
Kristi Noem says Trump wants FEMA 'remade,' and more tariffs are set for U.S. trade partners: Weekend Rundown
'I think the president recognizes that FEMA should not exist the way that it always has been. It needs to be redeployed in a new way, and that's what we did during this response,' Noem said in an interview on NBC News' 'Meet the Press,' referring to the federal government's response to the Texas floods that devastated the region and left more than 120 dead.
Trump has previously slammed FEMA, which is part of the Department of Homeland Security, and mused about possibly 'getting rid' of the agency, which administers emergency relief. Noem, too, has previously said that the administration would eliminate FEMA.
Asked on 'Meet the Press' a second time whether Trump no longer wanted to end the agency, Noem reiterated that she believed the president 'wants it to be remade so that it's an agency that is new in how it deploys and supports states.'
Noem also brushed off criticism of the administration's flood response from some Democrats after Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., called for her resignation.
'I don't care what she thinks,' Noem said, adding there was 'no' chance she would resign.
Trump says he will hit E.U. and Mexico with a 30% tariff
President Donald Trump on Saturday threatened a significant tariff hike on the European Union and Mexico, two of the largest U.S. trade partners.
In separate letters published on Truth Social, the president wrote that each country will face a blanket tariff rate of 30% on all goods exported to the U.S. starting Aug. 1, and threatened even higher tariffs if either the E.U. or Mexico retaliates against his new levies.
On Sunday, the E.U. said it would suspend retaliatory tariffs scheduled to take effect Monday in hopes of reaching a trade deal by the end of the month.
Trump spent last week bringing his trade war back to a roaring boil. He kicked it off by issuing dozens of letters announcing unilateral tariffs, then said he planned to impose 50% duties on copper goods, sending prices of the raw metal to all-time highs. Late Thursday, he announced he would apply a blanket tariff of up to 20% on all imports, as well as a 35% tariff on some, and perhaps all, Canadian imports starting next month.
The letters come as the many trade deals that Trump administration officials had said would be signed have failed to materialize, leaving the president with little to show for weeks of negotiations.
'Meet the Press'
Gov. Andy Beshear, D-Ky., would not rule out running for president in 2028, telling 'Meet the Press' moderator Kristen Welker that he may 'take a look' at launching a bid.
'I would have never considered this a couple years ago, but I will not leave a broken country to my kids or to anyone else's,' Beshear said. 'And so if I'm somebody that at that point, that I believe that I can heal the country, then then I'll take a look at it.'
Beshear, who was first elected governor in 2019, won re-election in 2023, becoming a rare Democrat to govern a ruby-red state, where 64.5% of voters cast ballots for President Donald Trump in 2024.
Asked whether he was running for president, Beshear said, 'What I'm doing right now is trying to be a reasonable voice out there that hopefully doesn't just bring Democrats back together, but Democrats, Republicans and independents.'
Politics in brief
Trump vs. MAGA: Trump faces a revolt from his MAGA base as the Jeffrey Epstein files — and calls for Attorney General Pam Bondi to be fired — dominated a conservative conference in Tampa this weekend.
Georgia on Trump's mind: How midterm voters react in Georgia, which has taken center stage in the Trump era as a key battleground state, could help determine how the final two years of his presidency go.
Wimbledon crowns its men's and women's champions
Jannik Sinner won his first Wimbledon title Sunday, defeating rival Carlos Alcaraz in four sets to capture his fourth Grand Slam trophy.
In a rematch of June's French Open final — which Alcaraz won after dropping the first two sets — this time it was Sinner who came from behind for the victory. Sinner lost the first set before ultimately winning 4-6, 6-4, 6-4, 6-4.
'It's so special,' Sinner said after the match during an on-court interview. 'I had a very tough loss in Paris, at the end of the day it doesn't matter how you win or lose, you have to understand what you did wrong. That's what we did.'
