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Pritam Singh says he's not aiming to be Singapore's next prime minister; GE2025: PAP spent $9.4m, opposition spent $3.6m: Singapore live news

Pritam Singh says he's not aiming to be Singapore's next prime minister; GE2025: PAP spent $9.4m, opposition spent $3.6m: Singapore live news

Yahooa day ago

Workers' Party chief Pritam Singh may be a formidable opposition leader, but his sights aren't set on becoming Singapore's next prime minister. In an episode of popular Malaysian political podcast Keluar Sekejap that was uploaded to YouTube on Tuesday (24 June), Singh said his role was to "normalise the idea of an opposition". He said, "I have to have a good finger on the pulse of Singaporeans, I've got to understand what they want. And I've got to understand how they respond to language which reflects ambition."
Candidates in Singapore's 2025 General Election collectively spent slightly over $13 million in their bid to win over voters, with nearly half of that amount going towards traditional advertising such as posters and banners. Online ads accounted for about 16 per cent of total spending, while political parties also collectively spent $1.7 million on physical rallies – which were brought back after being suspended during the 2020 election due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Read more in our live blog below, including the latest local and international news and updates.
Workers' Party chief Pritam Singh may be a formidable opposition leader, but his sights aren't set on becoming Singapore's next prime minister. In an episode of popular Malaysian political podcast Keluar Sekejap that was uploaded to YouTube on Tuesday (24 June), Singh said his role was to "normalise the idea of an opposition".
The podcast is hosted by former Malaysian health minister Khairy Jamaluddin and Shahril Hamdan, previously UMNO's information chief.
Khairy referenced a previous conversation he had with Singh where he had expressed the same sentiment that he didn't see himself as an "alternative prime minister", and questioned if there was a "lack of ambition".
"I have to have a good finger on the pulse of Singaporeans, I've got to understand what they want. And I've got to understand how they respond to language which reflects ambition,' replied Singh.
"If that language is not in sync with their broad understanding of what they want out of politics in Singapore, then ambition can be a death knell for any politician in Singapore."
Singh in 2019 established that the party's medium-term objective was to contest and win one-third of the seats in parliament.
He added, "If we accept that Singaporeans are pragmatic, and that there's no demand for a change of government, then going out there flying a flag which says 'I am your prime minister in waiting' is probably, with respect, an act of foolishness."
For more on Pritam Singh's interview, read here.
Candidates in Singapore's 2025 General Election collectively spent slightly over $13 million in their bid to win over voters, with nearly half of that amount going towards traditional advertising such as posters and banners. Online ads accounted for about 16 per cent of total spending, while political parties also collectively spent $1.7 million on physical rallies – which were brought back after being suspended during the 2020 election due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
According to figures released by the Elections Department (ELD) on Thursday (27 June), overall election spending rose by about 42 per cent compared with the $9.2 million spent in 2020. The ruling People's Action Party (PAP) spent the most at $9.4 million. In contrast, the combined expenditure by 10 opposition parties and two independents came up to around $3.6 million.
Among the opposition, the Workers' Party topped the list with $1.6 million spent across its 26 candidates.
For more on the GE2025 expenditure, read here.
A kitten that was allegedly stuffed into a plastic container and rolled around at a Tuas canteen has since been adopted, said the National Parks Board (NParks) in an update on Thursday (27 June).
The case, which sparked outrage after being flagged by the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (SPCA), is currently under investigation by NParks.
According to the SPCA, the kitten had been placed inside a plastic container, and rolled around repeatedly. The incident occurred at a workers' canteen at Tech Park Crescent in Tuas on 26 March, between 9.45pm and 10.30pm.
