Trump and Xi will likely speak this week, White House saysNew Foto - Trump and Xi will likely speak this week, White House says

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -President Donald Trump and Chinese leader Xi Jinping will likely speak this week, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said on Monday, days after Trump accused China of violating an agreement to roll back tariffs and trade restrictions. Leavitt is the third top Trump aide to forecast an imminent call between the two leaders to iron out differences on last month's tariff agreement in Geneva, among larger trade issues. It was not immediately clear when the two leaders will speak. U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told CBS' "Face the Nation" on Sunday that Trump and Xi would speak "very soon" to iron out trade issues including a dispute over critical minerals and China's restrictions on exports of certain minerals. Trump said on Friday he was sure that he would speak to Xi. China said in April that the two leaders had not had a conversation recently. On Saturday, the U.S. Trade Representative's office announced it would continue to exclude certain solar manufacturing equipment and other products from existing tariffs on Chinese goods until August 31, offering a three-month extension while talks with Beijing continue. Bessent led negotiations with China in Geneva last month that resulted in a temporary truce in the trade war between the world's two biggest economies, but progress since then has been slow, the U.S. Treasury chief told Fox News last week. The U.S.-China agreement to dial back triple-digit tariffs for 90 days prompted a massive relief rally in global stocks. But it did nothing to address the underlying reasons for Trump's tariffs on Chinese goods, mainly longstanding U.S. complaints about China's state-dominated, export-driven economic model, leaving those issues for future talks. A U.S. trade court on Wednesday ruled that Trump overstepped his authority in imposing the bulk of his tariffs on imports from China and other countries under an emergency powers act. But less than 24 hours later, a federal appeals court reinstated the tariffs, saying it was pausing the trade court ruling to consider the government's appeal. The appeals court ordered the plaintiffs to respond by June 5 and the administration to respond by June 9. (Reporting by Katharine Jackson, Doina Chiacu and Andrea Shalal; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama and Rod Nickel)

Trump and Xi will likely speak this week, White House says

Trump and Xi will likely speak this week, White House says WASHINGTON (Reuters) -President Donald Trump and Chinese leader Xi Jinping will l...
Trump's Justice Department examining pardons issued by BidenNew Foto - Trump's Justice Department examining pardons issued by Biden

By Andrew Goudsward, Sarah N. Lynch WASHINGTON (Reuters) -A senior official in Republican U.S. President Donald Trump's Justice Department told staff on Monday that he has been directed to investigate clemency granted by Democrat Joe Biden in the waning days of his presidency to members of his family and death row inmates. Ed Martin, the Justice Department's pardon attorney, wrote in an email seen by Reuters that the investigation involves whether Biden "was competent and whether others were taking advantage of him through use of AutoPen or other means." An autopen is a device used to automatically affix a signature to a document. Trump and his supporters have made a variety of unfounded claims that Biden's use of the device while president invalidated his actions or suggested that he was not fully aware of these actions. It is not known whether Biden used autopen on pardons. The email stated that Martin's investigation is focused on preemptive pardons Biden issued to several members of his family and clemency that spared 37 federal inmates from the death penalty, converting their sentences to life in prison. Just before he relinquished the presidency to Trump on January 20, Biden pardoned five members of his family, saying he wanted to protect them from future politically motivated investigations. The pardons went to Biden's siblings James Biden, Frank Biden and Valerie Biden Owens as well as their spouses, John Owens and Sara Biden. Biden on December 1 pardoned his son Hunter Biden, who had pleaded guilty to tax violations and was convicted on firearms-related charges. Martin's email did not specify which pardons of Biden family members were being investigated. It also did not make clear who directed Martin to launch the investigation. A Justice Department spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment. A Biden spokesperson did not immediately provide comment. The U.S. Constitution gives the president broad power to issue pardons to wipe away federal criminal convictions or commutations to modify sentences. Trump himself has made extensive use of executive clemency. For instance, he granted clemency on January 20 to all of the nearly 1,600 of his supporters who faced criminal charges in connection with the January 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol, which was a failed attempt to prevent congressional certification of Biden's 2020 election victory over Trump. Martin previously served as the interim U.S. attorney in Washington before his nomination for that post foundered in the Senate. Martin told reporters last month that he viewed the presidential pardon power as "plenary," meaning it is absolute. "If you use the autopen for pardon power, I don't think that that's necessarily a problem," Martin said during a May 13 press conference, adding that he still felt the Biden pardons warranted scrutiny. The investigation appears designed to use the Justice Department to amplify questions about Biden's health and mental acuity, a conversation that has intensified in recent weeks following his cancer diagnosis and a new book revealing Democratic concerns last year about Biden's condition. Biden, who is 82, last year dropped his reelection bid amid questions about his mental acuity after a disastrous presidential debate performance. Biden was the oldest person to serve as U.S. president, and Trump is the second oldest. Biden's closest aides have dismissed those concerns, saying Biden was fully capable of making important decisions. No evidence has emerged to suggest that Biden did not intend to issue the pardons. In addition, a Justice Department memo from 2005 found it was legitimate for a subordinate to use an autopen for the president's signature. (Reporting by Andrew Goudsward and Sarah N. Lynch; Editing by Scott Malone)

