logo
An investigative report found that the first family is projected to rake in $3.4 billion thanks to their proximity to the White House.

An investigative report found that the first family is projected to rake in $3.4 billion thanks to their proximity to the White House.

Yahooa day ago
The journalist behind a bombshell report detailing the staggering amount of money that President Donald Trump's second term is raking in for the first family said Trump and Co. have cashed in on the presidency at an unprecedented rate. The New Yorker's David Kirkpatrick calculated that Trump, his children, and their spouses will earn more than $3.4 billion thanks largely to deals, transactions, and investments that almost certainly would not have happened if Trump were just a real estate agent and reality TV star. During an interview Sunday with MSNBC's The Weekend Primetime, Kirkpatrick said other presidents and their children have found ways of 'cashing in' with book deals and speaker fees but that it was all 'small change' compared to the Trump family deals.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump Said He Would Not Send Troops to Ukraine
Trump Said He Would Not Send Troops to Ukraine

New York Times

timea minute ago

  • New York Times

Trump Said He Would Not Send Troops to Ukraine

President Trump said today that no American ground troops would be deployed to Ukraine as part of the security guarantees that the U.S. and its NATO allies have promised to offer Kyiv. That leaves open the possibility that European countries could agree, as part of a peace deal with Russia, to deploy troops to Ukraine with the potential backing of U.S. air support. The leaders of Britain, France and Germany met today to discuss their role in a postwar Ukraine. Ukrainian officials argue that only a binding agreement that would oblige allies to defend the country could deter Russia from invading Ukraine again. But Russia has flatly rejected the idea of an international force deploying to Ukraine, which suggests that the path to a peace deal remains elusive, even after yesterday's extraordinary White House meeting. Trump has described a potential meeting between the leaders of Russia and Ukraine as an achievement of the talks, and the White House spokeswoman said that Vladimir Putin had already agreed to it. The Kremlin has played down the idea. For more: Trump described his motivation for brokering an end to the war in Ukraine: 'I want to try and get to heaven, if possible,' he said. Analysis: Ukraine's president, Volodymyr Zelensky, and his European allies have learned how to sway Trump — present a unified front, tug on his heartstrings, and lean heavily into flattery. Hundreds more troops are headed to Washington Tennessee is planing to send about 160 National Guard troops to Washington, D.C., making it the sixth Republican-led state to announce it will send troops to support Trump's crackdown in the nation's capital. So far, Army officials have placed troops largely around tourist spots, not high-crime areas. In Southeast Washington, many residents said they did not reject safety measures outright, but felt suspicious of the president's motives. The president's critics have used Washington's declining violent crime rate as evidence that he is overreaching. Now, the U.S. attorney's office in Washington has opened an investigation into whether city police officials falsified crime data. In other Trump administration news: Trump revoked the security clearances of 37 current and former national security officials, many of whom worked on Russia analysis or foreign threats to U.S. elections. The official tapped to investigate the New York attorney general, Letitia James, has sidestepped Justice Department norms. Meet the key players involved in Trump's overhaul of Washington's cultural institutions. OpenAI could become the most valuable private company OpenAI, the maker of ChatGPT, is in talks to sell $6 billion in shares owned by its current and former employees to investors. The deal would value the San Francisco-based A.I. lab at roughly $500 billion, which, according to data from the start-up tracker CB Insights, would make it the world's most valuable privately held company. Less than a year ago, OpenAI raised money at a $157 billion valuation. For more: When ChatGPT was updated this month, it became less overly agreeable, and some users felt they lost a friend. OpenAI agreed to backtrack. Related: Meta internally announced a new restructuring of its A.I. division amid internal tensions. Rainforests in Indonesia are being cleared to build your R.V. Recreational vehicles — the rolling homes that have grown