Trump's conflict with Musk explodes into a public feudNew Foto - Trump's conflict with Musk explodes into a public feud

WASHINGTON — The simmering tension between President Donald Trump and Elon Musk exploded in public Thursday, with the president sharply criticizing theTesla CEO's attackson the Republican policy bill andMusk firing backthat the president would have lost the election without his help. "I'm very disappointed because Elon knew the inner workings of this bill," Trump told reporters in the Oval Office during a bilateral meeting with German Chancellor Friedrich Merz. "I'm very disappointed in Elon. I've helped Elon a lot." The comments — and theflurryofonlineretortsfrom Musk that quickly followed — mark the latest development in a remarkable break between the world's richest man and the U.S. president who invited him into his administration. Musk's actions at the Department of Government Efficiency defined the early stages of Trump's second term, and the two showered each other in mutual praise earlier this year. But the relationship cooled as Trump's priorities shifted to major spending legislation and Muskwound downhis time at the White House. Trump suggested that Musk, who earlier this week called the GOP bill a "disgusting abomination," was upset that the bill cut out a tax credit meant to incentivize electric vehicle purchases. "Elon's upset because we took the EV mandate, which was a lot of money for electric vehicles and they're having a hard time with electric vehicles and they want us to pay billions of dollars in subsidy," Trump said. "Elon knew this from the beginning." Tesla is the biggest electric vehicle maker in the United States. The company's sales have suffered in recent months, reflecting increased global competition and backlash generated by Musk's political activities. Since leaving his White House role last week, Musk has said he is back at work at his companies, including Tesla and major government contractor SpaceX, "24/7." Tesla's stock, however, has stumbled as he's ramped up his attacks on Trump's signature bill. Shares are down more than 20% so far this year. Trump's comments Thursday are his strongest yet against a man who was once his top campaign donor and one of his closest advisers. Musk, who jokingly referred to himself as "first buddy," officiallyleft the administration last weekona less amicable note. "I was, like, disappointed to see the massive spending bill, frankly, which increases the budget deficit, not just decrease it, and undermines the work that the DOGE team is doing,"he told CBS during his last few daysas aspecial government employee. Reacting to Trump's comments Thursday, Musk first brushed them off, posting "whatever," beforequickly escalatingto claims that Trump owes his election victory to him. He posted criticism of Trump or the bill over two dozen times in the hours that followed. "Without me, Trump would have lost the election, Dems would control the House and the Republicans would be 51-49 in the Senate," he said. "Such ingratitude," he added. Musk, who spentmore than $250 millionto help Trump in last year's presidential election, said last month that heplanned to do "a lot less" political spendingin future elections. "I think I've done enough," he told Bloomberg. Musk's opposition to the House bill appears to have also strained his relationship with House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., who said Wednesday that the billionaire had done a "180" in terms of his support of the measure and didn't respond to his call after Musk came out against it. Johnson told reporters on Capitol Hill Thursday morning that he had planned to call Musk again during the day. The version narrowly passed by the House would extend Trump's 2017 tax cuts, eliminate taxes on tips and overtime work, boost funding for immigration enforcement and the military, would make cuts to Medicaid and the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, and raise the debt ceiling by $4 trillion. The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Officepredicted in an estimatereleased Wednesday that the legislation would add $2.4 trillion to the national debt over the next decade. Last week, Trump praised Musk's work leading the Department of Government Efficiency, which directed massive financial and job cuts to the federal government — but still fell short of Musk's goal of cutting $2 trillion from the federal budget. "Elon's really not leaving," Trump said. "He's going to be back and forth, I think. ... It's his baby and I think he's going to be doing a lot of things. But Elon's service to America has been without comparison in modern history."

