
Pacific
April
Jeffrey Epstein
Prince Andrew accuser Virginia Giuffre has died
The victims' advocate accused the royal of abuse as part of the sex-trafficking allegations against Jeffrey Epstein.
Trade wars
NZ toy billionaire says prices to double in trade war
Nick Mowbray built his fortune from a network of toy factories in China. Now tariffs have 'paralysed' his company Zuru Group that sells to Walmart and Target.
Apr 15, 2025
Ainsley Thomson
Epstein fallout
'I have four days to live': Prince Andrew accuser Virginia Giuffre
The 41-year-old has shared a picture from a hospital bed, saying a speeding bus collided with her car, and that she has gone into kidney renal failure.
Apr 1, 2025
Connor Stringer and Iona Cleave
Immigration
NZ braces for global elite rush as golden visa opens
Immigration Minister Erica Stanford said there has been a 'huge amount of interest' in the visa that starts on Tuesday after the rules were overhauled.
Apr 1, 2025
Ainsley Thomson
March
Supermarkets
New Zealand eyes breaking its supermarket duopoly
The local unit of Woolworths and Foodstuffs New Zealand have a stranglehold on the grocery sector, which has been blamed for high prices.
Mar 30, 2025
Matthew Brockett

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ABC News
2 days ago
- ABC News
Elon Musk deletes post claiming Donald Trump is 'in the Epstein files'
Elon Musk has deleted an allegation linking Donald Trump with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein that he posted on social media this week. The tech billionaire alleged on Thursday that the Republican leader is featured in secret government files on former associates of Epstein, who died by suicide in 2019 while he faced sex trafficking charges. The Trump administration has acknowledged it is reviewing tens of thousands of documents, videos and investigative material that his "MAGA" movement says will unmask public figures complicit in Epstein's crimes. "Time to drop the really big bomb: (Trump) is in the Epstein files," Musk posted on his social media platform X, as his growing feud with the president boiled over into a spectacularly public row. "That is the real reason they have not been made public." Mr Musk did not reveal which files he was talking about, and offered no evidence for his claim. In fact, he wrote in a follow-up message: "Mark this post for the future. The truth will come out." However, he appeared to have deleted both tweets by Saturday morning. Supporters on the conspiratorial end of Trump's base allege that Epstein's associates had their roles in his crimes covered up by government officials and others. They point the finger at Democrats and Hollywood celebrities — although not at Trump himself. No official source has ever confirmed that the president appears in any of the material. The US president knew and socialised with Epstein, but has denied spending time on Little Saint James, the private island in the US Virgin Islands where prosecutors alleged Epstein trafficked underage girls for sex. "Terrific guy," Mr Trump, who was Epstein's neighbour in both Florida and New York, said in an early-2000s profile of the financier. "He's a lot of fun to be with. It is even said that he likes beautiful women as much as I do, and many of them are on the younger side." Just last week, Mr Trump gave Mr Musk a glowing send-off as he left his cost-cutting role at the so-called Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE). But their relationship imploded within days as Mr Musk described as an "abomination" a spending bill that, if passed by Congress, could define the president's second term in office. Mr Trump hit back in an Oval Office diatribe and from there the row escalated, leaving Washington and riveted social media users alike stunned by the blistering break-up between the world's richest person and the world's most powerful. With real political and economic risks to their row, both men appeared to inch back from the brink of all-out war on Friday, but the White House denied reports the pair were scheduled to speak on the phone. AFP


7NEWS
3 days ago
- 7NEWS
Donald Trump has 'no plans' to speak to Elon Musk as feud deepens over tax bill and billions in contracts
Donald Trump says he has no plans to speak with Elon Musk, signalling the US president and his former ally might not resolve their feud over a sweeping tax-cut bill any time soon. Addressing reporters on Friday aboard Air Force One, Trump said he wasn't 'thinking about' the Tesla CEO. 'I hope he does well with Tesla,' Trump said. However, Trump said a review of Musk's extensive contracts with the federal government was in order. 'We'll take a look at everything,' the president said. 'It's a lot of money.' Trump may get rid of the red Tesla Model S that he bought in March after showcasing Musk's electric cars on the White House lawn, a White House official said, speaking on condition of anonymity. Musk, for his part, did not directly address Trump but kept up his criticism of the massive Republican tax and spending bill that contains much of Trump's domestic agenda. On his social-media platform X, Musk amplified remarks made by others that Trump's 'big beautiful bill' would hurt Republicans politically and add to the nation's $US36.2 trillion ($A55.8 trillion) debt. He replied 'exactly' to a post by another X user that said Musk had criticised Congress and Trump had responded by criticising Musk personally. Musk also declared it was time for a new political party in the United States 'to represent the 80 per cent in the middle!' People who have spoken to Musk said his anger has begun to recede and they think he will want to repair his relationship with Trump, according to one person who has spoken to Musk's entourage. The White House statements came one day after the two men battled openly in an extraordinary display of hostilities that marked a stark end to a close alliance. On Thursday, Musk claimed that President Trump is listed in the Epstein files, alleging this is why they have not been released to the public. '@RealDonaldTrump is in the Epstein files. That is the real reason they have not been made public,' Musk wrote on X. 