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New York Times
13 minutes ago
- New York Times
As Harvard and Trump Head to Court, the Government Piles on the Pressure
President Trump crowed online in June that his administration might cut a ''mindbogglingly' HISTORIC' deal with Harvard University 'over the next week or so.' But as the White House and the university negotiated in the weeks that followed, no deal materialized to return the billions of research dollars that the government had frozen. Now the two sides face a crucial court hearing on Monday in their lawsuit about financial obligations and academic independence, even as the Trump administration continues to pelt the nation's oldest university to amass leverage in negotiations. Last week, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement served subpoenas to Harvard with sprawling demands that included payroll records, years of disciplinary files and any videos Harvard had of international students protesting on campus since 2020, according to two people familiar with the subpoenas, some of which were reviewed by The New York Times. The agency gave the university a breakneck one-week deadline for compliance. Also this month, the administration formally accused the school of civil rights violations, arguing that Harvard had failed to protect Jewish people on campus. The government also complained to the university's accreditor, which could eventually jeopardize Harvard students' access to federal financial aid. Even so, both sides have continued discussions toward a resolution of the government investigations into the school and the sprawling legal fights, though they have made limited headway. This account is drawn from conversations with four people familiar with negotiations, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to avoid endangering the talks, and from public statements and court records. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.
Yahoo
36 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Trump Exempts Scores of Plants From Biden's Pollution Rules
(Bloomberg) — President Donald Trump is allowing chemical makers, coal-fired power plants and other facilities to bypass a range of environmental regulations on grounds that the waivers are needed for national security purposes. The Dutch Intersection Is Coming to Save Your Life Advocates Fear US Agents Are Using 'Wellness Checks' on Children as a Prelude to Arrests LA Homelessness Drops for Second Year Manhattan, Chicago Murder Rates Drop in 2025, Officials Say Mumbai Facelift Is Inspired by 200-Year-Old New York Blueprint The plants, which also include taconite iron ore processing operations and chemical manufacturing facilities that play a role in the production of semiconductors and energy, were granted two-year waivers from Environmental Protection Agency rules via proclamations signed by Trump and released on Thursday evening. The rules were finalized under the previous Biden administration. 'The exemptions ensure that these facilities within these critical industries can continue to operate uninterrupted to support national security without incurring substantial costs to comply with, in some cases, unattainable compliance requirements,' the White House said in a statement. Among the exempted operations were taconite iron ore plants in Minnesota owned by the United States Steel Corp. and six facilities owned by Cleveland-Cliffs Inc. (CLF) in Minnesota and Michigan, according to the White House, which said the steel was used in national defense systems and other critical infrastructure. Chemical makers, including Dow Inc. (DOW) and BASF SE ( BASFY), and refiners such as Phillips 66 (PSX) and Citgo Petroleum Corp., were granted waivers from EPA regulations requiring emissions controls for certain facilities, according to the White House, which said the requirements would have required massive capital investments or even forced the plants to shut down. The White House also said coal-fired power plants in Ohio, Illinois and Colorado had been exempted from stringent air pollution mandates limiting the emission of mercury and other toxins. The Biden 'emissions standards impose costly and, in some cases, unattainable compliance requirements on these industries essential to national interests,' according to a White House fact sheet. The waivers follow guidance earlier this year by the EPA that said companies could ask for exemptions to a range of regulations for as long as two years. —With assistance from John Harney. What the Tough Job Market for New College Grads Says About the Economy How Starbucks' CEO Plans to Tame the Rush-Hour Free-for-All Godzilla Conquered Japan. Now Its Owner Plots a Global Takeover Forget DOGE. Musk Is Suddenly All In on AI Why Access to Running Water Is a Luxury in Wealthy US Cities ©2025 Bloomberg L.P. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data


Bloomberg
an hour ago
- Bloomberg
Australia's Chalmers on Tariffs, Defense Spending, Cooperation
Australian Treasurer Jim Chalmers tells Bloomberg TV that Australia will "quite dramatically" boost its defense spending, while working with other Group of 20 nations to improve cooperation to combat volatility. Chalmers also warns that he sees US tariffs levied on countries around the world by President Donald Trump as an act of "economic self-harm." He was speaking on the sidelines of a meeting between many of the world's most powerful finance ministers in South Africa. (Source: Bloomberg)