
Trump seeks release of ‘pertinent testimony' in Epstein probe
President Donald Trump announced tonight on Truth Social that he's asked Attorney General Pam Bondi to produce 'any and all pertinent Grand Jury testimony,' related to accused sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein, seeming to bow to pressure to release more material on the case.
00:47 - Source: CNN
Vertical Politics of the Day 16 videos
Trump seeks release of 'pertinent testimony' in Epstein probe
President Donald Trump announced tonight on Truth Social that he's asked Attorney General Pam Bondi to produce 'any and all pertinent Grand Jury testimony,' related to accused sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein, seeming to bow to pressure to release more material on the case.
00:47 - Source: CNN
Democrats walk out before vote for controversial Trump nominee
Senate Judiciary Committee Republicans voted on Thursday to advance the nomination of Emil Bove, President Donald Trump's former personal attorney, to a federal judgeship, over the loud protests of Democrats.
01:42 - Source: CNN
Trump's 'Manosphere' problems
Influential podcasters with large audiences of millennial and Gen Z men helped propel President Donald Trump to victory in 2024. Now some of those same voices are sharing criticisms of the current administration. CNN's Steve Contorno breaks it down.
01:56 - Source: CNN
Trump DOJ fires federal prosecutor in Epstein case
Maurene Comey, a federal prosecutor in the case against accused sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein and the daughter of former FBI Director James Comey, has been fired from her job in the Southern District of New York, according to people familiar with the situation.
01:56 - Source: CNN
Bernie Sanders calls Trump's GOP 'cult of the individual'
Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) tells CNN's Anderson Cooper that Republicans developed an almost Stalinist-type devotion to President Donald Trump.
00:45 - Source: CNN
This Native American senator brings Oklahoma ranch style to Washington
Sen. Markwayne Mullin (R-Oklahoma) gives CNN's Dana Bash a tour of his Capitol office, which showcases his Cherokee heritage and rancher lifestyle.
02:35 - Source: CNN
Ex-Trump business associate on Trump's friendship with Epstein
CNN's Erin Burnett speaks with former Trump Plaza Hotel and Casino COO Jack O'Donnell about one of President Trump's previous interactions with Jeffrey Epstein.
02:27 - Source: CNN
Fearing ICE crackdown, this family self-deports
Fearing increased immigration enforcement, undocumented immigrant Julio Mendoza and his American wife, Sasha, made the difficult decision to self-deport to Mexico with their three children, all of whom are US Citizens. CNN's Priscilla Alvarez reports.
01:35 - Source: CNN
How Trump's image is changing inside Russia
Once hailed as a pro-Kremlin figure, President Donald Trump's image is changing inside Russia. It comes after Trump vowed further sanctions on the country if a peace agreement with Ukraine is not reached in 50 days. CNN's Chief Global Affairs Correspondent is on the ground in Moscow with the analysis.
01:41 - Source: CNN
Rep. Jasmine Crockett responds to Trump saying she should take IQ test
CNN's Laura Coates speaks with Rep. Jasmine Crockett (D-TX) about President Donald Trump's comments that she and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez should take an IQ test.
01:05 - Source: CNN
Trump says interest in Epstein files is 'pretty boring stuff'
President Donald Trump said he doesn't understand his supporters' continued interest in the Epstein files, calling it "boring," while also reiterating his call for anything 'credible' to be released.
00:56 - Source: CNN
Trump's fight with MAGA base over Epstein explained
President Trump is at odds with some of his own supporters over after his Attorney General Pam Bondi declined to release more documents from the Jeffrey Epstein case. CNN's Erin Burnett explains the feud inside Trump's MAGA movement.
02:20 - Source: CNN
Supreme Court ruling will allow mass firings of Education Department employees
The Supreme Court on Monday said President Donald Trump may proceed with his plan to carry out mass layoffs at the Department of Education in the latest win for the White House at the conservative high court. CNN's Sunlen Serfaty reports.
01:34 - Source: CNN
Trump demands Russia reach peace deal within 50 days
President Donald Trump made several announcements on Monday aligning him more firmly with Ukraine's defense against Russia's invasion than ever before. CNN's Nick Paton Walsh breaks down the two main developments that could drastically impact the ongoing war.
01:34 - Source: CNN
MTG warns of 'big' blowback in MAGA world over handling of Epstein case
CNN's Manu Raju spoke with Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) who is demanding "transparency" from President Donald Trump's administration when it comes to information related to accused sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein and warned that the issue could stoke "significant" blowback from the right wing of the party.