In their updated statement, NParks said they are "investigating the incident thoroughly, and appropriate action will be taken if any wrongdoing is established".
NParks' group director for enforcement and investigation Jessica Kwok said, "We have visited the premises and are in contact with the relevant persons. We were informed that the cat has since been adopted, and we will be checking on its well-being."
A Los Angeles home, said to belong to Brad Pitt, was reportedly broken into late Wednesday night (26 June), with the police confirming that three suspects entered the property through a front window and "ransacked the location".
While the Los Angeles Police Department did not confirm that the house belonged to Pitt, US media noted that the address matches a residence the Oscar-winning actor purchased in 2023. Pitt was not home at the time of the break-in as he was in London for the premiere of his upcoming Formula 1 movie.
Police said the suspects made off with stolen items, though the exact nature and value of the missing property remain unclear. The burglary occurred at around 10.30pm local time in the Los Feliz area. The property sits just outside Griffith Park – home to the iconic Hollywood Sign.
Pitt's house, a spacious three-bedroom property, is said to be surrounded by high fences and dense greenery, offering privacy from the public eye.
For more on the break-in of Brad Pitt's house, read here.
NEW: Overweight man wearing a Garfield shirt gets dragged off a plane after demanding he get an emergency exit seat due to his weight.The definition of a man-child right here. The man was reportedly from the UK and threw a tantrum on his flight departing from Bangkok when… pic.twitter.com/oLyzabhhJx
— Collin Rugg (@CollinRugg) June 26, 2025
A passenger was forcibly dragged off a Thai Lion Air flight departing Don Mueang Airport in Bangkok on Wednesday (25 July) after allegedly throwing a tantrum.
The man reportedly became upset after his request for a different seat from the one he was assigned was denied by flight attendants.
"At first, I thought we couldn't take off because the man had fallen ill. It turned out he just thought the economy seat was too crowded and insisted on moving to the emergency exit. The flight attendants had to call the police because he refused to cooperate," said one man who recorded video footage, according to Viral Press.
The flight crew's denial of his request allegedly resulted in an outburst, which lasted nearly an hour. Authorities boarded the Boeing 737 to remove him, and had to drag him out after he refused.
Labour chief, and Jalan Kayu Member of Parliament (MP), Ng Chee Meng took to Facebook on Thursday (26 June) to praise a resident for taking the initiative to sweep the common corridor of the floor he is staying on.
On his post, NG wrote, "Met Mr Wei during a recent visit to Fernvale Court. He was busy sweeping the common corridor along his whole floor. When I asked him if the area needs better cleaning, he smiled and just said he's just doing his part to keep the common areas clean. Two thumbs up."
The majority of the comments were positive, with netizens expressing their support for the resident while some praised Ng for walking the grounds in his constituency.
A portion of netizens, though, questioned the need for the resident to sweep the common corridor, casting doubt on the efforts of the cleaners.
Ng has had a rocky return to politics, with his campaign in the 2025 General Elections overshadowed by the Income-Allianz deal that caused much public uproar.
He won the Jalan Kayu SMC by a narrow margin over Workers' Party candidate Andre Low, garnering 51.47% of the votes.
Japan on Friday carried out its first execution in nearly three years, hanging Takahiro Shiraishi – infamously known as the "Twitter killer" – for the brutal murders of nine people in 2017. Shiraishi, 33, had lured his victims, eight women and one man, through social media before strangling and dismembering them in his apartment in Zama city in Kanagawa near Tokyo.
Justice Minister Keisuke Suzuki, who authorised the execution, said the crimes were driven by "extremely selfish" motives and has "caused great shock and unrest to society".
Shiraishi's hanging marks the first under Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba's administration, which came to power in October 2024. The execution is also the first since July 2022, when Japan executed another man involved in the 2008 Akihabara stabbing rampage.
