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  • Navy accused of neglecting brain injuries among pilots in new House probe

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    FIRST ON FOX: Leaders on the House Oversight Committee are pressing the Navy for answers on the prevalence of traumatic brain injuries among aviators and flight officers, accusing the service of failing to fully understand or address the psychological toll of flight operations.

    In a new letter to Navy Secretary John Phelan, the lawmakers requested documents and data on brain injuries, cognitive dysfunction, and mental health issues in the fleet, warning that the Navy has never conducted a comprehensive investigation into the risks facing pilots.

    “The Committee is concerned that the Navy is failing to adequately understand or address the underlying causes of traumatic brain injuries, cognitive dysfunction, and mental health issues affecting aviators and flight officers,” reads the letter by Oversight Chair James Comer, R-Ky., and Rep. William Timmons, R-S.C., chair of the Military and Foreign Affairs Subcommittee. 

    Congress is requesting more information on brain injuries seemingly associated with fighter jet pilots who operate at high speeds.  (US Navy;Reuters )

    “The lack of information on this issue also raises concerns about the adequacy of the information that is being provided to Congress and decisionmakers regarding the health and welfare of our warfighters,” it went on.

    “It is critical that the Navy take all necessary steps to identify the potential health risks facing aviators and flight officers.”

    The letter requested all “reports, statistical data, medical studies, situational assessments, and substantive communications, including memoranda or email attachments, relating to F-18 aviator mental and physical health and/or suicide from January 1, 2023, to the present.” 

    THE FUTURE OF AIR COMBAT: HOW LONG WILL THE US MILITARY STILL NEED PILOTS?

    It specifically demanded information related to the cases of six different aviators, whose names have been redacted.

    The Navy did not return a request for comment before publication deadline. 

    Earlier this year, Comer and Timmons wrote asking for information about a secret Navy TOPGUN project launched in 2024 to study the brain injury phenomena, called Project Odin.

    “Landing aboard an aircraft carrier, it’s literally a car crash. It’s the equivalent force of sitting in your driveway, in your car, and having a crane take you up to the second story and dropping you,” Matthew ‘Whiz’ Buckley, a TOPGUN graduate and F/A-18 fighter pilot, told Fox News Digital earlier this year. He said he suffers from the brain injuries scrutinized by the project. 

    US Navy F-35C Lightning II fighter jet

    In a new letter to Navy Secretary John Phelan, the lawmakers requested documents and data on brain injuries, cognitive dysfunction, and mental health issues in the fleet. (SONG KYUNG-SEOK/POOL/AFP via Getty Images)

    “The catapult shot, you go from zero to about 150, 200 miles an hour in a second to a second and a half. So your brain’s kind of being jarred, you know, back and forward.”

    “As a fighter pilot, pulling Gs, so I would fight the jet on the edge of consciousness,” said Whiz, referring to the gravitational pull pilots experience when maneuvering tight turns in a jet. 

    “I’d merge with a bad guy in training, pull seven, eight, nine Gs. When you do that, the blood rushes out of your head.”

    Comer wrote earlier this year that the project, which reportedly was adopted without formal approval from Navy Medical and Air Commands, “raises additional questions about the Navy’s knowledge of potential issues and whether it is acting to mitigate these issues in a comprehensive and effective manner.” 

    Buckley, founder of veterans’ anti-suicide group No Fallen Heroes, said the Navy loves to capitalize on the “cool” factor of flying jets popularized with movies like “Top Gun,” but fails to warn pilots about the risks associated with years of high-speed flights.

    NAVY SECRETARY PUSHES REVIEW BOARD TO PURGE DEI FROM NAVAL ACADEMY AND RESTORE ‘WARRIOR ETHOS’

    A February New York Times report detailed how a number of F/A-18 Super Hornet crew members suffered brain injuries after years of catapult takeoffs and dogfighting training. 

    Symptoms included insomnia, anxiety, depression and PTSD-like feelings.

    Buckley recalled feeling confusion, forgetfulness, and being quick to anger – symptoms he at first attributed to the Navy’s drinking culture. He said many of those he flew alongside suffered back and neck injuries. 

    “I remember really being hard on myself, like. Well, what is wrong with you, man? You’re a fighter pilot. You’re on top of the world. What’s wrong with you? So that would cause its own spiral,” he said. 

    “In 15 years of flying fighters, I’ve lost three F-18 brothers to suicide.”

