
Judge reinstates credit union agency members fired by Trump
It's the latest decision reversing Trump's firings of independent agency leaders across the federal bureaucracy.
U.S. District Judge Amir Ali warned in his 27-page ruling that accepting the administration's position would mean that Trump could also fire the Federal Reserve chair without cause.
'The overlap in powers wielded by the NCUA Board and the Federal Reserve, and their common role as financial regulators, supports the conclusion that Congress can insulate NCUA Board members from at-will removal,' Ali wrote.
Ali did not reference Trump's recent flirtations with firing Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell. But the Biden-appointed judge repeatedly suggested the government 'all but concedes' the point that they'd equally be able to fire Powell, too.
The Justice Department declined to comment. The Hill has reached out to Harper and Otsuka's legal team for comment.
Created in 1970, the NCUA is tasked with regulating and insuring credit unions. It plays a similar role to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, which insures banks.
The NCUA board members once served at the pleasure of the president. But within a few years, Congress removed that language and provided they should instead serve fixed, six-year terms, with no more than two of the three members coming from the same political party.
In April, Trump purported to fire Todd Harper and Tanya Otsuka, the two Democrats on NCUA's board, without explanation. Harper and Otsuka soon sued.
The administration in court did not purport to have cause, but it argued Trump has absolute authority to remove the duo at will and the courts had no authority to order their reinstatement.
The NCUA is one of a handful of agencies where Trump has attempted to fire top leadership despite their traditional independence from the White House.
The administration has a pending request with the Supreme Court to greenlight Trump's firings at the Consumer Product Safety Commission. It comes after the justices in May sided with the administration in its effort to fire officials at the National Labor Relations Board and Merit Systems Protection Board.
Other battles could soon reach the justices. On Monday, a panel on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit temporarily halted a lower judge's order reinstating a fired member at the Federal Trade Commission.
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Yahoo
4 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Trump tariffs live updates: Trump boasts of tariff billions, vows to punish China for Russian oil
President Trump took to Truth Social on Thursday boasting that billions of dollars in tariffs were now flowing into the US. "IT'S MIDNIGHT!!! BILLIONS OF DOLLARS IN TARIFFS ARE NOW FLOWING INTO THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA!" Trump wrote. The US president added that this additional money will come "largely from countries" that he says has taken "advantage" of the US. "RECIPROCAL TARIFFS TAKE EFFECT AT MIDNIGHT TONIGHT! BILLIONS OF DOLLARS, LARGELY FROM COUNTRIES THAT HAVE TAKEN ADVANTAGE OF THE UNITED STATES FOR MANY YEARS, LAUGHING ALL THE WAY, WILL START FLOWING INTO THE USA." Trump's sweeping "reciprocal" tariffs hit US trade partners on Thursday when his deadline to strike deals expired at 12:01 a.m ET. As the trade deadline loomed Wednesday, Trump signed an executive order imposing an additional 25% tariff on India over its purchases of Russian oil. The new tariff, which will come into effect in 21 days, is set to "stack" on top of an existing country-specific tariff of 25%, which takes effect today. In doing so, Trump is set to make good on a threat for higher tariffs on India, as he has accused the country of effectively financing the Russian war in Ukraine. "They're fueling the war machine," he charged in a CNBC interview. Trump also floated the idea of higher tariffs on China due to Beijing's purchase of Russian oil. Trump said he would punish China with additional tariffs. Outside of China and India, Switzerland is the developed nation whose goods face a whopping increase: up to 39%. You can see the new rates Trump is set to levy in the graphic below: Trump also said that he would soon announce tariffs on semiconductor and pharmaceutical imports, as he prepares to add more sectoral duties to his mix of tariffs. He said duties on pharma could eventually balloon as high as 250%. On Wednesday, during a White House event with Apple (AAPL) CEO Tim Cook, he suggested he would impose a tariff of 100% on "all chips and semiconductors coming into the United States." In the past several days, Trump has unleashed a flurry of deals and trade moves leading up to his self-imposed deadline: Trump granted Mexico, the US's largest trading partner, a 90-day reprieve on higher tariffs. Trump hiked tariffs on Canadian imports to 35%, though goods contained in the US-Mexico-Canada agreement are exempt, keeping this hike's impact limited so far. The US agreed to a trade deal with South Korea. The agreement includes a 15% tariff rate on imports from the country, while the US will not be charged a tariff on its exports. Trump imposed 50% tariffs on semi-finished copper products starting Aug. 1. The president signed an