Intel's CEO has successfully wooed President Trump
According to a report by the Financial Times , Tan wrote a letter to Intel employees about the issue, telling that there had been a lot of misinformation about the roles he'd held. "I wanted to be absolutely clear... I have always operated within the highest legal and ethical standards," he reportedly wrote in the letter. He also said that Intel was communicating with the White House "to address the matters that have been raised and ensure they have the facts."
Trump's call for Tan to resign reportedly came about due a letter from Tom Cotton, the Republican head of the Senate Intelligence Committee, to the Intel CEO. Cotton apparently expressed concerns aout the "security and integrity of Intel's operations" due to Tan's ties with China. Tan was named the CEO of Intel in March, taking over a company that was losing money due to its foundry business being unable to secure big customers and lagging behind rivals like Taiwan Semiconductor. Since taking over, Tan has enforced several cost-cutting measures, including cutting jobs with the goal of reducing its workforce by 22 percent by the end of the year. He also recently told investors that Intel could abandon the development of its next-gen manufacturing technology if it fails to secure a large client.
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Politico
a few seconds ago
- Politico
Trump BLS pick hints at halting monthly jobs report
'Until it is corrected, the BLS should suspend issuing the monthly job reports but keep publishing the more accurate, though less timely, quarterly data,' said Antoni, who is currently the chief economist at the conservative Heritage Foundation. Such a change would almost certainly unnerve markets, and it is unclear what criteria BLS would need to meet to bring those monthly reports back online. The Fox Business report said the interview was conducted Monday, before Trump's announcement naming him as the nominee to serve as BLS commissioner. 'Our Economy is booming, and E.J. will ensure that the Numbers released are HONEST and ACCURATE,' the president posted on his Truth Social account Monday evening. 'I know E.J. Antoni will do an incredible job in this new role.' Trump fired the sitting commissioner, Erika McEntarfer, earlier this month after the employment report for July included unexpectedly large revisions for the two prior months — wiping away more than a quarter-million jobs, a sizable chunk of the growth under the early part of Trump's first year back in office. Trump alleged without evidence that those numbers, as well as previous BLS data published under her tenure, were manipulated to damage Republicans. Administration officials and Trump-friendly economists like Antoni have separately tried to explain McEntarfer's ouster as a matter of competence and ensuring trust in the bureau's work.


Politico
a few seconds ago
- Politico
Black leaders feel under siege after Trump's D.C. takeover
What up, Recast fam. On today's agenda: Donald Trump's unprecedented takeover of Washington, D.C.'s police force is testing the limits of his presidential authority and ratcheting up fears that other cities also led by Black elected officials will soon be caught in his crosshairs. Trump, citing flimsy and misleading statistics, declared a 'crime emergency' in the nation's capital, seizing control over local law enforcement from three-term Mayor Muriel Bowser and deploying some 800 National Guard troops to city streets. 'This is Liberation Day in D.C. and we're going to take our capitol back,' Trump proclaimed, echoing World War II-era language associated with emancipation of Italy from facism and the German Nazi occupation. Trump added that his action would 'rescue our nation from crime, bloodshed, bedlam and squalor and worse.' The National Guard troops, who will work alongside the Metropolitan Police officers, will be tasked with clearing homeless encampments, protecting landmarks and keeping order in the city. It's an unprecedented presidential power grab that Bowser herself said is unnecessary, but has very little recourse to stop given the 'special conditions' outlined in the Home Rule Act. While Trump's supporters have cheered him on, his detractors say the move is nothing more than the president, once again, leaning into racist tropes to cast Black elected officials as incompetent and minority citizens as threats to society. During his wide-ranging press conference, Trump also singled out Baltimore, Chicago, Los Angeles, New York and Oakland — all of which have Black mayors and large minority populations that overwhelmingly voted against him in his three presidential runs — as crime ridden. 'He has never thought well of Black elected leaders, and he's been explicit about that,' said Maya Wiley, the president and CEO of the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights. She added that she views Trump's actions as a tactic to undermine liberal dissent. 'It's also clear from his previous statements that he has always searched for excuses to assert might over places he does not have political support and that will not just do his bidding,' she added. 