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The Guardian - US
The Guardian - US
World
Cecilia Nowell; Abené Clayton, Lucy Campbell, Joseph Gedeon, Fran Lawther and Tom Ambrose

Supreme court lifts order blocking Trump’s federal layoffs, paving way for mass job cuts – as it happened

Labor union members hold placards on the day of a rally in support of federal workers in Washington, DC, in March.
Labor union members hold placards on the day of a rally in support of federal workers in Washington, DC, in March. Photograph: Kent Nishimura/Reuters

Closing summary

Closing summary

Our live coverage is ending now. In the meantime, you can find all of our live US politics coverage here. Here is a summary of the key developments from today:

  • Donald Trump met with Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu once again today in a closed-door meeting regarding Gaza. Earlier in the day, Netanyahu met JD Vance at Blair House, and Qatari officials visited the White House. A temporary ceasefire agreement in Gaza could be finalized by the end of the week, Trump’s Middle East envoy, Steve Witkoff, said at a cabinet meeting.

  • The supreme court cleared the way for Donald Trump’s administration to resume carrying out mass job cuts and the restructuring of agencies. Liberal Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson was the sole member of the court to dissent. The decision will allow planned workforce reductions to resume at the US departments of agriculture, commerce, health and human services, state, treasury, veterans affairs and more than a dozen other agencies.

  • Despite receiving permission from the Trump administration to hire more employees, the National Weather Service never posted 126 vacancies to the federal government’s hiring website, Politico reports. The news follows Democrats asking a government watchdog to investigate whether cuts at the forecasting agency affected its performance.

  • At a cabinet meeting today, Donald Trump said that he is “not happy” with Russian president Vladimir Putin. The news follows the president’s announcement that the US will resume weapons shipments to Ukraine, after the Pentagon ordered certain shipments paused. Guardian reporter Hugo Lowell today reported that the United States only has about 25% of the Patriot missile interceptors it needs for all of the Pentagon’s military plans after burning through stockpiles in the Middle East in recent months.

  • An unknown fraudster has used artificial intelligence to impersonate the US secretary of state, Marco Rubio, contacting at least five senior officials.

  • Rightwing influencers in the US who are often aligned with Trump are angry that a joint justice department and FBI memo has dismissed the existence of a “client list” in the case against late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

  • The US government will ban sales of US farmland to Chinese buyers and other foreign adversaries, the agriculture secretary, Brooke Rollins, announced today.

  • New York City mayor Eric Adams faces lawsuits filed today by four former high-ranking police officers accusing the embattled Democrat of promoting corruption in the police department, the New York Times reports.

  • Eight men have been deported to South Sudan from the United States, following a supreme court ruling last month allowing the Trump administration to deport migrants to countries not their own. Only one is from South Sudan.

  • In a post on his social media platform, Trump said his administration will release “a minimum of 7” announcements regarding trade with other countries tomorrow.

State department to resume layoffs following supreme court ruling

The state department will resume layoffs following the supreme court’s ruling today on the Trump administration’s plan to downsize the federal government.

In a social media post, the agency, which has proposed firing nearly 2,000 employees, wrote: “We will continue to move forward with our historic reorganization plan.”

White House spokesperson Harrison Fields called the court’s ruling a “definitive victory for the president and his administration”, Reuters reports. However, the outlet also cited two anonymous White House sources that said the ruling did not mean agencies could resume layoffs immediately, noting the possibility of additional legal battles.

Updated

The city of Los Angeles has joined a lawsuit over the Trump administration’s immigration raids, the Associated Press reports. The suit, which was filed by immigrant rights groups last week, seeks a temporary restraining order to prevent the immigration agents from targeting people based on their race and denying detainees due process.

The news comes just one day after Los Angeles mayor Karen Bass confronted immigration agents during a raid on the city’s MacArthur park.

“What we have experienced over these last few weeks has just been shocking,” Bass said at a news conference earlier today.

“This cannot become routine, to send militarized troops into our streets without reasonable suspicion, without probable cause, to round people up and take them away,” city attorney Hydee Feldstein Soto added.

Updated

Trump to announce "minimum of 7" new tariffs tomorrow

In a post on his social media platform, Donald Trump said his administration will release “a minimum of 7” announcements regarding trade with other countries tomorrow.

The president said seven countries would be named in the morning, with others coming in the afternoon.

The news comes after the president published tariff letters directed to 14 other countries on his social media account yesterday.

Updated

Though overall inflation has not hit the predicted heights, the prices of used cars are ticking up across the US amid tariff-driven market volatility, Reuters reports.

According to the news outlet:

The Manheim Used Vehicle Value Index rose 1.6% in June from May on a seasonally adjusted basis and surged 6.3% from a year earlier, the largest year-over-year increase since August 2022, according to data released on Tuesday. At 208.5, the index has been trending upward for a year and is now at its highest since October 2023.

Updated

A federal judge in Colorado has dismissed a case filed by survivors and family members of people killed during a November 2022 mass shooting at Club Q in Colorado Springs.

The 12 plaintiffs claimed that El Paso county and its former sheriff’s failure to enforce the state red flag law allowed the shooter, who’d had run-ins with the law and talked about aspiring to be a mass shooter, to carry out the attack that killed five people and injured another 19.

