logo
Joe Biden reportedly failed to recognise George Clooney at 2024 fundraiser

Joe Biden reportedly failed to recognise George Clooney at 2024 fundraiser

Express Tribune14-05-2025

President Joe Biden reportedly did not recognise longtime friend George Clooney during a June 2024 fundraiser, according to claims in the upcoming book Original Sin by CNN's Jake Tapper and Axios reporter Alex Thompson. The incident is cited as a key moment in growing concerns over Biden's mental fitness during his re-election campaign.
As reported by Variety and The New Yorker, Clooney — who had last seen Biden at the 2022 Kennedy Center Honors — was 'shaken' when the president failed to identify him without prompting at the high-profile event. The fundraiser, co-headlined by Clooney and Julia Roberts, raised at least $28 million for the Biden campaign.
Clooney had already expressed concerns about Biden's health, including reports from a White House aide about efforts to improve his mobility. But the 2024 encounter led Clooney to believe the problem was 'much graver.'
The book also describes Biden as appearing 'slow and almost catatonic' during the event, displaying noticeable signs of cognitive decline. The incident, combined with Biden's poor June 27 debate performance, reportedly prompted Clooney to write a New York Times op-ed urging him to withdraw from the race.
Original Sin, published by Penguin Press, is set for release on May 20 and offers a behind-the-scenes look at internal Democratic concerns leading up to Biden's eventual exit from the 2024 presidential race.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Nippon Steel, US seek 8-day pause in litigation to resolve deal concerns
Nippon Steel, US seek 8-day pause in litigation to resolve deal concerns

Business Recorder

time20 hours ago

  • Business Recorder

Nippon Steel, US seek 8-day pause in litigation to resolve deal concerns

WASHINGTON: Nippon Steel and the Trump administration on Thursday asked a U.S. appeals court to extend a pause in their litigation for eight days, to give them more time to reach a deal allowing the Japanese firm to buy U.S. Steel for $14.9 billion. The court is likely to approve an extension of the pause, first granted on April 7 when U.S. President Donald Trump ordered a second national security review of the tie-up. That pause was set to expire on June 5. 'A continued abeyance is warranted given … the ongoing efforts to reach a resolution that would fully resolve petitioners' claims,' the companies and the government said in their filing. The request for a short pause signals the companies and the government believe they are closing in on a deal, welcome news for investors who have anxiously followed the deal's bumpy path since it was announced in December 2023. Both former President Joe Biden and Trump asserted last year that U.S. Steel should remain U.S.-owned, as they sought to woo voters ahead of the 2024 presidential election in Pennsylvania, where the company is headquartered. Biden blocked the deal in January on national security grounds, prompting lawsuits by the companies, which argued the national security review they received was biased. The Biden White House disputed the charge. The steel companies saw a new opportunity in the Trump administration, which began on January 20 and sought a pause in the litigation to open a fresh 45-day national security review into the proposed merger in April. Nippon Steel to invest $4 billion for new US Steel mill in $14 billion package, document says But Trump's public comments, ranging from welcoming a simple 'investment' in U.S. Steel by the Japanese firm to floating a minority stake for Nippon Steel, created confusion. Trump on Friday lauded an 'agreement' between Nippon Steel and U.S. Steel at a political rally but stopped short of approving the companies' diplomatically sensitive merger.

Trump-Musk row slams Tesla shares, $150 billion in market value wiped out
Trump-Musk row slams Tesla shares, $150 billion in market value wiped out

