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Furious Democrats call for investigation into Musk's bid to help build Trump's ‘$500 billion' Golden Dome project

Furious Democrats call for investigation into Musk's bid to help build Trump's ‘$500 billion' Golden Dome project

Independent21-05-2025

A group of 42 Democrats has written to the Pentagon's Inspector General demanding an investigation after it was reported that Elon Musk 's company, SpaceX, could win a lucrative contract to help build President Donald Trump 's new 'Golden Dome' anti-missile defense system.
Senators Elizabeth Warren, Cory Booker, and Tammy Duckworth have responded by expressing their concerns in a letter to acting Pentagon Inspector General Steven A Stebbins, demanding transparency about the bidding process.
'Mr Musk's formal or informal participation in any process to award a government contract raises serious conflict of interest concerns, including the possibility that SpaceX is a top contender for the Golden Dome contract because of Mr Musk's position in the government,' they wrote.
The project, inspired by Israel's 'Iron Dome,' was announced by President Trump and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth at the White House on Tuesday. The former promised it would be 'fully operational' before he leaves office in January 2029 and capable of intercepting rockets, 'even if they are launched from space.'
The independent Congressional Budget Office has warned that the project could cost as much as $524 billion and take 20 years to build. Trump dismissed that estimate, putting the price tag closer to $175bn and insisting it could be completed in just three years, beginning with a $25bn grant to kickstart the development. That effort will be steered by Space Force General Michael Guetlein and 'the brightest minds' in Silicon Valley, he said without naming the former DOGE leader.
According to CNN, the billionaire, who donated $288m to the Republican election campaign last year, has lobbied Hegseth for a role in the project. SpaceX is reportedly pitching to win the contract to shape the Dome's 'custody layer,' a constellation of satellites that would detect missiles, track their trajectory, and determine if they are heading towards the U.S..
Sources told Reuters that Musk's company has estimated that the preliminary engineering and design work for the custody layer would cost between $6bn and $10bn.
The Pentagon has warned for years that the newest missiles developed by China and Russia are so advanced that updated countermeasures are necessary.
Golden Dome's added satellites and interceptors – where the bulk of the program's cost lies – would be focused on stopping those advanced missiles early on or in the middle of their flight.
The space-based weapons envisioned for Golden Dome 'represent new and emerging requirements for missions that have never before been accomplished by military space organizations,' General Chance Saltzman, head of the U.S. Space Force, told lawmakers at a hearing Tuesday.
China and Russia have put offensive weapons in space, such as satellites with the ability to disable critical American satellites, which can leave the U.S. vulnerable to attack.
Last year, the U.S. said Russia was developing a space-based nuclear weapon that could loiter in space for long durations, then release a burst that would take out satellites around it.
Trump told reporters in the Oval Office that he had not yet spoken to Russian President Vladimir Putin about the new program but would do so 'at the right time.'
In a joint statement earlier this month, China and Russia called the Golden Dome 'deeply destabilizing in nature,' warning that it would turn 'outer space into an environment for placing weapons and an arena for armed confrontation.'
No money has been set aside for the project yet, and overall, it is 'still in the conceptual stage,' newly confirmed Air Force Secretary Troy Meink told senators on Tuesday.
The U.S. already has many missile defense capabilities, such as the Patriot missile batteries it provided to Ukraine to defend against incoming missiles and an array of satellites in orbit to detect missile launches. Some of those existing systems will be incorporated into Golden Dome.
In an executive order signed on January 27, during the first week of his presidency, Trump directed the Pentagon to pursue space-based interceptors.

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Joy Reid campaigns for Iran to get 'nuclear energy' in cringe-worthy panel appearance
Joy Reid campaigns for Iran to get 'nuclear energy' in cringe-worthy panel appearance

Daily Mail​

time26 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Joy Reid campaigns for Iran to get 'nuclear energy' in cringe-worthy panel appearance