The judge said that though the sheriff and county commissioner are not being found legally liable: “Their collective role in refusing to at least try to thwart what most likely was a horrific but preventable tragedy should weigh heavily on their individual consciences, and most certainly will not be forgotten by the people of Colorado.”

Read more background on the shooting here.

Updated

Trump administration officials met with their Qatari counterparts at the White House ahead of Donald Trump’s meeting with Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu, the Associated Press reports, citing an anonymous White House official.

The teams discussed ceasefire and hostage negotiations in the war on Gaza.

Updated

Despite receiving permission from the Trump administration to hire more employees, the National Weather Service never posted 126 vacancies to the federal government’s hiring website, Politico reports.

The news comes in the wake of catastrophic flooding of the Guadalupe River in Texas. Although the National Weather Service accurately forecast the flood, staffing shortages may impact the agency’s ability to respond to future disasters, officials told Politico.

“Considering that there are critical staff shortages at NWS weather forecast offices across the country and the president of the United States has given NWS leadership permission to hire 126 replacements, it begs the question why the Department of Commerce has not implemented a presidential directive,” Tom Fahy, the legislative director for the National Weather Service employees organization, the union that represents many NWS staffers, told Politico.

Almost 600 employees have left the agency in recent months, following Donald Trump’s efforts to shrink the federal government.

Updated

Despite trying to pay his bond, Atlanta-based Spanish-language journalist Mario Guevara remains in federal custody.

Guevara was arrested while covering a protest in mid-June, and detained by Immigrations and Customs Enforcement. Last week, an immigration judge granted him bond, which would have allowed him to leave the George immigration detention facility where he was being held.

Despite trying to pay the $7,500 bond, Guevara’s lawyer says Ice did not accept Guevara’s payment.

Here’s the full story:

The Trump administration will continue phasing out the last type of asbestos legally allowed in US manufacturing, the Associated Press reports, citing an Environmental Protection Agency court filing today.

The administration had previously planned to allow manufacturers to continue using chrysotile asbestos, despite a Biden-era ban on the chemical. In a court filing last month, it had said parts of the ban went “beyond what is necessary to eliminate the unreasonable risk”. Following outcry from asbestos opponents, however, the administration has shifted course.

Updated

Eight men have been deported to South Sudan from the United States, following a supreme court ruling last month allowing the Trump administration to deport migrants to countries not their own, the Associated Press reports. Only one is from South Sudan.

Apuk Ayuel, a spokesperson for the South Sudanese foreign ministry, confirmed that the men are now in Sudan and said that they are “under the care of the relevant authorities who are screening them and ensuring their safety and well-being”. He did not share where the men are being held.

Here’s my colleague Maanvi Singh with more on the case:

Updated

New York City mayor Eric Adams accused of corruption by four ex-officers

New York City mayor Eric Adams faces lawsuits filed today by four former high-ranking police officers accusing the embattled Democrat of promoting corruption in the police department, the New York Times reports.

In his lawsuit, one of the former officers, former chief of detectives and 40-year force veteran James Essig, claims that the former commissioner of the NYPD sold promotions to the tune of $15,000. Essig says he was forced to resign after objecting to the practice.

Essig’s suit adds that senior NYPD leadership often selected “friends and cronies” of theirs and Adams’s in hiring.

“They used the Police Department as their own little playground,” Essig told the Times.

The lawsuits come amid New York City’s mayoral race. Adams is running for re-election as an independent candidate although he ran as a Democrat in 2021. He was indicted on federal corruption charges last year – charges which were later dropped in an apparent deal with the incoming Trump administration – and has emphasized fall crime numbers under his administration in his campaign.

Adams is expected to face off against democratic socialist Zohran Mamdani, who saw a decisive victory over former governor Andrew Cuomo in the city’s Democratic primary last month.

A spokesperson for Adams told the Times that his administration would review the lawsuits.

Updated

My colleagues are reporting on two other court rulings today involving subscription cancellations and funding for violence prevention and substance abuse programs.

The US court of appeals for the eighth circuit vacated the Federal Trade Commission’s “click-to-cancel” rule, which would have required companies to allow consumers to cancel subscriptions using the same method they used to sign up, after finding that the commission behind it failed to follow required procedures under the FTC Act during the rule-making process.

Here’s Joseph Gedeon with the full story:

Elsewhere, a federal judge ruled against five non-profit organizations that sued the Trump administration over the rescinding of hundreds of millions of dollars meant to prevent and respond to issues such as gun violence, substance abuse and hate crimes.

Here’s Abené Clayton with more:

The supreme court’s ruling today will allow the Trump administration to proceed with its plans to layoff vast swaths of federal workers. The impacted agencies will include: the US Departments of Agriculture, Commerce, Health and Human Services, State, Treasury and Veterans Affairs.

Updated

Pam Bondi, the attorney general, applauded the supreme court’s ruling today allowing the Trump administration’s mass federal layoffs to proceed.

Writing on social media, Bondi said: “Today, the Supreme Court stopped lawless lower courts from restricting President Trump’s authority over federal personnel.”

“Now, federal agencies can become more efficient than ever before,” she added.

