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Supreme Court upholds Trump's removal of Biden-appointed officials and more top headlines

Supreme Court upholds Trump's removal of Biden-appointed officials and more top headlines

Fox News23-05-2025

1. Supreme Court upholds Trump's removal of Biden appointees from federal boards
2. Shooting at Capital Jewish Museum highlights rising wave of anti-Jewish hate crimes
3. Trump administration terminates Harvard's student visa program
DESPOT'S OUTRAGE – Dictator fumes as North Korean naval destroyer launch ends in embarrassment. Continue reading …
MIXED MESSAGES – Alex Soros blasted for condemning shooting of Israelis while funding anti-Israel groups. Continue reading …
DIDDY'S DOWNFALL – Diddy sunk $35 million into Miami mansion, but Star Island digs may not be safe if he's convicted. Continue reading …
JAILHOUSE ROCK – Sheriff boasted about jail security days before 10 inmates escaped. Continue reading …
BLAME GAME – Bryan Kohberger defense takes on infamous legal strategy. Continue reading …
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OH, SNAP – Trump admin approves 'historic' waivers to ban junk food from food stamp programs. Continue reading …
WARRIOR SPIRIT – Defense secretary announces pay raises for Army paratroopers. Continue reading …
'DEBT BOMB' – Two GOP holdouts reject 'big, beautiful bill,' defend 'no' votes on social media. Continue reading …
HEATED PRESSER – White House shuts down reporter's 'ridiculous' challenge of White South African farmer deaths. Continue reading …
NEW VIEW? – Disney, ABC execs urge 'The View' hosts to tone down heated rhetoric. Continue reading …
CREDIBILITY CRISIS – Karine Jean-Pierre's defense of Biden's mental fitness over the years. Continue reading …
OVERREACH – Legal experts blast 'baseless' letter warning Paramount against Trump lawsuit settlement. Continue reading …
CANYON STATE SPLIT – Carville tells prominent Dem to win elections 'not run your jacka-- mouth.' Continue reading …
CHAD WOLF – Chinese devices are threatening our national security and safety, but there's a simple solution. Continue reading …
MACY PETTY – National sports governing bodies must be held accountable for failing to protect women. Continue reading …
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VACATION NIGHTMARE – 12 family members diagnosed with fungal disease after exploring cave. Continue reading …
BIGGER IN TEXAS – Construction unearths 'colossal' prehistoric remains of 'big ol' animals.' Continue reading …
DIGITAL NEWS QUIZ – FOX News challenges readers with weekly quiz featuring Khamenei, Cannes controversy. Take the quiz here …
BIG BOOST – Buc-ee's heads northward with expansion to new states in summer 2025. Continue reading …
THAT'S A MEAL – Bloody Mary cocktail goes viral for its towering build. See video …
KAROLINE LEAVITT – Alleged Biden decline one of the worst political scandals the US has seen. See video …
BRIANNA LYMAN – Perpetrators know there's a safe haven in the left's political corner. See video …
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Trump renegotiating Biden-era Chips Act grants, Lutnick says
Trump renegotiating Biden-era Chips Act grants, Lutnick says

CNBC

time5 minutes ago

  • CNBC

Trump renegotiating Biden-era Chips Act grants, Lutnick says

President Donald Trump's administration is renegotiating some of former President Joe Biden's grants to semiconductor firms, U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said at a hearing on Wednesday, suggesting some awards may be axed. Some of the Biden-era grants "just seemed overly generous, and we've been able to renegotiate them," Lutnick told lawmakers on the Senate Appropriations Committee, adding the goal was to benefit American taxpayers. "All the deals are getting better, and the only deals that are not getting done are deals that should have never been done in the first place," Lutnick said, appearing to signal that not all the awards would survive renegotiation. Biden in 2022 signed the CHIPS and Science Act to plow $52.7 billion into boosting semiconductor chips manufacturing and research in the U.S. and luring chipmakers away from Asia. The program rolled out billions in grants for semiconductor heavyweights, including Taiwan's TSMC, South Korea's Samsung and SK Hynix, as well as U.S.-based Intel and Micron. The grants, while signed, had only just begun to be disbursed by the time Biden left office. The details of those plans are not public but the money is meant to be disbursed as companies make progress toward their pledged plant expansions. Lutnick pointed to TSMC as an example of successful renegotiation. He said the chipmaker -- which won a $6 billion Chips Act award -- had increased by $100 billion its initial pledge to invest $65 billion in U.S. manufacturing. "We were able to modify the award for the same $6 billion of (government) funding," he said. TSMC announced the $100 billion in added investment in March but it was not immediately clear whether that was part of a renegotiation of its Chips Act award. TSMC declined to comment. Reuters reported in February that the White House was seeking to renegotiate the awards and had signaled delays to some upcoming semiconductor disbursements. Lutnick also said the administration agrees with the goal of having more than 50% of global AI computing capacity in America, responding to concerns that deals like the one announced by Trump last month to allow the United Arab Emirates to buy advanced American artificial intelligence chips could deprive the United States of key AI computing power.

