
Waymo partners with Magna for new vehicle factory in Arizona
May 5 (Reuters) - Alphabet's (GOOGL.O), opens new tab self-driving unit Waymo said on Monday that it plans to build Jaguar I-PACE and Zeekr vehicles with its autonomous technology at a new plant in Arizona as soon as this year, with Canadian auto parts supplier partner Magna International (MG.TO), opens new tab.
Waymo, which started as a small self-driving project within Google in 2009, has expanded slowly but steadily in a tricky autonomous vehicle market that has witnessed several casualties due to soaring investment, tight regulatory requirements and tough technological hurdles.
The Mesa, Arizona, factory is a multi-million dollar investment and has created hundreds of jobs, Waymo said in a statement, adding that this is a step towards scaling Waymo One — the company's fully autonomous ride-hailing service.
Waymo One is providing more than 250,000 paid passenger trips each week in San Francisco, Phoenix, Los Angeles and Austin after more than 4 million paid trips in 2024. It plans to add Atlanta and Miami and then Washington, D.C., by 2026.
The company plans to build over 2,000 more fully autonomous Jaguar I-PACE vehicles through next year and integrate Waymo's technology on new vehicle platforms, starting with Zeekr RT this year, the statement said.
"The Waymo Driver integration plant in Mesa is the epicenter of our future growth plans," said Ryan McNamara, vice president of operations at Waymo.
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Scottish Sun
34 minutes ago
- Scottish Sun
Bitter Trump-Musk breakup forces allies to take sides as MAGA influencers quip Don's ‘not invited to Mars anymore'
LAWMAKERS have been forced to pick sides after President Donald Trump and Elon Musk's bromance came to a screeching halt. Democrats and Republicans are scrambling to pledge their allegiance after Musk called for Trump's impeachment and hurled unfounded accusations about the Epstein files. 7 Elon Musk's feud with President Donald Trump has left some MAGA loyalists picking sides Credit: Reuters 7 The feud erupted over Trump's 'big, beautiful bill,' which proposed stripping billions in government subsidies from Tesla Credit: AP 7 The drama unfolded when Musk disapproved of Trump's "Big Beautiful Bill," calling it a "massive, outrageous, pork-filled Congressional spending bill." Trump said the world's richest man was furious because the bill proposes stripping billions in government subsidies from Musk's electric vehicle company Tesla. The two exchanged digital blows with searing social media posts until late Thursday night, when White House aides were said to have scheduled a call between the bitter rivals. RECONCILIATION REJECTED Musk appeared to have offered a possible olive branch when he responded to a post on X from hedge fund manager Bill Ackman. Ackman called for reconciliation, "for the benefit of our great country," and said, "We are much stronger together than apart." In a telling reply, Musk said, "You're not wrong." Speaker Mike Johnson raced to try to get Musk on the phone to negotiate a peace offering. He said they were trying to nail down a time to chat, but haven't been able to iron things out yet. But that all fell apart on Friday morning when Trump blasted Musk again and said he wasn't interested in talking anytime soon. Despite glimmers of hope, politicians and thought leaders have rushed to pick sides and share their two cents on the matter. Trump crushes hopes of 'peace talks' call with Musk as he insists Elon has 'lost his mind' after feud went nuclear Though many of them have been quick to stick to President Trump, not everyone is falling in line. TRUMP SUPPORTERS RALLY Support for Trump was immediate and forceful as allies rallied around the president. Johnson, who oversaw the passage of Trump's "big beautiful bill" in the House that prompted Musk's initial shot across the bow when he called the legislation a "disgusting abomination," was among the first to come to the president's aid. "Look, I know all of you are very concerned about [Musk's] tweets, but I think the American people are concerned about things that really matter," Johnson told reporters Thursday. How did Musk and Trump's relationship crumble? ELON Musk and Donald Trump spent Thursday launching insults on social media as their relationship quickly went sour. The Tesla owner called for Trump's impeachment as the president hit back and warned the government could end all federal contracts with Musk's companies. Here's how it went down: On Tuesday, Musk tweeted that Trump's signature "big beautiful" spending bill was a "disgusting abomination" that would add billions to the federal deficit On Thursday in the Oval Office, Trump addressed Musk's criticism of the bill and accused Musk of trying to kill it because the bill ends federal subsidies for electric vehicles Musk responded by live-posting on X as Trump spoke, initially shrugging off the president's assessment with an unbothered "Whatever," before tearing into the bill's other spending provisions Trump escalated the feud after the Oval Office meeting with multiple posts on Truth Social, saying he told Musk to leave the White House instead of continuing to work with Doge and threatening to dump Musk's federal contracts, which are worth billions Musk fired back on X