Trump the GrifterNew Foto - Trump the Grifter

In the years before the Constitution was written, two of the most famous figures of the American Revolution were caught up in controversy over fears of undue foreign influence caused by their receipt of opulent gifts from European kings. One was a goldsnuff boxencrusted with 408 diamonds that King Louis XVI of France gave to Benjamin Franklin. The other wasa horse, given to John Jay by the King of Spain. Both of these gifts were publicly reported to the new Confederation Congress, and despite vocal public objection, both men kept the gifts. The controversies were still ripe in the minds of American leaders when they soon went to draft a new constitution. They worried that large and valuable gifts might inappropriately influence American officials in their dealings with foreign states—that a snuff box or a horse could psychologically warm a person to another country, distorting his ability to put America's interests first. To prevent that distortion, the drafters made anti-corruption provisions a cornerstone of the new constitution. Indeed, if the frequency of their attention to a particular issue is a measure of how significant their concern was, then few issues were as alarming to them as corruption, which the original Constitution explicitly addresses in four separate instances—plus a fifth that was later added. President Donald Trump's instinct for self-enrichment is a horrific exemplar of what the Founders hoped to prevent: a president profiting from public office. Trump's ventures—intending to accept the gift of a Qatari jet, profiting from the sale of a self-referential cryptocurrency, auctioning off a chance to have dinner with him—all reflect his disregard for the Founders' concern. Two of the Constitution's efforts to restrict conflicts of interest are direct and distinct prohibitions on profiteering by the president. One of these (in Article II, Section 1) was an absolute ban on domestic gifts to the president: Aside from compensation for his service, "he shall not receive within that Period any other Emolument from the United States, or any of them."Emolument, a word first recorded in the 15th century, signifies a "profit or gain arising from station, office, or employment." That is, making money off one's position by, say, selling favors to fellow citizens (for example,the opportunity to dine with the president) is expressly prohibited. [Yair Rosenberg: The darker design behind Trump's $400 million plane] The second prohibition (in Article I, Section 9) was conditional. Presidents may not "accept of any present, Emolument, Office, or Title, of any kind whatever, from any King, Prince, or foreign State" without Congress's consent. In other words, the answer to the offer of a personal gift (such asthe use of an airplaneeither during or after presidential service) is a constitutionally required "no," unless Congress affirmatively authorizes it. Rejecting a gift is not "stupid," as Trump suggested—it's required by the law of the land, and for good reason. In addition to these direct limitations on presidential conduct, also notable is that the impeachment clause (Article II, Section 4), which generally authorizes impeachment for "high crimes and misdemeanors" names two (and only two) crimes specifically as grounds for impeachment: treason and bribery—receipt of a giftin exchange for an official act. Not all gifts are bribes, but some are, and those would be grounds for removal from office. Beyond these three instances, the Constitution twice addresses the problem of possible profiteering by other federal officials, namely members of Congress: in Article I, Section 6 and in the Twenty-Seventh Amendment (which restricts Congress's ability to increase its own pay, and which was originally proposed in 1789). What animated the Founders' fear of conflicts of interest? An understanding of human nature and a respect for history. First they recognized that influence could be readily purchased from unprincipled leaders. As Alexander Hamilton put it in "Federalist No. 22": "One of the weak sides of republics, among their numerous advantages, is that they afford too easy an inlet to foreign corruption." Commenting on human nature, he went on to explain: "In republics, persons elevated from the mass of the community, by the suffrages of their fellow-citizens, to stations of great preeminence and power, may find compensations for betraying their trust, which to any but minds animated and guided by superior virtue, may appear to exceed the proportion of interest they have in the common stock, and to over-balance the obligations of duty." In short, Hamilton argued, the average citizen might (unless he or she was a person of "superior virtue") put their own financial interests above their duty to the country. [Jonathan Lemire and Russell Berman: The MAGA-world rift over Trump's Qatari jet] The requirement of congressional consent for foreign gifts persists today. When I served as a minor official at the Department of Homeland Security 20 years ago (I was the acting assistant secretary for international affairs and routinely interacted with foreign officials), any ceremonial gifts above a de minimis limit that foreign officials gave me as part of my official duties were, as constitutionally required, turned over to the department for receipt, processing, and storage. Congressional consent to keep a few small gifts was authorizedby the Foreign Gifts and Decorations Act. Trump's proposed acceptance of the Qatari jet,which he plans to use after he leaves office, stems from his view that Qatar is a country "we have successfully defended for many years" with a "special royal family." This sort of conflict of interest is precisely what the Founders feared. Americans cannot know now whether Qatari security continues to be in America's best interests or only in Trump's desire to please his "special" friends. That doubt is exactly why the Framers adopted a formal practice of requiring the notice and consent of Congress before foreign gifts may be accepted. An unfortunate flaw in the Founders' design was that they anticipated ready compliance with the prohibition on gift receipt. I think they could have barely imagined a president accepting a personal gift without congressional consent despite the express words of the constitutional text. Nor could they have readily imagined a president soliciting personal benefits to himself or his family as a condition of access to and influence on his decision making. Perhaps even more to the point, in the absence of such compliance, the Framers no doubt anticipated aggressive congressional oversight to enforce the obligations of consent, buttressed by the ultimate remedy of impeachment to compel compliance. And they might even have anticipated enforcement of the anti-emolument provisions in the courts. But Congress today is supine—this, perhaps more than anything, is what they could not possibly have imagined. And when, in the first Trump administration, emoluments cases were brought in the courts, they were delayed until after Trump left office and ultimately dismissed, leaving openquestions of standingandsubstantive scope. All of which puts the nation in an exceedingly uncomfortable place. The emoluments clauses were integral to how the Founders sought to constrain human nature, fearful as they were of self-interest triumphing over constitutional duty. But today, faced with a president who seemingly has no concern for constitutional limitations, the carefully crafted restrictions of the Constitution appear to be unenforceable; the courts are ineffective, and Congress doesn't seem to care. The Framers, one suspects, would weep. Article originally published atThe Atlantic

Trump the Grifter

Trump the Grifter In the years before the Constitution was written, two of the most famous figures of the American Revolution were caught up...
Mediators make fresh push for peace in Gaza as death toll spikes from new Israeli campaignNew Foto - Mediators make fresh push for peace in Gaza as death toll spikes from new Israeli campaign

International mediators are making renewed efforts to reach a truce in Gaza after Israel launched a majornew offensivein the territory, as the health ministry there reported more than 100 people killed in intense overnight strikes. On Saturday, Hamas and Israel started indirect negotiations in the Qatari capital Doha to reach a ceasefire and hostages deal. Senior Hamas official Taher Al-Nunu confirmed the resumption of talks in Doha, saying, "We have agreed to the current round of negotiations without preconditions," according to Hamas-run al Aqsa TV. Israel's Defense Minister Israel claimed Saturday that its new military operation had pushed Hamas to the negotiating table. "With the launch of Operation 'Gideon's Chariots' in Gaza… the Hamas delegation in Doha announced a return to negotiations over a hostage deal — in contrast to the refusal they had maintained until that moment," Katz said. But another possibility is that Hamas agreed to restart the talks following a visit from US President DonaldTrump to the Middle East. "Following discussions between Qatar and the US during President Trump's visit to Doha, there is a renewed push by mediators from the United States, Qatar and Egypt to see if a new ceasefire agreement can be reached," an official with knowledge of the talks told CNN. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has been in close contact with the negotiation team in Doha as well as Israel's Strategic Affairs Minister Ron Dermer and the US' Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff in an effort to advance the deal, an Israeli official told CNN on Saturday. He instructed his negotiating team to remain in Doha "to fully exhaust all efforts to secure the release of our hostages," the official added. Last week Netanyahu directed the Israeli negotiating team to head to Qatar for talks, but made clear that he is only committed to negotiating a proposal put forward by Witkoff, which would see the release of half the hostages in return for a temporary ceasefire. The proposal does not guarantee an end to the war. Trump was in Doha Wednesday as part of a Middle East trip that skipped Israel. Trump said last week that he wanted an end to the "brutal war" in Gaza. He also bypassed Israel twice this month in reaching bilateral deals with regional militant groups. Hamas released an Israeli-American hostagelast week, and theHouthis agreedto stop firing at American ships in the Red Sea while pledging to continue fighting Israel. On Wednesday, Trump denied that Israel had been sidelined. "This is good for Israel," he said. But on Thursday, he said he wanted the US to "take" Gaza and turn it into a "freedom zone." "I have concepts for Gaza that I think are very good, make it a freedom zone, let the United States get involved and make it just a freedom zone," Trump said in Qatar. While in the Gulf, Trump also acknowledged that people are starving in Gaza and said the US would have the situation in Gaza "taken care of." Meanwhile, the UN and prominent aid organizations are raising the alarm over Israel's new offensive in Gaza, who say civilians who are bearing the brunt of the assault. The Israeli military said the operation is to "achieve all the goals of the war in Gaza, including the release of the hostages and the defeat of Hamas." More than 100 people have been killed in fresh airstrikes overnight, the Palestinian health ministry said Sunday, with entire families together. In the Al-Mawasi area of southern Gaza, an infant, his two young siblings and their parents, who were all living in a displacement camp, were killed on Saturday, Dr. Munir al-Barsh, the health ministry's director, told CNN. As the bombardment continues and the death toll rises, Gaza's healthcare system is being pushed further to the brink. On Sunday, the ministry of health said that "all public hospitals in the northern Gaza Strip are now out of service." The UN is now warning that over 2.1 million people – the enclave's entire population – is facing a risk of famine, following 19 months of conflict and mass displacement, now exacerbated by Israel's 11-week blocking of aid. On Friday, UN human rights chief Volker Turk said in a statement that the renewed bombing campaign was equivalent to ethnic cleansing. "This latest barrage of bombs … and the denial of humanitarian assistance underline that there appears to be a push for a permanent demographic shift in Gaza that is in defiance of international law and is tantamount to ethnic cleansing," Turk said. Despite the resumption of talks in Qatar, Omar Qandil, whose brother, sister-in-law and 4-month-old niece were killed in an overnight airstrike in central Gaza, said he feels the world has turned a blind eye to their suffering. "They were all asleep…all targeted in their bedroom," he said. "I don't know what we (can) say anymore, we (have) spoke a lot. There is no one looking at us: not Arabs not Muslims, no one." CNN's Eyad Kourdi, Abeer Salman and Eugenia Yosef contributed reporting. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Mediators make fresh push for peace in Gaza as death toll spikes from new Israeli campaign

