Birthday wishes, delivered: with a presidential twist

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Yahoo
11 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Australia Plans to Lift Import Curbs on US Beef to Pacify Trump
(Bloomberg) -- The Australian government has announced it intends to remove restrictions on US beef imports in a bid to appease President Donald Trump, who had highlighted Canberra's biosecurity measures as an unfair impediment to trade. Trump Awards $1.26 Billion Contract to Build Biggest Immigrant Detention Center in US Why the Federal Reserve's Building Renovation Costs $2.5 Billion The High Costs of Trump's 'Big Beautiful' New Car Loan Deduction Salt Lake City Turns Winter Olympic Bid Into Statewide Bond Boom Milan Corruption Probe Casts Shadow Over Property Boom Agriculture Minister Julie Collins said the government will lift restrictions from next week on the import of red meat that originated in either Canada or Mexico and later slaughtered in the US. Australia barred US beef imports in 2003 following an outbreak of mad cow disease, and only eased some restrictions in 2019. Collins said in a statement on Thursday that there had been 'a rigorous science and risk-based assessment over the past decade' and the government now considered that 'the strengthened control measures put in place by the US effectively manage biosecurity risks.' Trump singled out Australia's refusal to take exports of US beef in April when he unveiled his 'reciprocal' tariffs. 'They're wonderful people and wonderful everything, but they ban American beef. Yet we imported $3 billion of Australian beef from them just last year alone,' Trump said in his 'Liberation Day' address on April 2. The US is one of Australia's largest markets for red meat, with beef shipments rising by 23% in June from a year earlier despite the current 10% tariff on all Australian exports to the US. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese had previously said he wouldn't weaken Australia's biosecurity regime simply to satisfy Trump's demands. Elon Musk's Empire Is Creaking Under the Strain of Elon Musk Burning Man Is Burning Through Cash A Rebel Army Is Building a Rare-Earth Empire on China's Border What the Tough Job Market for New College Grads Says About the Economy It's Not Just Tokyo and Kyoto: Tourists Descend on Rural Japan ©2025 Bloomberg L.P.
Yahoo
11 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Bondi facing Democratic calls to testify following report she told Trump she was in Epstein files
WASHINGTON (AP) — Attorney General Pam Bondi is facing Democratic calls to testify before Congress following a newspaper's revelation that she told President Donald Trump that his name appeared in the files of the Jeffrey Epstein sex-trafficking investigation. The Wall Street Journal reported Wednesday that Bondi told Trump his name was among many high-profile figures mentioned in the files, which the Justice Department this month said it would not be releasing despite a clamor from online sleuths, conspiracy theorists and members of Trump's base. Trump's personal ties to Epstein are well-established and his name is already known to have been included in records related to the wealthy financier, who killed himself in jail in 2019 as he awaited trial on sex trafficking charges. Sen. Adam Schiff, a California Democrat, responded to the report by calling on Bondi and FBI Director Kash Patel to appear before the Senate Judiciary Committee. 'We need to bring Bondi and Patel into the Judiciary Committee to testify about this now,' Schiff said in a video posted on X. The Justice Department declined to comment on the report but issued a joint statement from Bondi and Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche saying that investigators had reviewed the records and 'nothing in the files warranted further investigation or prosecution.' 'As par of our routine briefing, we made the president aware of the findings,' the statement said. The mere inclusion of a person's name in Epstein's files does not imply wrongdoing and he was known to have been associated with multiple prominent figures, including Trump. Over the years, thousands of pages of records have been released through lawsuits, Epstein's criminal dockets, public disclosures and Freedom of Information Act requests. They include a 2016 deposition in which an accuser recounted she spent several hours with Epstein at Trump's Atlantic City casino but didn't say if she met Trump and did not accuse him of any wrongdoing. Trump has also said he once thought Epstein was a 'terrific guy' but they later had a falling-out. White House spokesman Steven Cheung on Wednesday said the reports were 'nothing more than a continuation of the fake news stories concocted by the Democrats and the liberal media.'


New York Post
12 minutes ago
- New York Post
Columbia must make good on its promises and quash antisemitism
What do you know? The White House has managed to get Columbia University to 'fess up to its sorry record of antisemitism, pay a considerable fine and agree to fresh steps to set it on the right path. That's enormously encouraging — not least because it'll put pressure on other schools that have been resisting changes, like Harvard, to fall in line. President Donald Trump and his team worked hard to reach a deal and deserve great credit. They put the screws to the elite school, cutting off hundreds of millions of dollars in grant support until it agreed to reforms. Advertisement Now Columbia will pay a whopping $200 million to settle discrimination claims and another $20 million specifically to address antisemitism on campus. It also promised to stop racial discrimination in hiring and admissions. Plus, the school has agreed to vet international students more closely and share its data with the feds. That means it won't let in more terror-aligned foreign 'students' like Mahmoud Khalil whose real purpose is to sow chaos on American campuses. Advertisement And just a day earlier, Columbia meted out heavy punishments against more than 70 students for their antisemitic antics, suspending some and expelling others. These are all huge wins. Recall that the school had allowed a mob, including 'community activists' with no university affiliation, to occupy its main square with tents for weeks on end. This rabble harassed Jewish students and faculty, physically blocking their passage around the campus and into university buildings. Jewish students were shoved and bullied. Advertisement The deans did nothing as protestors invaded buildings, chanted antisemitic slogans and destroyed property. Indeed, Columbia abetted a climate of terror. Students wearing keffiyehs as masks disrupted a class on Israeli history taught by an Israeli professor and distributed incendiary fliers reading, 'Burn Zionism to the Ground.' This wasn't just a matter of leniency and laziness on the part of university officials. It was intentional. Advertisement Tenured faculty and top administrators expressed open support for the mayhem, and some were caught mocking Jewish students speaking up about the fear and intimidation they were suffering. Katrina Armstrong, the former interim president, told faculty members in private that she had no intention of making good on her promises to the administration to ban masked protests or reform admissions procedures. This lying and hypocrisy captures the elitist scorn of top Columbia faculty. Tenured radicals turned a blessed institution of culture and science into a pit of rancor and violence in the name of eliminating the Jewish state. Some of that may be about to change — though don't expect all the fixes to come overnight. Notably, Columbia has given in on all the points Harvard is fighting in court, and gotten its grant money restored. Let's hope that resonates with Harvard and nudges it, and other antisemitic schools, to straighten out, once and for all.