The United States’ five-year offshore drilling plan calls for 0 to 11 auctions

five-year

Joe Biden’s administration proposes a five-year plan for offshore oil and gas development. It seeks to balance efforts to fight climate change with calls to increase oil supplies. The final plan may have up to 11 lease sales or none at all, the Interior Department says. President Joe Biden’s organization on Friday disclosed a five-year … Read more

US Supreme Court Signals Biden to end Trump-era immigration rule

US Supreme Court
  • The US Supreme Court upholds President Joe Biden’s administration’s decision to end the “Remain in Mexico” policy.
  • The ruling was split 5-4, with Chief Justice John Roberts and the court’s three liberal justices in the majority.
  • Advocates for migrants said the policy exposed asylum-seekers to dangerous conditions in Mexico.

 

The US Supreme Court gave President Joe Biden’s administration the go-ahead on Thursday to end Donald Trump’s so-called “Remain in Mexico” policy as part of his hardline immigration stance.

Instead of being detained or provisionally released, some non-Mexicans who crossed the southern border illegally were sent back to Mexico to await the outcome of their immigration cases in court.

Since the beginning of his term, Biden has been trying to wind down the policy as part of what he claims is a more humane take on immigration.

Advocates for migrants said the policy exposed asylum-seekers to dangerous conditions in Mexico as overwhelmed US courts slowly work through a backlog of cases.

Thursday’s ruling in favor of the Biden administration was split 5-4, with Chief Justice John Roberts joining fellow conservative Brett Kavanaugh and the court’s three liberal justices in the majority.

Roberts, who authored the majority opinion, argued that federal immigration law allows the executive branch to return asylum seekers to Mexico, but does not force it to do so.

“Congress conferred contiguous-territory return authority in expressly discretionary terms,” the opinion states.

Biden’s attempt to terminate the policy, instituted by Trump in 2019, was challenged by a group of Republican-governed states led by Texas.

These states argued that his move violated US immigration law by forcing authorities to release migrants they had detained onto US territory. They also said that Biden officials had not followed proper administrative procedure.

A lower court in August 2021 ruled against the Biden administration and the case eventually ended up before the nation’s highest court.

At first, the Supreme Court simply refused to freeze the lower court ruling, forcing the administration to restart the policy, formally called Migration Protection Protocols (MPP), while it pressed ahead with its appeal.

From the start of the policy in January 2019 until its suspension under Biden, nearly 70,000 people were sent back to Mexico, according to the American Immigration Council.

During Biden’s tenure as president, more than 200,000 people attempting to enter the country illegally have been interdicted at the border each month and sent back, under MPP or a separate Covid-related policy blocking people at the border.

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China accuses New Zealand of ‘misguided’ allegations

China accuses New Zealand
  • China has accused New Zealand’s prime minister of making “wrong and thus regrettable” statements.
  • Jacinda Ardern said China had become “more assertive and willing to challenge international rules and norms”.
  • It is the second time in a month that China has taken issue with her comments. Wellington has previously sought not to antagonize Beijing.

 

China accused New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern on Friday of making “wrong and thus regrettable” statements that were detrimental to keeping the two countries’ relationship “on track.”

Ardern spoke at the NATO leaders’ summit in Spain this week, saying China had become “more assertive and willing to challenge international rules and norms.”

The Chinese embassy in Wellington responded on Friday, saying it was aware of Ardern’s “misguided” accusations.

“That allegation is wrong and thus regrettable,” the embassy said in a statement posted on its website.

“It is obvious that such comment is not helpful for deepening mutual trust between the two countries, or for the efforts made by the two countries to keep our bilateral relations on the right track.”

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Missile strikes kills 19 Ukrainians in Odessa

Ukrainians
  • Missile strikes hit an apartment building and a recreation centre in Serhiivka.
  • There was no immediate comment from Russia on the strikes. Ukrainian officials accuse Russian forces of shelling relentlessly the city of Lysychansk.
  • Ukraine is a major agricultural exporter in peacetime, but Russia’s invasion has damaged farmland and led to food shortages.

