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November 10, 2025

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Steve Penny, founder of SilverChartist.com, explains why he currently has a bullish outlook for gold, silver and platinum, as well as uranium.

“The reaction to the next deflationary impulse is what I believe ultimately sends silver up towards triple digits, gold up towards north of US$10,000 (per ounce),” he explained.

Securities Disclosure: I, Charlotte McLeod, hold no direct investment interest in any company mentioned in this article.

This post appeared first on investingnews.com

The following is a list of Upcoming Meeting Dates for Reporting Issuers in Canada. The data is supplied by Issuing Companies through the service of CDS Clearing and Depository Services Inc.

Company Name Record Date Meeting Date Type
 ATLANTIS SUBMARINES INTL HLDS November 24, 2025 December 29, 2025 S
 Anonymous Intelligence Company* October 21, 2025 December 19, 2025 A
 Arcus Development Group Inc November 24, 2025 December 29, 2025 AG
 BLUE LAGOON RESOURCES INC. November 19, 2025 December 30, 2025 A
 Big Ridge Gold Corp. November 6, 2025 December 16, 2025 AGS
 BrandPilot AI Inc. % September 29, 2025 November 13, 2025 AGS
 BrandPilot AI Inc. November 28, 2025 January 15, 2025 AGS
 CLEAN SEED CAPITAL GROUP LTD % October 2, 2025 November 20, 2025 A
 Deveron Corp. November 28, 2025 December 30, 2025 S
 EV Nickel, Inc. November 7, 2025 December 17, 2025 A
 FAB-FORM INDUSTRIES LTD November 7, 2025 December 12, 2025 AG
 Gabriel Resources Ltd November 17, 2025 December 18, 2025 AS
 Gabriel Resources Ltd % October 31, 2025 December 4, 2025 AS
 Glenstar Minerals Inc. November 24, 2025 December 29, 2025 A
 Gold Strike Resources Inc. November 18, 2025 December 23, 2025 AGS
 Golden Harp Resources Inc November 4, 2025 December 9, 2025 AS
 Grafton Resources Inc. November 25, 2025 January 2, 2025 AS
 Grit Metals Corp. November 14, 2025 December 19, 2025 A
 Grosvenor Cpc I Inc. December 1, 2025 January 6, 2025 AS
 Helium Minerals Limited November 14, 2025 December 19, 2025 AG
 J2 Metals Inc. * October 8, 2025 December 3, 2025 S
 LOMIKO METALS INC * November 5, 2025 December 18, 2025 AS
 Makenita Resources Inc November 26, 2025 January 12, 2025 AG
 Margaret Lake Diamonds Inc. November 25, 2025 December 30, 2025 A
 Muzhu Mining Ltd. November 7, 2025 December 19, 2025 AS
 New Media Capital 2.0 Inc. * October 21, 2025 December 10, 2025 AGS
 New Zealand Energy Corp. November 19, 2025 December 19, 2025 AGS
 POCML 7 Inc. November 17, 2025 December 18, 2025 AS
 Pacific Geoinfo Corp. November 25, 2025 December 30, 2025 AG
 Pinnacle Silver and Gold Corp November 7, 2025 December 17, 2025 AG
 Pioneer AI Foundry Inc. November 13, 2025 December 18, 2025 A
 Pure Energy Minerals Limited * November 4, 2025 December 19, 2025 A
 QUADRO RESOURCES LTD November 28, 2025 December 30, 2025 AS
 Queen’s Road Capital Inv Ltd. November 28, 2025 January 9, 2025 AG
 Railtown AI Technologies Inc. November 10, 2025 December 17, 2025 A
 Robex Resources Inc. November 3, 2025 December 15, 2025 S
 Rev Exploration Corp. * October 27, 2025 December 19, 2025 AGS
 Route 109 Resources Inc. November 24, 2025 December 29, 2025 AG
 Silver Bear Resources Plc November 25, 2025 December 30, 2025 AGS
 Sky Gold Corp November 6, 2025 December 17, 2025 AG
 Stockworks Gold Inc. * October 27, 2025 December 11, 2025 AGS
 SuperQ Quantum Computing Inc. November 24, 2025 December 29, 2025 AS
 Teryl Resources Corp. November 13, 2025 December 22, 2025 AG
 Troy Minerals Inc. November 19, 2025 December 30, 2025 A

 

Legend:

* = Change in Previously Reported Information
% = Cancelled Meeting
@ = Adjourned Meeting

Type of Meeting

A = Annual Meeting
S = Special Meeting
G = General Meeting
X = Extra Meeting
E = Extraordinary Meeting

For more information, please visit https://www.cds.ca/

To view the source version of this press release, please visit https://www.newsfilecorp.com/release/273462

News Provided by Newsfile via QuoteMedia

This post appeared first on investingnews.com

Here’s a quick recap of the crypto landscape for Friday (November 7) as of 9:00 p.m. UTC.

Get the latest insights on Bitcoin, Ether and altcoins, along with a round-up of key cryptocurrency market news.

Bitcoin and Ether price update

Bitcoin (BTC) was priced at US$103,760, a 3.8 percent decrease in 24 hours, and its highest valuation of the day. Its lowest was US$99,590.49.

Bitcoin price performance, November 7, 2025.

Chart via TradingView.

After a week that has seen the world’s largest cryptocurrency slip more than 20 percent from its early October record high, the crypto market began to show signs of recovery on Friday afternoon.

Speaking about Tether’s Bitcoin accumulation during the recent downturn, Bitget Wallet’s Lacie Zhang said the move underscores institutions’ view of Bitcoin as a strategic reserve asset rather than a speculative trade.

“However, institutional accumulation does not necessarily signal an immediate rebound — it’s a strategic positioning move grounded in the expectation that Bitcoin will outperform once global liquidity conditions improve.’

Zhang explained that Bitcoin’s recent selloff was driven more by broader liquidity stress rather than crypto-specific issues, with exchange-traded fund redemptions causing mechanical selling, and leverage unwinding amplifying volatility — a typical liquidity-drain cycle. She also offered her outlook on what’s to come:

“Looking ahead, recovery depends on how quickly liquidity returns: if unemployment climbs above 4.4 percent or economic data softens once the US shutdown ends, the (US Federal Reserve) may be pushed toward easing. Until then, conditions remain tight, and the January to February credit cycle could still test markets. Longer term, though, institutional accumulation and resilient on-chain activity suggest the foundation for the next phase of crypto recovery is quietly being built.”

Ether (ETH) was priced at US$3,463.13, a 4.8 percent increase in 24 hours to its highest valuation of the day. Its lowest was US$3,199.47.

Altcoin price update

  • Solana (SOL) was priced at US$163.40, up by 5.2 percent over the last 24 hours to its highest valuation of the day. Its lowest was US$150.79.
  • XRP was trading for US$2.36, up by 8 percent over the last 24 hours, also at its highest valuation of the day. Its lowest was US$2.17.

Crypto derivatives and market indicators

Crypto derivatives markets displayed notable liquidation activity on Friday afternoon amid cautious trader sentiment and volatile price action. Bitcoin liquidations hit US$35.8 billion, primarily from short positions unwinding, while Ether saw US$29.8 billion in short liquidations, reflecting significant adjustments in bearish bets.

Open interest in Bitcoin futures climbed modestly by 0.65 percent to US$71.24 billion, indicating persistent market engagement despite recent price pressures just below the key US$100,000 level. Ether’s open interest rose more sharply by 3 percent to US$40.24 billion, underscoring increasing participation ahead of critical expiration events.