Mediators make fresh push for peace in Gaza as death toll spikes from new Israeli campaign International mediators are making renewed effort...
On the White House website under Trump, there's a sporadic commitment to documentationNew Foto - On the White House website under Trump, there's a sporadic commitment to documentation

A look at some of what's missing from the Trump White House's website: — Onwhitehouse.govunder "Remarks," the last posting is from April 22 and is Vice President JD Vance's comments while he traveled in India. There has been nothing posted for PresidentDonald Trumpsince his comments on March 13 while meeting with NATO's secretary-general. — The last transcription of White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt's briefings with reporters was on Feb. 20, and that one featured national security adviser Mike Waltz, who has since left that job. Leavitt generally has held a briefing about once a week since Inauguration Day on Jan. 20, and sometimes conducts multiple ones in a week. — The lack of transcriptions stands in contrast to pages on the White House of President Joe Biden, which are maintained by the National Archives. There, under a heading marked "The Briefing Room," is Biden's last major speech as president, which he made in South Carolina on Jan. 19, and numerous other comments he offered right up to the end of his term on Jan. 20. The last statement from former Vice President Kamala Harris was posted on Jan. 17. The transcript of White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre's final briefing appears on Jan. 15. — In all, there are 1,247 webpages of speeches, remarks and presidential actions in that section of the Biden archives alone. The current Trump White House lists only 10 page of briefings and statements in total.

On the White House website under Trump, there's a sporadic commitment to documentation

On the White House website under Trump, there's a sporadic commitment to documentation A look at some of what's missing from the Tru...
Utah GOP Sen. John Curtis vows to be independent voice as he breaks with Trump over key issuesNew Foto - Utah GOP Sen. John Curtis vows to be independent voice as he breaks with Trump over key issues

In a Republican Party dominated byPresident Donald Trump, Sen. John Curtis, who was elected to fill retired Sen. Mitt Romney's seat last year, thinks it's still possible – and essential – to be an independent thinker, and isn't afraid to break with the president over key issues. "I really think the best way to make President Trump successful is to let him know when we disagree," the Utah Republican told CNN's Manu Raju on "Inside Politics Sunday." In a wide-ranging interview, Curtis praised Trump on certain issues, including border policy, but warned about the potential negative impacts of tariffs on small businesses and expressed concern over Trump's plan to accept a Qatari jet. Curtis also said he believes the president would need to come to Congress if the administration wants to suspendhabeas corpus, a legal procedure that allows people to challenge their detention in court. "We serve the president best when we act and function more like a board of directors," he said, asking, "you wouldn't want a board of directors to rubber stamp the president of a company, right?" The senator's predecessor found himself a target of scathing attacks from Trump after voting to convict the president in both of his impeachment trials. But Curtis, who didn't back Trump in the 2024 GOP presidential primary, isn't worried about the consequences of breaking with the leader of his party, who has often threatened Republican critics with primaries. "That's a stereotype," Curtis said, explaining that he believes Trump actually has "respect" for people who confront him in "the right way, the right time, the right place." "If I send out a mean, nasty tweet, of course, that's not received well, but if I have a thoughtful conversation with the administration about how I see something, I hope and trust that he actually values that as somebody who wants to help him," he said. Curtis isn't concerned about blowback from base voters either, not hesitating to tout his double-digit lead over his three rivals in Utah's 2024 GOP Senate primary, including Riverton Mayor Trent Staggs,who had the backing of Trumpand the state Republican Party. "People in Utah want the president to be successful," he said of the state that elected Trump to a second term by more than 20 points. "I want the president to be wildly successful, and so it becomes a question of how do we help him be successful," he said, adding, "from time to time, not often, that means we're going to disagree." In his maiden Senate floor speech this month, Curtis emphasized the merits of being "wildly honest" in Washington. "The odds of Congress delivering real results for the American people go up dramatically when we start telling each other the truth, not just behind closed doors, but out in the open," he said. The freshman senator said he's already exhibited some of that "wild" honesty with the Trump administration, telling the president's Cabinet nominees, all of whom he ultimately voted for, "if we're not careful, we'll destroy small businesses with tariffs." As Trump and his top advisers cobble together trade deals in the wake of global backlash to his sweeping tariff policies, Curtis said he understands the president is playing "the long game" on the world stage, but warned of the impacts at home. "We have to be very, very careful with our small businesses," he said. Other areas where Curtis disagrees with Trump and his closest allies range from environmental issues to the value of highlighting diversity to the war in Ukraine. "I think I've been very clear on where I feel about Ukraine and President Zelensky," he said, adding "(Russian President Vladimir) Putin is not our friend." As Trump tests the limits of executive power, Curtis said he thinks the president should consult with Congress first before potentially suspending habeas corpus. He insisted that he would consider the move, whichCNN has reported Trump has recently talked about, "incredibly carefully." "Make a case to me, but I will tell you, as I judge that case, I'm going to be thinking in my mind: what if this is a Democrat president coming after something that I think is important," he said. On another headline-making issue – Trump's plans for his administrationto accept a luxury jet from the Qatari royal family to use as Air Force One– Curtis would only speak for himself. "I will just tell you, in my experience as an elected official, I have found it is best to avoid even the very appearance of being in a bad place," he said. Though Curtis believes Congress has "abdicated" some responsibilities, including managing the federal deficit, he's wary of the dramatic spending slashes shepherded by Elon Musk and the so-called Department of Government Efficiency. "We need to cut," he acknowledged, later adding, "that doesn't mean we shouldn't have compassion. That doesn't mean when we're letting a federal employee go that we shouldn't be thoughtful about perhaps that's the worst day of their life." He also recommended a compassionate approach to his colleagues on Capitol Hill as they weigh how to advance Trump's sweeping tax promises without ballooning the deficit. "We could do this without taking away critical benefits for those most in need, but if we don't make hard decisions, we're going to be making more drastic cuts in the future, and I don't want to do that," he said. Curtis said he thinks GOP lawmakers will end up in a "good place" with Trump's agenda, but he's among the chorus of Republicans calling for changes, urging caution about how the bill rolls back Biden-era clean energy tax credits. "The honesty is we need clean, affordable, reliable energy," he said, explaining that some provisions of former President Joe Biden's signature Inflation Reduction Act are "actually Republican priorities" when it comes to harnessing new forms of energy. The Utah Republican, who previously represented the youngest congressional district in the country, said he knows how much protecting the environment matters to young voters, implying that should be an asset to his party, not a hindrance. "Republicans are far better on this than we're willing to admit," he said. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Utah GOP Sen. John Curtis vows to be independent voice as he breaks with Trump over key issues

Utah GOP Sen. John Curtis vows to be independent voice as he breaks with Trump over key issues In a Republican Party dominated byPresident D...
'Criminal': Elton John condemns UK's AI copyright plansNew Foto - 'Criminal': Elton John condemns UK's AI copyright plans

LONDON (Reuters) -Elton John on Sunday accused the British government of "committing theft" by proposing that tech firms could train artificial intelligence models on the UK's music and creative output without guaranteeing proper recompense. Creative industries globally are grappling with the legal and ethical implications of AI models that can produce their own work after being trained on existing material. Britain, which Prime Minister Keir Starmer wants to become an AI superpower, has proposed relaxing copyright laws to allow AI developers to train their models on any material to which they have lawful access. The proposal would require creators to proactively opt out to stop their work being used. The biggest names in the industry, including John, Paul McCartney, Andrew Lloyd Webber, Ed Sheeran and others, have urged the government to change course, saying the proposal will make it even harder for young people to make a living in the creative industries. "The danger is for young artists, they haven't got the resources to keep checking or fight big tech," John told the BBC. "It's criminal and I feel incredibly betrayed." "A machine ... doesn't have a soul, doesn't have a heart, it doesn't have human feeling, it doesn't have passion. Human beings, when they create something, are doing it ... to bring pleasure to lots of people," he said. John has sold more than 300 million records over a six-decade career. A supporter of Starmer's Labour Party, he said he had always sought to support young artists and would continue to fight against the changes. The government says it is seeking a solution that will enable creative industries and AI companies to flourish. It said on Sunday it was consulting on measures, would publish an assessment on the economic impact of any move, and will not sign off on anything unless it is "completely satisfied they work for creators". Britain has long outperformed in the creative industries, with thousands employed in sectors including theatre, film, advertising, publishing and music. (Reporting by Kate Holton; editing by Barbara Lewis)

'Criminal': Elton John condemns UK's AI copyright plans

'Criminal': Elton John condemns UK's AI copyright plans LONDON (Reuters) -Elton John on Sunday accused the British government of...
Texas AG Ken Paxton sued over new rule to rein in 'rogue' DAs by allowing him access to their case recordsNew Foto - Texas AG Ken Paxton sued over new rule to rein in 'rogue' DAs by allowing him access to their case records

