the U.S. in 2022 on a student visa to attend Columbia University, Mahmoud Khalil quicklybecame the faceof the student protests that rocked the school's campus in 2024. The "Gaza solidarity encampment," a collection of tents unlawfully occupying campus grounds, demanded Columbia officials divest from Israel, and many protesters were accused of harassing Jewish students. The protests became so aggressive, campus officials in May 2024 canceled their university-wide graduation ceremony. Khalil appeared at many protests events and served as a leader of Columbia University Apartheid Divest, a group critics accuse of being "virulently anti-Israel" and "openly pro Hamas." Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agentsarrestedKhalil on March 8 and eventually transferred him to a detention center in Jena, Louisiana, where he has remained as the administration fights to deport him out of the country. Democrats and immigration advocates have vehemently contested his arrest and attempted removal. While a judge earlier in April ruled Khalil heis amenableto deportation, he is counting to challenge his removal in court. Moshen Mahdawi Columbia University student Moshen Mahdawiwas arrestedby ICE agents in Vermont in April. Born and raised in the West Bank, Mahdawi relocated to the U.S. in 2014 and eventually obtained permanent status, according to his attorneys. A friend of Khalil's, Mahdawi also became a significant leader in anti-Israel student protests that swept Columbia University in 2024. While his lawyers frame him in court documents as a peaceful Buddhist who abhors violence, groups that track pro-Hamas actors paint a far different picture of Mahdawi. The Canary Mission, which collects dossiers on alleged anti-Semitic activists, has amassedan extensive liston him. The group highlighted an interview Mahdawi gave a speech in October 2023 in which he appeared to justify the Oct. 7, 2023, massacre by Hamas terrorists, arguing that "Hamas is the product of the Israeli occupation." In documents submitted to court, prosecutors pointed to an incident in 2015 in which Mahdawi visited a Vermont gun store and allegedly told the owner that he "had considerable firearm experience and used to build modified 9mm submachine guns to kill Jews while he was in Palestine." The gun store owner told law enforcement that Mahdawi allegedly had a similar conversation with an additional gun enthusiast. An Obama-appointed judgein Aprilordered Mahdawi be freed from ICE custody, deeming him not to be a flight risk and his release to be in the public interest. NEW YORK, NEW YORK – APRIL 15: Pro-Palestinian activists rally for Mohsen Mahdawi and protest against deportations outside of ICE Headquarters on April 15, 2025 in New York City. (Photo by Adam Gray/Getty Images) Badar Khan Suri Georgetown University Student and researcher Badar Khan Suriwas arrestedby immigration authorities in March in Arlington, Virginia, not far from Washington, D.C. where his school is located. Originally from India, Khan entered the U.S. on a student visa and lived in the area with his Palestinian wife. DHS officials accuse Khan of spreading Hamas propaganda and having connections to the terrorist group. "Suri was a foreign exchange student at Georgetown University actively spreading Hamas propaganda and promoting antisemitism on social media," a DHS spokesperson stated to the Daily Caller News Foundation at the time. "Suri has close connections to a known or suspected terrorist, who is a senior advisor to Hamas." "The Secretary of State issued a determination on March 15, 2025 that Suri's activities and presence in the United States rendered him deportable," the spokesperson went on. Suri's petition for release says his wife, Mapheze Saleh, is accused of ties to Hamas and formerly worked for Al Jazeera, a news company largely funded by the Qatari government. A 2018 articlepublishedby the Hindustan Times identified Saleh's father, Ahmed Yousef, as a former "senior political advisor to the Hamas leadership." Suriwas releasedfrom federal detention earlier in May, but he still faces deportation proceedings in a Texas immigration court. He is currently petitioning the Trump administration for wrongful arrest and detention. Alireza Doroudi A University of Alabama doctoral student from Iran, Alireza Doroudi was apprehended by ICE agents in March, the Crimson White, the school's newspaperreportedat the time. Like the other students engaged in anti-Israel activism, DHS officials said Doroudi posed security risks and revoked his student visa. "ICE [Homeland Security Investigations] made this arrest in accordance with the State Department's revocation of Doroudi's student visa," a DHS spokesperson said,according toAL.com. "This individual posed significant national security concerns." A judge denied Doroudi bond on Thursday, finding that he failed to prove that he is not a threat to national security. The ICE locatordatabasepreviously indicated he was held at the La Salle detention center in Jena, Louisiana, the same facility Khalil is detained in. However, Doroudi has sincerequestedto self-deport back to his home country rather than remain in ICE custody — a request his judge granted. NEW YORK, NEW YORK – NOVEMBER 15: Students participate in a protest in support of Palestine and for free speech outside of the Columbia University campus on November 15, 2023 in New York City. (Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images) Rumesya Ozturk A Turkish national currently attending Tufts University, Rumesya Ozturk was arrested by immigration authorities in March just outside of Boston, DHSconfirmedto the DCNF at the time. Like many of the other foreign students arrested before her, Ozturk used her time on campus to serve as an anti-Israel activist and was profiled by a watchdog that tracks anti-Semitism. Anop-edOzturk co-authored in March 2024 demanded that Tufts divest from all companies with "direct or indirect" ties to Israel and compared the country to apartheid-era South Africa. The Turkish national's op-ed made zero mention of the Oct. 7 massacre by Hamas militants that killed roughly 1,200 people and sparked the current Israel-Hamas war. "A visa is a privilege not a right. Glorifying and supporting terrorists who kill Americans is grounds for visa issuance to be terminated," DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said in a statement provided to the DCNF about Ozturk's arrest. "This is common sense security." After roughly six weeks in ICE detention, U.S. District Judge William K. Sessions, an Obama-appointed federal judge, orderedshe be releasedback into the community. Leqaa Kordia ICE agents out of Newark, New Jersey, arrested Leqaa Kordia, a Palestinian from the West Bank,in Marchfor overstaying her expired student visa. Kordia acknowledges incourt documentsthat she attended an anti-Israel rally at Columbia University on April 30, 2024 where activists violently clashed with police, leading tonumerous arrests, but claims she wasn't involved in the violence. "Kordia, a Palestinian from the West Bank, was another Columbia Student who actively participated in anti-American, pro-terrorist activities on campus," DHS said in asocial media statement. "Kordia was arrested for immigration violations due to having overstayed her F-1 student visa, which had been terminated on January 26, 2022 for lack of attendance." Kordia claims she dropped out of the student visa program around 2022 and stopped attending classes after a "trusted teacher" gave her bad advice, according to court documents. She is currently being detained at ICE's Prairieland Detention Facility in east Texas and has complained about not being provided any halal meals. All content created by the Daily Caller News Foundation, an independent and nonpartisan newswire service, is available without charge to any legitimate news publisher that can provide a large audience. All republished articles must include our logo, our reporter's byline and their DCNF affiliation. For any questions about our guidelines or partnering with us, please contactlicensing@dailycallernewsfoundation.org.

