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National Post
26-06-2025
- Politics
- National Post
Geoff Russ: The socialist madness of Zohran Mamdani is a spreading contagion
Article content A hardline critic of Israel, he refused to condemn the phrase 'Globalize the Intifada,' and pledged to arrest Benjamin Netanyahu if he sets foot in the city. Curiously, the war in Ukraine has attracted little to no attention from Mamdani, and that is a choice. Article content The left-wing dislike of Western institutions and alliances is eternal, and the war between Israel and Gaza is just the latest opportunity to project it. Gaza is their current cause célèbre, and Mamdani's admirers, both in the U.S. and elsewhere will be emboldened to toughen their anti-Israel rhetoric. Article content Some have even accused Mamdani of being an Islamist due to his support for the Palestinians and his Muslim faith. Were that the case, Mamdani would be the strangest one to have ever lifted. Article content He supports using public funds to subsidize transgender health care, and is a stalwart supporter of rights for sexual minorities across the board, none of which would be the beliefs held by an extreme religious insurgent. However, it is typical of modern left-wing populists who desire to loot the well-off so they can fund a government that seizes power over the economy. Article content It is a political style that utterly rejects the principles of the American Founding Fathers, and appropriate for a city hall that removed a 187-year old statue of Thomas Jefferson in 2021 due to his ownership of slaves. Article content The man authored the Declaration of Independence, but this does not matter to those who want to remake New York with thoroughly un-American ideas like socialism. Article content However, it was neither Mamdani's personal ideology nor his support for Gaza that drove his success in the Democratic primary. The main culprit of his victory was affordability, or New York's lack thereof, which should surprise nobody. Article content Mamdani's campaign promised rent caps, subsidized public housing, and expanded free city government services. This resonated with young New Yorkers who pay exorbitant rates for tiny apartments that they usually have to share with one too many roommates. Article content The cost of living is the best way to rally youth across the West right now, and no political faction has no monopoly upon that strategy. In Canada, Pierre Poilievre's Conservatives won the youth vote in large part due to their frustrations over sky-high rental costs and the impossibility of home ownership. Article content Although this failed to get the Conservatives into government in Canada, it is likely to work for Mamdani. Article content There is nothing wrong with wanting to address affordability, but the issue will be a Trojan Horse for a host of terrible ideas to accompany it, like hostility to law enforcement, driving out capital, and throwing a country's founding principles into the trash bin. Article content Mamdani is the most famous leftist in the West right now, and the future of the Democratic Party and their ideological branch plants. It's no wonder the NDP wasted no time in kowtowing to him, the man poised to lord over the most important city in the world. Article content


CNN
23-06-2025
- Politics
- CNN
Supreme Court prepares to release major opinions on birthright citizenship, LGBTQ books, porn sites
From digging into President Donald Trump's battle with the courts to deciding whether people can be required to identify themselves before viewing porn online, the Supreme Court in the coming days will deliver its most dramatic decisions of the year. With most of its pending rulings complete, the justices are now working toward issuing the final flurry of opinions that could have profound implications for the Trump administration, the First Amendment and millions of American people. Already, the conservative Supreme Court has allowed states to ban transgender care for minors — a blockbuster decision that could have far-reaching consequences — sided with the Food and Drug Administration's denial of vaping products and upheld Biden-era federal regulations that will make it easier to track 'ghost guns.' Here are some of the most important outstanding cases: The first argued appeal involving Trump's second term has quickly emerged as the most significant case the justices will decide in the coming days. The Justice Department claims that three lower courts vastly overstepped their authority by imposing nationwide injunctions that blocked the president from enforcing his order limiting birthright citizenship. Whatever the justices say about the power of courts to halt a president's executive order on a nationwide basis could have an impact beyond birthright citizenship. Trump has, for months, vociferously complained about courts pausing dozens of his policies with nationwide injunctions. While the question is important on its own — it could shift the balance of power between the judicial and executive branches — the case was supercharged by the policy at issue: Whether a president can sign an executive order that upends more than a century of understanding, the plain text of the 14th Amendment