Business Recorder

time20 hours ago

  • Business Recorder

Trump-Musk row slams Tesla shares, $150 billion in market value wiped out

Tesla shares went into free-fall on Thursday as President Donald Trump publicly feuded with the electric vehicle maker's billionaire CEO Elon Musk, his self-proclaimed 'First Buddy.' Investors watched the unfolding drama with growing worry about what the fracas could mean for Musk's business empire. The carmaker's shares ended the day down 14%, wiping off $150 billion in market value on a day absent other news about the company. Traders dumped Tesla in heavy trading after Musk quickly responded to Trump's criticism with social media posts that stepped up criticism of the president's tax bill. Trump fired back further, alleging Musk was upset because the bill takes away tax benefits for electric vehicle purchases. Openly feuding with Trump could pose multiple hurdles for Tesla and the rest of Musk's sprawling business empire. The U.S. Transportation Department regulates vehicle design standards and would have a big say in whether Tesla can mass-produce robotaxis without pedals and steering wheels. The agency is also investigating Tesla's driver-assistance software, known as 'Full Self-Driving,' following a fatal crash. 'Elon's politics continue to harm the stock. First he aligned himself with Trump, which upset many potential Democratic buyers. Now he has turned on the Trump administration,' said Tesla shareholder Dennis Dick, chief strategist at Stock Trader Network. With EV sales falling, Musk over the last year has re-oriented Tesla's future around self-driving robotaxis. On an earnings call last year, he said investors 'should sell their Tesla stock' if they did not believe the company would solve the technological challenges of driverless vehicles. Wedbush analysts have said the AI and autonomous opportunities could be worth $1 trillion alone in market value for the company. Musk has advocated for one federal approval process for autonomous vehicles to streamline the current maze of different state regulations. Ross Gerber, CEO of Tesla investor Gerber Kawasaki Wealth and Investment Management, said the feud with Trump 'creates a negative force against Tesla' that could jeopardize regulations and risk more government investigations. 'Every benefit that was perceived he would have got now turns into a negative,' Gerber said. Musk, the world's richest man and a key figure in the Department of Government Efficiency's (DOGE) cost-cutting plan for several months, blasted Trump's 'big beautiful bill' this week, after he decided to spend less time in the White House and instead focus on his companies. Following Thursday's selloff, his net worth fell by roughly $27 billion to $388 billion, according to Forbes. Trump on Thursday said on his Truth Social platform that the 'easiest way to save money in our Budget, billions and billions of dollars, is to terminate Elon's governmental subsidies and contracts.' Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy has already moved to exempt autonomous vehicles from some safety requirements, and NHTSA said in April it is 'actively engaged in developing a multi-faceted regulatory framework' for autonomous vehicles. Although the federal government has already started to streamline some regulations around autonomous driving, Morningstar analyst Seth Goldstein said regulators might possibly craft rules in a way that would single out Tesla. Most autonomous vehicle companies use sensors such as radar and lidar to detect objects, for example, but Tesla relies solely on cameras. Goldstein said federal regulators might devise rules requiring lidar, which would hurt Tesla. 'With President Trump, being on his bad side always creates risk that you're going to get personal retaliation,' Goldstein said. He doubted that such an outcome was likely, though, because many other companies have been pushing for new regulations for years. The stock has been on a roller-coaster ever since Musk endorsed Trump in mid-July 2024 in his re-election bid, gaining 169% from that point through mid-December. That was followed by a 54% slide through early April as a 'Tesla Takedown' protest intensified. Musk's leadership of DOGE and alignment with the Trump administration had put off some car buyers, with sales slumping in Europe, China and key U.S. markets like California. The House of Representatives version of Trump's budget bill proposes largely ending the popular $7,500 EV subsidy by the end of 2025. Tesla and other automakers have relied on incentives for years to drum up demand, but Trump promised during the transition to end the subsidy. Tesla could face a $1.2 billion hit to its annual profit, along with an additional $2 billion setback to regulatory credit sales due to separate Senate legislation targeting California's EV sales mandates, according to J.P. Morgan. Trump, Musk feud explodes with threats of cutting contracts, backing impeachment The company is still the most valuable automaker worldwide by a long shot. Through Wednesday, Tesla's market value stood at about $1 trillion, well above Toyota Motor's $290 billion. 'There were a lot of people excited about Tesla because the political winds were at his (Musk's) back. And now they've turned into headwinds in a lot of different ways,' Steve Sosnick, chief strategist at Interactive Brokers, said. Tesla trades at 150 times profit estimates, a steep premium to other Big Tech stocks such as Nvidia. 'I am short Tesla. I don't understand it. I don't understand its valuation. I don't understand its fundamentals. I think it's overhyped,' Bob Doll, Crossmark Global Investments chief investment officer, said.

Leah Remini addresses rumors of fallout with Jennifer Lopez
Leah Remini addresses rumors of fallout with Jennifer Lopez

Express Tribune

timea day ago

  • Express Tribune

Leah Remini addresses rumors of fallout with Jennifer Lopez

Leah Remini is finally setting the record straight about her relationship with longtime friend Jennifer Lopez, following months of speculation that the two stars had a falling out. In a recent interview with Us Weekly, Remini shared insight into where the friendship stands today. 'Right after the divorce, we'd text each other loving messages of support,' Remini said, referring to her 2024 split from husband Angelo Pagán after 21 years of marriage. The timing mirrored Jennifer Lopez's own divorce from Ben Affleck, which was also filed in August 2024. Rumors about a possible rift began circulating when Remini didn't attend Lopez's wedding to Affleck in 2022. However, the King of Queens star dismissed any talk of a feud. 'Sometimes you don't talk to people every day like you used to, but that doesn't mean the love is lost,' she said. 'Friendships ebb and flow. That doesn't mean we're at odds.' Remini, who famously left the Church of Scientology 12 years ago, revealed that her personal transformation has led her to retreat from the spotlight and spend more time at home. 'I cherish my friendships and not everybody is meant to be in your life in the way that they were,' she said. 'I have many friends that I don't talk to every day. That doesn't mean we're at odds — it's just that I'm at a different place and so are they.' Despite the distance, Remini's comments indicate that her bond with Lopez remains intact, though redefined. CNN has reached out to representatives for both stars for additional comment.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store