
Trump news at a glance: Fallout from Epstein case widens as Trump threatens to sue WSJ
The announcement came as Trump seeks to tamp down controversy over a story published in the Wall Street Journal that alleges the US president contributed a sketch of a naked woman to Epstein's 50th birthday album. The president has said the letter is a fake, and that he will sue the publication over the story.
The fallout over the Epstein case has also complicated House Republicans' plans to vote on Thursday on legislation demanded by Trump to slash government spending.
Here are the key stories at a glance:
The president said on Truth Social he had authorized the justice department to seek the public release of the materials, which are under seal, citing 'the ridiculous amount of publicity given to Jeffrey Epstein'.
Bondi, who has weathered days of accusations by Trump's far-right supporters that she had mismanaged and failed to deliver on promises to release previously secret documents about the Epstein case, responded to Trump's post with a post of her own that vowed to comply with the directive.
The flurry of activity followed the Wall Street Journal report alleging that Trump had contributed the letter – described as 'bawdy' and featuring a drawing of a naked woman's silhouette around a typewritten personal message to Epstein – to an album compiled by Ghislane Maxwell for Epstein's 50th birthday. Trump denied to the Journal that he was the author of the tribute and, hours after the story was published, announced he intended to file a lawsuit against the publication.
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The House of Representatives faces a Friday deadline to pass the rescissions package demanded by Trump and approved by the Senate.
But before the House can vote on the package, it must be approved by the rules committee, where the Democratic minority has sought to capitalize on a growing furor among Republicans and their supporters over the Trump administration's handling of documents related to the Epstein case. The committee announced it would hold a hearing into the package on Thursday evening.
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Donald Trump's efforts to dismiss the criticism over his administration's handling of the Jeffrey Epstein files as a 'hoax' showed no sign of working on Thursday as more prominent figures from across the political spectrum emerged to attack the US president and some of his supporters recorded videos burning their signature Make America Great Again hats.
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Medicaid officials have reportedly made an agreement with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice) to allow agents to examine a database of Americans' personal information – including home addresses, social security numbers and ethnicities.
The data sharing agreement will allow Ice to find 'the location of aliens', according to an agreement obtained by the Associated Press.
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Donald Trump was diagnosed with chronic venous insufficiency, the White House said on Thursday, after he noticed swelling in his legs. It is a fairly common condition among older adults, but requires a thorough checkup to rule out more serious causes of swelling in the legs.
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Officials in Florida diverted crucial disaster preparedness and response resources to support the hasty construction of the so-called Alligator Alcatraz migrant detention jail by the Republican governor, Ron DeSantis, a newly published report has claimed.
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A delegation of US officials toured Alcatraz on Thursday as part of Donald Trump's pledge to reopen the shuttered federal prison and tourist attraction in the San Francisco Bay, amid an outcry from California leaders who have called the plan 'lunacy'.
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Tens of thousands of people joined marches and rallies at more than 1,500 sites across all 50 US states on Thursday to protest against the Trump administration and honor the legacy of the late congressman John Lewis, an advocate for voting rights and civil disobedience.
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Exclusive: Donald Trump's huge spending boost for the Pentagon will produce an additional 26 megatons (Mt) of planet-heating gases – on a par with the annual carbon equivalent emissions generated by 68 gas power plants or the entire country of Croatia, new research reveals.
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Five migrants deported by the US to the small southern African country of Eswatini, under the Trump administration's third-country program, will be held in solitary confinement for an undetermined time, an Eswatini government spokesperson says.
Thabile Mdluli, the spokesperson, told the Associated Press that Eswatini planned to ultimately repatriate the five to their home countries with the help of a UN agency.
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Republican senators advanced Emil Bove's nomination to serve as a judge on a federal appeals court even as Democrats walked out in protest.
The Coca-Cola company defended its use of corn syrup after Trump's claim that he had apparently convinced the brand to switch to using sugar cane in its US drinks.
