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‘Tough pill to swallow': Iran's ceasefire deal an agreement to ‘stop being hit hard'

‘Tough pill to swallow': Iran's ceasefire deal an agreement to ‘stop being hit hard'

Sky News AU24-06-2025
Former US rear admiral Mark Montgomery discusses United States President Donald Trump's ceasefire brokered between Iran and Israel.
'Military ceasefires are not perfectly executed … there's a little bit of uncertainty to them,' Mr Montgomery told Sky News Australia.
'Iran's agreement to a ceasefire was to agree to stop being hit hard.
'The Iranians, that's going to be a tough pill for them to swallow at the diplomatic table.'
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Donald Trump made MAGA a promise on the Epstein files. They are holding him to it
Donald Trump made MAGA a promise on the Epstein files. They are holding him to it

ABC News

timean hour ago

  • ABC News

Donald Trump made MAGA a promise on the Epstein files. They are holding him to it

We may have just arrived at a line MAGA seems unwilling to follow Donald Trump over. It used to be that when politicians went back on their word, the people who elected them noticed, cared, reacted and pulled support and so the decision is sometimes reversed. For the President of the United States it is unchartered territory. Routinely, when he breaks a promise, his devout MAGA base has been inclined to forgive and selectively forget. Trump was the law and order presidential candidate who was also a felon. He said the United States wouldn't get involved in foreign wars and then bombed Iran. He said he would end the war in Ukraine in one day and then he announced he'll send Kyiv more Patriot missiles, albeit this time with an invoice. But he also taught his supporters to love conspiracy theories and hate the politicians who star in them. Perhaps without the humility to wonder if he'd one day be centre stage. The Epstein files are American conspiracy theory lore and the loudest voices in the most right-wing factions of the MAGA movement want them released to the public. Donald Trump used that momentum during his campaign, promising to release all documents compiled during the investigation into Epstein. It would be easy to say MAGA heavyweights would never accept anything less, but so many of them have tied themselves in knots to justify Trump's broken promises in the past. But the past few days have suggested the Epstein files might be different. After attempting to downplay the documents, Donald Trump tried convince his base to forget about them, only to then insult those who wouldn't and eventually perform somewhat of a backflip — ordering his Attorney General Pam Bondi to release all "pertinent" grand jury testimony related to the case. It remains to be seen whether that will be enough, but the move itself suggests the president may know the answer to a question that's been playing on repeat in the minds of Washington watchers since day one: Is there anything Donald Trump could do that would shake MAGA's love for him? Perhaps the president now believes crossing the line and becoming one of the powerful figures who keep the secret of the Epstein files could well have been it. That's the thing about dabbling in conspiracies — many are indeed theories, but some are true. Or more potent still, they start with something that is true. In 2008, high-flying financier Jeffrey Epstein pleaded guilty to state charges in Florida of soliciting and procuring a minor for prostitution. He was listed as a sex offender, but avoided a possible life sentence, instead serving 13 months in a work-release program. Epstein was later charged by federal prosecutors in Manhattan for nearly identical allegations in 2019, but he took his own life while in federal custody as he awaited trial. Years later, British socialite Ghislaine Maxwell was convicted of luring teenage girls to be sexually abused by Epstein. During her trial, some names came up. For example, pilots took the witness stand and dropped very well-known names — Prince Andrew, Bill Clinton, Donald Trump — who flew on Epstein's private jets. From the available evidence, theories have grown. And there has long been a theory that Epstein's "client list" not only existed but was being buried by the state. From opposition, that was a convenient theory to jump on for Trump. It played into the character he'd created for himself because it allowed him to style himself as the president that would get to the bottom of it . But earlier this month, Donald Trump's Department of Justice, as well as the FBI, released a memo saying their review found there was no "incriminating client list" and "no credible evidence found that Epstein blackmailed prominent individuals as part of his actions". This is not what MAGA expected to hear from their president and try as he might to distract them, they were not showing any signs of forgiving or forgetting. At a conservative conference held just days ago, commentators Megyn Kelly and Charlie Kirk discussed the memo and the actions of the Trump administration. "One of the main reasons that we voted Trump in was because we wanted real answers on real stories and we didn't want to be BS'ed anymore with a bunch of nonsense from our government that treated us like a bunch of stooges," Kelly said. "I believe Trump is still loyal to that mission and maybe the people who are behind that memo are loyal to that mission, too, but this ain't it." She said those in charge knew "the base has been led ... with a trail of breadcrumbs to believe something else for years". The pair called for all files, excluding those containing child sexual assault material, to be unsealed and released. "I think every file should be released to the public the same way as the JFK files. Let the American people decide," Kirk said. Donald Trump tried to tell his base the Epstein list didn't exist — just as he's tried to tell them what to believe in the past. But this story is well and truly in show, not tell, territory. It's not so much about what, or who, is on the list, as it about the transparency Trump promised and the base demands. Let us remember, that just one month after Donald Trump was elected for the first time, and still weeks before he would be sworn in as president, a man drove himself from North Carolina to Washington DC and stormed a pizza shop with an assault rifle. That man believed the Comet Ping Pong pizzeria on the capital's leafy Connecticut Avenue was actually a front for a child sex ring led by Hilary Clinton. This man was so adamant the former secretary of state was involved in crimes against children, he drove hours to "self-investigate" the conspiracy theory. What he found was a line up of wood-fired thin crusts and a terrified employee caught up in what is now known as "pizzagate". The idea that children are preyed upon by a ring of powerful people and that the government is involved in its cover-up has proven to be incredibly powerful in the past. It has compelled people to bear arms. It is not the sort of thing those with conspiratorial minds easily forget or can be talked out of with a few lines in a Truth Social post. When Donald Trump said the Epstein client list didn't exist, he really just added fuel to a conspiracy theory's fire. It might have been a surprise for the president who largely enjoys being believed by his base. But the political capital you can derive from conspiracy theories about the deep state becomes more of a liability when you are the person in charge and promised you'd be different. Trump has bigger fish to fry as the Murdoch-owned Wall Street Journal alleges further ties between him and Epstein, but his base has not been moved by his association with the sex offender in the past. Nor has it been swayed by criminal convictions or a civil jury that found Trump did sexually abuse E Jean Caroll in the 1990s. Donald Trump can be a criminal, but the reaction from MAGA over the past week tells us he cannot be seen to be protecting them, theoretical or not.

