
Lukewarm welcome expected as Trump heads to Scotland
President Donald Trump is heading to Scotland for a five-day working trip, as protest groups said they would mount a wave of resistance against the visit. Trump will meet UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer on Monday, before traveling to Aberdeen to dedicate an 18-hole course to his Scottish-born mother.
01:16 - Source: CNN
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Lukewarm welcome expected as Trump heads to Scotland
President Donald Trump is heading to Scotland for a five-day working trip, as protest groups said they would mount a wave of resistance against the visit. Trump will meet UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer on Monday, before traveling to Aberdeen to dedicate an 18-hole course to his Scottish-born mother.
01:16 - Source: CNN
Why are Thailand and Cambodia fighting?
Tensions are rising between Thailand and Cambodia over a border dispute that dates back to 1907. CNN's Will Ripley explains how the conflict has escalated.
01:32 - Source: CNN
CNN reports from Gaza aid crossing
CNN's Nic Robertson is on the scene at the Kerem Shalom border crossing as aid agencies warn of rampant hunger caused by Israel's blockade of Gaza. Gaza's health ministry said on Tuesday that 900,000 children are going hungry, and 70,000 already show signs of malnutrition. Israel denies it is at fault and accuses Hamas of 'engineering' food shortages.
01:39 - Source: CNN
Almost 50 missing as plane crashes in Russia
Dozens of civilians are feared dead, including children, after a Soviet era passenger jet crashed in Russia's far east Amur Region. Burning wreckage was discovered by rescuers just 10 miles (16 kilometers) from the Tynda airport, the plane's destination.
00:30 - Source: CNN
Erin Burnett on the significance of Trump knowing he's in the Epstein files
CNN's Erin Burnett explains how reports that President Trump was briefed that he is named in the Epstein files shine a light on his recent denials of that exact claim.
02:13 - Source: CNN
Judge declines to release Epstein grand jury documents
A Florida federal judge declined to release additional grand jury documents from the criminal investigation into Jeffrey Epstein, marking the first roadblock in the Justice Department's efforts to quell the public backlash over the handling of the case. CNN's Evan Perez reports.
02:43 - Source: CNN
Bryan Kohberger sentenced to life in prison
Bryan Kohberger has been sentenced to life in prison without parole for the murders of four University of Idaho students.
01:29 - Source: CNN
Fans pay tribute to Ozzy Osbourne
Fans have gathered in Ozzy Osbourne's hometown to pay tribute to the former Black Sabbath singer, who died yesterday at the age of 76. One of them told CNN's Salma Abdelaziz that Osbourne will 'live on forever in his music.'
01:07 - Source: CNN
Hot Chinese brands are coming to America
Chinese brands like Luckin Coffee, Pop Mart, and HEYTEA are expanding in the United States, despite the ongoing trade war. CNN's Vanessa Yurkevich and Marc Stewart report from two different continents on why the companies covet American customers.
02:10 - Source: CNN
Metal legend Ozzy Osbourne dies at 76-years-old
Ozzy Osbourne, the hellraising frontman of Black Sabbath and reality TV star, has died aged 76. CNN's Stephanie Elam looks back at the legendary career as the Godfather of Heavy Metal.
03:05 - Source: CNN
Newly uncovered photos show Jeffrey Epstein attended Trump's wedding in 1993
Photos from Trump's 1993 wedding and video footage from 1999 Victoria's Secret fashion show shed light on Trump-Epstein relationship. CNN's Andrew Kaczynski has the story.
01:31 - Source: CNN
Missing child case from 46 years ago reopened
A federal appeals court overturned the verdict of Pedro Hernandez, the bodega worker who was found guilty in 2017 of kidnapping and murdering Etan Patz in 1979. Patz was 6 years old when he disappeared on the first day he was allowed to walk alone to his school bus stop in New York City.
01:50 - Source: CNN
US citizen among Druze executed in Syria
Hosam Saraya, a 35-year-old Syrian-American from Oklahoma, was among eight men, all family members, rounded up and killed in an execution-style attack amid an outbreak of sectarian violence in Syria this month. The violence flared between Syrian Druze groups and Bedouin tribes in the Druze-majority Suwayda province. Video geolocated by CNN shows a group of men, Saraya included, being marched to their death.