by saying he was "decommissioning" the Dragon spacecraft made by SpaceX that brought the stranded Nasa astronauts back from the International Space Station in March Musk also escalated the war of words by reposting and replying "Yes" to a tweet claiming that Trump should be impeached and replaced by Vice President JD Vance Musk further fanned the flames by claiming that Trump is named in the infamous "Epstein files" and making unfounded accusations that its the reason they haven't been released to the public. "That is making their taxes low, making their economy work, making the border secure, making energy dominance a big thing again, and that's what our bill is going to do." Johnson said he supported Trump's massive tax and spending cuts bill, and called it a "historic step forward." Vice President JD Vance rushed to his bosses aid and blasted "lies the corporate media tells about President Trump." "One of the most glaring is that he's impulsive or short-tempered," he wrote. "Anyone who has seen him operate under pressure knows that's ridiculous." White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said the feud was an "unfortunate episode from Elon," adding that he wasn't happy with the bill because "it does not include the policies he wanted." "As a businessman, he has a right to speak for his companies, but as president, President Trump has a responsibility to fight for this country," she told Fox News. CJ Pearson, who is the co-chair of the Republican National Committee Youth Advisory, made it clear who had his vote and confidence. "I'll be on the side of the guy that took a bullet for his country. Simple as that," he told the Daily Mail. 7 Representative Thomas Massie, a Republican from Kentucky, slammed Musk's claims, but added that he should be respected Credit: Getty 7 White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt praised the 'big beautiful bill' when she was asked about the feud Credit: Splash EPSTEIN CLAIMS 'RIDICULOUS' Other Republicans fumed over Musk's unfounded claim that Trump is named in files on sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein and should be impeached. Leader of the House Task Force on the Declassification of Federal Secrets, Anna Paulina Luna, said the Epstein accusation was bogus. "The fact is, I do not believe that President Trump is in the Epstein files," she said. Representative Thomas Massie, a Republican from Kentucky who Musk supported, disagreed that Trump should be impeached but added that he still respects the Tesla CEO. "This is the language Trump speaks in. [Musk] is speaking it back to him," he said. Meanwhile, Tennessee Representative Tim Burchett argued that if Trump were in the files, it would've already be used against him politically. "Honestly, if any of that stuff was true on Trump, don't you think the Biden administration would have brought it out? I mean, that's just ridiculous," he said. There's no evidence that Trump had any involvement in Epstein's crimes. 7 Vice President JD Vance blasted the 'corporate media' for portraying Trump as short-tempered Credit: AP MAGA INFLUENCERS CAUTIOUS MAGA influencers remain divided on the feud, including Emily Wilson, known as Emily Saves America, who said that she "doesn't agree with doing this publicly and it's not a good look for us… compared to Democrats, our party at least goes for it. "We go with what we think and feel, we don't just fall in line with each other. I feel like Democrats are all shady and do everything behind closed doors and eat their own." Raquel Debono, who runs Make America Hot Again, jokingly said: "I guess Trump's not invited to Mars anymore." However, activist Robby Starbuck said MAGA is stronger "with Trump and Elon working together," and hopes the two can come together. "Elon is right to want a balanced budget and Trump is right to want his signature legislation. "Remember, our founders in America did great things, often fought and later made up. "This doesn't need to be a breakup if they let cooler heads prevail." Meanwhile, podcaster Joe Rogan, who endorsed Trump as president, called for Musk's phone to be thrown away. 7 White House aides reportedly set up a phone call between Musk and Trump to clear the air, but it fell through Credit: AP DEMOCRATS DIVIDED ON MUSK PRAISE The feud has had some in the Democratic party praising Musk, which has earned the ire of Pennsylvania Senator John Fetterman. "The Dems, we've been dumping all over Musk and vandalizing Teslas or whatever, and now, suddenly, we might be more back into him," he said. Fetterman warned the party against fawning over the billionaire. "It wasn't that long ago that Tesla was like the virtue-signaling kind of accessory for Dems," he said. "I would never want to vandalize Teslas, and the 'big, beautiful bill' is wrong for America. So, from my perspective, I've just tried to be consistent through that." WHO'S STAYING QUIET Some key decision makers are keeping to themselves until tensions cool. "I'm staying out of it," Representative Don Bacon, a Republican from Nebraska, told NBC News. "There's a good verse in Proverbs, 'Stay out of fights.' I'm staying out of this one." Representative Richard Hudson, a Republican from North Carolina, said that he has faith the feud will "blow over." When he was asked whether the two would make up, he merely shrugged.


