Alan Wilson, South Carolina's longtime GOP attorney general, set to enter 2026 governor's race
CHAPIN, S.C. (AP) —
Alan Wilson, the four-term Republican attorney general of South Carolina, is set to enter the state's open gubernatorial race in 2026, setting up a primary contest likely to be a multi-candidate competition for President Donald Trump's endorsement.
Long expected to run, Wilson will officially launch his campaign at an event on Monday, according to a person familiar with Wilson's political plans who was not authorized to speak about them publicly. The Associated Press viewed an invitation sent out this week, inviting backers to an 'Alan Wilson for South Carolina Campaign Rally.'
Official filing for the state's 2026 elections doesn't open until March, but several other Republicans have already made moves toward running. That includes Rep. Nancy Mace, who told the AP earlier this year she was 'seriously considering' a run, as well as Lt. Gov. Pam Evette, who has made similar statements.
All three potential Republican hopefuls have supported Trump in his own campaigns, and while Trump's role in 2026 races is yet to be known, it could have sway in the state where he's remained popular since his 2016 South Carolina GOP primary win helped cement him as the party's nominee. In 2018, Trump helped Gov. Henry McMaster secure a primary runoff win that set him on the path to becoming South Carolina's longest-serving governor.
As South Carolina's top prosecutor, Wilson has taken actions to support Trump's political and personal moves. In 2020, he was lead signatory on a letter decrying impeachment proceedings against Trump as 'fundamentally flawed as a matter of constitutional law.' Last year, Wilson traveled to New York to support Trump as he stood trial in a hush money case.
Republicans have in recent decades dominated South Carolina's statewide-elected positions, including governor, meaning that some of the most intense political competition has taken place in GOP primaries. With McMaster — in office since Nikki Haley's 2017 departure to serve as Trump's United Nations Ambassador — term-limited, next year's Republican primary is expected to be intense.
Like his predecessor in the attorney general's office, McMaster, Wilson has been part of dozens of lawsuits against Democratic presidents, suing the Biden administration over issues including vaccine mandates and environmental regulations.
Wilson, who has served three times as chairman of the Republican Attorneys General Association, has spearheaded other national efforts, including wrangling top prosecutors in all 50 states to urge Congress to craft legislation to guard against the use of artificial intelligence in exploiting children through pornography. In addition, he has led his GOP colleagues in pressing federal lawmakers for a bill allowing state prisons to jam the signals of cellphones smuggled to inmates.
On the state level, he defended South Carolina's restrictive abortion law — which bans the practice around six weeks after conception — against constitutional challenges. Wilson recused himself from a wide-ranging, multi-year state ethics probe into lawmakers including then-House Speaker Bobby Harrell, due to a connection with a political consultant entangled in the case.
Wilson was in the national spotlight throughout 2023, as his office prosecuted Alex Murdaugh, the disgraced attorney currently serving two life prison sentences for the 2021 murders of his wife and son at the family's rural home. Attention on the six-week trial swirled into cult-like status, with daily events live-streamed by a number of outlets, and true-crime influencers giving regular updates to their followers from the environs near a small-town courthouse in South Carolina's Lowcountry.
The son of Rep. Joe Wilson, a longtime South Carolina congressman, Wilson, his wife and their two children live in Lexington, South Carolina. First elected attorney general in 2010, he has served for nearly three decades in the Army National Guard, with the current rank of colonel.
