
Trump announces 30% tariffs on European Union, Mexico

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


NBC News
25 minutes ago
- NBC News
Possible '28 contender Andy Beshear says he wants to unite ‘Democrats, Republicans and independents'
Gov. Andy Beshear (D-Ky.) tells Meet the Press he wants to show that America 'can actually move not right, or left, but forward as a country,' as he faces speculation about a potential presidential bid in 2028.


The Herald Scotland
28 minutes ago
- The Herald Scotland
Evan Ferguson 'makes' decision on future amid Celtic links
However, Roma have also been showing an interest and Calciomercato now reports he has decided he would like to head to the Italian capital. Read more: Brighton are said to be happy to agree a loan deal which would include an obligation to buy for €45 million (£38.9million). The Serie A side are looking to negotiate that price down. The two clubs are also said to be in discussions over a loan deal for former Celtic midfielder Matt O'Riley.


Telegraph
28 minutes ago
- Telegraph
German comedian to go on trial for Trump assassination joke
A German comedian will appear in court after he was charged for making a joke about the assassination attempt on Donald Trump last year. Sebastian Hotz could face up to three years in prison for comparing the shooting of the US president at an election campaign rally in 2024 to catching the last bus. 'You sadly just missed it,' he wrote shortly after the shooting on July 13. Hotz, also known as El Hotzo, doubled down on the joke shortly after, adding: 'I find it fantastic when fascists die. 'Absolutely no one forces you to feel sorry for fascists; you can just not do it without the slightest consequence.' Hotz was fired from his job with RBB, the public broadcaster, and charged with condoning and rewarding criminal offences. His trial, which is scheduled to begin on July 23 at the Tiergarten district court in Berlin, has inflamed critics on the Left and Right, who are divided on whether his comments should be protected by free speech. Gerd Buurmann, the Right-leaning comedian, said: 'It is not okay that a satirist is brought to court just because he said something... Everything he said is disgusting, but he must be allowed to say it.' But others in the public eye praised the decision for showing that the 'internet is not a legal free-for-all'. One of the most prominent critics of the comedian's comments has been Elon Musk. The Tesla owner tweeted angrily at Olaf Scholz, the then-German chancellor, noting: 'Someone wishing death on the leading US presidential candidate and myself is paid to do so by the German government.' Mr Musk then tagged Mr Scholz on X and asked: 'Was ist das? [What is that?]' Comedy vs free speech The incident is not the first to cause a free-speech stir in the world of comedy. Jan Böhmermann, a TV host, was charged in 2016 with breaking an obscure German law against insulting authority figures after a satirical poem about Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, the Turkish president, after he said Mr Erdoğan's 'stiff neck stinks of doner' kebab and he 'loves to have sex with goats while oppressing minorities'. Angela Merkel, the then-chancellor, personally approved the prosecution of the comedian, after speaking with Turkish officials. Böhmermann accused Ms Merkel of 'serving me to a neurotic despot for tea and made me become a German Ai Weiwei', with the case eventually dropped by prosecutors and the lese-majestylaw abolished.