order to end the de minimis exemption on low-value imports under $800, thereby applying tariffs from Aug. 29. Trump signed another order to impose a total of 50% tariffs on many goods from Brazil. However, it exempts key US imports like orange juice and aircraft parts. The US and EU agreed to a trade deal that imposes 15% tariffs on EU goods. The nations are still working on finalizing many terms of the deal. Read more: What Trump's tariffs mean for the economy and your wallet Here are the latest updates as the policy reverberates around the world. Trump says billions of dollars will now 'flow' into the US due to tariffs President Trump took to his social media platform Truth Social on Thursday and boasted of the billions of dollars that will now flow into the US due to tariffs. "IT'S MIDNIGHT!!! BILLIONS OF DOLLARS IN TARIFFS ARE NOW FLOWING INTO THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA!" Trump wrote. Trump wrote that this money will come from countries he claims has taken advantaged of the US for years. ."RECIPROCAL TARIFFS TAKE EFFECT AT MIDNIGHT TONIGHT! BILLIONS OF DOLLARS, LARGELY FROM COUNTRIES THAT HAVE TAKEN ADVANTAGE OF THE UNITED STATES FOR MANY YEARS, LAUGHING ALL THE WAY, WILL START FLOWING INTO THE USA." Trump's sweeping "reciprocal" tariffs hit US trade partners on Thursday when his deadline to strike deals expired at 12:01 a.m ET. Now the world waits to see how these new tariffs will affect the global economy. Toyota warns of $9.5B tariff hit, slashes annual profit forecast Japan's Toyota Motor (TM) stock fell over 1% in premarket trading on Thursday after saying it expected a nearly $10 billion hit from President Trump's tariffs on cars imported into the US. Reuters reports; Read more here. Trump vs Modi: India hits back at at US for 50% tariff India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his government have fired back at Trump after the US president announced 50% tariffs on the South Asian country. Trump hit India with 50% tariffs, 25% of which will take effect on Thursday, due to India's purchase of Russian oil. Bloomberg News reports: Read more here. TSMC hits record; Taiwan says tech giant exempt from US tariffs Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSM) shares rose 5% in premarket trading on Thursday after announcing it will not have to pay 100% tariff on sales to the US. Bloomberg News: Read more here. Trump floats possible tariffs on China for buying Russia oil Bloomberg News reports: Read more here. Trump says he plans to set tariffs on computer chips at 100% President Trump said on Wednesday at a press conference with Apple CEO Tim Cook that he is planning to set a 100% tariff on semiconductor imports. Companies that pledge to invest in manufacturing in the US, however, will be exempt from the tariff. Reuters reports: Read more here. Apple set to dodge bulk of India tariffs Yahoo Finance's Dan Howley reports: Apple CEO Tim Cook has arrived at the White House. 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TSMC hits record; Taiwan says tech giant exempt from US tariffs Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSM) shares rose 5% in premarket trading on Thursday after announcing it will not have to pay 100% tariff on sales to the US. Bloomberg News: Read more here. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSM) shares rose 5% in premarket trading on Thursday after announcing it will not have to pay 100% tariff on sales to the US. Bloomberg News: Read more here. Trump floats possible tariffs on China for buying Russia oil Bloomberg News reports: Read more here. Bloomberg News reports: Read more here. Trump says he plans to set tariffs on computer chips at 100% President Trump said on Wednesday at a press conference with Apple CEO Tim Cook that he is planning to set a 100% tariff on semiconductor imports. Companies that pledge to invest in manufacturing in the US, however, will be exempt from the tariff. Reuters reports: Read more here. 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Modi's rival blasts 'bully' Trump as public opinion hardens Rahul Gandhi, Narendra Modi's most recognizable political rival, has come out to call President Trump a "bully" for his negotiation tactics. Bloomberg reports: Read more here. Rahul Gandhi, Narendra Modi's most recognizable political rival, has come out to call President Trump a "bully" for his negotiation tactics. Bloomberg reports: Read more here. Trump order lowering tariffs on EU autos still days away: source European automakers will have to hold on a little while longer before President Trump lowers auto tariffs as EU-US negotiations continue. Reuters reports: Read more here. European automakers will have to hold on a little while longer before President Trump lowers auto tariffs as EU-US negotiations continue. Reuters reports: Read more here. Alcohol groups say tariffs put $2B in sales and 25,000 jobs at risk In a letter to President Trump, a group comprising of 57 alcohol industry firms have said that Trump's tariffs of 15% on EU goods could reduce the value of alcohol sales by almost $2B and put 25,000 jobs at risk. Reuters reports: Read more here. In a letter to President Trump, a group comprising of 57 alcohol industry firms have said that Trump's tariffs of 15% on EU goods could reduce the value of alcohol sales by almost $2B and put 25,000 jobs at risk. Reuters reports: Read more here. Trump hits India with additional 25% tariff over Russia oil buys President Trump has hit India with an additional 25% tariff due to India's purchase of Russian oil. The US president threatened India with higher tariffs earlier this week, which India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi called "unjustified," also calling out the US for its double standard over Russia. In an interview with CNBC on Tuesday, Trump said that India was helping to fuel the war machine. 