01:04 - Source: CNN
MAGA faithful weigh in on Epstein files debate
At a conservative conference in Florida, Trump supporters share their views on the Epstein files fallout with CNN's Donie O'Sullivan.
01:40 - Source: CNN

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Bryan Kohberger to be sentenced after admitting he killed four Idaho students. How to watch and what to expect today.
Victim statements will be read, while Kohberger will have an opportunity to address the court. Bryan Kohberger, who pleaded guilty earlier this month to killing four University of Idaho students in 2022, is scheduled to be sentenced today. The murder victims — Madison Mogen, 21, Kaylee Goncalves, 21, Xana Kernodle, 20, and Ethan Chapin, 20 — were all found stabbed to death in their off-campus rental home in Moscow, Idaho, on November 13, 2022. Prosecutors laid out key DNA evidence, surveillance footage and cellphone records that linked Kohberger to the killings. Kohberger, 30, was expected to go through a lengthy and highly publicized trial in August. But in a surprise turn of events, Kohberger pleaded guilty on July 2 to murdering the four students as part of a plea deal to avoid the death penalty. He's expected to receive four consecutive life sentences, plus 10 years for burglary, according to the deal. He also waived his right to appeal and to challenge the sentence. The agreement doesn't require Kohberger to explain his motive or actions, which has been one of many unanswered questions in the case as the victims' families search for answers. On Monday, President Trump wrote in a post on Truth Social that he hopes presiding Judge Steven Hippler 'makes Kohberger, at a minimum, explain why he did these horrible murders.' 'There are no explanations, there is no NOTHING. People were shocked that he was able to plea bargain, but the Judge should make him explain what happened,' Trump wrote online, adding, 'These were vicious murders, with so many questions left unanswered.' Here's what to expect on Wednesday. When is the sentencing hearing? It is scheduled to take place today, July 23 at 9 a.m. MT (11 a.m. ET) at the Ada County Courthouse in Boise, Idaho. 'This hearing is expected to last the day,' according to the Ada County court's website. 'The court has tentatively scheduled short breaks mid-morning and mid-afternoon, as well as a 40-minute lunch break.' Will the public be able to watch the sentencing as it unfolds? Yes. The public will be able to watch Kohberger's sentencing in person at the courthouse and via livestream, according to the court's website. For people interested in attending in person, the courthouse will open at 7:30 a.m. MT, and the courtroom will open about 15 minutes before the hearing starts. An overflow room at the courthouse will also show the livestream. Who is expected to give victim impact statements? Kohberger will come face to face with the victims' families, who will get the chance to read their victim impact statements in open court. The families of Kaylee Goncalves and Xana Kernodle are angry with prosecutors over the plea deal, and will be able to address their daughter's killer directly. 'Today was the day, the day for answers, the day to find out what happened, to find out really anything about what the Defendant did that night and why he took the lives of 4 beautiful people. At least that's what we hoped for but hope is really all we had today,' the Goncalves family's statement read following Kohberger's guilty plea. 'I had hoped the agreement would include conditions that required the defendant to explain his actions and provide answers to the many questions that still remain, especially where evidence is missing or unclear,' Jeff Kernodle, Xana's father, said in a statement on July 2. The two roommates who survived the murders, Dylan Mortensen and Bethany Funke, could speak in court themselves or have a statement read on their behalf by an attorney or relative. "Our hope is that not only the families, but the friends, even the Moscow community and all the communities that were affected by this, can start to heal and bring some sort of closure to this horrendous act,' Moscow Police Chief Anthony Dahlinger told ABC News. Judge Hippler said in order to give the victims' families time to make their statements, the hearing may stretch into a second day if needed. Will Kohberger speak? After the victim impact statements are read, Kohberger will have a chance to address the court before he is sentenced in what is called an allocution. But he is not obligated to speak. This will provide an opportunity for Kohberger to reveal answers to burning questions that still remain a mystery: why did he do it, why that house, and why those particular students? After the opportunity for Kohberger's allocution, Judge Hippler will hand down Kohberger's sentence. What's next after the sentencing? Kohberger is currently being held at the Ada County Jail in Boise. He'll be transferred into the custody of the Idaho Department of Corrections, where he'll be evaluated to determine where he will be housed to serve his sentences, spokesperson Sanda Kuzeta-Cerimagic told USA Today. A long-standing gag order was also lifted last week, which means police and prosecutors can now speak out about the case. Documents that were sealed in the high-profile case may be made public soon. "I think the rights of the public to information in this case is paramount given the fact that a plea has been entered in this case,' Judge Hippler said during a July 17 hearing. Hippler said he will review the sealed material in the weeks and months to come after Wednesday's scheduled sentencing to determine which documents should be made public. Solve the daily Crossword