02:04 - Source: CNN
Epstein's brother vividly details relationship between Trump and Epstein
Jeffrey Epstein's brother, Mark, tells CNN's Erin Burnett about his brother's 'very close' friendship with Donald Trump in the 1990s.
02:01 - Source: CNN
Stephen Colbert addresses 'The Late Show' cancellation
'Cancel culture has gone too far,' Stephen Colbert told the audience as he began his first post-cancellation episode of 'The Late Show.' The host went on to fire back at Trump's Truth Social post celebrating the announcement by CBS. The episode also featured cameos by late night talk show hosts including Jimmy Fallon, Jon Stewart, John Oliver and Seth Meyers.
01:24 - Source: CNN
Fire tornado rips through Turkish forest
Turkey's forestry ministry has released video of a fire tornado tearing through the country's woodland. Hundreds of wildfires have gripped Turkey this summer, as well as Greece and other Mediterranean countries.
00:33 - Source: CNN
Breonna Taylor's mother speaks out on officer's sentencing
CNN's Laura Coates speaks with Tamika Palmer, Breonna Taylor's mother, about the sentencing of former Louisville police officer Brett Hankison. He was given three years in prison for using excessive force during the deadly 2020 Breonna Taylor raid.
01:45 - Source: CNN

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The 2026 campaign has already kicked off, with ads focused on Medicaid, Trump tax cuts
By Helen Coster and James Oliphant NEW YORK (Reuters) -Residents of Columbus, Indiana awoke last week to a yellow billboard purchased by the Democratic National Committee blaring: 'Under Trump's Watch, Columbus Regional Health is Cutting Medical Services." Meanwhile, the National Republican Congressional Committee, which oversees races for the U.S. House of Representatives, this month launched a digital ad campaign touting President Donald Trump's tax cuts and blaming Democrats for spiking inflation. As members of Congress return to their home districts for the August recess, the Democratic and Republican parties are launching ad blitzes centered around the tax-cut and spending bill Trump signed into law on July 4, in an unofficial start to the 2026 midterm election campaign. Democrats are focusing their message around access to healthcare, three party operatives and three officials from allied groups told Reuters. Republicans are countering that the tax provisions will put more money in voters' pockets – particularly wage workers and seniors, four party operatives said. The bill makes permanent Trump's 2017 tax cuts and funds his immigration enforcement crackdown, while reducing health care and food aid. It devotes $170 billion to immigration enforcement while cutting $1.1 trillion from Medicaid and other public health programs and $186 billion in food assistance. The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office estimated that 10 million people would lose their health insurance by 2034 as a result of the bill, and that the tax provisions and increased immigration and military spending would increase the federal deficit by $3.4 trillion over the next decade. "How voters feel about Trump and the economy may be the most important factor next fall - but so is how voters feel about the Republican response to their concern," said Jacob Rubashkin, a nonpartisan analyst with Inside Elections. Republican strategists concede that Democrats, who campaigned against the bill while it was working its way through the Republican-controlled House and Senate, are starting with an upper hand in messaging around the legislation. But they say they have plenty of time to sell the bill's benefits. "We will use every tool to show voters that the provisions in this bill are widely popular,' said Mike Marinella, a spokesman for the NRCC. And the party has a cash advantage. The RNC had $81 million in cash at the end of June, according to Federal Election Commission data, compared to the DNC's $15 million during the same period. The DNC has trailed the RNC in fundraising in the first half of the year at the same time as it has deepened its financial commitments, spending in every state, FEC disclosures show. The RNC also enjoys a huge asset in a sitting president who is still holding fundraisers for big-ticket donors. 'At the end of the day, Democrats got a jump start on messaging,' said a Republican Senate operative who asked to remain anonymous to discuss party strategy. 'They have won the battle. Now we have to focus on winning the war.' Republicans can only afford a net loss of two of the 220 seats they hold in the House to maintain control. In the Senate, they have a 53-47 advantage. "CRITICAL OPPORTUNITY" The messaging battle, largely focused on battleground states and districts, is key to defining the bill in the minds of voters. 