Syria's only female minister says lifting of economic sanctions offers hope for recoveryNew Foto - Syria's only female minister says lifting of economic sanctions offers hope for recovery

DAMASCUS (AP) — The lifting of economic sanctions onSyriawill allow the government to begin work on daunting tasks that include fighting corruption and bringing millions of refugees home, Hind Kabawat, the minister of social affairs and labor, told The Associated Press on Friday. Kabawat is the only woman and the only Christian in the 23-membercabinet formedin March to steer the country during a transitional period after the ouster of former PresidentBashar Assadin a rebel offensive in December. Her portfolio will be one of the most important as the country begins rebuilding after nearly 14 years of civil war. She saidmoves by the U.S. and the European Unionin the past week to at least temporarily lift most of the sanctions that had been imposed on Syria over decades will allow that work to get started. Before, she said, "we would talk, we would make plans, but nothing could happen on the ground because sanctions were holding everything up and restricting our work." With the lifting of sanctions they can now move to "implementation." One of the first programs the new government is planning to launch is "temporary schools" for the children of refugees and internally displaced people returning to their home areas. Kabawat said that it will take time for the easing of sanctions to show effects on the ground, particularly since unwinding some of the financial restrictions will involve complicated bureaucracy. "We are going step by step," she said. "We are not saying that anything is easy -- we have many challenges — but we can't be pessimistic. We need to be optimistic." The new government's vision is "that we don't want either food baskets or tents after five years," Kabawat said, referring to the country's dependence on humanitarian aid and many displacement camps. That may be an ambitious target, given that 90% of the country's population currently lives below the poverty line, according to theUnited Nations. Thecivil warthat began in 2011 also displaced half the country's pre-war population of 23 million people. The U.N.'s refugee agency, UNHCR, estimates that about half a million havereturned to Syriasince Assad was ousted. But the dire economic situation and battered infrastructure have also dissuaded many refugees from coming back. The widespread poverty also fed into a culture of public corruption that developed in the Assad era, including solicitation of bribes by public employees and shakedowns by security forces at checkpoints. Syria's new rulers have pledged to end the corruption, but they face an uphill battle. Public employees make salaries far below the cost of living, and the new government has so far been unable to make good on a promise to hike public sector wages by 400%. "How can I fight corruption if the monthly salary is $40 and that is not enough to buy food for 10 days?" Kabawat asked. Women and minorities The country's new rulers, led by PresidentAhmad al-Sharaa— the former head of Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, or HTS, a Sunni Islamist insurgent group that spearheaded the offensive against Assad — have been under scrutiny by western countries over the treatment of Syrian women and religious minorities. In March, clashes between government security forces and pro-Assad armed groups spiraled into sectarian revenge attacks onmembers of the Alawite sectto which Assad belongs. Hundreds ofcivilians were killed. The government formed a committee to investigate the attacks, which has not yet reported its findings. Many also criticized the transitional government as giving only token representation to women and minorities. Apart from Kabawat, the cabinet includes only one member each from the Druze and Alawite sects and one Kurd. "Everywhere I travel… the first and last question is, 'What is the situation of the minorities?'" Kabawat said. "I can understand the worries of the West about the minorities, but they should also be worried about Syrian men and women as a whole." She said the international community's priority should be to help Syria to build its economy and avoid the country falling into "chaos." 'Rebuilding our institutions' Despite being the only woman in the cabinet, Kabawat said "now there is a greater opportunity for women" than under Assad and that "today there is no committee being formed that does not have women in it." "Syrian women have suffered a lot in these 14 years and worked in all areas," she said. "All Syrian men and women need to have a role in rebuilding our institutions." She called for those wary of al-Sharaa to give him a chance. While the West has warmed to the new president -- particularly after his recenthigh-profile meetingwith U.S.President Donald Trump— others have not forgotten that he fought against U.S. forces in Iraq after the invasion of 2003 or that his HTS group was formed as an offshoot of al-Qaida, although it later cut ties. "People used to call (Nelson) Mandela a terrorist, and then he became the first leader among those who freed South Africa, and after that suddenly he was no longer a terrorist," Kabawat said. She urged skeptics to "give us the same chance that you gave to South Africa."

Syria's only female minister says lifting of economic sanctions offers hope for recovery

Syria's only female minister says lifting of economic sanctions offers hope for recovery DAMASCUS (AP) — The lifting of economic sanctio...
Some global LGBTQ travelers are skipping America this Pride seasonNew Foto - Some global LGBTQ travelers are skipping America this Pride season

For many European gays, the festive Eurovision Song Contest each May marks the unofficial kickoff to the global Pride season. As usual, there were soaring highlights and scandalous lowlights among the competing Eurovision nations at the 2025 edition of the contest in Basel, Switzerland, this month. But another country was on the lips of many queer jet-setters this year: the United States, with itsspate of new anti-transandanti-immigrant policiesthat are causing some LGBTQ travelers to reconsider their upcoming American itineraries. Several European countries, including Denmark, Finland and Germany, have issued official cautions for LGBTQ travelers visiting the U.S., particularly those with an "X" gender listed on their passport. Meanwhile, out of concerns for participant safety, Canada's leading LGBTQ rights group,Egale Canada, pulled out of participation in WorldPride DC, and theAfrican Human Rights Coalitionhas called for aboycottof this edition of the international Pride event, coordinated by InterPride and usually held every two years. "It doesn't feel right to at the moment," Karl Krause told NBC News at Eurovision in Basel, referring to travel to the U.S. Krause, who is German by birth, lives in Amsterdam with his Dutch partner, Daan Colijn, and together they are travel-focused content creators known to their followers asCouple of Men. In 2021, Lonely Planet awarded them its first Best in Travel LGBTIQ Storyteller Award, a nod to their work for the LGBTQ community. "As gay men traveling to the U.S., we are probably still the more privileged part of the community," Krause said. "But we had some interesting conversations recently in Bilbao with a trans person who was like, 'I cannot, I literally cannot travel to the U.S., because I have no idea how they would receive my diverse passport, if I would be put in detention or whatever. I have my little daughter — I'm not going to risk any of this.'" Krause said that was the moment he realized that while he and Colijn as gay men may not yet be feeling the full effects of the Trump administration's policies, they were already having an impact on other travelers within the LGBTQ community. "So how can we in good feeling promote this destination?" he asked. "How can I send a trans friend or nonbinary friend and try to inspire them to go to the U.S. when they are in what's supposed to be the best time of their year, to spend in a country where they don't feel safe?" Colijn added that he and Krause want to send their followers "somewhere where they are safe, where they feel welcome." "At the moment, of course a lot of people will still feel very, very welcome in the majority of America — a lot of places are still the same, or maybe even trying to do better. But we just want to be careful in what we are supporting," Colijn said. John Tanzella, president and CEO of the International LGBTQ+ Travel Association, orIGLTA, told NBC News that such concerns are commonplace this year. "We've heard from travelers feeling uncertain about visiting the U.S., especially trans and gender-diverse individuals," he said. "These decisions are often driven by concerns about safety, treatment at the border and access to affirming health care. Some have canceled their trips. Many others are still coming, but they're being more selective about where they go." Nicoló Manfredini, an Italian trans man living in Valencia, Spain, said he was recently able to enter the U.S. without incident thanks to having an "M" marker on his passport, but the government's anti-trans policies currently make America a place he would rather not visit again. "Originally I had planned to go to WorldPride, but not now," he said. Given the current environment in the U.S., Manfredini added, he said he would only travel to the U.S. if he had to do so for work. Even American gender-diverse people are adjusting their travel plans because of Trump administration policies, according toa studyreleased earlier this month by the Williams Institute at the UCLA School of Law. Of the more than 300 transgender, nonbinary and other gender-diverse people surveyed, 70% said they are less likely to go on vacation to U.S. states they view as less trans-affirming. Krause said that despite usually attending at least one and sometimes several U.S. Pride events every year, this year will be different. "We were actually planning to go to Washington, D.C., for WorldPride, but this is off the table for us … How safe can we be in Washington? Just saying that scares me a little bit," he said, noting the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol was particularly concerning. "I don't know what is going on there now and who is coming, and I don't feel safe with the idea that I'm going there and I'm walking and maybe there is a mob [coming] from whatever direction." Capital Pride Alliance, the organizers behind WorldPride DC, which started earlier this month and continues through June 8, did not respond to requests for comment from NBC News, but the event's websitedetails security protocolsand includes a passport advisory for transgender and nonbinary travelers. Sahand Miraminy, director of operations for Capital Pride Alliance,told The Washington Postthis week that security measures at WorldPride DC will include weapons screening at the entrance to the street festival June 7 and 8, which will also be fenced in. In addition to the local and federal "agency support that we have, we also hire private security and have many forms of safety measures and surveillance that we may not share at all times with the public," he said, "but there are certainly conversations that we're having with those agencies on a weekly basis." Organizers at NYC Pride, arguably the most globally popular of U.S. Pride events each year and held like most big cities during Pride Month in June, are also stepping up security plans for 2025. "NYC Pride has contracted a private firm with vast experience managing LGBTQIA+ events to lead on-site security," spokesperson Kevin Kilbride said. "Given the size and visibility of our events, NYC Pride is monitored and secured by municipal agencies at every level of government to protect our freedom of expression and ensure a safe space for our community." Tanzella said that since safety is unfortunately never guaranteed for the LGBTQ community, careful planning is more essential than ever for LGBTQ travelers coming to the U.S. this year. "Research destinations with strong reputations for inclusion and visible LGBTQ+ support," he advised. "Connect with local LGBTQ+ organizations for on-the-ground insights, stay informed about local laws and current events, and have a plan for accessing affirming health care if needed. Most importantly, prioritize places where you feel respected and supported." Cities and states with long-standing reputations for LGBTQ inclusivity are getting more attention, Tanzella added. "In this climate, a destination's visible commitment to inclusion through its policies, community engagement, and public support truly matters," he said. In October, the IGLTA will host its annual global convention in Palm Springs, California, a destination Colijn said he and Krause can and will enthusiastically visit. "We were there just last year, and we felt how amazing and welcome and how much old queer culture is there," he said. "So of course we want to go there, and we can fully tell people to go there. Unless of course we might get in trouble at the border." Krause, however, noted that he and Colijn still haven't booked their Palm Springs trip just yet, because they fear that under the Trump administration "everything can change overnight." "There is no long-term planning," he said. Kilbride said he understands the need global queer travelers feel to exhibit caution this year, but he said he believes Pride remains one of the most powerful tools in the collective struggle for equality. "We stand with the international LGBTIA+ community, particularly our trans and nonbinary siblings," he said. "But we also believe the fight for our community is more important now than ever. We need to show up big to make it clear: We're here, we're queer, and we're not going anywhere."