Meet The Alleged Pro-Hamas Campus Radicals Scooped Up By Trump Admin

Meet The Alleged Pro-Hamas Campus Radicals Scooped Up By Trump Admin Following through on a campaign pledge to crack down on the massive ant...
EXCLUSIVE: GOP Rep Expresses Optimism That Senate Will Seek 'Big, Beautiful' Spending Cuts In Trump BillNew Foto - EXCLUSIVE: GOP Rep Expresses Optimism That Senate Will Seek 'Big, Beautiful' Spending Cuts In Trump Bill

Republican Rep. Scott Perry of Pennsylvania, former chair of the House Freedom Caucus (HFC), is calling on the Senate to make steeper spending cuts in President Donald Trump's "one big, beautiful bill." Perry, one of the fiscal hawks who hadpushedfor more aggressive reforms to the vast tax and spending bill up into the final hours of its Housepassageearly Thursday morning, believes the bill "has a long way to go" before it reaches the president's desk. He is urging the Senate to pursue additional spending reduction in light of the bond market's recentuneaseabout persistent high budget deficits, and is optimistic from what he is hearing from across the Capitol thus far.(RELATED: 5 Issues That Might Decide Fate Of Trump's 'Big, Beautiful' Bill In Senate) "Typically, the bill gets weaker in the Senate," Perry told the Daily Caller News Foundation in an interview Friday. "We feel that there's an opportunity for the bill to get stronger." "As a proud Republican and House member and member of the Freedom Caucus it's not my first inclination to quote [Republican South Carolina] Sen. Lindsey Graham, but Sen. Graham said just yesterday, 'You're talking about one and a half percent, so let's not act like we're really cutting a lot [in the bill].' I completely agree with him." Graham, the top Republican on the Senate Budget Committee, appeared todismissa question from CNN's Manu Raju on Thursday about the House Freedom Caucus urging GOP senators not to weaken the spending cuts in the bill. "You had your chance," Graham told Raju with a laugh. "Some of these cuts are not real. And we're talking about over a decade — if you do a 1.5 trillion — that's like a percent-and-a-half. So let's don't get high on our horse here that we've somehow made some major advancement in reducing spending because we didn't." Perry readily concedes that he wishes the House-passed bill did more to achieve steeper spending reduction, but credited the House Freedom Caucus for pushing House GOP leadership to lock in more than $1.5 trillion in spending cuts over a ten-year period. An initial proposal floated during House Republicans' member retreat in Doral, Florida, in February outlined just $300 billion in savings. "We have a long way to go," Perry said. "But you've got to remember where we started." "That [amount of savings in the House-drafted bill] is five times higher because of our efforts," Perry added. He also cited a host ofconservative winsthat HFC members helpedsecurein final amendments to the legislation, such as accelerating the implementation of Medicaid work requirements, disincentivizing Medicaid expansion in some states and fast-tracking the phaseout of green energy tax breaks. The president's sprawling domestic policy bill is now under consideration in the Senate following itspassagein the House by just one vote early Thursday morning — after HFC memberssuppliedthenecessaryvotesto back the bill. HFC chair Andy Harris of Maryland was the lone GOP lawmaker to vote "present." Two Republicansjoinedall Democrats in voting against the bill. "We still think we have work to do, but we want to advance the [President's] agenda," Perry said. "We want the tax cuts to happen. We need to deal with the debt ceiling. But we also need to deal with the spending in Washington." "This [House-passed bill] is the first swing," Perry said. "I think that we not only can be optimistic, but I think we need to be aggressive, in kind of pushing them [the Senate] right, holding them up and encouraging them to stick with their own commitment to themselves." WASHINGTON, DC – MAY 21: Rep. Scott Perry (R-PA) (4th-R), accompanied by Rep. Chip Roy (R-TX) (3rd-R), Rep. Keith Self (R-TX) (5th-R), House Freedom Caucus chair Rep. Andy Harris (R-MD) (2nd-R), and Rep. Clay Higgins (R-LA) (R), speaks about the