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EU Readies €100 Billion No-Deal Plan to Match US 30% Tariff
(Bloomberg) -- The European Union plans to quickly hit the US with 30% tariffs on some €100 billion ($117 billion) worth of goods in the event of no deal and if US President Donald Trump carries through with his threat to impose that rate on most of the bloc's exports after Aug. 1. Trump Awards $1.26 Billion Contract to Build Biggest Immigrant Detention Center in US Why the Federal Reserve's Building Renovation Costs $2.5 Billion Salt Lake City Turns Winter Olympic Bid Into Statewide Bond Boom Milan Corruption Probe Casts Shadow Over Property Boom How San Jose's Mayor Is Working to Build an AI Capital As a part of a first wave of countermeasures, the EU would combine an already approved list of tariffs on €21 billion of US goods and a previously proposed list on an additional €72 billion of American products into one package, a European Commission spokesman said on Wednesday. The US exports, which include industrial goods such as Boeing Co. aircraft, US-made cars and bourbon whiskey, would face a levy that matches Trump's 30% threat, according to people familiar with the matter. The threatened retaliation from Brussels would hit about one-third of American exports to the EU, based on the €335 billion worth of US goods shipped to the bloc last year. The tariffs would be prepared to come into force next month but only if there is no deal and the US implements its levies after the August deadline, said the people who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss private deliberations. The euro extended a fall after the report, down 0.3% at $1.1723, leading losses among major currencies. German bonds trimmed an earlier decline. The plans come as EU member states, including Germany, have hardened their positions in response to the US stiffening its negotiating stance. Berlin would be willing to even support the activation of the EU's anti-coercion instrument, or ACI, in a no-deal scenario, a government official said on condition of anonymity. This tool would come into play only if a deal fails to materialize. Trump announced two tariff deals on Tuesday — one with the Philippines and another with Japan, and both featured across-the-board duties on their imports that were lower than initially threatened. Also noteworthy was the 15% US levy on Japanese autos that was lower than the current 25% rate on major car exporters including the EU. European leaders are in Tokyo and Beijing this week for talks with some of the the bloc's biggest trading partners in Asia. US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, speaking with Bloomberg Television on Wednesday, said the EU hasn't yet brought anything as innovative as the Japanese offer. 'Talks are going better than they had been,' he said in the interview. 'I think that we are making good progress with the EU, but as I've said before, the EU has a collective action problem with 27 countries.' Explainer: All About the EU's Trade Weapon of Last Resort The EU's most potent trade tool is the ACI, and a growing number of member states is pushing for its use if a deal isn't reached. The instrument is primarily designed as a deterrent and is currently not on the table, with its activation requiring a qualified majority of member states to support the move. The ACI would enable the EU to launch a broad range of retaliatory actions, including new taxes on US tech giants, targeted curbs on US investments, and limiting access to the EU market. 'We are now approaching the decisive phase in the tariff dispute with the USA — we need a fair, reliable agreement with low tariffs,' German Chancellor Friedrich Merz told reporters in Berlin on Tuesday after a meeting with his Czech counterpart Petr Fiala. 'Without such an agreement, we risk economic uncertainty at a time when we actually need exactly the opposite.' The Commission, the EU's executive arm, is discussing the instrument with member states, the people said. While some capitals having been pushing to use the tool, most want to wait to see how the situation develops beyond Aug. 1 before progressing discussions further to try to achieve the required majority, they added. The overwhelming preference is to keep negotiations with Washington on track in a bid for an outcome to the impasse ahead of next month's deadline. EU and US negotiators are scheduled to continue talks on Wednesday. The US is now seen to want a near-universal tariff on EU goods higher than 10%, with increasingly fewer exemptions limited to aviation, some medical devices and generic medicines, several spirits, and a specific set of manufacturing equipment that the US needs, Bloomberg previously reported. The two sides have also discussed a potential ceiling for some sectors, as well as quotas for steel and aluminum and a way to ring-fence supply chains from sources that oversupply the metals. Any agreement would need Trump's sign off – and his position isn't clear. The US president wrote to the EU earlier in the month, warning of a 30% tariff on most of its exports from Aug. 1. Alongside a universal levy, Trump has hit cars and auto parts with a 25% customs tax, and steel and aluminum with double that. He's also threatened to target pharmaceuticals and semiconductors with new duties as early as next month, and recently announced a 50% duty on copper. Hoped-For Extension Before Trump's letter, the EU had been hopeful it was edging toward an initial framework that would allow