Radical Land Rover Defender 90 Convertible Debuts At Goodwood
Debuting at the 2025 Goodwood Festival of Speed, the Urban Widetrack Heritage Series Soft-Top combines Heritage Customs' Valiance soft-top conversion for the Defender with one of Urban Automotive's carbon-fiber body kits. It's the first convertible modified by Urban Automotive, which specializes in high-end models from brands like Land Rover and Rolls-Royce.
Heritage Customs offers forged wheels, accessories, and custom interiors, but its most ambitious projects are the Defender 90-based Valiance convertible and the Defender 130-based Valiance pickup. For the convertible, the donor car's chassis is reinforced with a custom roll cage to account for the loss of rigidity from removing some bodywork.
Valiance convertibles were already available in limited numbers, but this one got additional customization from Urban. It wears the company's Widetrack fender flares, XRS (Extreme Road Series) vented hood, and some smaller items, including carbon-fiber mirror caps, lower front canards, and additional square daytime running lights. It rolls on black 23-inch wheels that match the paint and most of the exterior trim.
In contrast to the darkened exterior, the interior features riotous Hermes Orange leather upholstery, with Recaro front seats. The orange leather even covers the roll cage and a custom dashboard overlay.
Founded in 2014, Urban Automotive specializes in modifying luxury vehicles in what the company calls an "OEM+" manner, trying to match the quality of factory builds. That approach is apparently resonating with customers looking to modify their cars, as Urban is rapidly expanding to meet what the company says is increasing demand.
In addition to the merger with Heritage Customers, Urban recently acquired a 42,000-square-foot facility in the United Kingdom and a warehouse and distribution facility in the United States. It's also continuing to launch new builds and products. It displayed a newly-modified Rolls-Royce Cullinan Series II and Range Rover Sport alongside the Defender convertible at Goodwood.
Copyright 2025 The Arena Group, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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The Hill
24 minutes ago
- The Hill
Live updates: Trump, UK prime minister to meet at start of big week for economy
President Trump will meet with British Prime Minister Keir Starmer for 'wide-ranging talks' on Monday in Scotland. Fresh off Trump's trade deal with the European Union, announced Sunday, Trump and Starmer are expected to discuss implementation of the U.S.-U.K. trade deal, agreed to in May, the prime minister's office said Sunday. The struggle to reach a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, along with the hunger crisis in Gaza, as well as the war in Ukraine, are also on the table. Trump's five-day visit to Scotland is a mix of business — trade talk ahead of Thursday's White House deadline for tariff deals — and pleasure, with the president taking in his golf courses. In Stockholm on Monday, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent starts the next round of trade meetings with China. Looking even beyond tariffs, a flurry of economic activity this week makes it a significant one. The Federal Reserve announces its next interest rate decision on Wednesday. Between Tuesday and Thursday, the government will release consumer confidence insights, second-quarter GDP data, details on job openings, and the Fed's preferred inflation measure, the PCE index.