Updated

The supreme court’s ruling to allow Donald Trump’s mass federal layoffs to continue “dealt a serious blow to our democracy and puts services that the American people rely on in grave jeopardy”, the unions, non-profits and local governments that filed the lawsuit said in a statement today.

The plaintiffs added that the court’s ruling “does not change the simple and clear fact that reorganizing government functions and laying off federal workers en masse haphazardly without any congressional approval is not allowed by our constitution”.

Updated

It appears that Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu has arrived at the White House for his closed-door meeting with Donald Trump.

A White House pool reporter says that Netanyahu’s motorcade has arrived, though press did not see Netanyahu enter the White House as he used a different entrance.

Travelers will soon be able to keep their shoes on while traversing US airport security, the Homeland Security secretary Kristi Noem announced today, in a reversal of a nearly two decades old policy.

In a press conference at Reagan airport today, Noem announced the new Transportation Security Administration policy, which she said she hoped would make travel to the United States easier ahead of the Olympics, World Cup and 250th anniversary of the country.

“The Golden Age of America is here,” she said. “We’re so excited that we can make the experience for those individuals traveling throughout our airports in the United States more hospitable.”

The TSA policy requiring travelers to remove their footwear dates back to 2006.

Updated

Donald Trump’s scheduled meeting with Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu is starting later than the announced 4.30pm ET start time. We’ll bring you the top lines once it begins.

Updated

Liberal Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson was the sole member of the Supreme Court to dissent in the court’s recent ruling clearing the way for Donald Trump’s administration to resume mass job cuts and the restructuring of federal agencies.

In her dissent, Jackson criticized the court’s “enthusiasm for greenlighting this President’s legally dubious actions in an emergency posture” and called the decision “hubristic and senseless”.

She warned that the administration’s actions “promises mass employee terminations, widespread cancellation of federal programs and services, and the dismantling of much of the Federal Government as Congress has created it”.

Updated

Marco Rubio is headed to Malaysia this week, the Washington Post reports. The trip will mark the secretary of state’s first visit to Asia, which comes as the White House has just announced steep tariffs on goods imported from many other Asian nations.

Yesterday, Donald Trump announced 25% tariffs on goods from Malaysia, and equal or higher tariffs on goods from Japan, South Korea, Indonesia, Bangladesh, Cambodia, Thailand, Laos and Myanmar.

Relatedly, Howard Lutnick, the commerce secretary, told CNBC today that US officials will meet with their Chinese counterparts to discuss trade between the two countries next month.

Updated

Supreme court lifts order blocking Trump's mass federal layoffs

The supreme court has cleared the way for Donald Trump’s administration to resume carrying out mass job cuts and the restructuring of agencies, key elements of his campaign to downsize and reshape the federal government.

The justices lifted San Francisco-based US district judge Susan Illston’s 22 May order that had blocked large-scale federal layoffs called “reductions in force” affecting potentially hundreds of thousands of jobs, while litigation in the case proceeds.

Workforce reductions were planned at the US departments of agriculture, commerce, health and human services, state, treasury, veterans affairs and more than a dozen other agencies.

Illston wrote in her ruling that Trump had exceeded his authority in ordering the downsizing, siding with a group of unions, non-profits and local governments that challenged the administration.

“As history demonstrates, the president may broadly restructure federal agencies only when authorized by Congress,” Illston wrote.

The judge blocked the agencies from carrying out mass layoffs and limited their ability to cut or overhaul federal programs. She also ordered the reinstatement of workers who had lost their jobs, though she delayed implementing this portion of her ruling while the appeals process plays out.

Illston’s ruling was the broadest of its kind against the government overhaul being pursued by Trump and Doge.

The San Francisco-based ninth US circuit court of appeals in a 2-1 ruling on 30 May denied the administration’s request to halt the judge’s ruling.

It said the administration had not shown that it would suffer an irreparable injury if the judge’s order remained in place and that the plaintiffs were likely to prevail in their lawsuit.

The ruling prompted the justice department’s 2 June emergency request to the supreme court to halt Illston’s order.

Controlling the personnel of federal agencies “lies at the heartland” of the president’s executive branch authority, the justice department said in its filing to the supreme court.

“The constitution does not erect a presumption against presidential control of agency staffing, and the president does not need special permission from Congress to exercise core Article II powers,” the filing said, referring to the constitution’s section delineating presidential authority.

The plaintiffs urged the supreme court to deny the request. Allowing the Trump administration to move forward with its “breakneck reorganization”, they wrote, would mean that “programs, offices and functions across the federal government will be abolished, agencies will be radically downsized from what Congress authorized, critical government services will be lost and hundreds of thousands of federal employees will lose their jobs”.

Updated

Trump says he will meet again with Netanyahu this evening

Donald Trump and Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu will meet again on Tuesday evening to discuss Gaza, a day after they met for hours while officials conducted indirect negotiations on a US-brokered ceasefire.

Trump and Netanyahu dined together on Monday at the White House during the Israeli leader’s third US visit since the president began his second term on 20 January.

Netanyahu spent much of Tuesday at the Capitol, telling reporters after a meeting with House speaker Mike Johnson that while he did not think Israel’s campaign in the Palestinian territory was done, negotiators are “certainly working” on a ceasefire.