ongoing negotiations between House leadership, the White House and the House Freedom Caucus on the "One, Big, Beautiful Bill" at the U.S. Capitol Building on May 21, 2025 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Andrew Harnik/Getty Images) Perry's calls for more aggressive spending cuts in the president's sweeping bill will have some natural allies in the Senate. Republican Wisconsin Sen. Ron Johnson, who is calling for a return to pre-pandemic spending levels, said he would oppose the House-drafted bill, citing the lack of spending reduction. "Everybody likes the tax cut, but when you're $37 trillion in debt on the path to over $60 trillion in debt, when the Social Security Trust Fund is running out, somebody's got to be the dad that says, 'I know everybody wants to go to Disney World, but we just can't afford it,'" Johnsontoldreporters Thursday. "I guess that's what's going to have to happen here in the Senate." Republican Utah Sen. Mike Lee haschampioneda full repeal of green energy tax credits signed into law under former President Joe Biden. Perry is urging the upper chamber to eliminate even more subsidies under the Biden-era Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) and resist pressure from lobbyists to roll back certain phase-out dates of green energy tax breaks in the House-drafted bill. "Every single Republican voted against it [the IRA] when it came to the floor, every single one," Perry reflected. "The American people expect all those Republicans to honor that commitment at that time and not change allegiances and alliances after the fact." "From my standpoint, I don't really care about the army of lobbyists and the few billionaires that are advocating for this policy," Perry continued. "We have to do right by our people that get up in the morning and go to work and expect to come home and turn the lights on." Republican North Dakota Sen. Kevin Cramertoldreporters Thursday that no GOP senator "gives a shit about SALT," referring to the state and local tax deduction cap. House Republicans raised the SALT deduction cap to $40,000 — four times the current $10,000 limit — with certain income limitations to appease blue-state House Republicans whose constituents face high tax burdens. The prospect of the Senate significantly lowering the SALT deduction cap is music to Perry's ears. He told the DCNF that the Senate should absolutely reconsider the SALT cap raise in the House-drafted bill, arguing the deduction primarily benefits wealthy people in blue states and lets elected Democrats off the hook for keeping state and local taxes high. "The people that I work for, my bosses, don't feel like paying for the high taxes in California, New York and Illinois," Perry said. Perry said that Moody's recent downgrade of the U.S. government's credit rating and fears in the bond market about perpetual high budget deficits could heighten his colleague's urgency to pursue steeper spending cuts than those incorporated in the House-drafted bill. "What the United States does financially affects the entire globe, and if we don't want to put the entire globe into a financial tailspin, just a few turns of the dial here can make a huge difference, and that's what we're going to continue to press for," Perry told the DCNF. "We're going to be very aggressive with that push." Senate Majority Leader John Thune hasfloatedpassing the tax and spending package by July 4. The legislation would then have to be voted on in the House for a second time before being signed into law by Trump — assuming the Senate makes modifications to the bill. House Speaker Mike Johnson has urged the Senate to make minimal modifications to the House-passed legislation, citing the "delicate equilibrium" reached between conservatives and moderates to advance the president's landmark bill. All content created by the Daily Caller News Foundation, an independent and nonpartisan newswire service, is available without charge to any legitimate news publisher that can provide a large audience. All republished articles must include our logo, our reporter's byline and their DCNF affiliation. For any questions about our guidelines or partnering with us, please contactlicensing@dailycallernewsfoundation.org.