The Hill
24 minutes ago
- The Hill
Trump leans into trade deals to shake off polling slump
Morning Report is The Hill's a.m. newsletter. Subscribe here or using the box below: In today's issue: ▪ Trump, Starmer meeting in Scotland ▪ Digging into the US-EU trade deal ▪ Courts hand Trump more wins ▪ Israel pauses Gaza fighting for aid Fresh off announcing a U.S.-European Union trade deal, President Trump is looking to clinch more bilaterial agreements this week before his Friday tariff deadline. The president on Sunday touted the EU trade deal, struck during talks with European officials after a round of golf at one of his clubs in Scotland, and urged the Senate to confirm more nominees before starting their August recess. Trump will play host again today, meeting with British Prime Minister Keir Starmer at his golf clubs in Scotland for talks ranging from their recent bilateral trade deal to the worsening hunger crisis in Gaza. Follow along with The Hill's live blog. But the protesters who have gathered across Scotland for Trump's visit — including outside the U.S. Consulate in Edinburgh — offer a preview of the headwinds the president faces back home. POLLING NUMBERS: Trump saw some of his lowest approval ratings of his second term over the past week, with his net approval in the Decision Desk HQ average falling to more than 9 points underwater. As part of the drop, he's seen declines in particular among independents and on his handling of certain key issues like immigration. Lee Miringoff, the director of the Marist University Institute for Public Opinion, told The Hill's Jared Gans that Trump's quickly shifting political fortunes are part of his skill at 'keeping the focus moving all the time,' which requires redirecting people's attention to his benefit. 'But you do take a cost that your victories are short-lived, and the net effect is there's still an awful lot that people feel has not been accomplished and that he hasn't fulfilled a lot of campaign promises,' he added. At the same time, Trump is trying to ease an ongoing headache stemming from the controversy surrounding his administration's handling of the Jeffrey Epstein case. While his numbers certainly haven't bottomed out, they add up to a rough patch for Trump after a series of major victories just a few weeks earlier. The president has expressed his frustration with how aides are handling the backlash, The Washington Post reports, as the White House and Department of Justice's response to the crisis lacks any apparent strategy. 'This is a pretty substantial distraction,' a source told the Post. 'While many are trying to keep the unity, in many ways, the DOJ and the FBI are breaking at the seams.' ▪ The Hill: Five unanswered questions around Trump and the Epstein saga. ▪ CNN: Trump's Scotland trip is the latest example of blending private business with presidential duties. ▪ Politico: Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) panned a discharge petition from Reps. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) and Ro Khanna (D-Calif.) designed to force the release of more files on Epstein. DEMOCRATS ARE TAKING ADVANTAGE of the widespread disapproval of the White House's handling of the Epstein case. A recent Emerson College Polling survey found 51 percent of registered voters disapprove of the administration's handling of the Epstein files, while 16 percent approve and a third said they're neutral. Trump's refusal to release federal files put him at odds with the same core MAGA loyalists who helped propel him to power. Democrats are only happy to watch the unraveling, however long it endures, and goad it along when the chance arrives. 'Let them destroy each other. If we have to throw a log on the fire, we'll do it,' one House Democratic aide told The Hill's Mike Lillis. House Democrats are using their long summer recess to ramp up their blitz of town halls in GOP-held districts. The strategy is not new, but this time they're armed with a powerful new talking point: Trump's defiance on the Epstein issue. 'People … want someone to listen,' said Rep. Suzan DelBene (Wash.), the head of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee. 'And if their member of Congress isn't going to listen, they want to make sure their voices are heard.' Republicans are also going on offense. Vice President Vance will be at a steel plant in Canton, Ohio, today to kick off an effort to promote the 'one big, beautiful bill' that the White House pushed through Congress this month. ▪ The Wall Street Journal: A Wall Street Journal poll found 52 percent of respondents oppose the GOP funding bill, showing the party's challenges in touting its benefits ahead of the midterms. IT'S ALL ABOUT 2026: The polling numbers and town halls all lead to the next big political target — the midterm elections. Democrats are looking to claw back a majority in one, or both, chambers of Congress, while Republicans are trying to buck the historical trend of a midterm disadvantage for the party in charge. This election cycle, Trump is using his influence to help Republicans avoid messy primary fights. The president recently