FiveTexas district attorneysare suing state Attorney General Ken Paxton, challenging new rules that would give his office broad authority to access their office's case records, according to a new report. In the two lawsuits filed on Friday, the district attorneys said the rule, in effect since April, is an unconstitutional overreach that violates the separation of powers and would impose unnecessary burdens on county prosecutors, The Texas Tribune reported. District attorneys in Dallas, Bexar and Harris countiesfiled one lawsuitwhile district attorneys in Travis and El Paso counties filed another. Both lawsuits seek to block Paxton from enforcing the rule, arguing that it violates the state constitution and federal law. The rule created by Paxton's office applies to counties with at least 400,000 residents, impacting only 13 of Texas' 254 counties, The Texas Tribune reported. It requires district attorneys to provide all documents or communications produced or received by their offices, including confidential information. Texas Gov. Abbott Signs $1 Billion Voucher Program Into Law, Capping Off Win For School Choice Advocates All documents, correspondence and handwritten notes relevant to a case can be subject to review, according to the outlet. Counties must also submit quarterly reports to the attorney general on twelve different subjects, including specific information on indictments of police officers and the number of times indictments were issued for election code violations. Information on internal policies and how funds obtained through civil forfeiture are spent would also need to be turned over under the new rule. Read On The Fox News App Dallas County District Attorney John Creuzot described the rules as a violation of the separation of powers between the executive branch and the judicial branch. "To make matters worse, the rule's extremely burdensome reporting requirements will cause district attorneys' offices to divert resources and staff away from core prosecutorial roles and responsibilities, which harms public safety and the administration of justice," Creuzot said in a statement. "And it will cost Dallas County taxpayers hundreds of thousands of dollars or more to pay for the technology and resources needed to identify and produce all the responsive information under these unnecessary reporting requirements." "AG Paxton should be working with all district and county attorneys in pursuit of justice, not picking fights with the Democrats in large cities," Creuzot added. Paxton's office has claimed the provision is a way to "rein in rogue district attorneys" allegedly refusing to uphold the law. District attorneys that do not comply with the reporting rule could be charged with official misconduct and removed from office. "District and County Attorneys have a duty to protect the communities they serve by upholding the law and vigorously prosecuting dangerous criminals," Paxton said in March. "In many major counties, the people responsible for safeguarding millions of Texans have instead endangered lives by refusing to prosecute criminals and allowing violent offenders to terrorize law-abiding Texans. This rule will enable citizens to hold rogue DAs accountable." Jasmine Crockett Accused Of 'Abusing Her Power' At Airport Boarding Gate In response to the lawsuits, Paxton said Friday that it "is no surprise that rogue DAs who would rather turn violent criminals loose on the streets than do their jobs are afraid of transparency and accountability." "My DA reporting rule is a simple, straightforward, common-sense measure that will shed light on local officials who are abdicating their responsibility to public safety. This lawsuit is meritless and merely a sad, desperate attempt to conceal information from the public they were sworn to protect," he continued. The two lawsuits claim Paxton's office does not have the sweeping jurisdiction the rule creates, and that providing the information requested would be expensive and illegal, according to The Texas Tribune. The lawsuits claim the rule seeks to achieve apolitical objectiveby burdening officials and creating strict consequences for noncompliance. Original article source:Texas AG Ken Paxton sued over new rule to rein in 'rogue' DAs by allowing him access to their case records

Texas AG Ken Paxton sued over new rule to rein in 'rogue' DAs by allowing him access to their case records

Texas AG Ken Paxton sued over new rule to rein in 'rogue' DAs by allowing him access to their case records FiveTexas district attorn...
Trump's Middle East 'bromance' and Qatar jet controversy lampooned on SNL finaleNew Foto - Trump's Middle East 'bromance' and Qatar jet controversy lampooned on SNL finale

"Saturday Night Live" lampooned President Donald Trump's recent Middle East trip in its season finale, trivializing what the administration billed as a major foreign policy reset. The cold open featured James Austin Johnson as an exaggerated Trump alongside a fictionalizedCrown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. The sketch suggested an unlikely bromance. "We're together now, kidding, of course, but we are vibing," Johnson's Trump quipped, as though describing a new romance. "I, of course, am a big fan of everything that Saudi Arabia has to offer, from the oil to the money. To – end of list," he added. Snl Says Trump's Been In Office '100 Years' While Mocking Papal Ambitions And Executive Order Frenzy 'Snl' Slammed For 'Classless' United Healthcare Murder Segment On 'Weekend Update' Read On The Fox News App In reality, Trump returned to Washington toutingthree major investment dealsworth billions of dollars from Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Qatar, commitments he said would bolster the U.S. economy. SNL's Trump implied his motives were not so patriotic. "I didn't make this trip for myself. I want to make that clear. I did this for the American people. And, in many ways, myself, my personal enrichment. I did that too. I did very well on this trip," he bragged. The show also capitalized on the controversy over a gifted $400 million jet from Qatar to the United States, a matter now underHouse Democrats'scrutiny. 'Saturday Night Live' Viewership Cratered During 2024 Election Cycle "The Qataris gave me a $400 million plane. Can you believe that? And people said that was some sort of bribe," the fake president deadpanned. "Not true, not true, because they haven't asked for anything in return. Well, not yet. Alright, so it's a pre-bribe." The real Trump defended accepting the jetin an interview Fridaywith Fox News chief political anchorBret Baier, calling it "a good deal" and noting delays in Boeing's newAir Force One project. SNL then mocked Boeing's recent safety scares and the country's aging air-traffic-control system. Johnson's Trump complained that he preferred the Qatari jet over an American plane. "Have you seen what's happening with our planes? The radar is down and the screen is blank -- Newark," he said, referring to to at least three equipment outages atNewark Liberty Internationalin recent weeks. A second segment in the episode, led by host Scarlett Johansson and musical guest Bad Bunny, also made light of Newark's radar failures, turning the issue into a comedic rap about a nerve-wracking landing and pilots being cut off from the control tower. The opening Trump sketch wound down with the show's typical jabs at the president and his continued daily media presence. "Since it's a finale, that means after tonight, you won't be seeing me here for a while. Well, not the fake, fun version of me that makes you smile. The real one will still be omnipresent. You can't escape me, right? I'm everywhere." Before signing off for its summer hiatus, the fictionalized version of Trump quipped, "See you again in the fall, if we still have a country." Original article source:Trump's Middle East 'bromance' and Qatar jet controversy lampooned on SNL finale

Trump's Middle East 'bromance' and Qatar jet controversy lampooned on SNL finale

Trump's Middle East 'bromance' and Qatar jet controversy lampooned on SNL finale "Saturday Night Live" lampooned Presi...
China slaps anti-dumping duties on plastics from US, EU, Japan, TaiwanNew Foto - China slaps anti-dumping duties on plastics from US, EU, Japan, Taiwan

By Colleen Howe BEIJING (Reuters) -China on Sunday announced anti-dumping duties as high as 74.9% on imports of POM copolymers, a type of engineering plastic, from the United States, the European Union, Japan and Taiwan. The commerce ministry's findings conclude a probe launched in May 2024, shortly after the U.S. sharply increased tariffs on Chinese electric vehicles, computer chips and other imports. POM copolymers can partially replace metals such as copper and zinc and have various applications including in auto parts, electronics and medical equipment, the ministry has said. In January the ministry said initial investigations had determined that dumping was taking place, and implemented preliminary anti-dumping measures in the form of a deposit starting from January 24. According to Sunday's announcement, the highest anti-dumping rates of 74.9% were levied on imports from the United States, while European shipments will face 34.5% duties. China slapped 35.5% duties on Japanese imports, except for Asahi Kasei Corp, which received a company-specific rate of 24.5%. General duties of 32.6% were placed on imports from Taiwan, while Formosa Plastics received a 4% tariff and Polyplastics Taiwan 3.8%. Hopes have risen that the U.S.-China trade war is easing after the two sides said on Monday they had agreed to slash reciprocal tariffs in a 90-day truce, a deal that state mouthpiece the Global Times said on Friday should be extended. The Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation group of nations warned of "fundamental challenges" facing the global trading system in a communique on Friday after a meeting in South Korea. (Reporting by Colleen Howe; Editing by Shri Navaratnam and William Mallard)

China slaps anti-dumping duties on plastics from US, EU, Japan, Taiwan

China slaps anti-dumping duties on plastics from US, EU, Japan, Taiwan By Colleen Howe BEIJING (Reuters) -China on Sunday announced anti-du...
Russia launches one of biggest drone attacks on Ukraine since start of war, killing at least 1New Foto - Russia launches one of biggest drone attacks on Ukraine since start of war, killing at least 1

KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — Russia overnight into Sunday launched one of its most intense drone attacks on Ukraine since the beginning of its full-scale invasion in 2022. Russia fired a total of 273 exploding drones and decoys overnight, Ukraine's air force said. Of those, 88 were intercepted and a further 128 lost, likely having been electronically jammed. The attacks targeted the country's Kyiv, Dnipropetrovsk and Donetsk regions. According to data from Ukraine's air force, this would be the largest drone attack Russia has launched against Ukraine since the start of the war, but Ukrainian officials have not confirmed this. The number of drones fired exceeds Russia's previous largest known single drone attack of the war, whenRussia pounded Ukraine with 267 droneson the eve of the war's third anniversary. Kyiv regional Gov. Mykola Kalashnyk said a a 28-year-old woman was killed in a drone attack on the region and three other people, including a 4-year-old child, were wounded. Meanwhile, Russia's Defense Ministry said its air defenses shot down seven Ukrainian drones overnight, and a further 14 on Sunday morning. The attacks came after the first direct talks between Moscow and Kyiv in years on Friday failed to yield a ceasefire. Russian President Vladimir Putinspurned Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy's offerto meet face-to-face in Turkey after he himself proposed direct negotiations — although not at the presidential level — as an alternative to a 30-day ceasefire urged by Ukraine and its Western allies, including the U.S. U.S.President Donald Trumpsaid he plans to speak by phone Monday with Putin, followed by Zelenskyy and leaders of various NATO countries, about endingthe war in Ukraine.

Russia launches one of biggest drone attacks on Ukraine since start of war, killing at least 1

Russia launches one of biggest drone attacks on Ukraine since start of war, killing at least 1 KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — Russia overnight into Su...
'You saved my life:' Freed hostage Edan Alexander thanks Trump in emotional phone callNew Foto - 'You saved my life:' Freed hostage Edan Alexander thanks Trump in emotional phone call

In an emotional and widely shared moment,President Donald J. Trumpspoke directly with Edan Alexander, the 21-year-old American-Israeli soldier who was recently freed from Hamas captivity, during a phone call captured on camera and released by the White House."Mr. President," Alexander greeted Trump at the start of the call, visibly moved. "You're the only reason I'm here. You saved my life." The phone conversation, which took place while Alexander was recovering at Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center, came just days after his dramatic release from Gaza, where he was held hostage for over 580 days following his abduction by Hamas on Oct. 7, 2023.Hamas Captivity Survivors Appeal To Netanyahu, Trump After Edan Alexander's Release President Trump greeted Edan with a bit of humor and humility, saying "I'm very nervous talking to you, Edan, because you're a much bigger celebrity than I am." Trump also expressed American solidarity and the administration's commitment to bringing all hostages home while on the call. "You're an American, and we love you," Trump told Alexander. "We're going to take good care of you. And your parents are incredible. I saw your mother. She was pushing me around a little bit—putting a lot of pressure on me." "Like a good mom!" exclaimed Edan's mother in the background. Read On The Fox News App American Hostage Edan Alexander Released By Hamas After More Than 580 Days In Captivity The heartfelt exchange was posted online by the official White House account and has quickly gone viral, drawing praise from across the political spectrum for its display of humanity and international unity. Alexander's release came amid intensified U.S. diplomatic pressure and quiet negotiations, coordinated in part by senior envoys Steve Witkoff and Adam Boehler. Trump had previously signaled his determination to secure the freedom of American citizens held abroad and made Alexander's case a top priority. The Alexander family issued a statement thanking President Trump directly, along with the negotiation team and theIsraeli Defense Forces, calling the outcome "a miracle rooted in strength, diplomacy, and prayer." Edan Alexander's homecoming has reignited calls to bring home the remaining hostages still held in Gaza. A coalition of 65 former hostages recently signed a letter urging both President Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to "build on this breakthrough" and intensify efforts for a comprehensive agreement to ensure every hostage's safe return. Prime Minister Netanyahuacknowledged the success of this combined effort, stating, "This was achieved thanks to our military pressure and the diplomatic pressure applied by President Trump. This is a winning combination." The White House did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital's request for comment. Original article source:'You saved my life:' Freed hostage Edan Alexander thanks Trump in emotional phone call