Reuters
2 hours ago
- Reuters
Mexico's annual inflation likely accelerated in May, exceeding central bank target
MEXICO CITY, June 6 (Reuters) - Mexico's annual inflation likely accelerated in May to above the official target, a Reuters poll showed on Friday, complicating the central bank's efforts to keep cutting its key rate amid a weakening economy. The median forecast from 10 analysts showed a rate of 4.39% for the year-on-year headline inflation rate for May, up from 3.93% in April. (MXCPIA=ECI), opens new tab Core inflation, considered a better indicator of price trends because it strips out some especially volatile food and energy prices, likely also accelerated to 4.04%. (MXCCPI=ECI), opens new tab May consumer prices likely edged up 0.23% from the previous month, while core prices are expected to have risen 0.27%, according to the survey. Official data will be released on Monday. (MXINFL=ECI), opens new tab, (MXCPIX=ECI), opens new tab Mexico's central bank, which has an inflation target of 3%, plus or minus one percentage point, cut its benchmark interest rate by 50 basis points last month for the third consecutive time to 8.5%, its lowest level since 2022. In its statement, the Bank of Mexico said the current inflation environment could allow it to continue its easing cycle, potentially with further cuts of similar magnitude. The next monetary policy decision is scheduled for June 26. The board also noted continued weakness in economic activity. Although Mexico avoided a technical recession in the first quarter, analysts warn the economy remains at risk of contracting.


Time Out
7 hours ago
- Time Out
Toronto just surpassed Montreal in this world's top cities list
Don't look now, but Toronto has officially surpassed Montreal as one of the top cities in the world. According to the 2025 edition of the Global Cities Index, cities across the planet were evaluated across five core categories: Economy, Human Capital, Quality of Life, Environment, and Governance. Toronto showed up strong, coming in at 20th place, while Montreal barely made the top 50. Could it have anything to do with Montreal's high transport emissions, or the post-tropical cyclones and torrential downpours forecasted (again) for this summer? Oxford Economics is the world's foremost independent economic advisory firm, covering over 200 countries, 100 industrial sectors, and 8,000 cities and regions. Drawing on top-tier urban economic forecasts and a range of publicly available datasets, the Index builds a consistent global profile of the 1,000 largest cities. What is the world's top city? It should come as a surprise to absolutely no one that New York City topped the list as the world's top city. The urban giant ranked first in the Economics category as the economic capital of both the U.S. and, arguably, the world—boasting the largest metro economy globally, nearly double that of Los Angeles. While heavily reliant on finance, its stable GDP growth and future outlook remain strong. It also scores high in Human Capital, with a population of over 20 million, top universities, major corporate headquarters, and a highly educated, diverse population—though future growth may slow due to stricter immigration policies. What are the top 50 cities in 2025? Here are the top 50 countries according to the Oxford Economics' Global Cities Index 2025: 1. New York 2. London 3. Paris 4. San Jose 5. Seattle 6. Melbourne 7. Sydney 8. Boston 9. Tokyo 10. San Francisco 11. Los Angeles 12. Washington, D.C. 13. Dublin 14. Stockholm 15. Seoul 16. Zurich 17. Oslo 18. Copenhagen 19. Dallas 20. Toronto 21. Singapore 22. Munich 23. Brisbane 24. Chicago 25. Geneva 26. Denver 27. Amsterdam 28. Atlanta 29. Berlin 30. Houston 31. Perth 32. Luxembourg 33. Philadelphia 34. Brussels 35. Minneapolis 36. Vienna 37. Vancouver 38. Helsinki 39. Hamburg 40. San Diego 41. Phoenix 42. Basel 43. Montreal 44. Madrid 45. Miami 46. Tel Aviv 47. Austin 48. Bern 49. Gothenburg 50. Portland Why did Toronto surpass Montreal in this global ranking? Toronto is the top-ranked Canadian city thanks to its role as a national hub for business, finance, culture, and education. Scoring in the top 20 globally for both Economics and Human Capital, the city boasts strong GDP and employment growth, fuelled by high levels of international immigration. Home to Canada's largest banks and major universities like the University of Toronto, it's a centre for innovation and research. However, rapid population growth has strained housing supply, leading to affordability challenges and impacting its Quality of Life score. Environmental challenges and extreme weather also weigh on its overall ranking. Still, with strong governance, high life expectancy, and continued global appeal, Toronto is expected to remain a top performer for years to come. Meanwhile Montreal, the third Canadian city in the top 50, stands out for its strong Human Capital score, bolstered by world-renowned universities like McGill and a growing tech sector focused on AI and video games. It's also a key transport hub, home to major companies like Air Canada and Canadian National Railway. Once Canada's economic capital, Montreal now has the country's second-largest GDP, though lower wages in its dominant sectors contribute to some of the lowest incomes in North America. Still, housing is more affordable than in other Canadian cities, inequality is low, and residents enjoy high life expectancy and rich cultural offerings. Montreal's main weakness lies in the Environment category, due to high transport emissions and weather volatility. As climate change intensifies, reducing carbon output remains a key challenge for the city's economy.