Elizabeth Warren Calls for Bribery Investigation Into Paramount-Trump Settlement as Blowback Widens
Sen. Elizabeth Warren said that she is demanding an investigation into the settlement, and said that she 'will soon introduce new legislation to rein in corruption through presidential library donations.'
More from The Hollywood Reporter
Inside CBS News, Staffers Voice Disgust, Anger, Relief and Anxiety After Trump Settlement
Paramount and Trump in "Advanced" Settlement Talks As Merger Deadline Nears
"BET Is Not Immune" From Paramount Job Cuts, CEO Scott Mills Says in Unveiling "Streamlining"
'With Paramount folding to Donald Trump at the same time the company needs his administration's approval for its billion-dollar merger, this could be bribery in plain sight,' Warren said in a statement. 'Paramount has refused to provide answers to a congressional inquiry, so I'm calling for a full investigation into whether or not any anti-bribery laws were broken.'
In addition, Democratic FCC commissioner Anna Gomez released a statement requesting that the broadcast regulator, chaired by Brendan Carr, bring the pending Paramount-Skydance transaction to a full-commission vote.
'This moment marks a dangerous precedent for the First Amendment, and it should alarm anyone who values a free and independent press,' Gomez said. 'Approving this transaction behind closed doors would be a shameful outcome that denies the American people the transparency and accountability they deserve, especially when press freedom is at stake.'
The settlement between Paramount and Trump will see the media giant pay $16 million ($15 million to a future presidential library and $1 million in legal fees), but it will not include an apology. That said, the settlement does require that 60 Minutes release any future transcripts with presidential candidates.
Paramount had said previously that 'this lawsuit is completely separate from, and unrelated to, the Skydance transaction and the FCC approval process. We will abide by the legal process to defend our case.'
Still, the pending license transfer at the FCC has raised alarm bells, with Democratic members of Congress and outside groups suggesting that if the FCC approves the deal after a settlement, Paramount executives could be exposed to anti-bribery laws. The Paramount settlement is similar in scale to a settlement from Disney over an ABC News broadcast.
Inside CBS News, staffers expressed anxiety and relief at the settlement, angry at the precedent it sets, but relieved that they can move on without it hanging over their work.
Best of The Hollywood Reporter
How the Warner Brothers Got Their Film Business Started
Meet the World Builders: Hollywood's Top Physical Production Executives of 2023
Men in Blazers, Hollywood's Favorite Soccer Podcast, Aims for a Global Empire
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
27 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Stock market today: Dow, S&P 500, Nasdaq futures slump after Trump's sweeping tariffs, Amazon's earnings flub
US stock futures sank on Friday after President Trump officially hit virtually every US trading partner with sweeping tariff hikes, pushing ahead with his plan to remake the global trade order. Dow Jones Industrial Average futures (YM=F) dropped 1%, while those on the S&P 500 (ES=F) also fell 1%. Contracts on the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 (NQ=F) dived 1.1%, on the heels of a losing day for the major US gauges. The retreat in stocks came as markets assessed the reshaped US trade landscape after President Trump on Thursday hit dozens of countries — including crucial partners Taiwan and India — with steep new tariffs. His executive order formally authorized a hike in levies on Canada to 35%, to go into effect on Friday. Most of the other "reciprocal" rates range from 15% to 40% (though the baseline remains 10%) and will be implemented in seven days. The White House also confirmed details of trade agreements negotiated by some trading partners before the Aug 1. deadline for "Liberation Day" tariffs to hit. But Trump said the implementation of the hiked levies will be pushed back by seven days, opening up scope for more talks. Read more: The latest on Trump's tariffs Also dragging on spirits was disappointment over Amazon's (AMZN) earnings released late Thursday. The performance of its AWS cloud unit failed to live up to lofty expectations set by rivals Google (GOOG, GOOGL) and Microsoft (MSFT), sending its shares down over 8%. But Apple (AAPL) stock rose after its results beat expectations, boosted by surprisingly strong iPhone sales. A blockbuster week on Wall Street is set to end not just with trade turmoil but also with the July jobs report, which is expected to show hiring slowed while unemployment ticked higher. The key indicator of US economic health will be closely watched by the Federal Reserve, whose preferred inflation gauge on Thursday showed signs of increasing price pressures. Chevron (CVX) beat analyst estimates on Friday for second-quarter profit as record oil and gas production and lower capital expenditure helped the US oil producer boost earnings despite weaker crude prices. Chevron shares were flat in premarket trading. Reuters reports: Read more here. Exxon beats profit estimates with higher production despite weak oil prices Shares in Exxon Mobil (XOM) rose more than 1% before the bell on Friday after the company beat Wall Street estimate for second-quarter profit as higher oil and gas production helped the top US oil producer overcome lower crude prices. Reuters reports: Read more here. Eyes on Figma, day two After a sizzling 250% surge on Thursday IPO day, Figma (FIG) is up another 8% pre-market. You are watching the forming of a stock bubble in real time here! I