“We have still to finish the job in Gaza, release all our hostages, eliminate and destroy Hamas’ military and government capabilities,” Netanyahu said.

Netanyahu’s plan to return to the White House at 4.30pm ET pushed back his meeting with Senate leaders to Wednesday.

Shortly after Netanyahu spoke, Trump envoy Steve Witkoff said he hoped to reach a temporary ceasefire agreement this week.

“We are hopeful that by the end of this week, we’ll have an agreement that will bring us into a 60-day ceasefire. Ten live hostages will be released. Nine deceased will be released,” Witkoff told reporters at a meeting of Trump’s cabinet earlier.

In his remarks to reporters at Congress, Netanyahu praised Trump, saying there has never been closer coordination between the US and Israel in his country’s history.

Updated

Pentagon provided $2.4tn to private arms firms to ‘fund war and weapons’, report finds

A new study of defense department spending previewed exclusively to the Guardian shows that most of the Pentagon’s discretionary spending from 2020 to 2024 has gone to outside military contractors, providing a $2.4tn boon in public funds to private firms in what was described as a “continuing and massive transfer of wealth from taxpayers to fund war and weapons manufacturing”.

The report from the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft and Costs of War program at Brown University said that the Trump administration’s new Pentagon budget will push annual US military spending past the $1tn mark.

That will deliver a projected windfall of more than half a trillion dollars that will be shared among top arms firms such as Lockheed Martin and Raytheon as well as a growing military tech sector with close allies in the administration such as JD Vance, the report said.

The report is compiled of statistics of Pentagon spending and contracts from 2020 to 2024, during which time the top five Pentagon contractors (Lockheed Martin, Raytheon, Boeing, General Dynamics and Northrop Grumman) received $771bn in contract awards. Overall, private firms received approximately 54% of the department’s discretionary spending of $4.4tn over that period.

Taking into account supplemental funding for the Pentagon passed by Congress under Trump’s flagship sweeping tax and spending bill, the report said, the US military budget will have nearly doubled this century, increasing 99% since 2000.

“The US withdrawal from Afghanistan in September 2021 did not result in a peace dividend,” the authors of the report wrote. “Instead, President Biden requested, and Congress authorized, even higher annual budgets for the Pentagon, and President Trump is continuing that same trajectory of escalating military budgets.”

That contradicts early indications from Trump in February that he could cut military spending in half, adding that he would tell China and Russia that “there’s no reason for us to be spending almost $1tn on the military … and I’m going to say we can spend this on other things”. Instead, the spending bill pushed by Trump through Congress included a $157bn spending boost for the Pentagon.

Updated

Migrants deported from US to El Salvador prison remain under US control, Salvadorian officials tell UN

The government of El Salvador has acknowledged to United Nations investigators that the Trump administration maintains control of the Venezuelan men who were deported from the US to a notorious Salvadoran prison, contradicting past public statements by officials from both countries.

The revelation was contained in court filings on Monday by lawyers for more than 100 migrants who are seeking to challenge their deportations to El Salvador’s mega-prison known as Cecot.

“In this context, the jurisdiction and legal responsibility for these persons lie exclusively with the competent foreign authorities,” Salvadorian officials wrote in response to queries from the unit of the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights.

The UN group has been looking into the fate of the men who were sent to El Salvador from the US in mid-March, even after a federal judge had ordered the planes that were carrying them to be turned around.

The Trump administration has argued that it is powerless to return the men, as they are beyond the reach of US courts and no longer have access to due process rights or other US constitutional guarantees.

But lawyers for the migrants said the UN report shows otherwise. American Civil Liberties Union lawyer Lee Gelernt said in an email:

El Salvador has confirmed what we and everyone else understood: it is the United States that controls what happens to the Venezuelans languishing at Cecot. Remarkably the US government didn’t provide this information to us or the court.

Skye Perryman, CEO and president of Democracy Forward, said the documents show “that the administration has not been honest with the court or the American people”. The ACLU and Democracy Forward are both representing the migrants.

A justice department spokesperson declined to comment. White House and homeland security department officials did not immediately respond to requests for comment from the Associated Press.

Updated

The US education secretary, Linda McMahon, yesterday threatened the state of California with legal action after the state refused to ban transgender girls from participating in girls’ sports as demanded by the Trump administration.

“@CAgovernor, you’ll be hearing from @AGPamBondi,” McMahon wrote on X, using the handles for California’s governor, Gavin Newsom, and the US attorney general, Pam Bondi.

McMahon’s statement was the latest salvo in the culture wars over transgender youth and ratchets up the personal rivalry between Trump and Newsom. Trump has made reversing advances in transgender rights a priority since returning to office on 20 January, while California law has allowed student athletes to participate in sports in alignment with their gender identity since 2013.

The justice department declined to comment and the education department did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for clarification on the meaning of McMahon’s comment.

California’s state education department did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Newsom’s office and the California Interscholastic Federation (CIF), the governing body for high school sports, declined to comment.

The US education department issued a statement in June declaring California in violation of the Trump administration’s interpretation of Title IV, the education law banning sex-based discrimination, and demanding the state alter its policy. The state rejected the federal government’s directive, and in June filed a pre-enforcement lawsuit against the US justice department in anticipation of legal action.