Trump's Justice Department examining pardons issued by Biden

Trump's Justice Department examining pardons issued by Biden By Andrew Goudsward, Sarah N. Lynch WASHINGTON (Reuters) -A senior official...
Deion Sanders blasts 'foolish' reports about Shedeur Sanders' professionalism during NFL's pre-draft processNew Foto - Deion Sanders blasts 'foolish' reports about Shedeur Sanders' professionalism during NFL's pre-draft process

Deion Sanders opened up on Monday about reports that his son and former Colorado quarterback Shedeur Sanders went into pre-draft meetings unprepared and unprofessional. The Colorado head coach and former NFL star who coached his son through college said he was "hurt" by the reports around Shedeur's slide into the fifth round of the NFL Draft to the Cleveland Browns. Sanders made his comments inan interview on Asante Samuel's "Say What Needs To Be Said" podcast. "When you sit up there and say something like he went into a meeting unprepared, like, dude," Deion said. "Shedeur Sanders? Who has had six different coordinators, who has still functioned and went up, leveled up every time we brought somebody new in, and you're going to tell me he was unprepared? "You're going to tell me he had on headphones? Anybody who knows my son understands he's a professional. He's gonna go into a meeting with headphones on? Y'all, come on now." At one point in the pre-draft process, Sanders was projected in media evaluations as a first-round prospect. Reports closer to the draft indicated that Sanders was actually not a first-round talent. Those evaluations bore truth when Sanders dropped into the fifth round. Some of the reasons for Sanders' then-projected slide were purely related to football. By many accounts, including fromYahoo Sports NFL Draft analyst Nate Tice,Sanders didn't possess the elite arm talent, athleticism or size to have warranted a first-round selection. Other reports questioned Sanders' character and professionalism. Deion addressed the latter on Monday, referring to the reports as "some foolish stuff" while citing former sixth-round pick and seven-time Super Bowl champion quarterback Tom Brady as inspiration for Shedeur. "It did hurt," Deion Sanders said. "But the bible says God uses the foolish things to confound the wise. There was some foolish stuff that went on, but, you know what? That gave them something that they needed. … "Like that edge that Tom had, it gave them the edge that you had, it gave them the edge that I have. Folks said we weren't gonna be nothing. But we had to prove that. That gave them that edge that they needed. Both of them." Some of the reports critical of Sanders' pre-draft preparedness came from legitimate reporting.NFL Network's Tom Pelissero cited an anonymous NFL assistant coachwho called Sanders' interview with his team "the worst formal interview I've ever been in in my life." Others — like the headphones rumor that Deion referenced — appear to have come out of thin air. And Deion appears right be perplexed by it. A "report" with no sourcing attached and no citation stated that Sanders "wore headphones around his neck with music playing throughout the entire interview." The "report" claims to have quoted an NFL head coach andwas shared ad nauseam on random social media accountsenough that it was given an air of legitimacy. Deion chalked the rumors up to people taking "shots at his kids," whom he argued were too savvy and prepared to make those kinds of mistakes. "My kids are built for everything," Deion said. … "We've always been in front of the camera, so they know how to navigate, they know how to handle themselves. "You're not gonna catch them in no foolery or no mess. You're not gonna do that whatsoever."

