
First Thing: Trump says he'll seek ‘long-term' control of DC police
Donald Trump has said he plans to ask Congress for 'long-term' control of Washington DC's police department and signaled that he expects other US cities to change their laws in response to his deployment of national guard troops and federal agents into the capital.
In an unprecedented move, Trump this week invoked a clause that allows a 30-day federal takeover of the police department, but will need Congress's permission to extend it beyond this timeframe. Despite Congress being out of session, the president said he expected to propose the legislation 'very quickly', before alluding to other plans to secure the extension, saying: 'If it's a national emergency, we can do it without Congress'.
'We're going to go for statutes in DC and then ultimately for the rest of the country, where that's not going to be allowed,' Trump said, singling out Democrat-led cities such as New York, Chicago and Los Angeles.
Why the takeover? The administration argues it's necessary to fight what Trump has called an 'out of control' crime problem – a crisis that the city's leaders say does not exist. More on that below.
Vladimir Putin will face 'very severe consequences' unless he agrees to a ceasefire in the war in Ukraine when he meets with Donald Trump in Alaska on Friday, the president has said.
Trump said that if the summit went well, he would push for a second meeting which would include Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy, adding that he 'would like to do it almost immediately' but gave no concrete timeframe.
He made the comments after a call with Zelenksyy and other European leaders, in which he reassured them that a truce was his priority and he would not make any territorial concessions without Kyiv's full involvement.
What are European leaders calling for? The UK, France and Germany have repeatedly said negotiations can only begin in earnest with a ceasefire in place. They called for Russia to face further sanctions if it does not agree to a truce at the summit.
More than 115 scholars have condemned the cancellation of an entire issue of a prestigious academic journal dedicated to Palestine by a Harvard University publisher as 'censorship'.
In an open letter published Thursday, they condemned the sudden cancellation of a special issue of the Harvard Educational Review – which was first revealed by the Guardian in July – as an 'attempt to silence the academic examination of the genocide, starvation and dehumanisation of Palestinian people by the state of Israel and its allies'.
Why was it canceled? The journal's publisher acknowledged to editors that it was seeking legal reviews out of concern that the publication would trigger antisemitism claims, according to an editor.
Donald Trump has signed an executive order that aims to downgrade environmental rules for commercial spaceship companies, in a move that appears to benefit Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos.
The father of a New Zealand woman who has been detained by US immigration authorities for three weeks with her six-year-old son is hopeful they will be freed this week.
Israeli strikes on a Tehran prison in June killed scores of inmates, visitors and staff in what Human Rights Watch (HRW) has labeled an 'apparent war crime'.
In order to feed a growing human population, agricultural output will need to rise by 50% in the next 25 years, the journalist Michael Grunwald estimates in his new book, We Are Eating the Earth. Doing this without wiping out biodiversity and ramping up global heating will be a momentous challenge. 'Feeding the world without frying it' looks to be even tougher than ending the age of fossil fuels, Grunwald argues.
In 1992, the death of a staffer for Senator Richard Shelby led the senator to introduce legislation to legalize the death penalty. The incident has similar qualities to the events leading up to Donald Trump's decision to take over Washington DC and deploy the national guard, after a Doge staffer was assaulted. But there's a big difference between DC then and now. Violent crime is at a 30-year low: in 1991, it had recorded 482 murders, earning it infamy as the US's murder capital. By contrast, there were 187 homicides in 2024 and the city looks set to record a lower number this year. Fred Frommer examines the period in the district's history.
'No country is safe from climate change', scientists have warned after Nordic countries endured a dangerous heatwave in July. Despite their typically cool climates, Norway, Sweden and Finland were hit with soaring temperatures last month, including a record run of 22 days above 86C in Finland. In 2018, during the region's last major heatwave, 750 people died prematurely in Sweden alone, and scientists expect to see a similar toll once the data is processed.