encourage you to read up on the company's not so impressive financials this weekend. US stock losses pick up pace after Trump's tariff blitz The retreat in US stock futures accelerated on Friday morning as Wall Street weighed the likely fallout from President Trump's trade war. The broad benchmark S&P 500 (ES=F) was down 1% with four hours to go before the market open, having held not far below the flat line in earlier overnight trade. Futures on The Dow Jones Industrial Average (YM=F) sank 0.9%, while contracts on the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 (NQ=F) dived 1.1%. Markets are assessing the reshaped US trade landscape after President Trump on Thursday hit dozens of countries — including crucial partners Taiwan and India — with steep new tariffs. July jobs report on deck: What to watch The countdown is on for the release of the US nonfarm-payrolls reading for July, the final piece in a string of top-tier data this week. Yahoo Finance's Josh Schafer lays out what's in store: Read more here. Asian markets slide as tariffs rock global boat Asian markets fell overnight Thursday following the White House's announcement that Trump's sweeping tariffs on many of America's largest trading partners will be implemented in varying degrees of severity. Reuters reports: Read more here. Chevron (CVX) beat analyst estimates on Friday for second-quarter profit as record oil and gas production and lower capital expenditure helped the US oil producer boost earnings despite weaker crude prices. Chevron shares were flat in premarket trading. Reuters reports: Read more here. Chevron (CVX) beat analyst estimates on Friday for second-quarter profit as record oil and gas production and lower capital expenditure helped the US oil producer boost earnings despite weaker crude prices. Chevron shares were flat in premarket trading. Reuters reports: Read more here. Exxon beats profit estimates with higher production despite weak oil prices Shares in Exxon Mobil (XOM) rose more than 1% before the bell on Friday after the company beat Wall Street estimate for second-quarter profit as higher oil and gas production helped the top US oil producer overcome lower crude prices. Reuters reports: Read more here. Shares in Exxon Mobil (XOM) rose more than 1% before the bell on Friday after the company beat Wall Street estimate for second-quarter profit as higher oil and gas production helped the top US oil producer overcome lower crude prices. Reuters reports: Read more here. Eyes on Figma, day two After a sizzling 250% surge on Thursday IPO day, Figma (FIG) is up another 8% pre-market. You are watching the forming of a stock bubble in real time here! I encourage you to read up on the company's not so impressive financials this weekend. After a sizzling 250% surge on Thursday IPO day, Figma (FIG) is up another 8% pre-market. You are watching the forming of a stock bubble in real time here! I encourage you to read up on the company's not so impressive financials this weekend. US stock losses pick up pace after Trump's tariff blitz The retreat in US stock futures accelerated on Friday morning as Wall Street weighed the likely fallout from President Trump's trade war. The broad benchmark S&P 500 (ES=F) was down 1% with four hours to go before the market open, having held not far below the flat line in earlier overnight trade. Futures on The Dow Jones Industrial Average (YM=F) sank 0.9%, while contracts on the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 (NQ=F) dived 1.1%. Markets are assessing the reshaped US trade landscape after President Trump on Thursday hit dozens of countries — including crucial partners Taiwan and India — with steep new tariffs. The retreat in US stock futures accelerated on Friday morning as Wall Street weighed the likely fallout from President Trump's trade war. The broad benchmark S&P 500 (ES=F) was down 1% with four hours to go before the market open, having held not far below the flat line in earlier overnight trade. Futures on The Dow Jones Industrial Average (YM=F) sank 0.9%, while contracts on the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 (NQ=F) dived 1.1%. Markets are assessing the reshaped US trade landscape after President Trump on Thursday hit dozens of countries — including crucial partners Taiwan and India — with steep new tariffs. July jobs report on deck: What to watch The countdown is on for the release of the US nonfarm-payrolls reading for July, the final piece in a string of top-tier data this week. Yahoo Finance's Josh Schafer lays out what's in store: Read more here. The countdown is on for the release of the US nonfarm-payrolls reading for July, the final piece in a string of top-tier data this week. Yahoo Finance's Josh Schafer lays out what's in store: Read more here. Asian markets slide as tariffs rock global boat Asian markets fell overnight Thursday following the White House's announcement that Trump's sweeping tariffs on many of America's largest trading partners will be implemented in varying degrees of severity. Reuters reports: Read more here. Asian markets fell overnight Thursday following the White House's announcement that Trump's sweeping tariffs on many of America's largest trading partners will be implemented in varying degrees of severity. Reuters reports: Read more here. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data
Yahoo
27 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Here's when the economic data may start showing the tariff impact