Funding rates for both Bitcoin (0.005) and Ether (0.006) remain marginally positive, signaling a slight long bias among traders, but a generally cautious and balanced market stance.

Crucially, Bitcoin’s relative strength index (RSI) at 48.86 sits near neutral territory, suggesting neither overbought nor oversold conditions. This RSI level aligns with the view of an equilibrium phase with potential for either consolidation or a directional move, depending on forthcoming catalysts.

Today’s crypto news to know

Senate members still gridlocked

The US government shutdown entered day 38 on Friday, with the Senate voting down a House-passed funding bill designed to temporarily restore operations. The deadlock centers on the extension of Affordable Care Act subsidies, a key sticking point for Democrats who rejected the GOP-backed measure.

In response, Senate Democrats proposed a counteroffer to reopen the government with a one year extension of healthcare subsidies. However, bipartisan agreement has yet to be reached, and negotiations continue amid growing economic and social impacts, including flight cancelations and delayed pay for federal workers.

Tempo invests in Commonware

Crypto infrastructure startup Commonware has raised US$25 million in a funding round led by Tempo, a payments-focused blockchain network launched by Stripe and crypto venture firm Paradigm.

Commonware was founded in 2024. The company develops open-source tools that empower companies to launch and manage their own blockchains. Commonware’s CEO, Patrick O’Grady, reportedly told Fortune, which first reported the story, that strategic partnerships and network growth are more important than capital alone at this stage, highlighting the long-term value of collaboration over fundraising milestones.

Japan’s financial regulator backs bank-led stablecoin pilot

Japan’s Financial Services Agency has confirmed it will support a project by the country’s three largest banks — Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group (TSE:8306), Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group (TSE:8316) and Mizuho Financial Group (NYSE:MFG,TSE:8411) — to jointly issue stablecoins for cross-border payments.

In a Reuters report, Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama said the agency will oversee legal and operational compliance as the initiative moves into testing. The banks intend to issue yen-pegged tokens under Japan’s revised Payment Services Act, which requires full asset backing and enhanced consumer safeguards. Startup JPYC recently launched its first fully regulated yen-denominated stablecoin backed by domestic savings and government bonds.

UNDP to launch global blockchain training program for governments

The United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) is expanding its blockchain education initiatives to include government officials, aiming to accelerate digital infrastructure adoption in the public sector.

Robert Pasicko, who leads UNDP’s Alternative Finance Lab, said four countries will be selected for the initial rollout within weeks. The program will build on UNDP’s internal blockchain academy, and will include both training and hands-on project support. Research by UNDP has identified over 300 potential government applications for blockchain technology, from transparent fund tracking to public sector payments.

Twenty-five major blockchain organizations, including Polygon Labs, Stellar Foundation and the Ethereum Foundation, have discussed forming an advisory group under UNDP coordination.

Securities Disclosure: I, Giann Liguid, hold no direct investment interest in any company mentioned in this article.

Securities Disclosure: I, Meagen Seatter, hold no direct investment interest in any company mentioned in this article.

This post appeared first on investingnews.com

(TheNewswire)

Vancouver, British Columbia TheNewswire – November 10, 2025 Juggernaut Exploration Ltd (JUGR.V) (OTCPK: JUGRF) (FSE: 4JE) ( the ‘Company’ or ‘Juggernaut’) is excited to announce that detailed mapping and sampling have confirmed that the gold-rich Big Mac Zone, Whopper Zone and Gold Dome Zone all form part of the 22 Km 2 district-scale Eldorado System that remains wide open where grab samples assayed up to 263.70 gt AuEq or 8.48 ozt AuEq and channel cuts assayed up to 4.89 gt AuEq over 5.21 m from >400 mineralized veins that are up to 10 m wide hosted in shear zones up to 50 m wide, and are exposed on surface for >1 km with >1 km of vertical relief, remains open and is drill ready on the Big One property (the ‘Property’), Golden Triangle, British Columbia. In addition, based on excellent assay results, the Company has acquired additional claims and expanded the Gold Swarm discovery area of strong gold potential from 1 km 2 to 3 km 2 and 700 m of vertical relief and remains open, effectively tripling this area of strong gold potential, where grab samples assayed up to 231.81 gt AuEq or 7.45 ozt AuEq and channel cuts assayed up to 4.51 gt AuEq over 4.36 m that remains open and is drill ready. The Big One discovery is located in an area of recent glacial and snowpack abatement adjacent to the Tier 1 gold-rich porphyry systems, the likes of Galore Creek. The 100% controlled Big One property covers 39,271 hectares of geological terrane with tremendous additional discovery potential.

Link to map with samples > 1 g/t AuEq

Big One Gold Rich District Scale System Highlights:

  • The district-scale Eldorado System covers an area ~half the size of the Island of Manhattan (22 km ) that remains wide open where grab samples assayed up to 263.70 g/t AuEq or 8.48 oz/t AuEq and channel cuts assayed up to 4.89 g/t AuEq over 5.21 m from 400 mineralized veins that remain open and are up to 10 m wide, the equivalent to ~3-story building, hosted in shear zones up to 50 m wide, comparable to a 15-story building, and are exposed on surface for 500 m, or 5 football fields, with 1 km of vertical relief, the height of 2.5 Empire State Buildings.

Link to Gold Dome Figure

Link to Whopper Zone Figure

  • The Gold Swarm Area of strong gold potential has been expanded from 1 km to 3 km , equivalent to more than the downtown core of Vancouver B.C, with 700 m of vertical relief and remains wide open, with 100 veins up to 4.5 m wide, the equivalent of a 1.5-story building, and exposed on surface for 200 m equivalent to 2 football fields and remain open containing grab samples that assayed up to 231.81 g/t AuEq or 7.45 oz/t AuEq a nd channel cuts that assayed up to 4.51 g/t AuEq over 4.36 m. The Gold Swarm Area is drill ready.

Link to Goldswarm Figure

  • 41% (219 samples out of 527) collected within the Eldorado System in 2024 and 2025 assayed 1 g/t AuEq; 65% (28 samples out of 43) collected withing the Gold Swarm Zone in 2024 and 2025 assayed 1 g/t AuEq.

Grade (AuEq)

>1 g/t

>3 g/t

>5 g/t

>10 g/t

>15 g/t

>20 g/t

>30 g/t

>60 g/t

>90 g/t

Samples

219

129

95

66

51

40

23

8

5

  • Gold samples up to 256.60 g/t or 8.25 oz/t, silver samples up 2810 g/t or 90.34 oz/t, and copper samples up to 14.40 % were collected on Big One.

  • Detailed mapping has confirmed common orientations as well as similar geochemical signatures and textures of the gold-mineralized veins along the 15 km Highway of Gold corridor surrounding the snowcap of Deeker Glacier, strongly indicating that the gold-rich mineralization found throughout is all part of one huge district-scale gold system that remains wide open.

  • The polymetallic veins, alteration signature, geochemical pathfinder element signature, and geophysical anomalies strongly indicate the presence of a large common buried gold-silver-copper rich porphyry feeder source or similar magmatic source or sources at depth responsible for the extensive high-grade veining confirmed on surface over 22 km

  • The company recently received a 5-year property-wide advanced exploration drill permit.

  • Detailed geological and structural mapping has been completed on the reported drill targets in order to define the full geometry of these high-grade gold-bearing shears and veins and will be instrumental in designing the drill plan for the upcoming maiden drill program.

  • A high-resolution UAV photogrammetry survey was completed over an area of 52 km2 on the Eldorado System and Gold Swarm Zone encompassing all of the maiden drill targets. The data will be used to support modelling and define targeting the high-grade gold mineralization recently discovered.