For more on Japan's capital punishment, read here.
Fashion magnate Anna Wintour is stepping down as Vogue's editor-in-chief after 37 years.
It was reported that Wintour, 75, announced the news in a staff meeting on the morning of Thursday (26 June). Vogue is set to appoint a new head of editorial content, who will report directly to Wintour. While stepping back from day-to-day editorial duties at the iconic fashion magazine, Wintour isn't going anywhere – she will remain as Condé Nast's global chief content officer, and continue her role as global editorial director at Vogue, overseeing every brand, like Vanity Fair, GQ, and AD, across all markets.
"Anybody in a creative field knows how essential it is never to stop growing in one's work. When I became the editor of Vogue, I was eager to prove to all who might listen that there was a new, exciting way to imagine an American fashion magazine," Wintour told Vogue staff in a meeting on Thursday.
She continued: "Now, I find that my greatest pleasure is helping the next generation of impassioned editors storm the field with their own ideas, supported by a new, exciting view of what a major media company can be. And that is exactly the kind of person we need to now look for to be HOEC for US Vogue."
Wintour also explained that many of her responsibilities at Vogue would remain the same, 'including paying very close attention to the fashion industry and to the creative cultural force that is our extraordinary Met Ball, and charting the course of future Vogue Worlds".
For more on Anna Wintour stepping away as Vogue's editor-in-chief, read here.
A couple and their two sons behind a family-run construction firm were charged on 26 June for allegedly giving over $56,000 in bribes to property and condominium managers to advance their business interests. Ong Chin Kee, 66, and his wife Lea Lam Moy, also 66, both directors of OCL Building Services, were charged alongside their sons – project director Jovi Ong Teng Hong, 36, and general manager Jordan Ong Wei How, 30.
Each family member faces 17 corruption charges under the Prevention of Corruption Act, said the Corrupt Practices Investigation Bureau (CPIB).
The alleged offences took place between 2018 and 2022 and involved $56,260 to secure advantages for OCL, a company primarily dealing in building construction and upgrading works. Its secondary business activity is listed as painting and decorating.
CPIB also revealed that Ong Chin Kee is facing an additional four charges for allegedly obstructing justice. Between June and November 2023, he is said to have instigated individuals to alter their statements to CPIB. He also tipped off two others about the CPIB's investigation into both the family and the company.
Meanwhile, five individuals who allegedly received the bribes were also charged on the same day.
For more on the Singapore construction family bribery, read here.
Workers' Party chief Pritam Singh may be a formidable opposition leader, but his sights aren't set on becoming Singapore's next prime minister. In an episode of popular Malaysian political podcast Keluar Sekejap that was uploaded to YouTube on Tuesday (24 June), Singh said his role was to "normalise the idea of an opposition".
The podcast is hosted by former Malaysian health minister Khairy Jamaluddin and Shahril Hamdan, previously UMNO's information chief.
Khairy referenced a previous conversation he had with Singh where he had expressed the same sentiment that he didn't see himself as an "alternative prime minister", and questioned if there was a "lack of ambition".
"I have to have a good finger on the pulse of Singaporeans, I've got to understand what they want. And I've got to understand how they respond to language which reflects ambition,' replied Singh.
"If that language is not in sync with their broad understanding of what they want out of politics in Singapore, then ambition can be a death knell for any politician in Singapore."
Singh in 2019 established that the party's medium-term objective was to contest and win one-third of the seats in parliament.
He added, "If we accept that Singaporeans are pragmatic, and that there's no demand for a change of government, then going out there flying a flag which says 'I am your prime minister in waiting' is probably, with respect, an act of foolishness."
For more on Pritam Singh's interview, read here.