Fired ex-MSNBC host Joy Reid mistakenly blasted the US for trying to stop Iran obtaining nuclear energy during her latest CNN appearance. Speaking on Newsnight earlier this week, Reid defended the country following the attacks on their nuclear sites by President Donald Trump over the weekend. The left-wing commentator said: 'Why on earth is the United States bombing a country that did not attack us, what on earth are we doing there at all. 'Why is it there is this arrogance in the west and in the United States to say that we get to decide who can have nuclear energy.' Trump's bunker buster bombing campaign was actually aimed at stopping Iran from developing nuclear weapons, not nuclear power. Reid then added: 'The bottom line here is the way we know that Iran did not have nuclear weapons, if they had nuclear weapons Israel would not have attacked them. 'The reason they're trying to get nukes is because an expansionist power in their region keeps threatening them and actually bomb[ing] them.' CNN host Abby Phillip interrupted, saying: 'Joy, this is not just about nukes. It's also about Iran being a state sponsor of terrorism and chaos and violence and death around the world.' The panel then decided into chaos over her remarks, with attorney Arthur Aidala slamming her for backing Iran. He said: 'Joy the fact that you are backing a country that slaughters homosexuals, that slaughters people for their religious beliefs. It's crazy, it's nuts.' In response, she said that LGBTQ people weren't allowed to serve in the US military under President Trump. Trump has banned transgender service personnel, but gays, lesbians and bisexuals are free to serve. Clearly angered, Aidala continued: 'But they can live, they can get married they can have children. We're not killing them!' U.S. stealth bombers dropped 12 deep penetrator bombs, called bunker busters, on the Fordo nuclear facility and two on the Natanz site over the weekend. Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu hailed the attack as a success, but a US intelligence report has since emerged that seems to discredit that. According to the preliminary report, it was found that Iran's nuclear program had been set back only a few months. At a Pentagon briefing on Thursday, defense officials laid out details that bolstered their argument that the attack had wiped out the key sites. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said: 'You want to call it destroyed, you want to call it defeated, you want to call it obliterated, This was an historically successful attack.' Reid's remarks this week come after she said she was disillusioned with the Democratic party to the point she was just 'hanging on'. She told The Breakfast Club podcast on Tuesday that she believes the current Democrat line-up is fueling Trump's agenda by failing to provide opposition. 'I've been a Democrat since I was old enough to vote, but I'm barely hanging on,' Reid told The Breakfast Club podcast on Tuesday. 'At this point, the party is not bigger than the future of my kids. I have three children, that have to live in this country as black people, and fascism doesn't work for me. 'I'm not willing to cede the country to Trumpism and MAGA simply because I'm clinging to this party.' Reid added that the party desperately needs a new leader, and a fresh ideology. She blasted Trump as having 'no actual talent' - but he still beat the Democrats. 'You have to blow up the whole Democratic Party,' she said.

High flyer to pariah: the saga of Epstein-linked banker Jes Staley
High flyer to pariah: the saga of Epstein-linked banker Jes Staley