Deion Sanders blasts 'foolish' reports about Shedeur Sanders' professionalism during NFL's pre-draft process

Deion Sanders blasts 'foolish' reports about Shedeur Sanders' professionalism during NFL's pre-draft process Deion Sanders o...
'Inside the NBA' will reportedly run as usual with 'extensive' postgame show on ESPN networksNew Foto - 'Inside the NBA' will reportedly run as usual with 'extensive' postgame show on ESPN networks

By almost all previous accounts, ESPN has no plans to interfere with "Inside the NBA" when the iconic studio show transitions from TNT to its own networks next season. Butconcerns linger that ESPN will do something to mess things up, specifically around the timing of the show. Will ESPN — a network that doesn't do dedicated NBA postgame coverage — continue to allow "Inside the NBA" to run as usual after games? Per a report on Monday, it will.Front Office Sports reportedfurther details about the show's move to ESPN's networks starting in the 2025-26 season — most notably that "Inside the NBA" will be allowed "extensive" postgame run after games that air on ESPN networks, including its parent network, ABC. From the report: "There will be an extensive post-game show, say sources. ESPN's goal is to let the post-game segment run as long as it does now on TNT." That's cause for relief for the show's loyal viewers, many of whom have watched some combination of Ernie Johnson, Kenny Smith, Charles Barkley and Shaquille O'Neal guide and entertain them after NBA games for decades. The show is appointment viewing for fans, even when the games that the show covers are not. Despite that reassurance, there's been legitimate reason for concern that ESPN won't give "Inside the NBA" the runway that it's enjoyed at TNT. ESPN's track record with decisions around NBA studio content is dicey at best and a big reason that chairman Jimmy Pitaro outsourced it to "Inside the NBA" when he saw the chance. Smith raised those concerns inan interview with the New Yorkerafter the TNT/ESPN partnership was announced. "We have the same crew of people doing the show," Smith said. "But the timing: Are we a half hour now? Are we forty-five minutes? Fifteen minutes? "Those are the things that you can control when you own your I.P. But we don't. That was the only part that made me uncomfortable and disheartened, because I felt that the four of us should have went into ABC to negotiate that deal. I'm not saying that our executives don't know how to do that, but we are the I.P. now." Podcaster and former ESPN writer and personality Bomani Jones floated concern about "Inside the NBA" running as a dedicated postgame show on Monday while raising another question: Is ESPN really going to let Charles Barkley speak unfiltered in postgame coverage over the traditional and inherently more conservative airwaves of ABC? Will TNT's 'Inside the NBA' hit the same on ESPN?"If you're not gonna do the Inside the NBA postgame show, you're getting rid of the best part of it."pic.twitter.com/yqIygZDPGt — The Right Time with Bomani Jones (@righttimebomani)June 2, 2025 "My concern about taking 'Inside' to ESPN, ESPN historically has not done postgame shows," Jones said in an edited clip from his show Monday morning. "If you're not gonna do the 'Inside the NBA' postgame show, you're getting rid of the best part. "It doesn't seem like it'll be a gratifying experience. But they also can't put that on ABC. That would be preposterous." There's also the subject ESPN's existing coverage. ESPN has an established postgame routine that features one of its own strongest brands, "SportsCenter with Scott Van Pelt." Is ESPN going to preempt Van Pelt in favor of an outsourced product? SVP's show frequently features an immediate postgame interview with the star of the game, which is also the turf of "Inside the NBA." Doing both shows at the same time on different ESPN networks doesn't make much sense. Then there's ESPN's much-maligned existing studio coverage that handles pregame and halftime coverage that's also the turf of the "Inside the NBA" team. ESPN previously announced that "NBA Countdown" and "NBA Today," will continue to air in some form. So "Inside the NBA" isn't fully replacing ESPN's NBA studio coverage. The FOS report didn't address specifics. And ESPN did not comment on how "Inside the NBA will be scheduled." But thanks to its extensive collection of networks, ESPN does have options. If the game airs on ABC, ESPN would have the option of tossing postgame "Inside the NBA" coverage to ESPN. Would it use a similar strategy to juggle "Inside the NBA" with SVP's "SportsCenter"? Airing both in competing time slots on different ESPN networks seems equally preposterous. They're both marquee, spotlight shows that demand access to postgame coverage from the arena. It would appear to be a one or the other decision for ESPN, with Monday's FOS report suggesting that "Inside the NBA" will have priority over SVP in whatever decision is made. But again, ESPN has not confirmed scheduling specifics. It has confirmed in previous statements that "TNT Sports will continue to independently produce 'Inside the NBA'" in addition to providing the following broader framework for when the show will air: "The legendary 'Inside the NBA' studio team will appear on ESPN and ABC surrounding high-profile live events, including ESPN's pregame, halftime and postgame coverage of the NBA Finals on ABC, conference finals, NBA playoffs, all ABC games after January 1, Christmas Day, opening week, the final week of the season and other marquee live events." Will ESPN's established studio show be relegated to covering games that aren't considered "marquee" or "high-profile?" A lot of these questions remain unanswered, perhaps because ESPN hasn't yet figured the details out. Until it does and we see "Inside the NBA" on ESPN's networks, we won't be fully sure what the merger will look like.

