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UK weather: Met Office names Storm Floris as rain and strong winds forecast

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Waves overtop a promenade in Scotland in strong windsImage source, Reuters

Storm Floris has been named by the Met Office and will hit the UK on Monday, bringing strong winds and heavy rain.

It is the fifth named storm this season and the first since January.

Current forecasts show the centre of Floris travelling across the northern half of the UK, with the strongest and most disruptive winds on the southern and western edge of the area of low pressure.

Some forecasts show the potential for wind gusts of between 60 and 80mph in places, particularly for coasts and hills in the north during the day on Monday. Exposed coastal areas of Scotland could see gusts of up to 85mph.

Even across inland areas in the south there could be gusts of 40-45mph.

A deep area of low pressure approaches Northern Ireland and Scotland on Monday
Image caption,

Storm Floris will bring strong winds and heavy rain across the UK on Monday with the worst of the weather for northern coasts

The area of cloud and rain that may bring some of us the stormier spell was still only a band of heavy showers near the Great Lakes in the US on Thursday morning.

As this heads out into the Atlantic it will get picked up by an active jet stream and will develop into a storm with a huge drop in pressure as it nears our shores.

The exact track of the low pressure system will be crucial to which areas may be worst affected and so it is worth staying across forecasts over the coming days to keep across the latest.

If the winds do reach their potential forecast strength then they are likely to have an impact on travel.

At this time of year trees are in full leaf and are more likely to be toppled with branches broken off than during the winter when the wind can whistle through them unimpeded.

Many temporary summer structures including tents could be damaged.

Power disruption and some damage would also be possible while heavy rain and flooding could be an additional hazard in places.

Are summer storms unusual?

Storms are named by the Met Office and by the Dutch and Irish equivalents when they are judged to have strong impacts on the population.

A low pressure system like Floris would not be that unusual during the autumn or winter months but it will have greater impacts during summer.

Last year, Storm Lilian struck the UK before the bank holiday weekend, closing stages at the Leeds Festival and disrupting Heathrow flights.

It is worth noting that Monday is still a number of days away, and in terms of the forecast there could be some changes.

Check out the prospects for the rest of summer in our Monthly Outlook.

Booker's criticism of Democrats highlights deep divide on fighting Trump

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Senate Democrats are battling each other over how far to go in opposing President Trump’s agenda, a dispute that spilled out into the open earlier this week when Sen. Cory Booker (N.J.) slammed his fellow Democratic senators for “willing to be complicit” with Trump.

Booker’s tirade against fellow Democrats came after Sens. Catherine Cortez Masto (D-Nev.) and Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) attempted to advance a bipartisan package of policing bills.

Booker argued Democrats wanted to “look the other way” from Trump’s attempt to bully Democratic states, elite universities and media companies.

“This, to me, is a problem with Democrats in America right now,” Booker declared on the floor. “We’re willing to be complicit with Donald Trump.”

It’s part of a broader fight within the Democratic Party over when it’s acceptable, if at all, to work with Trump and his GOP allies.

Senate Democrats are at odds over whether to expedite the confirmation of dozens of lower-level and relatively noncontroversial Trump nominees so that lawmakers can go back to their home states for the August recess after a long seven months of legislative session.

Sen. John Fetterman (Pa.), a centrist, is asking whether it makes sense for his fellow Democrats to drag out the floor proceedings for every single Trump nominee, even for noncontroversial picks to fill under-the-radar positions in the executive branch.

“In the past, there was a large number of UCs and that wasn’t controversial. I’m not [sure] why it’s controversial right now,” Fetterman said, referring to what had been a long-standing practice of approving noncontroversial or lower-level nominees by unanimous consent and skipping time-consuming votes.

Fetterman questioned the point of making Republicans jump through procedural hoops, forcing late-evening votes and burning up weeks of floor time, when Trump’s nominees are going to be inevitably confirmed.

“They have more votes than we do and that’s inevitable,” he said. “Have we blocked or stopped any? No. And that’s the reality.

“If it happens today, if it happens tomorrow, does that really mean anything? Is that resistance?” he asked. “It hasn’t blocked or stopped anything.”

Most Senate Democrats have sought to drag out consideration of Trump’s nominees as long as possible, creating a backlog of 161 nominees as of Thursday morning.

Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer (N.Y.) and his colleagues have required cloture votes — the procedural votes needed to limit debate — on 120 straight nominees.

Democrats only allowed Secretary of State Marco Rubio to come straight to a confirmation vote on Jan. 20, Trump’s first day in office.