 

Missile strikes killed 19 people and injured dozens more in Ukraine’s Odessa region on Friday, a day after Russian troops abandoned positions on a strategic island, effectively ending the Kremlin’s invasion.

Two children were killed, and six others were injured, according to Ukrainian officials, just one day after US Vice President Joe Biden announced $800 million in new weapons for Kyiv at a NATO summit.

The missiles slammed into an apartment building and a recreation centre early Friday in the town of Serhiivka about 80 kilometres (50 miles) south of the Black Sea port of Odessa, which has become a strategic flashpoint in the conflict.

“The death toll is 19 people,” wrote Sergiy Kruk, head of the Ukrainian emergency services, on Facebook. Thirty-eight people were wounded, including six children, he added.

Kyrylo Tymoshenko, a senior official at the Ukrainian presidency, earlier put the death toll at 18, including two children.

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Yair Lapid is now officially Israel’s new PM

yair

Yair Lapid has been sworn in as Israel’s new prime minister. The new PM will meet US President Joe Biden and French President Emmanuel Macron on July 5 to discuss Israeli-French relations. US President Joe Biden congratulated Lapid. Yair Lapid formally became Israel’s 14th prime minister at the stroke of midnight between Thursday and Friday. … Read more

US inflation high but stable in May as spending slows

US inflation
  • Consumer spending growth slowed sharply in May,  The personal consumption expenditures (PCE) price index rose 6.3 percent.
  • May’s drop in spending on big-ticket manufactured items reflects a slowing in vehicle sales.
  • Consumer spending on services rose 0.7 percent in the month, the same as in April.

 

A key US inflation indicator showed that price increases remained stable in the 12 months ending in May, while consumer spending growth slowed sharply, a positive sign in the fight against rising prices.

Any sign of moderation will be welcomed by President Joe Biden, whose approval ratings have plummeted as his administration has struggled to find effective tools to assist American families suffering from rising gasoline, food, and housing prices.

The trend also offers comfort to the Federal Reserve, showing its aggressive interest rate strategy is starting to have an impact to quell the fastest surge in inflation in more than 40 years.

The personal consumption expenditures (PCE) price index rose 6.3 percent compared to May 2021, still high but the same pace as in the prior month, the Commerce Department reported Thursday.

The index jumped 0.6 percent compared to April, much faster than in the prior month, but slightly below what economists had projected.

But spending edged up just 0.2 percent, less than half the increase in April and part of a steady downward drift as consumers pull back amid surging prices.

Buoyed by a stockpile of savings, helped by massive government aid, consumers have been the lynchpin in the rapid US recovery from the pandemic downturn.

But strong demand clashed with global supply chain snarls and the world’s largest economy has been battered for months by a cresting inflation wave, made more painful by the surge in energy prices sparked by the Russian invasion of Ukraine in late February.

Excluding volatile food and energy prices, “core” PCE rose 0.3 percent in the month, the same as in April, while the 12-month pace slowed slightly to 4.7 percent, the report said.

Brian Deese, head of the White House National Economic Council, noted that the three-month annual average for core PCE fell to four percent from 5.2 percent.

“That is important moderation that we’re seeing,” he said on CNBC.

However, he said the headline continues to be driven by higher energy prices.

Energy prices jumped four percent in the month, after dropping in April, and are 35.8 percent higher than May 2021, the data showed.

The PCE price index is the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation gauge, as it reflects consumers’ actual spending, including shifts to lower cost items, unlike the more well-known consumer price index, which jumped 8.6 percent in May.

PCE also gives less weight to things like rent, vehicles and airline fares, which have contributed to the blistering pace of the CPI rise.

The Fed early this month announced the biggest hike in the benchmark lending rate in nearly 30 years, a three-quarter point increase that was the third step in its counteroffensive against rising inflation, as it aims to cool demand.

Policymakers have signaled there is a good chance of another similar increase in late July, followed by more big steps in coming months.