Some global LGBTQ travelers are skipping America this Pride season

Some global LGBTQ travelers are skipping America this Pride season For many European gays, the festive Eurovision Song Contest each May mark...
Musk said he was chainsawing government spending. It was more like a trimNew Foto - Musk said he was chainsawing government spending. It was more like a trim

By Brad Heath, Jason Lange, Andy Sullivan, Grant Smith WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Elon Musk once famously wielded a chainsaw on stage in a theatrical demonstration of his effort to drastically cut U.S. federal spending under President Donald Trump. As he leaves government, official data shows he achieved something closer to a trim with scissors. In the four months since Musk's Department of Government Efficiency began slashing federal spending and staffing, a handful of the agencies he has targeted trimmed their combined spending by about $19 billion compared with the same period last year, according to U.S. Treasury Department summaries reviewed by Reuters. That is far below Musk's initial goal of $2 trillion in savings and amounts to about a half of 1% of total spending by the federal government. Musk said on Wednesday he is leaving the administration but that its cost-cutting work will "only strengthen over time." It remains to be seen, however, how enthusiastically Trump's cabinet secretaries will continue to downsize their departments. DOGE says it pulled the plug on more than 26,000 federal grants and contracts that are worth about $73 billion, while more than 260,000 government workers have been bought out, taken early retirement or been fired. But the DOGE tallies have been riddled with errors, according to reviews by numerous budget experts and media outlets, including Reuters. That has made them difficult to verify, and some of the announced cuts are not saving the government any money because judges have reversed or stalled them. That leaves the Treasury Department's daily reports on how much the government is spending as the clearest window into the scope of the administration's cost-cutting. The view they offer so far is modest: The government has spent about $250 billion more during the first months of Trump's administration than it did during the same period of time last year, a 10% increase. And even some parts of the government Trump has cut the most deeply are, for now at least, spending more money than they did last year. One big factor driving costs is largely outside Trump's immediate control: interest payments on the United States' growing pile of debt, which amount to about $1 in every $7 the federal government spends. Debt interest payments are up about 22% from a year ago. Spending on Social Security, the safety-net program for the elderly and disabled, totaled about $500 billion since Trump's inauguration, up 10% from a year earlier. To be sure, the view offered by the Treasury Department's daily reports is incomplete. Many of the cuts DOGE has made to the federal workforce, grants and contracting will reduce what the government will spend in the future but do not show up in its checkbook today. For example, while thousands of workers have taken buyouts, the government will continue to pay their wages until October. So far, the Labor Department has estimated there were only about 26,000 fewer people on federal payrolls in April than were on the books in January, after adjusting the figures for typical seasonal swings. Tallying savings from future cuts, however, is seldom straightforward. "It could be that in the future we never replace these workers and we save billions of dollars, or it could be that they come back and it's even more expensive than before," said Martha Gimbel, executive director of the Budget Lab at Yale, a nonpartisan budget analysis organization at Yale University. The White House declined to offer an explanation for DOGE's figures. Spokesman Harrison Fields said in a statement that "DOGE is working at record speed to cut waste, fraud, and abuse, producing historic savings for the American people." Reuters estimated the administration's impact by tallying outlays at agencies that had been targeted for cuts and whose spending had dropped from the same time last year. Among the agencies hardest hit are the Department of Education, State Department, U.S. Agency for International Development, National Institutes of Health, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and other independent agencies. Rachel Snyderman, an expert on fiscal policy at the Bipartisan Policy Center, said the spending declines at agencies could be reversed if the Trump administration doesn't get congressional approval to cancel outlays from this year's federal budget, as required by law. AN $11 BILLION EDUCATION CUT The most obvious sign that the Trump administration is making a dent in federal spending is in the Education Department, which Trump has ordered shut down. The administration cut the department's staff by about half in March. DOGE's website lists 311 Education Department grants and contracts it says it has eliminated for a savings of about $1.6 billion, though it is not clear how it arrived at those figures. Some cuts have not stuck. A federal judge in March ordered the administration to restore some of the grants it had cut, and another judge this month ordered it to rehire 1,400 workers. Still, the Education Department under Trump has spent close to $11 billion less than it did over the same period last year, the Treasury reports show, far more than what DOGE says it has cut. One reason could be that layoffs have made it harder for the government to process payments for special education and low-income schools. School districts that have sued over the cuts alleged that states were already experiencing slowdowns in receiving money. Another factor for the reduced outlays: The department has stopped handing out the $4.4 billion that remains to be distributed from the hundreds of billions of dollars approved in previous years to help schools weather the COVID-19 crisis. The Education Department did not respond to a request for comment. OTHER AREAS DOGE HAS CUT Other agencies targeted in Trump's overhaul are also starting to show declines in their spending compared with the same time last year. Spending is down about $350 million at the CDC and about $1 billion at the National Institutes of Health. The Trump administration has moved to slash spending across those agencies, cancelling grants and ending leases for office space. The Department of Health and Human Services has reported terminating close to 2,000 grants that planned to disperse more than $20 billion. Many of the grants were to boost labs that fight new infectious diseases, or to fund state mental health programs. Some $14 billion of the grant money had already been spent prior to the termination, with roughly $7 billion effectively frozen, according to a Reuters analysis of the government's tallies. The administration has effectively dismantled USAID, which handled most U.S. foreign assistance, firing nearly all of the agency's employees and cancelling most of its humanitarian aid and health programs, though federal courts have forced the government to continue making some payments. USAID spending is down about 40%, to about $4.6 billion, from last year. Spending at the State Department – where DOGE says it has cut nearly $1 billion in grants and contracts – is also down about 20% from 2024. WHY WE CAN'T KNOW MORE Measuring the impact of the administration's actions is difficult because many cuts will not yield savings for months or years even as spending elsewhere increases. Spending on federal employee salaries, for example, is up by more than $3 billion under Trump. Some of the grants and contracts DOGE cut were due to be paid out over several years, and many remain the subject of lawsuits that will determine whether they can be cut at all. DOGE says it has saved taxpayers $175 billion, but the details it has posted on its website, where it gives the only public accounting of those changes, add up to less than half of that figure. It says the figure includes workforce cuts, interest savings and other measures it has not itemized. It is also hard to know exactly how much the government would have spent if the administration had not started cutting. (Reporting by Brad Heath, Jason Lange and Andy Sullivan in Washington and Grant Smith in New York, Editing by Ross Colvin and Matthew Lewis)

Musk said he was chainsawing government spending. It was more like a trim

Musk said he was chainsawing government spending. It was more like a trim By Brad Heath, Jason Lange, Andy Sullivan, Grant Smith WASHINGTON ...
Trump Cracks Down on Chinese International Students: What to KnowNew Foto - Trump Cracks Down on Chinese International Students: What to Know