And Democrats have not allowed a single civilian Trump nominee to pass by unanimous consent or voice vote.

A spokesperson for Schumer said Trump’s “historically bad nominees deserve historic levels of scrutiny.”

Polls show the Democratic Party with a low job approval rating — between 33 percent and 40 percent, according to recent polls — and some Democrats think part of the problem is that their base doesn’t think they’re fighting hard enough against Trump’s agenda.

A recent Wall Street Journal poll of 1,500 registered voters found that Democrats had their highest unfavorable rating in 35 years.

Booker on Tuesday said “the Democratic Party needs a wake-up call,” channeling the frustration of many rank-and-file Democratic voters and donors.

“I see law firms bending a knee to this president, not caring about the larger principles that free speech rights [say] that you can take on any client. … I see universities that should be bastions of free speech bending the knee to the president,” he said, referring to settlements that several prominent law firms and elite universities reached with the president.

Some Democratic senators privately agree they need to put up more of a fight when Trump runs roughshod over Congress and Democratic priorities by shuttering or reorganizing federal departments and agencies such as the Department of Education, the Department of Agriculture and the U.S. Agency for International Development without approval from Congress.

“There is a deep, deep interest among folks for us to try to find somewhat to better dramatize the authoritarian takeover. I hear this all the time from folks back home,” said a Democratic senator, who requested anonymity to discuss internal discussions.

The senator said Democratic constituents have pressed lawmakers to force Republicans to use every hour of debate time on nominees and to force late-night votes and debates — something Democrats in Washington have done to put up a fight.

But it still hasn’t satisfied the desire within the Democratic base to inflict pain on Trump and his allies.

“None of these things really quite meet the thirst, the desire for more drama about this moment in history where our Constitution is being savaged,” the lawmaker said.  

Other Democrats insist they are fighting hard, even if some members of their party think they’re lying down.

“We’re fighting, no, we’re fighting,” said Sen. Peter Welch (D-Vt.).

Democrats on Capitol Hill are now quarreling over how hard a line they want Schumer and House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries (N.Y.) to hold ahead of the Sept. 30 government funding deadline.

Some Democrats are insisting that their leaders demand that Trump and Republican leaders in Congress promise not to make additional attempts to rescind congressionally approved funding in exchange for Democratic votes to keep the government funded past September.

“If the Republicans are not willing to put in writing that they will not roll the deal back after it’s been agreed to, then they’re signaling loud and clear that any deal with them right now isn’t worth the paper it’s printed on,” said Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), who has urged a tougher approach toward Republicans on spending bills.

Warren was one of eight Democrats who voted against a motion to proceed to the military construction and Department of Veterans Affairs appropriations bill, which passed out of committee with a 26-3 vote.

Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.) says Democrats should use their leverage on bipartisan policy priorities to curb Trump’s executive actions.

“If the Trump administration wants the benefit of bipartisan legislation on things like infrastructure, permitting reform and appropriations, they’re going to have to convince Democrats that a deal’s a deal and they will honor the deal,” he said.

“Otherwise, we’re just wasting our time so that Russ Vought can run the government on behalf of his creepy billionaire benefactors,” he added, referring to the director of the Office of Management and Budget.

Other Democrats are eager to get the spending bills passed, even without ironclad commitments from Republicans to not advance another rescissions package on Capitol Hill or from the administration to stop unilateral efforts to dismantle or reorder federal agencies.

Booker, for his part, was unapologetic in arguing that Democrats should use their leverage to get Trump to back off his efforts to punish blue states.

“We have seen a consistent erosion of the Article I branch of government ceding authority to the executive in ways that violate the founders’ intention and the Constitution of the United States. We are in a crisis right now,” Booker told reporters, referring to Congress’s failure to defend its power of the purse, power to set tariffs and power to declare war against Trump’s efforts to rescind federal funding, reorganize federal agencies, impose sweeping tariffs and bomb Iran’s nuclear facilities with little advance notice to congressional leaders.

“We are watching our democracy, democratic norms, traditions and rules, being violated by a president who has authoritarian tendencies. That’s why I’m saying, fundamentally, we must fight and fight harder,” said Booker, a past and potentially future Democratic presidential candidate.

Analysis-Fed’s reticence on rate cuts forces market to rethink outlook

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By Saqib Iqbal Ahmed and Davide Barbuscia

NEW YORK (Reuters) -The Federal Reserve’s decision to avoid signaling imminent rate cuts despite relentless political pressure underscores its prevailing caution and has forced investors to dial back expectations for an easing at the next policy meeting.