  • A property wide LiDAR survey covering an area of 385 km has been conducted and will be used to augment information obtained from the mapping as well as plan the upcoming inaugural drill campaign.

  • Multiple drill-ready targets have been confirmed and are planned to be tested in the fully funded inaugural drill program and include but are not limited to: the 22 km Eldorado System hosting the Gold Dome Zone where grab samples assayed up to 263.70 g/t AuEq or 8.48 oz/t AuEq; the Big Mac Zone where grab samples assayed up to 113.92 g/t AuEq or 3.66 oz/t AuEq; the Whopper Zone where grab samples assayed up to 43.94 g/t AuEq or 1.41 oz/t AuEq; and the Gold Swarm Area where grab samples assayed up to 231.81 g/t AuEq or 7.45 oz/t AuEq.

  • Juggernaut is working in consultation with the Tahltan First Nation and the local community and is committed to maintaining respectful and collaborative relationships. As we advance exploration on our project, we will continue working closely with the Tahltan First Nation and all the local stakeholders and regulatory agencies to ensure our activities create long-term value and reflect community priorities.

Dan Stuart, President and CEO of Juggernaut Exploration states: ‘With a district-scale discovery of this magnitude host to so many large gold-rich veins and shears exposed on surface that rise above the valley floor for >1 km we are likely only seeing the tip of the iceberg on this mountain of gold. We look forward to the fully funded maiden drill program on this remarkable gold discovery with much anticipation. The best is yet to come!’

Manuele Lazzarotto, PhD, Chief Geologist of Juggernaut Exploration, states: ‘With the advanced exploration permit in hand, we look forward to unlocking the full potential of the Big One gold discovery in the third dimension during the inaugural drill program. Once we receive, compile, and interpret all the deliverables from the detailed and regional mapping, UAV orthophotos survey, and LiDAR survey, the same team responsible for the Tier 1 Surebet gold discovery will design and execute the maiden drill program. Obvious opportunities with the scale and grades seen on Big One are extremely rare, and we have clearly barely begun to scratch the surface. The team looks forward to testing this remarkable discovery at depth.’

Table 1: Samples from 2024-2025 with assays >1 g/t AuEq

Sample ID

Year

Sample Type

Au (g/t)

Ag (g/t)

Cu (%)

Pb (%)

Zn (%)

AuEq (g/t)

