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Bill Belichick’s 1st season at North Carolina has run into problems on and off the field

Bill Belichick’s 1st season at North Carolina has run into problems on and off the field

By AARON BEARD AP Sports Writer

Of all the ugly moments so far — bad play, blowout losses, home fans fleeing early for the exits — the most telling moment of Bill Belichick’s first season at North Carolina came during an open week.

It took the form of a pair of terse statements from Belichick and athletic director Bubba Cunningham posted on social media late Wednesday, reaffirming the marriage between the six-time Super Bowl winner from the NFL’s New England Patriots and the school desperately seeking to elevate its football program beyond decades of also-ran status.

“I’m fully committed to UNC Football and the program we’re building here,” Belichick said.

The fact it came at all, though — following a day of speculation and reports of behind-the-scenes troubles in the program — said more about how the first few weeks of Belichick’s first college season have gone.

The messaging about building the “33rd” NFL team with a pro-style approach at a college program has given way to school leaders and the Tar Heels’ general manager pleading for patience from fans and donors jarred by the team’s lack of competitiveness. And now the school is looking into potential NCAA rules violations involving an assistant coach.

It all comes amid elevated financial investments into the program, none more significant than spending at least $10 million annually to hire the 73-year-old Belichick as a first-time college coach.

“It’s not the kind of thing we judge after four games or even after one season,” Chancellor Lee Roberts told reporters after a meeting of university trustees two weeks ago. “These things take time.”

On the field

The Tar Heels (2-3) have managed a total of four touchdowns in three losses to power-conference opponents, each coming by at least 25 points. One of their two wins came against a Championship Subdivision opponent in Richmond.

In games against fellow Bowl Subdivision opponents, UNC ranks last among all 67 power-conference teams in scoring offense (13.3), total offense (253.0) and third-down conversion rate (26.5%). They also rank amid the bottom dozen in scoring defense (30.8), total defense (416.8) and third-down conversion defense (43.4%), according to SportRadar.

UNC opened Belichick’s tenure on Labor Day with a national TV spotlight, only to see TCU roll to a 48-14 win that had UNC fans largely gone from Kenan Stadium by the end of the third quarter.

Last week, it happened again, this time by halftime, as Clemson took a 28-3 lead in the first quarter in a game that ended in a largely empty Kenan Stadium.

“We’re just going to keep working every day and every week,” Belichick said afterward. “And let the guys get better. And the guys that get better will keep playing. And the guys that don’t, maybe there’s other people that can compete and move ahead of them for playing time. But we’re just going to keep grinding. I’m not going to evaluate where things are or aren’t. Just take it week by week.”

The Tar Heels next visit California on Oct. 17 in their first cross-country league trip since the Atlantic Coast Conference’s expansion last year.

Off the field

The school is also dealing with issues away from the games themselves.

A person with knowledge of the situation said cornerbacks coach Armond Hawkins has been suspended while the school looks into potential violations tied to improper benefits for players. A timetable for that suspension is unclear. The person spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity Thursday because UNC hasn’t publicly discussed the suspension, first reported by The Athletic.

Additionally, a planned TV show from streaming provider Hulu on Belichick’s first UNC team is no longer in development, the person told the AP. The program had posted social media video in August of Belichick telling the players that the Tar Heels would be featured in what he described as a season-long show to “showcase” the program.

The future

General manager Michael Lombardi, a former NFL executive, recently sent a letter to donors encouraging them to remain patient. He outlined a plan that included signing “upwards of 40” high school players in next year’s class to restock the program, indicating the need for a longer-term building effort.

“First and foremost, this letter isn’t an excuse or to shed blame on the past regimes,” Lombardi wrote in the letter, first reported by Football Scoop and later reviewed by the AP. “It’s meant to explain our team building blueprint moving forward, now that we have surveyed the inherited land.”

Changing course would be expensive, too.

Belichick is in the first year of a deal that guarantees $10 million in base and supplemental pay for each of the next seasons. Lombardi is making $1.5 million for each of the next two seasons. And most of the staff — which includes Belichick’s sons Steve and Brian, as well as Lombardi’s son Matt — holds two-year deals.

It would cost more than $30 million to buy out those staff contracts if UNC opted to make a coaching change.

