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Senate Republicans trigger ‘nuclear option,’ changing rules to speed up Trump nominees

WASHINGTON — Republicans triggered the “nuclear option” to change the rules of the Senate on a party-line basis Thursday, a move that will allow them to speed up confirmation of President Donald Trump’s nominees for key executive branch positions.
The vote was 53-45 to establish a new rule that allows the Senate to confirm an unlimited number of nominees en bloc, rather than process each one individually.
The rule applies to executive branch nominees subject to two hours of Senate debate, including subcabinet picks and ambassadors. It will not affect judicial nominations. Republicans say they’ll allow their own senators to object to individual nominees in any given block, but the rule will strip away the power of the minority party to do the same thing.
Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., initiated the process by bringing up a package of 48 Trump nominees, which under longstanding rules has been subject to the 60-vote threshold. The vote to advance them failed due to Democratic opposition. Then, Thune sought to reconsider and Republicans subsequently voted to overrule the chair, setting a new precedent and establishing the new rule.
Thune had telegraphed the move for weeks, accusing Democrats of creating an “untenable situation” with historic obstruction of Trump’s nominees. The vote was held up for hours on Thursday as the two parties engaged in last-ditch negotiations to strike a deal to avoid a rules change.
But they failed. And Republicans chose to proceed.
“It’s time to move. Time to quit stalling. Time to vote. Time to fix this place,” Thune said in an impassioned floor speech, accusing Democrats of stalling and dragging out negotiations. “This is a broken process, folks. That’s an embarrassment.”
Thursday’s vote sets up a fast track for confirmation of that initial bloc of 48 Trump nominees, including former Rep. Brandon Williams, R-N.Y., to be undersecretary for nuclear security, as well as Kimberly Guilfoyle and Callista Gingrich to be ambassadors to Greece and Switzerland, respectively.
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said his party was reacting appropriately to Trump’s “historically bad nominees,” a trend he predicted would worsen with the GOP’s rule change.
“This move by Republicans was not so much about ending obstruction, as they claim; rather, it was another act of genuflection to the executive branch… To give Donald Trump more power and to rubber-stamp whomever he wants whenever he wants them, no questions asked,” he said.
He also predicted that Republicans would come to regret it.
“This is a sad, regrettable day for the Senate,” he said. “And I believe it won’t take very long for Republicans to wish they had not pushed the chamber further down this awful road.”
The vote Thursday makes a far-reaching change to the rules that will tear down hurdles for Trump — and future presidents — to rapidly push their nominees through the Senate.
Moments later, Senate Republicans used their modified rule to formally advance the package of 48 nominees on Thursday, with the goal of confirming them all next week.
The tool they used is known as the nuclear option because senators typically prefer to avoid it. But over the last decade and a half, it has been used by both parties to erode the powers of the Senate minority — by nixing the 60-vote threshold for confirming judges and cutting debate time for some nominees.
Although nominations are the prerogative of the Senate, House Republicans have watched the battle with interest and pushed for faster confirmation of Trump’s nominees.
Sen. Katie Britt, R-Ala., gave a presentation on the rules change proposal Wednesday to a group of House Republicans, according to a source with direct knowledge of the matter.
Sen. Brian Schatz, D-Hawaii, who had spearheaded an effort to find an agreement that would avoid the nuclear option, said there wasn’t total agreement to proceed with it.
But he said he was happy to have tried.
“We don’t have unanimous consent, we do not have unanimity,” he said on Thursday before the vote. “It’s a damn shame, and maybe this exercise builds a little muscle memory for at least exploring how to have a bipartisan negotiation. So maybe there’s some silver lining to this.”
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Canelo Alvarez vs. Terence Crawford fight: Results, winners, highlights, fight card, complete guide

Terence Crawford is crowding the history books. On Saturday, Crawford became the first three-division undisputed boxing champion of the four-belt era, overcoming his status as a marginal underdog to beat super middleweight champ Canelo Alvarez.
Crawford moved up two weight classes to pursue greatness. The added muscle did not hamper him. Crawford implemented his signature speed and elusiveness with expert precision, dodging Alvarez’s bombs and returning fire in combinations. Crawford fearlessly took momentum back each time it seemed Alvarez was building towards something. The outcome: a unanimous decision win for “Bud.”