M224886

2025

Float

256.60

546.00

0.43

0.41

0.01

263.70

M217656

2025

Float

226.94

335.00

0.00

4.99

0.01

231.81

D751423

2025

Grab

138.70

29.96

0.08

0.02

0.02

139.14

M220659

2025

Grab

111.35

159.00

0.02

3.88

0.01

113.92

M224956

2025

Grab

95.04

49.60

0.02

0.02

0.01

95.67

D751282

2024

Grab

79.01

58.90

0.13

0.43

0.80

80.08

D751407

2025

Grab

68.57

115.00

0.35

1.25

6.53

72.02

D751424

2025

Grab

60.08

9.57

0.01

0.00

0.01

60.21

D751966

2024

Grab

56.54

23.30

0.03

0.02

0.03

56.84

M220561

2025

Grab

55.50

38.62

0.09

2.02

0.44

56.47

M217807

2025

Channel

47.18

156.00

0.01

9.28

0.07

50.57

D750642

2025

Grab

43.99

102.00

0.00

9.19

0.44

46.79

M217601

2025

Channel

39.84

333.00

0.02

0.07

0.06

43.94

M217579

2025

Channel

34.96

415.00

0.02

21.13

0.06

43.38

D751216

2024

Grab

37.98

75.50

0.24

5.72

3.93

41.46

D751191

2024

Channel

12.12

2810.00

0.02

8.04

0.00

37.20

D751156

2024

Grab

33.72

177.00

0.27

2.71

0.27

36.11

D751357

2025

Grab

18.06

333.00

12.05

0.00

0.14

32.65

M217613

2025

Channel

31.68

9.40

0.16

0.00

0.10

31.96

M224961

2025

Grab

31.25

13.98

0.39

0.00

0.00

31.77

D750638

2025

Grab

14.46

621.00

0.11

54.39

0.44

30.79

D751375

2025

Grab

28.47

70.39

0.15

2.43

0.40

29.94

D751402

2025

Grab

29.23

11.44

0.17

0.01

0.00

29.52

D751373

2025

Grab

21.44

172.00

0.07

15.92

6.21

27.59

D751964

2024

Talus

23.47

110.00

1.37

0.01

0.00

26.07

D750389

2024

Grab

8.10

1420.00

1.11

0.15

2.70

26.01

D751163

2024

Float

23.97

116.00

0.02

2.16

0.13

24.53

D750639

2025

Grab

18.12

174.00

3.36

2.91

0.03

23.63

M217567

2025

Channel

17.00

461.00

0.04

0.87

0.31

22.86

D750624

2025

Grab

21.62

45.06

0.00

2.33

0.16

22.58

M217705

2025

Channel

20.78

48.45

0.62

2.37

1.05

22.53

M224905

2025

Talus

9.48

646.00

5.48

0.05

0.05

22.15

M224982

2025

Chip

21.17

20.30

0.02

0.92

0.03

21.58

M217655

2025

Grab

19.64

15.34

0.00

1.37

2.93

20.74

M224983

2025

Grab

14.06

191.00

0.15

17.27

4.50

20.31

D751365

2025

Grab

9.35

566.00

0.01

25.22

0.06

20.24

M217657

2025

Grab

18.11

88.95

0.00

2.08

0.01

19.53

D750621

2025

Grab

3.76

223.00

14.45

0.00

0.11

19.09

D750644

2025

Grab

18.47

12.54

0.00

0.89

0.01

18.77

D750625

2025

Grab

18.32

6.19

0.01

0.01

0.55

18.54

D751374

2025

Talus

16.60

66.43

0.38

1.82

0.60

18.17

D750641

2025

Grab

15.52

55.65

0.63

1.85

0.08

17.06

M224959

2025

Grab

15.94

16.54

0.00

0.01

0.01

16.15

D750394

2024

Grab

13.12

163.00

0.51

1.65

0.42

16.04

M217852

2025

Channel

15.39

20.95

0.04

1.02

0.37

15.93

M217649

2025

Channel

14.96

22.24

0.41

0.64

0.95

15.92

D751285

2024

Grab

3.74

91.20

7.96

0.01

0.01

13.18

D751975

2024

Grab

10.62

198.00

0.00

0.77

0.01

13.10

D750192

2024

Grab

3.44

220.00

6.61

0.00

0.01

12.91

M224932

2025

Grab

0.00

755.00

0.63

6.07

7.28

12.43

D750852

2025

Subcrop

1.07

860.00

0.01

2.12

1.32

12.20

M220602

2025

Grab

11.92

2.04

0.01

0.00

0.04

11.96

M224883

2025

Grab

11.07

20.98

0.03

0.01

0.00

11.36

D751943

2024

Grab

4.00

128.00

0.30

15.35

8.35

11.32

D750198

2024

Float

6.01

34.10

0.14

0.04

15.30

11.21

M217784

2025

Channel

10.83

1.88

0.00

0.00

0.04

10.87

D750704

2025

Grab

2.59

325.00

0.35

22.97

1.56

10.83

D750608

2024

Grab

10.62

3.20

0.00

0.01

0.01

10.67

M217785

2025

Channel

10.17

1.97

0.00

0.00

0.01

10.20

M224957

2025

Grab

9.65

15.14

0.03

0.18

0.48

10.00

D751154

2024

Grab

5.72

218.00

0.22

1.81

1.34

9.20

D751969

2024

Float

5.59

185.00

0.40

1.91

0.98

8.82

D751284

2024

Float

6.34

47.70

0.03

6.78

0.59

8.66

D751151

2024

Float

2.79

474.00

0.01

20.00

1.22

8.59

D751192

2024

Channel

3.39

366.00

0.01

0.11

0.00

7.68

D751372

2025

Grab

7.44

16.56

0.00

0.17

0.01

7.67

D751104

2024

Float

3.79

204.00

0.30

4.60

1.12

7.54

D750395

2024

Grab

6.01

105.00

0.01

0.06

0.09

7.42

D750643

2025

Grab

7.36

2.04

0.00

0.03

0.02

7.40

M217571

2025

Channel

6.06

89.91

0.04

0.01

0.67

7.35

M220559

2025

Grab

1.55

262.00

0.01

13.83

0.08

6.94

M220601

2025

Grab

6.77

5.19

0.08

0.00

0.01

6.91

M224865

2025

Grab

0.05

213.00

4.32

0.07

0.48

6.53

M217589

2025

Channel

5.81

19.08

0.35

0.37

0.28

6.48

D751403

2025

Float

6.13

14.47

0.00

0.02

0.01

6.31

D751368

2025

Talus

6.09

6.80

0.01

0.25

0.04

6.24

D751433

2025

Grab

0.03

139.00

2.99

4.42

4.65

6.13

D751369

2025

Grab

4.97

71.63

0.02

1.44

0.07

6.10

D751939

2024

Channel

5.06

96.30

0.00

0.05

0.03

6.10

M217566

2025

Channel

4.40

118.00

0.02

0.13

0.22

5.93

D751107

2024

Float

4.09

71.80

0.22

1.20

0.95

5.71

D751112

2024

Float

4.94

59.50

0.00

0.31

0.02

5.70

M217702

2025

Channel

4.30

38.77

0.58

2.16

0.10

5.64

M224981

2025

Grab

5.31

13.36

0.01

0.69

0.04

5.60

D751435

2025

Grab

5.19

10.98

0.00

0.54

0.20

5.46

D751158

2024

Grab

4.60

30.70

0.04

1.36

0.02

5.31

M220673

2025

Grab

0.00

345.00

0.03

0.45

4.17

5.29

M217648

2025

Channel

4.69

7.08

0.26

0.44

0.43

5.17

M217788

2025

Channel

5.15

1.29

0.01

0.01

0.00

5.17

D750657

2024

Grab

3.71

40.80

0.76

0.01

0.02

4.98

M220603

2025

Grab

0.39

313.00

0.26

1.50

1.07

4.92

D751215

2024

Grab

2.96

102.00

0.04

0.04

2.15

4.84

D750094

2024

Grab

0.02

108.00

1.01

0.06

8.60

4.83

D750632

2025

Float

4.44

20.01

0.02

0.74

0.01

4.83

D750656

2024

Grab

1.56

97.60

0.06

7.88

0.25

4.53

M217573

2025

Channel

4.27

16.46

0.00

0.00

0.00

4.48

M217643

2025

Channel

4.35

3.99

0.01

0.01

0.04

4.42

M217608

2025

Channel

4.35

1.50

0.00

0.00

0.01

4.38

D751406

2025

Grab

4.07

12.47

0.00

0.02

0.05

4.24

M224868

2025

Grab

0.38

68.48

3.42

0.01

0.15

4.23

M217805

2025

Channel

4.18

2.82

0.00

0.03

0.01

4.22

D750088

2024

Grab

0.16

143.00

0.04

7.63

1.50

4.18

M224938

2025

Grab

0.00

89.59

3.15

0.01

1.15

4.11

D751417

2025

Grab

3.38

46.67

0.00

0.41

0.00

4.02

M217637

2025

Channel

3.63

10.25

0.03

0.53

0.59

4.00

D750664

2024

Float

0.46

292.00

0.02

4.51

0.08

3.99

D750854

2025

Grab

0.00

186.00

0.07

7.28

1.99

3.95

M224935

2025

Grab

0.00

271.00

0.23

1.45

0.78

3.91

M224866

2025

Grab

0.20

146.00

1.78

0.04

1.31

3.85

M224851

2025

Chip

2.61

38.00

0.13

1.99

0.85

3.70

D751697

2024

Grab

0.09

105.00

2.35

0.01

0.07

3.65

M220553

2025

Grab

0.59

200.00

0.01

3.58

0.06

3.61

D751283

2024

Float

0.26

12.60

3.02

0.00

0.00

3.57

D751946

2024

Grab

0.02

136.00

0.72

0.18

4.35

3.54

D751699

2024

Grab

2.15

68.90

0.01

2.63

0.06

3.51

D750751

2025

Grab

1.16

82.41

0.03

4.01

2.80

3.48

M224904

2025

Grab

1.04

187.00

0.00

0.43

0.17

3.43

D751195

2024

Channel

1.61

38.20

0.82

1.27

0.71

3.37

D751398

2025

Grab

0.09

65.28

2.01

2.59

1.34

3.36

D751436

2025

Grab

0.14

80.25

0.09

13.18

0.20

3.32

D751394

2025

Grab

0.24

187.00

0.16

1.40

1.42

3.22

D750554

2024

Channel

0.05

81.50

0.35

1.05

5.34

3.17

D750199

2024

Grab

0.15

108.00

0.01

7.73

0.05

3.13

D751836

2024

Chip

0.22

114.00

0.00

5.21

1.59

2.95

D751845

2024

Chip

2.63

24.80

0.00

0.01

0.00

2.95

D751972

2024

Channel

1.42

47.30

0.03

3.43

0.68

2.90

D751846

2024

Grab

2.59

24.70

0.01

0.00

0.00

2.87