and multiple Supreme Court precedents pointing to the idea that people born in the US are US citizens. During the May 15 arguments, conservative and liberal justices seemed apprehensive to let the policy take effect. The high court is also set to decide whether a school district in suburban Washington, DC, burdened the religious rights of parents by declining to allow them to opt their elementary-school children out of reading LGBTQ books in the classroom. As part of its English curriculum, Montgomery County Public Schools approved a handful of books in 2022 at issue. One, 'Prince & Knight,' tells the story of a prince who does not want to marry any of the princesses in his realm. After teaming up with a knight to slay a dragon, the two fall in love, 'filling the king and queen with joy,' according to the school's summary. The parents said the reading of the books violated their religious beliefs. The case arrived at the Supreme Court at a moment when parents and public school districts have been engaged in a tense struggle over how much sway families should have over instruction. The Supreme Court's conservative majority signaled during arguments in late April that it would side with the parents in the case, continuing the court's yearslong push to expand religious rights. The court is juggling several major cases challenging the power of federal agencies. One of those deals with the creation of a task force that recommends which preventive health care services must be covered at no cost under Obamacare. Though the case deals with technical questions about who should appoint the members of a board that makes those recommendations, the decision could affect the ability of Americans to access cost-free services under the Affordable Care Act such as certain cancer screenings and PrEP drugs that help prevent HIV infections. During arguments in late April, the court signaled it may uphold the task force. The court also seemed skeptical of a conservative challenge to the Universal Service Fund, which Congress created in 1996 to pay for programs that expand broadband and phone service in rural and low-income communities. Phone companies contribute billions to that fund, a cost that is passed on to consumers. A conservative group challenged the fund as an unconstitutional 'delegation' of the power of Congress to levy taxes. If the court upholds the structure of the programs' funding, that would represent a departure from its trend in recent years of limiting the power of agencies to act without explicit approval from Congress. For years, the Supreme Court has considered whether congressional districts redrawn every decade violate the rights of Black voters under the landmark 1965 Voting Rights Act. This year, the justices are being asked by a group of White voters whether Louisiana went so far in adding a second Black-majority district that it violated the 14th Amendment. The years-old, messy legal battle over Louisiana's districts raises a fundamental question about how much state lawmakers may think about race when drawing congressional maps. The answer may have implications far beyond the Bayou State, particularly if a majority of the court believes it is time to move beyond policies intended to protect minority voters that were conceived during the Civil Rights Movement of the 1950s and 1960s. Arguments in the case, which took place in March, were mixed. A ruling against Louisiana would likely jeopardize the state's second Black and Democratic-leaning congressional district, currently held by Rep. Cleo Fields, a Democrat. And any change to Fields' territory could affect the boundaries of districts held by House Speaker Mike Johnson and House Majority Leader Steve Scalise. The justices will also decide a fight that erupted in 2018 when South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster yanked Medicaid funding for the state's two Planned Parenthood clinics. Technically, the legal dispute isn't about abortion — federal and state law already bar Medicaid from paying for that procedure — but a win for South Carolina could represent a financial blow to an entity that provides access to abortion in many parts of the country. McMaster, a Republican, argued the payments were a taxpayer subsidy for abortion. McMaster's order had the effect of also blocking patients from receiving other services at Planned Parenthood. A patient named Julie Edwards, who has diabetes, and Planned Parenthood South Atlantic sued the state, noting that federal law gives Medicaid patients a right to access care at any qualified doctor's office willing to see them. The legal dispute for the court deals with whether Medicaid patients have a right to sue to enforce requirements included in spending laws approved by Congress — in this case, the mandate that patients can use the benefit at any qualified doctor's office. Without a right to sue, Planned Parenthood argues, it would be impossible to enforce those requirements. The Supreme Court has tended to view such rights-to-sue with skepticism, though a 7-2 majority found such a right in a related case two years ago. The court is expected to release more opinions Thursday and will need at least one other day — and possibly several more — to finish its work.