increasingly popular in the U.S. — rely on a tropical hardwood called lauan. The U.S. has imported more than $900 million of it since 2020, most of it processed into plywood for R.V.s. Manufacturers say that the wood is irreplaceable for features like cabinets and interior walls. Conservation groups say the industry's demand for lauan has accelerated deforestation in Borneo, where tens of thousands of acres of rainforest have been chopped down for the wood in the past five years, often without the government's permission. More top news Politics: California Republicans filed a lawsuit asking the State Supreme Court to block Democrats' redistricting plans. Weather: Hurricane Erin isn't expected to make landfall in the U.S., but Hatteras Island in North Carolina has been evacuated and 70 people were rescued from rip currents off one beach. Travel: Air Canada reached a tentative deal with the union that represents 10,000 striking flight attendants. Middle East: Israeli hard-liners ruled out a proposed hostage deal that Hamas has agreed to, but the prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, has yet to state his position. Arkansas: In the Ozark Mountains, homesteaders are building an all-white community, which they think will survive any legal challenges in the current political environment. Media: For the first time, Shari Redstone spoke at length about why she sold Paramount: her father's death, and the Oct. 7 attacks. Science: A small, preliminary study found a possible link between extreme exercise and colon cancer. After the fire, they created a new Wonderland onstage Aveson School of Leaders was once the most beautiful elementary school campus in Los Angeles County. The Eaton fire turned it into a charred ruin. Many students left for other schools or other states. But school officials decided that the tragedy wouldn't stop them from putting on their spring musical, 'Alice in Wonderland.' We spent five months with a group of roughly 40 students as they prepared for a big performance against a backdrop of staggering loss. For some, the rehearsals became a lifeline — a reminder of the way things used to be. Do food expiration dates really matter? Inside your refrigerator, just about every packaged item probable comes with some sort of expiration date. This would make sense if those dates named the moment after which you should no longer consume the food. But that's often not the case. The reality is that food expiration dates are a jumbled mess, with many different state laws, industry norms and company preferences playing a role. Here's how to navigate them. Dinner table topics City lovers: Two coyotes named Romeo and Juliet have quietly made New York's Central Park their home. 'America's Team': A new Netflix docuseries shows why the Dallas Cowboys seem to always win the battle for attention. Thick bands: Chunky engagement rings — a Victorian-era favorite — are back in style. Household disagreements: Leave dirty dishes in the sink? A comedian will see you in 'Roommate Court.' Cook: Chamoy is a vibrant and tangy Mexican condiment that's good on everything. Read: A tender new biography emphasizes James Baldwin's romantic side. Plan: A.I. travel tools are good at some things and lacking at others. Here's what to know. Wear: Take inspiration from our fashion photographer's look of the week. Consider: Kiwis may be the perfect healthy snack. Preserve: Wirecutter has six tips for making your phone last longer. Test yourself: Take our quiz to see if you can match vacation novels to their settings. Play: Here are today's Spelling Bee, Wordle and Mini Crossword. Find all our games here. A Swedish church took a road trip For more than a century, a red wooden church sat atop a hill in Kiruna, Sweden's northernmost city, becoming one of the country's most beloved cultural institutions. Then, today, it left, setting off on a two-day, three-mile road trip. The church has been forced to relocate, after the local mining company said the ground beneath it was unstable. So the 660-ton building was hoisted onto an enormous rolling structure with a system of beams and jacks, and roads along its path were widened to accommodate it. Check out video of the church's slow journey. Have an astonishing evening. Thanks for reading. I'll be back on Monday. — Matthew Philip Pacheco was our photo editor. We welcome your feedback. Write to us at evening@

Putin Won't Even Say Zelensky's Name. So Will He Sit Down With Him?
Putin Won't Even Say Zelensky's Name. So Will He Sit Down With Him?

New York Times

timea minute ago

  • New York Times

Putin Won't Even Say Zelensky's Name. So Will He Sit Down With Him?

