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Trump says Coca-Cola has agreed to use real cane sugar in Coke

Trump says Coca-Cola has agreed to use real cane sugar in Coke

Axios2 days ago
President Trump said Wednesday that Coca-Cola has agreed to use "REAL Cane Sugar in Coke in the United States."
Why it matters: The beverage giant has been under pressure to reduce sugar in its drinks.
The company currently uses high fructose corn syrup in the original soda recipe, according to its website.
What they're saying: Trump said he's been speaking with the Atlanta-based company about using cane sugar, which it does in its Mexican Coke.
" I'd like to thank all of those in authority at Coca-Cola. This will be a very good move by them — You'll see. It's just better!" Trump wrote on Truth Social.
Zoom in: Coca-Cola CEO James Quincey told investors in April that "we continue to make progress on sugar reduction in our beverages."
He noted that the company has "done this by changing recipes as well as by using our global marketing resources and distribution network to boost awareness of and interest in our ever-expanding portfolio."
The company did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Wednesday.
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Stock market today: Dow, S&P 500, Nasdaq futures pause after march to latest records
Stock market today: Dow, S&P 500, Nasdaq futures pause after march to latest records

Yahoo

time22 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Stock market today: Dow, S&P 500, Nasdaq futures pause after march to latest records

US stock futures traded steady on Friday, holding near record highs as signs of strength in the economy provided the buoyancy that Netflix's (NFLX) earnings report lacked. Futures on the S&P 500 (ES=F), the Dow Jones Industrial Average (YM=F), and the tech-focused Nasdaq 100 (NQ=F) all hovered just above the flatline. Stocks are consolidating after the S&P 500 (^GSPC) and Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) vaulted to their latest all-time closing highs on Thursday. Wall Street welcomed a softening in jobless claims and stronger-than-expected retail sales, which showed little indication that President Trump's tariffs are affecting consumer spending habits. Read more: The latest on Trump's tariffs On the downside, Netflix's second quarter results failed to enthuse the market, pulling the stock about 1% lower in premarket trading. The streaming giant kicked off Big Tech earnings late Thursday with a wide profit beat and a solid revenue number. But investors likely wanted a bigger boost to full-year guidance to justify a raise on an already lofty valuation, analysts suggested. Meanwhile, earnings continue to roll in, with focus on whether they continue to reflect steady resilience in corporate America. Friday's highlights include 3M (MMM), American Express (AXP), and Charles Schwab (SCHW). Read more: Full earnings coverage in our live blog The major indexes are set for weekly wins, with this week's drama involving Trump's fury with Fed Chair Jerome Powell largely on the back burner. Powell sent a letter to Trump's top budget official on Thursday, defending the Fed's headquarters renovation project for which he has come under fire in recent days. But already, the focus is turning to who could replace Powell next year and the additional dual mandate that person will face: keeping Trump happy while attempting to maintain the Fed's independence. 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UK stocks seem to be reversing years of underperformance Overseas investors are starting to warm up to the UK's unloved stocks as a UK-US trade deal, lighter regulation, and cheap stocks deliver juicy returns versus the rest of Europe. The FTSE 100 (^FTSE) has gained nearly 10% this year to hit record highs this week, beating the STOXX 600 (^STOXX), which is up 7.5%. Reuters reports: Read more here. Battery materials stocks jump after US lays out 93.5% graphite duty Bloomberg reports: Stocks of battery material makers climbed after the US announced it would impose preliminary anti-dumping duties of 93.5% on graphite imports from China. Shares of Australian graphite miner Syrah Resources Ltd. (SYAAF) surged as much as 38%, while shares of South Korea's Posco Future M Co. ( climbed 24%. Novonix Ltd. (NVNXF), an Australian-listed company with a graphite production plant in Chattanooga, Tennessee, surged 21%. Gains in these and other Asian stocks tracked earlier jumps in Canadian peers including Nouveau Monde Graphite Inc. (NMG) The Commerce Department issued the preliminary determination Thursday, and a final plan should be announced by Dec. 5. The US determined that China, which dominates the processing capacity of graphite, had been unfairly subsidizing the industry. Graphite is a key raw material in the anodes of electric-vehicle batteries. About two-thirds of the material imported by the US still came from China last year. Read more here. Netflix stock slips after a 'solid' report