People hold up signs during the Harvard Students for Freedom rally in support of international students at the Harvard University campus in Boston, Mass., on May 27, 2025. Credit - Rick Friedman—AFP/Getty Images "Economists don't like tariffs not only because of the tariff itself but because of the uncertainty it creates," Fangzhou Jiang, a Chinese student at Harvard Kennedy School and co-founder of higher education consulting firm Crimson Education, tells TIME. "It's the same situation." The uncertainty Jiang is dealing with is his education: while his student visa has so far not been affected, thechanging situationaround Harvard's enrollment authorization and now new restrictions on Chinese students have made it difficult to navigate decisions around things like housing for the next academic year. Secretary of State Marco RubiosaidWednesday the U.S. would start "aggressively" revoking Chinese student visas and "enhance scrutiny" of applications from mainland China and Hong Kong. Rubio gave sparse details on what exactly the criteria would be but said it would include "those with connections to the Chinese Communist Party or studying in critical fields." China on Thursday condemned the decision, calling it "discriminatory." "The U.S. decision … seriously hurts the lawful rights and interests of international students from China, and disrupts people-to-people exchanges between the two countries. China firmly opposes it and has protested to the U.S. over the decision,"saidChinese foreign ministry spokesperson Mao Ning. "This politically motivated and discriminatory move exposes the U.S. hypocrisy over freedom and openness. It will further damage the image and reputation of the U.S. itself." The U.S. move comes at a time when the Trump Administration has imposedrestrictions on the sales of chip design softwareandsome jet engine partsto China, and soon after it warned that the sale of Huawei semiconductors "anywhere in the world" would violate U.S. export controls—prompting China tothreaten legal action. It's also come amid the Administration's war on U.S. colleges, which has included slashing federal funding for a number of universities and an attempt tobar Harvard University from enrolling international studentsover the school's alleged noncompliance with a list of demands. The decision was celebrated by some. Ashley Moody, a Republican Senator from Florida,postedon X, "the U.S. is no longer in the business of importing espionage." Moodyintroduceda bill in March to ban all Chinese students from the U.S. Others, however, condemned the move. "The wholesale revocation of student visas based on national origin—and without an investigation—is xenophobic and wrong," the Democratic-led Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucuspostedon X. "Turning these students away—many of whom simply wish to learn in a free and democratic society—is not just shortsighted but a betrayal of our values." This policy "doesn't come from nowhere," says David Weeks, co-founder and chief operating officer of Sunrise International, a consulting firm that advises overseas universities on recruiting Chinese students. "You have adverse policies tracing back all the way to" President Donald Trump's first term, Weeks says. In 2020, Trump's first-term Administration implemented Proclamation 10043, arestrictive visa policyon Chinese graduate students and researchers with ties to China's "military-civil" universities. Around 1,000 Chinese scholars had their visasrevokedunder the policy, which persisted under the Biden Administration. The new restrictions may appear more expansive, but it's "a lot of chest thumping," Weeks says, adding that without further details, it doesn't appear to be substantively different from what's been in place for the last five years. "It's almost domestic political posturing. There's folks in the State Department that may want to seem tough on China, but this idea of limiting visas for students pursuing critical fields is nothing new." The ambiguity around the new policy and other recent decisions has thrown some Chinese students into a precarious position. The main change is that the criteria has been expanded from alleged military ties to ties to the CCP—but in effect, Weeks says, this will be logistically difficult to implement. A huge number of Chinese citizens have ties to the CCP: the party boasts a membership ofaround 100 million members, and even if someone isn't a member, it's likely they can be linked through someone they know who is. But people join forreasons beyond direct political involvement. "To be a civil servant or work in a state enterprise, it's almost obligatory to be in the party," one membertoldAFP. "It's like a diploma. It opens doors." On top of that, "essentially every department of every Chinese university has a dual system of governance, where you've got the dean and you have the Communist Party Secretary," Weeks says. Students may have also joined the Communist Youth League at some point, but it's almost akin to joining the Boy Scouts, he adds. "The party is omnipresent in many Chinese universities," Weeks says, but that doesn't mean that students are actively politically involved. "The effort to try to disentangle and identify who has a party affiliation is practically extremely difficult." If it's about national security, Jiang says, then it "might not be the most effective move" to go after anyone with apparent affiliations with the CCP because "you would have targeted a whole bunch of people that have nothing to do with politics or with national security matters." "There's a possibility that students could be vindictively targeted, especially if they're at a university like Harvard that's picked a fight with the Administration," Weeks says. "There's certainly a risk that we could have a McCarthyist sort of sweep." Chinese students account for nearly a quarter—or more than 277,000—of all international students in the U.S., the second highest nationality behind Indian students, according to a2024 Open Doors report. Many of these students are "financially pretty self-sustaining," Weeks says, which can be a significant contribution to university revenue. Chinese students also tend to have strong backgrounds in STEM and are typically highly academically motivated, he adds. They can be "a critical lifeline for some programs." "There's just no market that is as big and as wealthy and as academically prepared as China," Weeks says. Right now, among Chinese students and their families, there's concern, Weeks says, but not yet panic. U.S. universities have long held a "tremendous amount of soft power," he adds. "In China, there's still a perception that certain other countries are easy, because they don't have as selective of admissions processes as the U.S. does, the degrees are shorter and thus less rigorous." Many U.S. universities, even non-elite ones, have a kind of brand recognition among Chinese employers, while job opportunities in large American cities are "unparalleled." Chinese families have also watched Trump's other policies go on rollercoasters, including imposing heavy tariffs on China and the rest of the world beforebacking out. "I think Chinese families are seeing that there's sometimes a lot of noise and bluster, then the final outcome is not ideal," says Weeks, "but it's certainly not apocalyptic either." Still, if punitive policies towards Chinese international students persist, students may turn to alternative destinations, experts say. Read More:These Asian Universities Are Seeking to Attract Harvard Transfers as Trump Targets International Students "Chinese parents view this environment as one of toxic uncertainty," Weeks says. "Chinese parents really gravitate towards the rule of law in a lot of these anglophone countries, so when they see that the rule of law in some places is under threat, that's deeply concerning to them." The Trump Administration's attitude towards Chinese students is a far cry from the counterpart view of Chinese President Xi Jinping, who has for years advocated for more American students to come to China. Xi in 2023 launched an initiative to bring in 50,000 Americans for exchanges and studies over five years. Last year, 16,000 Americansparticipated. "There's recognition that when you don't have people-to-people exchanges, you lose an important bulwark against populist rhetoric on both sides," Weeks says. "China thinks that we need more, not less, exchange if we have disagreements." On Wednesday evening, the same day that Rubio announced the decision, Chinese Ambassador Xie Feng touted people-to-people exchanges as foundational to U.S.-China relations. "It is people-to-people ties that invigorate China-U.S. relations," he said at his embassy. "We warmly welcome all American friends to travel in China, shop in China, succeed in China and take part in Chinese modernisation. Come and see the country with your own eyes." Jiang says when he thinks of his peers, friends, and faculty members, he feels very welcome in the U.S. But these moves by the Administration have spotlighted rhetoric that makes him feel less accepted. Some experts say the Administration's decision will lead to an erosion of trust between the two countries, which could ultimately impact trade negotiations—a key priority for the Trump Administration. "This policy is an unfair treatment of Chinese citizens, which will intensify diplomatic tensions between China and the United States, undermining the easing atmosphere that had emerged following the Geneva talks," Sun Chenghao, a fellow at Tsinghua University's Centre for International Security and Strategy,toldtheSouth China Morning Post, referencing the agreement between the U.S. and China totemporarily lower tariffs. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said in a ThursdayFox News interviewthat trade talks with China are "a bit stalled" and pushed for a call between Trump and Xi—who last spoke in January ahead of Trump's inauguration. "I think China has made it clear that it would like to disentangle security disagreements and trade … from people-to-people exchanges," Weeks says. Though he doesn't think the Trump Administration's education policies will ultimately undermine trade negotiations, he adds: "I don't know if Trump or Rubio actually care that much about which student from what province is studying at what U.S. university, but I do think that they see international students unfortunately not as humans, but as bargaining chips." Contact usatletters@time.com.

Trump Cracks Down on Chinese International Students: What to Know

Trump Cracks Down on Chinese International Students: What to Know People hold up signs during the Harvard Students for Freedom rally in supp...
British Attacks on Free Speech Prove the Value of the First AmendmentNew Foto - British Attacks on Free Speech Prove the Value of the First Amendment

Political activists occasionally propose a new constitutional convention, which would gather delegates from the states to craft amendments to the nation's founding document. It's a long and convoluted process, but the Constitution itself provides the blueprint.Article Vallows such a confab if two-thirds of Congress or two-thirds of the state legislatures call for one. These days, conservatives are the driving force for the idea, as they see it as a means to put further limits on the federal government. Sometimes,progressivespropose such a thing. Their goals are to enshrine various social programs and social-justice concepts. Yet anyone who has watched the moronic sausage-making in Congress and state legislatures should be wary of openingPandora's Box. I'd be happy enough if both political tribes tried to uphold the Constitution as it is currently drafted. It's a brilliant document that limits the power of the government to infringe on our rights. Without the first 10—the Bill of Rights—this would be a markedly different nation. For a sense of where we might be without it, I'd recommend looking at Great Britain and its approach to the speech concepts detailed on our First Amendment. Our nation was spawned from the British, so we share a culture and history. Yet, without a specific constitutional dictate, that nation has taken a disturbingapproachthat rightly offends American sensibilities. AsTabletmagazinereported, "74-year-old Scottish grandmother Rose Docherty was arrested on video by four police officers for silently holding a sign in proximity to a Glasgow abortion clinic reading 'Coercion is a crime, here to talk, only if you want.'" Thousands of Brits are detained, questioned, and prosecuted, it notes, for online posts of the type that wouldn't raise an eyebrow here. The chilling effect is profound. This isn't as awful as what happens in authoritarian countries such as Russia, where the government's critics have a habit of accidentallyfalling out of windows. But that's thin gruel. Britain and the European Union are supposed to be free countries. Their speech codes are intended to battle disinformation/misinformation, but empowering the government to be the arbiter of such vague concepts only destroys everyone's freedoms. In 1998, Great Britain approvedArticle 10of the European Convention on Human Rights. It protects a citizen's "right to hold your own opinions and to express them freely without government interference." But it comes with limits and conditions. The authorities may quash suchspeechto "protect national security, territorial integrity (the borders of the state) or public safety," or "prevent disorder or crime," or "protect health or morals," or "maintain the authority and impartiality of judges." One may not express "views that encourage racial or religious hatred." Those are open-ended terms, which has led to bizarre prosecutions. OurFirst Amendmentincludes these words: "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble." A constitutional amendment stating "no law" is more protective than a statute with asterisks and exceptions. With the political Left devoted to limiting speech based on its fixations on race and gender and the political Right's willingness to, say, deport students who take verboten positions on the war in Gaza and malign reporters asenemies of the people, I'd hate to see how speech protections would fare in a refashioned constitution. Traditionally, the Left has taken a "living and breathing" approach, insisting its plain words and founders' intent are up for reinterpretation. Sadly, modern conservatives, who previously defended originalism, seem ready to ditch the Constitution when it hinders their policy aims. Just read their dissing ofdue process—as stated in the 5th and 14th amendments, when it comes to immigration policy. When asked abouthabeas corpusduring a Senate hearing, Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noemsaidit's "a constitutional right that the president has to be able to remove people from this country." It's the opposite, ashabeas corpusrequires the government to explain why it's detaining people—and forbids it from holding them indefinitely. MAGA apparently believes the words of the Constitution mean the opposite of what they say. Frankly, I wouldn't want either side to be near a constitutional convention that's empowered to rewrite a document penned by men more brilliant and civic-minded than our current lot. "Those who won our independence by revolution were not cowards,"wroteSupreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis in the 1927 free-speech case,Whitney v. California. "They did not exalt order at the cost of liberty. … If there be time to expose through discussion the falsehood and fallacies, to avert the evil by the processes of education, the remedy to be applied is more speech, not enforced silence." We don't need to revisit theConstitution, but to uphold the protections already within it. This column wasfirst publishedin The Orange County Register. The postBritish Attacks on Free Speech Prove the Value of the First Amendmentappeared first onReason.com.