D751207

2024

Grab

0.04

256.00

0.01

12.65

0.01

2.85

M224963

2025

Grab

2.63

9.40

0.09

0.08

0.01

2.84

M224855

2025

Grab

2.23

30.34

0.03

0.95

0.20

2.83

M217727

2025

Channel

2.73

2.04

0.01

0.03

0.01

2.77

D751109

2024

Grab

1.65

89.50

0.10

0.01

0.03

2.73

D751962

2024

Grab

0.55

95.20

0.26

1.17

1.98

2.65

D751404

2025

Grab

2.61

1.26

0.00

0.00

0.00

2.63

M220555

2025

Grab

0.09

83.19

0.04

8.00

0.64

2.55

D751968

2024

Grab

1.49

53.50

0.01

1.68

0.13

2.55

D751153

2024

Grab

0.83

86.60

0.38

0.08

1.16

2.52

M220674

2025

Grab

0.00

175.00

0.01

0.62

0.74

2.42

D751213

2024

Float

1.65

51.40

0.02

0.31

0.02

2.41

M224927

2025

Grab

0.70

40.80

0.13

6.73

0.02

2.37

M217782

2025

Channel

0.02

88.40

0.84

0.78

1.59

2.32

M224902

2025

Subcrop

2.02

10.72

0.01

0.90

0.02

2.31

M220677

2025

Talus

0.00

29.29

0.29

0.29

6.78

2.26

D751992

2024

Grab

0.33

102.00

0.03

3.27

0.06

2.21

D750448

2024

Grab

0.42

71.70

0.03

4.57

0.09

2.20

D751391

2025

Grab

1.89

14.34

0.10

0.24

0.01

2.19

D751947

2024

Grab

0.01

74.70

0.48

0.09

2.81

2.16

D750086

2024

Channel

0.17

17.30

0.12

1.11

4.70

2.16

D751371

2025

Grab

1.56

39.69

0.00

0.20

0.00

2.08

M224852

2025

Grab

1.08

50.66

0.16

0.93

0.29

2.05

D750555

2024

Channel

0.05

73.10

0.17

1.03

2.65

2.03

M217618

2025

Channel

1.94

6.23

0.00

0.00

0.01

2.02

D750629

2025

Grab

1.23

39.89

0.15

0.00

0.58

1.99

D751165

2024

Grab

1.95

6.80

0.00

0.01

0.01

1.99

M217592

2025

Channel

1.69

10.63

0.17

0.02

0.01

1.97

D750393

2024

Grab

1.01

41.30

0.02

1.79

0.37

1.97

D750449

2024

Grab

0.24

32.60

0.01

6.38

0.02

1.96

D751426

2025

Grab

1.91

1.49

0.00

0.00

0.01

1.94

D751352

2025

Chip

0.22

41.10

1.34

0.01

0.07

1.91

D751422

2025

Grab

0.01

41.14

1.55

0.01

0.02

1.86

M217853

2025

Channel

1.75

2.88

0.00

0.02

0.06

1.81

M217665

2025

Channel

0.80

43.76

0.53

0.00

0.01

1.80

M224912

2025

Grab

1.00

64.20

0.00

0.01

0.00

1.78

D751194

2024

Grab

0.44

130.00

0.01

0.08

0.09

1.74

D750725

2025

Grab

0.00

62.49

0.07

4.77

0.60

1.71

M224903

2025

Grab

0.47

39.05

0.86

0.01

0.01

1.70

M217721

2025

Channel

0.03

53.49

0.88

0.46

0.76

1.70

M220604

2025

Grab

0.50

29.35

0.89

0.30

0.03

1.69

D751429

2025

Grab

0.06

73.61

0.02

2.36

1.37

1.67

M224901

2025

Grab

1.46

12.66

0.02

0.22

0.01

1.66

D750197

2024

Grab

0.10

95.80

0.02

1.43

0.53

1.66

D750195

2024

Grab

0.33

15.30

0.07

2.21

1.77

1.60

D750083

2024

Channel

0.81

32.70

0.01

1.63

0.12

1.57

M217565

2025

Channel

0.47

12.27

0.61

0.04

1.67

1.56

M217724

2025

Channel

1.50

2.88

0.01

0.06

0.01

1.55

D750616

2025

Grab

0.11

64.83

0.52

0.35

0.56

1.54

D751251

2024

Grab

1.27

11.10

0.11

0.02

0.02

1.53

M217636

2025

Channel

1.33

12.99

0.01

0.07

0.01

1.52

D750552

2024

Channel

0.02

33.00

0.24

0.04

2.82

1.51

D751948

2024

Grab

0.11

53.10

0.01

3.48

0.07

1.49

D751993

2024

Grab

1.20

11.90

0.03

0.35

0.17

1.48

M224885

2025

Grab

0.48

14.86

0.90

0.00

0.01

1.45

D751116

2024

Grab

1.27

13.20

0.00

0.01

0.01

1.44

D750553

2024

Channel

0.02

25.10

0.22

0.06

2.82

1.42

D751115

2024

Grab

0.05

45.10

0.02

0.95

2.03

1.40

D751397

2025

Grab

0.01

26.13

0.65

0.05

2.10

1.40

M224914

2025

Grab

0.02

49.81

0.32

1.61

0.85

1.36

D750607

2024

Grab

0.68

43.40

0.00

0.75

0.03

1.36

D751941

2024

Grab

0.35

26.00

0.06

0.64

1.54

1.34

D750095

2024

Channel

0.06

52.40

0.07

1.56

0.93

1.32

D750093

2024

Channel

0.02

43.70

0.15

0.65

1.65

1.31

D751159

2024

Grab

0.54

29.00

0.03

1.93

0.03

1.31

M217707

2025

Channel

0.03

35.15

0.46

1.41

0.94

1.30

M217591

2025

Channel

1.17

3.78

0.06

0.04

0.03

1.28

D751599

2024

Float

0.05

67.20

0.02

1.54

0.23

1.27

M217625

2025

Channel

0.35

20.84

0.55

0.02

0.61

1.22

M217673

2025

Channel

0.07

48.23

0.03

1.41

1.35

1.22

M217626

2025

Channel

0.84

17.58

0.18

0.00

0.02

1.22

M224854

2025

Grab

0.95

20.56

0.05

0.91

0.24

1.21

D750706

2025

Float

0.03

86.21

0.09

0.10

0.05

1.18

D750091

2024

Channel

0.02

56.00

0.13

0.07

1.40

1.18

D751193

2024

Grab

0.44

20.60

0.48

0.01

0.01

1.17

D750087

2024

Channel

0.14

37.00

0.00

1.49

0.91

1.15

D751945

2024

Grab

0.02

27.30

0.08

1.53

1.17

1.13

M217704

2025

Channel

1.07

1.61

0.02

0.01

0.02

1.11

M224856

2025

Grab

0.01

18.03

0.66

0.02

1.22

1.10

D750727

2025

Grab

0.00

28.20

0.83

0.00

0.02

1.07

D751835

2024

Chip

0.12

25.20

0.05

1.76

0.75

1.05

M224919

2025

Grab

0.86

8.94

0.03

0.17

0.01

1.03

M217602

2025

Channel

0.55

25.19

0.16

0.03

0.05

1.02

The Big One property is situated in a region that is well known for hosting Tier 1 precious metal and porphyry deposits, several of which occur near the property including the multiple porphyry systems at Galore Creek (12,159 million pounds of copper, 9.438 million ounces of gold, 174.086 million ounces of silver), the world’s largest known gold reserve at KSM (47.3 million ounces of gold, 160 million ounces of silver, 7.32 billion pounds of copper) and the polymetallic copper project at Shaft Creek (5 billion pounds of copper, 3.7 million ounces of gold, 16.4 million ounces of silver), as well as the Brucejack high-grade epithermal gold deposit (14 million ounces of gold, 91.8 million ounces of silver), and the structurally controlled high-grade hydrothermal gold-silver zones at Trophy and Sphal Creek. The property geology is favorable to host these types of deposits as confirmed by the presence of extensive areas of propylitic alteration, untested geophysical anomalies, strong silt, soil and rock geochemistry including path finder elements directly related to porphyry systems, key structures and textures, porphyry-style mineralization, and high-grade polymetallic veins, that have been discovered within the Big One claims.

The Big One property can be accessed year-round via helicopter from the Glenora/Telegraph Creek Road at the Barrington Mine (33 km to the north-northeast) as well as the Galore Creek Road (15 km to the southeast). The Canadian government committed $20 M to extend/improve the Galore Creek Road to within 15 km of the Big One property. The property is 2 km west of the Scud River airstrip used in the early days of Galore Creek.

The Big One property exploration qualifies for the Critical Mineral Exploration Tax Credit (CMETC).

The Company would like to extend a special thanks to the Tahltan First Nation, the local community, and service providers for supporting our efforts and contributing to the success of this year’s program. We look forward to continuing to work with the Tahltan First Nation and all local stakeholders and businesses while we move forward to unlocking the full potential of this amazing new discovery. WORKING TOGETHER WE SUCCEED!

About Juggernaut Exploration Ltd.

Juggernaut Exploration Ltd. is an explorer and generator of precious metals projects in the prolific Golden Triangle of northwestern British Columbia. Its projects are in world-class geological settings and geopolitical safe jurisdictions amenable to Tier 1 mining in Canada. Juggernaut is a member and active supporter of CASERM, an organization representing a collaborative venture between the Colorado School of Mines and Virginia Tech. Juggernaut’s key strategic cornerstone shareholder is Crescat Capital.