EXCLUSIVE: GOP Rep Expresses Optimism That Senate Will Seek ‘Big, Beautiful’ Spending Cuts In Trump Bill

EXCLUSIVE: GOP Rep Expresses Optimism That Senate Will Seek 'Big, Beautiful' Spending Cuts In Trump Bill Republican Rep. Scott Perry...
Texas is closer to putting the Ten Commandments in classrooms after a key voteNew Foto - Texas is closer to putting the Ten Commandments in classrooms after a key vote

Texas would require all public school classrooms todisplay the Ten Commandmentsunder a Republican proposal that cleared a major vote Saturday and would make the state the nation's largest to impose such a mandate. If passed as expected, the measure is likely to draw a legal challenge from critics who consider it a constitutional violation of theseparation of church and state. The Republican-controlled House gave its preliminary approval, with a final vote expected in the next few days. That would send the bill to the desk of Republican Gov. Greg Abbott, who has indicated he will sign it into law. "The focus of this bill is to look at what is historically important to our nation educationally and judicially," said Republican state representative Candy Noble, a co-sponsor of the bill. Two other states, Louisiana and Arkansas, have similar laws, but Louisiana's is on hold after a federal judge found that it was "unconstitutional on its face." Those measures areamong efforts, mainly in conservative-led states, to insert religion into public schools. The vote in Texas came after the US Supreme Court effectively ended apublicly funded Catholic charter schoolin Oklahoma on Thursday with a 4-4 tie, following a string of high court decisions in recent years that have allowed public funds to flow to religious entities. Texas lawmakers also have passed and sent to Abbott a measure that allows school districts to provide students and staff a daily voluntary period of prayer or time to read a religious text during school hours. Abbott is expected to sign it. "We should be encouraging our students to read and study their Bible every day," Republican state Rep. Brent Money said. "Our kids in our public schools need prayer, need Bible reading, more now than they ever have." Supporters of requiring the Ten Commandments in classrooms say they are part of the foundation of the United States' judicial and educational systems and should be displayed. But critics, including some Christian and other faith leaders, say the Ten Commandments and prayer measures would infringe on the religious freedom of others. The Ten Commandments bill requires public schools to post in classrooms a 16-by-20-inch (41-by-51-centimeter) poster or framed copy of a specific English version of the commandments, even though translations and interpretations vary across denominations, faiths and languages and may differ in homes and houses of worship. Democratic lawmakers made several failed attempts Saturday to amend the bill to require schools to display other religious texts or provide multiple translations of the commandments. A letter signed this year by dozens of Christian and Jewish faith leaders opposing the bill noted that Texas has thousands of students of other faiths who might have no connection to the Ten Commandments. Texas has nearly 6 million students in about 9,100 public schools. In 2005, Abbott, who was the state attorney general at the time, successfully argued before the Supreme Court that Texas could keep a Ten Commandments monument on the grounds of its Capitol. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Texas is closer to putting the Ten Commandments in classrooms after a key vote