detailed discussions to continue on the basis of a universal rate of 10% on many of the bloc's exports. While most capitals and officials accept that any agreement would be asymmetrical in favor of the US and see the EU facing higher than 10% rates, the bloc has been seeking wider exemptions than the US is offering, as well as looking to shield the bloc from future sectoral tariffs. The EU's €100 billion list would cover its response to Trump's universal duties as well as his tariffs on metals and cars. The level of pain that member states are prepared to accept varies, and some are open to landing on a higher 15% levy if enough exemptions are secured and the scope of the duty was clear, the people said. In addition to the tariffs on goods, the bloc's executive arm is also working on measures that could see export controls as well as restrictions on some services and public procurement contracts introduced in future, they said. --With assistance from Greg Ritchie and Annmarie Hordern. (Adds detail on US exports in fourth paragraph, Bessent comments in 11th) Elon Musk's Empire Is Creaking Under the Strain of Elon Musk Burning Man Is Burning Through Cash A Rebel Army Is Building a Rare-Earth Empire on China's Border Thailand's Changing Cannabis Rules Leave Farmers in a Tough Spot How Starbucks' CEO Plans to Tame the Rush-Hour Free-for-All ©2025 Bloomberg L.P. Sign in to access your portfolio
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Trump tariffs live updates: Trump strikes deal with Japan, but EU digs in with over $100B counterattack
The European Union said on Wednesday it plans to hit the US with 30% tariffs on over $100 billion worth of goods in the event the two sides cannot reach a trade deal by Aug. 1. Bloomberg News reported the European Commission will combine $24 billion in approved tariffs with a proposed $83 billion US goods list into one countermeasure package that would hit everything from American whiskey to cars to Boeing (BA) planes. As the EU digs in, President Trump announced two more deals and finalized a third, most notably a pact with Japan. 'I just signed the largest deal in history with Japan," Trump said during the meeting. The president said the agreement includes a 15% tariff on imported goods from Japan, and the country will invest $550 billion into the US. Earlier on Tuesday, Trump said the US had also struck a trade deal with the Philippines, which will see the country's imports face a 19% tariff into the US. Trump said US exports will face no import tax in the Philippines as part of the deal. The White House also unveiled new details of a confirmed trade agreement with Indonesia too. Yahoo Finance's Ben Werschkul reported that a 19% tariff will apply to Indonesian goods, as well as a 40% rate on any 'transhipped' goods. US officials said no tax would apply to "99%" of US imports. The deal developments come as prospects for larger pacts with India, the EU, and Canada look increasingly in doubt. Trump has threatened 25% to 35% tariffs on those larger trade partners. Trump has also said he would soon send letters to over 150 smaller US trade partners, setting blanket tariff rates for that large group. Trump has already sent letters to over 20 trade partners outlining tariffs on goods imported from their countries. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent on Tuesday said he expected many deals to take shape over the next several days. Read more: What Trump's tariffs mean for the economy and your wallet Here are the latest updates as the policy reverberates around the world. EU readies €100B no-deal plan to match US 30% tariff The European Union announced on Wednesday it plans to hit the US with 30% tariffs on over $100 billion worth of goods in the event that no deal is made and if President Trump decides to follow through with his threat to impose that rate on most of the bloc's exports after Aug. 1. A European Commission spokesman said that the first part of countermeasures would combine an already approved list of tariffs on $24 billion of US goods and a previously proposed list on an additional on $83 billion of American products into one package. The US exports, which would include goods such as Boeing (BA) aircraft, US-made cars and bourbon whiskey would all face heavy tariffs that match Trump's 30% threat. The tariffs would be prepared to come into force next month but only if there is no deal and the US implements its levies after the August deadline, said the people who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss private deliberations. Bloomberg News reports: Read more here. The European Union announced on Wednesday it plans to hit the US with 30% tariffs on over $100 billion worth of goods in the event that no deal is made and if President Trump decides to follow through with his threat to impose that rate on most of the bloc's exports after Aug. 1. A European Commission spokesman said that the first part of countermeasures would combine an already approved list of tariffs on $24 billion of US goods and a previously proposed list on an additional on $83 billion of American products into one package. The US exports, which would include goods such as Boeing (BA) aircraft, US-made cars and bourbon whiskey would all face heavy tariffs that match Trump's 30% threat. The tariffs would be prepared to come into force next month but only if there is no deal and the US implements its levies after the August deadline, said the people who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss private deliberations. Bloomberg News 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