waded into Michigan's Senate race and the New York gubernatorial contest in an effort to convince notable potential candidates in those races — Reps. Bill Huizenga (R-Mich.) and Mike Lawler (R-N.Y.) — to opt against running. In both cases, the Republicans in question bowed to pressure. The Hill's Julia Manchester and Brett Samuels break down Trump's influence on key races, from North Carolina to Texas. Former North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper (D) hinted over the weekend that he plans to run for the open Senate seat in his state next year. Many Democrats have been hoping Cooper would enter the race, especially as Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) announced he would not run for reelection after bucking Trump and voting against his massive tax and spending bill. The announcement is buoying Democrats, who face a tough map in the upper chamber. Despite the president's souring approval numbers in recent surveys, allies argued the president's endorsement is still a make-or-break factor in primaries because of his enduring popularity within the party. 'His numbers are stronger than ever before with the Republican base,' one Trump ally said. 'Republican voters are happier with him now than ever before.' ▪ The Hill: Rep. Nancy Mace (R-S.C.) said Sunday she plans to decide in the coming days whether to launch a bid for South Carolina governor. ▪ The Hill: Civic groups are warning Democrats their plans for redistricting could violate the Voting Rights Act, creating a new problem for the party as it seeks to answer GOP efforts to redistrict its way to more power. Editor's note: Blake Burman's 'Smart Take' will return later this week. 3 Things to Know Today At this Texas school, students spend two hours a day on academics. The Alpha School has a curriculum driven by artificial intelligence (AI), and is set to expand to a dozen cities. Fights to expand or thwart the spread of abortion pills have intensified across the country. They tee up legal clashes that experts say could drag on for years. Blockbuster GLP-1 drugs could become a cure-all. The medications don't just help with weight loss, research finds, as more uses surface. Leading the Day TRADE: Trump reached a trade agreement with the European Union on Sunday that will set 15 percent tariffs on most imports — half the rate the president had threatened to levy on EU countries starting Friday. 'It's a very powerful deal — a very big deal,' Trump told reporters while sitting next to European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen at his Turnberry golf course in Scotland. 'It's the biggest of all the deals.' The EU trade deal is the largest the Trump administration has announced since its major 'Liberation Day' announcement on April 2. The EU countries combined represent the U.S.'s largest trading partner, with almost $2 trillion in goods traded in 2024. Under the new agreement, Trump and von der Leyen said the EU will purchase $150 billion in U.S. energy and make additional investments worth $600 billion. Trump had threatened to impose 30 percent tariffs on most goods if a deal wasn't reached beyond a temporary truce set to expire Friday. The new agreement will have no impact on steel and aluminum tariffs, which are subject to a separate 50 percent rate. ▪ The Hill: The White House has managed to secure some significant trade deals since the president's unprecedented sweeping tariffs were first announced in the spring. ▪ The Associated Press: As with other, recent tariff agreements that Trump announced with countries including Japan and the United Kingdom, some major details remain pending. ▪ The Washington Post: The EU agreement is likely to become a road map for further, more detailed talks. ▪ Politico: How the EU dashed to Trump's Scottish hideaway — and got the deal it craved. ▪ The Washington Post: The U.S. and China on Monday are set to begin their third round of trade talks in as many months. DEADLINE DAY: Trump will not extend Friday's deadline for countries that want to negotiate trade deals to prevent the president's proposed hikes, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said Sunday. Since January, Trump has regularly threatened trade moves before later changing tacks. It's effectively kept the world guessing. Critics have dubbed this 'TACO' trade, short for 'Trump always chickens out.' The Commerce chief signaled the threat of tariffs will stick this time. 'No extensions; no more grace periods,' Lutnick said Sunday on Fox News. 'They'll go into place, customs will start collecting the money, and off we go.' CONGRESS: Time is ticking for Republican senators who hope to avert a government shutdown this fall, and The Hill's Alexander Bolton reports that it's pushing some to try to reach common ground with Democrats and mend growing rifts. 'I know that our side won't want a shutdown,' a Republican senator told The Hill, 'Trump hates that and rightly so.' Senate appropriations bills, unlike in the GOP-controlled House, have reached bipartisan votes on higher spending levels to avoid rematches of the blistering battles that Congress had over Trump's priority tax and spending legislation during his first six months back at the White House. Republicans who spoke with The Hill said Trump made it clear he doesn't want the federal government to lapse its Sept. 30 funding deadline. 