
Trump administration backs U.S. candidate to retain UN telecoms post
U.S. President Donald Trump has so far largely retreated from U.N. institutions: he has cut funding to aid agencies, plans to leave, opens new tab the World Health Organization and has not yet installed permanent U.N. ambassadors in New York or Geneva.
But Secretary of State Marco Rubio endorsed U.S. candidate Doreen Bogdan-Martin for re-election to the International Telecommunication Union - a 160-year-old Geneva-based agency that sets standards for new technologies.
"At a time when global networks and digital technologies are increasingly impacting the global economy, ITU needs the right leadership," Rubio said.
The qualified radio operator who grew up in New Jersey and spent most of her career at the ITU, was elected the first woman to lead it in 2022, when she beat, opens new tab the Russian candidate after a campaign publicly endorsed by former President Joe Biden.
As with many U.N. elections, nation state endorsement is a condition to run for the ITU election set to take place in 2026.
The ITU has so far been spared most of the foreign aid cuts.
Trump said in February that the United Nations had "great potential and ... we'll continue to go along with it, but they got to get their act together".
Trump has said he wants his former national security adviser Mike Waltz to be his next New York U.N. ambassador.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Guardian
15 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Virginia Giuffre wanted Epstein documents made public, siblings say
The siblings of Virginia Giuffre, one of Jeffrey Epstein's most prominent accusers who died earlier this year, said their sister had wanted the so-called Epstein files to be released, and urged Donald Trump not to pardon his longtime associate, Ghislaine Maxwell. In an interview with NBC News on Thursday, Giuffre's family said she would have wanted the documents – a trove of materials related to the investigation into the years of abuse into the late sex offender – made public. 'She had a little bit of hope in her because it was said that the files were going to be released,' Amanda Roberts, Giuffre's sister-in-law, told the network in an interview, saying Giuffre would have wanted 'transparency and justice' for his victims. 'She was fighting for that to happen right up until the very end,' Roberts added. 'She wanted the public to know the crimes that they had committed.' Earlier this week, Trump said Epstein, with whom he socialized for more than a decade, 'stole' Giuffre and other young female staffers from his Mar-a-Lago country club, where she worked as a spa attendant in 2000. Trump made the remark to reporters after he was asked to elaborate on an earlier comment in which he said he had kicked Epstein out of his club 'because he [Epstein] did something that was inappropriate' – specifically, that 'he stole people that worked for me'. 'She's not an object, she's a person,' Sky Roberts, Giuffre's other brother, said through tears. 'She's a mom. She's a sister. And she was recruited by Maxwell. She wasn't stolen.' He said the family was 'shocked' to hear Trump use the word 'stolen' to describe what had happened to his sister, who said in a lawsuit that she was hired away from the Mar-a-Lago spa by Maxwell when she was 16. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt noted the president was responding to a reporter's question and did not bring up Giuffre himself. 'The fact remains that President Trump kicked Jeffrey Epstein out of his club for being a creep to his female employees,' Leavitt said. Giuffre, who died this year, alleged in her complaint that she was first abused by Epstein and Maxwell together, and then 'lent out to other powerful men', including Prince Andrew. Andrew has denied wrongdoing. Maxwell, who is serving a 20-year prison sentence for her role recruiting and trafficking minors for sex, has asked the US supreme court to overturn her conviction and is reportedly seeking a pardon from the president. A Trump administration official said the president was not currently considering clemency action for Maxwell. The Associated Press contributed reporting


The Guardian
15 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Trump tariffs live: White House releases new rates on 92 countries ahead of self-imposed deadline for trade deals