After three bizarre seasons, And Just Like That says it is finally wrapping up. The critically panned Sex and the City's spin-off was characterized by incoherence, with some viewers wondering if it had secretly been written by artificial intelligence. Despite functioning more like 'content' than TV, writer Lara Williams admits she was drawn to its anaesthetizing lull: 'And when it comes back, as I'm almost certain it will, I will feel much the same about it as Donald Trump does about Coca-Cola: I'll still keep drinking that garbage.'
First Thing is delivered to thousands of inboxes every weekday. If you're not already signed up, subscribe now.
If you have any questions or comments about any of our newsletters please email newsletters@theguardian.com
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
20 minutes ago
- BBC News
Trump shifts ceasefire position ahead of Zelensky talks
Donald Trump has said he wants to bypass a ceasefire in Ukraine to move directly to a permanent peace agreement after his meeting with Russian President Vladimir a major shift of position, the US president said on Truth Social following Friday's summit that this would be "the best way to end the horrific war between Russia and Ukraine", adding ceasefires often "do not hold up".Trump will welcome Volodymyr Zelensky, Ukraine's president, to Washington on Monday and urged him to agree to a peace a phone call with Trump after the summit, Zelensky called for a real, lasting peace, while adding that "the fire must cease" and killings stop. Trump's comments indicate a dramatic shift in his position on how to end the war, having said only on Friday ahead of the summit that he wanted a ceasefire "rapidly".Ukraine's main demand has been a quick ceasefire before talks about a longer-term settlement, and Trump reportedly told European leaders beforehand that his goal for the summit was to obtain a ceasefire deal. Meanwhile, multiple news outlets reported on Saturday that Putin had presented an offer that involved Ukraine handing over complete control of its eastern Donetsk region, which is 70% occupied by Russia. In return, Russia would reportedly agree to front lines being frozen and other unspecified concessions were apparently US president, who has previously said any peace deal would involve "some swapping of territories", is said to have relayed the offer to Zelensky in a phone call following the summit. Just days ago, Ukraine's president ruled out ceding control of the Donbas, saying it could be used as a springboard for future Russian attacks. The BBC's US partner CBS has reported, citing diplomatic sources, that European diplomats were concerned Trump may try to pressure Zelensky on Monday into agreeing to deal terms he and Putin may have discussed at the summit. CBS quotes sources as saying that Trump told European leaders in a call after the summit that Putin would make "some concessions", but failed to specify what they were. In an interview with Fox News following Friday's summit, Trump was asked what advice he has for the Ukrainian leader, to which he responded by saying "make a deal"."Russia's a very big power and they're not," he had previously threatened "very severe consequences" if Putin did not agree to end the war, last month setting a deadline for Moscow to reach a ceasefire or face tough new sanctions, including secondary was announced by way of an agreement by either president following Friday's summit, but Trump insisted progress had been Saturday, Putin described the summit as "very useful" and said he had been able "set out our position" to Trump. "We had the opportunity, which we did, to talk about the genesis, about the causes of this crisis. It is the elimination of these root causes that should be the basis for settlement," the Russian president the "coalition of the willing" - a group of countries that have pledged to strengthen support for Ukraine that includes the UK, France, and Germany - will hold a call on Sunday afternoon before Zelensky's visit to the White House on Monday. A group of European leaders, including French President Emmanuel Macron, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, said "the next step must now be further talks including President Zelensky".The leaders said they were "ready to work" towards a trilateral summit with European support."We stand ready to uphold the pressure on Russia," they said, adding: "It will be up to Ukraine to make decisions on its territory. International borders must not be changed by force."UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer praised Trump's efforts to end the war, saying they had "brought us closer than ever before"."While progress has been made, the next step must be further talks involving President Zelenskyy. The path to peace in Ukraine cannot be decided without him," he in Kyiv, Ukrainians have described feeling "crushed" by the scenes from Alaska."I understand that for negotiations you shake hands, you can't just slap Putin in the face when he arrives. But this spectacle with the red carpet and the kneeling soldiers, it's terrible, it makes no sense," Serhii Orlyk, a 50-year-old veteran from the eastern Donetsk region said.


