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US judge rejects justice department bid to unseal Epstein grand jury materials

US judge rejects justice department bid to unseal Epstein grand jury materials

Sky News6 days ago
A judge in the US has rejected a justice department bid to unseal grand jury materials related to the sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
The US government had filed a motion to unseal grand jury transcripts related to Epstein, a former financier who took his own life while awaiting trial in 2019.
Last Friday, Donald Trump said attorney general Pam Bondi had been asked to release the transcripts because of "the ridiculous amount of publicity given to Jeffrey Epstein".
The Department of Justice said criminal cases against Epstein and his former girlfriend, Ghislaine Maxwell, were a matter of public interest.
The judge's decision is the first ruling in a series of attempts by President Donald Trump's administration to release more information on the case amid calls by some in his MAGA support group for the full details of Epstein's activities to be released.
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France is turning against the EU
France is turning against the EU

Spectator

time15 minutes ago

  • Spectator

France is turning against the EU

When Donald Trump won a second term in the White House last November the response in Europe was one of barely disguised horror. 'The European Union must stand close together and act in a united manner,' declared Germany's Chancellor Olaf Scholz. Emmanuel Macron posted a message on X: 'The question we, as Europeans, must ask ourselves is, are we ready to defend the interests of Europeans?' The president of France got his answer on Sunday evening. No. The trade deal agreed between Ursula von der Leyen, the EU Commission president, and Donald Trump has not gone down well in much of Europe. Scholz's successor, Friedrich Merz forecast that Germany's economy would suffer 'significant' damage because of the deal. EU exports will have a tariff of 15 per cent, which is superior to the customs duties before Trump's re-election, but much lower than his threatened 30 per cent tariff. Additionally, von der Leyen has promised the bloc will purchase energy worth $750 billion from the United States and make $600 billion in additional investments. According to Hungary's Viktor Orban: This is not an agreement… Donald Trump ate von der Leyen for breakfast.' The most strident criticism of the deal came from France, where in a rare display of unity the terms of the agreement were savaged across the political spectrum. Prime Minister Francois Bayrou said that 'it is a dark day when an alliance of free peoples, united to assert their values and defend their interests, resigns itself to submission.' Trade minister Laurent Saint-Martin described the deal as unbalanced and said the government should not accept 'what happened yesterday because that would be accepting that Europe is not an economic power.' It was telling that Saint-Martin said 'Europe' and not 'France'. For centrists like Saint-Martin – he was one of the first to join Macron's fledging En Marcheparty in 2016 – France and the EU are indistinguishable. Macron's predecessor (and mentor), Francois Hollande once accused him of 'believing in nothing and having no conviction'. That is not true. Macron has one unshakeable conviction and that is the EU. It is why he won't let Brexit go, taking every opportunity to savage Britain's decision to leave the bloc. Twice during his recent state visit he went on the attack. Britons were 'sold a lie' over Brexit he said at one point, adding on another occasion that the country 'was stronger when part of the EU.' As yet there has been no response the Elysee to von der Leyen's trade deal. Perhaps Macron is still working out how best to spin the fact that Britain's tariff rate with the USA is 10 per cent. Marine Le Pen lost little time in pointing this out, posting on X that the EU 'has obtained worse conditions than the United Kingdom.' The leader of the National Rally described the deal as 'a political, economic and moral fiasco' and said that that 'this form of globalisation, which denies and destroys sovereignty, has been outdated for many years.' The majority of the French agree with her. In an interview with the BBC in 2018, Macron admitted that if given the choice his people would probably follow Britain out of the EU. This is one reason why he has been so determined to make life difficult for post-Brexit Britain: pour encourager les autres. Macron's strategy has been partially successful. A poll last year revealed that 62 per cent of the French are opposed to Frexit. The bad news for the president is that 69 per cent of them have a bad opinion of the EU. The poll was conducted a month before the European elections, which resulted in a resounding victory for Le Pen's Eurosceptic party and a humiliating defeat for Macron's Europhile movement. When Le Pen reached the second round of the 2017 presidential election it was with a promise to quit the EU. Two years later she abandoned that position and vowed to reform the bloc from within. Her party won't return to Frexit but it will increase its Euroscepticism between now and the 2027 election. The same goes for the hard-left's Jean-Luc Melenchon, who loathes Brussels as much as Le Pen. Bruno Retailleau, the leader of the centre-right Republicans, is also a long-standing critic of the EU's ambition and voted against the EU Constitution in France's 2005 referendum. That result, he said in a 2020 interview, along with Brexit, 'have shown one and the same thing: Europeans do not want a federal Europe.' Across France enmity towards the EU has strengthened in the last year. The Mercosur trade deal agreed with South America in December is widely unpopular and France's failure to control its borders is blamed on Brussels. The French are demoralised and angrier than ever with their ruling elite. A citizens' collective called 'Bloquons tout!' (Block everything) is using social media to mobilise people for a day of protest on September 10. 'Boycott, disobedience, and solidarity' is their rallying cry and they are urging people to take to the streets across France. Will it achieve anything? Probably not. After all, what's the point of protesting in Paris when all the big decisions about France's future are made in Brussels.