Put a cork in it: An ill-timed bottle pop from the crowd resulted in a cork landing on the court. 'Ladies and gentlemen,' the umpire said on the loudspeaker, 'as a courtesy to both players, please do not pop Champagne corks just as the players are about to serve.'
On Saturday, the women's final was almost over before you saw it.
Clocking in at just 57 minutes, the match was a lopsided affair as No. 8 Iga Swiatek dominated No. 13 Amanda Anisimova, 6-0, 6-0, to win her sixth Grand Slam title and first at Wimbledon.
The Pole, 24, became the first woman since 1911 to win the Wimbledon final without losing a single game. She has now won every Grand Slam except the Australian Open.
'Honestly, I didn't even dream [of this], because for me, it was just, like, way too far, you know?' Swiatek said. 'I feel like I'm already an experienced player after winning the Slams before, but I never really expected this one.'
A star-studded affair: While the on-court play garnered headlines, so too did the action off of it. Countless celebrities and athletes were in attendance for the tournament.
Notable quote
I don't know how you treat people this way. I really don't.
A Veteran State Department Employee
More than 1,300 employees were forced out of the State Department on Friday, taking with them decades of specialized skills and on-the-job training as part of the United States diplomatic corps. Several career employees who unexpectedly found themselves with pink slips told NBC News they were baffled by the massive overhaul.
In case you missed it
Two people were killed and at least three others, including a state trooper, were injured in what authorities described as a series of incidents in Lexington, Kentucky, after a suspect first shot at the trooper.
A historic lodge on the Grand Canyon's North Rim was destroyed by a fast-moving wildfire, the park said.
A 20-year-old American from Florida was beaten to death by Israeli settlers while visiting relatives in the occupied West Bank, according to his family and the Palestinian Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
The family of a Northwestern scientist questioned for China ties sued the university, alleging it discriminated against her even though she was cleared of wronging, forcing her into a psychiatric facility against her will and ultimately leading to her suicide.
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Spectator
23 minutes ago
- Spectator
Trump is turning ‘Biden's war' into his own
It's official: President Trump is tired of Russian President Vladimir Putin's bloody shenanigans. While he won't admit it, it's likely Trump feels strung along and publicly humiliated. Every time he ends a conversation with Putin that he's relatively pleased with, he learns a few hours later that another batch of Russian drones and missiles have slammed into Kyiv and killed more civilians. Today's meeting at the White House with Nato Secretary General Mark Rutte, during which Trump said yet again that he was 'very unhappy' with Russia over the war in Ukraine, came after weeks in which the US president was increasingly expressing his frustration, even anger, with how Putin was behaving. The President didn't mince any words during his comments to reporters, threatening 100 per cent secondary tariffs on Russia if Putin doesn't sign a peace deal in the next 50 days that would end the 40-month long conflict. All types of US-manufactured missiles, including the Patriot systems and interceptors that were already in short supply, will now be transmitted to the Ukrainian army. This last item is particularly notable given the fact that the Pentagon paused weapons shipments earlier in the month as part of a department-wide review of US munitions stockpiles. With these latest changes, Trump's Ukraine policy is moving closer to Joe Biden's, an ironic development when one considers how many times Trump-the-candidate bashed Biden's stewardship of the war during the 2024 presidential campaign. Apparently Trump-the-president has come to an altogether different conclusion than his previous self: the only way this war will end in a deal is by throwing more pressure, not less, at the Russians. The carrots Trump dangled in front of Putin's face are now being replaced with pointy sticks – not to mention icier language. 'My conversations with him are very pleasant, and then the missiles go off at night,' Trump said, referencing his conversations with Putin so far. 