Wall Street’s feverish rally takes a break as US stocks and gold pull back from their records

Wall Street’s feverish rally takes a break as US stocks and gold pull back from their records

By STAN CHOE AP Business Writer

NEW YORK (AP) — Wall Street took a pause on Thursday as U.S. stocks and even the price of gold pulled back from record highs following torrid runs.

The S&P 500 slipped 0.3% from its latest all-time high for just its second loss in the last 10 days. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 243 points, or 0.5%, and the Nasdaq composite edged down by 0.1%.

Gold also fell following its stellar rally this year, losing 2.4% to drop back below $4,000 per ounce, while Treasury yields held relatively steady in the bond market. They’re taking a moment following big runs driven in large part by expectations that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates to support the economy.

Financial markets have been climbing so relentlessly, including a 35% leap for the S&P 500 from a low in April, that worries are rising that prices may have shot too high and become too expensive. Concerns are particularly strong about the frenzy lifting stocks related to artificial-intelligence technology.

Dell Technologies sank 5.2% for the biggest loss in the S&P 500, but that only trimmed its surge since talking up its AI growth opportunities at an investment conference earlier in the week. The stock is still up nearly 11% for the week so far.

Tesla also weighed on the market after falling 0.7%. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration opened a preliminary evaluation of its “Full Self-Driving” system due to safety concerns.

Those losses helped offset a 4.3% ascent for Delta Air Lines, which reported a stronger profit for the summer than analysts expected.

Delta also gave a forecasted range for profit during the year’s final three months whose midpoint topped analysts’ estimates. Its president, Glen Hauenstein, highlighted a broad-based acceleration in sales trends over the last six weeks, including for business travel domestically.

Such reports from companies are taking on more significance, offering windows into the strength of the economy. That’s because the U.S. government’s shutdown is delaying reports that would clearly show how the overall economy is doing. This is the second week where the U.S. government has not published its update on unemployment claims, for example, a report that usually helps guide Wall Street’s trading each Thursday.

PepsiCo rose 4.2% after delivering a better profit for the latest quarter than analysts expected, saying momentum improved for its drinks business in North America.

Delivering bigger profits is one of two ways that companies can make their stock prices look less expensive following their big rallies. The other is if their stock prices fall.

Akero Therapeutics leaped 16.3% after Novo Nordisk, the Danish company behind the Wegovy weight-loss drug, said it would buy the drug developer based in South San Francisco, California. The price tag could reach $5.2 billion if Akero’s lead product candidate wins federal regulatory approval.

MP Materials, a company that mines and processes rare earths in California, rose 2.4% after China announced curbs on its exports of the materials, which are critical for the making of everything from consumer electronics to jet engines.

Costco Wholesale climbed 3.1% after the retailer said its revenue rose 8% in September from a year earlier.

All told, the S&P 500 fell 18.61 points to 6,735.11. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 243.36 to 46,358.42, and the Nasdaq composite slipped 18.75 to 23,024.63.

In stock markets abroad, indexes were mixed in Europe after Italy’s Ferrari tumbled 15.4% following the release of financial forecasts that some analysts said were below their expectations.

Stocks in Shanghai leaped 1.3% after trading resumed there following a holiday.

Japan’s Nikkei 225 jumped 1.8% for another one of the world’s bigger moves. Technology giant SoftBank Group surged 11.4% after announcing a $5.4 billion deal for the robotics unit of Swiss engineering firm ABB.

In the bond market, the yield on the 10-year Treasury edged up to 4.14% from 4.13% late Wednesday.

___

AP Writers Teresa Cerojano and Matt Ott contributed.

Madison Interviews Van Eure with The Angus Barn

Madison Interviews Van Eure with The Angus Barn

On Sunday, October 12th from 9 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. is the 37th Annual Foundation of Hope, Walk for Hope at The Angus Barn.

Registration and details on Foundation of Hope.

Madison Interviews Garner Fire Department Captain, Don Johnson for Firemen’s Day Festival

Madison Interviews Garner Fire Department Captain, Don Johnson for Firemen’s Day Festival

Last weekend was the Garner Firemen’s Festival, so Madison chatted with the energetic Captain, Don Johnson!

Frustrated lawmakers say lack of trust is making it harder to end the government shutdown

Frustrated lawmakers say lack of trust is making it harder to end the government shutdown

By STEPHEN GROVES, MARY CLARE JALONICK and MATT BROWN Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — A president looking to seize power beyond the executive branch. A Congress controlled by Republican lawmakers unwilling to directly defy him. And a minority party looking for any way to fight back.