President Vladimir V. Putin's disdain for his Ukrainian counterpart runs so deep that he almost never utters the name 'Zelensky.' The Kremlin insists he's an illegitimate leader. Russian state television calls him a 'clown.' But President Trump has pinned his recent flurry of diplomacy on the idea that Mr. Putin and President Volodymyr Zelensky will have to come face to face in order to end Russia's war. Mr. Trump said he 'began the arrangements' for such a meeting when he spoke by phone with Mr. Putin on Monday. And so the whirlwind of diplomatic intrigue in Moscow amid Mr. Trump's push to halt the fighting shifted to a new mystery on Tuesday: Could the war's central archenemies soon sit down one on one? For Mr. Putin, such a summit could be a way to cement a peace deal that the Kremlin would cast as a victory, if Mr. Trump were to pressure Mr. Zelensky to accept Mr. Putin's demands on Ukraine's land and sovereignty. But it could also carry political risks, since the Kremlin has long signaled that negotiating directly with Mr. Zelensky would be beneath the Russian leader. 'It would be a compromise,' Konstantin Zatulin, a senior Russian lawmaker, said in a phone interview on Tuesday, casting a potential Putin-Zelensky meeting as a Kremlin concession in itself. 'Russia would withdraw its concerns about a meeting with Zelensky in order to support President Trump's peacemaking efforts.' Mr. Zatulin said some Russian officials believed Mr. Putin should not meet with Mr. Zelensky in any scenario, given that 'Russia has been talking everywhere about Zelensky's illegitimacy.' But Mr. Zatulin said that in his view, a summit with Mr. Zelensky should be considered because 'the stakes are just too high to keep ignoring any possibility of a meeting.' Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Nebraska's governor announces plan for an immigration detention center in a farming area in the state's southwest corner
Nebraska's governor announces plan for an immigration detention center in a farming area in the state's southwest corner

CNN

timea minute ago

  • CNN

Nebraska's governor announces plan for an immigration detention center in a farming area in the state's southwest corner

Immigration Donald TrumpFacebookTweetLink Follow Nebraska Republican Gov. Jim Pillen announced plans Tuesday for an immigration detention center in a farming area in the state's southwest corner as President Donald Trump's administration races to expand the infrastructure necessary for increasing deportations. Pillen said he and Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem had agreed to use an existing minimum security prison work camp in rural McCook to house people awaiting deportation and being held for other immigration proceedings. 'This is about keeping Nebraskans – and Americans across our country – safe,' Pillen said in a statement. Pillen also announced he would order the Nebraska National Guard to provide administrative and logical support to Nebraska-based immigration agents. About 20 Guard soldiers will be involved. He also said the Nebraska State Patrol would sign an agreement that enables troopers to help federal immigration agents make arrests. The Trump administration is adding new detention facilities across the country to hold the growing number of immigrants it has arrested and accused of being in the country illegally. Older and newer US Immigration and Customs Enforcement centers were holding more than 56,000 immigrants in June, the most since 2019. The new and planned facilities include the remote detention center in the Florida Everglades known as 'Alligator Alcatraz,' which opened last month. It's designed to hold up to 3,000 detainees in temporary tent structures. When Trump toured it, he suggested it could be a model for future lockups nationwide. The Florida facility also been the subject of legal challenges by attorneys who allege violations of due process there, including the rights of detainees to meet with their attorneys, limited access to immigration courts and poor living conditions. Critics have been trying to stop further construction and operations until it comes into compliance with federal environmental laws. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis announced last week that his administration is preparing to open a second facility, dubbed 'Deportation Depot,' at a state prison in north Florida. It's expected to have 1,300 immigration beds, though that capacity could be expanded to 2,000, state officials said. Also last week, officials in the rural Tennessee town of Mason voted to approve agreements to turn a former prison into an immigration detention facility operated by a private company, despite loud objections from residents and activists during a contentious public meeting. And the Trump administration announced plans earlier this month for a 1,000-bed detention center in Indiana that would be dubbed 'Speedway Slammer,' prompting a backlash in the Midwestern state that hosts the Indianapolis 500 auto race. The Nebraska plan has already raised concerns. In a video posted to social media, state Sen. Megan Hunt, an independent, blasted a lack of transparency about plans for the detention center, citing her unfulfilled request to the governor and executive branch for emails and other records about plans to build the facility. She urged people to support local immigrant rights groups, and said any response by the Legislature would not come until next year – and only with enough support from lawmakers. 'The No. 1 thing we need to do is protect our neighbors, protect the people in our communities who are being targeted by these horrible people, these horrible organizations that are making choices to lock up, detain, disappear our neighbors and families and friends,' Hunt said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store