'Washington, D.C., has been one of those cities.' Was The Recast forwarded to you by a friend? Don't forget to subscribe to the newsletter here. You'll get a weekly breakdown of how race and identity are the DNA of American politics and policy. Bowser worked to quell tensions between her and Trump stemming from his first term. This included painting over the yellow letters of the city's Black Lives Matter Plaza, which was formed in a response to police brutality during the national protests of 2020. Prior to Trump's inauguration she traveled to Mar-a-Lago to discuss possible areas of collaboration. In late April, Bowser helped lure the Washington Commanders NFL franchise from suburban Maryland back to D.C., with Trump cheering the move in a social media post as a 'HUGE WIN' for the city and it's 'incredible fan base.' Days later, she appeared with him at the White House to announce the city would host the NFL Draft in 2027. (Last month, Trump injected himself again by threatening to scuttle the deal to bring the football team back to D.C. if the team didn't return to its original name, which is considered a racial slur against Native Americans.) None of that appears to have deterred Trump from launching his federal takeover. 'I think this is a moment for the mayor to question whether her strategy, which has been appeasement, has been a success,' said Paul Butler, a Georgetown law professor and former federal prosecutor. He described Trump's actions as a 'bogus declaration' but suggested there is likely little reprieve D.C. officials will gain trying to challenge the president's declaration in court. 'While the court reviews whether he appropriately has this power, the Supreme Court and other lower courts [have] generally allowed him to … proceed with what he wants to do, until they get around to deciding the case,' Butler added. 'It opens the doors to further militarization of the police, not just in the District, but in the other cities that he named.' This is not the first time Trump has ignored the wishes of local officials and deployed federal troops. During the height of federal immigration raids in Los Angeles, which sparked protests that turned violent, Trump federalized some 2,000 California Guard troops against the wishes of Mayor Karen Bass, who is Black, and California Gov. Gavin Newsom. Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott told The Recast that Trump's actions in D.C. and his singling out of other Black-led jurisdictions, including his own, is nothing more than a 'diversion and distraction tactic' to shift the focus from a volatile economic climate and the release of materials associated with Jeffrey Epstein, the disgraced financier and convicted sex offender. 'It's also the continuation of the president, unfortunately, spouting these racist-based, right-wing propaganda talking points about cities and Black-led cities,' said Scott, who last month said his city is in the midst of a historic reduction in violent crime. 'For the president to say that we're too far gone — it's just obscene, obnoxious and just not based in reality.' Maryland Gov. Wes Moore, a combat veteran, chastised Trump for using military personnel for political gain. 'These actions by the president lack both data and a battle plan,' Moore said in a statement. '[The president] is simply using honorable men and women as pawns to distract us from his policies, which continue to drive up unemployment and strip away health care and food assistance from those who need it most.' Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson echoed Moore's sentiments. 'If President Trump wants to help make Chicago safer, he can start by releasing the funds for anti-violence programs that have been critical to our work to drive down crime and violence,' Johnson said. 'Sending in the National Guard would only serve to destabilize our city and undermine our public safety efforts.' The pretext of Trump's actions appears to be a response to an attack on Edward Coristine, who is white and a former staffer at DOGE who goes by the nickname 'Big Balls.' He was allegedly assaulted by approximately 10 juveniles near Dupont Circle this month, according to a police report obtained by POLITICO. It caught the attention of Trump, who posted on his Truth Social platform a photo of a bloodied Coristine and called for D.C. laws to be changed so that teenagers who commit violence can be tried as adults 'and lock them up for a long time, starting at age 14.' Trump is deputizing key administration officials to help oversee the D.C. police, which he can maintain control of for up to 48 hours, but if he sends a special message to certain congressional leaders, he can extend that control for up to 30 days. Attorney General Pam Bondi will be in charge of D.C. police, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth will direct the order to call up troops, while the District's U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro said on Monday that she is preparing to bolster prosecutions. Bowser, the D.C. mayor, delivered a measured response to the federal takeover in her remarks following Trump's announcements. 'While this action [Monday] is unsettling and unprecedented, I can't say that, given some of the rhetoric of the past, that we're totally surprised,' she said. We'll continue to monitor how this plays out in D.C. and if similar federal action is deployed in other major cities. All the best,The Recast Team ARRESTED AT SEA The Israeli military last month intercepted the Handala, the flotilla carrying aid to Gazans, arresting 21 crew members. Among them was Chris Smalls, former president of the Amazon Labor Union. Smalls, the only Black member of the crew, told The Recast he believes he was singled out by the Israeli military because of his race and subsequently beaten. In prison, Smalls began a hunger strike, which he said lasted until he was released five days later. Our colleague Teresa Wiltz caught up with Smalls, who in 2023 was an honoree on the Recast Power List, to talk about his experiences on and off the flotilla, what happened once he was released — and why he says he's going back on the flotilla as soon as possible. This interview was edited for length and clarity. THE RECAST: Can you talk me through