    Many Navy pilots go on to seek jobs in the commercial airline industry, where they often fail to disclose suffering brain injury symptoms on applications.

    While the Navy can’t avoid putting aviators through the extreme conditions that combat training requires, Buckley argued the service must do more to make sure veterans receive proper care for the long-term strain of the job.

    The military does an incredible job of training us to do some pretty awful things to another human,” he said. 

    “But when they’re done with us, they do a pretty crappy job of transitioning us back to being a human.”

    He said he fought the Veterans’ Affairs Department for years after they classified his injuries as not service-related.  

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    “One day you go from flying an F-18 Hornet and having a top-secret clearance, the highest level of trust of the government. And when you’re out the next day, you’re a liar, right?”

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  • SCOOP: House Republicans ready slew of DC crime bills as Trump promises end to city violence

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    FIRST ON FOX: The House Oversight Committee is planning to advance several bills next month to back up President Donald Trump’s crackdown on crime in Washington, D.C., Fox News Digital has learned.

    A source familiar with the committee’s work told Fox News Digital that the panel will mark up bills to “combat juvenile crime in D.C., address the D.C. education system, and end restrictive policing policies enacted by the D.C. Council that prevent law enforcement from keeping residents and visitors safe.”

    It’s a significant step toward congressional Republicans lining up with Trump’s effort to combat crime in the national capital.

    The House Oversight Committee is one of two congressional panels that has jurisdiction over the national capital and its operations, so most House-wide legislation dealing with D.C. crime and other similar matters is likely to originate there.

    COMER DISMISSES BIDEN DOCTOR’S BID FOR PAUSE IN COVER-UP PROBE: ‘THROWING OUT EVERY EXCUSE’

    The House Oversight Committee, led by Rep. James Comer, is preparing to consider a slew of D.C. crime bills. (Getty Images)

    The committee is also holding a hearing next month on D.C. crime, scheduled for Sept. 18, with D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser, D.C. Council Chairman Phil Mendelson, and D.C. Attorney General Brian Schwalb slated to appear.

    House Oversight Committee Chair James Comer, R-Ky., did not elaborate on the legislation in a statement to Fox News Digital but vowed that his panel is working to help further Trump’s goals.

    “President Trump and House Republicans are committed to making our nation’s capital safe for every resident and visitor. Thanks to President Trump’s swift action, crime in the District of Columbia has dropped dramatically,” Comer said.

    148 DEMOCRATS BACK NONCITIZEN VOTING IN DC AS GOP RAISES ALARM ABOUT FOREIGN AGENTS

    Donald Trump

    President Donald Trump speaks with reporters in the James Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House on Aug. 11, 2025. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

    “The House Oversight Committee stands ready to advance reforms that give D.C. law enforcement the tools they need to protect the public and address the growing juvenile crime crisis. Every person in our nation’s capital deserves to feel safe, and with President Trump, we will make D.C. safe again.”

    Rep. Byron Donalds, R-Fla., a member of the committee, previously introduced a bill taking on the issue of juvenile crime by lowering the city’s definition of “youth” from 24 years old to 18, meaning that anyone aged 18 or over would be tried as adults.

    It’s not clear if that specific bill is among those being marked up by the committee next month, however.

    The House Oversight Committee’s latest plans come after the president announced he was federalizing D.C.’s police force for a period of 30 days as part of an effort to combat crime and beautify the city.

    DC's Union Station as National Guard troops stand watch

    The National Guard ramped up its presence in the nation’s capital, including dozens who stood guard outside D.C.’s Union Station. (FOX NEWS DIGITAL)

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    He’s also deployed the National Guard from both D.C. and around the country to patrol the nation’s capital, in addition to other federal forces.

    Trump said overnight Wednesday that House and Senate GOP leaders “are working with me, and other Republicans, on a Comprehensive Crime Bill.”

    Meanwhile, a leadership aide told Fox News Digital on Tuesday that House Republicans are working with the White House on a package of bills “to fix the many problems with D.C. governance and crime.”

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  • GOP senators push Kamala Harris testimony as House Oversight eyes subpoena

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    As the 11th member of former President Joe Biden’s administration appeared before the House Oversight Committee this week, Fox News Digital asked senators on Capitol Hill if former Vice President Kamala Harris should testify next. 