The Federal Open Market Committee held interest rates on Wednesday in a split decision that gave little indication of when borrowing costs might be lowered. It also drew dissent from two Fed governors, both appointees of President Donald Trump who agree with him that monetary policy is too tight.

The overnight policy rate controlled by the Fed remains in a 4.25%-4.50% range. The last rate cut was in December and the Fed hiked rates from March 2022 to July 2023 to fight inflation.

The lack of a clear signal that the Fed was warming to interest rate cuts as soon as the next meeting in September lifted Treasury yields and the dollar in late trade and turned stocks lower.

“I think the Fed has pushed out the probability of a rate cut,” Sonu Varghese, global macro strategist at Carson Group.

“They’re going to wait for more data, but more data means more time, and more time means rates are going to remain restrictive for a few more months,” Varghese said.

Fed funds futures traders are pricing in a 46% probability of a rate cut by September, down from about 65% a day ago, according to the CME Group’s FedWatch Tool. They are no longer pricing in two full 25 basis point cuts by year-end as they were in recent days.

Fed Chair Jerome Powell was careful to keep his options open on monetary policy. “We have made no decisions about September,” he said in a press conference. He also noted there was still time to take in a wide range of data before the central bank next met in mid-September.

“There was some possibility that (Powell) would softly signal that a September rate cut is the base case, and (that it) would only not happen if the data didn’t play out in a way that’s consistent with that,” said David Seif, chief economist for Developed Markets at Nomura in New York.

“I’d say he did not do that at all.”

Bond yields climbed on Wednesday as Powell reiterated the economy was showing resilience despite interest rates remaining “modestly restrictive”. Benchmark Treasury 10-year yields and two-year yields both rose by about two basis points after those remarks.

Investor positioning may have amplified the bond market reaction, said Jamie Patton, co-head of global rates at TCW.

‘Stressed’ scenes after children fell ill at camp

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Dan Hunt

BBC News, Leicester

NEMM Drone shot of Stathern LodgeNEMM

Eight children from the camp at Stathern Lodge were taken to hospital

Police have been given more time to question a man arrested on suspicion of administering poison at a children’s summer camp in Leicestershire.

Eight children from Stathern Lodge, Canal Lane, and an adult were taken to hospital on Monday amid what locals described as “crazy” scenes but have since been discharged.

A 76-year-old man was arrested at a nearby pub on Monday evening on suspicion of administering poison or a noxious substance with intent to injure, aggrieve or annoy.

Leicestershire Police said it received a report on Sunday of children feeling unwell, but did not visit the camp until Monday and had referred itself to the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC).

The force said the investigation was being led by the East Midlands Special Operations Unit’s major incident team.

The IOPC confirmed it was investigating Leicestershire Police’s handling of the incident.

East Midlands Ambulance Service said it received a report of a medical emergency at a private address in the nearby village of Plungar at 16:00 BST on Monday.

A spokesperson said: “We sent a number of resources including four paramedics in ambulance cars, 10 crewed ambulances and responders from the air ambulance were also in attendance.”

They added nine patients – eight children and an adult – were taken to Queen’s Medical Centre in Nottingham.

NEMM Police cars parked outside Stathern LodgeNEMM

Investigation work has been continuing at the scene

Neighbours described seeing stressed parents outside Plungar’s village hall, which was used as a triage centre for the children on Monday.

A 28-year-old woman who lives near the hall said: “We saw all the ambulances and police cars outside. All the kids were very guarded, they would not let anybody near it.

“Everybody was pretty stressed out. There were like four police cars, critical care teams, an ambulance, there was quite a lot. It was crazy.

“The parents were pretty stressed, they were here until probably 11pm.”

A man who also lives on the street said: “I saw maybe one girl with her dad. She had her toy with her. They were waiting around a lot.

“It was a bit surreal I guess, a bit odd because it’s quite quiet around here.”

These key US allies are set to recognize Palestinian state

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About three-quarters of the countries in the United Nations recognize the Palestinian state, which holds a “Permanent Observer State” status within the intergovernmental body — allowing it to be part of the proceedings but unable to vote on resolutions. 

Three more countries — close U.S. allies — have joined the tally in the last week. 

Last week, France said that it would recognize Palestinian statehood, with President Emmanuel Macron stating the move is part of a commitment to a “just and lasting peace” in the Middle East. 

France became the first nation within the Group of Seven (G7) to do so. 