Netflix (NFLX) shares are faltering in premarket trading, despite "solid" second quarter earnings. The streamer delivered beats on both profit and sales, and upped its full-year revenue guidance in its report late Thursday. Some on Wall Street had flagged Netflix's lofty valuation going into the print, Yahoo Finance's Allie Canal reports. Bloomberg Intelligence senior media analyst Geetha Ranganathan told Yahoo Finance that the stock was priced to perfection heading into the report. "It was a really solid print," Ranganathan said in reaction to the earnings. "The big thing that investors were really focused on was commentary for the rest of the year, and they delivered there as well." Ranganathan also noted that while the operating margin was also solid, it was "maybe not spectacular." "I think investors were looking for something a little but more here," she said. "So it was originally forecast at 29% for the full year operating margin — they just took that up a smidge to 29.5%. I think investors were looking somewhere in the range of 30%-31%." Read more on Netflix's earnings here. 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There's also discussion of a merger in the possible creation of what would be America's largest railroad. Chevron to proceed with Hess deal after winning legal battle against Exxon Chevron (CVX) and Hess (HES) have won an arbitration battle against Exxon (XOM) over access to an oil project off the coast of Guyana. Chevron stock rose 3% premarket, while shares of Hess climbed 7%. Exxon's stock declined less than 1%. The result clears the way for Chevron to proceed with its $53 billion acquisition of the smaller oil firm, whose value was partially tied up in its 30% stake in the Guyanese oil project shared with Exxon. Chevron had said it could delay or terminate the acquisition altogether if it didn't win the arbitration. But in the end, it prevailed. "We disagree with the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) panel's interpretation but respect the arbitration and dispute resolution process," Exxon said in a statement. Read more here. Chevron (CVX) and Hess (HES) have won an arbitration battle against Exxon (XOM) over access to an oil project off the coast of Guyana. Chevron stock rose 3% premarket, while shares of Hess climbed 7%. Exxon's stock declined less than 1%. The result clears the way for Chevron to proceed with its $53 billion acquisition of the smaller oil firm, whose value was partially tied up in its 30% stake in the Guyanese oil project shared with Exxon. Chevron had said it could delay or terminate the acquisition altogether if it didn't win the arbitration. But in the end, it prevailed. "We disagree with the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) panel's interpretation but respect the arbitration and dispute resolution process," Exxon said in a statement. Read more here. UK stocks seem to be reversing years of underperformance Overseas investors are starting to warm up to the UK's unloved stocks as a UK-US trade deal, lighter regulation, and cheap stocks deliver juicy returns versus the rest of Europe. The FTSE 100 (^FTSE) has gained nearly 10% this year to hit record highs this week, beating the STOXX 600 (^STOXX), which is up 7.5%. Reuters reports: Read more here. Overseas investors are starting to warm up to the UK's unloved stocks as a UK-US trade deal, lighter regulation, and cheap stocks deliver juicy returns versus the rest of Europe. The FTSE 100 (^FTSE) has gained nearly 10% this year to hit record highs this week, beating the STOXX 600 (^STOXX), which is up 7.5%. Reuters reports: Read more here. Battery materials stocks jump after US lays out 93.5% graphite duty Bloomberg reports: Stocks of battery material makers climbed after the US announced it would impose preliminary anti-dumping duties of 93.5% on graphite imports from China. Shares of Australian graphite miner Syrah Resources Ltd. (SYAAF) surged as much as 38%, while shares of South Korea's Posco Future M Co. ( climbed 24%. Novonix Ltd. (NVNXF), an Australian-listed company with a graphite production plant in Chattanooga, Tennessee, surged 21%. Gains in these and other Asian stocks tracked earlier jumps in Canadian peers including Nouveau Monde Graphite Inc. (NMG) The Commerce Department issued the preliminary determination Thursday, and a final plan should be announced by Dec. 5. The US determined that China, which dominates the processing capacity of graphite, had been unfairly subsidizing the industry. Graphite is a key raw material in the anodes of electric-vehicle batteries. About two-thirds of the material imported by the US still came from China last year. Read more here. Bloomberg reports: Stocks of battery material makers climbed after the US announced it would impose preliminary anti-dumping duties of 93.5% on graphite imports from China. Shares of Australian graphite miner Syrah Resources Ltd. (SYAAF) surged as much as 38%, while shares of South Korea's Posco Future M Co. ( climbed 24%. Novonix