With controversy brewing ahead of the state high school track and field championship in June, the CIF allowed girls displaced from the finals by a transgender athlete to also be granted space to compete. The CIF also allowed girls to appear on the winners’ podium if they would have won a medal without a transgender athlete competing.

As a result, the CIF crowned two champions in the girls’ high jump and triple jump after transgender girl AB Hernandez won both events.

Updated

Trump again floats federal takeover of Washington, DC

During his cabinet meeting, Donald Trump also suggested his administration was looking into taking over governance of Washington DC.

Trump said his chief of staff, Susie Wiles, was in close touch with the city’s mayor, Muriel Bowser, a Democrat.

It is not the first time the president floated a federal takeover of the city, home to the White House, Congress and the supreme court.

Trump told reporters in February: “I think we should take over Washington DC – make it safe. I think that we should govern District of Columbia.”

Under home rule, Congress already vets all laws in the city and federal lawmakers can overturn some of them. However, it would take an act of Congress to make federal rule a reality.

Both houses would have to vote to repeal the 1973 Home Rule Act. It would be a controversial move and unlikely to make it through.

Updated

Donald Trump said he would announce a 50% tariff on imported copper on Tuesday. The Trump administration announced a so-called Section 232 investigation into US imports of the red metal in February.

Trump had ordered the investigation into possible tariffs on copper imports to rebuild US production of a metal critical to electric vehicles, military hardware, semiconductors and a wide range of consumer goods.

Trump signed an order directing the commerce secretary, Howard Lutnick, to start a new national security investigation under Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962, the same law that Trump used in his first term to impose 25% global tariffs on steel and aluminum.

A White House official said any potential tariff rate would be determined by the investigation, adding that Trump preferred tariffs over quotas.

The homeland security secretary, Kristi Noem, said first responders in Texas are “still looking for a lot of little girls” who remain missing after a devastating flood in Texas.

Noem described the scene in Texas as Trump met with his cabinet at the White House on Tuesday.

Noem visited Camp Mystic in Kerrville on Saturday after the catastrophic flood on Friday.

You can read our Texas live coverage here:

Updated

Trump's Middle East envoy says 60-day Gaza ceasefire could be finalized by end of week

A temporary ceasefire agreement in Gaza could be finalized by the end of the week, Trump’s Middle East envoy, Steve Witkoff, said at the cabinet meeting.

Witkoff added that proximity talks had reduced outstanding issues from “four issues … to one”.

“We are hopeful that by the end of this week, we will have an agreement that will bring us into a 60-day ceasefire,” Witkoff said. “Ten live hostages will be released. Nine deceased will be released.”

Trump added that he would meet with the Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, later to discuss Gaza “almost exclusively”, describing the situation as “a tragedy” while claiming that the prime minister has been “very unfairly treated” because of his corruption trial.

“He’s been very unfairly treated. I think what they’ve done to him in Israel is very unfair. Having to do with this trial, he’s a wartime prime minister, had an unbelievable outcome, and I think he’s been treated very unfairly,” Trump said of Netanyahu.

Updated

Here’s some more on Trump’s comments about Putin. Talking about the Russian invasion of Ukraine, he said:

“That was a war that should have never happened. A lot of people are dying and it should end.

We get a lot of bullshit thrown at us by Putin, if you want to know the truth. He’s very nice all the time, but it turns out to be meaningless.

Asked if he wants to see further sanctions against Russia, he says: “I’m looking at it.”

Updated

When asked about the latest on the Jeffrey Epstein case – in which the Department of Justice concluded there was no secret client list and it lacked evidence to prosecute – Pam Bondi brought up her Fox News interview comments from earlier this year that has gone viral this week about Epstein’s client list, explaining that when she said files were “sitting on my desk to be reviewed”, she meant the Epstein file along with JFK and MLK assassination files.

The US attorney general explained that investigators found “tens of thousands” of child sexual abuse videos downloaded by Epstein, which she said would “never be released, never going to see the light of day”.

Regarding Epstein’s death, Bondi said prison video showed he committed suicide, though she noted a technical issue with the recording system based on the prison’s outdated video system.

Meanwhile, Trump was clearly irritated by the question, saying: “You still talking about Jeffrey Epstein? This guy has been talked about for years … And are people still talking about this guy, this creep? That is unbelievable.”

Updated

Trump 'not happy' with Putin but says any potential action would come as 'a little surprise'

Speaking to reporters, Trump said that he is “not happy” with Russian leader Vladimir Putin, and noted that weekly casualties in Ukraine are now at 7,000 a week.

“I’m not happy with Putin. I can tell you that much right now, because he’s killing a lot of people, and a lot of them are his soldiers, his soldiers and their soldiers mostly. And it’s now up to 7,000 a week,” Trump said.

When pressed by reporters about potential action, Trump declined to elaborate, saying: “I wouldn’t be telling you, we want to have a little surprise.”

Trump praised Ukrainian resistance while crediting US military aid: “The Ukrainians were brave, but we gave them the best equipment ever made.”

Updated

Opening his full cabinet meeting just before noon, Donald Trump again targeted his predecessors’ trade policies, claiming the US was previously “led by stupid people” who lacked business acumen.