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Kinnard can be reached at http://x.com/MegKinnardAP
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The Hill
15 minutes ago
- The Hill
FHFA chief takes aim at Fed
The Big Story The overseer of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac is waging an online battle to force out Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, shattering norms along the way. © The Associated Press Over the span of 24 hours, Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) Director Bill Pulte has written or shared more than a dozen posts on social media calling for Powell's resignation and sharing the rationale for doing so. Along the way, he's throwing his politically independent agency into a partisan battle. 'I am calling for Federal Reserve Chairman, Jay Powell, to resign,' Pulte wrote in a Thursday post on social platform X, which he pinned to the top of his profile. In another post in response to The Hill's reporting, Pulte said he was doing so '[b]ecause he is hurting Americans and hurting the mortgage market, which I am responsible for regulating.' The campaign against Powell began shortly before the Fed announced Wednesday, as was widely expected, it would keep interest rates unchanged for another month. President Trump has raged against Powell and the Fed for not cutting interest rates by levels only seen during economic crises, even though the unemployment rate remains close to historic lows. I've got more here. Welcome to The Hill's Business & Economy newsletter, I'm Sylvan Lane — covering the intersection of Wall Street and Pennsylvania Avenue. Did someone forward you this newsletter? Subscribe here. Essential Reads Key business and economic news with implications this week and beyond: Sports betting company DraftKings launching PAC DraftKings, a sports betting company, said Wednesday it filed with the Federal Election Commission (FEC) to create a corporate political action committee (PAC). US Steel, Nippon Steel finalize 'historic partnership' U.S. Steel said Wednesday it finalized its merger with Japan's largest steelmaker, Nippon. Trump signs order extending TikTok ban deadline President Trump signed an executive order Thursday extending the deadline for TikTok's parent company to divest the popular video sharing app by 90 days. The Ticker Upcoming news themes and events we're watching: In Other News Branch out with more stories from the day: Trump extends TikTok ban deadline for a third time, without clear legal basis WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump on Thursday signed an executive order to keep TikTok running … Good to Know Business and economic news we've flagged from other outlets: What Others are Reading Top stories on The Hill right now: Michelle Obama on being 'glad' she didn't have a son: 'He would've been a Barack Obama' Michelle Obama says she's 'so glad' she never had a son — because he would've been a kiddie clone of her husband. Read more Senate GOP leader faces pushback after members blindsided by Trump bill Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.) is facing strong pushback from members of the GOP conference over the Finance Committee's piece of President Trump's tax and spending bill, which largely ignores GOP senators' concerns about Medicaid cuts and the quick phaseout of clean-energy … Read more What People Think Opinions related to business and economic issues submitted to The Hill: You're all caught up. See you tomorrow! Thank you for signing up! Subscribe to more newsletters here


Hamilton Spectator
19 minutes ago
- Hamilton Spectator
California is to examine its Amazon oil ties following pleas from Indigenous leaders from Ecuador
RICHMOND, California (AP) — An oil tanker sat docked at Chevron's sprawling refinery in Richmond on Thursday — a visible link between California's appetite for Amazon crude and the remote rainforest territories where it's extracted. Just offshore, bundled in puffy jackets against the Bay wind, Indigenous leaders from Ecuador's Amazon paddled kayaks through choppy waters, calling attention to the oil expansion threatening their lands. Their visit to California helped prompt the state Senate to introduce a landmark resolution urging officials to examine the state's role in importing crude from the Amazon. The move comes as Ecuador's government prepares to auction off 14 new oil blocks — covering more than 2 million hectares of rainforest, much of it Indigenous territory — in a 2026 bidding round known as 'Sur Oriente.' The Indigenous leaders say the move goes against the spirit of a national referendum in which Ecuadorians voted to leave crude oil permanently underground in Yasuni National Park. The preservation push in Ecuador comes as another South American country that includes part of the Amazon rainforest, Brazil, is moving ahead with plans to further develop oil resources. On Tuesday, Brazil auctioned off several land and offshore potential oil sites near the Amazon River as it aims to expand production in untapped regions despite protests from environmental and Indigenous groups . Indigenous voices Juan Bay, president of the Waorani people of Ecuador, said that his delegation's coming to California was 'important so that our voices, our stance, and our struggle can be elevated' and urged Californians to reexamine the source of their crude from the Amazon — 'from Waorani Indigenous territory.' On Thursday, the Indigenous delegation joined local Californians in Richmond for a kayaking trip near a Chevron refinery, sharing stories about the Amazon and perspectives on climate threats. For Nadino Calapucha, a spokesperson for the Kichwa Pakkiru people, the visit to California's Bay Area was deeply moving. Spotting seals in the water and a bird's nest nearby felt ¨like a gesture of solidarity from nature itself,' he told The Associated Press on a kayak. 