Trump's conflict with Musk explodes into a public feud

Trump's conflict with Musk explodes into a public feud WASHINGTON — The simmering tension between President Donald Trump and Elon Musk e...
Pentagon to make change to military oversight of Greenland: reportNew Foto - Pentagon to make change to military oversight of Greenland: report

ILULISSAT, Greenland − The Pentagon is planning to put its military oversight of Greenland under U.S. Northern Command, according to a report, a largely symbolic gesture that comes as PresidentDonald Trumpcontinues to press for the world's largest island to break from Denmark. Greenlandis currently the purview of U.S. European Command, which is headquartered in Germany. U.S. Northern Command is in charge of defending the U.S. homeland and the shift more closely aligns with Trump's pledge to take control of the Danish territory. Politico first reportedthe planned redrawing of the Pentagon's command map. Trump talked about acquiring Greenland during his first term. But since winning reelection he has repeatedly riffed on the strategic importance of Greenland for U.S. national security including, missile defense programs and keeping tabs on Russian and Chinese naval activity in the Arctic. Greenland is also rich in natural resources such as oil, gold and rare earths minerals. 'One way or the other':Five ways Trump's Greenland saga could play out Denmark and the semi-autonomous Faroe Islands will remain under U.S. European Command, according to Politico, effectively creating a symbolic and operational split between those territories. The Pentagon's move is sure to anger Denmark, which has repeatedly stressed that Greenland is not for sale and Trump's stated position does not amount to serious discussion. The Danish Embassy in Washington, D.C. did not return a request for comment. Nor did the Joint Arctic Command, Denmark's Greenland-based Arctic security mission that consists of units such as inspection ships, patrol vessels, aircraft, helicopters and the Sirius Dog Sled Patrol. 'Buy us!':Greenlanders shocked, intrigued, bewildered by Trump zeal for Arctic territory A U.S. Department of Defense spokesperson said there were no announcements to make and deferred all questions about the move to the White House, which declined comment. The Pentagon has 11combatant commands– four functional, such as U.S. Special Operations Command and U.S. Cyber Command, and seven based on geography. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Pentagon to change military oversight of Greenland: report

Pentagon to make change to military oversight of Greenland: report

Pentagon to make change to military oversight of Greenland: report ILULISSAT, Greenland − The Pentagon is planning to put its military overs...
Phil Mickelson gearing up for (final?) bid to complete career Grand SlamNew Foto - Phil Mickelson gearing up for (final?) bid to complete career Grand Slam

Phil Mickelson has won just about everything during his career on the PGA Tour. Everything except the U.S. Open. The six-time major champion has finished as the runner-up in his country's national championship six different times, but has never hoisted the trophy. This year could be his last shot, as his five-year exemption for winning the 2021 PGA expires at the end of this season. "There's a high likelihood that it will be, but I haven't really thought about it too much,"Mickelson said at his pre-tournament press conference on Wednesdayahead of this week's LIV Virginia event at the Robert Trent Jones Club in Manassas, Virginia. Mickelson, 54, has missed the cut at the U.S. Open in his last three attempts to complete the career Grand Slam. Before winning the 2021 PGA, Mickelson had been granted a special exemption, but then didn't need it after his win. He could also participate in 36-hole Final Qualifying. Asked if he would consider attempting to qualify, Mickelson said, "I don't know. I don't know. I haven't thought that far." Mickelson said this week's setup at RTJ should provide a good test to see if his game is ready for Oakmont next weekend. "What I have thought about is how similar this week's course is set up to what we'll see next week. We have greens that are rolling 14 to 15 on the Stimpmeter, just like we will next week. We have contours, undulations, just like we will next week," he said. "Short game, touch, chipping around the greens, rough, speed, lag drills and speed and touch on the greens, all of that's critical here, same thing as next week. It couldn't be a better spot to get ready." Contributing: Adam Schupak, Golfweek This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Could Phil Mickelson be playing in his (final) US Open? Possibly