'They're fueling the war machine. And if they're going to do that, then I'm not going to be happy,' Trump said. In the early days of trade negotiations, relations between the US and India appeared more friendly, with both sides saying they would reach a deal within days. However, over recent months ,things seem to have turned sour as neither side can agree on some of the finer details within the deal, which concern dairy and agricultural products. As a result, a trade war seems to have developed between the two sides, and now with this additional 25% tariff gift from Trump to Modi, the two seem further away from reaching an agreement than ever before. President Trump has hit India with an additional 25% tariff due to India's purchase of Russian oil. The US president threatened India with higher tariffs earlier this week, which India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi called "unjustified," also calling out the US for its double standard over Russia. In an interview with CNBC on Tuesday, Trump said that India was helping to fuel the war machine. 'They're fueling the war machine. And if they're going to do that, then I'm not going to be happy,' Trump said. In the early days of trade negotiations, relations between the US and India appeared more friendly, with both sides saying they would reach a deal within days. However, over recent months ,things seem to have turned sour as neither side can agree on some of the finer details within the deal, which concern dairy and agricultural products. As a result, a trade war seems to have developed between the two sides, and now with this additional 25% tariff gift from Trump to Modi, the two seem further away from reaching an agreement than ever before. Carney says he'll look at opportunities to remove tariffs on US Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney said that he will look to assess ways in which he can remove some counter-tariffs against the US. Carney's statement seems at odds with his earlier commitments to fight back against President Trump's trade war. Bloomberg News reports: Read more here. Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney said that he will look to assess ways in which he can remove some counter-tariffs against the US. Carney's statement seems at odds with his earlier commitments to fight back against President Trump's trade war. Bloomberg News reports: Read more here. Trump says Japan to import Ford's huge F-150 pickup trucks President Trump said that Japan has agreed to accept imports of Ford's F-150 pick up trucks. This latest news is seen as a sign that the two sides may not be on the same page when it comes to their understanding of the trade agreement reached last month. Bloomberg News reports: Read more here. 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A stronger yen and the impact of President Trump's tariffs took their toll, but the company raised its full-year forecast. Reuters reports: Read more here. China draws red lines on US chip tracking with Nvidia meeting China is pushing back against the US over chips despite their overall trade truce. Last week, Beijing summoned Nvidia (NVDA) staff over security concerns with H20 chips, signaling opposition to the US plans to track advanced semiconductors. Analysts view China's latest move as a warning that it will not allow the US to dominate the chip sector. Bloomberg News reports: Read more here. China is pushing back against the US over chips despite their overall trade truce. Last week, Beijing summoned Nvidia (NVDA) staff over security concerns with H20 chips, signaling opposition to the US plans to track advanced semiconductors. Analysts view China's latest move as a warning that it will not allow the US to dominate the chip sector. Bloomberg News reports: Read more here. 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Starbucks (SBUX) may soon hike prices on its pumpkin spice lattes and bottled Frappuccinos as it faces cost pressure from the 50% tariff on Brazilian coffee imports, which takes effect on Aug. 6. Yahoo Finance's Francisco Velasquez reports: Read more here. EU continues to press for tariff exemption on wine, spirits as part of US deal The EU is pushing for its wine and spirit exports to be exempt from US tariffs, while both sides work towards refining the deal they agreed last month. The WSJ reports: Read more here. The EU is pushing for its wine and spirit exports to be exempt from US tariffs, while both sides work towards refining the deal they agreed last month. The WSJ reports: Read more here.
Yahoo
4 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Evansville City Councilor Mary Allen launches bid for seat in Congress: 'Why not me?'