For more information, please contact:

Juggernaut Exploration Ltd.

Dan Stuart

President and Chief Executive Officer

Tel: (604)-559-8028

www.juggernautexploration.com

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Qualified Person

Rein Turna, P. Geo, is the qualified person as defined by National Instrument 43-101, for Juggernaut Exploration projects, and supervised the preparation of, and has reviewed and approved, the technical information in this release.

Other

The reader is cautioned that grab samples are spot samples which are typically, but not exclusively, constrained to mineralization. Grab samples are selective in nature and collected to determine the presence or absence of mineralization and are not intended to be representative of the material sampled.

Grab, channels, chip and talus samples were collected by foot with helicopter assistance. Prospective areas included, but were not limited to, proximity to MINFile locations, placer creek occurrences, regional soil anomalies, and potential gossans based on high-resolution satellite imagery. The rock grab and chip samples were extracted using a rock hammer, or hammer and chisel to expose fresh surfaces and to liberate a sample of anywhere between 0.5 to 5.0 kilograms. All sample sites were flagged with biodegradable flagging tape and marked with the sample number. All sample sites were recorded using hand-held GPS units (accuracy 3-10 meters) and sample ID, easting, northing, elevation, type of sample (outcrop, subcrop, float, talus, chip, grab, etc.) and a description of the rock were recorded on all-weather paper. Samples are then inserted in a clean plastic bag with a sample tag for transport and shipping to the geochemistry lab. QA/QC samples including blanks, certified reference materials, and duplicate samples are inserted regularly into the sample sequence at a rate of 10%.

All samples are transported in rice bags sealed with numbered security tags. The rice bags are transported from the core shacks to the MSALABS facilities in Terrace, BC. MSALABS is certified with both AC89-IAS and ISO/IEC Standard 17025:2017. The core samples undergo preparation via drying, crushing to ~70% of the material passing a 2 mm sieve and riffle splitting. The sample splits are weighed and transferred into three plastic jars, each containing between 300 g and 500 g of crushed sample material. A 250 g split is pulverized to ensure at least 85% of the material passes through a 75 µm sieve. The crushed samples are transported to the MSALABS PhotonAssayTM facility in Prince George, where gold concentrations are quantified via photon assay analysis (method CPA-Au1). Samples that result in gold concentrations ≥5 ppm are analyzed to extinction. Photon assay uses high-energy X-rays (photons) to excite atomic nuclei within the jarred samples, inducing the emission of secondary gamma rays, which are measured to quantify gold concentrations. The assays from all jars are combined on a weight-averaged basis. Multielement analyses are carried at the MSALABS facilities in Surrey, BC, where 250 g of pulverized splits are analyzed via ICF6xx and IMS-230 methods. The IMS-230 method uses 4-acid digestion (a combination of hydrochloric, nitric, perchloric and hydrofluoric acids) followed by inductively coupled plasma emission spectrometry to quantify concentrations of 48 elements. Samples with over-limit results for Ag, Cu, Pb and Zn undergo ore-grade analysis via the ICF-6xx method (where ‘xx’ denotes the target metal). This method employs 4-acid digestion followed by inductively coupled plasma emission spectrometry.

FORWARD LOOKING STATEMENT

Certain disclosures in this release may constitute forward-looking statements that are subject to numerous risks and uncertainties relating to Juggernaut’s operations that may cause future results to differ materially from those expressed or implied by those forward-looking statements, including its ability to complete the contemplated private placement. Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on these statements.

NOT FOR DISSEMINATION IN THE UNITED STATES OR TO U.S. PERSONS OR FOR DISTRIBUTION TO U.S. NEWSWIRE SERVICES. THIS PRESS RELEASE DOES NOT CONSTITUTE AN OFFER TO SELL OR AN INVITATION TO PURCHASE ANY SECURITIES DESCRIBED IN it.

NEITHER THE TSX VENTURE EXCHANGE NOR ITS REGULATION SERVICES PROVIDER (AS THAT TERM IS DEFINED IN THE POLICIES OF THE TSX VENTURE EXCHANGE) ACCEPTS RESPONSIBILITY FOR THE ADEQUACY OR ACCURACY OF THIS RELEASE.

Copyright (c) 2025 TheNewswire – All rights reserved.

News Provided by TheNewsWire via QuoteMedia

This post appeared first on investingnews.com

Questcorp Mining Inc. (CSE: QQQ,OTC:QQCMF) (OTCQB: QQCMF) (FSE: D910) (the ‘Company’ or ‘Questcorp’) completed the first tranche of its non-brokered private placement (the ‘Offering’) on October 24, 2025. In connection with closing of the first tranche, the Company issued 14,000,334 units (each, a ‘Unit’) at a price of $0.15 per Unit for gross proceeds of $2,100,050. Each Unit consists of one common share of the Company (each, a ‘Share’) and one-half-of-one share purchase warrant (each whole warrant, an ‘Warrant’). Each Warrant entitles the holder to acquire an additional common share of the Company at a price of $0.20 until October 24, 2027, subject to accelerated expiry in the event the closing price of the Shares is $0.50 or higher for ten consecutive trading days.

A portion of the Units issued under the first tranche the Offering, representing $2,000,000 are held pursuant to a sharing agreement entered into with an institutional investor, Sorbie Bornholm LP (‘Sorbie‘) and the Company (the ‘Sharing Agreement‘). Funds deposited under the Sharing Agreement are secured in escrow with a third-party. The Sharing Agreement provides that the Company’s economic interest will be determined in twenty-four monthly settlement tranches as measured against the Benchmark Price (as defined herein). Unless subject to adjustment, each monthly settlement tranche will total $79,792.

If, at the time of settlement, the Settlement Price (determined monthly based on a volume-weighted average price for twenty trading days prior to the settlement date) (the ‘Settlement Price‘) exceeds the benchmark price of $0.1949 (the ‘Benchmark Price‘), the Company shall receive more than one-hundred percent of the monthly settlement due, on a pro-rata basis. There is no upper limit placed on the additional proceeds receivable by the Company as part of the monthly settlements. If, at the time of settlement, the Settlement Price is below the Benchmark Price of $0.1949, the Company will receive less than one-hundred percent of the monthly settlement due on a pro-rata basis. In no event will a decline in the Settlement Price of the Units result in an increase or decrease in the number of Units being issued to Sorbie, but it could result in the Company receiving less than the full amount of the subscription received from Sorbie or in the Company receiving a nominal amount for a particular month.

As an example, the following are the monthly settlement amounts the Company would receive based on varying Settlement Prices:

Settlement Price Monthly Settlement Amount
$0.2449 $100,262
$0.1949 (Benchmark Price) $79,792
$0.1449 $59,322

 

For further information concerning the Offering, readers are encouraged to review the news release issued by the Company on October 27, 2025.

About Questcorp Mining Inc.

Questcorp Mining Inc. is engaged in the business of the acquisition and exploration of mineral properties in North America, with the objective of locating and developing economic precious and base metals properties of merit. The Company holds an option to acquire an undivided 100% interest in and to mineral claims totaling 1,168.09 hectares comprising the North Island Copper Property, on Vancouver Island, British Columbia, subject to a royalty obligation. The Company also holds an option to acquire an undivided 100% interest in and to mineral claims totaling 2,520.2 hectares comprising the La Union Project located in Sonora, Mexico, subject to a royalty obligation.

Contact Information

Questcorp Mining Corp.

Saf Dhillon, President & CEO

Email: saf@questcorpmining.ca
Telephone: (604) 484-3031

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There are now enough Senate Democrats willing to back a revamped plan to reopen the government. 