'The bill is currently unpopular, and there's been a lot of conversation among Republicans about how to refocus on the more popular aspects and use the upcoming recess to sell the bill to skeptical voters,' Rubashkin said. According to a Reuters/Ipsos poll, conducted last month as the bill was moving through Congress, some 64% of registered voters oppose cuts to Medicaid and food stamps in return for lower taxes for everyone. Democrats are seizing on that sentiment, pushing the idea that Republicans have taken away healthcare to pay for tax giveaways for billionaires. The DNC has purchased billboards in a handful of Republican districts facing reduced services and shutdown of rural hospitals and health facilities. 'Republicans threw working families under the bus to fund tax cuts for the wealthy, and we'll never let them — or voters — forget that,' said DNC Deputy Communications Director Abhi Rahman in a statement to Reuters. 'This will define the midterms.' Republicans say the bill's provisions on tips, overtime and Social Security show the party is focused on issues affecting working families. They also point to a $50 billion fund the bill establishes to help rural hospitals. In a memo earlier this month, the National Republican Senatorial Committee encouraged candidates to talk about the bill in personalized terms, highlighting 'service industry workers who will keep more of their hard-earned tips,' 'first responders and critical workers who will keep more of their overtime pay' and 'working parents and caretakers who benefit from increased tax credits for child and dependent care.' Another Republican strategy memo prepared by Tony Fabrizio and David Lee, Trump's pollsters, urges candidates to "lead on kitchen-table issues." The memo was commissioned by One Nation, a super PAC that last week launched a $10-million-plus TV and digital ad blitz playing up the tax features of the bill. The ads will air in states like Georgia and Texas where Republicans are defending seats. Another Republican PAC, Americans for Prosperity, the conservative advocacy group founded by Charles Koch and the late David Koch, will launch a TV and digital ad campaign in key districts next month, said Bill Riggs, a spokesperson for AFP. And the American Action Network is running TV and digital ads in 29 battleground congressional districts in Arizona, California, New York and Pennsylvania, emphasizing tax cuts and border security. "It's a new America, full of hope, thanks to President Trump and House Republicans," the ad intones. 'TRUMP TAX' Democrats, meanwhile, are trying to tie Medicaid cuts to reduced healthcare access and higher costs. The DNC's website claims that the bill will "cost the poorest 10% of households $1,600 a year while raising the income of the richest 10% of Americans by $12,000 a year." Unrig Our Economy, a left-leaning outside group focused on populist economic messaging, is running ads in Iowa, Arizona and Pennsylvania depicting voters voicing frustration at their Republican lawmakers for voting for Trump's bill. 'I'm so angry that Congresswoman Mariannette Miller-Meeks just voted for the largest cut to Medicaid in history to give tax breaks to billionaires,' said one ad running in Iowa, featuring a Davenport resident identified as Maria. The group plans to spend $7 million by the end of the year, according to spokesperson Kobie Christian. On Monday the group launched a 'multi-million dollar' ad campaign focused on the Medicaid cuts in four Texas congressional districts. Protect Our Care, a left-leaning healthcare advocacy organization, said it plans to spend up to $10 million on ads in the first half of next year, largely focused on urging Republican lawmakers to restore funding to Medicaid. 'Republicans won't be able to spin their way out of their parents being kicked out of a nursing home,' said Brad Woodhouse, the group's executive director. Environmental groups are also targeting the bill's rollback of clean energy incentives. Climate Power and the League of Conservation Voters spent $500,000 on an ad pressuring lawmakers in six congressional districts to vote against the bill, claiming that it will increase electricity rates, according to League of Conservation Voters President Pete Maysmith. 'The bill just happened, so let's start communicating with people when it's fresh and happening,' said Maysmith. 'We don't want to show up later and try to pick up that conversation.'