The dynamic left Washington in a stalemate Thursday — the ninth day of the government shutdown — and lawmakers openly venting their frustration as they tried to gain traction without the trust that is typically the foundation of any bipartisan deal.

“To have good-faith conversations, you have to have trust. There’s a real challenge of trust,” said Rep. Brad Schneider, chair of the New Democratic Coalition, a pragmatic group of House Democrats.

Groups of lawmakers — huddled over dinners, on phone calls, and in private meetings — have tried to brainstorm ways out of the standoff that has shuttered government offices, kept hundreds of thousands of federal employees at home and threatened to leave them without a scheduled payday. But lawmakers have found themselves running up against the reality that the relationship between the two parties is badly broken.

The frustration was evident this week as House Speaker Mike Johnson and House Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries, on separate occasions, engaged in tense exchanges in the Capitol hallways with members of the opposing party.

“We’re in an environment where we need more than a handshake,” said Sen. Chris Coons, a Delaware Democrat who has engaged in talks with Republicans.

President Donald Trump and Republicans have so far held to the stance that they will only negotiate on Democratic demands around health care benefits after they vote to reopen the government. They also say Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer is beholden to the left wing of his party and only staging the shutdown fight to stave off a primary challenge.

“I typically vote with President Trump. I do — because that’s my party, and I lead my party in the House,” Johnson, R-La., told a caller on C-SPAN Thursday morning. He added that Trump “has been calling for the government to be open since before this began.”

Senate Majority Leader John Thune has said that there is interest on both sides in working on a compromise to extend some subsidies for health plans offered under the Affordable Care Act, but contended Wednesday that “you can’t take the federal government hostage and expect to have a reasonable conversation on those issues.”

When a handshake deal is not enough

Democrats have insisted they can’t take Trump at his word and therefore need more than a verbal commitment for any deal.

Conflicts over spending power had already been raging before the shutdown as the White House pushed to assert maximum power over congressionally approved budgets. The White House budget office had canceled scores of government contracts, including cutting out the legislative branch entirely with a $4.9 billion cut to foreign aid in August through a legally dubious process known as a “pocket rescission.”

That enraged Democrats — and disturbed some Republicans who criticized it as executive overreach.

“I hate rescissions, to be honest with you, unless they’re congressionally approved,” said Sen. Thom Tillis, a North Carolina Republican.

Matt Glassman, a fellow at the Government Affairs Institute at Georgetown University, said the president’s use of rescissions was “blowing up the underlying dynamic of the bargaining” because it inserts intense partisanship into the budget appropriations process that otherwise requires compromise, particularly in the Senate.

Then, as the government entered a shutdown, Trump’s budget director Russ Vought laid out arguments that the president would have even more power to lay off workers and even cancel pay due to furloughed federal workers once the funding lapse is solved. Vought has also announced that the administration was withholding billions of dollars for infrastructure projects in states with Democratic senators who have voted for the shutdown.

Trump has cast Vought’s actions as the consequences of Democratic obstruction, even sharing a video that depicted him as the grim reaper. But on Capitol Hill, there has been an acknowledgment that the hardball tactics are making it harder to negotiate.

“I think with senators, carrots work better than sticks,” said Sen. Kevin Cramer, a North Dakota Republican.

One Democratic idea may win GOP support

Before they vote to reopen the government, Democrats’ main demand is that Congress take up an extension of tax credits for health plans offered on Affordable Care Act marketplaces. Trump has sounded open to a deal, saying that he wants “great health care” for Americans.

What’s received less attention is that Democrats also want new safeguards in the law limiting the White House’s ability to claw back, or rescind, funding already approved by Congress. While final appropriations bills are still being worked out, Republicans have been open to the idea.

“When you end the shutdown and get back to regular order within the appropriations bills, there’s very clear language about how we feel about rescissions,” said Sen. Mike Rounds, a Republican on the Senate Appropriations Committee. “I think you’ll find hard, solid support from Republicans to see that what we agree to will be executed on.”

In the meantime, the main sticking point for lawmakers this week has been finding any agreement on extending the health care subsidies.

The consequences of an extended shutdown

As the shutdown drags on without sign of significant progress to ending the impasse, lawmakers are looking ahead to the dates when federal employees will miss a payday.