The Guardian

time27 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

High flyer to pariah: the saga of Epstein-linked banker Jes Staley

In 1999, the future Barclays chief executive Jes Staley was gearing up for his biggest job yet. As head of JP Morgan's private bank, he would be in charge of a sprawling team that managed money and investments for some of the world's richest people. Among them was the mysterious but well-connected billionaire Jeffrey Epstein, with whom he would quickly develop a 'fairly close professional relationship'. Staley was soon holidaying on Epstein's private island, flying on his private plane, and gaining access to an impressive portfolio of ministers, entrepreneurs and royalty. The relationship ended up bolstering Staley's profile on Wall Street and even connecting his daughter to senior figures at Ivy League universities. But it would also help to end his career. In July 2019 Epstein was arrested on child sex trafficking charges, accused of sexually exploiting and abusing dozens of girls at homes in Manhattan and Palm Beach, Florida. Some victims were as young as 14, US prosecutors alleged. Epstein, who was in jail as he awaited trial, was found dead in his prison cell weeks later. The revelations about Epstein led to a media storm, bringing renewed attention to his former friends and business associates, including Staley. Barclays told the Financial Conduct Authority in October 2019 that the pair 'did not have a close relationship' and were last in contact 'well before' Staley took over as CEO four years earlier. But a subsequent FCA investigation, involving a cache of 1,200 emails from JP Morgan, convinced the regulator that it had been misled. The regulator alleged that the pair were indeed close friends and stayed in touch via Staley's daughter for years after he joined Barclays. It was not Staley's first run-in with the FCA, having been fined £642,000 for trying to unmask a whistleblower in 2018. But it was the final straw: he was banned from the holding senior management roles in the City in 2023, leading to him lose about £18m worth of pay. The 68-year-old fought back in an appeal this spring, arguing that he had always been transparent with Barclays and had followed internal legal advice on the letter's phrasing, which was meant to emphasise that he had no knowledge of Epstein's crimes. Judges on Thursday ruled in the FCA's favour, upholding the lifetime City ban. March's two-week tribunal hearing in London also gave the first public account of Epstein's role in Staley's life. This is what the court heard. The pair did not meet by chance, but on the recommendation of JP Morgan's then chief executive, Douglas 'Sandy' Warner, who felt that Epstein – already a client – was someone the newly appointed head of the private bank should know. The two men 'got on well', according to Staley's lawyers, and Epstein's career-boosting potential quickly became clear. He would refer wealthy friends to Staley, many of whom turned into JP Morgan clients. The pair occasionally socialised, Staley said, explaining that he would sometimes swing by Epstein's home in Manhattan for a drink or dinner. And, from 2005, he took his family on the first of a handful of trips to Epstein's private Caribbean island, Little St James. But Staley was adamant that Epstein was never part of his inner circle, was never invited to the family home, any 'milestone birthdays', or 'personal meals in restaurants'. Staley said he had few personal friends and remains a loner. 'From what I recall, Jes didn't have very many friends,' his former chief of staff Sasha Wiggins told the court in March. And Staley said parts of Epstein's life always remained a mystery. 'I really didn't know how much money he had,' Staley said. 'What his background was, was always sort of shrouded.' But by 2006, the mask started to slip when Epstein was arrested after Florida police were tipped off that he was recruiting young girls for massages and sexual encounters. He pleaded guilty to soliciting prostitution from a minor and in 2008 he was sentenced to 18 months in jail. Staley stayed in contact, though, and visited Epstein after his indictment. He said Epstein did not deny that he solicited a prostitute, but maintained that he thought the girls were over 18. 'Obviously he lied to me,' Staley told the court in March. He again visited Epstein in around 2009, when he was on a prison work release programme in Florida. Staley said he reported the visit to JP Morgan, which was reviewing whether to keep Epstein as a client. But emails suggest he had been leaning on the imprisoned Epstein for advice throughout the financial crisis, writing in October 2008: 'I am dealing with the Fed on an idea to solve things. I need a smart friend to help me think through this stuff. Can I get you out for a weekend to help me (are they listening?)' The court heard that Staley turned to Epstein to help connect his daughter – a burgeoning physics major – with scientists and senior professors at Ivy League universities. The financier, who Staley referred to as 'Uncle Jeffrey', would later be invited to her graduation in 2015. Staley stressed that he did not then know of Epstein's crimes. 'Mr Staley said to me once: 'Why would I have introduced my wife and daughters to Mr Epstein if I thought he was a paedophile?'' Wiggins told the court. When Epstein was released on house arrest in July 2009, Staley was one of the four people he emailed to say: 'Free and home.' Staley replied: 'I toast your courage !!!!!' But more cryptic messages between the two stirred the most controversy, including an exchange about Disney princesses in July 2010. 'That was fun. Say hi to Snow White,' Staley wrote. 'What character would you like next?' Epstein asked, to which Staley replied: 'Beauty and the Beast.' 'Well one side is available,' Epstein responded. Staley told the court he was not able to explain the exchange. Months earlier, in September 2009, Epstein emailed a woman to say: 'Jes staley is staying at the berkeley hotel in London tonight.' Staley said he could not recall the reason behind the message. That year Staley's career took another leap, with his promotion to lead JP Morgan's investment bank. Even the chief executive, Jamie Dimon, was singing his praises, telling Fortune magazine: 'Jes has impeccable character and integrity.' The new gig meant Epstein was no longer a direct client. But that did not end their relationship, or Staley's effusive messages. In November 2009, Staley detoured from a work trip to visit Epstein's ranch in New Mexico, replete with a 26,700-square-foot mansion, private airstrip, and seven-bay heated garage. He emailed Epstein in thanks: 'So when all hell breaks lose [sic], and the world is crumbling, I will come here, and be at peace. Presently, I'm in the hot tub with a glass of white wine. This is an amazing place … I owe you much. And I deeply appreciate our friendship. I have few so profound.' In December, months after Epstein's release, the pair finally found time to meet in person. 'I realize the danger in sending this email. But is [sic] was great to be able, today, to give you, in New York City, a long heartfelt hug. To my friend, Thanks. Jes.' At times, their emails were more explicit: discussing sex scandals and lovers. One message, sent from a debutante ball that Staley attended in November 2010, told Epstein that Staley had seen a woman – 'your lover,' Staley said, 'she says u slept with her!!' Epstein separately sent photos, one of which was of a woman in a low-cut ballgown. 