Candidates in Singapore's 2025 General Election collectively spent slightly over $13 million in their bid to win over voters, with nearly half of that amount going towards traditional advertising such as posters and banners. Online ads accounted for about 16 per cent of total spending, while political parties also collectively spent $1.7 million on physical rallies – which were brought back after being suspended during the 2020 election due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
According to figures released by the Elections Department (ELD) on Thursday (27 June), overall election spending rose by about 42 per cent compared with the $9.2 million spent in 2020. The ruling People's Action Party (PAP) spent the most at $9.4 million. In contrast, the combined expenditure by 10 opposition parties and two independents came up to around $3.6 million.
Among the opposition, the Workers' Party topped the list with $1.6 million spent across its 26 candidates.
For more on the GE2025 expenditure, read here.
A kitten that was allegedly stuffed into a plastic container and rolled around at a Tuas canteen has since been adopted, said the National Parks Board (NParks) in an update on Thursday (27 June).
The case, which sparked outrage after being flagged by the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (SPCA), is currently under investigation by NParks.
According to the SPCA, the kitten had been placed inside a plastic container, and rolled around repeatedly. The incident occurred at a workers' canteen at Tech Park Crescent in Tuas on 26 March, between 9.45pm and 10.30pm.
In their updated statement, NParks said they are "investigating the incident thoroughly, and appropriate action will be taken if any wrongdoing is established".
NParks' group director for enforcement and investigation Jessica Kwok said, "We have visited the premises and are in contact with the relevant persons. We were informed that the cat has since been adopted, and we will be checking on its well-being."
A Los Angeles home, said to belong to Brad Pitt, was reportedly broken into late Wednesday night (26 June), with the police confirming that three suspects entered the property through a front window and "ransacked the location".
While the Los Angeles Police Department did not confirm that the house belonged to Pitt, US media noted that the address matches a residence the Oscar-winning actor purchased in 2023. Pitt was not home at the time of the break-in as he was in London for the premiere of his upcoming Formula 1 movie.
Police said the suspects made off with stolen items, though the exact nature and value of the missing property remain unclear. The burglary occurred at around 10.30pm local time in the Los Feliz area. The property sits just outside Griffith Park – home to the iconic Hollywood Sign.
Pitt's house, a spacious three-bedroom property, is said to be surrounded by high fences and dense greenery, offering privacy from the public eye.
For more on the break-in of Brad Pitt's house, read here.
NEW: Overweight man wearing a Garfield shirt gets dragged off a plane after demanding he get an emergency exit seat due to his weight.The definition of a man-child right here. The man was reportedly from the UK and threw a tantrum on his flight departing from Bangkok when… pic.twitter.com/oLyzabhhJx
— Collin Rugg (@CollinRugg) June 26, 2025
A passenger was forcibly dragged off a Thai Lion Air flight departing Don Mueang Airport in Bangkok on Wednesday (25 July) after allegedly throwing a tantrum.
The man reportedly became upset after his request for a different seat from the one he was assigned was denied by flight attendants.
"At first, I thought we couldn't take off because the man had fallen ill. It turned out he just thought the economy seat was too crowded and insisted on moving to the emergency exit. The flight attendants had to call the police because he refused to cooperate," said one man who recorded video footage, according to Viral Press.
The flight crew's denial of his request allegedly resulted in an outburst, which lasted nearly an hour. Authorities boarded the Boeing 737 to remove him, and had to drag him out after he refused.
Labour chief, and Jalan Kayu Member of Parliament (MP), Ng Chee Meng took to Facebook on Thursday (26 June) to praise a resident for taking the initiative to sweep the common corridor of the floor he is staying on.