'It was as if the animals were welcoming us,' he said. The connection between the Amazon and California — both facing environmental threats — was palpable, Calapucha said. ¨Being here with our brothers and sisters, with the local communities also fighting — in the end, we feel that the struggle is the same,¨ he said. California is the largest global consumer of Amazon oil, with much of it refined and used in the state as fuel. Ecuador is the region's top producer of onshore crude. Bay highlighted a March 2025 ruling by the Inter-American Court of Human Rights, which found that Ecuador had violated the rights of the area's Indigenous groups by allowing oil operations in and around a site known as Block 43. The court ordered the government to halt extraction in protected areas and uphold the 2023 referendum banning drilling in Yasuni National Park, where the country's largest crude reserve lies, estimated at around 1.7 billion barrels. Bay appealed to the California government to reconsider if it 'should continue receiving crude from the Amazon' — or continue to be 'complicit in the violation of rights' happening on Indigenous territory. Defending Indigenous rights State Senator Josh Becker, who introduced the new resolution, praised the visiting leaders for defending both their land and the global climate. 'Their communities are on the front lines asserting their rights and resisting oil extraction,' Becker said on the Senate floor on Monday. 'They are defenders of a living rainforest that stores carbon, regulates the global climate, and sustains life.' Long criticized by environmental justice advocates, the refinery has processed millions of barrels of Amazon crude, fueling concerns over pollution, public health, and the state's role in rainforest destruction. The delegation also helped launch a new report by Amazon Watch, an Oakland-based non-profit dedicated to the protection of the Amazon Basin, which outlines the climate, legal and financial risks of operating in Indigenous territories without consent. 'Addiction to Amazon crude' Kevin Koenig, Amazon Watch's director for climate, energy and extraction industry, said the impacts of Amazon crude extend far beyond Ecuador. He joined the Ecuadorian delegation on the kayaking trip on Thursday. 'The Golden State, if it wants to be a climate leader, needs to take action,' he told AP. 'California has an addiction to Amazon crude.' Californians need to 'recognize their responsibility and their complicity in driving demand for Amazon crude and the impact that that is having on Indigenous people, on their rights, on the biodiversity and the climate,' he added. California's future is closely tied to the Amazon's — the state relies on the rainforest's role in climate regulation and rainfall, Koenig said, warning that continued Amazon crude imports contribute to the very destruction increasing California's vulnerability to drought and wildfires. He said environmental and public health damage tied to oil drilling is not confined to South America. 'We're seeing the same impacts from the oil well to the wheel here in California, where communities are suffering from contamination, health impacts, dirty water,' he said. 'It's time that California lead an energy transition.' California, one of the world's largest economies and a major importer of Amazon crude, must take stronger climate action, Koenig added and called on the state to phase out its reliance on oil linked to deforestation, human rights abuses, pollution, and climate damage. The resolution commends the Indigenous communities of Ecuador for their struggle in defending the rainforest and Indigenous rights. It also marks the first time California would examine how its energy consumption may contribute to the region's deforestation and cultural loss. The resolution is expected to be up for a vote within a few weeks, according to Koenig. ___ Follow Steven Grattan on X: @sjgrattan ___ The Associated Press' climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP's standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at .


USA Today
21 minutes ago
- USA Today
Israel-Iran live updates: Trump to decide on US role in conflict within 2 weeks
Israel-Iran live updates: Trump to decide on US role in conflict within 2 weeks Trump said he would decide within two weeks whether to bomb Iran's nuclear facilities. Show Caption Hide Caption President Trump to make decision on Iran within two weeks President Donald Trump says he will make a decision on striking Iran within two weeks as he waits on possible negotiations, the White House says. At least 240 people have been killed in Iran since Israel began airstrikes on June 13. Israel has reported 24 deaths from Iranian attacks. Iran's foreign minister said an Israeli hospital was damaged in a missile attack on Israeli military targets. Israel military targets were nearby. WASHINGTON − President Donald Trump said there was a "substantial chance" of U.S. negotiations with Iran and that he would decide within two weeks whether diplomacy keeps America out of the ongoing