'You saved my life:' Freed hostage Edan Alexander thanks Trump in emotional phone call

'You saved my life:' Freed hostage Edan Alexander thanks Trump in emotional phone call In an emotional and widely shared moment,Pres...
Analysis-Moody's downgrade intensifies investor worry about US fiscal pathNew Foto - Analysis-Moody's downgrade intensifies investor worry about US fiscal path

By Davide Barbuscia NEW YORK (Reuters) -A U.S. sovereign downgrade by Moody's has exacerbated investor worries about a looming debt time-bomb that could spur bond market vigilantes who want to see more fiscal restraint from Washington. The ratings agency cut America's pristine sovereign credit rating by one notch on Friday, the last of the major ratings agencies to downgrade the country, citing concerns about the nation's growing $36 trillion debt pile. The move came as Republicans who control the House of Representatives and the Senate seek to approve a sweeping package of tax cuts, spending hikes and safety-net reductions, which could add trillions to the U.S. debt pile. Uncertainty over the final shape of the so-called "Big Beautiful Bill" has investors on edge even as optimism has emerged over trade. The bill failed to clear a key hurdle on Friday even as U.S. President Donald Trump called for unity around the legislation. "The bond market has been keeping a sharp eye on what transpires in Washington this year in particular," said Carol Schleif, chief market strategist at BMO Private Wealth, who said that Moody's downgrade may make investors more cautious. "As Congress debates the 'big, beautiful bill' the bond vigilantes will be keeping a sharp eye on making them toe a fiscally responsible line," she said, referring to bond investors who punish bad policy by making it prohibitively expensive for governments to borrow. The downgrade from Moody's, which follows similar moves from Fitch in 2023 and Standard & Poor's in 2011, will "eventually lead to higher borrowing costs for the public and private sector in the United States," said Spencer Hakimian, founder of Tolou Capital Management in New York. Even so, the ratings cut was unlikely to trigger forced selling from funds that can only invest in top-rated securities, said Gennadiy Goldberg, head of U.S. rates strategy at TD Securities, as most funds revised guidelines after the S&P downgrade. "But we expect it to refocus the market's attention on fiscal policy and the bill currently being negotiated in Congress," Goldberg said. FOCUS ON BILL One question is how much pushback there will be in Congress over whether fiscal principles are being sacrificed, said Scott Clemons, chief investment strategist at Brown Brothers Harriman, adding that a bill that shows profligate spending could be a disincentive to add exposure to long-dated Treasuries. The Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, a nonpartisan think tank, estimates the bill could add roughly $3.3 trillion to the country's debt by 2034 or around $5.2 trillion if policymakers extend temporary provisions. Moody's said on Friday successive administrations have failed to reverse the trend of higher fiscal deficits and interest costs, and it did not believe that material reductions in deficits will result from fiscal proposals under consideration. Concern shows up in market pricing. A recent increase in the 10-year Treasury term premium - a measure of the return investors demand for the risk of holding long-dated debt - is partly a sign of underlying fiscal worry in the market, said Anthony Woodside, head of fixed income strategy at Legal & General Investment Management America. Woodside said the market was "not assigning much credibility" to the deficit being brought down in a material way. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has said the administration is focused on containing benchmark 10-year yields. The yield, last seen at 4.44%, is about 17 basis points below where it was before Trump took office in January. "Certainly you could see a reaction in yields to a pretty substantial increase in the deficit at a time when we're already running pretty significant deficits," said Garrett Melson, portfolio strategist with Natixis Investment Managers Solutions. A White House spokesperson dismissed concerns around the bill. "The experts are wrong, just as they were about the impact of Trump's tariffs, which have yielded trillions in investments, record job growth, and no inflation," said Harrison Fields, special assistant to the President and principal deputy press secretary, in a statement. The White House characterized the Moody's downgrade as political. White House communications director Steven Cheung reacted to the move via a social media post on Friday, singling out Moody's economist, Mark Zandi, and calling him a political opponent of Trump. Zandi, who is chief economist at Moody's Analytics, a separate entity from the ratings agency, declined to comment. Some in the market believe the fiscal outlook will improve with the tax package compared to earlier expectations, due to tariff revenues and spending offsets. Barclays now estimates the cost of the bill to increase deficits by $2 trillion over the next 10 years compared to expectations of around $3.8 trillion before Trump took office. X FACTOR? Urgency is mounting as key deadlines approach. House Speaker Mike Johnson has said that he wants his chamber to pass the bill before the U.S. Memorial Day holiday on May 26, while Bessent has urged lawmakers to raise the federal government's debt limit by mid-July. The U.S. government reached its statutory borrowing limit in January and began employing "extraordinary measures" to keep it from breaching the cap. Bessent has indicated the government could hit the so-called X-date - when it runs out of cash to meet all its obligations - by August. Investor nervousness around the debt limit has started to show up. The average yield on Treasury bills due in August is higher than the yield of bills with adjacent maturities. While there is broad agreement within the Republican Party to extend Trump's 2017 tax cuts, there is a divide on how to achieve spending cuts that would help offset revenue loss. The room for manoeuvre on spending cuts is limited. Mandatory spending, including on social welfare programs that Trump has pledged not to touch, accounted for a vast majority of total budgetary spending last year. A politically viable fiscal package will likely lead to wider deficits in the near term, and at the same time it won't provide a meaningful fiscal boost to the economy, said Michael Zezas, a strategist at Morgan Stanley, in a note published last week. Anne Walsh, chief investment officer at Guggenheim Partners Investment Management said that without a real process in Washington aimed at significantly resetting spending levels, a meaningful improvement in the U.S. fiscal path is unlikely. "This is an unsustainable course that we're on," she said. (Reporting by Davide Barbuscia; additional reporting by Carolina Mandl; editing by Megan Davies and Anna Driver)

Analysis-Moody's downgrade intensifies investor worry about US fiscal path

Analysis-Moody's downgrade intensifies investor worry about US fiscal path By Davide Barbuscia NEW YORK (Reuters) -A U.S. sovereign down...
Trump budget would cut ocean data and leave boaters, anglers and forecasters scrambling for infoNew Foto - Trump budget would cut ocean data and leave boaters, anglers and forecasters scrambling for info

Capt. Ed Enos makes his living as a harbor pilot in Hawaii, clambering aboard arriving ships in the predawn hours and guiding them into port. His world revolves around wind speeds, current strength and wave swells. When Enos is bobbing in dangerous waters in the dark, his cellphone is his lifeline: with a few taps he can access the Integrated Ocean Observing System and pull up the data needed to guide what are essentially floating warehouses safely to the dock. But maybe not for much longer. PresidentDonald Trumpwants to eliminate all federal funding for the observing system's regional operations. Scientists say the cuts could mean the end of efforts to gather real-time data crucial to navigating treacherous harbors, plotting tsunami escape routes and predicting hurricane intensity. "It's the last thing you should be shutting down," Enos said. "There's no money wasted. Right at a time when we should be getting more money to do more work to benefit the public, they want to turn things off. That's the wrong strategy at the wrong time for the wrong reasons." Monitoring system tracks all things ocean The IOOS system launched about 20 years ago. It's made up of 11 regional associations in multiple states and territories, including the Virgin Islands, Alaska, Hawaii, Washington state, Michigan, South Carolina and Southern California. The regional groups are networks of university researchers, conservation groups, businesses and anyone else gathering or using maritime data. The associations are the Swiss army knife of oceanography, using buoys, submersible drones and radar installations to track water temperature, wind speed, atmospheric pressure, wave speeds, swell heights and current strength. The networks monitor the Great Lakes, U.S. coastlines, the Gulf of Mexico, which Trump renamed the Gulf of America, the Gulf of Alaska, the Caribbean and the South Pacific and upload member data to public websites in real time. Maritime community and military rely on system data Cruise ship, freighter and tanker pilots like Enos, as well as the U.S. Navy and Coast Guard, use the information directly to navigate harbors safely, plot courses around storms and conduct search-and-rescue operations. The associations' observations feed into National Weather Service forecasts. The Pacific Northwest association uses tsunami data to post real-time coastal escape routes on a public-facing app. And the Hawaii association not only posts data that is helpful to harbor pilots but tracks hurricane intensity and tiger sharks that have been tagged for research. The associations also track toxic algal blooms, which can force beach closures and kill fish. The maps help commercial anglers avoid those empty regions. Water temperature data can help identify heat layers within the ocean and, because it's harder for fish to survive in those layers, knowing hot zones helps anglers target better fishing grounds. The regional networks are not formal federal agencies but are almost entirely funded through federal grants through the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The current federal budget allocates $43.5 million for the networks. A Republican bill in the House natural resources committee would actually send them more money, $56 million annually, from 2026 through 2030. Cuts catch network administrators by surprise A Trump administration memo leaked in April proposes a $2.5 billion cut to the Department of Commerce, which oversees NOAA, in the 2026 federal budget. Part of the proposal calls for eliminating federal funding for the regional monitoring networks, even though the memo says one of the activities the administration wants the commerce department to focus on is collecting ocean and weather data. The memo offered no other justifications for the cuts. The proposal stunned network users. "We've worked so hard to build an incredible system and it's running smoothly, providing data that's important to the economy. Why would you break it?" said Jack Barth, an Oregon State oceanographer who shares data with the Pacific Northwest association. "What we're providing is a window into the ocean and without those measures we frankly won't know what's coming at us. It's like turning off the headlights," Barth said. NOAA officials declined to comment on the cuts and potential impacts, saying in an email to The Associated Press that they do not do "speculative interviews." Network's future remains unclear Nothing is certain. The 2026 federal fiscal year starts Oct. 1. The budget must pass the House, the Senate and get the president's signature before it can take effect. Lawmakers could decide to fund the regional networks after all. Network directors are trying not to panic. If the cuts go through, some associations might survive by selling their data or soliciting grants from sources outside the federal government. But the funding hole would be so significant that just keeping the lights on would be an uphill battle, they said. If the associations fold, other entities might be able to continue gathering data, but there will be gaps. Partnerships developed over years would evaporate and data won't be available in a single place like now, they said. "People have come to us because we've been steady," Hawaii regional network director Melissa Iwamoto said. "We're a known entity, a trusted entity. No one saw this coming, the potential for us not to be here." ___ The Associated Press' climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. The AP is solely responsible for all content. Find the AP'sstandardsfor working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas atAP.org.

