
Trump and Zelensky meet and an 'economic blackout' day of protest: Morning Rundown
Donald Trump and Volodymyr Zelenskyy are scheduled to meet today at the White House. The deaths of actor Gene Hackman and his wife have been ruled 'suspicious.' And what to know about today's 'economic blackout' protest.
Here's what to know today.
Trump and Zelenskyy to meet amid peace talk efforts and possible minerals deal
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy will meet with President Donald Trump today at the White House for the first time since the U.S. began direct negotiations with Russia to secure an agreement that would end the yearslong war in Ukraine.
Trump has signaled that the two counties have made an agreement, which would be signed today, granting the U.S. significant ownership of Ukraine's rare earth minerals. The deal would be a form of repayment for the nearly $66 billion in military assistance the U.S. has provided Ukraine since Russia invaded in February 2022, creating an 'economic partnership' between the two nations.
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Ukraine has some of the world's largest reserves of titanium and iron ore, but many of the minerals are in areas now controlled by Russian troops. Russia has proposed a similar deal that would give the U.S. ownership of rare earth minerals in Russian-controlled Ukrainian territory, an idea that both Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin have signaled interest in.
In September, Zelenskyy presented Trump with a 'Victory Plan' to help end the war. The two leaders last met in December in Paris. But this month, U.S. officials initiated peace talks with Russian negotiators in Saudi Arabia, and a war of words between Trump and Zelenskyy ensued. This week, however, Trump struck a more conciliatory tone about today's meeting.
British Prime Minister Keir Starmer said there is 'value' in Trump's pursuit of a Ukrainian mineral rights deal.
A federal judge ordered the Trump administration to rescind a memo directing the mass firings of federal workers.
The Trump administration can go ahead with plans to fire dozens of officers from the CIA and other intelligence agencies who had temporary jobs working on diversity programs, a federal judge ruled.
A judge ordered at least one DOGE employee to testify and provide documents in a lawsuit against the Trump administration.
Transgender service members will be removed from the military, the Pentagon said.
As Robert F. Kennedy Jr. downplays the measles outbreak in Texas and DOGE's cuts to efforts to combat some viruses, the consequences could be 'politically perilous.'
Extending Trump's 2017 tax cuts will cost an estimated $4.6 trillion over a decade. But Senate Republicans want to use a different calculation that would make the estimate $0. Here's how.
Deaths of Gene Hackman and his wife are ruled 'suspicious'
New Mexico authorities are investigating the 'suspicious' deaths of actor Gene Hackman, 95, and his wife, Betsy Arakawa, 65, after they were found dead in their home, along with their dog. Preliminary findings from the medical examiners found no signs of external trauma, the Santa Fe County Sheriff's Office said. The cause of death has yet to be determined. Sheriff Adan Mendoza said that there are no obvious signs of foul play but that investigators are not ruling anything out.
A man who identified himself as the subdivision's caretaker called 911 on Wednesday to report finding their bodies, call audio showed. Arakawa's body was found on the floor of a bathroom. Hackman was found dead in a mudroom near a kitchen. Both bodies showed 'obvious signs of death,' and Arakawa's body showed signs of 'body decomposition,' according to a search warrant. Here's what else we know.
Hackman's gruff but soulful turns in classics such as 'The French Connection,' 'The Conversation' and 'Unforgiven' made him one of the most respected performers in Hollywood. Read more about the Oscar-winning actor's life and legacy.
Arakawa was Hackman's steadfast companion for decades. She was also an accomplished pianist and co-owned a business in Santa Fe, where they lived. Read more about her life.
The push for one-day 'economic blackout'
A call for people to refrain from buying anything for one day has gained steam in the past few weeks. And today's the day for action — or rather, inaction. The day of protest, first shared about a month ago by Chicago-area meditation and mindfulness educator John Schwarz, calls on shoppers to halt nonessential purchases online and in stores. If people must spend, they should buy from small and local businesses. 'For too long, corporations have treated the American people like an endless source of profit,' Schwarz said in a video posted this week, explaining the reason for the protest.