The announcement came shortly after negotiations over a ceasefire between Israel and Palestinian militant group Hamas broke down, with Israel and the U.S. pulling their negotiators from Qatar. President Trump’s Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff pinned the blame on Hamas and argued that the officials will consider “alternative options to bring the hostages home and try to create a more stable environment for the people of Gaza.” 

Israeli Ambassador to the U.N. Danny Danon said last week that “neither international conferences disconnected from reality nor unilateral statements at the UN will lead to peace.” 

Then this week, as the international outrage over the humanitarian crisis in the Gaza Strip has continued, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer said the United Kingdom was ready to recognize Palestine’s statehood if Israel does not manage to take action to end the war with Hamas, a conflict that has been ongoing since the Palestinian militant group’s terrorist attack on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023. 

Starmer set the deadline for the U.N.’s General Assembly in September, calling for an uptick in aid being delivered into the war-torn enclave and for Hamas to release the remaining hostages. 

“I’ve always said that we will recognize a Palestinian state as a contribution to a proper peace process at the moment of maximum impact for the two-state solution, with that solution now under threat, this is the moment to act,” Starmer said. 

Canada became the third close U.S. ally this week to announce it would recognize Palestinian statehood.

Canada’s Prime Minister Mark Carney said Ottawa would provide recognition of the state in September at the U.N.’s General Assembly, a decision that would entail the Palestinian Authority “holding general elections in 2026 in which Hamas can play no part, and to demilitarize the Palestinian state.”

Trump said on Truth Social that Canada’s decision would make it hard for Washington to reach a trade agreement with Ottawa. 

On Monday, the president said the U.S. would set up “food centers” in Gaza as food distribution in the enclave has come under intense scrutiny amid the deaths of Palestinians in Gaza from starvation. 

Trump also acknowledged there is starvation among the roughly 2.1 million people in Gaza, sharing a different view from Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who said no one is starving in the enclave. 

The White House said Thursday that Witkoff and U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee would travel Friday to Gaza to “inspect the current distribution sites and secure a plan to deliver more food and meet with local Gazans to hear first-hand about this dire situation on the ground.”

Meta Shares Soar as Ad Business Continues to Fuel AI Ambitions

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Meta Shares Soar as Ad Business Continues to Fuel AI Ambitions

Knicks, Mikal Bridges agree to 4-year, $150 million extension

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New York Knicks forward Mikal Bridges has agreed to a four-year, $150 million contract extension with the franchise, his agents, Sam Goldfeder and Jordan Gertler of Excel Sports Management, told ESPN’s Shams Charania on Thursday.

The deal includes a player option for 2029-30 and a trade kicker. Bridges is ineligible to be traded for six months after the signing extension.

By completing this new contract, Bridges takes a slight discount from his max extension number ($156 million) to help New York maintain flexibility to continue building the roster. Bridges, along with Jalen Brunson, Karl-Anthony Towns and others, helped lead the Knicks to their first Eastern Conference finals appearance in 25 years last season.

With the Bridges deal sewn up — his contract was initially set to expire after the 2025-26 season — the most pressing question left in New York’s offseason has been resolved. The Brunson extension in 2024 and now the Bridges deal have given the Knicks flexibility to operate under both aprons of the salary cap, giving them room to add more players to the roster.

Bridges was coming off an up-and-down inaugural campaign with New York after having been traded to the club for five first-round draft picks last summer, which prompted speculation that the Knicks might seek to deal him rather than hammer out a big-money extension.

Bridges, who turns 29 in August, struggled early on as the Knicks used him to guard floor generals and ball handlers, a role the one-time runner-up for Defensive Player of the Year was unaccustomed to. His free throw attempts were down sharply from the season before as he adjusted from being a first or second option with the lowly Brooklyn Nets to being fourth in the Knicks’ pecking order on many nights. And he raised eyebrows within the relatively buttoned-down organization in March when he said he had asked then-coach Tom Thibodeau to back off a bit on the starters’ heavy minutes, telling reporters “sometimes it’s not fun on the body.”

But he was also effective in a number of ways, again playing in every single game while finishing second in the NBA in corner 3s made and third in the league — trailing Kevin Durant and Devin Booker — in field goal percentage from midrange (minimum 150 attempts). He came through in a handful of key moments during the postseason. Aside from having a pair of double-digit fourth quarters in the Celtics’ series, he also made key stops on the final plays of Games 1 and 2, in which the Knicks staged back-to-back 20-point comeback victories.