Associated Press
18-06-2025
- Politics
- Associated Press
Supreme Court work goes on with 16 cases to decide, including birthright citizenship
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court is in the homestretch of a term that has lately been dominated by the Trump administration's emergency appeals of lower court orders seeking to slow President Donald Trump's efforts to remake the federal government. But the justices also have 16 cases to resolve that were argued between December and mid-May. One of the argued cases was an emergency appeal, the administration's bid to be allowed to enforce Trump's executive order denying birthright citizenship to U.S.-born children of parents who are in the country illegally. The court typically aims to finish its work by the end of June. On Wednesday it decided one of its most closely watched cases, handing down an opinion that upheld a Tennessee ban on some healthcare for transgender minors. Here are some of the biggest remaining cases: Trump's birthright citizenship order has been blocked by lower courts The court rarely hears arguments over emergency appeals, but it took up the administration's plea to narrow orders that have prevented the citizenship changes from taking effect anywhere in the U.S. The issue before the justices is whether to limit the authority of judges to issue nationwide injunctions, which have plagued both Republican and Democratic administrations in the past 10 years. These nationwide court orders have emerged as an important check on Trump's efforts and a source of mounting frustration to the Republican president and his allies. At arguments last month, the court seemed intent on keeping a block on the citizenship restrictions while still looking for a way to scale back nationwide court orders. It was not clear what such a decision might look like, but a majority of the court expressed concerns about what would happen if the administration were allowed, even temporarily, to deny citizenship to children born to parents who are in the country illegally. Democratic-led states, immigrants and rights groups who sued over Trump's executive order argued that it would upset the settled understanding of birthright citizenship that has existed for more than 125 years. The court seems likely to side with Maryland parents in a religious rights case over LGBTQ storybooks in public schools Parents in the Montgomery County school system, in suburban Washington, want to be able to pull their children out of lessons that use the storybooks, which the county added to the curriculum to better reflect the district's diversity. The school system at one point allowed parents to remove their children from those lessons, but then reversed course because it found the opt-out policy to be disruptive. Sex education is the only area of instruction with an opt-out provision in the county's schools. The school district introduced the storybooks in 2022, with such titles as 'Prince and Knight' and 'Uncle Bobby's Wedding.' The case is one of several religious rights cases at the court this term. The justices have repeatedly endorsed claims of religious discrimination in recent years. The decision also comes amid increases in recent years in books being banned from public school and public libraries. A three-year battle over congressional districts in Louisiana is making its second trip to the Supreme Court Lower courts have struck down two Louisiana congressional maps since 2022 and the justices are weighing whether to send state lawmakers back to the map-drawing board for a third time. The case involves the interplay between race and politics in drawing political boundaries in front of a conservative-led court that has been skeptical of considerations of race in public life. At arguments in March, several of the court's conservative justices suggested they could vote to throw out the map and make it harder, if not impossible, to bring redistricting lawsuits under the Voting Rights Act. Before the court now is a map that created a second Black majority congressional district among Louisiana's six seats in the House of Representatives. The district elected a Black Democrat in 2024. A three-judge court found that the state relied too heavily on race in drawing the district, rejecting Louisiana's arguments that politics predominated, specifically the preservation of the seats of influential members of Congress, including Speaker Mike Johnson. The Supreme Court ordered the challenged map to be used last year while the case went on. Lawmakers only drew that map after civil rights advocates won a court ruling that a map with one Black majority district likely violated the landmark voting rights law. The justices are weighing a Texas law aimed at blocking kids from seeing online pornography Texas is among more than a dozen states with age verification laws. The states argue the laws are necessary as smartphones have made access to online porn, including hardcore obscene material, almost instantaneous. The question for the court is whether the measure infringes on the constitutional rights of adults as well. The Free Speech Coalition, an adult-entertainment industry trade group, agrees that children shouldn't be seeing pornography. But it says the Texas law is written too broadly and wrongly affects adults by requiring them to submit personal identifying information online that is vulnerable to hacking or tracking. The justices appeared open to upholding the law, though they also could return it to a lower court for additional work. Some justices worried the lower court hadn't applied a strict enough legal standard in determining whether the Texas law and others like that could run afoul of the First Amendment.