'I think [Democrats are] going to be under an enormous amount of pressure come fall, which is why … we need to do everything we can — House Republicans, Senate Republicans, President Trump and his team — to … set it up for success, to keep the government up and funded,' Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.) said in a recent podcast interview. OUT OF POCKET: The Trump administration's talk of using 'pocket recissions' to pare back federal spending without approval from Congress is making some Republicans nervous as they try to navigate the president's push for more cuts. White House budget chief Russell Vought recently referred to pocket rescissions as one of the executive tools available to the administration. 'It's not news that the Trump administration is going to bring a paradigm shift to this town in terms of the business of spending,' Vought said on CBS's 'Face the Nation' on Sunday. Trump signed a rescissions package last week to claw back $9 billion that Congress already appropriated, including for international aid and public broadcasting. But Trump has said he wants lawmakers to cut more, despite mounting political pressure. 'We're always gauging the extent to which the Congress is willing to participate in that process, and we're looking at a lot of different options along those lines,' Vought said. The Hill's Aris Folley spoke to experts and lawmakers about the potential tactic. COLLINS CONCERNS: Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine) is walking a tightrope to maintain Congress's grasp of the federal purse strings while the Trump administration tries to wrangle more control. The centrist chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee is tasked with ushering the GOP's spending priorities through the upper chamber, but it's quickly becoming what most lawmakers would consider a nightmare. 'Nobody wants that job right now,' Sen. Shelley Moore Capito ( an appropriator, told The Hill's Al Weaver. The Senate is aiming to pass a three-bill appropriations package by the end of September to fund the departments of Agriculture, Veterans Affairs, Commerce and Justice. Collins, 72, is facing reelection next year for a seat Democrats hope to flip. But Collins told The Hill she's not sweating the mounting pressure. 'I've been here a number of years. I've been through many high-pressure events,' she said. 'That's the nature of the job if you're in a leadership position or if you're representing your constituents.' Where and When The president is in Scotland. He will attend a meeting with British Prime Minister Keir Starmer at Turnberry golf course at 7:30 a.m. ET (12:30 p.m. BST). Trump will then travel to Aberdeen. The Senate will convene at 3 p.m. The House is in recess and resumes work in Washington on Sept. 2. Morning Report's Alexis Simendinger will return in August. Zoom In COURTS: Trump keeps adding notches to his Supreme Court winning streak. The justices on Wednesday blessed his firings of more independent agency leaders, their latest green light for the president to resume his sweeping agenda. To date, Trump's administration has already brought more emergency appeals than former President Biden did during his four years in office, write The Hill's Zach Schonfeld and Ella Lee, making it an increasingly dominant part of the Supreme Court's work. But as the court issues more and more emergency decisions, often without explanation, the practice has sometimes come under criticism — even by other justices. 'Courts are supposed to explain things,' liberal Justice Elena Kagan said while speaking at a judicial conference Thursday. 'That's what courts do.' As Trump wins at the high court, Americans are split along party lines over their support for the institution. A majority of Republicans, 73 percent, approve of its actions, according to a Friday YouGov survey. That number is far higher than the 34 percent of independents and 14 percent of Democrats who approve of the justices' decisions. ▪ CNN: Trump's effort to end birthright citizenship could have taken effect over the weekend. Lower courts continue to block it. ▪ The New York Times: The Trump administration is planning to change the visa system for skilled foreign workers and is considering changing the U.S. citizenship test. SILVER STATE RACE: Nevada Attorney General Aaron Ford (D) is running for governor next year, aiming to unseat first-term Republican Gov. Joe Lombardo. 'Nevadans are suffering in an economy that is rigged against those trying their hardest to stay afloat,' Ford, who has been the state's attorney general since 2019, said in a statement Monday. Nevada is seen as one of Democrats' best opportunities to flip a governor's office next year. The nonpartisan election handicapper Cook Political Report rates it as a toss-up. PRESSURE CAMPAIGN: Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard 's allegations about the Obama administration's review of the 2016 election led Trump to call for prosecution of former officials, including his predecessor. But many in Congress aren't ready to go quite that far. While his Republican supporters in Congress have united in expressing outrage, they have varying ideas of what accountability looks like. Democrats, meanwhile, say the Trump administration is completely misrepresenting the facts as they abuse intelligence and the justice system. 