Wall Street Journal,
by
Jess Bravin
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7/11/2025 8:47:55 PM
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A federal appeals court on Friday quashed plea bargains that would spare three alleged Sept. 11, 2001, conspirators from the death penalty in exchange for confessing guilt, extending the troubled prosecution of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and other Guantanamo detainees accused of engineering the deadliest terrorist attack in American history.
“The families of the victims and the American public have a strong interest in bringing the perpetrators to justice,” the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit said in the 2-1 opinion. “In particular, the judgment about whether respondents should face the death penalty is a grave one that requires political accountability.”
Alpha News,
by
Jenna Gloeb
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7/11/2025 3:09:57 PM
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A human resources director for the State of Minnesota is now on leave after sending a profanity-laced email from his official work account to an Alpha News reporter following an inquiry about racist posts on his social media page. It started after Alpha News received an email about LaVon “Vonnie” Phillips. A search of the state directory website shows Phillips listed as a “Human Resources Director 1” for the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency (MPCA). State records also indicate that Phillips earns six-figures and is paid $55.45 per hour. The tipster raised concerns about Phillips and claimed his social media page is “littered with racist comments about ‘white folk.’”
Politico,
by
Daniel Desrochers
,
Phelim Kine
&
Ari Hawkins
Original Article
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7/10/2025 9:46:10 PM
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Vietnam thought it had a preliminary deal with the U.S. to lower its tariff level substantially. Then, at the last minute, President Donald Trump raised the rate. As a result, the Vietnamese government still has not formally accepted a key part of the agreement the president touted on social media last week, despite Trump’s claim in the post that the terms had been agreed to by Vietnam’s leader, Tô Lâm. And neither side has released documentation of those terms, raising questions about whether they did, in fact, reach an agreement, as the White House labors to prove it is making headway in its trade negotiations with dozens of major partners.
Center Square,
by
Tate Miller
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7/10/2025 9:33:53 PM
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Taxpayers will no longer pay for the education of noncitizens in the U.S. illegally, the U.S. Department of Education said Thursday.
The department said “it will end taxpayer subsidization of illegal aliens in career, technical, and adult education programs.”
A news release said that this change takes place due to an interpretative rule issued Thursday in which “the Department rescinded a Dear Colleague letter from the Clinton Administration that enabled non-qualified illegal aliens to access federal public benefits in contravention of the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act (PRWORA)
Daily Mail,
by
Adry Torres
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7/10/2025 9:31:05 PM
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An American official was killed in a car accident in the northeastern Mexican city of Matamoros on Wednesday, the Attorney General's Office of the State of Coahuila said in a statement. U.S. Vice Consul Brian Matthew Faughan was driving his armored SUV when he crashed on the Torreón-Saltillo highway near the Matamoros Landfill in the state of Coahuila. The 41-year-old diplomat was rushed by the Red Cross to Matamoros Hospital and then transferred to Los Ángeles Hospital in Torreón, where doctors attempted to revive him. Faughan was traveling to Torreón for a meeting with Coahuila Governor Manolo Jiménez when his Toyota Land Cruiser flipped over.
Newsweek,
by
Giulia Carbonaro
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7/10/2025 2:02:30 PM
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The Trump administration has sued California over its animal cruelty laws, saying the state's regulation of chicken farms has led to high egg prices across the country.
Lowering the cost of eggs, which spiked in recent years as an avian flu outbreak ravaged American flocks, was one of President Donald Trump's key campaign promises in the lead-up to the 2024 election.
But almost six months into his second mandate, his administration has struggled to keep the cost of the staple down. The administration now says California's regulations create "unnecessary red tape" in the production of eggs and are responsible for stubbornly high prices.
Fortune,
by
Cecilia Hult
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7/9/2025 8:26:17 PM
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China and the European Union can’t seem to get along, despite sharing a common foe in U.S. President Donald Trump and his trade war. On Tuesday, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said that there needed to be a “genuine rebalancing” in the China-Europe relationship. Her comments cast a shadow over an upcoming China-EU summit, where the two sides are meant to hash out geopolitical and economic issues.
In her comments, von der Leyen slammed China’s tactic of flooding “global markets with subsidized overcapacity” in order “to choke international competition,” and complained that European products were “systematically discriminated” against in China.
Politico,
by
Kyle Cheney
&
Erica Orden
Original Article
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7/9/2025 6:09:07 PM
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A federal judge has ordered one of the organizers of Donald Trump’s Jan. 6, 2021, rally to pay a daily $2,000 fine, after weeks of skirting a civil court subpoena for records related to her role in the events. Caroline Wren, a longtime Republican fundraiser, was a liaison between the Trump White House and participants in the Jan. 6 rally, helping arrange speakers, coordinate the timeline and boost attendance. She’s among the many witnesses subpoenaed by Capitol Police officers suing Trump, accusing him of fomenting the violence that occurred that day, in a lawsuit that has been pending for four years. U.S. District Judge Donald Middlebrooks issued the order
Center Square,
by
Thérèse Boudreaux
Original Article
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7/9/2025 1:44:26 AM
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As lawmakers begin crafting the 12 annual appropriations bills to fund the federal government in fiscal year 2026, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., has implied that his party will refuse to cooperate in the process if Republicans revoke billions in funding from previous years. The Senate is set to vote on a rescissions package that narrowly passed the House in June and would cancel already appropriated federal funds for public broadcasting and some foreign aid programs.
Republicans only need a majority vote for the legislation to pass. The Rescissions Act of 2025, compiled by the Office of Management and Budget, requests the cancellation of federal spending deemed wasteful
Austin American-Statesman,
by
Austin Sanders
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7/9/2025 1:09:01 AM
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The Austin firefighters union will decide Tuesday whether to initiate a no-confidence vote against Fire Chief Joel Baker for allegedly waiting to send local firefighters to Kerr County to help with flood response. “We are disgusted with our fire chief,” the Austin Firefighters Association said in a Monday post on its Facebook page. “He needs to be held accountable and fired for his disgraceful dereliction of duty.” Association President Bob Nicks told the American-Statesman the Fire Department denied an informal request from the state for help on July 2 ahead of a storm that ended up killing at least 84 people. Another request on July 3 was also denied.
Red State,
by
Ward Clark
Original Article
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7/8/2025 12:53:58 PM
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Here in North America, the United States and Canada are both fortunate in having an abundance of rich farmlands. Drive through northern Indiana, through the dairy country of Wisconsin, the wheatfields of Kansas, or the vast grazing lands of the Great Plains, all the way north to Alberta, and you'll see the great agricultural country that could feed the entire world. These are the fruited plains and the amber waves of grain that Katharine Lee Bates was writing about in "America the Beautiful."
On Tuesday, Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins announced a new federal initiative to protect those lands—and keep the lands in the United States in American hands.
New York Times,
by
David A. Fahrenthold
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7/8/2025 12:18:12 AM
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The I.R.S. said on Monday that churches and other houses of worship can endorse political candidates to their congregations, carving out an exemption in a decades-old ban on political activity by tax-exempt nonprofits. The agency made that statement in a court filing intended to settle a lawsuit filed by two Texas churches and an association of Christian broadcasters.
The plaintiffs that sued the I.R.S. had previously asked a federal court in Texas to create an even broader exemption(snip).The agency said that if a house of worship endorsed a candidate to its congregants, the I.R.S. would view that not as campaigning but as a private matter, like “a family discussion concerning candidates.”
Comments:
Car looks like it was blown up and rolled.