    “I think they should take her behind closed doors and figure out what she knows and what she’s willing to talk about,” Sen. Roger Marshall, R-Kan., said. 

    House Oversight Committee Chair James Comer, R-Ky., is leading the investigation into the alleged cover-up of Biden’s cognitive decline and use of the autopen during his tenure as president. 

    Comer said on Fox News’ “The Ingraham Angle” last month that the “odds” of Harris getting a subpoena to appear before the House Oversight Committee are “very high.” 

    INSIDE THE BIDEN COVER-UP PROBE: 8 AIDES QUESTIONED, MORE ON THE WAY

    The House Oversight Committee could issue a subpoena for former Vice President Kamala Harris to testify about the alleged cover-up of former President Joe Biden’s mental decline.  (Ting Shen/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

    While Marshall told Fox News Digital that Harris should testify, he admitted, “I don’t think you need her testimony to show Americans what I knew as a physician a long time ago, that Joe Biden had a neurodegenerative disease of some sort.”

    HOUSE REPUBLICANS FLOAT GRILLING JOE, JILL BIDEN AS FORMER AIDES STONEWALL COVER-UP PROBE

    Marshall has a medical degree from the University of Kansas and practiced medicine for more than 25 years before running for public office. 

    “All you had to do is look at his very fixed, flat face,” Marshall explained. “Look at his gait, the way he walked. He had a shuffled walk. He didn’t move his arms, hardly at all. When he talked, it was very monotone, a very soft voice. He had malingering thought processes. I don’t think it took much to figure that out.”

    Sen. Roger Marshall speaks to media

    Sen. Roger Marshall, R-Kan. speaks during a news conference at the U.S. Capitol in Washington on March 4, 2021. (Ting Shen/Bloomberg via Getty Images )

    After listing the former president’s symptoms, the Kansas senator lamented that Biden “turned weakness into war,” creating a national security threat. 

    During Biden’s presidency, the United States’ withdrawal from Afghanistan resulted in the death of 13 U.S. soldiers, Russia invaded Ukraine and Hamas attacked Israel, triggering the ongoing war in Gaza.

    But as Republicans demand transparency, Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., told Fox News Digital that he is far more worried about the “challenges we face right now,” particularly on the economy, inflation and the impact of Trump’s tariff policies. 

    joe biden ahead of debate in georgia

    Joe Biden reacts to a light display at his debate watch party at Hyatt Regency Atlanta on June 27, 2024, in Atlanta. (Derek White/Getty Images for DNC)

    Meanwhile, Sen. John Hoeven R-N.D., defended the accountability argument, telling Fox News Digital that Americans “always want more information and more transparency.”

    “If you’re involved in an administration, you [should] always be willing to come in and say what you did and why you did it, and you know what it’s all about. I mean, that’s how it works, and that’s what the American people want,” he said. 

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    Fox News Digital reached out to Biden and Harris for comment but did not immediately receive a response. 

    Fox News Digital’s Elizabeth Elkind contributed to this report. 

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  • Conservative roadmap targets Medicaid, student loans for Trump’s ‘big, beautiful’ sequel

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    FIRST ON FOX: A conservative think tank that played a key role in shaping President Donald Trump’s “one big, beautiful bill” is circulating a new roadmap of recommendations for Republicans’ second act.

    The Economic Policy Innovation Center, which styles itself as “EPIC For America,” has been circulating a new memo with key congressional GOP figures in recent days, a source familiar with the group’s plans told Fox News Digital.

    The memo, which was obtained by Fox News Digital, advises lawmakers to broadly push for further Medicaid and regulatory reforms, crack down on federal dollars for government pensions and student loans, and use fiscal policy to extend conservative goals on abortion and transgender treatment.

    Passing Trump’s massive agenda bill despite razor-thin majorities in the House and Senate was a major victory for Republican leaders. EPIC, which hails the bill as a success, argues that continued reforms are needed for meaningful fiscal reform.

    GOP LAWMAKERS CLASH OVER STRATEGY TO AVERT GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWN CRISIS

    A new conservative policy memo is suggesting targets for a second “big, beautiful bill” promoting President Donald Trump’s agenda. (Getty Images;AP Images)

    “Unfortunately, even with the victories for the American people in the OBBB, our work is far from done. We must rebuild an economy that truly works for every American, while protecting the nation’s financial foundation to ensure lasting resilience,” the memo said.