US Congress approves $9 bn in Trump cuts to foreign aid, public media
US Congress approves $9 bn in Trump cuts to foreign aid, public media

News.com.au

timean hour ago

  • News.com.au

US Congress approves $9 bn in Trump cuts to foreign aid, public media

US Republicans early Friday approved President Donald Trump's plan to cancel $9 billion in funding for foreign aid and public broadcasting, vowing it was just the start of broader efforts by Congress to slash the federal budget. The cuts achieve only a tiny fraction of the $1 trillion in annual savings that tech billionaire and estranged Trump donor Elon Musk vowed to find before his acrimonious exit in May from a role spearheading federal cost-cutting. But Republicans -- who recently passed a domestic policy bill expected to add more than $3 trillion to US debt -- said the vote honored Trump's election campaign pledge to rein in runaway spending. "President Trump and House Republicans promised fiscal responsibility and government efficiency," House Speaker Mike Johnson said in a statement just after the vote. "Today, we're once again delivering on that promise." Both chambers of Congress are Republican-controlled, meaning a mostly party-line House of Representatives vote of 216 to 213, moments after midnight, was sufficient to approve the Senate-passed measure. The bill now heads to the White House to be signed by Trump, who praised his backers in the House. "REPUBLICANS HAVE TRIED DOING THIS FOR 40 YEARS, AND FAILED... BUT NO MORE. THIS IS BIG!!!" he wrote on Truth Social. Most of the cuts target programs for countries hit by disease, war and natural disasters. But the move also scraps $1.1 billion that the Corporation for Public Broadcasting was due to receive over the next two years. Conservatives say the funding -- which goes mostly to more than 1,500 local public radio and TV stations, as well as to public broadcasters NPR and PBS -- is unnecessary and has funded biased coverage. The bill originally included $400 million in cuts to a global AIDS program that is credited with saving 26 million lives, but that funding was saved by a rebellion by moderate Republicans. - 'Dark day' - The vote was a win for Trump and fiscal hawks seeking to support the mission of the so-called Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), launched by Musk as Trump was swept to power, for radical savings. Congress had already approved the cash that was clawed back, and Democrats framed the bill as a betrayal of the bipartisan government funding process. They fear Trump's victory clears the way for more "rescissions packages" canceling agreed spending. "Instead of protecting the health, safety and well-being of the American people, House Republicans have once again rubber stamped Donald Trump's extreme, reckless rescissions legislation," House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries said in a joint statement with fellow top Democrats. Republicans need some Democratic votes to keep the government funded past September, and the minority party had threatened to abandon any plans for cooperation if the DOGE cuts went ahead. Jeffries and fellow Democrats seemed to suggest as much on Friday. "Tonight's vote... makes it clear that House Republicans are determined to march this country toward a painful government shutdown later this year," they said in the statement. Although they are in the minority, Democrats have leverage in funding fights because a budget deal would need at least 60 votes in the 100-member Senate and Republicans only have 53 seats. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer called it "a dark day for any American who relies on public broadcasting during floods, hurricanes, tornadoes, and other disasters." White House budget chief Russell Vought told an event hosted Thursday by the Christian Science Monitor that the administration was likely to send another rescissions package to Congress. ft-mlm/rsc

‘They created this expectation': Trump built up idea of ‘transparency' before Epstein chaos
‘They created this expectation': Trump built up idea of ‘transparency' before Epstein chaos

Sky News AU

time2 hours ago

  • Sky News AU

‘They created this expectation': Trump built up idea of ‘transparency' before Epstein chaos

Former White House press secretary Sean Spicer has addressed the MAGA divide regarding US President Donald Trump's handling of the Epstein files. 'It's a proxy for transparency and accountability for those people in this country that have been able to get away with things with the connections that they have,' Mr Spicer told Sky News host James Morrow. 'They created this expectation of more information to come. 'It's like a trailer to a movie, and then there's no movie.'

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