'Tulsi Gabbard has leveled some of the most serious charges ever leveled against an American at a former president. Bring charges. Bring charges,' said Rep. Jim Himes (Conn.), the top Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee. 'And the reason I want her to bring charges is that there is not a court in the United States that will do anything other than to laugh hysterically over the bulls— that Tulsi Gabbard is peddling right now.' FEDERAL PROGRAMS: ▪ The Hill: Head Start programs face whiplash in funding and enrollment changes ahead of the new school year as big reforms from the Trump administration worry parents and staffers. ▪ The Hill: Medicaid cuts outlined in Trump's sweeping tax and spending package will harm family caregivers, experts warn, by reducing access to health care for themselves and those they care for. ▪ The Hill: Coca-Cola will offer a cane sugar version of its signature beverage, while ice cream and cereal makers pledged to phase out certain dyes. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has claimed them all as significant victories, but nutrition experts say the moves are far from signifying major change to make people healthier. Elsewhere GAZA: Israel implemented a 'tactical pause' in fighting in Gaza over the weekend amid concerns of mass starvation in the enclave. The pause in fighting, to allow in humanitarian aid via air drops and United Nations-approved routes, suspends fighting from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. daily until further notice in accordance with government directives. Secure routes for aid delivery will be permanently established. The pause in military operations, the first of its kind since March, is part of a broader set of measures that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu approved Saturday in response to increased international criticism over the dire humanitarian crisis in Gaza. U.N. statistics estimate around 470,000 people face famine-like conditions in Gaza. The U.N.'s World Food Programme praised Israel's pause and said it has 'enough food in — or on its way to — the region to feed the entire population of 2.1 million people for almost three months.' When asked about the humanitarian conditions in Gaza, Trump on Sunday said Hamas is stealing food that was meant for civilians in the enclave. The Israeli military has reportedly found no proof of that. 'It's a mess, that whole place is a mess,' Trump told reporters. 'The Gaza Strip, you know it was given many years ago so they could have peace. That didn't work out too well.' ▪ The Hill: Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) said Sunday there will be a 'change in tactics' by the Israeli military in its war in Gaza. ▪ The Washington Post: Gazans are dying of hunger. Here's what happens to a starving human body. ▪ The New York Times: After Israeli restrictions on aid, hunger has risen across Gaza. Doctors and nurses, struggling to find food themselves, lack the resources to stem the surge. SOUTHEAST ASIA: Leaders from Cambodia and Thailand on Monday agreed to a ceasefire, ending days of attacks across their disputed border. The two countries met in Malaysia for peace talks after Trump threatened that continued violence would jeopardize both countries' trade deals with Washington. At least 35 people were killed, more than 200 injured, and more than 200,000 displaced in the fighting that broke out Thursday, CNN reports. ▪ The New York Times: The Thai-Cambodian conflict tears at remnants of a once-proud empire. ▪ CNBC: How Trump and his trade wars pushed Russia and Ukraine into the cold. ▪ The Washington Post: The Trump administration is set to destroy a large stockpile of U.S.-funded contraceptives stored at a warehouse in Belgium, which says it has 'explored all possible options to prevent the destruction.' Opinion People of good conscience must stop the starvation in Gaza, chef and World Central Kitchen's José Andrés writes in The New York Times. Gaza's aid crisis helps only Hamas,by The Wall Street Journal editorial board. The Closer And finally … 🍅 A 17 percent tariff on fresh tomatoes imported from Mexico could soon create problems for U.S. consumers, experts warn. The tomato import tax that began July 14, could lead to a dramatic spike in prices, The Associated Press reported, as about 70 percent of fresh tomatoes consumed in the U.S. are imported from Mexico. From looming higher prices to lower quality, The Atlantic describes why summer tomato season just hits 'different this year' amid the tariff tumult. The Mexican government has continued to try to negotiate down a 30 percent general tariff the U.S. is slated to tack on Friday.