BBC faces mounting pressure to not air new series after Gregg Wallace and John Torode sacked

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BBC/Shine TV John Torode and Gregg WallaceBBC/Shine TV

John Torode, left, and Gregg Wallace had presented MasterChef since 2005

The BBC is facing mounting pressure to reconsider airing this year’s series of MasterChef, after presenters Gregg Wallace and John Torode were sacked.

The broadcast union Bectu said that bad behaviour “should not be rewarded with prime-time coverage”, while a leading women’s rights charity warned many people would feel “deeply uncomfortable” to see the show on their TV screens.

It came after a MasterChef contestant said she was edited out after asking for the new series not to be broadcast following claims against the two hosts.

The BBC previously said it had not been “an easy decision” to run the series, adding that there was “widespread support” among the chefs for it going ahead.

The controversy over MasterChef started last year, when BBC News first revealed claims of misconduct against Gregg Wallace.

Last month, a report by the show’s production company revealed that more than 40 complaints against Wallace had been upheld, while a claim that Torode had used a severely offensive racist term was also substantiated.

Following the report, the BBC announced that the new series – filmed before Wallace and Torode were sacked – would still be shown on BBC One and iPlayer.

The corporation said it reached the decision after “careful consideration and consultation” with the contestants.

But speaking exclusively to BBC News, head of Bectu Philippa Childs called on the BBC “to reconsider its decision to broadcast the latest series of MasterChef”.

She said: “Whilst the BBC claims that it has consulted with contestants there appears to have been no consultation with complainants; freelancers who have taken the very difficult step of speaking out and who will legitimately feel distressed as the show appears on their screens several times a week over the next two months.”

Ms Childs added that freelancers whose complaints had been upheld would “undoubtedly be triggered” by the decision to air the series.

“If [the BBC] are serious about addressing this industry wide problem, broadcasters should not reward bad behaviour with prime-time coverage,” she said.

BBC News understands the new series may be re-edited in light of the findings, with the prominence of Wallace and Torode re-examined.

It is thought there will be limitations on how much the pair can be edited out, but the focus is likely to be on the contestants.

The BBC has been approached for a response to Ms Childs’ comments.

Her views were echoed by some of the women who came forward with claims against Wallace.

Reacting to the news that it would be aired, one former MasterChef worker who claimed Wallace groped her said the decision to broadcast the series showed “a blatant disregard for the people who have come forward”.

She warned it was “a total reversal of so-called firing from MasterChef – how can you be fired by your work is still made public?”

Another former MasterChef worker, who said Wallace pulled his trousers down in front of her, told BBC News the decision to air the series was “profoundly disrespectful” to people like her who had made allegations.

“It ultimately sends a message that such behaviour can be overlooked.”

She added that she had not been consulted over the decision to air the series.

A picture of Gregg Wallace, left, and John Torode

Penny East, chief executive of the Fawcett Society, also expressed concern over the decision.

“Seeing Gregg Wallace on our screens will be deeply uncomfortable for many people, not least the brave women who have spoken about his appalling behaviour,” she said.

“It can’t be right that men who sexually harass women continue to be given platform and allowed to maintain their profile and power.”

Ms East added that it was a “difficult dilemma”, adding: “We also know that all of the contestants will have put their hearts and souls into the competition over the many weeks of filming. To leave them with nothing to show for this feels uncomfortable.

“Perhaps editing out the presenters entirely would have been a better solution.”

‘Ideally, it would’ve been axed’

On Thursday, one of the contestants on the new series of MasterChef said she was edited out after asking for it not to be broadcast.

Sarah Shafi told BBC Newsnight that “in an ideal world, what would have happened is that it would have been axed” out of respect to those people whose complaints had been upheld.

She said that would have sent “a strong message that [the BBC] are not supporting people in those prominent positions or facilitating some sort of enabling environment”.

Ms Shafi said that she had felt “pressurised into saying yes” to the show going ahead and the solution of editing her out left her “flabbergasted”.

“This is a woman being edited out. Again, the woman gets silenced into extinction. It’s happening time and time again.”

The BBC said Banijay had consulted with all the contestants before the decision to run the series was made.

It said: “We are sorry that this contestant does not support the decision and we are grateful she raised this with both the BBC and Banijay.”

Separately, Ms Shafi also said that her experience on the show “wasn’t a good one” and that being on the show felt like “a boys’ game”.

“I went there being faithful to food, not to be eyed up and ogled, it just felt that was very uncomfortable for me,” she said. “That was with Gregg Wallace.”