On his post, NG wrote, "Met Mr Wei during a recent visit to Fernvale Court. He was busy sweeping the common corridor along his whole floor. When I asked him if the area needs better cleaning, he smiled and just said he's just doing his part to keep the common areas clean. Two thumbs up."
The majority of the comments were positive, with netizens expressing their support for the resident while some praised Ng for walking the grounds in his constituency.
A portion of netizens, though, questioned the need for the resident to sweep the common corridor, casting doubt on the efforts of the cleaners.
Ng has had a rocky return to politics, with his campaign in the 2025 General Elections overshadowed by the Income-Allianz deal that caused much public uproar.
He won the Jalan Kayu SMC by a narrow margin over Workers' Party candidate Andre Low, garnering 51.47% of the votes.
Japan on Friday carried out its first execution in nearly three years, hanging Takahiro Shiraishi – infamously known as the "Twitter killer" – for the brutal murders of nine people in 2017. Shiraishi, 33, had lured his victims, eight women and one man, through social media before strangling and dismembering them in his apartment in Zama city in Kanagawa near Tokyo.
Justice Minister Keisuke Suzuki, who authorised the execution, said the crimes were driven by "extremely selfish" motives and has "caused great shock and unrest to society".
Shiraishi's hanging marks the first under Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba's administration, which came to power in October 2024. The execution is also the first since July 2022, when Japan executed another man involved in the 2008 Akihabara stabbing rampage.
For more on Japan's capital punishment, read here.
Fashion magnate Anna Wintour is stepping down as Vogue's editor-in-chief after 37 years.
It was reported that Wintour, 75, announced the news in a staff meeting on the morning of Thursday (26 June). Vogue is set to appoint a new head of editorial content, who will report directly to Wintour. While stepping back from day-to-day editorial duties at the iconic fashion magazine, Wintour isn't going anywhere – she will remain as Condé Nast's global chief content officer, and continue her role as global editorial director at Vogue, overseeing every brand, like Vanity Fair, GQ, and AD, across all markets.
"Anybody in a creative field knows how essential it is never to stop growing in one's work. When I became the editor of Vogue, I was eager to prove to all who might listen that there was a new, exciting way to imagine an American fashion magazine," Wintour told Vogue staff in a meeting on Thursday.
She continued: "Now, I find that my greatest pleasure is helping the next generation of impassioned editors storm the field with their own ideas, supported by a new, exciting view of what a major media company can be. And that is exactly the kind of person we need to now look for to be HOEC for US Vogue."
Wintour also explained that many of her responsibilities at Vogue would remain the same, 'including paying very close attention to the fashion industry and to the creative cultural force that is our extraordinary Met Ball, and charting the course of future Vogue Worlds".
For more on Anna Wintour stepping away as Vogue's editor-in-chief, read here.
A couple and their two sons behind a family-run construction firm were charged on 26 June for allegedly giving over $56,000 in bribes to property and condominium managers to advance their business interests. Ong Chin Kee, 66, and his wife Lea Lam Moy, also 66, both directors of OCL Building Services, were charged alongside their sons – project director Jovi Ong Teng Hong, 36, and general manager Jordan Ong Wei How, 30.
Each family member faces 17 corruption charges under the Prevention of Corruption Act, said the Corrupt Practices Investigation Bureau (CPIB).
The alleged offences took place between 2018 and 2022 and involved $56,260 to secure advantages for OCL, a company primarily dealing in building construction and upgrading works. Its secondary business activity is listed as painting and decorating.
CPIB also revealed that Ong Chin Kee is facing an additional four charges for allegedly obstructing justice. Between June and November 2023, he is said to have instigated individuals to alter their statements to CPIB. He also tipped off two others about the CPIB's investigation into both the family and the company.
Meanwhile, five individuals who allegedly received the bribes were also charged on the same day.
For more on the Singapore construction family bribery, read here.