Active-duty military troops would miss a paycheck on Oct. 15. Some lawmakers are getting nervous about both the financial implications for the troops and the political blowback of allowing soldiers to go without pay.

As Johnson fielded questions on C-SPAN Thursday morning, one caller pleaded with him to pass legislation that would allow the military to get paid during the government shutdown.

The woman, identified as Samantha, said her husband serves in the military and that they “live paycheck to paycheck.”

She pleaded with Johnson to call the House back to Washington, saying, “You could stop this.”

Johnson said he was sorry to hear about her situation, blamed Democrats for refusing to pass a stop-gap spending bill and added, “I am angry because of situations just like yours.”

___

Associated Press writers Lisa Mascaro, Kevin Freking and Joey Cappelletti contributed to this report.

NC State visits No. 16 Notre Dame, No. 25 Florida State hosts Pittsburgh to top ACC’s weekly slate

NC State visits No. 16 Notre Dame, No. 25 Florida State hosts Pittsburgh to top ACC’s weekly slate

By AARON BEARD AP Sports Writer

Things to watch this weekend in the Atlantic Coast Conference:

Game of the week

N.C. State (4-2) at No. 16 Notre Dame (3-2), Saturday, 3:30 p.m. ET (Peacock)

This game is part of the football independent Fighting Irish’s annual scheduling partnership with the ACC, so it doesn’t matter in the league race. But Notre Dame needs to keep winning to build its College Football Playoff case after close losses to Miami and Texas A&M.

Then there’s the Wolfpack, who started 3-0 before losing back-to-back games against Duke and Virginia Tech — led by an interim coach — before last weekend’s win against Campbell. This is the start of a tough second half of the schedule for N.C. State, which has games ahead with No. 2 Miami, No. 13 Georgia Tech and No. 25 Florida State as it pushes toward bowl eligibility.

The undercard

Pittsburgh (3-2, 1-1 ACC) at No. 25 Florida State (3-2, 0-2), Saturday, noon ET (ESPN)

The Seminoles have lost two straight against ranked league teams, falling in double overtime at No. 19 Virginia before last weekend’s home loss to Miami. They get a chance to regroup with a home date against the Panthers, who rolled past Boston College last weekend behind a surprise starter at quarterback in true freshman Mason Heintschel.

Virginia Tech (2-4, 1-1) at No. 13 Georgia Tech (5-0, 2-0), Saturday, 3:30 p.m. ET (ACC Network)

The Yellow Jackets survived an overtime win at Wake Forest and then had an open date to regroup in the program’s first 5-0 start since 2014. Now they get a visit from the Hokies, who surprised N.C. State on the road only to follow that with a home loss to the Demon Deacons last weekend.

Impact players

— Clemson quarterback Cade Klubnik. The preseason Associated Press All-American emerged from an open date by completing 22 of 24 passes and throwing four TD passes in last week’s win at North Carolina after an open date. Afterward, coach Dabo Swinney said Klubnik and many of his teammates played with more confidence than they had in the program’s first 1-3 start under the longtime coach. They visit Boston College on Saturday night.

— Wake Forest defensive back Nick Andersen. Andersen had 11 tackles in losses to N.C. State and Georgia Tech, then had seven more stops in the Virginia Tech win as a veteran fixture in the secondary. The Demon Deacons visit Oregon State on Saturday.

Inside the numbers

The league has four ranked teams in the AP Top 25 poll. with Miami, Georgia Tech, Virginia and FSU. … Stanford visits SMU on Saturday in a matchup of two of the league’s newest additions in expansion. The Mustangs won last year’s game on the road during their 8-0 debut ACC season. … Miami is tied for 13th nationally in scoring defense (13.6) entering is open date. … California, Duke, Louisville, North Carolina, Syracuse and Virginia are also on byes this week.

Baked Potato Chips

Baked Potato Chips

These homemade, crispy potato chips make for a delicious snack that’s even better than store-bought.

Ingredients

  • 2 large russet potatoes 
  • olive or avocado oil spray 
  • 1 tsp. salt
  • Optional seasoning/flavoring ideas: garlic powder, paprika, rosemary, shredded parmesan, chili flakes

Instructions

1. Preheat the oven
Preheat oven to 400°F.

2. Prep the potatoes.
Wash and thinly slice the potatoes into rounds using a sharp knife. Then, soak the slices in cold water for 15–20 minutes to remove excess starch. Next, drain and pat the potatoes dry completely with a clean towel.