The call for a 'blackout' comes as the prices of essentials continue to rise, the housing market remains frozen and credit card debt has reached a record high. Some political organizations have encouraged consumers to avoid companies that have rolled back their DEI programs. Here's what else to know about the no-buy day.
Read All About It
Tonight is the best chance for skywatchers to see the 'planet parade,' in which all seven planets apart from Earth can be seen at once.
A string of recent plane crashes and near-collisions have made travelers nervous, but an NBC News analysis of federal data shows that incidents and deaths on flights have not been rising compared to previous years.
Hamas is willing to cede political power and governance of the Gaza Strip but would not disarm unless an independent Palestinian state is achieved, a senior political official from the group said.
The anticipated release of documents related to the Jeffrey Epstein case devolved into anger and disappointment, with conservative figures alleging FBI agents were hiding files.
San Antonio Spurs coach Gregg Popovich will not return this season after suffering a stroke in November.
'Cruel.' 'Devastated.' 'Without reason.' Thousands of federal employees have been let go as part of a swift and decisive downsizing by President Donald Trump and Elon Musk. But who are the people who have lost their jobs? They're not just a number.
NBC News has received dozens of stories from workers and compiled them into a digestible and engaging piece to give insight into the expertise being lost across so many sectors. They're everyday people who work to support veterans, take care of our national parks and even combat the spread of bird flu.
These stories will, unfortunately, continue. I hope to keep sharing them and the impact their losses will have on us at home and abroad. — Chelsea Stahl, art director
NBC Select: Online Shopping, Simplified
Almost all of the NBC Select editorial team tested this point-and-shoot digital camera from Camp Snap. At just $65, it won't take breathtaking photos, but the vintage aesthetic, limited controls and ease of use stood out. Plus, the Select team spoke to experts about how to take care of more than 23 fabric types, including cashmere, denim, fleece, leather and more.
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Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
DOGE nerds reveal their biggest fear after Musk and Trump's spectacular falling out
Employees of the Department of Government Efficiency are worried Elon Musk 's infamous chainsaw to government waste may come for them after his falling out with Donald Trump. Musk and Trump's fallout dates back to the man who once wore a t-shirt proclaiming himself 'the DOGEfather' leaving the White House in late May. The ex-'First Buddy' has spent the days since torching the relationship, everything from publicly slamming Trump's 'big, beautiful bill' to claiming the president is in The Epstein Files (which he quietly later deleted). Trump has also knifed a key Musk ally by pulling his nomination to become NASA administrator. That has many of those who remain at the Department of Government Efficiency worried that they may 'get DOGE'd' themselves, as group chats between employees have reportedly lit up wondering where their future in government lies. As former DOGE software engineer Sahil Lavingia said, he and many of the people attempting to streamline the government were already allies or employees of Musk. 'I worry with Elon gone, no one will join, and it will just slowly fade away,' Lavingia told the Wall Street Journal. Even if they remain, without Musk, the organization that claimed it has already cut $180 billion in government waste may never be the same. 'Working there felt like pushing a boulder up a mountain, and it'll just fall back down if the work doesn't continue,' Lavingia added. For now, the Trump White House remains proud of the department's work and looks for it to continue. 