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Presidents have F---'s to give when it's about Israel's Bibi Netanyahu
Presidents have F---'s to give when it's about Israel's Bibi Netanyahu

Fox News

timean hour ago

  • Fox News

Presidents have F---'s to give when it's about Israel's Bibi Netanyahu

What is it about Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin "Bibi" Netanyahu that drives American presidents to profanity? As Iran and Israel were still exchanging salvos after President Donald Trump had declared a ceasefire, Trump complained that these two countries "had been fighting for so long they don't know what the f--- they are doing." Trump's anger came through, and the ceasefire is holding — for now. While Trump is the latest president to send profanity in Netanyahu's direction, he is far from the only one. In fact, presidents have been cursing at Netanyahu for three decades. In the 1990s, Netanyahu and President Bill Clinton had a contentious relationship. In two separate elections, 1996 and 1999, Clinton sent political aides to try and defeat Netanyahu. He succeeded the second time. In the interim, though, they had to work together, and on one visit to the White House, Clinton was annoyed with how Netanyahu comported himself at a joint press conference. Afterward, Clinton reportedly fumed to his aides, "who's the f---ing leader of the free world?," suggesting that Netanyahu had overstepped his boundaries. Due in no small part to Clinton's efforts, Netanyahu was out of office during President George W. Bush's years, but cussing came back with Netanyahu's return during President Barack Obama's time in office. Netanyahu and Obama really disliked each other, and had a number of unpleasant run-ins, including one incident where Obama left Netanyahu and his team to cool their heels in the White House while Obama went to have dinner at the residence. Then, as now, the Iranian nuclear program and the matter of the Palestinians were matters of intense debate. Obama and company felt that Netanyahu was too cowardly on both issues. A senior Obama official, who may have been Obama himself, told The Atlantic that Netanyahu was "a chickensh***." The remark sparked outrage, especially since Netanyahu had been a decorated soldier in the Israeli special forces. Netanyahu pushed back on the comment, saying in a statement that "The attack on me comes because I defend the State of Israel and despite all the attacks, I will continue to defend our country and the citizens of Israel." Trump followed Obama and, by all accounts, they had a far better relationship, punctuated by important milestones such as the moving of the U.S. Embassy in Israel to Jerusalem and the signing of the Abraham Accords peace deals between Israel and four Arab countries. But Bibi also irked Trump by calling President Joe Biden to congratulate him for his 2020 election victory. This move managed to anger both Biden, who felt that Netanyahu had waited too long to make the call, and Trump, who felt that Netanyahu had betrayed him by calling at all. Trump signaled afterward that he was done with Netanyahu, saying starkly, "f--- him." Trump has three more years in office, but it will be hard for him to break the cursing at Netanyahu record set by Biden. Multiple reports have Biden launching streams of profane invective at Netanyahu, including calling Netanyahu and Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas "two of the biggest f---ing a--sholes in the world" ; saying that Netanyahu was "a f---ing liar," and adding, for good measure, that "Eighteen out of 19 people who work for him are f---ing liars."; and barking, "That son of a bitch, Bibi Netanyahu, he's a bad guy. He's a bad f---ing guy!" Biden also was not above cursing at Netanyahu directly. When Israel killed Hezbollah's Fuad Shukur, a fiend who helped kill 241 U.S. Marines in 1983, Biden should have praised Bibi for bringing Shukur to justice. Instead, he screamed at Netanyahu over the phone, "Bibi, what the f---?" With Trump now back in office, the two men have mostly cooperated, with Trump helping to release some of the Israeli hostages from Hamas' Gaza dungeons and striking the Iranian nuclear program, which elated Netanyahu. Yet the "they don't know what the f--- they are doing" incident shows that Netanyahu has the capacity to drive even friendly U.S. presidents to profanity. The question is why. One reason is that Netanyahu, unlike American presidents, lives in a dangerous neighborhood and faces constant existential threats. While some world leaders might acquiesce in a disagreement with the American president, Bibi is more likely to push back. A second reason lies in the way Netanyahu pushes back. His method, which he absorbed from his father's mentor, the Zionist leader Zev Jabotinsky, is to reach over the heads of the presidents and directly to the American people. As the record of profanity sent in his direction suggests, this method tends to annoy presidents. It also appears to have led to a grievous and welcome blow to the Iranian nuclear program.

Trump on a high after 'tremendous' wins at home and abroad
Trump on a high after 'tremendous' wins at home and abroad

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Trump on a high after 'tremendous' wins at home and abroad