Ltd. (NVNXF), an Australian-listed company with a graphite production plant in Chattanooga, Tennessee, surged 21%. Gains in these and other Asian stocks tracked earlier jumps in Canadian peers including Nouveau Monde Graphite Inc. (NMG) The Commerce Department issued the preliminary determination Thursday, and a final plan should be announced by Dec. 5. The US determined that China, which dominates the processing capacity of graphite, had been unfairly subsidizing the industry. Graphite is a key raw material in the anodes of electric-vehicle batteries. About two-thirds of the material imported by the US still came from China last year. Read more here. Netflix stock slips after a 'solid' report Netflix (NFLX) shares are faltering in premarket trading, despite "solid" second quarter earnings. The streamer delivered beats on both profit and sales, and upped its full-year revenue guidance in its report late Thursday. Some on Wall Street had flagged Netflix's lofty valuation going into the print, Yahoo Finance's Allie Canal reports. Bloomberg Intelligence senior media analyst Geetha Ranganathan told Yahoo Finance that the stock was priced to perfection heading into the report. "It was a really solid print," Ranganathan said in reaction to the earnings. "The big thing that investors were really focused on was commentary for the rest of the year, and they delivered there as well." Ranganathan also noted that while the operating margin was also solid, it was "maybe not spectacular." "I think investors were looking for something a little but more here," she said. "So it was originally forecast at 29% for the full year operating margin — they just took that up a smidge to 29.5%. I think investors were looking somewhere in the range of 30%-31%." Read more on Netflix's earnings here. Netflix (NFLX) shares are faltering in premarket trading, despite "solid" second quarter earnings. The streamer delivered beats on both profit and sales, and upped its full-year revenue guidance in its report late Thursday. Some on Wall Street had flagged Netflix's lofty valuation going into the print, Yahoo Finance's Allie Canal reports. Bloomberg Intelligence senior media analyst Geetha Ranganathan told Yahoo Finance that the stock was priced to perfection heading into the report. "It was a really solid print," Ranganathan said in reaction to the earnings. "The big thing that investors were really focused on was commentary for the rest of the year, and they delivered there as well." Ranganathan also noted that while the operating margin was also solid, it was "maybe not spectacular." "I think investors were looking for something a little but more here," she said. "So it was originally forecast at 29% for the full year operating margin — they just took that up a smidge to 29.5%. I think investors were looking somewhere in the range of 30%-31%." Read more on Netflix's earnings here. Meta continues Apple-targeted AI hiring spree After headhunting a top AI expert at Apple (AAPL) to lead Meta's (META) faltering AI division, the social media giant has followed up by taking two more key players from the artificial intelligence team, both of whom had previously worked under Meta's new head of AI. Bloomberg reports: Read more here. After headhunting a top AI expert at Apple (AAPL) to lead Meta's (META) faltering AI division, the social media giant has followed up by taking two more key players from the artificial intelligence team, both of whom had previously worked under Meta's new head of AI. Bloomberg reports: Read more here. Trending tickers in after-hours trading Netflix (NFLX) Stock in the streamer dipped nearly 2% despite topping analyst expectations for both earnings and revenue in Q2. The streaming leader reported revenue of $11.08 billion, just above the $11.07 billion Wall Street had forecast. Investors may be reacting to the narrower-than-hoped revenue beat and looking ahead to guidance. Norfolk Southern (NSC) Share value in railroad operator Norfolk Southern soared 4.7% in after-hours trading following a report from WSJ that Union Pacific is in preliminary talks to acquire the railroad operator. There's also discussion of a merger in the possible creation of what would be America's largest railroad. Netflix (NFLX) Stock in the streamer dipped nearly 2% despite topping analyst expectations for both earnings and revenue in Q2. The streaming leader reported revenue of $11.08 billion, just above the $11.07 billion Wall Street had forecast. Investors may be reacting to the narrower-than-hoped revenue beat and looking ahead to guidance. Norfolk Southern (NSC) Share value in railroad operator Norfolk Southern soared 4.7% in after-hours trading following a report from WSJ that Union Pacific is in preliminary talks to acquire the railroad operator. There's also discussion of a merger in the possible creation of what would be America's largest railroad. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Whole Hog Politics: It's the socialism, stupid
Whole Hog Politics: It's the socialism, stupid