Trump said: “We only adhered to the rules of other nations who charge us tremendous tariffs because we were led by stupid people, or people without any business sense.”

Donald Trump is set to attend Sunday’s Club World Cup final at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey, a senior administration official tells NBC News senior White House correspondent Garrett Haake.

The Club World Cup final would conclude Fifa’s newly expanded 32-team global tournament.

Updated

Trump confirms new tariffs to take effect 1 August: 'there will be no change'

Donald Trump has issued an ultimatum to the US’s trading partners, confirming that new tariffs will take effect on 1 August with no possibility of delays.

In a Truth Social post on Tuesday, Trump said:

As per letters sent to various countries yesterday, in addition to letters that will be sent today, tomorrow, and for the next short period of time, TARIFFS WILL START BEING PAID ON AUGUST 1, 2025. There has been no change to this date, and there will be no change. In other words, all money will be due and payable starting AUGUST 1, 2025 – No extensions will be granted. Thank you for your attention to this matter!

Updated

The US government will ban sales of US farmland to Chinese buyers and other foreign adversaries, the agriculture secretary, Brooke Rollins, announced at a joint press conference on Tuesday.

Speaking alongside defense secretary Pete Hegseth and homeland security secretary Kristi Noem, Rollins said the administration would pursue executive actions and work with states to halt such purchases, citing national security and food security concerns.

“No longer can foreign adversaries assume we’re not watching,” Hegseth said, adding that the Pentagon would block farmland sales near military installations to protect food supplies for troops “especially in a contingency”.

The move includes plans for increased monitoring of existing farmland owned by entities from China, Russia and Iran. Chinese investors currently control 265,000 acres of US land, according to government data, with roughly half connected to Smithfield Foods, which was bought by Chinese conglomerate WH Group in 2013.

Chinese ownership of US farmland has already fallen significantly, dropping from 384,000 acres in 2021 to current levels.

Updated

The Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, and some of his top officials met with JD Vance at Blair House on Tuesday, according to Israeli media reports.

Blair House, directly across from the White House, serves as the official presidential guest house and has been called “the world’s most exclusive hotel”. Only the most important foreign dignitaries get invited to stay there.

Netanyahu’s accommodation at the historic residence signals the Trump administration’s commitment to maintaining the special US-Israel relationship, even as the prime minister faces an arrest warrant from the international criminal court over war crime allegations stemming from Israel’s devastating conduct in Gaza.

He was joined by strategic affairs minister Ron Dermer, national security adviser Tzachi Hanegbi, ambassador to Washington Yechiel Leiter and military secretary Maj Gen Roman Gofman.

Updated

Rightwing influencers in the US who are often aligned with Donald Trump are angry that a joint justice department and FBI memo has dismissed the existence of a “client list” in the case against late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

The disgraced financier killed himself in a jail cell at the Metropolitan Detention Center in New York City in 2019 while awaiting prosecution on child sex-trafficking and conspiracy charges.

Almost ever since, Epstein’s death has been the subject of conspiracy theories on the right, including a supposed “client list” that he purportedly used to blackmail wealthy co-conspirators.

Trump’s presidential administration then created anticipation that the alleged list would be publicly disclosed, including the US attorney general, Pam Bondi, who had told Fox News in an interview: “It’s sitting on my desk right now to review.”

Updated

A split Wisconsin supreme court is paving the way for a statewide “conversion therapy” ban by striking down a Republican committee’s constitutional challenge to the proposed rule.

The 4-3 decision from the liberal-majority court overturned the GOP-controlled joint committee for the review of administrative rules, which had twice rejected a state agency regulation banning the scientifically discredited practice aimed at “converting” LGBTQ+ people to heterosexuality.

The ruling is yet another brush up between the Democratic governor, Tony Evers, and the Republican-controlled legislature over LGBTQ+ rights. Evers has previously vetoed GOP bills targeting transgender high school athletes and has sought to limit the legislature’s power.

Conversion therapy is already banned in 23 states and Washington DC.

Updated

Dan Osborn, the independent candidate who came surprisingly close to defeating Republican senator Deb Fischer in Nebraska last year, announced on Tuesday he will run for the state’s other Senate seat in 2026 against GOP senator Pete Ricketts.

The industrial mechanic and former Kellogg’s strike leader lost to Fischer by less than seven points in 2024 – a remarkable result in deep-red Nebraska. Osborn received 66,000 more votes than Kamala Harris, who lost the state to Donald Trump by 20 points in the presidential race.

Osborn ran on a populist platform combining conservative stances on border security and gun rights with liberal views on abortion and campaign finance reform, while distancing himself from Democrats. He has said he wouldn’t caucus with Democrats if elected.

Updated

Obama adviser warns of AI threat after Rubio impostor reported

David Axelrod, who served as senior adviser to Barack Obama, said the AI scam using Rubio was “only a matter of time” and urged urgent action to defend against such attacks.

“A Marco Rubio impostor is using AI voice to call high-level officials,” Axelrod wrote on X. “This is the new world in which we live and we’d better figure out how to defend against it because of its implications for our democracy and the world.”

Donald Trump is scheduled to have a meeting with his cabinet officials at 11 am.