The US economy will undoubtedly feel the impact of President Trump's tariffs. But when might it start showing up in the data? Morgan Stanley chief global economist Seth Carpenter took a closer look to get a rough idea. To watch more expert insights and analysis on the latest market action, check out more Market Catalysts. You, of course, along with everybody else has been following the effects of tariffs here in the US and globally. Um, we know that there is a lag, uh, because of when and how the tariffs have been instituted. This is something that Chair Powell has been talking about. What's your view on the question of when we will start to see it more and whether that effect is going to be sustained? Yeah, I know. It's a key, key question here, and so we tried to do a bunch of work looking at what happened in 2018, for example, looking at everything we can scrounge from, uh, looking at changes in prices for supply chains. Looks like, uh, in a macro sense, it's about three, four months after tariffs get implemented that you start to see it in the inflation data, and then it's probably two, maybe three quarters until you start to see the effects of tariffs pushing down economic growth. If you remember back in 2018, uh, when President Trump was president before, tariffs on China were imposed the second half of 2018. We saw some disruption to manufacturing because two-thirds of what we import from China are either capital goods or intermediate goods that go into manufacturing in the US. So the tariffs are just taxes on US manufacturing. We saw manufacturing and industrial production start to fall in the second half of 2018 and keep falling for 2019. So where are we this time around? Well, we know that we just got some inflation data for the month of June, and it looks like the most of the tariff-sensitive categories started to show that pickup. So that's kind of that three or four month lag that we had in mind. So we expect, uh, the inflation data to keep showing increases in tariff-sensitive, uh, categories for the next several months, really, uh, pushing up inflation for the third quarter quite notably. And then, you know, the fourth quarter, we're probably going to see a big drag on the economy coming in from tariffs, augmented by the drag that the immigration restriction is doing. So we're seeing everything play out in the data now as we had anticipated. And so Seth, that implies that people on the street who were waiting for the Fed to cut rates, they might be disappointed for a while, not to mention the president himself. Yeah, I think that's right. Our base case, once we had the announcement of tariffs coming in faster, bigger, sooner than we had originally thought, they all came in really aggressively in the beginning of the year, we changed our forecast. We said if that's the way it's going to work out, the Fed probably won't cut rates at all this year in 2025. The logic being, and it's very consistent with what, uh, Chair Powell said yesterday, inflation is still above target, and the labor market for now is just fine. And so there's no reason for the Fed to cut in that circumstance. If inflation goes higher from here, well, that gives them all the more reason to stay where they are with policy slightly restrictive. And even if and when we start to see some degradation in the economy, some slowdown in the labor market, if inflation is still now high and rising at that point, the bar for them to cut rates has got to get worse, uh, as long as inflation is rising. So that's how we get to the idea that they're probably not going to cut rates this year. Uh, the market was in a very different place from us, uh, a month ago, two months ago, uh, judging from where things are now, the market's putting a little bit less than even odds on a cut in September, reducing the expectation for cuts this year. Uh, so I'd say the market is coming to the same view that we have. Um Seth, sort of looking at it as a case study, I know you're looking at autos and auto pricing, which has not seen sort of the effect of tariffs. Um, so could you walk us through that just as an example to sort of illustrate how they you get these these lags and the effect? Absolutely. Now, the auto industry is very much the the exception that proves the rule in this case. Uh, it's a industry very, very large, and yet dominated by a much smaller number of firms. And what we think we're hearing anecdotally and possibly seeing in the data is that for now, some of the larger firms are are waiting. They're absorbing some of the costs in their margin until they get a better sense of exactly where these tariffs are going to end up. There's also a sense that they can wait and see if, you know, maybe they can take some market share, uh, because, um, you know, other other firms are facing higher costs. And if you can keep your prices down for a while and take some market share while the rest of the industry is is suffering, then that's another possibility. So I do think the auto industry is about a bit of pain now in terms of absorbing the costs in the margin, that can't last forever. And so we expect those prices and autos to start to come up in the next few months as well, maybe a bit more of a delay than the rest of the economy. Related Videos US GDP Grows by 3% in Second Quarter IMF's Gourinchas Says Tariffs Causing Tepid Growth Job openings data falls short of estimates Goldman's Kaplan Says Fed Should Ready for September Cut Sign in to access your portfolio


Bloomberg
27 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
Citi Sees Africa Trading More With China, EU After US Tariff Hit
African trade flows may shift further away from the US after President Donald Trump announced a slew of new tariffs, the head of Citigroup Inc. 's regional office said. Trump unveiled a revised global plan on Thursday that imposed levies as high as 30% on imports from countries including South Africa — the continent's biggest economy — and Algeria. Goods from other major economies including Nigeria and Ghana face US duties of 15%.