The Hill

time24 minutes ago

  • The Hill

Whole Hog Politics: It's the socialism, stupid

On the menu: Epstein scandal not going quietly; Cornyn gets a boost; Hogg-tied; Ernst headed for the exits?; 'TacticalGramma' There's something familiar about the way a lot of Democrats are talking these days about their party's nominee for New York City mayor, Zohran Mamdani. A standard line from Democrats skeptical of socialistic policies and anxious about anti-Israel energy is to say something about how mainstream candidates can learn a lot from his style: social media-savvy, high-energy, and focused on kitchen-table issues. They say it was ' a brilliant campaign ' and duck the substance. The echo you're hearing there hearkens back a decade to what Republicans were saying about Donald Trump 's early successes. It was the same shtick: Mainstream candidates, it was said, could learn a lot from Trump's grasp of Twitter, blunt talk, media savviness, use of humor and pugnacity. Imitation soon followed, and to predictably disastrous results. Like, really disastrous. Really, really disastrous. Certainly for a general election, style tends to matter more than substance. Lower-propensity voters without strong attachments to either major party are bound to be less concerned about the fine points of policy than the super-high-frequency voters who populate a primary electorate. Vibes matter with those voters, but big ideological questions tend to be front and center. If Trump had been a celebrity squish with an appetite for comprehensive immigration reform, it wouldn't have mattered if he was famous or funny or good at Twitter. So it goes with Mamdani and the adventures in economic planning and the thrill of denouncing Zionism. When it comes to the lesson for the blue team, the The New York Times's Nate Cohn said it best: The Democratic Party has shifted dramatically to the left in the past decade. 'Today, liberal Democrats outnumber moderate and conservative ones by 12 percentage points, according to Gallup, 55 percent to 43 percent. In 2016 and 2020, liberals were essentially even with moderate and conservative Democrats.' That's not to say that Mamdani didn't run a terrific campaign. In fact, he still is. Faced with a challenge from the right by independents Andrew Cuomo and incumbent Mayor Eric Adams, Mamdani isn't playing it safe. Safe would be to count on those two to divide the anti-socialist vote and smash through to victory by keeping his progressive base fired up and freaked out. That would certainly be the Trump-y move. Instead, Mamdani is trying to grow his coalition by visiting with business leaders and calling on tDemocratic members of Congress. Sure, Mamdani didn't win many converts from the Upper West Side, and, sure, many of the big-name Washington pols who met with him were already on his side. But the big part is showing up, and doing it with a smile. You could say that Adams is reaching out to his right, too. Only he's skipping the center and going for the fringe, as he rakes in big bucks from Trump-aligned donors and spends his media moments on Fox News. Good for keeping busy and maybe even for beating Republican Curtis Sliwa in Staten Island, but not exactly a mainstream choice. And with Sliwa bangers like ' slapping fannies and killing grannies,' maybe not even Staten Island. But if Adams has plenty of money rolling in and gets to keep busy doing media, that's a serious problem for Cuomo, who is trying very hard to get into a one-on-one race with Mamdani, going so far as to say he would drop out if he's trailing Adams in the homestretch, and wants Adams to do the same. Mamdani is no dummy and knows that it would be a mistake to underestimate the threat Cuomo poses. The general electorate looks very little like the primary, and Mamdani's critics will now have months to hammer his weaknesses, not just on the substance of socialism and anti-Zionism but also on the style. What can delight the true believers may come off as slick or phony when presented to a broader audience. Certainly, Cuomo is in no danger of coming off as too slick, and can summon what seems to be a kind of enthusiasm when talking about things like mass transit and sewer improvements. Given the crowded field, is that enough to deny Mamdani a win? Probably not, but it won't be a cakewalk, even if Adams just hangs around to audition for a cable news contributorship. The lesson for Democrats in all this is the same one that Republicans failed to grasp about Trump in 2016. Mamdani's success is certainly about his prodigious gifts as a politician, but those aren't easily replicated. What is replicable is a platform, and with the right one, a radical minority movement within a larger party can stage a hostile takeover. It happened to Republicans around immigration, and one of these days, it may happen to Democrats around socialism. Establishment Democrats managed to keep an avowed socialist from winning their party's nomination in 2020 and 2024 and even managed the controlled demolition of an incumbent president's reelection campaign in favor of another normie. And the old guard's ability to deliver solid, electable moderates for races this year in New Jersey and Virginia similarly speaks well of the health