A source familiar with the newly-unveiled plan told Fox News Digital that there are enough Senate Democrats ready to join Republicans for a key vote Sunday night as Congress readies to reopen the government. 

The latest development comes after an updated continuing resolution was revealed that would reopen the government until Jan. 30, 2026, reverse firings of furloughed workers carried out by the Trump administration and ensure that furloughed workers get back pay. 

Senate Appropriations Chair Susan Collins, R-Maine, led the bipartisan deal, but a trio of Democratic caucus members, Sens. Angus King, I-Maine, Jeanne Shaheen, D-N.H., and Maggie Hassan, D-N.H., proved crucial in striking a way forward. 

Lawmakers are expected to take the first of a trio of votes on reopening the government later Sunday night. But it will require action from the House before the closure is officially ended. 

Earlier in the day, Senate Republicans unveiled another crucial piece of the puzzle in their bid to reopen the government and plan to plow ahead with a vote on Sunday. 

While both sides still appear at an impasse on extending expiring Obamacare subsidies, appropriators moved ahead with a package of spending bills that Republicans hope will jumpstart the government funding process, and lead to an end to the 40-day government shutdown. 

The Senate Appropriations Committee released the three-bill spending package, known as a minibus, Sunday afternoon. Lawmakers are still waiting on text for an updated continuing resolution (CR), that, if passed, is expected to reopen the government until late January. 

It includes legislation that would fund military construction and the VA, the legislative branch and agriculture and the Food and Drug Administration.

Senate Republicans view the package as a sweetener that they hope attracts enough Senate Democrats to break through the logjam and move toward reopening the government. And given that the minibus is a largely bipartisan product, lawmakers believe it could succeed. 

Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., made clear in the last few days that he would not put a bill on the floor that did not have the votes to pass after spending several weeks daring Senate Democrats to vote against the original House-passed continuing resolution (CR). 

‘There’s going to be something to vote on, let’s put it that way,’ Thune said. 

Still, the package does not include a deal on Senate Democrats’ chief demand throughout the government shutdown to extend expiring Obamacare subsidies. 

Thune has promised Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and his caucus a vote on the expiring subsidies after the government reopens. And for several weeks, Senate Democrats said that was not enough to assuage the concerns. 

Senate Democrats are expected to huddle Saturday night before a likely vote to plot a path forward. If Schumer and his caucus agree to the deal, they would effectively be caving from their deeply-entrenched position that has seen the government shutdown stretch over a month. 

Lawmakers will now have time to read over the bills, with a vote expected later Sunday evening. 

But, it’s just the first step in what could be a long and drawn-out process. First, Thune will tee up the original House-passed CR for a vote, which lawmakers view as the vehicle to attach the minibus and updated CR to. 

Then there will be two more votes before the package advances from the Senate. Then, it will have to go back to the House before making its way to President Donald Trump’s desk. 

Schumer and his caucus could still apply pain on the process, too, through procedural hurdles. And despite rumblings of some in the caucus ready to break ranks, some Republicans aren’t too optimistic that this will be an easy process. 

‘I don’t expect anything from the Democrats,’ Sen. Markwayne Mullin, R-Okla., said. ‘At this point, their demands have been so ridiculous, I don’t know what they’re going to do, and at this point, I frankly, don’t give a crap.’ 

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The Senate took a massive step forward on its way to reopening the government on Sunday, with a group of Senate Democrats caving and joining Republicans in their bid to pass a revamped plan to end the shutdown.

Signs that the shutdown, which entered its 40th day, could be ending became more and more clear as the day went on, particularly with the unveiling of a bipartisan package of spending bills that lawmakers hope to attach to a modified bill to reopen the government.

Eight Senate Democrats crossed the aisle to mark the first step in the GOP’s quest to end the shutdown. Many of the lawmakers that splintered from Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., were among those engaged in bipartisan talks over the last several weeks.

Among the defectors were Sens. Angus King, I-Maine, John Fetterman, D-Pa., Catherine Cortez Masto, D-Nev., Jeanne Shaheen, D-N.H., Maggie Hassan, D-N.H., Jacky Rosen, D-N.M., Tim Kaine, D-Va., and the number two Democrat in the Senate, Dick Durbin, D-Ill.

‘The question was, does the shutdown further the goal of achieving some needed support for the extension of the tax credits? Our judgment was that it will not,’ King said. ‘It would not produce that result. And the evidence for that is almost seven weeks of fruitless attempts to make that happen.’

Schumer and Senate Democrats long stayed the course that they would only vote to reopen the government in exchange for a solid deal on extending expiring Obamacare subsidies.

But the solution developed over the last several days included nothing of the sort. While there were some wins in the updated continuing resolution (CR), like reversals of some of the firings of furloughed workers undertaken by the Trump administration and guaranteeing back pay for furloughed workers, there was no guaranteed victory in sight on the Obamacare issue.

That means that Senate Democrats effectively caved with little to show for their healthcare push, save for the guarantee of a vote on the subsidies from Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., which was reflected in the updated CR. 

Schumer panned the compromise deal, and charged that when Republicans rejected Democrats’ own counter-proposal that would have extended the expiring subsidies for a year, ‘They showed that they are against any health care reform.’

‘This healthcare crisis is so severe, so urgent, so devastating for families back home that I cannot, in good faith, support this CR that fails to address the healthcare crisis,’ Schumer said. 

Thune was optimistic that the plan would work, and reiterated his promise of a vote on the expiring subsidies. However, whatever legislation is produced to address the Obamacare issue is likely to fail. 

Regardless, as I have said for weeks to my Democrat friends, I will schedule a vote on their proposal, and I’ve committed to having that vote no later than second week in December,’ he said. 

Progressives in the caucus were unhappy with the developments, too.

Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vermont, charged that it would be a ‘horrific mistake’ for Democrats to cave now without an Obamacare deal.

‘If Democrats cave on this issue, what it will say to Donald Trump is that he has a green light to go forward toward authoritarianism,’ Sanders said. ‘And I think that would be a tragedy for this country.’

Still, there is a long way to go before the government officially reopens.

Sunday’s vote was the first in a series needed in the Senate to modify the original House-passed continuing resolution and combine it with the three-bill spending package and updated CR, which, if passed, would reopen the government until Jan. 30, 2026.

Lawmakers hope that if given the extra time, they could finish funding the government with spending bills rather than turning to another CR or colossal omnibus spending package, which crams all 12 government funding bills into one piece of legislation.

‘If we blow this window, we’re going to get stuck with a yearlong CR,’ Sen. John Hoeven, R-N.D., said.

And the shutdown won’t end in the Senate, given that the changes to the legislation will need to be greenlit by the House before making it to President Donald Trump’s desk.

Democrats could still extract pain through procedural hurdles unless there is unanimous agreement from all 100 senators to move forward with the remaining votes.

The Obamacare issue is still bubbling on both sides of the aisle, however. Senate Republicans slammed the state of healthcare throughout Saturday, particularly over how the subsidies funneled money to insurance companies.

Democrats still remained skeptical if their frustration, and desire to make changes to take on insurance companies, was legitimate.

‘The point, I think that’s really relevant here, is if they’re serious, and I really question whether that’s the case,’ Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., said.

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The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) started reducing air traffic across 40 airports Friday due to air traffic controller staffing issues stemming from the government shutdown.

As the government shutdown has hit 40 days, more air traffic control workers have refused to come to work as they’re about to miss a second paycheck next week — prompting the FAA to make cuts to ensure no safety issues arise.