Forbes
30-05-2025
- Business
- Forbes
J.K. Rowling Is A Billionaire—Again
The Dark Arts of Cancel Culture have been no match for the magic of Harry Potter author J.K. Rowling. If there was any price to be paid for placing herself at the center of the debate over transgender rights, you wouldn't know it by looking at her pugnacious feed on X (formerly Twitter). There, Rowling posts several times a day in support of gender fundamentalism to her 14 million-plus followers, frequently trading barbs with commenters—even fracturing her relationship with Potter stars Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson and Rupert Grint—while toasting her own personal successes. 'I love it when a plan comes together,' she wrote in mid-April, channeling The A-Team's Hannibal Smith, after the United Kingdom's Supreme Court ruled that the legal definition of a woman is based on biological sex. The accompanying photo showed Rowling holding a cocktail and smoking a cigar aboard her superyacht, which is valued at $150 million. Bruising culture war aside, the 59-year-old's Rowling's business empire is now larger than ever. In the four years since she began posting about transgender rights in 2020, Forbes estimates Rowling has earned more than $80 million per year from the sales of her books and the vast litany of Potterverse brand extensions, including movies, TV shows, theme parks, video games, theater and merchandise. Even after factoring in high U.K. taxes and her extensive charity ventures, she has comfortably rejoined the billionaire ranks with a net worth of $1.2 billion, according to Forbes estimates. Rowling was previously a fixture on the Forbes billionaires list from 2004-2011—the height of Pottermania—until new reporting in 2012 uncovered $160 million in philanthropic giving. In the years since, she's built back her 10-figure fortune through multimillion-dollar revenue streams across every conceivable medium. West End Wizardry: The Harry Potter stage play has sold more than 11 million tickets and grossed over $1 billion since opening in London in 2016. And her momentum is not slowing any time soon, with a new HBO Max series adaptation of the Harry Potter books going into production this summer, expected to run for a decade beginning in late 2026 and mint a whole new generation of fans. Forbes estimates that Rowling could earn about $20 million per year for her involvement in the new series—one part of a wide-ranging deal with Warner Bros.—and she was 'very, very involved in the process selecting the writer and the director,' said HBO Max CEO Casey Bloys in November. One has to imagine she had the same input in casting the new pre-teen Harry, Hermoine and Ron, announced on Monday. When asked about Rowling's politics on an episode of The Town with Matt Belloni in April, Bloys said, 'She's entitled to those views. And if you want to debate her, you can go on Twitter." In the nearly three decades since Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone debuted in 1997, Rowling has shrewdly expanded the Potterverse, building it into a franchise that is likely to run as long as Harry's fictional British compatriots Sherlock Holmes and James Bond. According to Habo Studio, a consulting firm that ranks the strongest intellectual property brands in the U.S. by surveying thousands of consumers, Harry Potter is the sixth strongest brand in all of entertainment, and No. 1 among millennials. Warner Bros. saw the potential of Rowling's intellectual property very early, licensing the movie rights before the first book was even released, when Rowling was still a single mother living on welfare—'as poor as it is possible to be in modern Britain without being homeless,' she told The London Times in a recent interview. By the time that first big screen adaptation came to theaters in late 2001, Rowling had published four Potter books and sold over 100 million copies, vaulting her from living off welfare checks to multi-millionaire celebrity status. Just two years later, Rowling's then-agent Chris Little told Forbes the Harry Potter series had sold 250 million copies, building Rowling's initial fortune. The film franchise would then go on to gross almost $7.7 billion at the global box office after its final installment in 2011, at the time the highest-grossing franchise in movie history. By then Rowling's contract with Warner Bros. had been renegotiated numerous times to include various provisions and protections, including participation in the films' profits, an executive producer credit on the final two movies and, most