BBC News has approached MasterChef’s production company Banijay for a comment about these fresh claims. Banijay told Newsnight it had no record of Ms Shafi raising concerns at the time.

BBC News has also approached Gregg Wallace for comment.

‘Not an easy decision’

In announcing its decision to run the series, the BBC said: “This has not been an easy decision in the circumstances and we appreciate not everyone will agree with it.

“In showing the series, which was filmed last year, it in no way diminishes our view of the seriousness of the upheld findings against both presenters. We have been very clear on the standards of behaviour that we expect of those who work at the BBC or on shows made for the BBC.

“However, we believe that broadcasting this series is the right thing to do for these cooks who have given so much to the process. We want them to be properly recognised and give the audience the choice to watch the series.”

Former contestants on the show have also previously told BBC News that being on MasterChef can be “life-changing” for them.

The upheld claims against Wallace included one of unwelcome physical contact and another three of being in a state of undress.

A total of 83 complaints were made against Wallace, and he said he was cleared of “the most serious and sensational allegations”.

But he added: “I recognise that some of my humour and language, at times, was inappropriate.

“For that, I apologise without reservation. But I was never the caricature now being sold for clicks.”

The upheld complaint against Torode related to a severely offensive racist term allegedly used on the set of MasterChef in 2018.

The presenter said he had “no recollection” of it and that any racist language is “wholly unacceptable”.

Republicans reject Democrats' amendment to block Trump from taking Qatari jet after presidency

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Republicans on the Senate Appropriations Committee on Thursday rejected what they described as a “poison pill” amendment that Democrats say is intended to block President Trump from taking the Qatari luxury jet that the Pentagon intends to use as Air Force One with him after his presidency.

The committee voted 15-14 against adopting the amendment during consideration of the annual defense funding bill.

The amendment offered by Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.), a senior appropriator, sought to block funds from being used in a manner that would enable transfer of “a presidential air transport aircraft that has been under foreign registry to a nongovernmental entity until the aircraft has served as a presidential air transport aircraft through the end of its service life.”

During the markup session, Murphy cited recent reporting about the potential costs of upgrading the Boeing 747-8, which was previously used by the Qatari royal family.

“This is an extraordinary amount of money to be used on a plane retrofit that will likely only be in service for a short period of time. Well, the administration has essentially refused to brief us on the full cost,” he said. “Reports are that this number could be easily $1 billion.”

“To most Americans, that’s a lot of their money to be spent on a plane that is not going to be in the service of the United States military, in the United States Air Force, for perhaps any longer than a few months, because the president has, in fact, stated his intention to take this plane with him when he leaves office.”

Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), head of the subcommittee that crafted the Pentagon funding bill, pushed back on Murphy’s comments shortly after and said senators should not “marinate on rumors and speculation about what could happen years from now.”

“We should be briefed on the long-term disposition plans before rushing to take action such as this, for which this simply [has] no urgency. The amendment is intended as a poison pill and political theater,” he said, arguing the amendment is “better suited” as part of consideration for the national defense authorization bill lawmakers hope to pass in the coming months.

Sen. Jon Ossoff (D-Ga.), a member of the committee, argued in response to McConnell’s comments that “beyond rumor and speculation that Senator Murphy just quoted the president firsthand with respect to his intentions.”

“To address this claim that’s been made a few times, this is ‘a poison pill,’ if I understand correctly, that means that the Senate would refuse to fund the Pentagon … unless it allows the president to accept a jet from a foreign prince,” he said. “If that’s true, I’d like to understand why that is the line in the sand that would be drawn.”

The amendment came after both sides clashed over a previous measure proposed by Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (D-N.H.), another senior appropriator, that sought to block funding from being used to operate or modify the jet. 

The report comes as previous reports from multiple outlets indicated the administration planned to transfer the jet to Trump’s presidential library after his term ends.

Sen. Markwayne Mullin (R-Okla.), a spending cardinal, argued the president has only jokingly said the jet would be transferred to his library, however.

“The president has never came out and said he’s putting this in the library. He said it in a joke one time,” he said, adding that there have been talks instead “about using the current one that has been in the air for over 35 years to possibly be retired and go in the presidential library.”

“Senator Mullin, on May 12, the president of the United States said this, this plane will, quote, ‘Go directly to my presidential library at the end of my term,'” Murphy later argued. “There was no great chuckle from the audience after he said that you may interpret that as a joke. It certainly didn’t seem to be intended as a joke.”

Financial Services Roundup: Market Talk

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Financial Services Roundup: Market Talk