Phil Mickelson gearing up for (final?) bid to complete career Grand Slam

Phil Mickelson gearing up for (final?) bid to complete career Grand Slam Phil Mickelson has won just about everything during his career on t...
'SportsCenter' host Jay Harris reveals prostate cancer diagnosis, urges men to talk to each other about their healthNew Foto - 'SportsCenter' host Jay Harris reveals prostate cancer diagnosis, urges men to talk to each other about their health

"SportsCenter" anchor Jay Harris will step away from ESPN briefly after being diagnosed with prostate cancer. Harris made the announcement during an appearance on "Good Morning America" on Thursday, where he urged men to talk to each other about their health. Harris said he would undergo surgery Tuesday, and expects to miss a month before he returns to ESPN to host "SportsCenter." JUST IN: ESPN@SportsCenteranchor@JayHarrisESPNshares prostate cancer diagnosis: "I'm having surgery on Tuesday. I'll be away from SportsCenter for about a month to recover. Then I'm coming back better than ever."pic.twitter.com/CUM92LMRif — Good Morning America (@GMA)June 5, 2025 During the appearance, "GMA" host Michael Strahan asked Harris about the importance of men talking to each other about their health. Harris responded by sharing a personal story about a conversation he had with his friends on a golf trip. "We don't talk. I was on a golf trip with some buddies of mine. And we were just sitting around talking about things that I probably can't talk about on television right now. And I mentioned the news to them. I told them what was going on with me and the conversation from there was fantastic. "We talked about doctor's appointments and ailments and family histories and things that we wouldn't have had a conversation about because I figured I needed to share. We all need to talk about these things because we all have them in our families. By not talking about them, we just, I hate to be morbid, we sentence ourselves to death." Harris added that his latest scan showed his cancer had not spread. He said his doctor was optimistic, and that taking out Harris' prostate should be all it takes. "That's the goal," Harris said. Harris said he speaks to fellow "SportsCenter" anchors Hannah Storm and Brian Custer daily about his diagnosis. Storm revealed a breast cancer diagnosis in 2024. Custer had prostate-cancer surgery when heworked for SNY. Harris is a long-time ESPN employee, and has worked for the network since 2003. While he's hosted a number of shows, he's most known for his work on "SportsCenter."

'SportsCenter' host Jay Harris reveals prostate cancer diagnosis, urges men to talk to each other about their health

'SportsCenter' host Jay Harris reveals prostate cancer diagnosis, urges men to talk to each other about their health "SportsCen...
Trump aims to build a MAGA judiciary, breaking with traditional conservativesNew Foto - Trump aims to build a MAGA judiciary, breaking with traditional conservatives