An Oregon father was arrested by Ice and taken into custody while dropping off his child at a preschool in the Portland-area, the agency confirmed.
California governor Gavin Newsom threatens to redraw California House maps in protest over a Republican plan to pick up congressional seats in Texas.
Catching up? Here's what happened on 16 July 2025.
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Daily Mail
27 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
MAGA darling Alina Habba makes major admission about her future in Trump's inner circle
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The Guardian
30 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Trump worked to kill a story about his friendship with Epstein. Now we know why
For days before the Wall Street Journal published its story about Donald Trump's salacious friendship with Jeffrey Epstein on Thursday, the president was frantically working the phones. He reportedly put pressure on the paper's top editor, Emma Tucker, and even Rupert Murdoch, who controls the paper's business side, claiming that the alleged facts behind the story were nothing but a hoax, and threatening to sue the paper if it forged ahead. How worked up was he? 'On a fucking warpath,' one administration official told Rolling Stone magazine. Now that the story has been published – appearing on the Journal's print-edition front page, no less – and picked up everywhere, it's easy to see what Trump was so upset about. And equally easy to see why trying snuff it out in advance became such a high priority. It's not just that the 50th birthday card he reportedly penned for the future convicted child-sex offender is so damning in itself, with its bawdy sketch and references to shared secrets and 'enigmas' that 'never age'. It's not just that Trump has been denying a tight friendship with Epstein – who died in jail in 2019 – for some time, and that this would clearly put the lie to that. It's not just that he really, really wants this scandal to go away since it has been turning swaths of his normally cult-like base against him. No, there's another element – and a brutal one for the president. It's where the story was published: in the Wall Street Journal, whose conservative opinion side has often backed him and whose news side has a reputation for ensuring that explosive stories are bulletproof: accurate in their facts and fully prepared to stand up under legal scrutiny. What's more, the newspaper is controlled by Rupert Murdoch, Trump's most important media ally. Murdoch's rightwing propaganda outfit, Fox News, has been Trump's cheerleader and alter ego for years and played a crucial role in getting him elected twice. (Fox News has been much more docile in recent days, doing Trump's bidding by almost shutting down its reporting and commentary on Epstein and Trump.) And Murdoch's right-leaning tabloid the New York Post tends to stand by Trump, too. The Journal is widely perceived as right of center politically, with a reputation for pin-striped rectitude. In short, they don't make things up. When the paper has taken a big swing at exposing wrongdoing – do you remember John Carreyrou's exposé of the blood-testing company Theranos, by any chance? – their reporting holds up. All of that made JD Vance's complaints ring awfully hollow after the birthday card story ran. 'Forgive my language, but this story is complete and utter bullshit,' Vance posted on X shortly after it published. 'Does anyone honestly believe this sounds like Donald Trump?' And it made Trump's vehement denials and threats look absurd. Even in the Maga mind, the Journal is not the third-rate rag he tried to make it out to be. One part of Trump's denial efforts fell hilariously flat after he claimed that it's not his style to draw sketches. ('I never wrote a picture in my life,' he claimed.) The internet was soon flooded with his signed doodles and drawings over many years. Granted, Trump has had a lot of success in recent months in his various suits against big news organizations – in particular CBS News, whose parent company, Paramount Global, recently settled a worthless case for $16m. Capitulation and cowering has run rampant. And each one of the settlements makes it easier for Trump to start the next court battle with every expectation that he'll prevail, well before a suit ever reaches a courtroom. This, I suspect, will be quite different. A lawsuit won't make this damning story go away. And I doubt that Trump really wants to put himself through legal discovery, with all the ugliness that might be exposed. Will this be an element of Trump's long-awaited downfall? Few are willing to go that far, after all the scandals that have come and come, too numerous to detail and each one regarded as the final straw. But at a time when Magaworld is finally having its doubts about their dear leader and savior, this one really hurts. Margaret Sullivan is a Guardian US columnist writing on media, politics and culture


Reuters
30 minutes ago
- Reuters
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