EVANSVILLE — Mary Allen is trying to pull off one of the hardest feats in American politics — but that didn't matter to the roughly 250 people who came to Wesselman Park on Wednesday to help launch her campaign for Congress. To them, the at-large member of Evansville City Council offers the best hope 8th District Democrats have to deal a blow to Republican President Donald Trump and help usher in a Democratic House majority. Allen didn't mention Trump's name or the name of the Republican who holds the congressional seat she is seeking, Mark Messmer, in her seven-minute speech. Allen rejects the notion that by running for Messmer's seat she is asking voters to fire him and hire her instead, "I want to tell people why they should vote for me," Allen told the Courier & Press this week. "I'm not telling people why they should fire Mark Messmer. I want people to know and believe in me and why they should hire me." Allen, who was elected to the City Council in 2023, did offer reasons for her new campaign during her announcement speech. They hinted at the frustration of a Democrat confronting the reality of a Republican Congress and White House. "Looking at the national landscape, I was tired of feeling helpless and hopeless," she said. "And I don't know if any of you all can relate to that." The crowd responded with hearty agreement and applause. "And I thought, 'Why not me?'" Allen continued. "Why not? And even more so, 'If not now, then when?'" Elsewhere in her announcement speech, Allen alluded to a need for "new voices in Congress who are willing to make decisions that truly represent the people of the 8th District." More: Messmer makes it official: He will seek re-election to Congress But that was as close as she came to articulating a case against Messmer, who would have a lot of advantages in a general election. The 21-county 8th District, which stretches all the way from southern Posey County up the Illinois-Indiana border to the top of Fountain County, is solidly Republican. Messmer also has the benefits of incumbency — contributions from political action committees, the ability to send taxpayer-funded mailers that tout his accomplishments and the power to help constituents by sorting out their problems with government agencies. A majority member of the House Committee on Agriculture, House Armed Services Committee and House Committee on Education and Workforce, Messmer also has the unqualified support of Trump, who won the 8th District in the 2024 election with 67% of the vote. And then there's money. Money in a congressional race is very much to the point. Messmer's campaign reports having $427,302 cash on-hand as of June 30 with $8,250 in debt, according to the Federal Election Commission. Allen had a little more than $3,400 in her City Council campaign account as of January. Allen's community service has been her emphasis Against Messmer's advantages, Allen plans to sell herself to voters as a hand-on servant to her community, something she says is "at the heart of" her life. A resident of Downtown Evansville, Allen is the owner/operator of small business Sixth and Zero. The business's website gives a glimpse of where Allen's passions lie. "SIXTH is a nod to the original Sixth Street Soapery in Evansville, IN where we first began creating pure and natural skincare and body products to help you be kinder to yourself (because you are lovely)," it states. "As we learned more about the goodness of nature and being kinder to the planet, we started to expand and carry more products to help us all live more sustainably, thus the ZERO for zero waste. Or as we like to say, zero-ish. Because it's simply about taking our next step to waste less, live more, right?" More: Sources: Democratic Evansville City Council member will run for Congress Allen is the founder of the Haynie's Corner Art District Association and served alongside her husband for a decade in a nonprofit urban ministry. She chairs the board of the Evansville Urban Enterprise Zone, where she says she works to revitalize distressed neighborhoods. She's a member of Rotary International, whose motto, she noted Wednesday, is Service Above Self. Allen recalled the day she decided to create a parent-teacher organization to support the then-newly established New Tech Institute High School in 2010. "(One of her three daughters) was in the first class at New Tech Institute," she said. "When she first started going there, there was no parent-teacher organization. It was literally a freshman class of new students, new teachers, a new principal into this new program and type of school." Allen remembered wondering, "How can we pull everybody together to support one another?" "Just always looking for ways to gather people around a cause, to garner support and just to create a positive environment and change," she told the Courier & Press. Will a positive campaign be enough? Matthew Hanka, a political scientist at the University of Southern Indiana, said it won't be enough for Allen to run a positive campaign that doesn't sharpen the distinctions between her and Messmer. Allen faces the daunting prospects of raising millions of dollars in campaign cash, appealing to people in parts of the 8th District that bear no resemblance to her base in Downtown Evansville and convincing scores of voters who went with Messmer in 2024 to change their minds, Hanka said. And Hanka said he hasn't seen a sign