'Have a nice day, DJT!' The White House later responded, calling the claims 'an unfortunate episode from Elon'. Tesla stock rose on Friday, clawing back some losses from Thursday's session, when it dropped 14 per cent and lost $US150 billion ($A231 billion) in value, the largest single-day decline in the company's history. Musk, the world's richest person, bankrolled a large part of Trump's 2024 presidential campaign. Trump named Musk to head a controversial effort to downsize the federal workforce and slash spending. Trump feted Musk at the White House a week ago as he wrapped up his role as head of the Department of Government Efficiency. Musk cut only about half of one per cent of total spending, far short of his brash plans to axe $US2 trillion ($A3.1 trillion) from the federal budget. Since then, Musk has denounced Trump's tax-cut and spending bill as a 'disgusting abomination'. His opposition is complicating efforts to pass the bill in Congress where Republicans hold a slim majority. Trump had initially stayed quiet while Musk campaigned to torpedo the bill, but broke his silence on Thursday, telling reporters he was 'very disappointed' in Musk. Musk, who spent nearly $US300 million ($A462 million) in the 2024 elections, said Trump would have lost without his support and suggested he should be impeached. Trump suggested he would terminate government contracts with Musk's businesses, which include rocket company SpaceX and its satellite unit Starlink. The billionaire then threatened to decommission SpaceX's Dragon spacecraft, the only US spacecraft capable of sending astronauts to the International Space Station. Musk later backed off that threat. A prolonged feud could make it harder for Republicans to keep control of Congress in the 2026 midterm elections if Musk withholds financial support or other major Silicon Valley business leaders distance themselves from Trump. Musk had already said he planned to curtail his political spending, and on Tuesday called for 'all politicians who betrayed the American people' to be fired in 2026. His involvement with the Trump administration has provoked widespread protests at Tesla sites, driving down sales while investors fretted that Musk's attention was too divided.

Sydney Morning Herald
3 days ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
‘Betrayal': She built a cult baby business, then RFK Jr came calling
It's a point of tension that tends to bubble up during motherhood in particular, when many parents are trying to 'figure things out on their own' and are increasingly sceptical of government institutions, said Sara Petersen, the author of Momfluenced: Inside the Maddening, Picture-Perfect World of Mommy Influencer Culture. Focusing on their child's diet and lifestyle can create 'an illusion of control' over their wellbeing. This can become a gateway of sorts into Kennedy's Make America Healthy Again movement. It isn't, in other words, a coincidence that the movement is fuelled by so-called 'crunchy' mothers. The same mothers might also be Bobbie's target customer. Complicity, or a front seat? Modi, 39, started the Bobbie brand in 2018, creating infant formula that is marketed as free from corn syrup, palm oil and other ultra-processed ingredients that have been commonplace in US formula brands. She has also thrown the brand's weight behind policies and non-profits focused on equity in maternal health, reproductive health and access to paid parental leave. This marketing strategy has differentiated Bobbie from other formula brands and generated a cult-like following. Millennial parents seem especially interested in its nutritional value and are perhaps also drawn to its social media-ready packaging, with its soft colour palette and slogans such as, 'I like it shaken, not stirred'. Modi, a mother of four, is a canny marketer, of both herself and her business. She was named one of Time's women of the year in February and one of Marie Claire's power moms in May. The company reached $US100 million ($156 million) in revenue in 2023 – making it the third-largest formula manufacturer in the United States, holding 4 per cent of that market – and is sold at Target and Whole Foods. A contingent of Bobbie's customers sees an about face in Modi's alignment with Kennedy, a man who has been accused by critics of undermining established science and promoting public health policies that they say put children's lives at risk. 'I'm genuinely sad about this,' one follower wrote on the Instagram post of Modi with Kennedy. Another customer, Allison Rhone, 43, a social media manager at a non-profit, noted that the Instagram caption lacked any context about what she called the 'craziness' of much of Kennedy's agenda. 'That to me is complicity because it makes it all seem normal,' she said. Meghan Novisky, 41, a Bobbie customer and a criminology professor at Cleveland State University, said: 'It almost felt like a betrayal; I felt shocked to see that. It just shatters my trust in them.' In interviews, others vowed never to use or recommend Bobbie again. (The company said it hadn't seen a dip in subscriptions.) But 'what's the potential outcome of not being in that room?' Modi said in an interview. 'Two things can be true at the same time,' she said. 