Trump budget would cut ocean data and leave boaters, anglers and forecasters scrambling for info

Trump budget would cut ocean data and leave boaters, anglers and forecasters scrambling for info Capt. Ed Enos makes his living as a harbor ...
Romanians vote in presidential run-off that could widen EU riftsNew Foto - Romanians vote in presidential run-off that could widen EU rifts

By Luiza Ilie BUCHAREST Reuters) -Romanians vote on Sunday in a presidential election run-off that pits a hard-right eurosceptic against a centrist independent, and where the outcome could have implications for both the country's struggling economy and EU unity. Hard-right nationalist George Simion, 38, who opposes military aid to neighbouring Ukraine and is critical of European Union leadership, decisively swept the first presidential election round, triggering the collapse of a pro-Western coalition government. That led to significant capital outflows. Centrist Bucharest mayor Nicusor Dan, 55, who has pledged to clamp down on corruption, is staunchly pro-EU and NATO, and has said Romania's support for Ukraine is vital for its own security against a growing Russian threat. The president of the EU and NATO state has considerable powers, not least being in charge of the defence council that decides on military aid. He will also have oversight of foreign policy, with the power to veto EU votes that require unanimity. Whoever is elected will also need to nominate a prime minister to negotiate a new majority in parliament to reduce Romania's budget deficit - the largest in the EU - as well as reassure investors and try to avoid a credit rating downgrade. An opinion poll on Friday showed Dan slightly ahead of Simion for the first time since the first round in a tight race that will depend on turnout and the sizable Romanian diaspora. "Unlike Western states, which can more easily afford mistakes, trust in Romania can be lost much more easily and it could ... take generations to gain it back," said Radu Burnete, director of the country's largest employers' group. "We cannot afford to drift." Voting starts at 7 a.m. (0400 GMT) and ends at 9 p.m. (1800 GMT), with exit polls to follow immediately. MISINFORMATION Political analysts have said victory for Simion, a supporter of U.S. President Donald Trump, would risk isolating the country abroad, eroding private investment and destabilising NATO's eastern flank. The vote comes on the same day as the first round of Poland's presidential election, expected to be led by pro-EU Warsaw mayor Rafal Trzaskowski and conservative historian Karol Nawrocki. Victory for Simion and/or Trzaskowski would expand a cohort of eurosceptic leaders that already includes prime ministers in Hungary and Slovakia amid a political shift in Central Europe that could widen rifts in the EU. "What the (nationalists) want is a European Union that is as little integrated as possible," said political analyst and historian Ion M. Ionita. "One that is very little united from a legislative standpoint in which decisions are only taken nationally, but still benefitting from European money." Romania's vote comes nearly six months after the initial ballot was canceled because of alleged Russian interference - denied by Moscow - in favour of far-right frontrunner Calin Georgescu, who was then banned from standing again. The cancellation was criticised by the Trump administration, and Simion owes much of his success to popular anger against the decision, as well as frustration with mainstream parties blamed for high living costs and corruption. Simion has said his prime minister pick would be Georgescu, who favours nationalisations and an openness towards Russia. Some analysts warn online disinformation has been rife again ahead of Sunday's vote. "We're seeing disinformation spreading like wildfire across social media platforms – through bots and strategic reshares mimicking authentic posting," said Roxana Radu, expert at Oxford University's Blavatnik School of Government. (Reporting by Luiza IlieEditing by Mark Potter)

Romanians vote in presidential run-off that could widen EU rifts

Romanians vote in presidential run-off that could widen EU rifts By Luiza Ilie BUCHAREST Reuters) -Romanians vote on Sunday in a presidentia...
US embassy in Tripoli denies report of planned relocation of Palestinians to LibyaNew Foto - US embassy in Tripoli denies report of planned relocation of Palestinians to Libya

TRIPOLI (Reuters) -The U.S. embassy in Libya denied on Sunday a report that the U.S. government was working on a plan to relocate Palestinians from the Gaza Strip to Libya. On Thurdsay, NBC News said the Trump administration is working on a plan to permanently relocate as many as one million Palestinians from the Gaza Strip to Libya. NBC News cited five people with knowledge of the matter, including two people with direct knowledge and a former U.S. official. "The report of alleged plans to relocate Gazans to Libya is untrue," the U.S. embassy said on the X platform. The Tripoli-based interionationally-recognised Government of National Unity was not available for immediate comment. Trump has previously said he would like the United States to take over the Gaza Strip and its Palestinian population resettled elsewhere. Palestinians vehemently reject any plan involving them leaving Gaza, comparing such ideas to the 1948 "Nakba," or "catastrophe," when hundreds of thousands were dispossessed of their homes in the war that led to the creation of Israel. When Trump first floated his idea after taking the presidency, he said he wanted U.S. allies Egypt and Jordan to take in people from Gaza. Both states rejected the idea, which drew global condemnation, with Palestinians, Arab nations and the U.N. saying it would amount to ethnic cleansing. In April, Trump said Palestinians could be moved "around to different countries, and you have plenty of countries that will do that". During a visit to Qatar this week, Trump reiterated his desire to take over the territory, saying he wanted to see it become a "freedom zone" and that there was nothing left to save. Trump has previously said he wants to turn Gaza into the "Riviera of the Middle East." (Reporting by Ahmed Elumami, Tom Perry in Beirut, editing by Deepa Babington)

US embassy in Tripoli denies report of planned relocation of Palestinians to Libya

US embassy in Tripoli denies report of planned relocation of Palestinians to Libya TRIPOLI (Reuters) -The U.S. embassy in Libya denied on Su...
Gaza crisis 'beyond atrocious' as IDF operations intensify, UN chief saysNew Foto - Gaza crisis 'beyond atrocious' as IDF operations intensify, UN chief says

At least 153 people were killed -- including seven who were recovered from rubble --and 459 were injured in the past 24 hours as IDF operations intensify across the Gaza Strip, according to the Hamas-run Gaza Ministry of Health. Many victims remain trapped under debris or lying in the streets, as ambulances and civil defense crews are unable to reach them due to ongoing strikes, the Gaza Ministry of Health said. At least 3,131 Palestinians have been killed and over 8,600 have been injured since the end of the two-month ceasefire betweenIsraeland Hamas on March 18, the Gaza Ministry of Health previously said. MORE: Russia-Ukraine talks: Prisoner exchange agreed upon, Ukraine requests Putin-Zelenskyy meeting Conditions on the ground are "getting worse not day by day, but hour by hour" as bombardments intensify and access to emergency care becomes nearly impossible, according to ABC News' Diaa Ostaz, reporting from Khan Younis. Meanwhile, United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres, speaking at the Arab League summit in Baghdad, said he was "alarmed by reported plans by Israel to expand ground operations" and renewed his appeal for an immediate and permanent ceasefire. "We need a permanent ceasefire, now," Guterres told regional leaders. MORE: From al-Qaeda to Syria's presidency, the rise of Ahmad al-Sharaa Guterres issued one of his strongest statements yet on the crisis in Gaza, calling the situation for Palestinians "beyond description, beyond atrocious & beyond inhumane." In a post on X, Guterres condemned the ongoing Israeli siege and humanitarian blockade: "A policy of siege & starvation makes a mockery of international law. The blockade against humanitarian aid must end immediately," he said. "This is a moment for moral clarity & action." The Israel Defense Forces say the "extensive attacks" and "mobilized forces" used in the Gaza Strip over the past 24 hours are part of the "opening moves for Operation 'Gideon's Chariots' and the expansion of the campaign in Gaza," the IDF said in a post on X on Friday evening local time. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's security cabinet approved the plans for operation Gideon's Chariots on May 5. The operation will include a "broad attack that includes the displacement of most of the population of the Gaza Strip," an IDF spokesperson said on May 5 when the operation was announced. Israeli forces plan to remain in Gaza after the operation is complete, Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz said on May 7. Gaza crisis 'beyond atrocious' as IDF operations intensify, UN chief saysoriginally appeared onabcnews.go.com

Gaza crisis 'beyond atrocious' as IDF operations intensify, UN chief says

Gaza crisis 'beyond atrocious' as IDF operations intensify, UN chief says At least 153 people were killed -- including seven who wer...
Pfizer scientist claimed COVID vax results being delayed until after 2020 election 'wasn't a coincidence': House GOP panelNew Foto - Pfizer scientist claimed COVID vax results being delayed until after 2020 election 'wasn't a coincidence': House GOP panel