of the normies. The spectacular failure of aspiring enfant terrible David Hogg this week in the first test of his youth movement in an Arizona House primary would seem to point in the same direction, but look closer. The Hogg-backed candidate, Deja Foxx, a '25-year-old political content creator' isn't substantially more radical than the winner, Adelita Grijalva. Indeed, what Hogg mostly seems to be focused on is youth for youth's sake and social media virality. He's trying to do the same thing that old-head Democrats are talking about learning from Mamdani. That, again, misses the point. Mamdani has many specific attributes and won in a very unusual kind of primary where an incumbent mayor had left the party and the front-runner was dragging heavy baggage. Those are not things that can be replicated in other Democratic primaries, but his socialism can be. Holy croakano! We welcome your feedback, so please email us with your tips, corrections, reactions, amplifications, etc. at WHOLEHOGPOLITICS@ If you'd like to be considered for publication, please include your real name and hometown. If you don't want your comments to be made public, please specify. NUTRITIONAL INFORMATION Trump Job Performance Average Approval: 41.8% Average Disapproval: 54.2% Net Score: -12.4 Change from one week ago: -1.2 points Change from one month ago: -0.8 points [Average includes: Reuters/Ipsos 41% approve – 54% disapprove; AP-NORC 40% approve 58% disapprove; Echelon Insights 45% approve – 53% disapprove; Quinnipiac 40% approve – 54% disapprove; Marist 43% approve -52% disapprove] Confidence in higher ed rebounds How much confidence do you, yourself, have in higher education: Now vs one year ago Great deal/Quite a lot: 42% to 36% Some: 33% to 32% Very little/None: 23% to 32% [ Gallup survey of 1,402 U.S. adults, June 2-26 ] ON THE SIDE: IT'S ALWAYS IN THE LAST PLACE YOU LOOK Earth: 'A dusty envelope misplaced in a government archive has rewritten a chapter of mineral history. That 1949 letter, discovered during a 2023 digitization project in Bavaria, pointed curators toward a shoebox of lemon‑yellow fragments that had sat unnoticed for decades. Roland Eichhorn of the Bavarian State Office for the Environment (LfU) led the modern hunt that followed, and his team soon realized they were staring at humboldtine, one of the scarcest minerals on the planet. Archivists scanning shelves in Hof found the coal‑mine owner's note and the tantalizing phrase: 'Humboldtine from the Mathias mine near Schwandorf.' Their curiosity sent Eichhorn's crew rifling through more than 130,000 catalogued specimens stored beneath the LfU headquarters. In a small box, the team found hazelnut‑sized yellow fragments and a handwritten label that matched the location mentioned in the letter.' PRIME CUTS Dems pounce as Trump fails to quell MAGA revolt on Epstein: Associated Press: 'Democrats are latching on to the Jeffrey Epstein scandal, demanding records be released and trolling Republicans on social media, news shows and in the U.S. House as they revel in a rare fissure between President Donald Trump and his fiercely loyal base. … The controversy puts many elected Republicans in an uncomfortable position, caught between a president who demands loyalty and a sizable segment of their base convinced the files will expose a vast conspiracy covered up by elites. House Speaker Mike Johnson on Tuesday became the highest-ranking Republican to break with Trump on Epstein, telling conservative podcaster Benny Johnson that 'we should put everything out there and let the people decide.'' Poll shows Republicans almost evenly split on Trump's handling of scandal: USA Today: 'Voters aren't happy with how President Donald Trump's team is dealing with the controversial Jeffrey Epstein case as the MAGA family feud over the deceased financier's sordid past continues to divide Republicans. A new Quinnipiac University survey released on July 16 shows almost two-thirds of voters disapprove of the administration's handling of the case a week after the Justice Department and the FBI released no new files and concluded that the convicted sex offender died by suicide in his jail cell. Just 17% of registered voters gave the Trump administration a thumbs up when asked about the Epstein fallout versus 63% who gave them a thumbs down. … The Quinnipiac poll shows an almost even split among GOP voters, however, with 40% approving compared to 36% disapproving, with another 24% saying they don't have an opinion. Democrats and independents overwhelmingly have expressed displeasure, with 83% and 71% disapproving, respectively.' Cornyn cash haul helps calm GOP jitters: The Hill: Sen. John Cornyn's (R-Texas) reelection campaign announced Monday that he raised more than $3.9 million in the second quarter of the year, surpassing the sum raised by his top primary rival. … Cornyn's announced fundraising haul comes days after Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, his challenger in the Republican primary, announced his campaign raised $2.9 million during the same period. … The incumbent is facing arguably the toughest fight of his political career, as most polls show Paxton leading him in the primary, which is slated for early March. … A source told