Donald Trump's week began with an on-air expletive as he lost his cool over his mounting frustrations with Iran and Israel's shaky ceasefire. It ended with a beaming US president holding court at the White House - not once, but twice - as he celebrated a series of significant political victories at home and abroad. Trump was in a triumphant mood, answering questions for more than an hour at a news conference that turned into a meandering boast of his accomplishments. Here's a look at four big wins from this week, as well as a reminder of some things that didn't go entirely the president's way. The successful US strike on Iranian nuclear facilities on 21 June was followed just three days later by Trump's announcement of a "complete and total" ceasefire in what he termed the "12-day war" between Israel and Iran. It had a rocky start. Not long before the announcement, Iran fired off ballistic missiles at a US airbase in Qatar, sparking fears of a wider war across the Persian Gulf. Even after the ceasefire, things seemed tenuous. Both sides were quickly accused of breaking it, prompting an angry, expletive-laden tirade to reporters on the White House lawn. By his own admission, Trump only narrowly managed to convince Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to call off further attacks on Iran. But ultimately the ceasefire held, allowing the president to proudly claim that his military gamble of an "unbelievable" strike on Iran worked, and point to evidence that he is a "peacemaker" - a sorely needed win as peace continues to elude him in both Gaza and Ukraine. Hegseth talks up strikes in Iran in push for public approval Trump was on his way to the Netherlands for the Nato summit when he got a text from Nato Secretary General Mark Rutte, lavishing praise on him for the strikes on Iran - texts the president was more than happy to make public. During his whirlwind visit to the summit, US allies committed to 5% defence spending, something the president had repeatedly and vocally called for. Then during a joint press conference, Rutte referred to Trump as "Daddy", a reference to the president being able to broker a ceasefire between Israel and Iran. Trump has seemed to embrace the moniker. "I think he likes me. If he doesn't...I'll come back and hit him hard," Trump said at a news conference, with Secretary of State Marco Rubio laughing beside him. "He did it very affectionately." Soon after, the White House posted various videos of a victorious-looking Trump with the caption "daddy's home". Trump takes victory lap at Nato - but questions remain Trump's week ended on a high note with the news that the Supreme Court issued a ruling that will curb judges' power to block his orders nationwide. While the ruling stems from a case regarding Trump's ability to end birthright citizenship for children of some immigrants, it has sweeping implications. It will be harder for lower courts to challenge Trump's domestic agenda through what Attorney General Pam Bondi described as an "endless barrage" of injunctions. At an impromptu news conference, the president hailed the ruling as a "monumental victory for the constitution, the separation of powers, and the rule of law". The decision allows him to pursue a number of other policy items that had been thwarted by injunctions, including freezing funds to so-called "sanctuary cities" that stand in the way of his mass deportation drive, suspending refugee resettlement, and preventing tax money being used to fund gender surgeries. The president smiled and cracked jokes, inviting reporters to ask more and more questions, as his aides - including Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt - sat smiling beside him. "This was a tremendous win, and we've had tremendous wins," he said at the end. "But this was a tremendous win today." Court ruling expands Trump's power - he intends to use it On Friday afternoon, Trump met with the foreign ministers of Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of Congo, who earlier in the day signed a peace deal aimed at ending decades of fighting between the two neighbours. Further details are scant and previous peace deals in the region have failed - yet that has not deterred the US and Congolese presidents from framing this as a generational victory. "Today, the violence and destruction comes to an end, and the entire region begins a new chapter of hope and opportunity," Trump said. The deal also helps the US government and American companies gain access to critical minerals in the region. "I was able to get them together and sell it," Trump said. "And not only that, we're getting for the United States a lot of the mineral rights from the Congo." At his earlier news conference Trump had admitted he knew few details about the conflict, which is far from the minds of most Americans. "I'm a little bit out of my league... because I don't know too much about it," he said. "I know one thing. They were going at it for many years, and with machetes." Find out more about the peace deal signed in Washington The week hasn't been all victories and roses for Trump. The president's biggest legislative priority - a massive tax bill he's dubbed the "One, Big, Beautiful Bill" - has hit some roadblocks. Trump has repeatedly urged lawmakers to get it on to his desk to sign into law by 4 July, Independence Day in the US. But earlier this week, Senate Parliamentarian Elizabeth MacDonough said that certain provisions violated Senate rules, throwing billions of dollars of cuts into doubt. "This is part of the process. This part is part of the workings of the United States Senate," Karoline Leavitt said earlier this week. "But the president is adamant about seeing this bill on his desk here at the White House by Independence Day." And while Trump has hailed the ceasefires in Iran - as well as those in central Africa and last month between Pakistan and India - as victories, he has so far faltered on two of his biggest promises for peace: in Gaza and Ukraine. "We're working on that one," Trump said of the conflict between Russia and Ukraine at Friday's news conference, where he did not mention Gaza. Even the end of US military involvement in Iran is not guaranteed. During the news conference, Trump was asked by the BBC if he would consider bombing Iran again if he believed they were re-starting their nuclear programme. "Sure, without question, absolutely," he responded.

South Africa No. 2 Party Stays in Coalition, to Boycott Dialogue
South Africa No. 2 Party Stays in Coalition, to Boycott Dialogue

Bloomberg

timean hour ago

  • Bloomberg

South Africa No. 2 Party Stays in Coalition, to Boycott Dialogue

South Africa's fractious coalition survived after the second-largest party opted to stay in the government following its ultimatum to President Cyril Ramaphosa for firing one of its members as a deputy minister this week, while announcing it won't take part in a national dialogue. Ramaphosa set up the panel that includes business leaders, actors and the captain of its national rugby team to guide a dialogue on the country's future development path. The Democratic Alliance made the decision after accusing the president of double standards because he fired one of its members as a deputy minister for traveling abroad without permission while members of his African National Congress who were implicated in corruption retained their cabinet posts.

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