Update: Date: 2025-08-01T02:19:17.000Z Title: Opening summary Content: Welcome to our live coverage of Donald Trump's sweeping tariff regime. The US president signed an executive order on Thursday imposing reciprocal tariffs from 10% to 41% on US imports from dozens of countries and foreign locations. Rates were set at 25% for India, 20% for Taiwan and 30% for South Africa ahead of Trump's self-imposed deadline of 1 August for striking trade deals with countries worldwide. He extended the deadline for a tariff agreement with Mexico by another 90 days. Brazil's tariff rate was set at 10%, but a previous order signed by Trump placed a 40% tariff on some Brazilian goods, to punish the country for prosecuting its former president Jair Bolsonaro over an alleged coup attempt after the 2022 election. In other key news: Canadian imports will face tariffs of 35%, not the current 25%, the White House announced. Trump had threatened on Wednesday that Ottawa's move to recognise a Palestinian state would make agreeing a trade deal 'very hard'. Some of the world's poorest and most war-torn countries were hit with punitive rates, including Syria, which faces a levy of 41%; Laos and Myanmar with rates of 40%; Libya with a rate of 30%; Iraq with 35% and Sri Lanka with 20%. Switzerland faces a rate of 39%. The rates are set to go into effect in seven days, according to the order. Thailand's finance minister said on Friday that a 19% tariff rate had been agreed – significantly lower than the 36% level announced in April and better aligned with other countries in the region. Vietnam and Indonesia reportedly negotiated tariffs of 20% and 19% respectively. China faces a separate deadline for its higher tariffs of 12 August, with an extension to the truce agreed in principle but yet to be approved by the White House. By 31 July just eight countries or economic blocs had reached formal agreements with the White House: the UK, Vietnam, Indonesia, Philippines, South Korea, Japan, Pakistan and the EU.– With Helen Livingstone, Lisa O'Carroll and agencies


The Independent
an hour ago
- The Independent
Thousands gather to farewell NYPD officer killed in Midtown mass shooting
Thousands gathered to say farewell to the New York City Police Department officer who was killed in Monday's mass shooting in Midtown. The funeral for 36-year-old Didarul Islam took place at the Parkchester Jame Masjid, located on a residential street in the officer's neighborhood in the Bronx, three days after he was killed in the deadliest shooting in the city in a quarter-century, The New York Times noted. The gunman entered the office building at 345 Park Avenue with an assault style-rifle and started to discharge the weapon. He killed Islam and two others before heading to the 33rd floor, where he killed a fourth person, before he died by suicide. Police say the shooter, Shane Tamura, 27, had made his way to New York from his Nevada home, where he was set on targeting the headquarters of the National Football League. Hundreds of officers from as many as 54 of the 77 precincts in the city, as well as from states and counties in the surrounding area, attended the funeral. The streets around the mosque were empty of cars for the proceedings, with Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch saying that 'Didarul Islam came to this country as an immigrant with no guarantees, only the hope that hard work, that humility, and that purpose might lead him somewhere meaningful. And it did.' The rituals went on for close to four hours, with separate viewings for men and women. Floral wreaths covered the room, with the casket covered with the Police Department's standard in green, white, and blue. Mayor Eric Adams, himself a former NYPD officer, spoke at the funeral while the winner of the Democratic mayoral primary, Zohran Mamdani, sat with the family, The NYT noted. Islam came to New York City from Bangladesh when he was 20 years old, living in a small house along with his parents, his young sons, and his pregnant wife. In a eulogy read on his wife's behalf, she wrote that Islam had 'lived to help others' and that 'He gave his life protecting them. Though my heart is broken, I find comfort knowing that his sacrifice might have saved others.' Islam, who served in the department for three and a half years, joined the agency after spending two years as a safety agent in city schools. Even as an officer, he spent his time off as a security guard. Islam worked the Dominican Day Parade in the Bronx on Sunday before picking up an additional shift on Monday at 345 Park Avenue. 'He stepped into a new land and chose to become part of its promise, to believe in its dream. And he did believe in the American dream, not as something handed down but as something built with your own hands,' said Tisch. 'He may not be here to see that dream fulfilled, but his sons will surely grow up with its foundation beneath their feet.' Friends and colleagues said Islam was a devoted Muslim. Imam Dr. Zakir Ahmed of the Islamic Cultural Center of New York said during remarks that Islam, 'lived at a time when people like him are too often feared, vilified and made to feel like outsiders.' 'We cannot honor Officer Islam today while ignoring the daily pain endured by his community — being told to go back where you came from, being watched more closely, judged more harshly and loved less fully,' Imam Ahmed added, according to The NYT. 'To our city, our nation, you cannot ask us to serve and then silence us,' he said. 'You cannot take our sacrifice and ignore our suffering.'