as yet that a national wave of support for Democrats in 2026 is building, Allen will have to artfully blend a rationale for ousting Messmer with positive information about herself, the USI political scientist said. It's a narrow ledge to walk. "You've got to present something and yes, it might be perceived as criticisms or could even be (perceived as) potential attacks, but you're making your case," he said. "Often times you're making your case by saying, 'This is what my opponent isn't doing and here's what I would do.' "If she doesn't mention Messmer at all by name, she runs the risk of it being hard to kind of pinpoint what she's going to do." What happened the last time 8th District Democrats ousted a GOP congressman? It was 19 years ago that Democrats last won the 8th District congressional seat by unseating a Republican congressman. That year, Vanderburgh County Sheriff Brad Ellsworth defeated Rep. John Hostettler, then a 12-year veteran of Congress. Ellsworth ran a positive campaign — but he didn't shy away from criticizing Hostettler. Hurricane Katrina, which killed at least 1,833 people and ravaged Gulf Coast cities in 2005, was a focal point. Hostettler voted against a $51.8 billion Katrina relief package in 2005, saying he wasn't against aid but preferred smaller amounts and greater oversight. Almost $52 billion was a budget-busting figure and an invitation to fraud, the Republican congressman said. But Ellsworth told the Courier & Press he couldn't fathom why Hostettler would vote no. "These are Americans on our soil that are dying," the Democrat said. "You buck up and do what you have to do." Ellsworth also said, among other things, that Hostettler had been ineffective against a surge of illegal immigrants since his election in 1994. He accused Hostettler's campaign of accepting "dirty special interest money" and said the Republican congressman had stopped listening to voters. But Ellsworth had money. If Allen can't raise several million dollars, Hanka said, she won't be able to get her message out. And even then, the right framing of her differences with Messmer will be critical, he said. "This is somebody who's going to motivate and inspire a lot of people," Hanka said of Allen. "But that alone, when you're trying to convince a blood-red (Republican) district that 'Hey, I'm the person,' there has to be more to bring to it." For her part, Allen envisions earning victory with hard work. "We're going to connect with voters in all 21 counties in person at community events, public forums and door-to-door," she said Wednesday. "Through mailboxes to inboxes, we're going to remind our neighbors that they're not alone — and I say 'we,' because it's going to take all of us." This article originally appeared on Evansville Courier & Press: Evansville's Mary Allen announces she's running for Congress Solve the daily Crossword


Politico
5 minutes ago
- Politico
Blue State Republicans Helped Win the House Majority. The Redistricting Wars May End Their Careers.
Trump's move may well work. Even if California's new map wipes out five Republicans and shores up some Democratic seats there, more than neutralizing GOP gains in Texas, the president can likely rely on additional red states such as Ohio, Missouri and Indiana to salute him and overhaul their congressional boundaries to squeeze out the few Democrats left in their delegations. And this is to say nothing of how many more majority-minority districts in red states could be wiped out should the Supreme Court effectively gut the Voting Rights Act before next year's elections. Such an endgame will surely wind up in a series of state and federal courts, transforming the early going of the midterms into as much a legal fight as a political one. It would make for a mess. And it wouldn't stop with 2026. New York, for example, is constrained by its voter-approved independent redistricting commission and can't undo the commission and redraw its House maps until the 2028 election. But why would Democrats in Albany not do so if Trump effectively muscles a House majority into existence next year via a series of red states upending their own maps? If New York Democrats do pursue such a redraw, it will likely doom the most politically vulnerable House Republicans still left there after the midterms. Which gets to the cold reality for GOP lawmakers in California and New York: The very Republicans who helped deliver their party's congressional majority by winning in the two mega-states in 2020 and 2022 could be collateral damage to Trump's gambit. That includes House veterans such as Reps. Darrell Issa and Ken Calvert, both of California, but also younger, promising Republican lawmakers such as Kiley, 40, and Rep. Mike Lawler (N.Y.), 38. 'This creates a situation where you're going to lose blue state members, which over the long haul are critical to keeping the majority,' Lawler told me. It's all, Lawler said, 'mutually assured destruction once people go full throttle.' The redistricting threat is especially cruel to Lawler, who was already eager to avoid yet another tough race in his Hudson Valley district by running for governor next year. But Trump made clear he preferred Rep. Elise Stefanik, a born-again MAGA disciple, as the standard-bearer even though running a Trump acolyte statewide may only ensure Stefanik ends next year where she started this year: hoping for a Trump cabinet appointment.