'You were with Larry, and i had to put up with …' Epstein wrote. When FCA lawyers suggested that this interaction was a sign that he and Epstein were 'personally close', Staley suggested that such behaviour was not uncommon between people who were 'professionally close – you know, if you've ever worked on a trading floor on Wall Street'. Staley said there were also parts of his life he kept from Epstein, including having sex with a member of Epstein's staff. 'Oftentimes I would go to Epstein's apartment and he would be late, and she and I got the chance to know each other.' This led to sexual intercourse, he said, 'much to my embarrassment today'. The former banker, who has a wife and two daughters, said the confession came at a personal cost. 'I have been honest such that I have put my marriage at risk … I have never shied away from telling the truth about all of this.' The date of the encounter was not disclosed in court, but the FCA revealed that Epstein's former employee had 'carved' Staley out of a settlement she had reached with Epstein's estate. 'I was not aware of that,' Staley told the court. Despite the allegedly secret encounter, Epstein and Staley would send messages declaring their close ties, referring to each other as family. In one exchange in March 2011, Epstein writes: 'Told you −−−− family.' Staley replied with one word: 'Family'. Behind the scenes, Epstein's banking relationship with JP Morgan was starting to unravel. The bank was considering dumping Epstein as a client but was careful about breaching the issue with Staley, saying they were friends. 'He needs to understand the potential backlash to the firm given all the work done to root out clients involved in human trafficking,' an internal memo said. Staley tried to convince the bank's top lawyer to 'hear [Epstein] out', according to a JP Morgan meeting note. He also revealed to Epstein that his transactions were under review. Staley admitted to sharing internal information with Epstein but denied having pushed the bank to keep him as a client. Panic set in by September 2009, when Epstein told Staley that a 'family meeting was required'. Epstein was concerned about an 'abusive reporter', and instructed Staley on how to respond: 'I think your response should be [that] all of the incidents that they raise happened a decade ago, I paid my debt and like everyone else should be given another chance.' Epstein said he had been 'unaware of the full heat that you have taken as a result of our friendship', adding: 'I'm sorry.' The financier hired a London lobbyist for a 2012 campaign to make Staley Barclay's chief executive, dubbed 'Project Jes'. In emails the lobbyist claimed he hoped to convince top-level policymakers, including George Osborne, who was chancellor, and Mervyn King, the Bank of England governor, to support the US banker. Staley said he never knew about the push. Barclays ultimately installed its own head of retail and business banking, Antony Jenkins, whose ousting three years later led to Staley's leadership. In early 2013 Staley left JP Morgan, moving to the hedge fund Blue Mountain Capital. At this point, Staley claimed, his relationship with Epstein started to decline. But the FCA alleged that their communication did not wither, pointing to a string of emails in early 2013 in which the pair discussed dinner plans, new work numbers and planned meet-ups. Staley also kept up an annual tradition of emailing Epstein on New Year's Eve. The declarations of friendship continued in January 2015, when Staley told Epstein: 'The strength of a Greek army was that its core held shoulder to shoulder, and would not flee or break, no matter the threat. That is us.' That year, Epstein was back in the media's crosshairs. An anonymous woman had filed a lawsuit alleging she was repeatedly sexually abused by Epstein between 1999 and 2002, and that he had loaned her out to rich and influential men. By that April, Staley had what he says was his last in-person meeting with Epstein, having again taken his family to visit the financier's private island. 'Thanks for the flight and thanks for the lunch. Your place is crazy, and special … I count u as a deep friend. The girls seemed to enjoy the sail. All the best Jes.' Within months, Staley was taking another stab at the Barclays job, and kept Epstein abreast of developments. Weeks before the appointment, Staley emailed: 'Cross your toes !!!' Staley was back in touch days before receiving his Barclays contract: 'We're very close.' The British tabloids, however, were circling, pouncing on another prominent figure with ties to a convicted sex offender. News of Prince Andrew's relationship with Epstein had caused a media frenzy as early as 2011, years before a disaster BBC interview that led to the prince being forced to step back from public duties in 2019. Days before Staley was confirmed as Barclays' new boss, the Mail on Sunday was chasing up claims that Epstein lobbied Barclays to hire Staley in both 2012 and 2015. Epstein forwarded the newspaper's queries to Staley, who later replied: 'Ok. I'm going to play is [sic] simple. I've known you as a client. I will tell B tomorrow. Let me know if they say something else. But stay away from them. I'm fine.' The article was published with the headline: 'Andrew's billionaire paedophile friend secretly backed new Barclays boss for job'. Staley said he cut contact with Epstein days later, following 'strong advice' from Barclays. 'I telephoned Mr Epstein and told him that we could not ever again have communication, which he accepted. The relationship ended there. I have had no communication with him since then,' Staley told the court. There is no evidence of direct contact between the two men after October 2015, but the FCA alleged they stayed in touch via Staley's daughter until at least February 2017. Emails show that Epstein asked Staley's daughter to ask the newly installed chief executive's opinion on other bankers, tried to connect Staley with royalty in the Middle East, and to ask whether Staley was interested in a post with the US Treasury. Staley said he did not recall any of those conversations, and he did not realise at the time that his daughter and Epstein were still corresponding. The tribunal on Thursday raised concerns in its judgment about Staley's evidence, saying he 'could be inconsistent in his answers when he felt that it would suit his case', adding that he had 'shown no remorse for his conduct'. Judges have sided with the FCA, upholding its City ban and scuppering efforts to restore his reputation. And while the tribunal reduced his penalty by £1.8m to £1.1m, it reflected pay he lost from Barclays as a result of the FCA ruling. It is not clear how much Staley has paid in legal costs trying to challenge the UK regulator. Staley said in a statement: 'I am disappointed by the outcome and the time it took for this process to play out – that was entirely beyond my control. As the tribunal accepted, I was never dishonest. It took years of arguing with the authority and until November 2024 to establish that fact and it took more time for the financial penalty to be reduced by 40%. 'I have worked tirelessly for my prior employers for the entirety of my career. I am proud of the support I gave to many individuals during that career and the strategy I developed to help Barclays when it faced immense challenges. The tribunal recognised what they described as 'my long and distinguished career'.'