Telegraph
20 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Trump ‘played into Putin's hands'
Donald Trump has 'played into Vladimir Putin 's hands' by dropping his demands for a Russian ceasefire, a senior Ukrainian politician has warned. By aligning himself with Putin's 'insincere' peace proposal, the US president risked repeating Neville Chamberlain's betrayal of Czechoslovakia at the Munich conference of 1938, Oleksandr Merezhko, the chairman of the Ukrainian parliament's foreign affairs committee, said. 'If Trump is serious about supporting Putin's peace treaty idea without calling for a ceasefire first, then it looks very much like a betrayal,' Mr Merezhko told The Telegraph. 'It looks like Munich 1938,' he added referring to the decision to carve out Czechoslovakia's Sudetenland and award it to Hitler in the vain hope of staving off war. Mr Trump's effusive welcome of Putin at their summit in Alaska coupled with subsequent revelations of the concessions the US president appears to have made have triggered widespread anguish in Ukraine. Mr Merezhko said he believed Mr Trump had allowed Putin to hoodwink him into believing he was offering something bigger than a ceasefire, while remaining intent on destroying Ukraine. After emerging from his talks with the Russian leader, the US president said he now agreed with Putin that the best way to end the war was 'to go directly for a peace agreement and not a mere ceasefire agreement'. Yet in accepting that framework – and splitting from Ukraine and his European allies in doing so – Mr Trump had allowed himself to be captured by a long-held Kremlin narrative. 'When Putin talks of a peace treaty and addressing the root causes of the conflict, what he really means is the surrender and capitulation of Ukraine,' Mr Merezhko said. 'Trump has played into the hands of Putin. In choosing to support this idea it is a clear sign that unfortunately he is on the road to aligning with Putin.' In Kyiv, residents shared their dismay over the welcome given to Putin by Mr Trump. Olena and Yuriy, a couple who lost their son in the war, said they watched the Alaska summit unfold on television and were sickened by images of the Russian leader responsible for the invasion being welcomed on a red carpet. They spoke to The Telegraph as they put up a photograph of their son on the memorial wall of fallen soldiers at Saint Michael Square. 'The soldiers of the United States of America were unrolling this red carpet before Putin,' Yuriy said. 'For what reason is a person given such respect, who actually invaded our country?' In a nearby café, the events in Alaska were the topic of the day. 'We are supposed to be allies,' said Yevgheny Sofychuk, 39, who was getting a coffee during his morning dog walk. 'They behaved in a way that suggests they [Russia] are better.' The barista interrupts, 'All I want to say is that Trump is a chicken.' No ceasefire deal was reached at Friday's summit in Alaska and one Ukrainian MP described the outcome as one of the 'worst' possible for Ukraine. 'Putin has won some time for him and his troops,' she said. 'President Trump, in his own words, got a very good meeting. Ukraine got nothing.' On Saturday, after a call between Mr Trump, Volodymyr Zelensky and European leaders, the US president outlined a new proposal under which Ukraine would concede the entirety of the Donbas – Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts – in exchange for Article 5-style security guarantees, though these guarantees would not involve Nato membership. It has also been suggested that in other regions, such as Kherson and Zaporizhzhia, the front line will be frozen, according to officials who spoke on the condition of anonymity to several media outlets. While the fate of the Donbas region is already part of public debate, some Ukrainians said they would rather continue fighting for the land, even at the risk of losing it, than concede it to Putin. 'Our boys have been fighting and dying and they will never give away those territories. They are not ready for this.' Katerina, 35, said. 'But on the other side, for us civilian citizens, we've been working hard. We've lost a lot of relatives, lost properties, lost emotional and nerve cells. We want it to be over.' While Ukraine's constitution forbids recognition of any territory ceded to Russia, Serhii, 44, argued for a national deliberation. 'I think we should conduct some kind of pan-Ukrainian referendum to decide. It's a tough choice and there are no good options,' he admitted. 'The people of Donbas should also be consulted. I know that many there don't care much who is in charge – Russians or Ukrainians. Some are fine with being under Russian rule – that's a fact.' He added that with so much mixed messaging, it is hard to know whether Ukraine still has any 'cards' to play. 'If it's really bad and we are not in a position to choose or decide, then why should they ask us anyway? But if we still have some cards, then why not bargain for a bit longer?' Standing beside Serhii was a friend, pale-faced and silent. He refused to give his name or comment, explaining only that he has just returned from Russian captivity and the subject was too sensitive. Back at the memorial wall of heroes, the photograph of Olena and Yuriy's son now fills a once-empty space. The wall runs the length of a city block, with large sections of blue plaster still bare — spaces that could yet be filled if Ukraine continues the fight. 'Even if Trump stops all this weapons support,' said his father, Yuriy, 'we Ukrainians, those who care about our future, will be standing up to the very end.'