British Attacks on Free Speech Prove the Value of the First Amendment

British Attacks on Free Speech Prove the Value of the First Amendment Political activists occasionally propose a new constitutional conventi...
US inflation gauge cools with little sign of tariff impact, so farNew Foto - US inflation gauge cools with little sign of tariff impact, so far

WASHINGTON (AP) — A key U.S. inflation gauge slowed last month asPresident Donald Trump'stariffshave yet to noticeably push up prices, while American incomes jumped. Friday'sreportfrom the Commerce Department showed that consumer prices rose just 2.1% in April compared with a year earlier, down from 2.3% in March and the lowest since September. Excluding the volatile food and energy categories, core prices rose 2.5% from a year earlier, below the March figure of 2.6%. Economists track core prices because they typically provide a better read on where inflation is headed. The figures show inflation is still declining from its post-pandemic spike, which reached the highest level in four decades in July 2022. Economists andsome business executiveshave warned that prices will likely head higher as Trump's widespread tariffs take effect, though the timing and impact of those duties are now in doubt after they werestruck down late Wednesdayincourt. At the same time, incomes — before adjusting for inflation — rose a healthy 0.8%. Much of that gain reflected an increase in Social Security benefits for some retired teachers, fire fighters, and federal workers whose incomes previously weren't fully counted toward Social Security benefits. The inflation-fighters at the Federal Reservesaid at their most recent meetingMay 6-7 that inflation is still elevated, compared to their target of 2%. Fed officials, who focus more on core prices, broadly support keeping their key interest rate steady while they evaluate the impact of the tariffs on inflation and jobs. Consumer spending rose 0.2% in April from March, the report said, but that's down from the big 0.7% rise in March. Thecourt rulinglast Wednesday said that most of Trump's tariffs were unlawful, including his duties on imports from Canada, Mexico, and China, as well as those on more than 50 other countries. Tariffs on steel, aluminum, and cars were implemented under different laws and remain in place. But the duties were allowed to remain in effect while the Trump administration appeals the ruling against them. And administration officials say they will find other legal authorities, if needed, to implement the tariffs. As a result, what tariffs will end up in place and for how long remains highly uncertain.

US inflation gauge cools with little sign of tariff impact, so far

US inflation gauge cools with little sign of tariff impact, so far WASHINGTON (AP) — A key U.S. inflation gauge slowed last month asPresiden...
Michigan Gov. Whitmer says Trump vowed to 'drop' idea of pardoning kidnapping plottersNew Foto - Michigan Gov. Whitmer says Trump vowed to 'drop' idea of pardoning kidnapping plotters

DETROIT — Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer said in aradio interviewthatPresident Donald Trumphad previously told her in the Oval Office he would not consider pardons for the men convicted of conspiring to kidnap her — a position he veered from this week, when he told reporters gathered in the White House that he would "take a look at it." Whitmer, speaking with Michigan Public Radio Network reporter Rick Pluta at the Detroit Regional Chamber Conference on Mackinac Island, said not condemning political violence "does a disservice to everyone." "I'll be honest with you, I talked to the president about a month ago and he asked me how I'd feel about this and I said I think it would be the wrong decision, I would oppose it, and he said 'Okay, I'll drop it,'" Whitmer said in an interview for the Michigan Public Radio Network thataired May 29. "Now we see this revelation. So, I'm not sure how to process it." Whitmer added she would be reaching out to Trump, a Republican, over the weekend. She previously visited the Oval Office and earned Trump'ssupport for a new fighter mission at SelfridgeAir National Guard Base, as well as for a facility designed to prevent invasive carp speciesfrom entering the Great Lakes. Trump praised Whitmer, a Democrat, during the April visit, saying: "She's really been doing an excellent job." Whitmer, who typically meets one-on-one with reporters at the conference, declined an interview request from the Detroit Free Press, part of the USA TODAY Network, through her office. Trump, speaking in the Oval Office on May 28, told reporters he was considering a pardon for the convicted plotters. In Aug. 2022, Adam Fox and Barry Croft Jr. were convicted of conspiring to kidnap Whitmer in 2020 after being disgruntled with her government's handling of the COVID-19 pandemic. "It's been brought to my attention. I did watch the trial. It looked to me like somewhat of a railroad job, I'll be honest with you," Trump said, of a potential pardon. "It looked to me like some people said some stupid things. You know, they were drinking, and I think they said stupid things." Whitmer noted the July assassination attempt on Trump during a rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, last year, saying leaders must condemn political violence regardless of party. "I will just point out that when the man shot at the president when he was on the campaign trail in Pennsylvania, I was one of the first officeholders on either side of the aisle to condemn it," Whitmer told Pluta. "Because anything short of condemnation creates a dangerous space for people that are sworn an oath to do the work of the public. We don't take up arms and harm one another. And so, I'm going to make my thoughts on this known to the White House again. And I hope that it's not an action that they take." During a Q&A session on the stage of the Mackinac Policy Conference, President and Chief Executive Officer of Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan Tricia Keith asked Whitmer about the possibility of the Trump pardons. "Oh, what are you talking about?" Whitmer said. But after injecting some humor, she became serious. "No one should hesitate to condemn political violence," Whitmer said, adding that she hopes Trump doesn't follow through on the pardons he floated. Fox received a 16-year prison sentence, while Croft received a 19-year sentence after being convicted of an additional weapons charge. Both are currently serving their sentences at a maximum security federal prison in Colorado. In April, a U.S. 6th Circuit of Appeals panel denied their request for a new trial. Whitmer had previously condemned the kidnapping plot and called the convictions of Fox and Croft proof "that violence and threats have no place in our politics and those who seek to divide us will be held accountable." In total, 14 men were charged for their involvement with the plot. Prosecutors had mixed success across federal and state courts, landing nine convictions while five men were acquitted across state and federal courts. Contact Arpan Lobo: alobo@freepress.com This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press:Gretchen Whitmer says Trump promised not to pardon kidnapping plotters

Michigan Gov. Whitmer says Trump vowed to 'drop' idea of pardoning kidnapping plotters

Michigan Gov. Whitmer says Trump vowed to 'drop' idea of pardoning kidnapping plotters DETROIT — Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer said...
5 things to know for May 30: Wildfires, Israel-Hamas, Tariffs, Trump death threat, Covid-19New Foto - 5 things to know for May 30: Wildfires, Israel-Hamas, Tariffs, Trump death threat, Covid-19

C-O-N-G-R-A-T-U-L-A-T-I-O-N-S, Faizan Zaki! The 13-year-old from Allen, Texas,won the 2025 Scripps National Spelling BeeThursday night. Zaki, who hascompeted in the annual contest four times, came in second last year. Here's what else you need to know toGet Up to Speed and On with Your Day. The Canadian provinces of Manitoba and Saskatchewan have declaredstates of emergencydue to a series of wildfires. The blazes, which began on Monday in Saskatchewan, have rapidly expanded in size,prompting the evacuation of more than 18,000 people. The intensifying fires are also beginning to send hazardous smoke toward the US. As of Thursday, just over 160 wildfires were burning across Canada, and about half were uncontrolled. Collectively, they have burned more than 1.56 million acres — 40% above the 10-year average for this point in the year. According to National Resources Canada,above-average fire weather severity is forecastfor almost all of Western Canada in June and July. Israel has accepted a newceasefire proposalwith Hamas from US envoy Steve Witkoff, which includes the release of 10 living hostages and 18 deceased hostages, as well as a 60-day truce. Although Hamas said the latest framework doesn't "respond to any of our people's demands, foremost among which is stopping the war and famine," the militant group offered three counterpoints: 1) Hamas will agree to the release of the hostages and a 60-day ceasefire if the US can assure that negotiations over a permanent ceasefire will continue and the fighting will not resume after the 60 days. 2)Humanitarian assistancewill be carried out through the UN channels. 3) The Israel Defense Forces will agree to pull back to the positions that they held on March 2, before Israel re-launched its military operations. Amid these negotiations, Israelapproved a massive expansion of Jewish settlementsin the occupied West Bank. Peace Now, an Israeli non-governmental organization that tracks settlements, said it was the largest expansion since the signing of the Oslo Accords more than 30 years ago. A federal appeals court on Thursday paused the Court of International Trade's ruling that President Donald Trumpdidn't have the authorityto impose sweeping tariffs using the emergency powers he declared earlier this year. The ruling by the US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit means Trump can continue to impose tariffs using emergency powers, and adds tothe confusion and uncertaintyabout the future of his economic policy. The case could potentially work its way upto the Supreme Court. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem posted on X this week that an undocumented migrant from Mexico had been arrested for allegedly sending a letter threatening to kill President Trump. She also included a picture of the man and a copy of the letter. However, investigators now believethe migrant was set up. According to several sources, law enforcement believes Ramon Morales Reyes, 54, didn't write the letter, which was sent to an Immigration and Customs Enforcement office and other agencies. Instead, investigators suspect a person who is currently awaiting trial in a robbery and assault case in which Reyes was the victim wrote the letter in an attempt to have him deported. Federal officials who asked for a handwriting sample from Reyes also determined that his handwriting and the threatening letter didn't match. SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes Covid-19, continues to evolve. A new strain called NB.1.8.1 has been detected in several states and designateda variant under monitoringby the World Health Organization. Since NB.1.8.1 is a part of the Omicron family, the WHO said that currently approved Covid-19 vaccines should be effective. However, in recent weeks, the Department of Health and Human Services has madesignificant changesto how Covid-19 vaccines are approved and which groups they are recommended for. A new framework could limit Covid-19 vaccines to older Americans and people at higher risk of serious infection. HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. also said the vaccinewill no longer be recommendedfor pregnant women and healthy children. Kennedy Center exec firedA far-right political activist with a history of anti-gay rhetoric and promoting conspiracy theories about former President Barack Obama said hewas sackedafter only a month on the job following a CNN investigation. Fewer perks, more profitStarbucks plans toeliminate one of its top loyalty perks: the 25-star bonus for customers who bring in a reusable cup for drink orders. The reason for the raspy voiceSinger Miley Cyrus has revealed thatshe has Reinke's edema, a noncancerous vocal cord disorder. A whole new ball gameMajor League Baseball ispurchasing a stakein the Athletes Unlimited Softball League, which will feature four teams — the Bandits, Blaze, Talons and Vaults — playing 24 games each against one another between June 7 and July 23. Just imagine how fun the holidays will beActor/comedian Eddie Murphy's son Eric Murphyrecently wedJasmin Lawrence, actor/comedian Martin Lawrence's daughter. "Yeah, we're in-laws," Murphy said on "The Jennifer Hudson Show." Which airline, that at one time had a policy that "bags fly free," now charges travelers for checked luggage?A. SpiritB. FrontierC. SouthwestD. JetBlue Take me to the quiz! $50,000That's how muchreward moneyauthorities are offering to anyone with information leading to the arrest of a convicted double murderer or an experienced fugitive who broke out of a New Orleans jail. "I found myself surrounded by cumulonimbus clouds and trapped inside. It was terrifying — everything around me was white. Without the compass, I wouldn't have known which direction I was heading. I thought I was flying straight, but in reality, I was spinning." — Chinese paraglider Peng Yujiang,onsurviving an accidental high-altitude flightwithout oxygen. Check your local forecast here>>> Harvard president receives standing ovationDuring the university's commencement ceremony on Thursday, Alan Garberreceived applausewhen he made an indirect reference to the university's pushback against the White House's effort to keep international students from attending the school. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