'I don't agree with many of the things that this current administration is doing. It's very hard to watch the dismantling of really important agencies and, specifically within my world, parts of the FDA.' But, she said, she saw value in being in the room with a decision-maker like Kennedy. A 'naive' plan Modi moved from the west coast of Ireland to California for a job at Google in 2006. She planned to stay in the United States for a year or two before moving back to Ireland. Instead, she ended up climbing the corporate ladder and, in 2011, became director of hospitality at Airbnb. She assumed that she would breastfeed her first child, born in 2016, but her plans were upended by a nasty bout of mastitis, an infection of the breast. With a raging fever and a crying five-day-old infant, she walked into a Walgreens at 11pm. 'What am I picking up? What's the right thing to feed my baby?' she said of the thoughts that were racing through her mind then. 'No idea.' There were few formula brand options, and the ingredient lists on the cans were incomprehensible. She walked out that night with a pack of Similac, manufactured by Abbott, and the germ of an idea. Loading In any spare minute, Modi looked up ingredients, researched infant nutritional science and examined how the existing formula brands functioned. She asked her mother to smuggle in cans of European brands for her daughter, which, at the time, were not approved by the Food and Drug Administration to be sold in the US (an increasingly common practice for parents). The European Commission regulates formula differently, said Dr Bridget Young, a professor of paediatrics and a breastfeeding researcher at the University of Rochester. Europe, for example, 'sets limits on pesticide residues that can be in formula. We don't do that here,' she said. 'You can't, in Europe, use sucrose or table sugar,' she said. 'In the US, we don't regulate that.' Loading Europe also sets different limits for ingredients like DHA (a fatty acid believed to be essential for brain and eye development) and iron. Still, she added, the approaches to making formulas around the world are similar, and the small differences between them are marketed as large gulfs. Formulas are also among 'the safest foods made in the US', Young said. 'There's no perfect formula; there's no poison formula.' Similac, for instance – which Modi weaned her daughter off in favour of the imports – is fed to babies in hospitals, including in the neonatal intensive care unit wards. When, in December 2017, Modi found out she was pregnant again, she quit her job and decided to start Bobbie. 'In my mind,' she said, 'I'm like, 'I got nine months, I will have a better infant formula in the market before he comes.' ' That, she said, was incredibly 'naive'. For starters, there were the Goliaths of the market: the four manufacturers – Abbott, Mead Johnson (acquired by Reckitt), Nestle and Perrigo – which together controlled 97 per cent of the market in 2022. Infant formula is also highly regulated, presenting any new entrant with a labyrinth of hoops to jump through. And, infant formula being about as aspirational as antacid or Band-Aids, there were few eager investors. Most, many of whom were male, would also ask something to the effect of, ' 'Well, what are you planning to do with this?' And point to my very visible pregnant belly,' she said. By the time Modi was 8½ months pregnant, in 2018, she had pitched the idea of a 'European-style' formula to 64 investors. One gave her $US2.4 million in funding eight days before her second child arrived. It would be three more years before she would bring an FDA-approved product to market. Crises and opportunities In 2022, supply chain disruptions and a bacterial outbreak that temporarily closed Similac's plant set off a harrowing nationwide infant formula shortage. Since the brand's inception, Bobbie products had been sold online through a subscription model and were manufactured at a contract facility that also works with other smaller brands. During the shortage, when US store shelves sat bare, parents turned to Bobbie formula, creating a surge in demand that outpaced production at the contract facility. The company had to stop accepting new customers. Loading Modi bought a manufacturing facility in Ohio that began making Bobbie formula last year, allowing it to triple supply. HHS now presents Modi with another opportunity: to fulfil her long-standing goals of updating infant nutrition standards. Kennedy's MAHA agenda has many of the same talking points Modi has been espousing since 2018 – that European formulas are healthier, corn syrup in formula is a villain and regulators need to increase testing of heavy metals that have been detected in formulas made in the US. At the same time, the Trump administration has fired thousands of federal public health workers and researchers, including a committee that tracks bacterial outbreaks in infant formula. As head of the FDA division that regulates formula, Kennedy has named Kyle Diamantas, a corporate lawyer who defended Abbott in a lawsuit claiming that one of its formulas increased the risk of a deadly condition in infants. (Abbott, which lost the case, was ordered to pay $US495 million in damages.) Paediatricians worry too that, under these circumstances, a review of nutrition standards could easily veer into MAHA obsessions, like seed oils (which contain fatty acids that are essential for infant development), instead of focusing on science. Loading For Rhone, part of the appeal of Bobbie was that it was marketed as an outsider to the infant formula industry, putting it in a position to criticise the FDA and other agencies. 'I just need to know that you're going to be an actual advocate in there and that you're not just going to nod your head to whatever they're saying,' Rhone said. But to Modi, infant nutrition is a nonpartisan issue. 'And if what it takes to update nutritional standards is a certain administration, certain voices to create that change, I'm all here for it.'