US and China hold trade talks after Donald Trump eyes ‘world tariff'
US and China hold trade talks after Donald Trump eyes ‘world tariff'

The Guardian

time16 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

US and China hold trade talks after Donald Trump eyes ‘world tariff'

Update: Date: 2025-07-29T06:58:13.000Z Title: US-China talks extension 'likely' as Trump targets 'world tariff' Content: Good morning, and welcome to our live coverage of business, economics and financial markets. After the US and EU announced the outline of a trade deal that would limit tariffs to 15%, it looks like talks with China could be the next on the agenda, with an extension of a truce in the trade war 'likely', according to a top official in the Trump administration. US Treasury chief Scott Bessent arrived yesterday in Sweden, alongside China's vice premier He Lifeng, according to Reuters. Back in the US, Howard Lutnick, the commerce secretary told Fox News that a delay to a higher tariff deadline was probable: Is that a likely outcome? Sure, it seems that way, but let's leave it to President Trump to decide. Donald Trump triggered financial market chaos after slapping tariffs at 145% on China. However, in May he announced a 90-day pause, lowering tariffs to (a still significant) 30%. That left a deadline of 12 August for the talks, but it is US trade representative Jamieson Greer told the CNBC news channel he did not expect 'some kind of enormous breakthrough today' at the talks in Stockholm, although he flagged that a deal last month to speed up rare earth metal imports from China to the US would be on the agenda. He said: What I expect is continued monitoring and checking in on the implementation of our agreement thus far, making sure that key critical minerals are flowing between the parties and setting the groundwork for enhanced trade and balanced trade going forward. It came after the US and EU announced a deal to limit tariffs to 15%. The end of market uncertainty appeared to be welcomed at first by markets on Monday – only for the mood to sour somewhat later in the day. The French prime minister, François Bayrou, said the EU had capitulated to Donald Trump, and said it was a 'dark day' for the EU. Trump on Monday suggested that he could impose a 'world tariff' on all of the countries that have not agreed a trade deal. That tariff could be 15% or 20% – meaning that, after all the negotiating effort, the EU could be left with similar terms to the rest of the world. At his golf course in Scotland yesterday, while visiting UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer, Trump said: I would say it'll be somewhere in the 15 to 20% range. Probably one of those two numbers. On the prospects of Chinese talks, Trump said: I'd love to see China open up their country. Back in May, Trump had said that China had already 'agreed to open up' – but it appears there may be more work to be done. 9:30am BST: Bank of England mortgage approvals (June; previous: 63,032; consensus: 63,000) 9:30am BST: Bank of England consumer credit (June; previous: £859m; consensus: £1.2bn)

2 dead after third fatal A96 collision in under two weeks
2 dead after third fatal A96 collision in under two weeks

The National

time24 minutes ago

  • The National

2 dead after third fatal A96 collision in under two weeks

The women, aged 48 and 56, were travelling in a Vauxhall Mokka when it was involved in a crash with a lorry and a VW Golf on Kinloss Road in Forres at around 15:05 on Monday. Both women were pronounced dead at the scene. A 15-year-old girl, also in the Vauxhall, was airlifted to Aberdeen Royal Infirmary with injuries. The lorry driver and the occupants of the VW Golf were not hurt. This latest incident follows the death of Alison Campbell, 65, from Caithness, who died on July 22 in a collision involving a car and a tipper van near Inverness Airport. READ MORE: Donald Trump to meet John Swinney and open new golf course on final day in Scotland Just days earlier, on July 18, a 50-year-old woman died in hospital after a two-car crash at Newton of Perry, also near Inverness. The day before that incident, an 18-year-old motorcyclist was injured in a separate crash with a car near Auldern. Police Scotland confirmed the A96 was closed for several hours following the most recent incident. Sgt Lesley Morrison of Road Policing in Elgin said to the BBC: "We would like to speak to anyone who witnessed this tragic crash or anyone who has dashcam footage of it." The A96, which links [[Inverness]] and Aberdeen, crosses large stretches of rural farmland. It consists mostly of single carriageway, with occasional dualled sections and crawler lanes. Plans to fully dual the 86-mile (138km) route were shelved last year despite a 2011 commitment. However, following a recent consultation by Transport Scotland, the Scottish Government has said that full dualling between Aberdeen and Inverness remains its "current favoured position".

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