5 things to know for May 30: Wildfires, Israel-Hamas, Tariffs, Trump death threat, Covid-19

5 things to know for May 30: Wildfires, Israel-Hamas, Tariffs, Trump death threat, Covid-19 C-O-N-G-R-A-T-U-L-A-T-I-O-N-S, Faizan Zaki! The ...
Live updates: Israeli airstrikes in Gaza kill at least 14, medics sayNew Foto - Live updates: Israeli airstrikes in Gaza kill at least 14, medics say

Israeli airstrikes killed at least 14 people in the Gaza Strip, hospital officials said Friday, while Hamas was reviewing a new Israeli-approved ceasefire proposal after giving it an initial cool response. President Donald Trump's Mideast envoy had expressed optimism this week aboutbrokering an agreementthat could halt the Israel-Hamas war, allow more aid into Gaza, and return more of the 58 hostages still held by Hamas, around a third of whom are alive. Experts say a nearly three-month Israeli blockade of Gaza —slightly eased in recent days— has pushed the population of roughly 2 million Palestiniansto the brink of famine. Israel's war in Gaza has killed around 54,000 Palestinians, mostlywomen and children, according to the Gaza Health Ministry, which does not distinguish between civilians and combatants in its tally. The war began with Hamas' Oct. 7, 2023, attack on Israel, which left around 1,200 dead. Here's the latest: Families of hostages plead with Netanyahu Families of hostages held in Gaza are pleading with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to ensure that any agreement to end the war must include the freedom of all the hostages. There are 58 hostages left in Gaza, of whom Israel believes approximately a third are still alive. Ayelet Samerano, the mother of Yonatan Samerano, whose body is being held in Gaza, was among the family members who met with Netanyahu on Thursday. She said the news that only 10 hostages and several bodies would be released had once again plunged the families into indescribable uncertainty. "It's again a selection, you know, all the families, we are right now standing and thinking, is it going to be my son? Isn't it? What will be after part of them will come, what will be with the rest?" Israel has accepted a new U.S. proposal for a temporary ceasefire with Hamas, the White House said Thursday, while Hamas has had a cooler response. "If they (Hamas) want guarantees, we will give them guarantees that after the last hostages will back to Israel, we will stop the war," Samerano said. "I'm telling you, Netanyahu, say yes. All our countries say yes, the families say yes. All the families, when we are saying, stop the world and give us the hostages back." At least 14 dead in Gaza strikes, medics say Hospital officials and paramedics say Israeli airstrikes on the Gaza Strip have killed at least 14 people and wounded others. Officials at Shifa Hospital in northern Gaza said the bodies of 12 people, including three women, were brought Friday from the nearby Jabaliya refugee camp. The Palestinian Red Crescent Society said the bodies of two people as well as nine others who were wounded were taken to Al-Quds Hospital in Gaza City. It said one of the wounded is a doctor who works at the same hospital. Hamas reviewing a new ceasefire proposal Hamas said Friday it was reviewing a new Israeli-approved ceasefire proposal. The White House said Thursday that Israel accepted a new U.S. proposal for a temporary ceasefire with Hamas. Hamas officials, however, gave the draft a cool response, saying that it seeks to perpetuate Israel's policies of killing and starving people in Gaza. Still, the group said it was going to thoroughly review it. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has refused to end the war until all the hostages are released and Hamas is either destroyed or disarmed and sent into exile. Hamas has said it will only release the remaining hostages for a lasting ceasefire and a full Israeli withdrawal. Netanyahu undergoes a routine colonoscopy Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu underwent a routine colonoscopy on Friday morning in Jerusalem, his office said. The office did not provide further information about whether Netanyahu was moderately sedated or under general anesthesia for the procedure. Netanyahu, 75, underwentsuccessful surgery in Decemberto have his prostate removed. Netanyahu has gone to great lengths to bolster a public image of himself as a healthy, energetic leader, as he manages multiple crises including thewar in Gazaand histrial for alleged corruption, despite a series of recent health setbacks.

Live updates: Israeli airstrikes in Gaza kill at least 14, medics say

Live updates: Israeli airstrikes in Gaza kill at least 14, medics say Israeli airstrikes killed at least 14 people in the Gaza Strip, hospit...
US probes effort to impersonate White House Chief of Staff, WSJ reportsNew Foto - US probes effort to impersonate White House Chief of Staff, WSJ reports

(Reuters) -U.S. federal authorities are investigating an effort to impersonate White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles, the Wall Street Journal reported on Thursday, citing people familiar with the matter. The report said Wiles had told associates that some of her cellphone contacts had been hacked, allowing the impersonator to access private phone numbers. The incident affected her personal phone, not her government phone, the report said. The Journal reported that in recent weeks, senators, governors, top U.S. business executives and other figures received messages and calls from a person who claimed to be Wiles, citing the people familiar with the messages. The White House and FBI did not immediately respond to requests for comment. The White House has struggled with information security. A hacker who breached the communications service used by former Trump national security adviser Mike Waltz earlier this month intercepted messages from a broad swathe of American officials, Reuters reported recently. And late last year, a White House official said the U.S. believed that an alleged sweeping Chinese cyber espionage campaign known as Salt Typhoon targeted and recorded telephone calls of "very senior" American political figures. As Wiles is a key Trump lieutenant and a lynchpin of the White House's operation, the content of her personal phone would be of extraordinary interest to a range of foreign intelligence agencies and other hostile actors. Wiles has reportedly been targeted by hackers at least once before, in the final months of Trump's 2024 presidential campaign. At the time, hackers alleged by U.S. authorities to be acting on behalf of Iran approached journalists and a political operative with a variety of messages sent to and from Wiles, some of which were eventually published. (Reporting by Costas Pitas and Raphael Satter; Editing by Michael Perry and Sonali Paul)

US probes effort to impersonate White House Chief of Staff, WSJ reports

US probes effort to impersonate White House Chief of Staff, WSJ reports (Reuters) -U.S. federal authorities are investigating an effort to i...
Jobs data, tax bill, trade on tap for rebounding US stocksNew Foto - Jobs data, tax bill, trade on tap for rebounding US stocks

By Lewis Krauskopf NEW YORK (Reuters) -Key U.S. economic data, developments with federal tax-and-spending legislation and twists and turns on trade all are poised to influence equities in the coming week, with the U.S. market closing in on record highs. The S&P 500 was set for a weekly gain with the benchmark index on Thursday ending about 4% from its February all-time high. Investors at the end of the week were grappling with implications from legal rulings involving efforts to block most of President Donald Trump's tariffs. Trump's trade war has whipsawed global markets for weeks on concerns about economic fallout. The coming week also brings a raft of economic and labor market data, headlined by the monthly U.S. employment report out on Friday. "Now that we're back up here not all that far from the record high, I think the hard data needs to hold in better than the market expects to really advance from here," said Scott Wren, senior global market strategist at the Wells Fargo Investment Institute. The employment report for May is expected to show an increase of 130,000 jobs, according to a Reuters poll of economists, which would be a step down from growth of 177,000 the prior month. Investors have been eager to learn how Trump's tariffs may be rippling through the economy, especially in the wake of his April 2 "Liberation Day" announcement of sweeping levies on imports. The May data represents a full month of "how businesses have been handling some of the tariff uncertainty and some of the pressures in the market," said Anthony Saglimbene, chief market strategist at Ameriprise Financial. Still, an overly strong employment report, such as growth of over 200,000 jobs, might be viewed warily by the market because it could delay interest rate cuts by the Federal Reserve, said Eric Kuby, chief investment officer at North Star Investment Management Corp. Investors have reduced bets in recent weeks on the amount of expected Fed easing this year, with about two rate cuts priced in by December, according to LSEG data. Minutes of their latest meeting released this week showed Fed officials acknowledged they could face "difficult tradeoffs" in coming months with rising inflation alongside rising unemployment. Fiscal legislation in Washington will also be in focus. The Senate will start considering a tax-and-spending bill passed earlier this month by the House of Representatives. Trump said this week he plans to negotiate aspects of the "big, beautiful" tax bill, a day after billionaire Elon Musk said the bill detracts from efforts to reduce the U.S. budget deficit. The bill, which will add an estimated $3.8 trillion to the federal government's $36.2 trillion in debt over the next decade, has focused attention on the impact of increasing deficits on the Treasury market. Rising bond yields have pressured stocks in recent weeks. The shifting tariff backdrop also appeared likely to influence asset prices. Equities rebounded in recent weeks after Trump eased his harshest tariffs, but the situation remains in flux as Washington negotiates with trading partners. On Thursday, for instance, stocks rose early the session after a U.S. trade court blocked many of Trump's tariffs, but gains faded during the session. Later, a federal appeals court reinstated the tariffs, further muddying the backdrop. "There's initial excitement and then the reality set in that this is just another step in this process and it really hasn't clarified very much," Kuby said. (Reporting by Lewis Krauskopf; Editing by Alden Bentley and David Gregorio)

Jobs data, tax bill, trade on tap for rebounding US stocks

Jobs data, tax bill, trade on tap for rebounding US stocks By Lewis Krauskopf NEW YORK (Reuters) -Key U.S. economic data, developments with...
Wall Street futures down as Trump's tariffs stay put after latest court rulingNew Foto - Wall Street futures down as Trump's tariffs stay put after latest court ruling