Crawford is already the inaugural two-division undisputed boxing champion, a feat since accomplished by Naoya Inoue and Oleksandr Usyk. Crawford once again set himself apart from his contemporaries by becoming the only person to achieve undisputed status in three weight classes. Beating Alvarez eclipsed his acclaimed 2023 win over Errol Spence Jr. Boxing politics often interfered in Crawford’s ability to secure major fights, but he scored a legacy-boosting box office win in Las Vegas.
Saturday’s undercard featured a memorable WBC interim super middleweight title clash between Christian M’billi and Lester Martinez. They brawled tooth-and-nail for 10 rounds. Their memorable performance ended in a draw, spurring anticipation for a rematch. The co-main event saw Callum Walsh improve to 15-0 against Fernando Vargas Jr.
CBS Sports was with you throughout fight week with the latest news, in-depth features and betting advice to consider. Thanks for stopping by.
Canelo vs. Crawford fight card, results
- Terence Crawford def. Canelo Alvarez (c) via unanimous decision (116-112, 115-113, 115-113)
- Callum Walsh def. Fernando Vargas Jr. via unanimous decision (99-91, 99-91, 100-90)
- Christian M’billi (c) vs. Lester Martinez ends in a split draw (93-97, 96-94, 95-95)
- Mohammed Alakel def. Travis Crawford via unanimous decision (99-91, 99-91 98-92)
Canelo vs. Crawford info
- Date: Sept. 13
- Location: Allegiant Stadium — Las Vegas
- Start time: 9 p.m. ET (Main card)
- How to watch: Netflix (subscription required)
Canelo vs. Crawford countdown
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No. 16 Texas A&M survives slugfest vs. No. 8 Notre Dame with game-winning drive: Takeaways

By Ralph Russo, Pete Sampson and David Ubben
Nate Boerkircher hauled in an 11-yard touchdown pass from Marcel Reed with 13 seconds left, and No. 16 Texas A&M took advantage of No. 8 Notre Dame’s botched extra point to survive 41-40 on Saturday night at Notre Dame Stadium.
Facing a ranked opponent for the second time early this season, the Fighting Irish (0-2) found themselves in another game that went down to the final possessions. Notre Dame lost 27-24 at Miami in Week 1.
Texas A&M (3-0) beat a ranked opponent on the road for the first time since late in the 2014 season, when the Aggies knocked off No. 3 Auburn.
INSANITY! TEXAS A&M SCORES THE WINNER ON 4TH AND GOAL! 🤯 pic.twitter.com/iHtgqqkKwq
— NBC Sports (@NBCSports) September 14, 2025
Notre Dame running back Jeremiyah Love ran for a 12-yard touchdown with 2:53 left in the fourth quarter to cap a methodical 75-yard drive that included a fourth-and-1 conversion in field-goal range and gave Notre Dame a 40-34 lead. But holder Tyler Buchner dropped what looked like a solid snap, and the point after failed with an incomplete pass into the end zone by the backup quarterback.
A&M looked as if it answered immediately with Terry Bussey returning the ensuing kickoff for a touchdown, but a holding penalty on A&M brought it back and instead put the Aggies at their own 26 to start the drive with 2:41 left. They quickly drove into Notre Dame territory, and a holding penalty on Irish cornerback Christian Gray set up the Aggies with a first-and-goal at the 10 with 39 seconds left in regulation.
Three bad downs then set up fourth-and-goal from the 11 with 19 seconds left.
After a Notre Dame timeout, and with the home crowd blaring, Reed calmly bought some time and floated a pass to Boerkicher, who made the contested catch. A&M’s PAT was perfect, and Notre Dame didn’t have enough time to answer.
Notre Dame fell to 14-8 against ranked opponents under coach Marcus Freeman.
Marcel Reed’s flourishment
Texas A&M didn’t just win a game, it learned a lot about its offense and quarterback.
Last season, first-year starter Reed’s production spiked late in the season after a slow start. He looks like a much more developed passer in his second season.
Reed racked up a career-high 360 yards on 17-of-37 passing for his first career 300-yard game in the win against the nation’s runner-up a season ago, boasting two of the nation’s top corners in Leonard Moore and Gray. No completion was bigger than Reed’s scrambling touchdown pass — his second of the night — to tight end Boerkircher that gave the Aggies the win.