The Hill last week that Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.), who is supporting Cornyn, met with President Trump on Wednesday evening to discuss upcoming Senate races, including the Lone Star State's. ​​It's unclear whether Trump, who is an ally of both Cornyn and Paxton, will endorse in the race.' Judge shields Paxton divorce records from the public: KUT: 'The judge currently handling Attorney General Ken Paxton 's divorce case has decided to shield the records in the case from public disclosure. Judge Ray Wheless, a Republican serving as the regional administrative judge for North Texas, ordered the case records be sealed Friday. He was brought on to the case after the judge originally assigned to the case, Jill Renfro Willis, recused herself. While Willis did not give a reason for her recusal, she and her husband, Collin County District Attorney Greg Willis, have longtime ties to the Paxtons. Sealing the court records means the public will not have access to further filings in the case, which has garnered significant public interest given the Paxtons' political prominence and past links between the attorney general's infidelity and allegations of corruption.' Hogg thwarted as Adelita Grijalva protects late father's seat: Forbes: ' Deja Foxx, a popular social media influencer, lost Tuesday night's Democratic primary for the congressional seat vacated by the death of Rep. Raul Grijalva in March to the late congressman's daughter Adelita Grijalva, who was backed by top Democrats and progressive lawmakers like Rep. A lexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Sen Bernie Sanders. … Arizona's 7th district is heavily Democratic leaning, according to the Cook Political Report, meaning whoever wins Tuesday's primary will be a heavy favorite in the Sept. 23 general election. Republicans only hold a slim majority in the House and are keen to pick up any available seats. … Foxx was also one of the candidates endorsed by Leaders We Deserve, the political organization founded by former Democratic National Committee vice chair David Hogg with the intention of winning primary elections against sitting Democrats 'unwilling or unable to meet the moment' and 'asleep at the wheel.'' Obama tells Dems to stop whining: CNN: 'Former President Barack Obama issued a call to action for Democrats at a private fundraiser in New Jersey on Friday evening, urging those frustrated by the state of the country under President Donald Trump to 'stand up for the things that you think are right.' … 'I think it's going to require a little bit less navel-gazing and a little less whining and being in fetal positions. And it's going to require Democrats to just toughen up.' … As Democrats debate who should lead the party, Obama encouraged them to channel their energy into the governor's races in New Jersey and Virginia, saying the off-year elections could be 'a big jumpstart for where we need to go.'' SHORT ORDER Puny fundraising spurs speculation about possible Ernst retirement — KCRG Perennial candidate Stacey Abrams puts Georgia Dems on notice: She may run again — NPR Rep. Zach Nunn (R) drops potential Iowa governor bid after Trump steers him back to House — KCCI D.C. voters reward Councilman Trayon White with return to office after expulsion for corruption — WTOP Rep. Cory Mills (R-Fla.) blames 'processing error' for $85,000 in unpaid rent — The Hill Poll shows Spanberger still holds dominating Virginia gubernatorial lead — The Hill Former Rep. Mary Peltola keeps Alaska Dems in suspense — Northern Journal TABLE TALK: EXIT SANDMAN 'Absolutely not authorized.' — A spokesperson for the band Metallica when asked about Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth 's use of the band's hit 'Enter Sandman' for a video of himself with aerial drones. The Pentagon removed the music at the band's request. You should email us! Write to WHOLEHOGPOLITICS@ with your tips, kudos, criticisms, insights, rediscovered words, wonderful names, recipes, and, always, good jokes. Please include your real name—at least first and last—and hometown. Make sure to let us know in the email if you want to keep your submission private. My colleague, the boldly determined Meera Sehgal, and I will look for your emails and then share the most interesting ones and my responses here. Clickety clack! FOR DESSERT: THE GOLDEN AGE OF GAMING The Guardian: 'The military shooter game has a predominantly young male user base, but Statham's Twitch handle is TacticalGramma — a nod to the 60-year-old's two grandkids. Her lifelong gaming hobby has become an income stream. … 'A lot of people are surprised that someone my age is playing video games,' [Michelle] Statham admits. She finds the gameplay exhilarating. 'When I get really good long sniper shots in, or down someone out of a helicopter, that's pretty fun,' she says. Statham is one of the 57 million Americans over 50 who game, a cohort that represents 28% of roughly 205 million total US gamers. … According to the ESA, nearly half of Americans in their 60s and 70s play some form of PC, mobile or console video game every week, as do 36% of people in their 80s.' Chris Stirewalt is the politics editor for The Hill and NewsNation, the host of ' The Hill Sunday '