importantly, authority over 'non-author written sequels,' which meant that no further Harry Potter material could be developed without Rowling's approval. If there's one thing Rowling has been more fiercely protective of than her political beliefs, it is the rights to her signature characters. That contractual stipulation allowed Rowling to negotiate for screenwriting control over the Harry Potter spin-off Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them in 2016 and its two sequels. The third installment, released in 2022, was the first to be stress tested by public backlash (including calls for boycotts) to Rowling's stance against transgender rights. Fantastic Beasts: The Secrets of Dumbledore grossed $400 million at the global box office against a budget of more than $250 million, and is considered an enormous flop. Riding High: A sixth Wizarding World attraction was revealed at Universal's Epic Universe when the theme park opened in May. Still, Rowling was far from cancelled. By that point, tickets for her Harry Potter and the Cursed Child stage play were selling steadily on Broadway, in London's West End and five other locations around the world—grossing more than $1 billion since its premiere in 2016, of which Rowling shares in the profits. HBO Max was also producing the fifth season of C.B. Strike, an adaptation of Rowling's adult detective novels, written under the pseudonym Robert Galbraith. And in 2023 a new video game Hogwarts Legacy sold 24 million copies, the best-selling game of that year, grossing another $1 billion. Because of that momentum, Warner Bros. was eager to double down on Potter projects. When CEO David Zaslav was hired in 2022, he flew to Scotland to meet with Rowling to find a way to develop new wizarding world content. While Rowling held rights to prequels and spin-offs, Warner Bros. still controlled the material from the original seven novels, which is why the studio pursued a remake of the original series. Eventually the project secured Rowling's blessing in 2023. 'Max's commitment to preserving the integrity of my books is important to me,' Rowling said in a statement last April when the show was announced. Despite the obvious ubiquity of the Potterverse, analysts believe that Rowling's tight-fisted control and near-singular authorship over the Harry Potter world has protected it from the kind of overexposure and dilution that has plagued other popular intellectual property in recent years, such as Disney's Marvel and Star Wars universes. Everywhere the Potter brand goes, it finds eager customers. When Universal's Islands of Adventure theme park opened its first Wizarding World attraction in 2010, it saw a 36% jump in attendance and a 40% increase in revenue. Comcast's annual financial report called it 'transformative to the company,' and it has since implemented Harry Potter into its parks in Orlando, Hollywood, Tokyo and Beijing, all of which saw boosts in attendance as a result. Similarly, an hour north of London, a studio tour of the Warner Bros. lot branded 'the making of Harry Potter' reported over $300 million in revenue and $120 million in operating profit in 2023. "Nothing has ever given a 36% increase in attendance in parks, from Disney to Six Flag to whoever,' says Dennis Spiegel, founder and CEO of International Theme Park Services. "The Harry Potter licensing deal, in my opinion, is probably the greatest licensing arrangement that has been done in theme parks in the last 40 years." Universal licenses the property from Warner Bros., and by extension Rowling gets a percentage of every purchase in that portion of the park, everything from wands to scarfs to butterbeer. According to Forbes estimates, theme parks account for the second largest income stream for Rowling over the past decade. Of course, the largest portion of Rowling's empire continues to be her book sales. The Harry Potter series has sold more than 600 million copies worldwide, according to its U.S. publisher Scholastic, and has been on the New York Times Best Seller List for 843 weeks and counting. A hardcover edition of the script for Cursed Child—written by veteran playwright Jack Thorne but based on a story by Rowling, Thorne and director John Tiffany—sold more than four million copies in its first year of release in 2016, and a picture book Christmas at Hogwarts was the No. 1 holiday book overall in 2024. In addition, Rowling has published five Comoran Strike novels under the Galbraith pseudonym since 2013. Rowling never sold the rights to ebooks for her work, instead founding Pottermore