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France to Officially Recognize Palestinian State

France to Officially Recognize Palestinian State

President Emmanuel Macron says France will officially recognize a Palestinian state, making it the first G-7 country to do so. Photo: Ludovic Marin/Agence France-Presse/Getty Images; Abed Rahim Khatib/Zuma Press
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Trump's 35% tariffs on Canada take effect as trade talks deadline lapses
Trump's 35% tariffs on Canada take effect as trade talks deadline lapses

Axios

time13 minutes ago

  • Axios

Trump's 35% tariffs on Canada take effect as trade talks deadline lapses

President Trump's tariffs order for countries yet to strike a trade deal with the U.S. went into effect just after midnight on Friday, though most levies aren't due to start until Aug. 7. Why it matters: While countries like Mexico struck trade deal extensions ahead of Trump's deadline, others face steep tariffs. The president increased Some Canadian goods imported to the U.S. on Thursday to 35%, effective 12:01am Friday ET. An appeals court is now considering the legality of the tariffs, and the judges have indicated they're wary of the Trump administration's argument that global trade imbalances amounted to a national emergency. Zoom in: Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney said Wednesday he had expected trade talks to continue beyond the deadline, but his pledge to recognize Palestinian statehood prompted Trump to say it "will make it very hard for us to make a Trade Deal" with the North American neighbor. Trump said at a Thursday briefing he "didn't like" Carney's plans, but it's "not a deal-breaker." He told NBC News late Thursday that he hadn't spoken with Carney but didn't plan to strike a deal before the deadline. The reason a White House fact sheet gave on the tariffs was the Trump administration's belief that Canadian officials had "failed to cooperate in curbing" the flow of drugs into the U.S. from the border. The U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) on trade is exempt from the tariffs hike. The latest: Carney said in a statement early Friday that pledged to continue negotiating with the Trump administration that the USMCA exemption meant that "the average U.S. tariff rate on Canadian goods remains one of the lowest for all of its trading partners." His statement that was posted to his social media channels noted that Canada accounts for 1% of U.S. fentanyl imports and that Canadian officials were working to further reduce this and the country's government was making "historic investments" in border security. State of play: Trump made a series of trade deals in the leadup to the Aug. 1 deadline, including with the European Union, the U.K. and Japan. Despite the deadline date, many of the tariffs will become effective seven days after Trump's July 31 order. Some nations got substantially lowered rates versus what was first announced in April. Trump confirmed Thursday that imports from most nations would face a baseline tariff rate of 10%, but he increased the levy of close trading partner Canada to 35% as threatened.

UCLA says it is losing some federal research funding
UCLA says it is losing some federal research funding

NBC News

time14 minutes ago

  • NBC News

UCLA says it is losing some federal research funding

The California university UCLA said Thursday that it has been notified that it is losing federal research funding over alleged antisemtism, a move the chancellor called "a loss for America." 'UCLA received a notice that the federal government, through its control of the National Science Foundation (NSF), the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and other agencies, is suspending certain research funding to UCLA,' university Chancellor Julio Frenk said in a message to the campus community. 'This is not only a loss to the researchers who rely on critical grants. It is a loss for Americans across the nation whose work, health, and future depend on the groundbreaking work we do,' he wrote. The announced notice comes as the Trump administration has sought to pressure or retaliate against universities across the country following student protests on college campuses about the war in Gaza. Some Republican members of Congress and others have called the protests and some of the conduct antisemitic. Frenk in his message to the UCLA community said that the federal government used antisemitism as its reason for the loss of funding. "In its notice to us, the federal government claims antisemitism and bias as the reasons. This far-reaching penalty of defunding life-saving research does nothing to address any alleged discrimination," he wrote. UCLA announced Tuesday that it has agreed to pay $6 million to settle a lawsuit that alleged discrimination, and which was brought by Jewish students and a faculty member. The lawsuit filed in June 2024 accused the university of failing to take action when pro-Palestinian protesters set up encampments on campus that spring. Frenk wrote in the message to the Bruin community — as the UCLA community is known — that antisemitism has no place on campus but acknowledged room for improvement. He said that the university has taken steps to combat it, and put in place policies about student protests. The National Science Foundation and the National Institutes of Health did not immediately respond to requests for comment late Thursday. Frenk in his message to the university did not say how much federal funding will be suspended. He highlighted important work done by UCLA, which included helping to create what would become the Internet, and he said researchers "are now building new technologies that could fuel entire industries and help safeguard our soldiers." President Donald Trump during his campaign pledged to crack down on universities because of student protests against the war in Gaza, which Israel launched against Hamas after the Hamas attacks on Oct. 7, 2023, that targeted Israeli civilians, including at a music festival. There is now a humanitarian crisis in Gaza, and this week t he United Nations said the U.N.'s Integrated Food Security Phase Classification, or IPC, showed mounting evidence of a worsening famine there. The IPC emphasized that its warning constituted an alert and was not a formal 'famine classification.' Columbia University in New York City was among the universities targeted by the Trump administration over allegations of antisemitism, and last week Columbia announced a settlement with the federal government in an effort to restore cut federal funding. Brown University in Rhode Island said Wednesday that it reached an agreement with the federal government to restore funding. The university said that agreement resolves three reviews of Brown's 'compliance with federal nondiscrimination obligations.'