Updated

Marco Rubio impostor using AI to contact multiple senior officials – report

An unknown fraudster has used artificial intelligence to impersonate the US secretary of state, Marco Rubio, contacting at least five senior officials.

According to a state department cable seen by the Washington Post, the impostor sent fake voice messages and texts that mimicked Rubio’s voice and writing style to those targets including three foreign ministers, a US governor and a member of Congress.

The cable, dated 3 July, said the impostor “left voicemails on Signal for at least two targeted individuals” and sent text messages inviting others to communicate on the platform.

It’s still a mystery who is behind the scam, but the cable reportedly reads that the goal had been “gaining access to information or accounts” of powerful government officials.

Updated

A pediatrician for a chain of clinics affiliated with a prominent Houston hospital system is “no longer employed” there, according to officials, after a social media account associated with her published a post wishing the “Maga” voters of a Donald Trump-supporting county in Texas to “get what they voted for” amid flash flooding that killed more than 100 people, including many children.

“We were made aware of a social media comment from one of our physicians,” read a statement from Blue Fish Pediatrics circulated late on Sunday. “The individual is no longer employed by Blue Fish Pediatrics.”

The statement also said: “We strongly condemn the comments that were made in that post. That post does not reflect the values, standards or mission of Blue Fish Pediatrics. We do not support or condone any statement that politicizes tragedy, diminishes human dignity, or fails to clearly uphold compassion for every child and family, regardless of background or beliefs.”

Blue Fish Pediatrics’ statement neither named the physician in question nor specified whether she had resigned or was dismissed. But multiple publicly accessible social media posts identified her as Dr Christina Propst. A Guardian source familiar with the situation confirmed the accuracy of the posts naming Propst. And, at the time it issued the statement, Blue Fish Pediatrics had recently unpublished Propst’s biographical page from its website.

Attempts to contact Propst weren’t immediately successful.

Updated

A pregnant physician who was denied a Covid-19 vaccine is suing the Trump administration alongside a group of leading doctors associations, charging that the administration sought to “desensitize the public to anti-vaccine and anti-science rhetoric”, according to their attorney.

The lawsuit specifically takes aim at health secretary Robert F Kennedy’s unilateral decision to recommend against Covid-19 vaccines for pregnant women and healthy children.

Kennedy’s announcement circumvented expert scientific review panels and flouted studies showing pregnant women are at heightened risk from the virus, and made it more difficult for some to get the vaccine.

“This administration is an existential threat to vaccination in America, and those in charge are only just getting started,” said Richard H Hughes IV, partner at Epstein Becker Green and lead counsel for the plaintiffs in a statement.

The American Academy of Pediatrics, American College of Physicians and American Public Health Association are among a list of leading physicians associations named as plaintiffs in the lawsuit.

“If left unchecked, secretary Kennedy will accomplish his goal of ridding the United States of vaccines, which would unleash a wave of preventable harm on our nation’s children,” said Hughes. “The professional associations for pediatricians, internal medicine physicians, infectious disease physicians, high-risk pregnancy physicians, and public health professionals will not stand idly by as our system of prevention is dismantled. This ends now.”

In late May, Kennedy announced that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) would no longer recommend Covid-19 vaccines for healthy children or pregnant women. The announcement, made on social media, contradicted a raft of evidence showing pregnant women and infants are at especially high-risk from the disease, including from the administration’s own scientific leaders.

In June, Kennedy went further by firing all 17 sitting members of a key vaccine advisory panel to the CDC. The advisory panel is a key link in the vaccine distribution pipeline, helping to develop recommendations insurers use when determining which vaccines to cover.

That panel met for the first time in late June. Members announced they would review both the childhood vaccine schedule and any vaccines that had not been formally reviewed in seven years. They also recommended against a long-vilified vaccine preservative, in spite of a lack of evidence of harm.

Republicans toe Trump line even in aftermath of deadly Texas floods

The US is reeling after catastrophic floods killed more than 100 people in Texas, including 27 children and counsellors from an all-girls Christian camp. On Monday, Democrats asked a government watchdog to investigate whether cuts at the National Weather Service (NWS) affected the forecasting agency’s performance.

But Republicans’ default response has been to express fealty to Donald Trump. They lavished praise on the president for providing federal assistance while studiously avoiding questions around the effect of his “department of government efficiency” (Doge) or threats to dismantle the Federal Emergency Management Agency (Fema).

“It is a sign of the sickness and dysfunction of what was the Republican party that they have almost no thoughts about their constituents,” said Rick Wilson, a cofounder of the Lincoln Project, an anti-Trump group. “Their thoughts are, how do I avoid making sure that Donald Trump doesn’t look at me as an enemy or a critic?

“Despite the fact that the Doge cuts and the reductions in force and the early buyouts have savaged the workforce of the National Weather Service, they can’t even utter the slightest vague, elliptical critique of the administration that is now engaged in these cuts that have cost the lives of the people they supposedly represent.”

The raging flash floods – among the US’s worst in decades – slammed into riverside camps and homes in central Texas before daybreak on Friday, pulling sleeping people out of their cabins, tents and trailers and dragging them for miles past floating tree trunks and cars. Some survivors were found clinging to trees. Authorities say the death toll is sure to rise as crews look for the many who are still missing.