That has raised concerns the Fed could push the economy into a recession — a price Fed Chair Jerome Powell signaled the central bank is willing to pay to control inflation.

The signs of consumers pulling back will weigh on second-quarter GDP growth, after the Commerce Department revised first-quarter consumer spending sharply lower, cutting it to 1.8 percent from 3.1 percent, as the economy contracted 1.6 percent.

According to Grant Thornton’s Diane Swonk, “consumers have drained approximately $600 billion of the excess $2.5 trillion in savings they amassed during the pandemic to deal with the bite of higher prices.”

The sharp drop in spending on big-ticket manufactured items, which economists note reflects a slowing in vehicle sales, was the main driver of May’s slower consumption growth.

Spending on services rose 0.7 percent in the month, the same as in April.

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Joe Biden says US ‘should sell’ F-16s to Turkey

Joe Biden
  • Turkey surprised NATO members by suddenly dropping opposition to Finland and Sweden joining the alliance.
  • Turkey is an important NATO member in a strategically sensitive location, but it has had often tense relations with its European partners.
  • A plan to equip Turkey with state-of-the-art US F-35 stealth fighters fell through after Turkey bought Russia’s S-400 anti-aircraft missile system.

 

President Joe Biden on Thursday said the United States should go ahead with the delayed sale of F-16 warplanes to Turkey but noted that Congress needs to give approval.

“We should sell them the F-16 jets and modernize those jets as well,” Biden said, adding there was “no quid pro quo” linking the sale to Turkey’s approval for Finland and Sweden entering NATO.

Biden added that for the sale, “I need congressional approval to do that and I think I can do that”.

The declaration of support from Biden comes after Turkey surprised fellow NATO members at a summit in Madrid by suddenly dropping weeks of opposition to the Finland and Sweden applications to join the alliance.

Unanimous consent by NATO members is required for enlargement.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said he would send a delegation to the United States “without delay” to convince lawmakers to swiftly approve the sale.

“It’s necessary to get support from both Democrats and Republicans. Despite all this, Mr Biden is confident. I hope that we will get a result that fits our friendship and solidarity,” Erdogan told a news conference in Madrid.

Turkey is an important NATO member in a strategically sensitive location, but it has had often tense relations with its European partners and Washington, which is the alliance’s main military force.

“In politics, yesterday was yesterday, today is today,” Erdogan said.

“In politics, a lot can change in 24 hours… There were good days and bad days but Turkish-US relations have continued,” he said.

A plan to equip Turkey with state-of-the-art US F-35 stealth fighters fell through after Turkey bought Russia’s S-400 anti-aircraft missile system.

Washington saw Ankara’s purchase as potentially threatening the security of the F-35 program.

Turkey then set out to purchase new F-16s as well as upgrade its existing but outdated fleet of the same planes.

However, that agreement is also on hold, and there has been speculation that Turkey is delaying the two northern European countries’ NATO accession bids in order to gain concessions.

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Putin told Macron he’d rather ‘play ice hockey’ than peace negotiations

putin

Vladimir Putin told French President Emmanuel Macron that he would rather play “ice hockey” than hold talks with US President Joe Biden. Discussions between the two will be exposed in a documentary to be aired on France 2, the primary state television network. Mr Macron concluded the call by suggesting a last-minute summit with the … Read more

Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine has “SHATTERED peace in Europe.” US President Joe Biden

Valadimir Putin

As the possibility of an all-out war with Russia grows, Biden promised to strengthen US military power in Europe during his speech at the Nato summit held today in Madrid. Additionally, the US will garrison two more destroyers in Spain, send two additional squadrons of F-35 planes to the UK, and build a permanent 5th … Read more

Joe Biden announces US military reinforcements in Europe

House Democrats

NATO will be “strengthened in all directions across every domain,” Biden says. He was meeting NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg in Madrid. Extra forces include boosting fleet of US naval destroyers from four to six in Rota, Spain. NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg and Joe Biden have discussed NATO’s response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.   President … Read more