Israel-Iran conflict. The statement took down the temperature as the world waited for news of whether he would commit U.S. forces to Israel's campaign against Tehran's nuclear program. "Based on the fact that there's a substantial chance of negotiations that may or may not take place with Iran in the near future, I will make my decision whether or not to go within the next two weeks," press secretary Karoline Leavitt said, quoting Trump. More: 40,000 reasons to worry: U.S. troops in Middle East could face Iran blowback Iran has said it won't negotiate under duress, raising the question of whether Israel and the U.S. will support a ceasefire in the seven-day conflict. Earlier on June 18, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed revenge after a hospital was struck by an Iranian ballistic missile. "This morning, Iran's terrorist tyrants launched missiles at Soroka Hospital in Beersheba and at a civilian population in the center of the country," Netanyahu said in a statement. "We will exact the full price from the tyrants in Tehran." Iran's foreign minister said its forces "will continue to pummel the criminals who target our people until they cease and pay for their criminal aggression." The conflict has killed at least 240 Iranians and 24 Israelis since June 13. Israeli warplanes struck three nuclear sites in Iran on June 18. Follow along with USA TODAY for live updates. Iran launched a missile at Israel on June 19 that scattered small bombs with the aim of increasing civilian casualties, the Israeli military and its Washington embassy said, the first reported use of cluster munitions in the seven-day-old war. Cluster bombs are controversial because they indiscriminately scatter submunitions, some of which can fail to explode and kill or injure long after a conflict ends. The Israeli military released a graphic as a public warning of the dangers of unexploded ordnance. 'The terror regime seeks to harm civilians and even used weapons with wide dispersal in order to maximize the scope of the damage,' Israel's military spokesperson, Brigadier General Effie Defrin, told a briefing. Reuters reported on June 19 that Special envoy Steve Witkoff and Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi had spoken by phone several times since Israel began its strikes on June 13, citing three diplomats. Araqchi told Witkoff nuclear negotiations could not resume until the attacks halted. At a press briefing the White House confirmed conversations were taking place with the Iranians and suggested that at least some of them were direct. 'I can confirm that correspondence has continued,' Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said. She declined to provide further details. Iranian missile attack strikes Israeli hospital An early morning Iranian missile attack hit an Israeli hospital and several other densely populated civilian locations. Araqchi will meet in Geneva, Switzerland, on Friday with European nations. Witkoff was not expected to attend. -Francesca Chambers The White House said Iran is 'close' to developing a nuclear weapon and could do so within weeks. 'It is a fact, and the United States government maintains this fact, that Iran has never been closer to obtaining a nuclear weapon,' Leavitt told reporters, without citing specific intelligence. Pressed later to explain, Leavitt said Iran is close to having enough enriched uranium to start building a weapon. 'Iran has all that it needs to achieve a nuclear weapon. All they need is a decision from the supreme leader to do that. And it would take a couple weeks to complete the production of that weapon,' she said. -Francesca Chambers Just three months ago, Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, testified before Congress that the U.S. intelligence community had assessed that Iran 'is not building a nuclear weapon.' In her prepared testimony before the House and Senate Intelligence committees on March 25, Gabbard provided an overview of all threats to U.S. national security, including Iran. She was unequivocal in the assessment provided by the 18 U.S. intelligence agencies she oversees, including the CIA and the National Security Agency. 'The IC continues to assess that Iran is not building a nuclear weapon and Supreme Leader Khamanei has not authorized the nuclear weapons program that he suspended in 2003,' Gabbard said. 'We continue to monitor closely if Tehran decides to reauthorize its nuclear weapons program.' Over the past year, Gabbard said, U.S. spies, intelligence analysts and specialized satellites have 'seen an erosion of a decades long taboo in Iran on discussing nuclear weapons in public, likely emboldening nuclear weapons advocates within Iran's decision-making apparatus.' 'Iran's enriched uranium stockpile is at its highest levels and is unprecedented for a state without nuclear weapons,' Gabbard said. 'Iran will likely continue efforts to counter Israel and press for U.S. military withdrawal from the region by aiding, arming, and helping to reconstitute its loose consortium of like-minded terrorists, actors, which it refers to as its 'Axis of Resistance.'' -Josh Meyer White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Iran would have to agree to stop all uranium enrichment for Trump to find an agreement acceptable. 'Iran is absolutely not able to achieve a nuclear weapon,' she added. 