Reed was showing anticipation, throwing with accuracy and hitting throws he rarely hit consistently last year. And it helps that he’s got an upgraded group of speedy receivers in KC Concepcion from NC State, Mario Craver from Mississippi State and Bussey. Craver hauled in an 86-yard catch and run in the first half from Reed, who completed the pass rolling left. Craver’s seven-catch, 207-yard night made him the Aggies’ first 200-yard receiver since Mike Evans in 2013. That can’t happen with an improved passer like Reed.
Moore and Gray were battling injuries, but Reed is showing the kind of growth that gives A&M an offense balanced enough to contend for the SEC. — David Ubben, college football writer
And Notre Dame’s defensive decline
Notre Dame built last year’s run to the national championship game around its defense under coordinator Al Golden and a veteran spine that included two sixth-year seniors and a two-time All-American. It’s proving much harder to replace all that than Marcus Freeman would have expected.
The Irish were picked apart by Reed, who put Notre Dame in unfamiliar and uncomfortable territory. By halftime, the Irish defense allowed the same number of touchdowns through six quarters (seven) as it did in the first six games of last season. Apparent injuries to cornerbacks Moore and Gray didn’t help. Neither did the Aggies’ speed at wide receiver, which got behind the Irish secondary all game.
The shock of Notre Dame’s defense taking this big of a step back this quickly should send up alarm bells, as first-year coordinator Chris Ash has yet to find the right formula for a defense expected to pick up where last year’s left off. The Irish didn’t sack Reed after taking down Carson Beck just once in the loss at Miami. Notre Dame forced its first turnover of the season but finished with just the Moore interception. And the Irish posted just two tackles for loss all night.
Notre Dame’s defense won’t be tested by speed like Texas A&M for the next month, perhaps not until USC visits on Oct. 18. But with a defense that’s putting some vexing material on tape, it’s not clear how much Notre Dame can rely on its defense moving forward.
Once a known quantity, the Irish defense is now a riddle that Ash needs to solve as soon as possible. Notre Dame won’t make the College Football Playoff unless he does. — Pete Sampson, Notre Dame beat writer
An offensive battle
Texas A&M coach Mike Elko was back at Notre Dame for the first time since he was the defensive coordinator for the Fighting Irish under Brian Kelly in 2017. He wasn’t happy with his Aggies in the first half, slinging a folding chair and lighting into his players on the bench after a Notre Dame touchdown to make it 14-7.
After a Notre Dame touchdown, Texas A&M coach Mike Elko tossed a chair while yelling at his defense.
Noah Eagle: That chair, we’re gonna have to check on. Because the well-being doesn’t appear to be super high. pic.twitter.com/ebwLITWkx9
— Awful Announcing (@awfulannouncing) September 14, 2025
It didn’t get much better for either defense. The Aggies and Irish combined for 917 yards.
The first game of this home-and-home between the Irish and Aggies was a slugfest in College Station last year, too, won 23-13 by Notre Dame after Love broke off a late, long TD run.
In Texas A&M’s first trip to South Bend since 2000 on Saturday, the teams combined for 52 points in the first half, including three short rushing touchdowns by Le’Veon Moss that put the Aggies up 28-24.
Notre Dame opened the scoring by pulling out a trick it perfected last season: the blocked kick. Loghan Thomas smothered a punt on the first possession of the game, and Tae Johnson grabbed the bouncing ball in stride for a 20-yard touchdown return to begin what would be a heated offensive battle. — Ralph Russo, college football writer
(Photo: Joe Robbins / Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)
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Canelo vs Crawford Results, Fight Recaps, Official Scorecards & More From Las Vegas

Alvarez targeted the body with his left hook in the second, but Crawford used his speed and accuracy to tag the Guadalajara native upstairs.
The third saw Alvarez pressuring Crawford more, but “Bud” boxed effectively off his back foot, as he avoided any incoming fire to the head. Alvarez was landing his left hook to the body, but Crawford started adding some more offense in the fourth, confidently standing in the pocket and throwing. Alvarez responded with some of his best work of the fight, but Crawford was still in control.
Alvarez had his best round to this point in the fifth, as he boxed well from the outside and was busier with his attack, but it was Nebraska’s Crawford who regained control with strong efforts in the sixth and seventh stanzas.
As the eighth began, it was clear that Alvarez needed to start making a charge if he wanted to win the fight, and he had brief moments of success, but not enough to deter Crawford from his rhythm.
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