Publishing in 2012, a business that took off during the pandemic and now pays her several million per year. A spokesperson from The Blair Partnership, Rowling's management team, declined to comment on her wealth but sent the following statement to Forbes: 'The global passion for Harry Potter continues to drive growth and innovation across the brand, supported by our incredible partners—from publishing and theme parks to consumer products, theatre, gaming, and television. With numerous exciting new projects in development globally, fans from every generation can look forward to even more meaningful ways to experience the magic of J.K. Rowling's beloved stories. We're thrilled about this next chapter in the franchise, including the 10th anniversary of Harry Potter and the Cursed Child, the full-cast audiobooks from Pottermore and Audible featuring over 100 actors, and, of course, the highly anticipated HBO Max television series.' Based on her earnings and diverse revenue streams, Rowling's net worth could be considerably higher, were it not for her commitment to philanthropy. Forbes estimates she has donated more than $200 million in the past 20 years, primarily to three causes: Lumos, which has helped more than 280,000 abandoned children in orphanages in Romania, Haiti, Colombia and Ukraine; Volant, which supports victims of sexual abuse and domestic violence; and the Anne Rowling Regenerative Neurology Clinic, which treats patients with neurological conditions such as MS, the disease that took her mother's life when Rowling was just 25. She has also been very vocal about maintaining her residency in Edinburgh, Scotland, and paying the country's highest income tax rate of 45%. In 2010, Rowling wrote that she wants her children to be 'citizens, with everything that implies, of a real country, not free-floating ex-pats, living in the limbo of some tax haven and associating only with the children of similarly greedy tax exiles.' She considered it a form of payback for how far she had come in her own life, adding, 'I am indebted to the British welfare state,' and that it is 'my notion of patriotism' to pay into the system for others. Still, Rowling doesn't shy away from her wealth in the public square of social media, where she deploys it as a trump card against those who would condemn her for her anti-trans statements. 'How do you sleep at night knowing you've lost a whole audience from buying your books,' wrote one X user in 2022. 'I read my most recent royalty cheques,' Rowling replied, 'and find the pain goes away pretty quickly.'


CNN
14-05-2025
- Entertainment
- CNN
Trump addresses Qatari jet gift
Trump addresses Qatari jet gift In an interview with Fox News' Sean Hannity, President Donald Trump addressed his plan to accept a jet worth hundreds of millions of dollars as a gift from the Qatari royal family. 00:53 - Source: CNN New book reveals 'shocking' claim that Biden didn't recognize Clooney President Joe Biden did not recognize George Clooney when he arrived for a record-breaking June 2024 fundraiser the movie star was co-hosting, according to a forthcoming book from CNN's Jake Tapper and Axios' Alex Thompson. 01:06 - Source: CNN Syrians react after Trump says he plans to lift sanctions President Donald Trump announced he plans to lift sanctions on Syria during a speech in Saudi Arabia citing the fall of the Assad regime as grounds for the release of pressure on the country. Syrians spared little time before celebrating. 00:51 - Source: CNN Erin Burnett's whiteboard: The rising cost of your YETI bottle CNN's Erin Burnett uses her whiteboard to illustrate the rising cost of popular consumer goods like YETI products amidst President Donald Trump's ongoing negotiations with major global trade partners. 02:03 - Source: CNN Trans Master Sgt. grieves losing military career After a nearly two decade career in the military, Nick Wright says he will now be forced to discharge after the Supreme Court said that the Trump administration can begin immediately enforcing a ban on transgender service members in the military. 02:20 - Source: CNN Trump meets with Saudi crown prince President Donald Trump is in Riyadh visiting with the Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman on his first international trip of his second term. CNN's Kaitlan Collins explains what Trump is hoping to accomplish. 01:07 - Source: CNN Trump defends plan to accept jet from Qatar President Trump defended a plan to accept a luxury jet from the Qatari royal family that will be retrofitted and used as Air Force One during the president's second term. Ethics experts have raised concerns about the potential move and questioned whether accepting the plane will violate the Constitution's Emoluments Clause. 