WASHINGTON — The release of COVID-19 vaccine results after the 2020 election may have not been a "coincidence" — and could have been part of an effort by senior Pfizer executives to "deliberately slow down" the testing, according to bombshell allegations from a Republican-led congressional panel. The House Judiciary CommitteerevealedThursday that Pfizer's former Global Head of Vaccines Research and Development, Dr. Philip Dormitzer, may have "conspired to withhold public health information to influence" the presidential contest between Donald Trump and Joe Biden. The London-based drugmaker GSK in an April 16 letter to Judiciary Chairman Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) disclosed that Dormitzer "approached a representative from the GSK human resources team to speak about a potential relocation abroad" in November 2024. According to the HR rep, the ex-Pfizer vaccine scientist was "visibly upset" in the meeting and asked to be moved to Canada "due to concerns that he could be investigated by the incoming Trump Administration over his role in developing Pfizer's COVID-19 vaccine." When the GSK employee asked what his reasons were for requesting the relocation, Dormitzer apparently responded: "Let's just say it wasn't a coincidence, the timing of the vaccine." Pfizer used independent experts to review the effectiveness and safety of its vaccines and broadcast the results being shared by its scientists just five days after polls closed for the 2020 election on Nov. 3. GSK also divulged in the letter that some of its employees heard from the scientist "in late 2020, the three most senior people in Pfizer R&D were involved in a decision to deliberately slow down clinical testing so that it would not be complete prior to the results of the presidential election that year." But the drugmaker, in its letter, also denied that Dormitzer was copping to "delaying disclosure of completed results," characterizing his statements as being part of "a situation of slowing down results before disclosure became necessary." The Judiciary panel still fired off a pair of letters toDormitzerand Pfizer's chairman and CEO,Dr. Albert Bourla, on Thursday demanding all records — including emails, texts, meeting notes and other documents — showing data from the clinical trials or communications with federal public health agencies. "This new information appears to suggest that you and other senior Pfizer executives conspired to withhold public health information to influence the 2020 presidential election," Jordan wrote to Dormitzer. "Due to the seriousness of these allegations, the Committee is compelled to request additional information to inform our oversight." The responsive files are supposed to cover the period between March 2020 and the present, per the letters. Jordan's panel has also demanded Dormitzer — schedule a transcribed interview no later than May 29. Dormitzer has only contributed to Democratic campaigns, federal election campaignfilings show, forking over hundreds of dollars in the 2010s to congressional candidates while working in vaccine development at Novartis. His comments to GSK employees were first made in the course of a federal probe by Manhattan prosecutors, which,along with the Judiciary letters, wasfirst reported by The Wall Street Journal. The scientist has denied that he or anyone at Pfizer tried to delay the vaccine, and said his comments to his colleagues at GSK were misinterpreted. "My Pfizer colleagues and I did everything we could to get the FDA's Emergency Use Authorization at the very first possible moment," Dormitzer previously told Reuters in a statement amid the investigation by the US Attorneys' Office for the Southern District of New York. "Any other interpretation of my comments about the pace of the vaccine's development would be incorrect." "Pfizer is in receipt of the letter asking about allegations made in a Wall Street Journal story, and we will respond directly to the Committee," a rep for the pharmaceutical company said in a statement. "The COVID-19 vaccine development process was driven by science and guided by the U.S. FDA back in 2020," the rep added. "We have consistently and transparently reiterated the facts and the timeline of the tireless work of scientists, regulators, and thousands of clinical trial volunteers who made the vaccine possible. Theories to the contrary are simply untrue and being manufactured." Reps for GSK did not immediately respond to a request for comment. President Trump has touted how "proud" he was of "Operation Warp Speed" being able to get Americans vaccinated from COVID, with the purchase of200 million dosesof Pfizer's vaccine and200 million dosesof the Moderna shot.

Pfizer scientist claimed COVID vax results being delayed until after 2020 election ‘wasn’t a coincidence’: House GOP panel

Pfizer scientist claimed COVID vax results being delayed until after 2020 election 'wasn't a coincidence': House GOP panel WASHI...
Leaked audio of Hur interview shines light on Biden mental fitness: What to knowNew Foto - Leaked audio of Hur interview shines light on Biden mental fitness: What to know

Former President Biden has found his wayback into the spotlightmore than 100 days after President Trump reclaimed the White House. Audio, obtained by Axios, from Biden's October 2023 interview with special counsel Robert Hur about classified documents found in his private home from his time as vice presidentwas published by the outleton Saturday. Ashorter clipwas released late Friday. Thefive-hour interviewcomes from Hur's first day of questioning andappears to showBiden struggling. While the Department of Justicereleased a transcriptof the conversation last year, the Biden administration hadpushed backon releasing the tapes,citing concernsover potential tampering or "deepfakes." Hurultimately ruledthat Biden "willfully" kept the documents but suggesteda jury would findhe is "a sympathetic, well-meaning, elderly man with a poor memory." No charges were filed. Here's what to know about the leaked audio. Special Counsel Robert Hur on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., March 12, 2024. (Photo by Mandel NGAN /AFP) Biden in several points during the interview had to pause mid-sentence while struggling to find the words to say,the audio shows. The tone of the conversation highlighted the former president's difficulty remembering timelines or staying on track. In one instance he struggles to recall the year his son, Beau, died from brain cancer. Biden was asked by the special counsel to describe his private residence and where he kept the classified documents. "Well, um … I, I, I, I, I don't know. This is, what, 2017, 2018, that area?" he replied but quickly diverted into why he didn't run against Trump in 2016, citing former President Obama's enthusiasm for former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. Later, he added, "I hadn't walked away from the idea that I may run for office again. But if I ran again, I'd be running for president. And, and so what was happening, though — what month did Beau die? Oh, God, May 30th." Two of White House aides interjected to remind him it was 2015 when his son died. He then struggles to relay the year Trump defeated Clinton in the election. "And what's happened in the meantime is that as … Trump gets elected in November of 2017," Biden continues, which two staffers quickly correct to 2016. He added, "16. 2016. Alright, so — why do I have 2017 here?" The numbers appeared to confuse Biden once again, as he returned to the topic of Beau and his younger son Hunter Biden. "OK, yeah. And in 2017, Beau had passed and — this is personal — the genesis of the book and the title 'Promise Me, Dad,' was a — I know you're all … close with your sons and daughters, but Beau was like my right arm and Hunt was my left." After he finished glowing, Hur asked Biden if he wanted to take a break, per the audio. When the transcriptwas first released in March, the former president pushed back on the notion that he forgot details around Beau's death. President Joe Biden speaks from the Oval Office of the White House as he gives his farewell address Wednesday, Jan. 15, 2025, in Washington. (Mandel Ngan/Pool via AP) Biden also struggled to explain why he keptcertain classified documentsafter leaving the White House in 2017, the audio shows. Thedocuments were discoveredat an office he previously used when serving as vice president, igniting a later search of his home. In addition to handwritten notes on national security, authorities collected 90 documents from his property, of which a little more than 50 contained classified markings. During the interview, the former president acknowledged that he may have wanted to keep a document related to foreign policy in Afghanistan "for posterity's sake." Biden had initially said he wasn't sure why he kept the document when asked for the purpose. "I, I, I, I don't know that I knew, but it wouldn't have … it wasn't something I would have stopped to think about," he responded. "I don't know if it was going to be the subject of reporting, but I wanted to hang — I guess I wanted to hang onto it just for posterity's sake," the former president said. "I mean, this was my position on Afghanistan." The reversal likely frustrated his attorneys, who then pressed the special counsel to avoid speculatory questioning that could lead to charges, after which Biden quickly added, "I don't recall intending to keep this memo." His lawyers then asked for a break. President Joe Biden walking out to speak at a news conference in the Rose Garden at the White House, Tuesday, Nov. 26, 2024, in Washington. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta) Despite the memory lapses and needing assistance on certain words and dates, the audio shows that Biden was fully engaged with the special counsel. As Axios pointed out, the then-president made numerous jokes and came off like a "nostalgic, grandfatherly storyteller." He dived into several memories about the wood and molding he has in refurbished rooms at his houseto the Corvettehe drove with comedian Jay Leno. He also explained the influence of Gutenberg's printing press and spoke about former President Nixon's excessive sweating during a famous 1960 debate with former President Kennedy. The interview only became testy when his attorney asserted that prosecutors may be trying to implicate Biden with their questioning. President-elect Donald Trump greets President Joe Biden during the 60th Presidential Inauguration in the Rotunda of the U.S. Capitol in Washington, Monday, Jan. 20, 2025. (Chip Somodevilla/Pool Photo via AP) Trumptold reportersearly Friday that Attorney General Pam Bondi would be in charge of deciding whether to officially release the tapes. Following Axios's release, the president and his allies have doubled down on their earlier critiques of Biden — from his age to mental fitness to theuse of an autopenat the end of his tenure. House Oversight Chair James Comer (R-Ky.)announced late Fridaythat his committee will investigate what he called a "cover up" of Biden's cognitive function. The lawmaker said he intends to speak to several former White House aides as well as the former president's doctor Kevin O'Connor. Trump alsoblasted Bidenon Saturday, calling the interview a "scandal" and reupping his 2020 election fraud claims. "Whoever had control of the "AUTOPEN" is looking to be a bigger and bigger scandal by the moment," the presidentwrote on his Truth Socialplatform, later calling his predecessor "a hapless and cognitively impaired Sleepy Joe Biden." He added, "THE FIGHT HAS JUST BEGUN!!!" The messaging comes as manyDemocratshavecast blame on Bidenfor 2024 election losses, saying he should havewithdrawnfrom presidential race earlier. Two recent books have also highlighted Biden's decline: "Original Sin" by Axios's Alex Thompson and CNN's Jake Tapper and "Fight" by The Hill's Amie Parnes and NBC's Jonathan Allen. The audio release also comes after the former presidentbroke his silencefor the first time since Trump returned to the Oval Office. He recently sat forinterviews with BBCand ABC's "The View," to the chagrin of many Democrats whohave aired frustrationwith the move. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. For the latest news, weather, sports, and streaming video, head to The Hill.