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump is signaling a new approach to selecting judges in his second term, departing from his first-term formula of younger up-and-comers, elite credentials and pedigrees in traditional conservative ideology and instead leaning toward unapologetically combative, MAGA-friendly nominees. The president turned heads last week by launching a searing attack on Leonard Leo and the conservative legal network known as the Federalist Society, which played a major role in selecting and steering 234 Trump-nominated judges, including three Supreme Court justices, through Senate confirmation during his first term. Trump's transformation of the federal courts and the creation of 6-3 conservative Supreme Court majority, which led to the overturning of the landmark abortion rights case Roe v. Wade in 2022, was possibly his biggest achievement in his first term. But Trump slammed Leo as a "sleazebag" in late May after a panel of judges, including one he appointed, blocked some of his tariffs. "I am so disappointed in the Federalist Society because of the bad advice they gave me on numerous judicial nominations,"he wroteon Truth Social. Leo, who declined an interview request, praised Trump's first term judicial appointments, saying in a statement that they will be his "most important legacy." Of Trump's early judicial nominees in his second term, much attention has been focused on his decision to tap Emil Bove, his former personal criminal defense lawyer and current Justice Department official, to serve on the Philadelphia-based 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. "What's different about him is that MAGA world is very excited about him because it sees him as someone who has been ruthlessly implementing the White House's wishes," said Ed Whelan, a veteran conservative judicial nominations analyst who works at the Ethics and Public Policy Center. The president's early actions have raised warning signs among conservative lawyers who favor a nonpartisan judiciary. "It's potentially a watershed moment in the relationship between Trump and the traditional conservative legal movement," said Gregg Nunziata, former chief nominations counsel to Senate Republicans who now leads the Society for the Rule of Law, a group of right-leaning lawyers that has been critical of Trump. "There are allies and advisers to the president who have been agitating for a different kind of judge — one more defined by loyalty to the president and advancing his agenda, rather than one more defined by conservative jurisprudence." Nunziata warned that the president is "turning his back on" his first-term legacy of prioritizing conservative jurisprudence. Trump's social media posts were welcomed by some conservatives who want a new approach to judicial nominations in his second term — including Mike Davis, another former Senate GOP chief counsel for nominations, who runs the conservative Article III Project advocacy group and offers his suggestions to the White House on judicial nominees. Trump needs to avoid "typical FedSoc elitists" who were "too weak to speak out" on issues like what MAGA world perceives as lawfare against Trump during the Biden years, Davis said. "We need to have evidence that these judicial nominees are going to be bold and fearless for the Constitution, and there were plenty of opportunities for them over the last five years to demonstrate that," he added. Jonathan Adler, a professor at Case Western Reserve University School of Law who mixes in Federalist Society circles, said some federal judges may have concerns about stepping down if they are not convinced Trump will replace them with someone they consider to be qualified. Certain judges, Adler said, want to be succeeded by "someone that understands the judicial role, understands that their obligation is to follow the law and apply the law, as opposed to someone that is seen as a political hack and is going to rule in a particular way merely because that's what their team is supposed to want." Whelan said he has heard a sitting judge express such concerns. "I recently heard from a conservative judge who has decided not to take senior status because of concerns over who would be picked as his or her successor," he said. He declined to name the judge. During the first term, Leo played a key role in advising Trump on whom to pick. He helped come up with a list of potential Supreme Court nominees during the 2016 election, when some on the right were worried Trump would not pick a justice who was sufficiently conservative to replace Justice Antonin Scalia, who died earlier that year. In Trump's second-term, the deputy White House counsel for nominations, Steve Kenny, has daily oversight of judicial nominations with input from chief of staff Susie Wiles, White House counsel David Warrington and Trump himself, among others. Like Davis, Kenny previously worked for Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, on the Senate Judiciary Committee. "In choosing these judges, we are looking for judges who are constitutionalists, who won't be judicial activists on the bench," a senior White House official said. The administration is looking for judges whose judicial philosophy is similar to conservative Supreme Court justices such as Samuel Alito and Clarence Thomas, the official added. Both are seen within MAGA world as more aligned with Trump than his own appointees to the court: Justices Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett. Despite the alliance with Leo delivering achievements that many Senate Republicans take pride in, few were willing to jump to his defense in the wake of Trump's personal attack. "I'm not going to get involved in those personality conflicts," said Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, a senior member of the Judiciary Committee. Sen. John Kennedy, R-La., another Judiciary Committee member, pleaded the Fifth: "That's between Leonard and the president." But, he added, "I like the Federalist Society." Grassley praised Trump's initial slate of nominees. "Republicans remain laser-focused on putting strong conservatives on the federal bench," he said. "President