Daily Beast apologizes and retracts article alleging a Melania Trump-Jeffrey Epstein link
Daily Beast apologizes and retracts article alleging a Melania Trump-Jeffrey Epstein link

New York Post

timean hour ago

  • New York Post

Daily Beast apologizes and retracts article alleging a Melania Trump-Jeffrey Epstein link

The Daily Beast took down an article Thursday alleging a modeling agent connected to notorious sex predator Jeffrey Epstein introduced Melania Trump to her husband, President Trump. The article, which detailed claims made by author Michael Wolff on a Daily Beast podcast, was replaced with an editor's note apologizing 'for any confusion' after the first lady's lawyers contacted the lefty outlet. 3 The article suggested that Melania met her husband through a modeling agent connected with Epstein and Trump. Getty Images Advertisement 'After this story was published, The Beast received a letter from First Lady Melania Trump's attorney challenging the headline and framing of the article,' read the editor's note. 'After reviewing the matter, the Beast has taken down the article and apologizes for any confusion or misunderstanding,' it added. The original headline, body text, image and URL on the article were all scrubbed from the Daily Beast's website. Advertisement Wolff — who President Trump last month blasted as a 'Third Rate Reporter … laughed at even by the scoundrels of the Fake News' — charged in an interview with 'The Daily Beast Podcast' Saturday that Melania was 'very involved' in Trump's 'relationship' with Epstein. 'She's introduced by a model agent, both of whom Trump and Epstein are involved with. She's introduced to Trump that way,' Wolff alleged. 'Epstein knows her well.' The 'Fire & Fury' author's reporting has drawn heavy skepticism from journalists in the past. 'Wolff is a shoddy, dishonest journalist and his book has to be read with suspicion,' left-wing journalist Jeet Heer wrote in The New Republic in 2018, arguing that 'Wolff clearly plays loose with the facts' in his book about Trump's first term in the White House. Advertisement 3 Melania's lawyers challenged the framing of the Daily Beast article. Getty Images That same year, New York Times reporter Maggie Haberman told CNN that Wolff 'gets basic details wrong' in his book and 'creates a narrative that is notionally true, conceptually true' but with details that are 'often wrong.' In her self-titled 2024 memoir, Melania explained that she met Trump at a September 1998 Fashion Week party at the Kit Kat Klub in New York City. 'I saw my friend wave at someone behind me. When I turned around, I noticed a man and an attractive blonde woman approaching us,' Melania wrote. ''Hi. I'm Donald Trump,' the man said when he reached my table.' Advertisement Trump sat down next to his future wife and started a conversation, Melania recalled. 3 The story was retracted by the left-wing news outlet on Thursday. Daily Beast 'From the moment our conversation began, I was captivated by his charm and easygoing nature,' she wrote, noting that their back-and-forth was a 'refreshing departure from the usual superficial small talk' and made her feel like 'the center of his world.' 'I found myself drawn to his magnetic energy.' The president and his administration have faced pressure from his base to release more documents related to Epstein and the federal child sex trafficking case against the late financier, who was found dead in his Manhattan jail cell in 2019 as he awaited trial. His death was ruled a suicide.

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