Leaked audio of Hur interview shines light on Biden mental fitness: What to know

Leaked audio of Hur interview shines light on Biden mental fitness: What to know Former President Biden has found his wayback into the spotl...
Trump says he'll speak separately to Putin and Zelenskyy about a potential ceasefireNew Foto - Trump says he'll speak separately to Putin and Zelenskyy about a potential ceasefire

President Donald Trump on Saturday said that he'll speak separately to Russian President Vladimir Putin and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Monday as he ramps up efforts to help the two nations reach a ceasefire. "I will be speaking, by telephone, to President Vladimir Putin of Russia on Monday, at 10:00 a.m.," Trumpwrotein an all-caps post on Truth Social on Saturday, adding, "I will then be speaking to President Zelenskyy of Ukraine." Trump said he would speak to Putin about "stopping the 'bloodbath' that is killing, on average, more than 5,000 Russian and Ukrainian soldiers a week, and trade." "Hopefully it will be a productive day, a ceasefire will take place, and this very violent war, a war that should have never happened, will end," he added. Trump has urged Zelenskyy and Putin for months to reach a ceasefire deal to end the three-year war. Ending the war was akey campaign promiseof Trump's during the 2024 presidential election cycle. Officials from Russia and Ukraine met in Istanbul on Fridaytoholdtheir first direct talkssince the war began. The two sides reached an agreement for a prisoner swap but did not appear to be significantly closer to setting terms for a permanent ceasefire. Secretary of State Marco Rubio also spoke with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov on Saturday about peace talks, State Department spokesperson Tammy Bruce said. Putin did not attend the Istanbul talks. Trump told reporters on Friday that he and the Russian president "have to meet." "He and I will meet. I think we'll solve it, or maybe not," Trump added. The president has for weeks escalated rhetoric against Putin, blasting him for striking Ukraine as U.S. officials tried to initiate talks between both sides. "Vladimir, STOP!" Trumpwrotein one April post after Russia bombarded Ukraine in attacks that killed at least 12 people. Trump met with Zelenskyy for a private conversation on the sidelines of Pope Francis' funeral in Rome in April. After that meeting, the U.S. presidentquestionedPutin's commitment to ending the war in Ukraine, writing in another Truth Social post that recent Russian strikes, "[make] me think that maybe he doesn't want to stop the war, he's just tapping me along." Earlier in his administration, Trump and top U.S. officials, like Vice President JD Vance, targeted their ire about the ongoing war toward Zelenskyy, with a late-February White House meeting between the three mendevolvinginto a shouting match. Last month, Ukraine and the U.S.reached a dealon an "economic partnership" between the two nations involving Ukraine's rare earth minerals. NBC News reached out to the Russian and Ukrainian embassies for comment.

Trump says he'll speak separately to Putin and Zelenskyy about a potential ceasefire

Trump says he'll speak separately to Putin and Zelenskyy about a potential ceasefire President Donald Trump on Saturday said that he...
Newsom Looks To Extend Carbon Cap Policy, Fund Rail Boondoggle As Possible Gas Crisis LoomsNew Foto - Newsom Looks To Extend Carbon Cap Policy, Fund Rail Boondoggle As Possible Gas Crisis Looms

Democratic California Gov. Gavin Newsom on Wednesday released the May revision of his state budget proposal for 2025-2026, which included an extension to a cap-and-trade program that some analysts warn could raise gas prices, while also helping fund a problem-ridden high-speed rail project. Newsom's revised budget proposal, firstreportedby Politico, includes a 15-year extension of California'scap-and-trade program— whichlaunchedin 2013 and was established to limit greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions in the state. While the program is currently set to expire in 2030, the state's Legislature is considering extending it, which some havecautionedcould lead to a spike in gas prices in the state over the next few years. The state's cap-and-trade system requires natural gas power plants, coal power plants and other companies to purchase allowances to offset emissions,accordingto the U.S. Energy Information Administration. The program "establishes a declining limit" on major sources of GHG emissions throughout the state and also incentivizes companies to invest in "cleaner, more efficient technologies and energy,"accordingto the California Air Resources Board (CARB).(RELATED: What Corporate Media Isn't Telling You About Trump's Cuts To Decades-Old Energy Efficiency Program) Analysts havewarnedthat Californians could face potentially massive gas price hikes over the next several years due to the potential reauthorization of the state's the cap-and-trade program, as well as theplannedclosingsof two major California oil refineries. "California refining capacity is dying, it is dwindling," Marlo Lewis Jr., a senior fellow at the Competitive Enterprise Institute, told the Daily Caller News Foundation. "Two major [oil] refineries in California are set to close this year … California also has the highest gasoline tax in the continental U.S., which also increases the cost [of gas]. California basically has to produce its own oil and gas or import it by rail and ship. That's all part of what I call California's climate obsession." Californian households could pay an additional cost of roughly 74 cents per gallon of gas if the state's Democratic-dominated legislatureextendsits cap-and-trade program,accordingto a May report from California's Legislative Analyst's Office. The potential increase in gas prices could be "particularly burdensome" for the state's lower-income households, as they tend to spend a higher portion of their incomes on transportation fuels than higher-income households do, according to the report. "This represents an extreme scenario that does not reflect the reality of the program," Lindsay Buckley, a spokesperson for CARB, told the DCNF. "The Legislative Analyst's Office recognized this is a hypothetical situation that would occur only if allowance prices were to reach the price ceiling. Cost containment measures are in place to prevent price spikes to high levels and the analysis does not consider the large number of allowances, purchased at lower prices, which have been banked by companies in the program which would also avoid such spikes. In fact, extending the program provides market certainty and attracts liquidity to manage price volatility. This is observed in historical data when the program was extended past 2020 under AB 398." In April, President Donald Trump unveiled anexecutive ordertargeting certain programs similar to California's cap-and-trade system, claiming such initiatives "discriminate" against energy producers while also raising the cost of energy. "These high fuel prices in California have nothing to do with corporate greed, they have nothing to do with collusion by oil companies to manipulate the markets," Lewis told the DCNF. "They have everything to do with the energy infrastructure of California, which is driven by California energy policy and the climate policies." "You can either get rid of the [climate] policies that are ruining the market, or if not, maybe you ought to try and provide some type of even playing field for the industries that you have targeted for destruction," Lewis added. "It certainly wouldn't go against Gavin Newsom's moral compass, because picking winners and losers and interfering with the marketplace is what progressive energy policies are all about." NEW YORK, NEW YORK – SEPTEMBER 18: California Gov. Gavin Newsom speaks onstage during the Clinton Global Initiative September 2023 Meeting at New York Hilton Midtown on September 18, 2023 in New York City. (Photo by Noam Galai/Getty Images for Clinton Global Initiative) "There are essentially no upsides to any of these policies aimed to curb climate change, including California's cap and trade program," Kevin Dayaratna, a senior research fellow at the Heritage Foundation's Center for Data Analysis, told the DCNF. "They come with significant economic costs and essentially no meaningful environmental impact. We have modeled these types of policies at the federal level, and they come with significant economic costs and essentially no environmental impact." Newsom's proposed statebudgetwould alsoshell outa minimum of $1 billion annually to help fund his state'sbeleagueredhigh-speed rail project. The California High Speed Rail Authority (CHSRA) wasestablishedin 1996 to supervise the buildout of a high-speed railway in California, but the project has beenmarredby significant setbacks, including farexceedingits proposed budget and experiencingsignificant delays. The railway project was initiallyprojectedto cost $33 billion and be completed by 2020, but now isexpectedto cost between $89 billion to $128 billion, andonly119 of the planned 776-mile railroad is actively under construction thus far. "The problem [with Newsom's budget proposal] is that right now that California's high-speed rail is about $100 billion dollars short of the money it needs to go between San Francisco, Los Angeles and Anaheim," Marc Joffe, a visiting fellow at the California Policy Center, told the DCNF. "That is not enough money to solve the problem. They would have to hope they could get more money from the government to fund the high-speed rail, or a private company would have to fund it. But it is pretty unlikely that a private company would fund California's high-speed rail, as it has not really met any of its objectives so far." In February, the Trump administration's Department of Transportationannouncedthat it was launching an investigation into the CHSRA to determine whether to rescind "roughly $4 billion in taxpayer money" for a proposed project to build a high-speed rail system in California's Central Valley. Secretary of Transportation Sean Duffy wrote in a Februarypress releasethat American taxpayers have "subsidized" the "massively over-budget and delayed California High-Speed Rail project" for too long. "I don't think that they [California lawmakers] have the right incentives to really aggressively move forward and complete the [high-speed rail] project," Joffe told the DCNF. California is notablyfacinga budget shortfall of roughly $12 billion, which Newsom hasblamedon economic impacts from the Trump'stariffs. The Golden State's spending has grown significantly since the governor took office in 2019, with California's state budget increasing over 63% from that year to June 2024,accordingto a May 2024 report from the Hoover Institution, a conservative think tank. Moreover, a large number of Californians haveleftthe state during Newsom's time in office, with many of themcitingthe high cost of living in the state as a key factor for leaving. "We appreciate Governor Newsom's commitment to delivering the nation's first high-speed rail system right here in California," CHSRA CEO Ian Choudri said in a statement shared with the DCNF. "The cap-and-trade commitment of a minimum of $1 billion per year will help us finish the Merced to Bakersfield line and build on that momentum to extend out to the Bay Area and Los Angeles. It puts us on the right track to attract and utilize private investment in the system and get clean, electrified fast high-speed rail delivered as soon as possible." Newsom's office referred the DCNF to a fact sheet about the cap-and-trade program when reached for comment. "California won't bend the knee to a federal administration hellbent on making America polluted again," Newsom said in a statement provided to the DCNF. "Cap-and-Invest is the next chapter for one our most effective tools to clean the air and keep our communities healthy. We're going to make polluters pay for solutions to the climate crisis they helped create — including CAL FIRE's world class fire protection and prevention operations and holding the line on high-speed rail, providing a stable source of funding critical to delivering this project. We will do all of this while continuing to get money directly back to people's wallets – making $60 billion available to help Californians with their utility bills." A Newsom spokesperson told the DCNF that since the cap-and-trade program was established, "it's estimated to havecreated 122,000 jobsand has delivered $15 billion directly back to Californians in the form ofutility bill creditsthat have averaged more than $1,100 per household since 2014." All content created by the Daily Caller News Foundation, an independent and nonpartisan newswire service, is available without charge to any legitimate news publisher that can provide a large audience. All republished articles must include our logo, our reporter's byline and their DCNF affiliation. For any questions about our guidelines or partnering with us, please contactlicensing@dailycallernewsfoundation.org.