'Inside the NBA' will reportedly run as usual with 'extensive' postgame show on ESPN networks

'Inside the NBA' will reportedly run as usual with 'extensive' postgame show on ESPN networks By almost all previous account...
Trump's funding bill runs into Senate GOP fiscal hawksNew Foto - Trump's funding bill runs into Senate GOP fiscal hawks

As the Senate prepares to put its imprint on President Donald Trump's One Big Beautiful Bill Act this week, Republicans are grappling over the potential impact the megabill might have on the national debt, which has ballooned to nearly $37 trillion. With a 10-year budget bill, deficit hawks in the Senate like Rand Paul and Ron Johnson are drawing a red line — pushing for deeper cuts than those in the bill the House sent to them. As lawmakers aim to send a bill to Trump by the Fourth of July, those demands could complicate the Senate's calculus for passage — where Republicans can only afford three defections. On one hand, the One Big Beautiful Bill Act reduces outlays by more than $1.5 trillion against current baseline spending — according to the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office's preliminary analysis, meeting reconciliation's target for between $1.5 to $2 trillion in spending reductions. On the other hand, the bill still adds about $3.1 trillion to the debt, according to the CBO — though some Republicans like Rep. Thomas Massie of Kentucky predict it could add up to $20 trillion to the debt over the next decade. Paul and Johnson are directly at odds with the White House, which points to an analysis from the White House Council of Economic Advisors that finds the legislation will save $1.6 trillion over 10 years. "There's $1.6 trillion worth of savings in this bill," White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said during a May 19 press briefing. "That's the largest savings for any legislation that has ever passed Capitol Hill in our nation's history." In a press briefing on Thursday, Leavitt attacked the CBO and other scorekeepers, saying they used "shoddy assumptions and have historically been terrible at forecasting across Democrat and Republican administrations alike." The Senate is expected to alter the House-passed proposal and some of the Senate's fiscal hawks have conditioned their support on the implementation of even steeper cuts. But any cuts these members want implemented will have to be balanced by Senate leadership against the desires of moderates who wish to preserve key social safety net programs, creating major challenges for hopes of offsetting the cost of the package. Another complication: any changes to the bill made by the Senate must be approved by the House, which narrowly sent the bill to the upper chamber by just one vote. Speaker Mike Johnson, who guided the bill through the House over the objections from both fiscal hard-liners and moderates in his conference, declared "It's not going to add to the debt," when asked if Trump would take ownership of an increase of the deficit. And he said he and Trump has the same concerns as Johnson and Paul. "He's also concerned as I am, as Ron Johnson is, as Rand Paul is, as all of us are about the nation's debt, and he and I talk about this frequently, and he is excited about changing that trajectory," he said on NBC's "Meet the Press." The bill sent to the Senate would also hike the federal debt limit by $4 trillion dollars, another sticking point with fiscal hawks. "There's nothing fiscally conservative about expanding the debt ceiling more than we've ever done it before," Paul said after the bill passed through the House two weeks ago. "This will be the greatest increase in the debt ceiling ever, and the GOP owns this now." At an event last week in Iowa, Paul repeated his disdain for the bill, calling the current cuts "wimpy and anemic" and suggesting