Texas is closer to putting the Ten Commandments in classrooms after a key vote Texas would require all public school classrooms todisplay th...
British government considers chemical castration in plan to reduce prison populationNew Foto - British government considers chemical castration in plan to reduce prison population

A British government minister says she's "not squeamish" about the idea of chemical castration for male sex offenders, and wants to make it mandatory. The UK is considering a range of options from a new report, which aims to cut the country'sprison populationby 10,000 inmates to help alleviate chronic overcrowding. "Problematic sexual arousal and preoccupation can be reduced via chemical suppressants and other medications, which can be prescribed for individuals who have committed a sexual offense under certain circumstances," the new report states. Prisons in the south-west of England have been involved in a pilot program of chemical castrations since 2002, and Justice Minister Shabana Mahmood from theruling Labour Partytold lawmakers in parliament on Thursday that the program would expand to 20 more prisons in two other regions of England. Uk Lawmakers Vote Against Inquiry Into 'Rape Gang Scandal' As Musk Keeps Up Pressure Prisoners would be given two drugs as part of the treatment: one limits sexual thoughts, while the other reduces testosterone and "problematic sexual arousal." Inmates would also have ongoing counseling to treat their psychological issues, such as a desire for sexual power and control. One recent study found that reoffending rates were up to 60% lower for prisoners who had received the treatment. Read On The Fox News App "For some, offending relates to power, but for another subset of offenders, the combination of chemical suppressants and psychological interventions can, we believe, have a big and positive impact," Minister Mahmood told parliament. Initially, the option for chemical castration treatment would be only voluntary, and medical ethicists say it could be a problem to force doctors to treat an inmate who doesn't want to have it done. In Britain, there is a strict tradition of informed medical consent where a patient can refuse medical treatment, and a doctor can't ordinarily be forced to carry it out. Louisiana Bill To Castrate Sex Offenders Moving Toward Governor's Desk For Signature Sex offenders make up a significant percentage of the prison population in England, and at the end of March, more than 20% of inmates were incarcerated onsex crimescharges. The new report cautions that chemical castration "should never be used as a risk management tool or standalone rehabilitative offer, and it is only appropriate for a limited number of sex offenders". Chemical castration is already being used in some other European prisons to treat sex offenders. Authorities in Sweden have been carrying out limited clinical trials on volunteers at a Stockholm prison, while in Germany and Denmark it is more widely used but still on a voluntary basis. In Poland, courts can pass a sentence of mandatory chemical castration for some categories of sex-offense prisoners. Thursday's report, written by a former government minister from the Conservative Party, also made four dozen recommendations to try and ease prison overcrowding. These include giving fewer people jail sentences under 12 months and encouraging other types of punishment instead, such as community service or fines; developing new policies for early release with good behavior for inmates, and tagging all offenders who committed crimes of abuse against women and girls. Uk Pm Starmer Hits Back Against Musk Attacks On Child Grooming Gangs The opposition Conservative Party has criticized the new report, saying that by scrapping shorter prison sentences the government "is effectively decriminalizing crimes like burglary, theft and assault." "This is a gift to criminals, who will be free to offend with impunity," the party's justice spokesman Robert Jenrick told reporters. However, the report has been broadly welcomed by the Howard League for Penal Reform, the world's oldest prison charity. "The government is taking an important step forward by accepting most of the recommendations from this important review," says Chief Executive Andrea Coomber, but she cautioned that "the prisons crisis will not be solved by half-measures." Senior police officers have cautioned that if there will be fewer prisoners behind bars, they need more resources to manage the risk that offenders pose outside of jail. Original article source:British government considers chemical castration in plan to reduce prison population

British government considers chemical castration in plan to reduce prison population

British government considers chemical castration in plan to reduce prison population A British government minister says she's "not ...

 

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