'He fooled Clinton, Bush, Obama, Biden – he didn't fool me.' Will any of this make a difference to the war, though? Amid everything that has been written over the last few weeks about Trump's supposed 180-degree turn on Putin, there is a surprisingly little attention to this big question. In the short-term, the answer is yes. More air defence interceptors in Ukrainian hands will obviously provide Kyiv with a stronger ability to shoot down the ballistic and cruise missiles the Russians are lobbing into the country. Depending on the scale of the weapons packages and whether the Trump administration will request another supplemental from Congress like Biden did (twice), the Russian army will have a tougher job moving the massive frontline further west. Yet these would all be tactical changes, not strategic ones. The issue isn't whether more American weapons and American sanctions will complicate things for Putin, but whether the combination convinces him that Russia's interests are better served negotiating with the Ukrainians rather than fighting them. We've stress tested this theory before, and it failed. Biden, after all, sent more than $60 billion in arms to Ukraine, organised a Western-led global sanctions apparatus against some of Moscow's most profitable industries (such as crude oil and natural gas) and essentially outsourced US foreign policy on the war to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in a bid to increase the amount of chips Ukraine could bring to the table once negotiations commenced. However, all of this assistance merely cemented the preconceived notion in Putin's mind that the collective West was out to constrain, if not diminish, Russian power globally. Putin responded by doubling down on his policy, not aligning it with the West's preferences. Every time Putin's back has been against the wall, his instinct was to bash through it rather than capitulate. We saw this most dramatically during the opening months of the war, when the Russian army's clumsy, abysmal offensive in Kyiv was beaten back by Ukrainian forces. Putin responded not by cutting his losses and ending his war of choice, but instead re-focusing his efforts on eastern Ukraine and re-aligning his resources. In the fall of 2022, when the Ukrainian army captured wide swaths of Kharkiv and the city centre in Kherson, Putin acted by kicking away the negotiating table as if it was a dusty piece of old furniture. He ordered a partial mobilisation of 300,000 men to plug holes at the front and organise a counter-offensive that killed off whatever momentum the Ukrainians had at the time. Are we to believe more US weapons and sanctions will coerce Putin into behaving any differently than he did during those two prior occasions? Anything is possible, and with his announcement today, Trump is certainly hoping history won't repeat itself. Yet given everything we know about the Russian leader and his conduct over the last three years, it's likely Trump is setting himself up for disappointment – all the while turning what he often calls 'Biden's war' into his own.


Daily Mail
31 minutes ago
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Obama's message to Democrats
Published: | Updated: Former President Barack Obama told whining Democrats that they needed to 'toughen up' as the party figures out how to fight back against President Donald Trump. On Friday, Obama headlined a private fundraiser in New Jersey hosted by the state's current Democratic Gov. Phil Murphy in support of the Democratic nominee for New Jersey governor, Rep. Mikie Sherrill. CNN obtained excerpts of the former president's remarks. 'You know, don't tell me you're a Democrat , but you're kind of disappointed right now, so you're not doing anything,' Obama said. 'No, now is exactly the time that you get in there and do something.' The ex-president complained about party members grumbling over there not being a defined leader of the party. 'I think it's going to require a little bit less navel-gazing and a little less whining and being in fetal positions,' he said. 'And it's going to require Democrats to just toughen up.' There are two off-year elections that Obama said Democrats should be focused on - the governors races in New Jersey and Virginia. In past years, both races have been considered bellwethers - and if Democrats are successful they could give them momentum going into the midterms. Obama called the races 'a big jumpstart for where we need to go.' 'Stop looking for the quick fix,' he told the crowd. 'Stop looking for the messiah.' 'You have great candidates running races right now. Support those candidates,' the ex-president said. In the primary last month, New Jersey Republicans selected former Assemblyman Jack Ciattarelli to be there guy. He was backed by Trump. Ciattarelli unsuccessfully pursued the governorship in both 2017 and 2021 - losing the primary in 2017 and losing the general election to Murphy in 2021. 'Make sure that the DNC has what it needs to compete in what will be a more data-driven, more social media-driven cycle, which will cost some money and expertise and time,' Obama advised on the two races. More broadly, he encouraged Democrats to 'stand up for the things that you think are right.'


Reuters
36 minutes ago
- Reuters
China steps in as US pulls back from diplomacy, report says
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