San Francisco Chronicle
an hour ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
As Trump shows off his golf courses for Britain's leader, crisis in Gaza looms
EDINBURGH, Scotland (AP) — President Donald Trump once suggested his golf course in Scotland 'furthers" the U.S.-U.K. relationship. Now he's getting the chance to prove it. British Prime Minister Keir Starmer is meeting Monday with Trump at a golf property owned by the president's family near Turnberry in southwestern Scotland — then later traveling to Abderdeen, on the country's northeast coast, where there's another Trump golf course and a third is opening soon. During his first term in 2019, Trump posted of his Turnberry property, 'Very proud of perhaps the greatest golf course anywhere in the world. Also, furthers U.K. relationship!' Starmer is not a golfer, but toggling between Trump's Scottish courses shows the outsized influence the president puts on properties bearing his name — and on golf's ability to shape geopolitics. However, even as Trump may want to focus on showing off his golf properties, Starmer will try to center the conversation on more urgent global matters. He plans to urge Trump to press Israel to allow more aid into Gaza and attempt to end what Downing St. called 'the unspeakable suffering and starvation' in the territory, while pushing for a ceasefire in Israel's war with Hamas. Britain, along with France and Germany, has criticized Israel for 'withholding essential humanitarian assistance' as hunger spread in Gaza. Over the weekend, Starmer said Britain will take part in efforts led by Jordan to airdrop aid after Israel temporarily eased restrictions. But British Business Secretary Jonathan Reynolds acknowledged Monday that only the U.S. has 'the leverage' to make a real difference in the conflict. Still, asked about the crisis in Gaza on Sunday night, Trump was largely dismissive — focused more on how he's not personally gotten credit for previous attempts to provide food aid. 'It's terrible. You really at least want to have somebody say, 'Thank you,'' Trump said. The president added, 'It makes you feel a little bad when you do that" without what he considered proper acknowledgement. Starmer is under pressure from his Labour Party lawmakers to follow France in recognizing a Palestinian state, a move both Israel and the U.S. have condemned. The British leader says the U.K. supports statehood for the Palestinians but that it must be 'part of a wider plan' for a two-state solution to the Israel-Palestinian conflict. Also on Monday's agenda, according to Starmer's office, are efforts to promote a possible peace deal to end fighting in Russia's war with Ukraine — particularly efforts at forcing Russian President Vladimir Putin to the negotiating table in the next 50 days. Trump in the past sharply criticized Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy for also failing to express enough public gratitude toward U.S. support for his country, taking a similar tack he's now adopting when it comes to aid for Gaza. The president, though, has shifted away from that tone and more sharply criticized Putin and Russia in recent weeks. On Tuesday, Trump will be at the site of his new course near Aberdeen for an official ribbon-cutting. It opens to the public on Aug. 13 and tee times are already for sale — with the course betting that a presidential visit can help boost sales. Protesters have planned a demonstration in Balmedie, near Trump's existing Aberdeen golf course, after demonstrators took to the streets across Scotland on Saturday to decry the president's visit while he was golfing. Starmer and Trump are likely to find more common ground on trade issues. While China initially responded to Trump's tariff threats by retaliating with high import taxes of its own on U.S. goods, it has since begun negotiating to ease trade tensions. Starmer and his country have taken a far softer approach. He's gone out of his way to work with Trump, flattering the president repeatedly during a February visit to the White House, and teaming up to announce a joint trade framework on tariffs for some key products in May. Starmer and Trump then signed a trade agreement during the G7 summit in Canada that freed the U.K.'s aerospace sector from U.S. tariffs and used quotas to reduce them on auto-related industries from 25% to 10% while increasing the amount of U.S. beef it pledged to import. Discussions with Starmer follow a Trump meeting Sunday with European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen at his Turnberry course. They announced a trade framework that will put 15% tariffs on most goods from both countries, though many major details remain pending. The president has for months railed against yawning U.S. trade deficits around the globe and sees tariffs as a way to try and close them in a hurry. But the U.S. ran an $11.4 billion trade surplus with Britain last year, meaning it exported more to the U.K. than it imported. Census Bureau figures this year indicate that the surplus could grow. There are still lingering U.S.-Britain trade issues that need fine-tuning. The deal framework from May said British steel would enter the U.S. duty-free, but it continues to face a 25% levy. U.K. Business Secretary Jonathan Reynolds said Monday that 'negotiations have been going on on a daily basis' and 'there's a few issues to push a little bit further today,' though he downplayed expectations of a resolution. The leader of Scotland, meanwhile, said he will urge Trump to lift the current 10% tariff on Scotch whisky. First Minister John Swinney said the spirit's 'uniqueness' justified an exemption. Even as some trade details linger and both leaders grapple with increasingly difficult choices in Gaza and Ukraine, however, Starmer's staying on Trump's good side appears to be working — at least so far.