'Trump's success through DOGE is undisputed, and [the president's] work will continue to yield historic results,' spokesperson Harrison Fields said. However, sources told WSJ that many are worried that at the very least, DOGE will see massive staffing cuts without Musk's protection. Russell Vought, the head of the Office of Management and Budget, seemed to confirm that they are now at the mercy of whomever is in charge of the department that they were hired to cut waste from. 'Cabinet agencies that are in charge of the DOGE consultants that work for them are fundamentally in control of DOGE,' he told Congress earlier this week. The fallout between Trump and Musk - who were political allies for a little less than a year - started in recent weeks when the billionaire started resisting Republicans' 'Big, Beautiful Bill,' arguing that the spending wiped out DOGE's cost-cutting efforts. However, there were signs of the strain between the two on the day Musk left the White House, as Trump pulled the nomination for Jared Isaacman to be the new NASA administrator despite reports he was a shoe-in for confirmation. Isaacman, 42, had his nomination pulled after a 'thorough review' of his 'prior associations,' Trump said. He believes the nomination was withdrawn to coincide with his friend Musk parting ways with the administration and was pushed for by Sergio Gor, an anti-Musk White House official. Then, on Thursday, when Trump was supposed to be hosting the new German Chancellor Friedrich Merz in the Oval Office, he was asked about Musk's recent criticism. From there the dam broke. 'Elon and I had a great relationship. I don't know if we will any more, I was surprised,' Trump told reporters. The president suggested that Musk was angry - not over the bill ballooning the deficit - but because the Trump administration has pulled back on electric vehicle mandates, which negatively impacted Tesla, and replaced the Musk-approved nominee to lead NASA, which could hinder SpaceX's government contracts. 'And you know, Elon's upset because we took the EV mandate, which was a lot of money for electric vehicles, and they're having a hard time the electric vehicles and they want us to pay billions of dollars in subsidy,' Trump said. 'I know that disturbed him.' Musk posted to X as Trump's Q&A with reporters was ongoing. 'Whatever,' the billionaire wrote. 'Keep the EV/solar incentive cuts in the bill, even though no oil & gas subsidies are touched (very unfair!!), but ditch the MOUNTAIN of DISGUSTING PORK in the bill,' he advised. 'In the entire history of civilization, there has never been legislation that [is] both big and beautiful. Everyone knows this!' Musk continued. 'Either you get a big and ugly bill or a slim and beautiful bill. Slim and beautiful is the way.' The spat quickly turned personal with Musk then posting that Trump would have lost the 2024 election had it not been for the world's richest man - him. Musk publicly endorsed Trump on the heels of the July 13th assassination attempt in Butler, Pennsylvania and poured around $290 million into the Republican's campaign. The billionaire also joined Trump on the campaign trail when he returned to the site of the Butler shooting in early October, a month before Election Day. After his meeting with Merz, Trump continued to throw punches online. He asserted that he had asked Musk to leave his administration and said he was 'CRAZY!' 'Elon was "wearing thin," I asked him to leave, I took away his EV Mandate that forced everyone to buy Electric Cars that nobody else wanted (that he knew for months I was going to do!), and he just went CRAZY!' Trump wrote. It was after that post that he then threatened to pull SpaceX and Tesla's government contracts. Musk then taunted Trump to act. 'This just gets better and better,' he wrote. 'Go ahead, make my day …' In a follow-up post, Musk said he would 'begin decommissioning its Dragon spacecraft immediately.' Trump continued his 'crazy' remarks on Friday when speaking with CNN Anchor and Chief Political Correspondent Dana Bash. He said: 'I'm not even thinking about Elon. He's got a problem. The poor guy's got a problem.' The tech billionaire also claimed Trump appeared in files relating to disgraced pedophile Jeffrey Epstein in a post on his social media platform X as the pair traded blows in a sensational public row. Musk gave no evidence for the claim, which has since been deleted, and the White House dismissed the allegation.