Iran: US must discard ‘Trump method’ in nuclear talks

trump

Iran and the US have started indirect talks in Doha, Qatar, to try to resurrect a nuclear deal that Donald Trump ruined. Iran has said it is willing to negotiate, but will not violate its “red lines” regarding the agreement’s implementation. DOHA: Iran warned the US on Wednesday not to use the “Trump method” after … Read more

Mexican president to discuss migrant crisis with Biden

Mexican president

Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador will meet with US counterpart Joe Biden in Washington on July 12. At least 22 Mexicans were among the 50 people killed in and around a trailer truck found abandoned in Texas. Thousands of undocumented migrants cross Mexico’s southern border with Guatemala every year to reach the United States. … Read more

US opens probe after 50 migrants die in sweltering trailer

migrants
  • US authorities launched a criminal investigation Tuesday after 50 migrants died in a suffocating trailer in Texas.
  • Sixteen people, including four children, were taken to the hospital suffering from extreme dehydration.
  • San Antonio, which lies 250 kilometers (150 miles) from the border, is a major transit route for human smugglers as well as tens of thousands of migrants who cross the border.

 

US authorities launched a criminal investigation Tuesday after 50 migrants died in a suffocating trailer in Texas, with President Joe Biden blaming professional smugglers.

According to a spokesperson for US Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the death toll had risen overnight after the tractor-trailer rig was discovered abandoned on an isolated road near San Antonio on Monday.

Sixteen people, including four children, were taken to the hospital suffering from extreme dehydration. Most of the fatalities were Mexican, and US media said some victims died in hospital.

Biden said the grim incident underscored the need to shut down “the multi-billion dollar criminal smuggling industry preying on migrants.”

“The tragic loss of life in San Antonio, Texas that took place yesterday is horrifying and heartbreaking,” he said in a statement.

It was the most deadly single incident involving migrants along the southern border in memory, and drew more attention to the risks that hundreds of thousands of people face seeking to enter the United States from Mexico without permission.

The intense heat of the region is one of the greatest threats, to those smuggled in vehicles and others who cross on foot and try to make their way into the country across the sweltering desert.

On Monday, the high temperature in San Antonio was 103 degrees Fahrenheit, or 39.4 degrees Celsius, and the temperature in the unvented trailer would have been much higher.

According to Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, most of the dead were from Mexico and Central America.

“It’s a tremendous misfortune… so far there are 50 dead: 22 from Mexico, seven from Guatemala, two from Honduras and 19 still without information about their nationality,” Lopez Obrador told reporters.

San Antonio Police Chief William McManus said authorities were first alerted to the trailer by an emergency call at about 5:50 pm local time (2250 GMT).

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Pro-China online network targets mineral firms: report

Pro-China

China controls 80 percent of world’s supply of rare earth elements. Western powers have been attempting to rebalance the supply for years. US cybersecurity firm Mandiant identified a network of thousands of fake social media accounts in 2019.   A pro-China online network is targeting Western companies mining for elements used in smartphones and other … Read more

Tayyip Erdogan says will meet Biden on sidelines of NATO meeting

erdogan

Erdogan will meet Biden on the sidelines of the NATO summit in Madrid. The two leaders’ relationship has been cold since Biden’s election. Sweden and Finland have asked to join NATO, but Turkey is against them joining the Western military alliance. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan announced on Tuesday that he would meet US President … Read more

Joe Biden’s wife, daughter are banned from Russia

joe biden

The wife and daughter of US President Joe Biden are among those banned from entering Russia. 23 other Americans have also been barred from entering the country. The Russian foreign ministry says the move is in reaction to US sanctions against Russia’s political and public figures. MOSCOW: The Russian foreign ministry said on Tuesday that … Read more

Joe Biden urges G7 leaders to ‘stay together’ in face of Russia

joe biden

The G7 summit is dominated by the Ukraine conflict and its impact on food and energy supplies, as well as the global economy. Russian gold exports to the West were valued at $15.5 billion last year. The G7 leaders agreed to get $600 billion from private and government sources to help poor countries. GERMANY: US … Read more

Do signs point to an Israel-Saudi normalisation deal?