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19 minutes ago
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William Watson: Government-managed trade is sure to fail again
Those are some trade deals Donald Trump is shaking hands on — but so far not releasing details about. The U.S. gets tariff-free access to other countries while other countries pay stiff across-the-board tariffs going into the U.S. The U.K. pays 10 per cent, the EU and Japan 15 per cent, Indonesia and the Philippines 19 per cent and Vietnam 20 per cent. What China will pay remains to be determined. It typically pushes back more in response to Trump's jibes and jabs. Perhaps President Xi Jinping read the sections of the Art of the Deal about the need to stand up to bullies. Silly question: If a virtue of tariffs is that they're clean and simple, as the U.S. president always says, wouldn't it be a lot easier to have the same across-the-board rate for all countries? And whatever happened to 'reciprocity,' which the White House was big on a couple of months ago? Tariffs of 10-20 per cent for other countries' goods going into the U.S. but zero for American goods entering other countries are hardly 'reciprocal.' Yes, the rates chosen supposedly reflect the amount of procedural protectionism or non-tariff barriers (NTBs) that countries impose on U.S. goods. Except that no systematic study of that in fact much-studied problem has produced numbers that look like the pattern the deals reveal. And of course the U.S. itself is no stranger to NTBs and procedural protectionism. Just ask our softwood lumber industry. What the emerging regime looks like most is affirmative action for American businesses. They evidently can't compete with wily foreigners deploying unfair practices against them. And they're unwilling to abide by the (presumably rigged) decisions of international trade tribunals set up, under U.S. leadership actually, to make sure governments discriminate as little as possible against one another's firms. Even as the Trump administration abolishes affirmative action from U.S. society in general, it imposes it in international trade. Also strange are the commitments by other countries to invest given dollar amounts in the U.S. and to buy given amounts of U.S. goods, especially Boeing aircraft. Japan's going to buy 100 Boeing planes (not clear yet whether doors will be extra) and invest $550 billion in the U.S., with the U.S. somehow getting 90 per cent of the profit on this investment. Details to follow. When we economists teach international trade theory we customarily talk about (to cite the classic example) Portugal selling wine to the U.K. in return for wool. But in the real world, the non-communist parts of it at least, countries generally don't buy and sell goods and services to each other. Rather, people and companies in their millions and billions decide what goods and services to buy and their accumulated choices generate the trade flows we see. That type of trade system accords very well with the traditionally very American view that governments should not run economies, people and businesses should, with the government restricting itself to policing property rights and providing good public services at a reasonable tax price. But now governments, America's included, apparently want to manage the intricate details of the supply chain. In support of the Trump tariffs, some American politicians say it's simply not efficient for car parts to cross the Canada-U.S. or U.S.-Mexico border several times before cars are complete, as sometimes happens. But who are they to say? Since 1965's Canada-U.S. Auto Pact car companies have decided, free of tariffs, how best to put cars together. If it made economic sense to make and assemble all the parts in one location — if that's what maxed out their profits — you can bet that's what they'd do. If they don't do that, it's because that isn't the most efficient way to do things, given costs, technologies and transportation costs. Politicians should stick to matters such as Jeffrey Epstein and let car companies figure out how best to make cars. Why have Americans traditionally resisted government micro-management of the economy? Have a listen to the soundtrack of Hamilton. Because they abhor the concentration of power in a politico-industrial complex. Because not even a stable genius in the White House — not to suggest that's what we have now — would be smart enough to outsmart the combined intelligence and creativity of the entire American population when channelled through price- and efficiency-revealing markets. And, finally, because the invisible hand of competition is the best way to restrain the grasping hand of corruption. Corruption is not unknown in the private sector, of course. Humans are humans everywhere and always prey to temptation. But if you have competition — which in a small country like Canada is often provided by imports and foreign investors — companies or individuals that go astray get punished in the marketplace. And decisions don't get made for political reasons. Donald Trump always says he wants Canadian auto jobs to move to Michigan and Ohio, which, no coincidence, are two battleground states. Every president, not just the transparently venal, will favour places he wants his party to win in the next election, whenever that is. The only way to avoid such corruption is to remove power from politicians and vest it in markets. William Watson: All checks, no balances here in Nastyland William Watson: Our better-funded military will need to be more lethal I do understand such arguments are in disfavour at the moment. I bet the future vindicates them, as it always does. But the process won't be fun. 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Opinion: Forget the G7. We need an FT8 — a Free Trade Eight