North Wales Chronicle
2 hours ago
- North Wales Chronicle
National Guard face protesters hours after arriving in LA on Trump's orders
The confrontation broke out in front of the Metropolitan Detention Centre in central Los Angeles, as a group of demonstrators shouted insults at members of the federal guard lined shoulder to shoulder behind plastic riot shields. There did not appear to be any arrests. About 300 National Guard troops arrived in Los Angeles on Sunday on orders from Mr Trump, in response to clashes in recent days between federal immigration authorities and protesters seeking to block them from carrying out deportations. Members of California's National Guard had mobilised at the federal complex in central Los Angeles that includes the Metropolitan Detention Centre, one of several sites that have seen confrontations involving hundreds of people in last two days. The troops included members of the 79th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, according to a social media post from the Department of Defence that showed dozens of National Guard members with long guns and an armoured vehicle. Mr Trump has said he is deploying 2,000 California National Guard troops to Los Angeles to quell the protests, which he called 'a form of rebellion'. California — Don't give Donald Trump what he wants. Speak up. Stay peaceful. Stay calm. Do not use violence and respect the law enforcement officers that are trying their best to keep the peace. — Gavin Newsom (@GavinNewsom) June 8, 2025 The deployment was limited to a small area in central Los Angeles. The protests have been relatively small and limited to that area. The rest of the city of four million people is largely unaffected. Their arrival follows clashes near a Home Depot in the heavily Latino city of Paramount, south of Los Angeles. As protesters sought to block Border Patrol vehicles, some hurling rocks and chunks of cement, federal agents unleashed tear gas, flash-bang explosives and pepper balls. Tensions were high after a series of sweeps by immigration authorities the previous day, as the weeklong tally of immigrant arrests in the city climbed past 100. A prominent union leader was arrested while protesting and accused of impeding law enforcement. On Sunday, homeland security secretary Kristi Noem said the National Guard would 'keep peace and allow people to be able to protest but also to keep law and order'. In a signal of the administration's aggressive approach, defence secretary Pete Hegseth also threatened to deploy active-duty marines 'if violence continues' in the region. The move came over the objections of governor Gavin Newsom, marking the first time in decades that a state's national guard was activated without a request from its governor, according to the Brennan Centre for Justice. In a directive on Saturday, Mr Trump invoked a legal provision allowing him to deploy federal service members when there is 'a rebellion or danger of a rebellion against the authority of the Government of the United States'. Mr Newsom, a Democrat, said Mr Trump's decision to call in the National Guard was 'purposefully inflammatory'. He described Mr Hegseth's threat to deploy marines on American soil as 'deranged behaviour'. In a statement on Sunday, assistant homeland security secretary Tricia McLaughlin accused California's politicians and protesters of 'defending heinous illegal alien criminals at the expense of Americans' safety'. A message to the LA rioters: you will not stop us or slow us down. @ICEgov will continue to enforce the law. And if you lay a hand on a law enforcement officer, you will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law. — Secretary Kristi Noem (@Sec_Noem) June 7, 2025 'Instead of rioting, they should be thanking Ice (Immigration and Customs Enforcement) officers every single day who wake up and make our communities safer,' Ms McLaughlin added. Vermont senator Bernie Sanders said the order by Mr Trump reflected 'a president moving this country rapidly into authoritarianism' and 'usurping the powers of the United States Congress'. Mr Trump's order came after clashes in Paramount and neighbouring Compton, where a car was set on fire. Protests continued into the evening in Paramount, with several hundred demonstrators gathered near a doughnut shop, and authorities holding up barbed wire to keep the crowd back. Crowds also gathered again outside federal buildings in central Los Angeles, including a detention centre, where police declared an unlawful assembly and began to arrest people.


NBC News
2 hours ago
- NBC News
National Guard deployed to L.A. and Trump warns Musk of 'consequences': Weekend Rundown