'The president has been very clear about that.' Leavitt said a deal that the U.S. proposed through special envoy Steve Wiktoff prior to the Israeli strikes was 'realistic and acceptable.' She did not provide specifics on what was in it. -Francesca Chambers President Trump joined an 11:30 am meeting with members of his national security team in the White House Situation Room. In the afternoon, he'll hold a private, swearing-in ceremony for his ambassador to Ireland, Edward Walsh, a businessman from New Jersey. Trump has no public events on his schedule – but he posted on Truth Social throughout the morning about various topics − including his extension of the deadline for a deal to save TikTok. He's given no public clue on which way he's leaning over a possible U.S. attack on Iran's nuclear program. June 19 is a federal holiday, but the White House is treating it like a regular work day, as Trump contemplates his options on Iran. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt will hold an on-camera briefing at 1pm. -Francesca Chambers The U.S. embassy in Jerusalem was working to evacuate Americans from Israel by commercial flights and on cruise ships after Israeli air and seaports were reopened. Foreigners are trying to flee both Israel and Iran in the face of a deepening crisis. Here's who's leaving: AUSTRALIA: The Australian government evacuated by land a small group of the 1,200 Australians on June 18, Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong said. Around 1,500 Australians in Iran have registered for assistance. AUSTRIA: Forty-eight Austrians have left Israel or neighboring Jordan, the Foreign Ministry said. Around 100 Austrians have requested to leave Iran. Forty-four Austrian and EU citizens have been evacuated towards Turkey and Armenia, it added. CHINA: China has evacuated more than 1,600 citizens from Iran and hundreds more from Israel, a Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson said June 19. Several thousand Chinese nationals are thought to reside in Iran, according to state media reports. CZECH REPUBLIC: A flight with 66 people evacuated from Israel had landed near Prague, Czech Defence Minister Jana Cernochova said. FRANCE: France will arrange a convoy by the end of the week from Iran to the Turkish or Armenian borders, French foreign minister Jean-Noel Barrot said. French citizens in Israel can board buses starting the morning of June 20 from the Jordanian border. GERMANY: 345 German citizens have left the Middle-East region on charger flights, the foreign ministry said. INDIA: India said had launched "Operation Sindhu" to evacuate Indian nationals from Iran. 110 Indian students were earlier evacuated from northern Iran to Armenia. ITALY: Italy is organizing a charter flight from Egypt on June 22 to allow its citizens to leave Israel. Some 500 Italians are leaving Iran. JAPAN: Japan's government said it would send two Self-Defense Forces transport aircraft to Djibouti in preparation for the evacuation of Japanese nationals from Iran and Israel. -Reuters The president took aim at a report in the Wall Street Journal that he had green-lighted plans for U.S. forces to attack Iran's nuclear program. Citing three people familiar with the deliberations, the Journal reported on June 18 that Trump had approved a strike plan but had not issued an order to proceed with it, as he waited to see if Tehran would agree to give up its nuclear enrichment program. On June 19, Trump disparaged the report. "The Wall Street Journal has No Idea what my thoughts are concerning Iran!" he wrote in a single-line post on Truth Social. -Francesca Chambers Iran is maintaining crude oil supply by loading tankers one at a time on the Persian Gulf and moving its seabound floating oil storage much closer to China, two vessel tracking firms told Reuters, as the country seeks to keep a key source of revenue while under attack from Israel. The conflict between Iran and Israel poses a fresh hurdle for Iran, which uses a shadow fleet of tankers to conceal their origin and skirt U.S. sanctions reinstated in 2018 over its nuclear program. Crude exports from Iran, OPEC's third-largest producer, mainly head to China. Iran has loaded 2.2 million barrels per day of crude oil so far this week, marking a five-week high, analytics firm Kpler said. Energy infrastructure in both countries has been targeted in missile exchanges, including the Haifa oil refinery in Israel and Iran's South Pars gas field, though Iran's major crude exporting facility at Kharg island has so far been spared. Iran has moved part of its 40 million barrel floating storage fleet, which sits on 36 different vessels, much closer to China to minimize the impact of any disrupions on buyers, ship tracking firm Vortexa told Reuters. -Reuters Separatist and jihadist militants on the Pakistan-Iran border could take advantage of any collapse of authority in Iran, fears that Pakistan's army chief pressed in a meeting this week with the President Donald Trump. Anti-Iranian and anti-Pakistan outfits operate on both sides of the 560-mile long border. As Israel bombs Iran's nuclear program, its officials have repeatedly indicated that they are seeking to destabilize the Iranian government or see it toppled. As well as worrying about chaos spilling over from Iran, Pakistan is concerned about the precedent set by Israel of attacking the nuclear installations of another country. Nuclear-armed rivals Pakistan and India fought a four-day conflict in May. Following a June 18 lunch at the White House with Pakistan's army chief, Field Marshal Asim Munir, Trump said: 'They're not happy