Newsom Looks To Extend Carbon Cap Policy, Fund Rail Boondoggle As Possible Gas Crisis Looms

Newsom Looks To Extend Carbon Cap Policy, Fund Rail Boondoggle As Possible Gas Crisis Looms Democratic California Gov. Gavin Newsom on Wedne...
CNN's Scott Jennings responds to reports about possible Kentucky Senate runNew Foto - CNN's Scott Jennings responds to reports about possible Kentucky Senate run

GOP political pundit Scott Jennings, who is a CNN contributor, brushed off questions in a Friday interview about whether he is plotting a run for Senate next year to replace former Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.). Appearing on "Overtime with Bill Maher,"an online aftershowthat follows HBO's "Real Time with Bill Maher," Jennings laughed but didn't answer when the host tried multiple times to get him to say whether he's exploring a political bid in his home state. Jennings, 47, anardent defenderof President Trump, has been speculated among potential GOP hopefuls for the seat McConnell has held for more than four decades. McConnell, 83,confirmed in Februarythat he won't seek an eighth term in 2026. Maher noted during his interview that Jennings has shown some of the telltale signs of preparation for a political campaign: Hehas a bookcoming out in December that was met with Trump'spraise, and he has continued to live in Kentucky, despite commuting to New York City and Washington, D.C. for work. "It sounds like you're running," Maher said, eliciting a chuckle from Jennings. The Daily Beastreported last month, citing an anonymous source, that Jennings told people during the White House Correspondents Dinner weekend that he would run for the Senate job only if Trump wants him to and that he would support whoever Trump backs in the race. U.S. Rep. Andy Barr (R-Ky.) and 2023 GOP gubernatorial candidate Daniel Cameron, the state's former attorney general, have already launched campaigns to replace McConnell, while conservative businessman Nate Morris has acknowledged that he's mulling a run andreportedly has beenworking with operatives aligned with Trump andVice President Vance, Semafor reported. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. For the latest news, weather, sports, and streaming video, head to The Hill.

CNN’s Scott Jennings responds to reports about possible Kentucky Senate run

CNN's Scott Jennings responds to reports about possible Kentucky Senate run GOP political pundit Scott Jennings, who is a CNN contributo...
5 injured in explosion at health facility in Palm Springs: SourcesNew Foto - 5 injured in explosion at health facility in Palm Springs: Sources

Five people were injured in an explosion at a health facility in Palm Springs, California, on Saturday morning, according to law enforcement sources. A suspect is believed to be dead, the sources told ABC News. An active search is ongoing to determine if there are devices planted in the area. "We are aware of the explosion that occurred this morning in Palm Springs. FBI is on scene and will be investigating whether this was an intentional act. We will release as much information as possible once we are able to confirm details," U.S. Attorney Bill Essayli said in a statement. Residents are being instructed to stay away from North Indian Canyon Drive in Palm Springs, California. The explosion occurred on North Indian Canyon Drive near East Tachevah Drive just before 11 a.m. local time. "Palm Springs Police and Fire are currently on scene and request that residents stay away from the area so that emergency crews can work the incident," the city said in a statement. California Gov. Gavin Newsom has been briefed on the explosion. "The state, through [California Governor's Office of Emergency Services], is coordinating with local and federal authorities to support the response," Newsom's office said in a statement. This is a developing story. Please check back for updates. 5 injured in explosion at health facility in Palm Springs: Sourcesoriginally appeared onabcnews.go.com

5 injured in explosion at health facility in Palm Springs: Sources

5 injured in explosion at health facility in Palm Springs: Sources Five people were injured in an explosion at a health facility in Palm Spr...
Germany, Italy say Europe's leaders 'far from' talks on troop deployment in UkraineNew Foto - Germany, Italy say Europe's leaders 'far from' talks on troop deployment in Ukraine

ROME/BERLIN (Reuters) -Europe is a long way from talking about deploying troops in Ukraine as all its efforts are currently focused on securing an unconditional ceasefire from Russia, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz and Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni said on Saturday. "The next step must be that the format for peace talks is made clear, as well as which security guarantees could possibly, one day, be necessary for Ukraine," Merz said, describing these matters as currently unforeseeable. "There is no reason to talk about (troops) at the moment, we are far from that. We want the weapons to stop, the killing to end ... these are the questions we are dedicated to now, and no others," he added. The leaders of France, Germany, Britain and Poland, together with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy, met on the sidelines of a summit in Albania on Friday to discuss the situation. They also called U.S. President Donald Trump, who said on Saturday he would speak with Russian President Vladimir Putin on Monday. Meloni did not take part in the meeting - an absence that Italian media has described as a deliberate snub, suggesting that French President Emmanuel Macron had not wanted her involved. Meloni told reporters on Saturday that Italy was open to joining any international format aimed at ending the war, but warned against divisions within the West. "Western unity has been our greatest strength since the beginning of Russia's invasion," she said. "At a delicate time like this, it is important to set aside any personal (differences) that could undermine that unity." 'BELOW EXPECTATIONS' The European Union is working on a new package of sanctions to increase pressure on Moscow over the war, after the first face-to-face talks between Russia and Ukraine in three years on Thursday failed to yield a ceasefire, though Russia agreed to continue contacts. "Yesterday's talks in Istanbul ended below our expectations despite the extremely constructive positioning of Ukraine's negotiators," Merz said. Merz's position on peacekeeping troops echoes that of his predecessor Olaf Scholz, who also prioritised peace deal talks over discussion of boots on the ground. UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer has previously expressed willingness to send peacekeeping troops, but only backed by a U.S. security commitment for European countries. Russia has repeatedly rejected the idea of soldiers from countries in the NATO military alliance being stationed in Ukraine. (Reporting by Victoria Waldersee in Berlin, Crispian Balmer in Rome. Editing by Mark Potter)

Germany, Italy say Europe's leaders 'far from' talks on troop deployment in Ukraine

Germany, Italy say Europe's leaders 'far from' talks on troop deployment in Ukraine ROME/BERLIN (Reuters) -Europe is a long way ...
Questions remain on deals, Syria sanctions following Trump's Middle East tripNew Foto - Questions remain on deals, Syria sanctions following Trump's Middle East trip

PresidentDonald Trumpwrapped up a four-day Middle East trip on Friday, traveling to Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates. His first major foreign trip of his second term saw the U.S. secure more than $2 trillion in investment agreements in the Gulf region, according to the White House, as well as Trump announcing that he will move to lift U.S. sanctions in Syria. Trump also said during the trip that he believed that the U.S. and Tehran are "getting close to maybe doing a deal" on Iran's nuclear program and called on Qatar to use its influence to persuade Iran's leadership to reach an agreement with the U.S. to dial back its rapidly advancing nuclear program. MORE: From al-Qaeda to Syria's presidency, the rise of Ahmad al-Sharaa The trip "creates some pretty interesting openings and opportunities," Michael Hanna, the U.S. program director for the International Crisis Group, told ABC News. "It looks like maybe the region, led by the Gulf, can have some really substantive, important input in shaping U.S. policy in a better direction," he said, such as moving away from military conflict with Iran and the Houthis and engaging with Syria to stabilize the transition after the Assad family was removed from power. But, he said, "one of the things that has been a huge problem for Trump, traditionally, is implementation and follow-through." During Trump's trip, the U.S. secured over $200 billion in commercial deals with the United Arab Emirates, more than $243.5 billion in economic deals and a $1.2 trillion economic exchange agreement with Qatar, and a $600 billion commitment from Saudi Arabia to invest in the U.S., the White House said. Some of the deals focused on AI infrastructure, energy and defense. "Increasingly, he's convinced, as a former real estate developer and businessman, that pushing for expansion of America's business interest should be the primary business of American government, so to speak. And he went there with that mission," Manochehr Dorraj, a political science professor at Texas Christian University, told ABC News. "So far as that was a guiding principle, he took major strides toward achieving that goal." But, he noted, "the devil is always in the details." "We'll see how that would pan out in practice," Dorraj said. MORE: Trump embarks on Middle East trip to strengthen ties with Gulf states Among his major announcements, Trump said during a keynote speech in Riyadh on Tuesday that he will order the cessation of U.S. sanctions against Syria, which has been designated a state sponsor of terrorism by the U.S. government since 1979, "in order to give them a chance at greatness." Following that announcement, there are "a lot of big question marks" in terms of implementation and follow-through, Hanna said. "Some of these things he can do with the stroke of a pen," Hanna said, while noting it's unclear how his administration or Congress will react. "He was pretty clear that this is happening, so I'm going to be keenly watching how first, [Secretary of State] Marco Rubio deals with this, because he can lift some of these sanctions with the stroke of a pen," Hanna said. "There are other big issues with sectoral sanctions and theCaesar Act." "There's a lot to unravel," he said. Asked about the timeline on lifting the sanctions during remarks in Turkey on Thursday, Rubio said, "I was with the president when he made the decision to do this and included it in his speech. So we've been doing preparatory work in that regard." He said Trump intends to use waiver authorities under the Caesar Act, which have to be renewed every 180 days. "Ultimately, if we make enough progress, we'd like to see the law repealed because you're going to struggle to find people to invest in a country when in six months, sanctions could come back," Rubio said. "We're not there yet. That's premature. I think we want to start with the initial waiver, which will allow foreign partners who wanted to flow in aid to begin to do so without running the risk of sanctions. I think as we make progress, hopefully we'll be in a position soon, or one day, to go to Congress and ask them to permanently remove the sanctions." As negotiations are ongoing over Iran's nuclear program, Hanna noted the technical and diplomatic effort that went into the negotiations over the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action -- the 2015 Iranian nuclear deal the Obama administration agreed to but which Trump pulled the U.S. out of three years later. "Those negotiations were highly technical, highly detailed, very lengthy. And that's not the way that Trump likes to operate, or [U.S. Special Envoy to the Middle East Steve] Witkoff, right? They're not details guys. They're the big picture, deal-making piece of it," he said. He added, "But for something like a nuclear agreement with Iran, there's a lot that is required to make an agreement real, and that requires a lot of technical and diplomatic capacity. And if we got to that stage, it really would be a pretty big challenge -- even if everybody got on the same page -- to turn an agreement in principle into an agreement on paper." Dorraj said Trump's transactional foreign policy can be an asset in the short term but "the drawback is there's no long-term strategy." "These are quick initiatives," he said. "The pragmatic part of it -- 'let's see what works. Let's see what will get us to the deal that we want. We will learn as we go along, and we will adopt and adjust as needed.' Okay, so that can be an asset. But also you are zigzagging, flipflopping. You are changing course on a daily basis. Your parties you're negotiating with, they're on slippery ground. They don't know what to count on, and that does not give us an image of continuity." Questions remain on deals, Syria sanctions following Trump's Middle East triporiginally appeared onabcnews.go.com

Questions remain on deals, Syria sanctions following Trump's Middle East trip

Questions remain on deals, Syria sanctions following Trump's Middle East trip PresidentDonald Trumpwrapped up a four-day Middle East tri...

 

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