Trump's first five judicial nominees, who all came before the Judiciary Committee this week, are high-caliber legal minds who will faithfully defend the Constitution and serve the American people well." Despite the first-term success,there were already indications once Trump was re-electedthat his second-term approach to judicial nominations would differ. Leo is no longer advising Trump,and both the president and his allies have been sharply critical of judges who have ruled against the administration in its early months over its aggressive use of executive power. Barretthas been one target, as have some lower court judges. "Federalist Society lawyers are very bright. They're very intellectual, kind of the academic side of the law. This Trump White House is looking for more practical judges," said a senior Republican lawyer close to the White House. "A second element is there are some decisions that have been made by Amy Coney Barrett, in particular, that really disappointed the Trump administration, and Trump people more broadly, and that has filtered down to some of these lower court decisions," the lawyer added. For Democrats, Trump's public break with the Federalist Society — along with another move to refuse to cooperate with the American Bar Association, which traditionally provides recommendations on judicial nominees — are part of the same trend. "They don't want anyone looking over the shoulders of nominees to find out what they believe, what they've said and what they've done," Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., ranking member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, said Wednesday during the first hearing for Trump's new wave of nominees. So far, Trump has announced two nominees to the influential federal appeals courts, as well as nine district court nominees. In addition to Bove, the other appeals court nominee is Whitney Hermandorfer, who has been tapped for a seat on the Cincinnati-based 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. While Bove is not viewed as the type of nominee Leo might suggest, Hermandorfer is seen as a traditional Federalist Society pick. She served as a law clerk for Barrett and Alito, as well as for Kavanaugh when he was an appeals court judge. Hermandorfer has also been involved in some culture war litigation while serving under Tennessee Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti. She is "very much in the Trump 1.0 Federalist Society mode," said Russell Wheeler, a scholar at the nonpartisan Brookings Institution who tracks judicial nominations. Five of Trump's district court nominees are from Florida, and four are from Missouri. Hermandorfer, joined by the Missouri nominees. appeared at theconfirmation hearingWednesday where she said her job would not be to do the president's bidding. "That would not be my role. My role would be to carry out my oath," she said. Hermandorfer called the Federalist Society, of which she is a member, a "wonderful place" to discuss issues with other lawyers. According to the federal judiciary, there are 49 pending vacancies, with only three of them on the appeals courts. Another three have announced plans to step down. The Republican lawyer close to the White House said it is a little early to know how different Trump's second-term picks will be from the first because the president got off to a slow start in nominating his first batch of judges. Trump may struggle to match the numbers of his first term, in part because this time around there are not as many vacancies as there were in 2017. Then, Trump benefited from a Republican Senate that blocked many of President Barack Obama's picks, including his nominee to replace Scalia, Merrick Garland. Legal activists tend to focus more on federal appeals court nominees than district court nominees because they have more power to change the law and are often more likely to be tipped for potential slots on the Supreme Court. There are currently 24 Republican-appointed appeals court judges in total who are eligible for retirement, according to Wheeler. Generally, judges are more likely to step down when a president of the same party who appointed them is in office. Even if Trump wants to depart from the Leo playbook, he will find it difficult to find qualified conservative lawyers who do not have some links with the Federalist Society, Whelan said. "If you are looking for talented lawyers with the sort of experience that would make them good judges, most of the people you are looking at are going to be Federalist Society types," he added. Kenny, for example, who holds daily oversight over nominations at the White House, "is definitely a proud member of the Federalist Society," the Republican lawyer said. "But he's also going to follow the administration's lead on the kinds of judges they want." Nunziata said it's up to GOP senators to push back on nominees like Bove, warning that acquiescing would send a signal to Trump that he has a "free hand" to nominate more individuals like him, including to a possible Supreme Court vacancy. "I hope there will be pushback. Time will tell," he said, citing former Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell's key role in steering Trump's first-term judicial nominees. "I would expect him to be alarmed by this turn and to fight against it with his remaining time in the Senate." McConnell's office declined to comment. Democrats say that with nominees like Bove, Trump is making it more explicit that he simply wants loyalists. "He's putting in all the people that will support him, or have a relationship to him," Sen. Mazie Hirono, D-Hawaii, said. "That's what it's all about for the president. … He just wants people who will support what he wants." But when asked if she believes Republicans will stand up to some of Trump's judicial nominees, Hirono responded wryly. "Of course not," she said.

Trump aims to build a MAGA judiciary, breaking with traditional conservatives

Trump aims to build a MAGA judiciary, breaking with traditional conservatives WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump is signaling a new approac...

 

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