01:02 - Source: CNN Trump makes Middle East a priority with Gulf trip President Trump has arrived in the Gulf for a three-day trip that will see him visit Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates. Choosing the region as his first major trip as president sends a strong message about not only his priorities but also his foreign policy. CNN's Becky Anderson looks at three reasons why the region is important to him. 01:42 - Source: CNN Honig: Trump's birthright order 'doomed to fail' President Donald Trump's efforts to end birthright citizenship are the most serious challenge to the 14th Amendment in a long time. CNN senior legal analyst Elie Honig explains why he thinks the Supreme Court is unlikely to side with Trump. 01:08 - Source: CNN ICE arrest sparks chaos as crowd tried to intervene A chaotic scene unfolded in Worcester, Massachusetts, as onlookers attempted to intervene in an ICE raid, leading to the additional arrest of a 16-year-old teenager and another woman who was charged with assault and battery on a police officer. 01:35 - Source: CNN Trump's 'unprecedented' trade deal Just days ago, a de-escalation between the US and China seemed completely impossible. CNN's Phil Mattingly explains how the two countries got to the negotiating table and what it tells us about President Donald Trump's strategy moving forward. 01:32 - Source: CNN Newark mayor responds to critics who say arrest was a publicity stunt Newark, New Jersey Mayor Ras Baraka joins CNN's Kaitlan Collins to discuss his arrest at a federal immigration detention center, where he has been protesting against the ICE detention facility in his state. 01:30 - Source: CNN Here's what's in the US-UK trade 'deal' The Trump administration announced the framework of a trade agreement with the UK. More negotiations need to take place to hammer out details, but CNN's Vanessa Yurkevich breaks down what we do know about the deal. 01:20 - Source: CNN Breaking down Trump's 'big beautiful bill' CNN's Manu Ranju spoke with GOP representatives who say they're divided over President Donald Trump's proposed 'big beautiful bill' that aims to cut trillions more from the federal budget and overhaul Medicaid. 02:08 - Source: CNN Trump calls election of American pope 'great honor' President Donald Trump celebrated the news that Cardinal Robert Francis Prevost of Chicago was elected as Pope Leo XIV. 00:34 - Source: CNN 'I take responsibility': Biden addresses Trump's presidential win Former President Joe Biden said he 'wasn't surprised' by Vice President Kamala Harris's 2024 election loss and admitted his administration failed to communicate some of their achievements during an interview on 'The View.' 00:55 - Source: CNN Biden reacts to Pope Leo XIV's election Former President Joe Biden tell CNN's Dana Bash that he's pleased to see Pope Leo XIV making history as the first American pope. 00:32 - Source: CNN First cargo ships facing 145% tariffs arrive in LA Ships now pulling into LA's harbor from China are the first to be subject to massive tariffs. Shipments have dropped by 50%. CNN's Nick Watt is on the ground at the port of Los Angeles. 01:00 - Source: CNN Transgender Navy veteran reacts to military ban A transgender US Navy veteran responds to the Supreme Court's decision that President Trump's ban on transgender troops serving in the military is effective immediately. Abby Phillip and the CNN NewsNight panel react. 01:56 - Source: CNN Trump urges India-Pakistan attacks to 'stop' President Donald Trump emphasized to reporters that the US 'gets along with both countries very well,' when asked about the deadly eruption of fighting between India and Pakistan. 00:27 - Source: CNN Carney says he asked Trump to stop '51st State' threats Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney told reporters following his meeting with President Trump at the White House he asked Trump to stop threatening to annex Canada. During the meeting, Carney told Trump in the Oval Office that Canada 'won't be for sale ever.' 01:04 - Source: CNN Trump supporters on third term Comedians Davram Stiefler and Jason Selvig regularly attend Trump rallies, speaking with the President's supporters for their podcast, 'The Good Liars Tell the Truth.' They tell CNN's Laura Coates there was 'constant forgiveness for anything' that President Trump does, including a possible third term. 01:31 - Source: CNN