3. Arrange and bake
Place the potato slices in a single layer on a parchment paper-lined baking sheet and spray with olive or avocado oil. Then, bake the chips for 10-15 minutes, flipping them halfway.

4. Season the chips
Pour the warm chips into a bowl and season with salt and other flavors of your choice. Let the chips cool slightly, then enjoy this crisp, savory snack.

October 9th 2025

October 9th 2025

Thought of the Day

Photo by Getty Images

Dig the well before you are thirsty so plan ahead.

The ACC has been going through a sideline overhaul. This year that includes 4 new head coaches

The ACC has been going through a sideline overhaul. This year that includes 4 new head coaches

By AARON BEARD AP Basketball Writer

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — Luke Loucks remembers winning an Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament title at Florida State when Mike Krzyzewski, Roy Williams and his coach, Leonard Hamilton, were sideline fixtures.

Thirteen years later, those guys have all headed into retirement, along with multiple other marquee names who weren’t even in the league when Loucks played.

Now Loucks is a 35-year-old first-time head coach for the Seminoles. He’s one of four additions to the coaching ranks in the league alongside Miami’s Jai Lucas, N.C. State’s Will Wade and Virginia’s Ryan Odom. It’s part of a continuing makeover in the ACC after losing Williams at North Carolina, Krzyzewski at Duke, Syracuse’s Jim Boeheim, Notre Dame’s Mike Brey, Miami’s Jim Larrañaga, Virginia’s Tony Bennett — and Loucks’ predecessor in Hamilton.

“There was a true backbone to this league with historic coaches,” Loucks said Wednesday during the league’s preseason media days.

“Now you look at the league, six more teams than when I played … but there’s a new wave of youthfulness, guys that have a lot of energy, that I also think will also be those legendary coaches. It’s just they’re about 20 to 30 years behind in age.”

Steady changes

To Loucks’ point, the ACC has been going through a sideline reset in the years since the COVID-19 pandemic.

Williams was first into retirement in April 2021, followed by fellow Hall of Famers with four-decade runs in Coach K and Boeheim in the subsequent years. Four other coaches have also ended long runs in Brey (23 years), Hamilton (23), Bennett (15) and Larrañaga (14), with Bennett joining Williams, Krzyzewski and Boeheim as coaches exiting with at least one NCAA championship on the résumé.

The average coaching tenure for ACC schools during the 2020-21 season was 13.47 years. This year it will be 4.06, with 14 of 18 schools making coaching changes darting to 2020-21.

And that leaves Clemson’s Brad Brownell, starting his 16th season, as the senior member of the bunch.

“You can be a pretty good coach, I didn’t all of a sudden get that much smarter,” Brownell said. “I’d like to think I wasn’t that much dumber in 2013 and 2014. But we didn’t have the kind of facilities and support that we needed in order to help us. So it all works both ways.

“I do think we have a great influx of talented young coaches in our league. i think you’ve got guys that can be at their schools for decades.”

Quick risers

Loucks and Lucas are the “youngsters” of the new quartet.

Loucks arrives from the NBA coaching ranks, starting with support roles with the Golden State Warriors — including during two of their NBA titles — and coming off a three-year run as an assistant coach with the Sacramento Kings.

Lucas, 36, coached at Texas and Kentucky before working the past three seasons under Duke’s Jon Scheyer.

That gave Lucas an up-close look at another young coach making the transition to first-time head coach while following a longtime winner. Scheyer was 35 in his first season as successor to his mentor in Krzyzewski, a five-time NCAA champion who won 1,202 games.

“So just being there and having a front-row seat for that, I think the biggest thing I took away from Jon was just the attention to detail that’s needed when starting a program,” Lucas said.

“Mine is a little bit different in the sense of building it from a clean slate, but understanding that everything you do in the beginning and the first couple of months is going to set the foundation for how the program is moving forward.”

A homecoming

Odom, 51, took a longer journey back to a familiar Cavaliers home after Bennett’s unexpected exit on the eve of last season.

His father, Dave, was an assistant coach at Virginia under Terry Holland during the 1980s. And Ryan served as a ball boy for home games.