(Reuters) -Wall Street futures slipped on Friday, as investors took stock of an appeals court decision to undo a prior ruling that had blocked most of U.S. President Donald Trump's tariffs, heading into the last trading day of a solid month for equities. The S&P 500 and the Nasdaq are on pace for their best monthly showing since November 2023, while the Dow is also set for a near 4% monthly advance. Stocks have seen immense volatility this month on Trump's on-and-off tariff moves, though the S&P 500 has rebounded from its April low and now sits about 4% lower from its all-time high hit in February. U.S. equities had initially rallied on Thursday when the Court of International Trade ruled late on Wednesday to effectively block most levies imposed since January, but did not address some industry-specific tariffs. However, a federal appeals court on Thursday temporarily reinstated most of the tariffs and ordered the plaintiffs in the cases to respond by June 5 and the administration by June 9. "This week's courtroom drama has added another layer of uncertainty to what was already an unsettling series of events," Richard Hunter, head of markets at interactive investor, said in a morning note. Hopes of more trade deals between the U.S. and major trading partners, along with upbeat earnings and tame inflation data, have been some of the main drivers of gains in equities this month. U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent stated that U.S. trade talks with China are "a bit stalled" and getting a deal over the finish line will likely need the direct involvement of President Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping. At 5:14 a.m. ET, Dow E-minis were down 31 points, or 0.07%, S&P 500 E-minis were down 8.5 points, or 0.14% and Nasdaq 100 E-minis were down 36.5 points, or 0.17%. Most megacap and growth stocks inched lower in premarket trading, with Nvidia off 0.7% after gaining in the last session on reporting robust quarterly revenue growth. Chipmaker Marvell Technology shed 3.9% despite forecasting second-quarter revenue above estimates. Ulta Beauty gained 8.6% after the cosmetics retailer raised its annual profit forecast after beating quarterly results. Zscaler advanced 3.2% as the cloud security firm raised its annual profit and revenue forecasts and named Kevin Rubin as its chief financial officer. Later in the day, the Personal Consumption Expenditure data - the Fed's favored inflation indicator - is scheduled for release at 8:30 a.m. ET, which could shed more light on the U.S. Federal Reserve's interest rate trajectory. Trump called Fed Chair Jerome Powell to the White House late on Thursday for their first face-to-face meeting since he took office in January and told the central bank chief he was making a "mistake" by not lowering interest rates. Traders currently see at least two 25 basis points of cuts by the end of the year, according to data compiled by LSEG. (Reporting by Shashwat Chauhan in Bengaluru; Editing by Maju Samuel)

Wall Street futures down as Trump's tariffs stay put after latest court ruling

Wall Street futures down as Trump's tariffs stay put after latest court ruling (Reuters) -Wall Street futures slipped on Friday, as inve...
Daily Briefing: Trade whiplashNew Foto - Daily Briefing: Trade whiplash

Good morning!🙋🏼‍♀️ I'mNicole Fallert. Ask a friendif they can spell"éclaircissement." An appeals court allowed President Donald Trumpto keep tariffswhile an appeal plays out. Former government workersare running for public office— and winning. A Swiss glacier collapsedin a dramatic displayof the impact of climate change. The Trump administration won temporary reprieve Thursday after an appeals court ruled the White House can keep up tariffs while challenging a court order that had blocked them. Trade whiplash: The quick reversal came a day after the United States Court of International Trade invalidated Trump's use of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act of 1977 to impose tariffs. The administration quickly appealed and won a short-term break.Trump attacked the judges who blocked his tariffs, a ruling later temporarily paused on appeal, and blamed a conservative legal group for giving him bad advice on judicial picks. No tariff on Spike the Fine Motor Hedgehog:Adding to the mix, a second federal court blocked Trump tariffs Thursday — this time for Illinois companies that import Spike, among other kids' toys. White House officials have vowed to keep pressing the issue in court.White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters the Trump administration expects the U.S. Supreme Court to resolve the issue. Itir Cole tried to take some time off after quitting her job with the federal government early in the Trump administration. Then her husband mentioned offhand that there was an open seat on her New Jersey town's governing body. No one else like her was running, so she did — and won her mid-May race by 49 votes. Cole is among a flood of federal workers looking to run for public office.Many say they want to continue serving Americansafter leaving the government either voluntarily or through mass layoffs, as Trump dramatically downsizes the federal workforce. As the summer months approach,lightning activitywill soon ramp up. Tariffs and AIhave altered the job marketfor 2025 grads. Heavy smoke is expected to hit the U.S.as dangerous Canadian wildfiresforce evacuations. The White House blamed"formatting" for errors in RFK Jr.'s MAHA report.Authors pushed back. Public housing failed miserably in Chicago.Why is the city now opening a housing museum? What's the weather today?Check your local forecast here. A Boston federal judge said at a hearing Thursday that she planned to issue a preliminary injunction that blocks the Department of Homeland Security from revoking Harvard's ability to enroll foreign exchange students. The comments from U.S. District Judge Allison Burroughs came as the Trump administration attempted to walk back its May 22 directive that immediately revoked Harvard's participation in a federal exchange student program.Students from around the worldattended commencementat the Ivy League on the same day as the hearing. America's birth rate has been on a steady decline since 2007, and pronatalists − both in and outside the White House − are determined to raise it. But when partners struggle to conceive, the burden is rarely distributed evenly between men and women. Fertility experts say we're missing a key component of the conversation – male infertility. Experts say male and female infertility factors often coexist, yet a high number of men do not undergo testing before their female partner begins IVF.Advocates saycharacterizing fertility solely as a woman's issueis part of a "broader cultural misunderstanding." Exploring the gulfbetweenMartin Luther King Jr. and Donald Trumpin a divided nation. Beyoncéfulfilled a fan's requestwith an onstage gender reveal. The internet has thoughtsabout Sydney Sweeney's bathwater. Paige DeSorbois sippinga Dunkin' pink refresher. Who is "Mia"?Why you won't see photosof Diddy's ex-personal assistant during trial. Air traffic controller staffing has been a major issue for the Federal Aviation Administration for years. As a result, it's been a major issue for travelers, too, even if it's not always as top of mind for the average passenger when there are delays. According to Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy, the FAA is short about 3,000 air traffic controllers nationwide, but those shortages aren't spread evenly throughout the system.This map showsthe disparity between staffing in different facilities across the country. Reuters reports that 90% of Blatten, Switzerland, is engulfed by ice, mud and rock after a glacier collapsed on a nearby mountain.These photos capturehow the disaster unfolded. Nicole Fallert is a newsletter writer at USA TODAY,sign up for the email here. Want to send Nicole a note? Shoot her an email at NFallert@usatoday.com. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Trump, tariff, trade, economy, federal workers, Harvard, fertility, FAA, air traffic control, Diddy: Daily Briefing

Daily Briefing: Trade whiplash

Daily Briefing: Trade whiplash Good morning!🙋🏼‍♀️ I'mNicole Fallert. Ask a friendif they can spell"éclaircissement." An appe...
Who Is Leonard Leo and Why Did Trump Call Him a 'Sleazebag'?New Foto - Who Is Leonard Leo and Why Did Trump Call Him a 'Sleazebag'?

Leonard Leo, co-chariman of the Federalist Society board of directors, speaks at the University of Cambridge in England on March 11, 2025.
Credit - Nordin Catic/Getty Images for The Cambridge Union "A real 'sleazebag'" and "bad person." Someone who "probably hates America." The latest target of Donald Trump's insults, however, is the very same whom he once credited with what he would later call "one of the greatest achievements" of his presidency. "We're going to have great judges, conservative, all picked by the Federalist Society," Trump promised during his first campaign in 2016. It was the result of a meeting in March 2016 with Leonard Leo, then the executive vice president of the Federalist Society, a conservative organization that advocates for legaloriginalism. True to his promise, Trump would go on to consult Leo for judicial nominations, including his three Supreme Court picks. Read More:Inside Trump's Plan to Dramatically Reshape U.S. Courts[From 2018] "What we're doing with the courts, I think, is going to go down as one of the greatest achievements," Trump said during his first term. But on Thursday, Trump had changed his tune. "I was new to Washington, and it was suggested that I use The Federalist Society as a recommending source on Judges," hepostedon his social media platform Truth Social. "I did so, openly and freely, but then realized that they were under the thumb of a real 'sleazebag' named Leonard Leo, a bad person who, in his own way, probably hates America, and obviously has his own separate ambitions. He openly brags how he controls Judges, and even Justices of the United States Supreme Court—I hope that is not so, and don't believe it is! In any event, Leo left The Federalist Society to do his own 'thing.' I am so disappointed in The Federalist Society because of the bad advice they gave me on numerous Judicial Nominations. This is something that cannot be forgotten! With all of that being said, I am very proud of many of our picks, but very disappointed in others." Trump's rant came after a federal three-judge panelruledthat he didn't have the authority to impose most of the tariffs he'd announced so far in his second term, a key part of his economic agenda and promise to bringmanufacturing jobsback to America. Leo, in response, offered a less combative response. "I'm very grateful for President Trump transforming the Federal Courts, and it was a privilege being involved," he said ina statement. "There's more work to be done, for sure, but the Federal Judiciary is better than it's ever been in modern history, and that will be President Trump's most important legacy." Here's what to know about Leo and the Federalist Society—and their falling out with Trump. Founded in 1982by a group of law school studentsas a pro-originalism organization for law students, the Federalist Society for Law and Public Policy Studies has been describedas"the single most influential advocacy organization in Washington." The organization—which counts over 90,000 lawyers, law students, scholars, and others among its members—describes itselfas "a group of conservatives and libertarians interested in the current state of the legal order." But that puts it mildly: the organization, especially under Leo's leadership, has been credited with creating a "pipeline," utilizing its vast network, for conservative law students to make their way into positions of influence—ideally, all the way up to the Supreme Court. A2023 studyshowed that, in the current confirmation process, a judicial nominee's affiliation with the Federalist Society increased the probability of a successful Senate confirmation by around 20%. In 2021, Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D, R.I.)flaggedthat 86% of Trump's Supreme Court or appellate court nominees were or are members of the group. Six of the nine sitting Supreme Court justices—Chief Justice John Roberts, Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh, and Amy Coney Barrett—are linked to the Federalist Society, particularly through Leo. ProPublicadescribed the Federalist Society as part of "a machine that remade the American legal system." It described Leo as the man who "built" that machine. The conservative legal activist joined the Federalist Society in 1989, when he started a student chapter of the organization while studying law in Cornell. For many years, he served as executive vice president of the organization until he stepped back in 2020, though he remains co-chair of its board of directors. Leo's most significant and long-lasting impact is probably his work related to the makeup of the Supreme Court. In 1990, before he even began officially working for the Federalist Society, as a 25-year-old clerk for a U.S. Court of Appeals judge in Washington, he met then-appellate judge Thomas, whom he befriended and helped through his Supreme Court confirmation in 1991. During the George W. Bush Administration, Leo organized efforts to lobby for the nominations of Roberts and Alito. And during Trump's first term, Gorsuch, Kavanaugh, and Coney Barrett were all selected from a list reportedly "personally curated" by Leo. But the Federalist Society isn't the only powerful organization Leo has championed. "The network of increasingly influential conservative groups that Leonard A. Leo has helped to create and shape is not easily defined or quantified," theNew York Timesreportedin 2022. Many of those groups have funding sources that have been difficult to trace and have funnelled billions of dollars to conservative causes,including groupsthat had been preparing for Trump's second term. Politicoreported that the relationship between Leo and Trump became strained when the three conservative justices Trump appointed to the Supreme Court on Leo's advice "did not intervene to keep Trump in office after he lost the 2020 presidential election." Leo, however, has generally refrained from publicly criticizing Trump—and the Federalist Society has reportedly appeared "ambivalent" about Trump's second-term Administration so far, compared to itsenthusiasmduring his first—though Trump's tariffs appear to be a major breaking point. In April, the New Civil Liberties Alliance, a group affiliated with Leo,mounteda legal challenge against levies imposed on Chinese imports,arguingthat the President misapplied the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) cited to order the tariffs. While that case remains ongoing, the U.S. Court of International Trade found that Trump misused the same presidential authority in aruling this weekon separate tariff cases. Trump'ssocial-media outburstagainst the judges on that court and against Leo and the Federalist Society came as his Administration has increasingly challenged the authority of the judicial branch torein in his powers. Still, the President may be relying on Leo's greatest accomplishment to ultimately push his agenda through. "Hopefully," Trump added in his social media post, "the Supreme Court will reverse this horrible, Country threatening decision, QUICKLY and DECISIVELY." Contact usatletters@time.com.