Updated

The Trump administration has ended temporary protections for people from Honduras and Nicaragua in the latest phase of its effort to expel undocumented people from the US.

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) announced it would end temporary protected status (TPS) for an estimated 72,000 Hondurans and 4,000 Nicaraguans in moves that will come into effect in about 60 days.

Citizens of the two Central American nations were accorded the status after Hurricane Mitch in 1998, which left 10,000 dead after it ripped through the region.

Honduras and Nicaragua are the latest in a series of countries to have their US-based citizens stripped of temporary protections since Donald Trump’s return to the White House. Similar moves have been made to end TPS for those from Venezuela, Haiti, Afghanistan, Cameroon and Nepal.

Not all of those being stripped of the protection will necessarily be at risk of being forced to leave. Roughly 21,000 Hondurans and 1,100 Nicaraguans have obtained green cards, giving them legal permanent residence status.

Those without such status will be urged to arrange their departure through a Customs and Border Protection app, which would offer complimentary plane tickets and a $1,000 exit bonus, according to Fox News.

Exclusive: US only has 25% of all Patriot missile interceptors needed for Pentagon’s military plans

The United States only has about 25% of the Patriot missile interceptors it needs for all of the Pentagon’s military plans after burning through stockpiles in the Middle East in recent months, an alarming depletion that led to the Trump administration freezing the latest transfer of munitions to Ukraine.

The stockpile of the Patriot missiles has fallen so low that it raised concern inside the Pentagon that it could jeopardize potential US military operations, and deputy defense secretary, Stephen Feinberg, authorized the transfer to be halted while they reviewed where weapons were being sent.

Donald Trump appeared to reverse at least part of that decision on Monday when he told reporters in advance of a dinner at the White House with Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu that he would “send some more weapons” to Ukraine, although he did not disclose whether that would include Patriot systems.

Trump also told Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, in a phone call that he was not responsible for the halt in weapons shipments and that he had directed a review of US weapons stockpiles but didn’t order the freeze, according to people briefed on the conversation.

But the determination last month to halt the transfer, as described by four people directly familiar with the matter, was based in large part on the Pentagon’s global munitions tracker, which is used to generate the minimum level of munitions required to carry out the US military’s operations plans.

According to the tracker, which is managed by the joint chiefs of staff and the Pentagon’s defense security cooperation agency, the stockpiles of a number of critical munitions have been below that floor for several years since the Biden administration started sending military aid to Ukraine.

Updated

The Kremlin said on Tuesday that it would take time to clarify what weapons the United States is supplying and will supply to Ukraine after president Donald Trump said Washington would have to send more arms to Kyiv.

Trump said on Monday that the United States would send more weapons to Ukraine, primarily defensive ones, to help the war-torn country defend itself against intensifying Russian advances.

Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu to meet JD Vance and Mike Johnson today

Hello and welcome to the US politics live blog. I’m Tom Ambrose and I will be bringing you all the latest news lines over the next few hours.

We start with news that Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu will meet US vice-president JD Vance at 9.15am local time at the Blair House, The Times of Israel has reported.

He will then meet US House of Representatives speaker Mike Johnson at Capitol House, before returning to Blair House for meetings.

Then at 4pm, Netanyahu will head to the Senate for meeting with majority leader John Thune, Democratic senator John Fetterman and other lawmakers.

It comes as Netanyahu told Donald Trump that he would nominate him for the Nobel peace prize on Monday, as the two leaders met for the first time since the US launched strikes on Iran’s nuclear program as part of a short-lived war between Israel and Iran.

Trump was expected to press Netanyahu to agree to a ceasefire in Israel’s war against Hamas in Gaza amid an outcry over the humanitarian cost of an offensive that has led to nearly 60,000 deaths.

Read the full story here:

In other developments:

  • The White House published letters to 14 countries detailing new tariff rates on imported goods to the United States. He also signed an executive order on Monday extending a 90-day pause for a slate of so-called “reciprocal” tariffs first introduced in April – in effect pushing back the deadline of trade talks back to 1 August. The tariffs include:

    • Japan, South Korea, Malaysia, Kazakhstan, and Tunisia: 25%

    • Indonesia: 32%

    • Bangladesh and Serbia: 35%

    • Bosnia: 30%

    • Cambodia and Thailand: 36%

    • South Africa: 30%

    • Laos and Myanmar: 40%

  • Trump signed two other executive orders today: one directs his administration to “strictly enforce the termination of the clean electricity production and investment tax credits”, Biden-era subsidies for wind and solar projects. The other extends a federal hiring freeze through 15 October 15.

  • Los Angeles mayor, Karen Bass, confronted immigration agents after US Customs and Border Patrol conducted a raid on the city’s MacArthur Park today, she said in a social media post.

  • The Trump administration will deport Kilmar Ábrego García if he is released from custody, a justice department attorney said in court this morning, according to the New York Times.

  • The Department of Veterans Affairs will no longer need to cut 80,000 jobs, as ordered by the Trump administration’s so-called “department of government efficiency”, because it has already cut staff by 30,000 through retirements, buyouts and hiring freezes, the agency said today.

  • A judge has ordered the Trump administration to continue disbursing Medicaid payments to Planned Parenthood, despite a provision in the president’s recently signed tax and spending bill.

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