that additional cutbacks could happen to entitlement programs like Medicaid and Social Security — areas where a line has been drawn by Trump and fellow GOP senators like Josh Hawley of Missouri, who called building the bill on cutting health insurance for the working poor "morally wrong and politically suicidal." Paul told CBS' "Face the Nation" on Sunday that he thought there were enough votes among his Senate Republican colleagues to block the bill. "I think there are four of us at this point, and I would be very surprised if the bill at least is not modified in a good direction," he said. Trump called Paul out over the weekend, writing on his Truth Social platform that if the senator votes against the bill, "Rand will be playing right into the hands of the Democrats, and the GREAT people of Kentucky will never forgive him!" Talking to reporters on Monday, Leavitt suggested there will be a price to pay for those who vote against it. "Their voters will know about it. That is unacceptable to Republican voters and all voters across the country who elected this president in a Republican majority to get things done on Capitol Hill," she said. Budget reconciliation, the tactic congressional Republicans are using to get the bill passed, is not subject to the filibuster, enabling the Republican majority to enact sweeping changes with only a simple majority. But changes to Social Security and Medicare are exempt from the fast-track budgeting process. Any changes to those entitlements would require 60 votes and bipartisan cooperation from Democrats — a prospect Republicans are not entertaining as they go it alone on the bill. Paul called for steeper spending cuts so that raising the debt limit would not be part of this bill. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has called on Congress to increase the statutory debt limit by the end of July to prevent the country from defaulting on its debt obligations. "I want [Trump's 2017] tax cuts to be permanent. But at the same time, I don't wanna raise the debt ceiling five trillion," he told CBS on Sunday. "The GOP will own the debt once they vote for this." Sen. Johnson, a notable fiscal hawk, has also signaled strongly that he would not support the bill in its current form, given that it adds to the debt. "It's so far off the mark. It's so bad," he told reporters at the Capitol while the House was still advancing the bill through the Rules Committee. "I've been trying to interject reality. I've been trying to interject facts and figures. They're on my side." At a Newsmaker luncheon Wednesday in Milwaukee hosted by WisPolitics and the Milwaukee Press Club, Johnson claimed there was "no amount of pressure" that Trump could place on him in order to support it in its current form. Asked Sunday on Fox News' "Sunday Morning Futures" if he was willing to push so far as to blow up Trump's agenda, Johnson stressed his loyalty was with the American people. "I want to see [Trump] succeed. But again, my loyalty is to the American people, to my kids and grandkids. We cannot continue to mortgage their future," Johnson said. Trump adviser Elon Musk, who left the White House on Friday after his role as a special government employee reached its 130-day limit, broke publicly with the president during an interview with CBS a couple days earlier in which he said he was "disappointed" by the massive spending bill. "I think a bill can be big or it can be beautiful," Musk told CBS News, "but I don't know if it can be both. My personal opinion." -ABC News' Isabella Murray and Kelsey Walsh contributed to this report.

Trump's funding bill runs into Senate GOP fiscal hawks

Trump's funding bill runs into Senate GOP fiscal hawks As the Senate prepares to put its imprint on President Donald Trump's One Big...

 

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