The Guardian
27 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Israeli government official arrested in Nevada in internet crimes against children sting
An Israeli government cybersecurity official was reportedly arrested recently by Las Vegas police and other authorities in Nevada who were conducting an undercover investigation aimed at online users seeking to sexually prey on children. Tom Artiom Alexandrovich, 38, faces felony charges of luring a child with a computer for a sex act, alongside several other suspects who were apprehended during the two-week sting operation, the Las Vegas metropolitan police department said in a statement published on Friday. He has since evidently been released from custody and returned to Israel. As first reported by the news site Mediaite, a publicly posted screenshot of Alexandrovich's page on the LinkedIn professional networking platform described him as the executive director of the Israel Cyber Directorate, an Israeli government agency under the purview of prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office. Other information online attributes the same position to Alexandrovich. The screenshot first reported by Mediaite also showed a post under Alexandrovich's name alluding to his having been in Las Vegas earlier in August for the Black Hat Briefings, a yearly meeting of cybersecurity professionals. 'Two things you can't escape at Black Hat 2025: the relentless buz of generative [artificial intelligence] and the sound of Hebrew … in every corridor,' Alexandrovich wrote in part in an accompanying post. Invoking an abbreviation for large language models and referring to one of Israel's largest cities, the post continued: 'The key takeaway? The future of cybersecurity is being written in code, and it seems a significant part of it is being authored in #TelAviv and powered by LLMs. An exciting time to be in the field!' That LinkedIn page under Alexandrovich's name has since been deleted. The Israeli news outlet Ynet reported on Wednesday that the US had detained 'an employee of the Israel National Cyber Directorate' for interrogation while he was representing his country at a professional conference. That employee then returned to his hotel and flew back to Israel two days later. 'Israeli officials downplayed the incident, saying it carried 'no political implications' and was resolved quickly,' Ynet reported, without naming Alexandrovich or mentioning he had been arrested in connection with a felony charge leveled against him by Nevada law enforcement officials. 'The reasons for the questioning remain unclear but may relate to the employee's conduct.' Mediaite reported that Netanyahu's office issued a statement denying that the employee in question had even been arrested. 'A state employee who traveled to the US for professional matters was questioned by American authorities during his stay,' the prime minister's office said. 'The employee, who does not hold a diplomatic visa, was not arrested and returned to Israel as scheduled.' Nevada's internet crime against children taskforce helmed the operation which resulted in the arrests of Alexandrovich and seven other men in the city of Henderson, which is near Las Vegas. All eight suspects were brought to jail after their arrests, said the statement from the Las Vegas metropolitan police department, which participated in the operation alongside local, state and federal law enforcement officials. Under Nevada law, luring a child with a computer for a sex act can carry between one and 10 years in prison.