    “The federal government is rapidly running out of fiscal space. Maintaining sufficient fiscal space is critical in order to respond appropriately to a crisis. Without space between the fiscal limit and the current level of debt, elected officials will not have room to maneuver in the event of war, a natural disaster, or a recession.”

    On Medicaid, the memo advises further cuts to the cost-sharing burden on the federal government – known as the Federal Medical Assistance Percentage (FMAP) – for “large, wealthy states” as well as Washington, D.C.

    FMAP refers to the rate at which the federal government matches state Medicaid payments, which is currently 50%.

    The memo calls to “end the special Medicaid subsidy FMAP treatment” for D.C., whose minimum is 70%.

    Republicans’ first budget reconciliation bill reduced certain FMAP expansions permitted under the Affordable Care Act (ACA), including for emergency care for states that provide Medicaid coverage to illegal immigrants.

    In turn, EPIC advises lawmakers to enhance personal and employer-based healthcare, like Individual Coverage Health Reimbursement Arrangements (ICHRAs) and Health Savings Accounts (HSAs).

    Mike Johnson speaks at press conference

    House Speaker Mike Johnson has publicly stated his goal of passing further reconciliation bills. (AP Photo/Rod Lamkey, Jr., File)

    Medicaid cuts were one of the largest sticking points during talks for the initial bill and will likely be just as politically fraught for Republicans in the second round. Meanwhile, Democrats have been using those reforms as a political cudgel, accusing the GOP of trying to take healthcare from millions of Americans. 

    But conservatives have viewed Medicaid as fraught with waste, fraud, and abuse – insisting their reforms better protect the program for vulnerable people who truly need it.

    The memo also advises congressional Republicans to use the budget reconciliation process to “reform federal bureaucrat compensation and retirement” and “eliminate public sector student loan forgiveness,” among other goals.

    On the social conservative policy front, EPIC appears to view an extension of the ban on taxpayer funds to abortion providers as critical to a second reconciliation bill.

    The first bill was viewed as a victory for pro-life advocates in its ban on Medicaid funds for large healthcare providers that perform abortions, which would affect Planned Parenthood and other similar organizations. But that ban is only effective for a year.

    THOM TILLIS ANNOUNCES RETIREMENT FROM SENATE AFTER CLASH WITH TRUMP

    Schumer, left, next to Jeffries

    Democratic leaders like Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries are already using GOP Medicaid reforms as a political cudgel. (Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)

    In a section titled “Protect Life and American Values,” EPIC urges lawmakers to “extend the prohibition of taxpayer funding for big abortion providers” as well as block Medicaid funds for gender transition care.

    It also calls on lawmakers to “invest in election security” and “impose an excise tax on higher education institutions that allow males to participate in women’s sports.”

    EPIC was founded by Paul Winfree, who served as director of budget policy during the first Trump administration.

    The group also has close ties to Capitol Hill, which it flexed during talks for Trump’s first agenda bill by both recommending policy initiatives and tailoring its advice through the various steps of the budget reconciliation process.

    148 DEMOCRATS BACK NONCITIZEN VOTING IN DC AS GOP RAISES ALARM ABOUT FOREIGN AGENTS

    Budget reconciliation, which can be used three times during a given congressional term, allows the party in power to enact broad fiscal policy changes while sidelining the opposition – in this case, Democrats – by lowering the Senate’s threshold for passage from 60 votes to 51.

    Brittany Madni, EPIC executive vice president and a former congressional aide, confirmed the memo’s veracity to Fox News Digital. She said the group would use the same “playbook” it did during the first reconciliation process.

    She said EPIC is looking to offer “an initial suggestion to lawmakers on what to target, and is readying to work with Republicans through the various steps of the process as details change and evolve.”

    “Mandatory spending reform is an essential target for actual fiscal change in order to stave off a debt spiral. This is why a second reconciliation bill building on the wins in the OBBB is important,” Madni said.

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    Two sources told Fox News Digital that the group’s efforts so far have included a staff-level briefing with the Republican Study Committee (RSC), a 189-member-strong House GOP group that serves as its own de facto think tank for the Republican conference.

    Many of the aforementioned proposals were discussed at that meeting, Fox News Digital was told, with EPIC being invited to speak as part of the RSC’s new initiative to workshop a second reconciliation bill.

    House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., has already publicly stated his goal of passing further reconciliation bills. But what a second bill would look like is still unclear.

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