about anything,' referring to Pakistan's views on the Israel-Iran conflict. -Reuters Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz said the military had been instructed to intensify strikes on strategic-related targets in Tehran to eliminate the threat to Israel and destabilise what he called the "Ayatollah regime." Who is Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran's supreme leader? As President Donald Trump and Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei trade threats, here's what to know about the Iranian official. He called Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei "the modern Hitler" and said "this man should not continue to exist." Netanyahu has said Israel's military attacks could result in the toppling of Iran's leaders, and Israel would do whatever is necessary to remove the "existential threat" posed by Tehran. But Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Sa'ar said regime change was not an official goal, "for the time being." More: Who is Iran's Supreme Leader? Like Trump, he controls a real-estate empire "The matter of changing the regime or the fall of this regime is first and foremost a matter for the Iranian people," Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told public broadcaster Kan late on June 19. "There is no substitute for this." President Trump has focused on ending Iran's nuclear program, but on June 17 he mused about the possiblity of killing Khamenei, calling him an "easy target." The Trump administration has at least 40,000 reasons to worry about the aftermath of a potential attack on Iran. Susan Page: The risks for Trump of 'regime change' in Iran: Just ask George W. Bush That's the rough number of U.S. troops stationed in the Middle East, in bases from Bahrain to Syria and points in between. Not to mention U.S. citizens who live and work in the region. They would be vulnerable to counterattacks that could involve Iranian ballistic missiles, drones or terrorism should the United States join Israel in its ongoing attack on Iran's nuclear facilities. Iran can strike 'all of them,' a U.S. Defense official said. -Tom Vanden Brook and Cybele Mayes-Osterman More: 40,000 reasons to worry: U.S. troops in Middle East could face Iran blowback Iran's foreign minister said that the Soroka hospital in Beersheba, Israel, was damaged in an attack on a nearby military command center, which Israel denied. "Earlier today, our powerful Armed Forces accurately eliminated an Israeli Military Command, Control & Intelligence HQ and another vital target," Foreign Minister Seyed Abbas Araqchi said on X. "The blast wave caused superficial damage to a small section" of the Soroka hospital. Araqchi pointed out Israel's repeated attacks on hospital facilities in Gaza. 'The claim of an attack on an intelligence base or the presence of military equipment under the hospital is another lie. We are not so despicable as to endanger civilians,' the IDF said in a Persian-language statement, the Times of Israel reported. 'Attacking hospitals is a crime. Fabricating a reason does not justify it.' No deaths were reported in the attack. Six people were seriously injured, emergency workers said. Like thousands of other Palestinians in Gaza, Hind Al-Nawajha takes a dangerous, miles-long journey every day to try to get some food for her family, hoping she makes it back alive. The mother-of-four had to duck down and hide behind a pile of rubble on the side of the road as gunshots echoed nearby. "You either come back carrying (food) for your children and they will be happy, or you come back in a shroud, or you go back upset (without food) and your children will cry," said Nawajha, 38, a resident of Beit Lahiya, in northern Gaza. "This is life, we are being slaughtered, we can't do it anymore." In the past two days, dozens of Palestinians have also been killed by Israeli fire as they tried to get food from aid trucks brought into the enclave by the United Nations and international relief agencies, Gaza medics said. More: Trump-backed Gaza aid sites temporarily close after dozens killed in shootings On June 19, medics said at least 40 people were killed by Israeli gunfire and military strikes, including 12 people who tried to approach a site operated by the U.S.-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation in the central Gaza Strip, the latest in near-daily reports of killings of people seeking food. There was no immediate comment from the Israeli army on the incident. In recent days, the Israeli military said its forces had opened fire and fired warning shots to disperse people who approached areas where troops were operating, posing a threat. It said it was reviewing reports of casualties among civilians. -Reuters The 'vast majority' of President Donald Trump's MAGA movement 'will get on board' with strikes on Iran, if he goes ahead with military action, his former chief White House strategist Steve Bannon says. Should he decide there's no diplomatic solution to be had, Trump will need to walk the American people and MAGA through his thinking, Bannon told reporters at a June 18 breakfast hosted by the Christian Science Monitor. But Trump is also likely to win ove most of his naysaying supporters. 'There will be some, but the vast majority of the MAGA movement will go, 'look, we trust your judgement, you've walked us through this, we don't like it, in fact maybe we hate it, but we'll get on board,'' Bannon said. -Francesca Chambers Contributing: Reuters