By Kevin Lynch and Paul Deegan As a means of pursuing American interests, President Donald Trump clearly views tariffs as an alternative to military power. His MAGA base, deeply sceptical of foreign military engagements, supports tariffs pitched as getting back at others who have been ripping off America. 'Tariff Man' is welding geo-politics, geo-economics and populism into a new global American weapon — tariffs — while making almost no distinction between friend and foe. His tactics — threats to sovereignty, name-calling, flip-flops and Truth Social tirades — may appear haphazard but his strategy has become crystal clear. First, he intends to level a baseline tariff of 10 to 15 per cent against all countries to raise revenues to help pay for his 'One Big Beautiful Bill.' As Team Trump's reaction to the market's reaction to 'Liberation Day' tariffs showed, it is terrified of fixed-income vigilantes driving up long-term U.S. bond yields, especially given the historic increase in U.S. government debt. Trump would never admit his tariffs are a partial consumption tax but his threats to American retailers and producers not to raise prices show he understands they are. Second, Trump will threaten additional, higher tariffs to achieve trade-policy outcomes, whether it be: getting countries to buy specific American goods; opening up markets to U.S. exporters (think dairy and supply management for Canada); or supporting selected American producers (think copper, steel, and aluminum), supposedly in the interests of national security, with prohibitive import tariffs that are essentially a subsidy financed by higher prices for American consumers. Third, Trump is using tariffs to drive American foreign policy and extra-territoriality. Recent examples include demanding Brazil halt prosecution of former president Jair Bolsonaro, Canada ditch its Digital Services Tax, and NATO countries raise defence spending to five per cent of GDP. Finally, Trump is employing his own unpredictability to weaponize uncertainty and shift investment towards the U.S. Business plans that depend on exporting to the U.S. are now much more risky — which is very bad news for this country's growth prospects. After 36 mutually beneficial years, free trade with the United States is now dead. Managed trade, with U.S. tariffs and quotas, is the new reality. And the threat will not end with a short-term deal. We had a deal with Trump — CUSMA — and though he's honouring it for the time being, no one should expect it will last beyond next year's renegotiation. So, what should we do? First, we should not overpay for the new 'managed trade' regime with the U.S. And we should retaliate by restricting government procurement, including defence, to like-minded countries that respect trade agreements with us. Provincial and territorial governments should eliminate their barriers to internal trade and reconsider their own procurement regimes. Corporate Canada needs to step up as well and seek out competitive Canadian suppliers. Second, we need to diversify our trade to like-minded trade partners, particularly the EU, Japan, the U.K. and South Korea. Urgency and practicality are key here, not comprehensive trade agreements that take years to negotiate, so sector-specific agreements should be the focus. We should also prioritize shifting our exports that are of great value to the U.S., such as oil, gas and potash, to new markets in Asia and Europe. Third, we should learn from the Americans' panic over Chinese retaliatory embargoes of rare earths and rapidly build our capacity to mine and process these critical resources of the future, both to diversify our trade and to give ourselves more leverage with the Americans in future trade troubles, which are inevitable. Bill C-5 is a good start, but we have to get diggers in the ground, fast. Finally, we should work with European and Asian allies to create a new group of countries committed to freer, fairer and enforceable trade rules. Doing so could revitalize national banking centres at the expense of New York, eventually leading to less dominance of the American dollar and banking system in international trade. Given today's attacks on free trade by America and China, Prime Minister Mark Carney should promote a new 'FT8' focused on preserving trade liberalization: the current G7, minus the U.S., but plus South Korea and Australia, to begin with. Philip Cross: Does threatening to fire the head of a central bank also threaten its independence? Jack Mintz: Canadian exporters are facing a triple-whammy Canada has a skilled workforce, strong post-secondary institutions, entrepreneurial innovators, a strong and stable financial system, energy and natural resources in abundance, a central bank whose independence is not under daily political threat, and much lower relative deficits and debt than the Americans. In short, we have everything we need to compete economically — provided we are willing to pivot and change. Passing Bill C-5 demonstrated willingness to work in the national interest in times of crisis. Let's build on that with urgency and determination, rally our like-minded allies, and help guide the world through this dark passage for liberal trade. Kevin Lynch was Clerk of the Privy Council and vice-chair of BMO Financial Group. Paul Deegan, a former executive at BMO and CN, is CEO of Deegan Public Strategies.