He brought up those ties Tuesday, including memories of 7-foot-4 program great Ralph Sampson’s final home game in 1983 — which included Sampson missing two critical late free throws but getting a tipped-out rebound for a go-ahead basket.

“They’re all real memories for me,” Odom said.

Odom also has another notable tie to the Virginia program, though from the other sideline: He was the UMBC head coach when the Retrievers beat the Cavaliers in 2018 for the first 16-vs-1 upset in the NCAA Tournament. He later spent two years as head coach at Utah State, then the last two at VCU.

“There’s pressure with every job no matter what level you coach at,” Odom said. “This obviously is the highest level and it’s more covered and all that, so it’s more in your face from that perspective. But I don’t know that that’s necessarily going to feel any different for me.”

Back in the spotlight

Then there’s the 42-year-old Wade, who is a power conference coach for a second time after his first stint at LSU ended with him fired for NCAA rules violations.

He spent two years at McNeese State, winning 28 games and upsetting Clemson to open the NCAA Tournament last year. And he landed with the Wolfpack, who fired Kevin Keatts after he followed an unexpected run to the 2024 Final Four with a 12-win crashout.

Wade has been blunt and unapologetically confident, leaning into the program’s “Red Reckoning” branding after an offseason retooling that added multiple notable transfers like Texas Tech’s Darrion Williams, Michigan State’s Tre Holloman and Ven-Allen Lubin from Wolfpack rival UNC.

“It’s going to be a reckoning for the ACC and college basketball,” Wade said last month. “You’re going to have to deal with us.”

It’s a confidence that has appealed to a rabid fan base longing for consistent basketball success, notably with runs to the 1974 and 1983 NCAA championships.

“You don’t want to be sailing against the wind,” Wade said Wednesday. “You want to get the wind behind your sails and get moving. So I think that winning in Year 1 will be good. And we’re going to win.”

Lumbee leader to join North Carolina statehouse as tribe’s federal recognition push gains attention

Lumbee leader to join North Carolina statehouse as tribe’s federal recognition push gains attention

LUMBERTON, N.C. (AP) — The leader of a southeastern North Carolina tribe is about to join the state legislature to succeed his brother, as the Lumbee’s efforts to attain full U.S. government recognition have gained recent momentum but still face obstacles.

Members of a Robeson County Republican Party committee voted unanimously Tuesday to recommend John Lowery to fill the state House seat held since 2023 by Jarrod Lowery, who resigned effective this week to take a job in Washington with the U.S. Interior Department. State law directs Gov. Josh Stein to formally appoint John Lowery to serve out his brother’s term representing the 47th House District through the end of 2026.

John Lowery has been chairman of the 55,000-member Lumbee Tribe of North Carolina since early 2022. He’s previously worked as a public school civics teacher and for the U.S. Agriculture Department and state Commerce Department. His jobs have included efforts to expand federal programs for Native American farmers and rural communities and build workforce development in the region.

“His years of experience serving in tribal, state, and federal government and delivering for the residents of Robeson County make him an exceptionally prepared choice,” Robeson County GOP Chairman Phillip Stephens said in a news release.

John Lowery intends to serve out the remainder of his three-year term as chairman — he was reelected to the post in 2024 — and intends to run next year for his own two-year term in the House, spokesperson Rachel Capen said Wednesday. Jarrod Lowery is now taking a job as senior adviser to the assistant secretary for Indian Affairs at the Interior Department, Capen said.

The brothers are former Lumbee Tribal Council members who have advocated for full federal recognition, which if approved could bring the Lumbee access to health care and certain federal grants, as well as the ability to create a land base such as reservations.

The Lumbee Tribe, which is already recognized by the state, applied for federal recognition in 1987. A 1956 congressional act acknowledged the Lumbee exist but denied them access to federal resources. The Office of Federal Acknowledgment determined the tribe was ineligible for recognition, but that decision was reversed in 2016. Still, legislation has been considered a quicker route to achieve recognition.

President Donald Trump issued an executive order in January directing the Interior Department to provide a plan for Lumbee recognition. While the department submitted that plan to the White House in April, it appears obtaining congressional approval remains the likely path.

The U.S. House passed last month a defense authorization bill that included full federal recognition to the Lumbee. Some other tribes still oppose the Lumbee’s recognition efforts, which comes at a time when Trump and Republican lawmakers also seek federal spending cuts.

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