Former Biden press secretary says she's no longer a Democrat
Former Biden press secretary says she's no longer a Democrat

Yahoo

time6 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Former Biden press secretary says she's no longer a Democrat

WASHINGTON – Karine Jean-Pierre, former White House press secretary for President Joe Biden, has left the Democratic Party to become an independent, she writes in a new book that will be released this fall. In her upcoming book "Independent: A Look Inside a Broken White House, Outside the Party Lines," Jean-Pierre shares "why Americans must step beyond party lines to embrace life as Independents," publisher Hachette Book Group says in a summary of the book released June 4. "Jean-Pierre didn't come to her decision to be an Independent lightly," the teaser for the book adds. "She takes us through the three weeks that led to Biden's abandoning his bid for a second term and the betrayal by the Democratic Party that led to his decision." More: Joe Biden 'optimistic' about treatment plan for Stage 4 prostate cancer Jean-Pierre's "Independent" is set to be released Oct. 21. It will add to the growing list of books on the Biden presidency written by White House reporters, including the recently released "Original Sin" by Jake Tapper of CNN and Alex Thompson of Axios that explores Biden's decline and initial decision to run for president in 2024. Jean-Pierre, who replaced Jen Psaki as Biden's press secretary, held the position from May 2022 to the end of Biden's term in January 2025. She was the first Black woman and first openly LGBTQ+ person to hold the high-profile position. More: Bill Clinton defends Biden on health reports: 'I never saw him that way' As Biden's top spokesperson, Jean-Pierre played a leading role in defending the former president's fitness after Biden struggled to complete coherent thoughts during a disastrous debate against Donald Trump on June 27, 2024. Biden dropped out of the 2024 election one month later amid pressure from top Democrats. "He is as sharp as ever, as I have known him to be," Jean-Pierre said during a July 3, 2024 briefing with reporters. A veteran of Democratic politics, Jean-Pierre worked as chief public affairs officer for and as an NBC and MSNBC political analyst before joining the White House. She was regional political director for the White House Office of Political Affairs during the Obama-Biden administration and deputy battleground states director for President Barack Obama's 2012 reelection campaign. In her book, Jean-Pierre "urges all Americans to vote their values and maintain individuality within party lines," according to the publisher's description, and "defines what it means to be part of the growing percentage of our fractured electorate that is Independent. "As a history maker, veteran public servant, political analyst and independent thinker, she urges Americans to think outside of the blue-and-red box as we consider what's next to save our democracy, the book summary says. Reach Joey Garrison on X @joeygarrison. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Karine Jean-Pierre leaves Democratic Party to become an independent

Critical US-Iran nuclear talks on shaky ground

time10 minutes ago

Critical US-Iran nuclear talks on shaky ground

The future of high-stakes negotiations over Iran's nuclear program remains shrouded in uncertainty as the U.S. and Iran publicly clash over the terms of an interim agreement proposed by the Trump administration that is intended to pave the way for a longer-lasting deal. Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, slammed that proposal during an address on Wednesday, saying it "contradicts our principle of power by 100%" and vowing that Iran would not agree to stop enriching uranium on its own soil, calling it "a key tool in the nuclear program." The Iranian foreign minister, Seyed Abbas Araghchi, succinctly underscored Iran's terms in a post on X shortly after the Ayatollah's speech, writing "no enrichment, no deal." Iran's stance contrasts sharply with that of President Donald Trump, which he emphasized on his social media platform on Monday. "Under our potential Agreement -- WE WILL NOT ALLOW ANY ENRICHMENT OF URANIUM!" Trump wrote on Truth Social. While the president and his Cabinet officials have repeatedly said Iran would be required to end enrichment activities under the terms of a deal, U.S. officials say that the initial interim proposal -- which is only intended to be a stepping stone to a broader agreement -- did not prohibit Iran from enriching uranium at low levels while a long-term solution to fuel Iran's civilian nuclear energy program could be established. Trump's post appeared to contradict the position staked out by his negotiators, and although Iran has not yet formally responded to the interim proposal, it remained unclear on Wednesday whether the U.S. would stand by all the terms in its initial offer. Whether delegations from Iran and the U.S. would meet for a sixth round of nuclear negotiations also remained unclear, although a U.S. official said a possible meeting in the coming days was under discussion. After holding a phone call with Russian leader Vladimir Putin on Wednesday, Trump signaled that he would look to Moscow to play a greater role in negotiations with Iran. "President Putin suggested that he will participate in the discussions with Iran and that he could, perhaps, be helpful in getting this brought to a rapid conclusion," Trump wrote on Truth Social. "It is my opinion that Iran has been slowwalking their decision on this very important matter, and we will need a definitive answer in a very short period of time!" But optimism among both U.S. and Iranian officials appears to have cooled in recent days. An Iranian official, who spoke with ABC News on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive negotiations, said that the U.S.' proposed terms are "unreasonable, greedy and unconventional." "The U.S. constantly changes its positions, which has led to a growing accumulation of mistrust regarding its intentions and heightened uncertainty about its will and seriousness to fulfil commitments, assuming any agreement is even to be formed," they told ABC News. "This document is not even open to be reviewed or responded to," the official added. Iran is pushing for relief from sanctions that have badly damaged the national economy. This week, Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmail Baghaei said Tehran needs guarantees regarding the "real end of the sanctions." That would include details on "how and through what mechanism" they would be lifted, Baghaei said, in remarks carried by the official IRNA news agency. Araghchi and Khamenei were downbeat on the U.S. proposal in comments this week. The document has "many ambiguities and questions," the Iranian foreign minister said in a Telegram post on Tuesday. "Many issues in this proposal are not clear," he added.

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