But these flight reductions will likely continue if the shutdown does — or worsen — and could impact thousands of flights daily, according to Marc Scribner, a senior transportation policy analyst at the libertarian Reason Foundation think tank.

‘This would affect thousands of flights per day, and tens of thousands of passengers potentially seeing their flights canceled — a major disruption,’ Scribner told Fox News Digital Thursday.

As of Sunday, there are now enough Senate Democrats willing to back a revamped plan to reopen the government. But if the shutdown doesn’t end, air travel disruptions are at risk. 

‘I don’t think we would expect, if the shutdown continues, for staffing levels to improve over what they are right now,’ Scribner said. ‘If anything, they will continue to deteriorate as controllers call out sick or perhaps even resign. So I would expect it would not get better as long as the shutdown continues.’

Scribner said that travelers shouldn’t be concerned that the reduction in flights would translate to a lapse in safety, but said they should be aware that their travel schedules will likely take a hit as a result.

‘They’re not going to allow unsafe flights. So whatever that means in terms of staffing capability and workflow, they are going to reduce the flights in order to maintain that very high level of safety that’s demanded of that,’ Scribner said. ‘Travelers shouldn’t be concerned about safety in this, but they should be concerned about their travel schedules, which are likely to be impacted.’

Richard Stern, director of the Grover M. Hermann Center for the Federal Budget at conservative think tank The Heritage Foundation, also said he expects this reduction to continue until the shutdown ends. 

‘Unfortunately, I think it’s going to have to continue until the shutdown ends, because they’re running through resources that they don’t have until this funding again,’ Stern told Fox News Digital Thursday. 

Stern said the government has been entering into uncharted territory now with what minimum services the government is required to provide, despite the fact that funding has expired. 

‘No one really knows exactly what the next steps are after this,’ Stern said. 

No clarity has been provided regarding how long this reduction in flights is expected to continue. The Department of Transportation, which oversees the FAA, did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Fox News Digital.

The FAA said Friday that air traffic will be cut by 10% in the coming days across 40 ‘high-volume’ markets, including those in major cities like Atlanta, Denver, Dallas, Orlando, Miami and San Francisco, according to a list of airports obtained by The Associated Press. Major metropolitan areas with several airports like New York and Chicago will have outages at multiple locations.

Reducing air traffic in response to the lapse in funding from the government shutdown is unprecedented, according to FAA Administrator Bryan Bedford.

‘I’m not aware in my 35-year history in the aviation market where we’ve had a situation where we’re taking these kinds of measures,’ Bedford said at a news conference Wednesday.

Air traffic controllers have been working without pay since the shutdown kicked off Oct. 1, and often are required to work six days a week in addition to mandatory overtime.

Bedford said that the decision to reduce air traffic was made in order to prevent a crisis from emerging, amid increased staffing pressures and voluntary safety reports from pilots suggesting that air traffic controllers were facing heightened levels of fatigue.

‘We’re not going to wait for a safety problem to truly manifest itself when the early indicators are telling us we can take action today to prevent things from deteriorating,’ Bedford said. ‘The system is extremely safe today and will be extremely safe tomorrow. If the pressures continue to build even after we take these measures, we’ll come back and take additional measures.’

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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President Donald Trump has granted ‘full, complete and unconditional’ pardons to several key allies accused of attempting to overturn the 2020 election, U.S. Pardon Attorney Ed Martin announced Sunday night.

In a post on X, Martin shared Trump’s proclamation granting pardons for dozens of people, including notable figures like Rudy Giuliani, Mark Meadows and Sidney Powell.

The pardon proclamation was posted in response to a message Martin shared on X on May 26, 2025, that said, ‘No MAGA left behind.’

‘This proclamation ends a grave national injustice perpetrated upon the American people following the 2020 Presidential Election and continues the process of national reconciliation,’ the document reads.

Trump wrote in that proclamation that he did not include himself in the pardons.

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Let’s put politics aside, as if that were possible, and look at how the craziness of the last few days is affecting people.

A week ago, President Donald Trump announced that the 42 million Americans on the SNAP nutrition program would not be getting their benefits — this against the backdrop of a government shutdown that has now reached its 40th day.

This against the backdrop of millions of federal workers who have not been paid while the shutdown drags on — and many of whom live paycheck to paycheck.

This against the backdrop of Trump throwing a lavish, Great Gatsby-themed Mar-a-Lago bash where guests in formal wear watched opera and feasted on blue cheese mousse, sliced beef filet, seared scallops and Trump chocolate cake.

Meanwhile, a federal judge ordered the administration to resume SNAP benefits, which cost $8.5 billion a month, but the Supreme Court gave Trump time to appeal.

And when at least nine states said they would pay for SNAP benefits during the crisis, Trump ordered them to ‘immediately undo’ any effort to provide food stamps to lower-income families — or face financial penalties.

Let’s see: how does this make the president look?

I hate this word, but what are the optics of this determined effort to stop these benefits from reaching hungry families?

After all, when a wealthy donor pal, Timothy Mellon, a banking and railroad heir, offered $130 million to ensure that American troops get paid during the shutdown, Trump seized the opportunity.

After all, the Trump tax cut was tilted toward the wealthy.

After all, Trump has further cut capital gains taxes on home sales that will mostly benefit the affluent and wealthy, enabling many to pay zero, or a reduced rate, on these sales. If you are totally unaware of this, you probably don’t qualify.

After all — this may have been the weirdest thing — Trump said Obamacare is so terrible that he wants to send people $2,000 checks so they can buy their own insurance.

But, where would they buy it, if not from an insurance company? And what would they do if the stock market plunged? There’s a reason that privatization of health insurance has never gone anywhere.

So to come back to politics (inevitably), how does any of this help Trump?

I get the notion that he’s trying to boost the pain level so that Democrats will end the shutdown on his terms.

The Democrats, who have made soaring Obamacare premiums a central part of their pitch — and fear millions will lose coverage unless expiring subsidies are extended — have hung on longer than anyone expected.

For what it’s worth, both sides deserve a ton of blame for failing to keep the lights on during this endless blame game, rather than work out a compromise, which is what we pay them to do.

But don’t Trump and JD Vance, who called the judge’s order ‘absurd,’ look like they don’t particularly care if millions of families go hungry, or are taking food from dumpsters?

Seriously, is there an alternative explanation?

Blaming the other side is fine for the usual political fun and games. But doing it during this kind of self-inflicted crisis?

With the opposition throwing out charges of cruelty, is there some nine — dimensional chess level on which this helps Trump?

Trump says former President Joe Biden ‘went totally crazy’ and handed out food stamps to ‘anybody that would ask.’ So is this liberalism gone wild? I decided to do a little digging.

Turns out there are income limits, and those in the program must meet work requirements. What’s more, the oft-repeated charge that illegal immigrants are getting SNAP benefits is simply untrue, though there are exemptions for children and refugees. (Obviously, you can never completely rule out instances of fraud.)

During the pandemic, when unemployment soared, Congress passed an emergency measure that temporarily suspended a work requirement for adults without dependents who were capable of holding jobs. This happened under … President Trump, in his first term, in 2020.

Under a deal with Republicans in 2023, work requirements for SNAP were increased. That happened under … Biden. Some Republicans, meanwhile, said the measure didn’t go far enough.

By the way, SNAP participation peaked in the fall of 2017, under Trump, which was related to hurricane emergencies.

Sorry for the green-eyeshade stuff, but I thought it was worth more research.

Most people don’t have the time or interest in excavating the details. They just know they aren’t getting the food aid they expected and that neither are millions of other lower-income families. And especially with his dogged determination to block the states from helping out, many are holding Trump accountable.

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