President Donald Trump moved to deploy the National Guard to Los Angeles over the objections of California Gov. Gavin Newsom and L.A. Mayor Karen Bass after immigration raids in the city led to protests and disorder. Approximately 300 National Guard members descended on Los Angeles on Sunday morning after the president ordered the deployment of 2,000 troops, a move sharply criticized as inflammatory and unnecessary by Newsom and a 'chaotic escalation' by Bass, who warned that an 'extreme presence of troops or law enforcement officers' could stoke 'massive civil unrest.' Tom Homan, Trump's appointed border czar, told NBC News that Newsom and Bass had created 'a sanctuary for criminals' and suggested the governor and mayor could be arrested if they impeded law enforcement. 'I'll say about anybody,' Homan said, 'it's a felony to knowingly harbor and conceal an illegal alien. It's a felony to impede law enforcement from doing their job.' Homan said 'around 150' undocumented immigrants had been detained in the last two days as Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers carried out large-scale sweep across the city. 'Meet the Press' In an interview with NBC News' 'Meet the Press,' Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J., said he would not accept campaign donations from Elon Musk, but urged the former Trump adviser to 'get involved right now in a more substantive way' in Democrats' push against the sweeping GOP-backed spending bill. Booker's remarks come as other Democrats have floated welcoming Musk into the Democratic Party after a feud between President Donald Trump and the tech mogul exploded into public view last week. Sen. James Lankford, R-Okla., also joined moderator Kristen Welker on Sunday, defending Trump's decision to deploy the National Guard in Los Angeles as demonstrators protest federal immigration raids. 'He's trying to de-escalate all the tensions that are there,' Lankford said. 'This is an American city, and to be able to have an American city where we have people literally flying Mexican flags and saying, 'You cannot arrest us,' cannot be allowed.' Notable quote President Donald Trump if tech mogul Elon Musk funds candidates to run against Republicans who vote in favor of his sweeping budget bill, after a breakdown in relations between the two. Trump's comments were the most extensive since he and Musk exchanged threats and attacks on X and Truth Social earlier this week. He added that he thought the Republican Party was more unified than ever after the two men fell out in front of the world. Politics in brief Back in the USA: Trump told NBC News that it wasn't his decision to bring mistakenly deported Maryland man Kilmar Abrego Garcia back to the U.S. to face federal charges, but said he believes it will be a 'very easy case.' Abrego Garcia's case has raised a number of questions, including what the political fallout will be. Lines redrawn: Democrats are making gains in wealthier, whiter and more educated areas as Republicans make inroads with Hispanic and white working-class voters, an analysis of election data shows. Treatment halted: Trump's travel ban has stalled lifesaving treatment for Haitian children who need to travel for surgery. A U.S. doctor who has operated on Haitian children is pleading for the administration to make a humanitarian exception to the ban. Coco Gauff and Carlos Alcaraz crowned French Open champions The No. 2 seeds for both the men's and women's finals at Roland-Garros came out on top this year. In three sets, Coco Gauff became the first American women to win the French open since Serena Williams in 2015, outlasting top-ranked Aryna Sabalenka with a 6-7 (5), 6-2, 6-4 victory. 'The crowd really helped me today. You guys were cheering for me so hard, and I don't know what I did to deserve so much love from the French crowd,' Gauff said. 'But I appreciate you guys.' In the men's final, Carlos Alcaraz produced one of the greatest comebacks in the history of the clay-court tournament. The defending champion made a stunning comeback from two sets down, winning a fifth-set tiebreaker to beat No. 1 Jannik Sinner 4-6, 6-7 (4), 6-4, 7-6 (3), 7-6 (10-2) to retain his French Open title for a second-straight year. It was the longest-ever French Open final — 5 hours, 29 minutes — in the Open Era. Broadway salutes a night of A-listers 'Wicked' star Cynthia Erivo, a Grammy, Emmy and Tony award-winning actress and singer, is slated to host the 78th annual Tony Awards, which this year return to New York City's Radio City Music Hall. There are 29 shows on Broadway that received nominations this season, with tight competition in many categories, and the acting categories are stacked with Hollywood stars, including George Clooney and Sarah Snook. In case you missed it Colombian senator and presidential candidate Miguel Uribe Turbay is fighting for his life after he was shot three times during a campaign event in Bogotá on Saturday. A Cantonese opera inspired by Trump has debuted its latest edition, riffing on the president's infamous White House sparring match with Ukraine's Volodymyr Zelenskyy. Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz vowed to block an aid vessel carrying Greta Thunberg and other activists from reaching Gaza, by 'any means necessary.' Did you know you are more likely to be struck by lightning than the Pacers were to win their playoff comebacks? These stats back up that claim. A U.S. marshal was mistakenly detained by Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents in Arizona because he 'fit the general description of a subject being sought by ICE,' officials said. A Seattle man was charged in connection with a series of robberies and burglaries of current and former professional athletes, with alleged victims including Seattle Mariners pitcher Luis Castillo, center fielder Julio Rodriguez and Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Blake Snell. Just how much damage did Ukraine do in its 'Spiderweb' drone attack on Russia? NBC News has analyzed satellite imagery to dig into the claims being made by Kyiv and Moscow.