ICE raids disrupt Utah restaurants, fuel fear
ICE raids disrupt Utah restaurants, fuel fear

Axios

time24 minutes ago

  • Axios

ICE raids disrupt Utah restaurants, fuel fear

Utah restaurateurs are feeling the impacts of the Trump administration's ramped-up immigration enforcement efforts, according to local industry leaders who say the policies and policing are interrupting business and fueling fear. Why it matters: The enforcement crackdown threatens to limit operating hours, drive up menu prices or shut down local restaurants. By the numbers: Almost 90,000 undocumented immigrants live in Utah, hailing mostly from Mexico and Central America, according to the Migration Policy Institute's 2019 estimates. Nearly half have resided in the state for more than 15 years, and around 17% of those ages 16 and older work in hospitality services, arts, entertainment or recreation. State of play: Some restaurant owners say their employees have not shown up to work, later finding out they were detained by immigration authorities at home or during traffic stops, Michele Corigliano, executive director of the Salt Lake Area Restaurant Association, which represents independently owned restaurants, told Axios. Corigliano said restaurants rely on immigrant workers to fill tough-to-hire jobs previously occupied by high schoolers and college students. She said immigrants are among the hardest workers, but many fear leaving home amid ongoing U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement raids that have occurred at work sites, as reported by CNN. Zoom out: Labor shortages, coupled with people dining out less frequently and Trump-imposed tariffs, have forced some restaurants to hike prices, she said. What they're saying: "It really has messed up our industry, and our [restaurant] owners are just really suffering because of these policies," she added, noting it is also impacting tourism in the state. Zoom in: Annie Bennett, who owns Annie's Cafe in Bountiful, told ABC 4 last month she's received hoax phone calls from a person posing as a law enforcement agent demanding information about her Latino staff and claiming they planned to raid her business, prompting employees to skip shifts. Between the lines: Agricultural workers are also missing days at work, said Enrique Sanchez, a state director for the American Business Immigration Coalition's Intermountain region, which covers Utah, Colorado, Nevada, Idaho and Arizona. The big picture: Nationwide, some operators are trying to educate their employees about what to do if an ICE raid happens.

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