Who Is Leonard Leo and Why Did Trump Call Him a ‘Sleazebag’?

Who Is Leonard Leo and Why Did Trump Call Him a 'Sleazebag'? Leonard Leo, co-chariman of the Federalist Society board of directors, ...
EU trade chief says he held another call with US's LutnickNew Foto - EU trade chief says he held another call with US's Lutnick

BRUSSELS (Reuters) -European Union Trade Commissioner Maros Sefcovic said on Friday that he had held another call with U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, as the EU and the United States continue efforts to reach a deal on tariffs. "Another call with U.S. Secretary @howardlutnick. Our time and effort fully invested, as delivering forward-looking solutions remains a top EU priority. Staying in permanent contact," wrote Sefcovic on X. The EU wants to see an end to 25% tariffs on steel and cars and for Trump to drop his so-called "reciprocal" tariff, which was provisionally set at 20% for the EU but is being held at 10% during a 90-day pause until July. Sefcovic said earlier this week in Dubai that the European Commission was in talks with Washington on possible cooperation in sectors such as aerospace, steel, semiconductors and critical minerals. (Reporting by Sudip Kar-Gupta, Editing by Charlotte Van Campenhout and Tomasz Janowski)

EU trade chief says he held another call with US's Lutnick

EU trade chief says he held another call with US's Lutnick BRUSSELS (Reuters) -European Union Trade Commissioner Maros Sefcovic said on ...
Chinese students face anxious wait for visas under US crackdownNew Foto - Chinese students face anxious wait for visas under US crackdown

By Laurie Chen BEIJING (Reuters) -Caught in the middle of Washington's renewed visa crackdown on Chinese international students, Beijing postgraduate Lainey is anxiously waiting to resume the visa process to study a PhD at her dream school, the University of California. "We feel helpless and unable to do anything," said the 24-year-old sociology student, who declined to give her surname for privacy reasons. "The situation in North America this year is not very good. From applying for my PhD until now, this series of visa policies is not very favourable to us. But we have no choice but to wait." The U.S. State Department said on Thursday it would not tolerate the "exploitation" of American universities or theft of U.S. research and intellectual property by Beijing. Spokesperson Tammy Bruce did not elaborate on how many Chinese students would be affected by a new plan announced on Wednesday to "aggressively" revoke visas. The visa crackdown is the latest in a series of moves targeting the international student community, especially Chinese nationals, who make up roughly 1 in 4 of all international students in the U.S., as the Trump administration pursues its hardline immigration agenda. If applied to a broad segment of the 277,000 Chinese students already at U.S. colleges, the visa revocations could disrupt a major source of income for universities and a crucial pipeline of talent for U.S. technology companies. Chinese students make up 16% of all graduate science, technology, engineering and maths (STEM) students in the United States. DEFER ENROLMENT? The announcement on Chinese student visa holders came after the Trump administration ordered its missions worldwide to stop scheduling new appointments for student and exchange visitor visa applicants. If the visa appointment system is not resumed soon, Lainey wishes to defer enrolment for a year. "Although everyone says the U.S. admissions system may be biased against Chinese students, in reality U.S. schools are indeed the top in terms of academic quality," she said. "I may also consider (applying to) some places outside the U.S., such as Europe, as well as Hong Kong and Singapore." The measures are a sign of the increasing spillover from a bruising trade war between the two global superpowers, and threaten to derail a fragile truce reached mid-May in Geneva. A Friday editorial by China's state-owned Global Times newspaper said the new visa measures raised "the spectre of McCarthyism" and likened them to an "educational witch-hunt". "In recent years, the suppression of Chinese students has increasingly become an important part of the U.S. strategy to contain China," the commentary said. Potentially even more damaging than the immediate economic impact for the U.S. could be a long-term erosion of the appeal of U.S. universities and the subsequent brain drain. International students - 54% of them from India and China - contributed more than $50 billion to the U.S. economy in 2023, according to the U.S. Department of Commerce. "If I really have to wait until 2026 to reapply, I might not have such positive feelings towards America," said Lainey. "If I can't even get a visa, then I'd have no choice but to go somewhere else." (Reporting by Laurie Chen; Additional reporting by Tiffany Le; editing by Sophie Walker)

Chinese students face anxious wait for visas under US crackdown

Chinese students face anxious wait for visas under US crackdown By Laurie Chen BEIJING (Reuters) -Caught in the middle of Washington's ...
U.S.-China trade talks 'a bit stalled' and need Trump and Xi to weigh in, Bessent saysNew Foto - U.S.-China trade talks 'a bit stalled' and need Trump and Xi to weigh in, Bessent says

BEIJING — U.S.-China trade talks "are a bit stalled," requiring the two countries' leaders to speak directly, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessenttold Fox Newsin an interview Thursday local time. "I believe that we will be having more talks with them in the next few weeks," he said, adding that there may be a call between the two countries' leaders "at some point." South Korea's Hybe opens China office amid hopes of a K-pop reversal from Beijing Musk's SpaceX town in Texas warns residents they may lose right to 'continue using' their property Synopsys pulls full-year guidance, citing new China export restrictions After a rapid escalation in trade tensions last month, Bessent helped the world's two largest economies reach abreakthrough agreementin Switzerland on May 12. The countries agreed toroll back recent tariff increases of more than 100%for 90 days, or until mid-August. Diplomatic officials from both sides had acall late last week. Still, the U.S. has pushed ahead withtech restrictionson Beijing, drawing its ire, while China has yet to significantly ease restrictions on rare earths,contrary to Washington's expectations. "I think that given the magnitude of the talks, given the complexity, that this is going to require both leaders to weigh in with each other," Bessent said. "They have a very good relationship and I am confident that the Chinese will come to the table when President [Donald] Trump makes his [preferences] known." Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping last spoke in January, just before the U.S. president was sworn in for his second term. While Trump has in recent weekssaid he would like to speak with Xi, analysts expect China to agree to that only if there is certainty that there will be no surprises from the U.S. during the call. China has maintained communication with the U.S. since the agreement in Switzerland, Chinese Ministry of Commerce Spokesperson He Yongqian told reporters at a regular briefing Thursday. But regarding chip export controls, she said that "China again urges the U.S. to immediately correct its wrong practices ... and together safeguard the consensus reached at high-level talks in Geneva." That's according to a CNBC translation of her Mandarin-language remarks. When asked whether China would suspend rare earths export controls announced in early April, He did not respond directly. Restrictions on items that could have both military and civilian applications reflect international practice, as well as China's position of "upholding world peace and regional stability," she said. This week, the Trump administration also announced it would startrevoking visas for Chinese students. "The U.S. decision to revoke Chinese student visas is fully unjustified," Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Mao Ning said Thursday, according to an official English transcript. "It uses ideology and national security as pretext."