Israel-Saudi

Saudi Arabia’s de facto ruler Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has said Israel was a “potential ally.” Saudi Arabia never showed any opposition when its regional ally, the United Arab Emirates, established diplomatic ties with Israel in 2020. Analysts say it is improbable Riyadh will agree to normalize relations with Israel during Biden’s visit or … Read more

Biden leaves for G7, NATO summits focused on Ukraine

NATO summits

US Vice President Joe Biden leaves the White House for a week of international diplomacy. G7 and NATO summits will take place in the shadow of Russia’s Ukraine invasion. Domestic political turmoil over abortion has overshadowed Biden’s trip to Europe, with midterm elections on November 4th. President Joe Biden left the White House on Saturday … Read more

US braces for more protests after Supreme Court abortion ruling

abortion ruling

Several right-leaning states have imposed immediate bans on abortion. President Joe Biden calls the ruling a “tragic error” stemming from “extreme ideology”. Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau calls it “horrific”, and French President Emmanuel Macron “solidarity with women”. Protesters were expected to take to the streets across the United States on Saturday, as outrage over … Read more

After a major dispute between the US and the UK, Biden secures a British defence company in a £2.6 billion contract

British defence company

After US authorities threatened to scale back their defence collaboration with Britain if the sale was rejected, the company Ultra Electronics, which specialises in crucial electronics for nuclear submarines, was acquired. Advent Foreign, a Boston-based private equity firm operating on the worldwide market and created to aid in the purchase of international enterprises, is expected … Read more

US Senate passes gun safety bill

us senate

The bill would strengthen background checks for gun buyers under the age of 21, provide funding for the administration of “red flag” regulations, and crack down on straw buyers. It was passed after a series of mass shootings across the United States and in response to public dissatisfaction with legislative inaction. The US Senate enacted … Read more

The new Colombian president wants to repair ties with the US

Colombia has been Washington’s closest ally for decades. Petro wants to renegotiate Colombia’s trade agreements with the US. He also wants to end the drug war and shift the nation’s economy away from fossil fuels. With Gustavo Petro’s victory in Sunday’s presidential elections in Colombia, a new chapter in the nation’s relationship with the US … Read more

The Supreme Court’s decision broadens US gun rights

The argument over gun rights has recently heated up as a result of high profile shootings. The U.S. Supreme Court has struck down a New York law limiting gun-carrying restrictions. The National Rifle Association applauded the decision; officials in New York called it “outrageous”. A New York legislation that limited people’s ability to carry guns … Read more

Biden directs USAID and other agencies to help the victims in Afghanistan

The magnitude-6.1 earthquake struck the regions of Paktika and Khost on Tuesday. Authorities estimate that the tremor injured close to 1,600 people. Joe Biden directed USAID and other federal agencies to assist those impacted by the quake. The United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and other federal agencies were directed by US President Joe … Read more

Russia fully supports revival of Iran nuclear deal

iran nuclear

Iran has demanded that all sanctions against the country must be lifted to revive the accord, a top Iranian diplomat said. The talks between Iran and the United States have been stalled since March. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov is in Tehran for a visit. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov stated Thursday, after meetings with … Read more

US stocks retreat as Powell cautions on inflation

US stocks

(Closes): The Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 0.8 percent at 30,287.75. The S&P 500 fell 0.6 percent to 3,740.54. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite Index fell 0.5 percent to 11,019.80. US stocks dipped, reversing some of the previous session’s gains, as markets awaited the Federal Reserve chairman’s testimony on inflation and monetary policy. In prepared … Read more

Plans to lessen nicotine in cigarettes are unveiled by the White House

US plans to reduce the quantity of nicotine in cigarettes sold to non-addictive levels. The initiatives could significantly lower cancer fatalities. The move is likely to face pushback by the tobacco industry. It is planned to reduce the quantity of nicotine in cigarettes sold in the US to negligible or non-addictive levels. The initiatives, which … Read more