what happened? SMALLS: We were intercepted, illegally kidnapped against our will because we had intentions to go to Israel. They cut communications off from the outside world. There's at least a dozen ships [surrounding us]. We had to ride with them for about 12 hours before we were transferred to the port of authority. THE RECAST: At what point were you arrested? SMALLS: Well, once we were transferred to the immigration department, they violently assaulted me; seven authorities threw me to the ground. They put their knees in my back. They pushed my arm behind my back, and three of them levitated me on each side, while one of them was using my jewelry to choke me. Then they isolated me. THE RECAST: Talk to me about what it was like in the prison. SMALLS: Yeah, we were seven in one cell, not ideal for a hot, low-oxygen room. It was a heat wave, very inhumane conditions. It was bedbug-infested; I have scabies now because of it. Yeah, it was, it was pretty much hell. They had us strip naked, humiliated us, tried to break us down psychologically. THE RECAST: Do you feel like you were being targeted because of your race? SMALLS: Oh, 1,000 percent. It was not a coincidence that I was the last [of my group released with Hatem from Tunisia, the only other person of color left behind from the flotilla.] THE RECAST: Tell me about the day they released you. SMALLS: They came in, told us to get ready, we're going home. They threw us in the back of a van, and we were off to the Jordan border. We had no idea where we're going. When we got to the border, they just handed us $300 in cash and told us, 'Take a taxi to the airport.' So thankfully, I was able to meet some Palestinian people that allow me to use one of their cell phones and contact the coalition to tell them where I was at. THE RECAST: Sens. Cory Booker (D-N.J.) and Andy Kim (D-N.J.) are your senators. Did you hear from them? SMALLS: Yeah, I hadn't heard from any of them. I mean, they take money from AIPAC or whatever they do. I'm not surprised. You know, it is what it is. It's a shame, you know. But that's the reason why I went, to shed light on this and for American citizens to be outraged about where our taxpayer dollars are going. [Editor's note: An aide from Booker's office said in a statement, 'Since being made aware of Mr. Small's detainment, Senator Booker's office worked with the U.S. Department of State and the Israeli Embassy to obtain information about the circumstances of his detainment, his treatment and ensure he was receiving assistance.' Kim's office did not respond to a request for comment in time for publication.] THE RECAST: Are you going to do it again? SMALLS: Yeah, of course. I'll definitely, definitely do it [with] other folks for sure.. WHAT WE'RE WATCHING THIS WEEK Thorny Texas tilt — Democratic Reps. Lloyd Doggett, the dean of the Texas congressional delegation, and Greg Casar, who heads the Congressional Progressive Caucus, may compete for the same Texas district if Texas lawmakers approve new redistrict maps. POLITICO's Gregory Svirnovskiy explores Doggett's push to get Casar to run in another district — one that's a Trump +10 — instead of the safe Democratic district. And more… TODAY'S CULTURE NEWS A royal extension — Meghan Markle and Prince Harry have reportedly extended their partnership with Netflix with a multiyear, first-look deal. Snoop Dogg goes down under — The 'Drop It Like It's Hot' rapper and former ambassador for the Olympics last year was just named headliner for next month's Australian Football League's Grand Final,billed as 'the biggest event on the Australian sporting calendar.' Country singer opens up about boyfriend, Kash Patel – Country singer Alexis Wilkins swatted away any unease about her 19-year age gap with boyfriend Kash Patel, the head of the FBI. 'Modern Family' star changes name, drops new music – The actress that played Lily on the hit show, Aubrey Anderson-Emmons, is reportedly changing her stage name and also debuting an indie pop EP.


New York Times
a few seconds ago
- New York Times
Sherrod Brown Plans to Try for a Senate Comeback in Ohio
Former Senator Sherrod Brown of Ohio plans to try to return to the Senate in 2026, giving the Democratic Party a strong recruit in its effort to take back control of the chamber next year, according to three people with knowledge of his decision. Mr. Brown, who served in the Senate for three terms until his defeat in 2024, immediately becomes the Democratic front-runner to face Senator Jon Husted, a freshman Republican whom Gov. Mike DeWine appointed to file the vacancy created by JD Vance's elevation to the vice presidency. The people spoke on decision of anonymity to discuss a decision that is not yet public. first reported on Mr. Brown's decision. Mr. Brown, 72, was a mainstay of Ohio politics for decades, dating to 1974, when he was the youngest person ever elected to the Ohio Statehouse. He later served as the Ohio secretary of state for eight years, as a congressman for more than a decade and as a senator for 18 years. He lost a re-election bid in 2024 as Ohio continued to turn increasingly Republican. Senator Bernie Moreno, a Republican, won 50 percent of the vote to Mr. Brown's 46.5 percent. That race was the most expensive Senate contest in the nation last year, with more than $451 million spent by candidates and outside groups, according to the Center for Responsive Politics. After leaving office, Mr. Brown formed a nonprofit organization, the Dignity of Work Institute, making it his mission to find a way for the Democratic Party to appeal more to working-class voters. In an essay this year, he called that goal an 'electoral and a moral imperative.' Want all of The Times? Subscribe.