Trump rejected invitation to Bezos wedding
Trump rejected invitation to Bezos wedding

Telegraph

time33 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

Trump rejected invitation to Bezos wedding

Donald Trump rejected an invitation to Jeff Bezos's star-studded Venetian wedding. Mr Bezos, the tech billionaire, was reportedly trying to cosy up to the US president, in what could be seen as an attempt to fill the position of 'First Buddy' vacated by Elon Musk. The Wall Street Journal (WSJ) reported that the 61 year-old, who is preparing for his lavish three-day wedding in Venice, had spoken twice to Mr Trump in the last few weeks. As part of his charm offensive, Mr Bezos extended an invitation to his upcoming nuptials with Lauren Sanchez, the journalist. White House officials confirmed to the WSJ that the invitation had been offered. Mr Trump was not expected to attend the Venice ceremony owing to scheduling conflicts, however. Mr Trump's daughter Ivanka, a friend of Ms Sanchez' is expected to attend, along with her husband, Jared Kushner. Donald Jr, the president's eldest son, is also going. In 2019, Mr Trump mocked Mr Bezos as 'Jeff Bozo' in a dig at the Washington Post, which the billionaire owned. However, the newspaper did not support Kamala Harris in last year's presidential election, breaking a liberal tradition going back decades. In February, the Post refused to run an advert attacking the administration that asked whether Donald Trump or Elon Musk was running the country. Earlier this year, Mr Bezos abandoned plans to display how much Mr Trump's proposed tariffs were costing Amazon customers on each transaction following a direct appeal from the president. Mr Bezos, the founder of Amazon and one of the world's richest men, appears to be trying to exploit Mr Trump's spectacular falling out with Mr Musk, which started at the end of last month. Dave Limp, chief executive of Mr Bezos's space company Blue Origin, has also held talks with Susie Wiles, the White House Chief of Staff, the WSJ reported. There are powerful business reasons for Bezos's approach, notably the possibility of government contracts for Blue Origin. Until now, Elon Musk's SpaceX has dominated the market, spectacularly outstripping Blue Origin in the race to become Nasa's main contractor since the US stopped using the Russians to ferry missions to the International Space Station.

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