U.S.-China trade talks 'a bit stalled' and need Trump and Xi to weigh in, Bessent says

U.S.-China trade talks 'a bit stalled' and need Trump and Xi to weigh in, Bessent says BEIJING — U.S.-China trade talks "are a ...
Scorecard: How Musk and DOGE could end up costing more than they saveNew Foto - Scorecard: How Musk and DOGE could end up costing more than they save

A version of this story appeared in CNN's What Matters newsletter. To get it in your inbox, sign up for freehere. Rather than set government straight,Elon Musk is leaving Washingtonwith the federal budget all cattywampus. Deficit spending is increasing, not waning, and there is a growing school of thought that his "efficiency" effort could end up costing the government as much as or more than it saved. The Tesla and SpaceX CEO came to Washington with a cut-till-it-hurts mindset and carte blanche from President Donald Trump. Musk quickly dialed back his campaign-trail bravado of cutting$2 trillionfrom the federal budget, but as recently as aFox News interviewin March, he said that by the time he left government, his Department of Government Efficiency "will have accomplished most of the work required to reduce the deficit by a trillion dollars…." Instead, Musk will leave government work "disappointed" that the Republicans he helped put in power are working to pass a bill that is estimated to addsome $3.8 trillion in deficit spendingand which Trump calls "big" and "beautiful." There's no accounting trick to correct that imbalance. The budget is trillions out of whack, and the shock-and-awe campaign Musk and Trump imposed across the federal workforce has led to some seriousPTSD for federal workersand contractors while claiming only to have saved $175 billion. That's not chump change, but it's not going to radically reform the US government. What's listed on the still-rudimentary DOGE website is also not an accurate reflection of what the group might actually have accomplished. DOGE will live on in the White House, "like Buddhism" without Buddha, Musk has said, andCNN has reportedthat more cuts are planned after his departure. But the pace of DOGE activity has slowed, at least as reflected on its website. Musk's departure is an opportunity to consider whether the Department of Government Efficiency has lived up to its name. CNN's Casey Tolan is among the reporters who have been trying to match what DOGE claims to have saved or cut with what has actually been trimmed. Picking apart the "estimated savings" of $175 billion on the DOGE website, Tolan told me that less than half that figure is backed up with even the most basic documentation. That means it's possible only even to start investigating about $32 billion of savings from terminated contracts, $40 billion of savings from terminated grants and $216 million of savings from terminated leases that DOGE claims. Plus, some of the specific terminations that are included in those numbers have no details at all. And Tolanhas reportedon the fact that DOGE's tally has "been marred by various errors and dubious calculations throughout the entire time they've been releasing this info." Probably not. The figure is based on "161 million individual federal taxpayers," according to the DOGE website, which drastically undercounts taxpayers in the US. That 161 million figure is more likely a reflection of individual tax returns and would not reflect married people who file jointly, according toBetsey Stevenson, a former chief economist at the US Department of Labor during the Obama administration who is now a professor at the University of Michigan. "This distinction is about trying to get that number as large as possible. If instead it was expressed as per American then it would be $514," and only if you assume DOGE has saved $175 billion, which it probably has not, she told me in an email. Workers who generated revenue from the government have been fired, Stevenson points out. For example, staffing cuts at the IRS will mean the US brings in less revenue — but so will operating national parks short-staffed. Plus, a universe of litigation related to DOGE's efforts to cancel contracts and fire workers seemingly without cause is percolating through courts. "In total, estimates suggest that what has been spent to generate these cuts may be as great as the cuts. In the long run, it's not clear that DOGE generated any savings," she said. Max Stier, CEO of the Partnership for Public Service, has estimated in a back-of-the-envelope way that DOGE cuts could end up costing the US $135 billion simply because it will need to retrain and rehire elements of the work force that have been let go. The federal workforce is literally in trauma — something Trump's director of the Office of Management and Budget, Russ Vought, said was an aim of his. Stier estimates the federal workers will be much less productive after DOGE's efforts, for a variety of reasons. Workers are now worried about losing jobs; their morale is depleted; they are distracted from their work; and many top performers are being reassigned or are leaving entirely. In a previous interview, Stier described the DOGE effort to me as "arson of a public asset." We probably can't, according to Nat Malkus, a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute who has tried to keep track of DOGE's accounting for its cuts. While Musk has promised maximum transparency, it has been impossible to verify much of what DOGE has said it has done. "We expect the government to show receipts," Malkus told me in a phone interview. "And the receipts that DOGE has shown that are posted publicly are nonetheless woefully inadequate to back their claims," he said. Far from fundamentally changing government, the savings DOGE claims won't actually be realized unless and until Congress, which has the power of the purse in the Constitution, passes a rescission bill to claw back the funding. "So far, we've just canceled contracts," he said. "The money is still spent because Congress spends the money." The DOGE effort has certainly changed the tenor of the conversation around government spending. Its aggressiveness came as a shock to many Americans. "They have shown that they're willing to inflict pain in the pursuit of reducing government expenditures," Malkus said, adding that most Americans think the government spends too much money. "That resolve is something rare and potentially valuable," Malkus said. DOGE also brought in a tech mindset of cutting more than is necessary with the aim of building back, something that could be argued occurred with therehiring of nuclear safety workers, for instance, or the reinstatement of certain contracts. Jessica Tillipman,an expert in government procurement law at George Washington University, is troubled by the idea that the government has gone from being the best business partner to one contractors approach with caution. "The government's not acting like a good business partner right now," Tillipman said. "They're squeezing contracts that have been fairly negotiated between the government and contractors." It's always possible DOGE could end up reforming government in positive ways, but the evidence is not yet there, Tillipman said. "What have we seen? You require everybody to come back to work and you don't have office space," she said as one example. "You have people doing work that they're not trained to do. You have talent drains," Tillipman said, pointing out that most of the government firings so far were among recently hired workers often brought on with a particular expertise. "Half the training programs for the government have been canceled, so these pipelines that the government spent decades working on to make sure that there's a steady supply and the government's an attractive place for high-quality talent have gone away." The long-term effect of those changes will not be clear for some time. "There's a long way to go before this is going to actually shift the way agencies work," Malkus said. "It just takes longer than four months." Stevenson pointed out that despite everything DOGE claimed to do, government outlays are on track to rise by 9% in 2025 compared with 2024. That's because Americans are living longer and drawing more from programs like Medicare and Social Security. It's those programs that are driving the deficit and debt, not the discretionary spending Musk targeted. "Chainsaws and bluster can't solve the yawning gap between revenue and spending that has led American debt to rise to unsustainable levels," Stevenson said. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Scorecard: How Musk and DOGE could end up costing more than they save

Scorecard: How Musk and DOGE could end up costing more than they save A version of this story appeared in CNN's What Matters newsletter....
Exclusive-Pakistan, India close to completing border troop reduction, senior Pakistani general saysNew Foto - Exclusive-Pakistan, India close to completing border troop reduction, senior Pakistani general says

By Idrees Ali and Raju Gopalakrishnan SINGAPORE (Reuters) -Pakistan and India are close to reducing the troop build up along their border to levels before conflict erupted between the nuclear-armed neighbours this month, a top Pakistani military official told Reuters on Friday, although he warned the crisis had increased the risk of escalation in the future. Both sides used fighter jets, missiles, drones and artillery in four days of clashes, their worst fighting in decades, before a ceasefire was announced. The spark for the latest fighting between the old enemies was an April 22 attack in Indian Kashmir that killed 26 people, most of them tourists. New Delhi blamed the incident on "terrorists" backed by Pakistan, a charge denied by Islamabad. On May 7, India launched missiles at what it said were "terrorist infrastructure" sites across the border and as Pakistan responded with its own attacks, both countries built up additional forces along the frontier. General Sahir Shamshad Mirza, Pakistan's chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, said the two militaries had started the process of drawing down troop levels. "We have almost come back to the pre-22nd April situation... we are approaching that, or we must have approached that by now," said Mirza, the most senior Pakistani military official to speak publicly since the conflict. India's ministry of defence and the office of the Indian chief of defence staff did not immediately respond to Reuters' requests for comment on the remarks by Mirza. Mirza, who is in Singapore to attend the Shangri-La Dialogue forum, said while there was no move towards nuclear weapons during this conflict, it was a dangerous situation. "Nothing happened this time," he said. "But you can't rule out any strategic miscalculation at any time, because when the crisis is on, the responses are different." He also said the risk of escalation in the future had increased since the fighting this time was not limited to the disputed territory of Kashmir, the scenic region in the Himalayas that both nations rule in part but claim in full. The two sides attacked military installations in their mainlands but neither has acknowledged any serious damage. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi warned Pakistan this month that New Delhi would target "terrorist hideouts" across the border again if there were new attacks on India. 'DANGEROUS TREND' The two countries have fought three major wars, two of them over Kashmir, and numerous armed skirmishes since both were born out of British colonial India in 1947. India blames Pakistan for an insurgency in its part of Kashmir that began in 1989 and has killed tens of thousands. Pakistan says it provides only moral, political and diplomatic support to Kashmiris seeking self-determination. "This (conflict) lowers the threshold between two countries who are contiguous nuclear powers...in the future, it will not be restricted to the disputed territory. It would come down to (the) whole of India and (the) whole of Pakistan," Mirza said. "This is a very dangerous trend." Reuters has reported that the rapid escalation of hostilities ended in part because of behind-the-scenes diplomacy involving the U.S., India and Pakistan, and the key role played by Washington in brokering peace. India has denied any third-party role in the ceasefire and said that any engagement between India and Pakistan has to be bilateral. But Mirza warned that international mediation might be difficult in the future because of a lack of crisis management mechanisms between the countries. "The time window for the international community to intervene would now be very less, and I would say that damage and destruction may take place even before that time window is exploited by the international community," he said. Pakistan was open to dialogue, he added, but beyond a crisis hotline between the directors general of military operations and some hotlines at the tactical level on the border, there was no other communication between the two countries. India's foreign ministry spokesperson said on Thursday "talks and terror don't go together" in response to a question on the possibility of dialogue with Pakistan. Mirza said there were no backchannel discussions, or informal talks, to ease tensions. He also said he had no plans to meet General Anil Chauhan, India's chief of defence staff, who is also in Singapore for the Shangri-La forum. "These issues can only be resolved by dialogue and consultations, on the table. They cannot be resolved on the battlefield," Mirza said. (Reporting by Idrees Ali and Raju Gopalakrishnan; Additional reporting by Shivam Patel in New Delhi; Editing by Shri Navaratnam)

Exclusive-Pakistan, India close to completing border troop reduction, senior Pakistani general says

Exclusive-Pakistan, India close to completing border troop reduction, senior Pakistani general says By Idrees Ali and Raju Gopalakrishnan S...

 

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