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Sparking a populist fire, the "Fighting Oligarchy" tour in Portland brought tireless Bernie, aspiring governor Troy Jackson, and electrifying veteran, oyster farmer, harbormaster, and unabashed populist Graham Platner - come, finally, please, to rid us of odious collaborator Susan 'I'm-Sure-He's-Learned-His-Lesson' Collins. With his "plainspoken fury at the billionaire economy," Platner's unafraid to "beat back fascism," "name the enemy - oligarchy" - call genocide genocide, and summon "a life that allows us to dream."
Boasting he can now say he's barnstormed from California to Maine - and drawing over 300,000 people en route - Bernie told a revved-up Labor Day crowd here of over 6,500, triple his likewise ardent audience in 2016, to "think big" and in unprecedented ways to combat our "unprecedented and dangerous moment in American history." On his travels, he's learned Americans "do not want to live under a kleptocracy" where they "sure as hell are sick and tired of the ongoing war of the rich against the working class." His now-decades-old solution: Building a "strong, progressive grassroots movement" to make real "a vision of where we want this country to be." The trick of the ruling class, he said, is "to say that ordinary people are powerless," that "they have all the money, all the power, you got nothing, and they can do anything they want....We must, must stop them today."
Toward that end, he brought his own, newly endorsed firepower. Jackson, a 5th-generation logger from northern Maine who became president of the state Senate on a progressive platform, wants to replace Janet Mills as governor next year; he argues that in an economic system rigged against them, he's running "to put power back in the hands of the people," for "all the workers who've been told they're replaceable (and) their lives are disposable." Since announcing his Senate bid two weeks ago, Platner, 40, has raised over a million dollars and many hopes his breath of fresh populist air can defeat the complicit Collins, allowing Maine to tip control of the Senate back to Democrats in 2026. Platner's generated so much fervor organizers reportedly had to move the event to a bigger venue; he himself calls the uproar "essentially incomprehensible."
Born and raised in the small coastal town of Sullivan, Platner is widely praised as "the real deal": A modest, hard-working, plain- talking, Philip-Seymour-Hoffman-voiced guy with an impeccable resume and "the honesty to call out the villains causing our pain" who "embodies the populist energy many Americans are looking for" - but Dems have failed to embrace. Even as up-front populist Sanders remains the country's most popular politician, Democrats' and Harris' craven clinging to the center last year earned them today's minus-32 approval rating, an exodus of working class voters, and Platner's wrath. In his 4th ever post on X, he raged, "Nothing pisses me off more than getting a fundraising text from Democrats about how they’re fighting fascism...It's such bullshit. We’re not idiots. Everyone knows most of them aren’t doing jack shit right now to fight back."
In a launch video that's racked up over four million views, and in his freshly-minted speeches, Platner is incisive, eloquent, straight-forward. Watching his state "become essentially unlivable for working people,” he says, makes him "deeply angry...The fabric of what holds us together is being ripped apart by billionaires and corrupt politicians." "Everyone in Maine knows, in their bones, the system is screwing us," he says. "We do not live in a system that is broken. We live in a system that is functioning exactly as it is intended...that has been built by the political class to enrich and support billionaires on the backs of working people." On fraught issues further from home, he is similarly direct. "What is happening in Gaza is a genocide," he told Jewish Insider. "None of this benefits working-class Americans, and I refuse to take money (for) our funding of a genocide."
As a longtime progressive - with an old, stained Bernie coffee mug - he acknowledges the seeming contradictions of his four combat tours, Marines and Army, in the "forever wars" of Iraq and Afghanistan he now denounces. “I thought I could do some good," he says. "I might have read too much Hemingway." By his early 30s, having been "blown up a few times," he realized the military and Afghanistan were "not a place for me anymore." He came home with two herniated discs, a traumatic brain injury, and then-undiagnosed PTSD, which qualified him for 100% disabled status from the VA; he used his benefits to attend George Washington University on the GI bill but, still struggling, eventually returned to Maine. He soon found solace and "a new purpose" on the water, taking over the small experimental Waukeag Neck Oyster Company farm back in Sullivan.
The website for the farm, "nestled between the tidal waters of Frenchman Bay and the rocky coastline of Sorrento," cites the singular flavor of their oysters "thanks to this special tidal exchange with deep, cold Atlantic waters and warmer waters from the bay...Handling the oysters often and with great care (makes) our oysters plump, sweet with a clean finish." Platner likes to add political context, describing a 5,000-year history of oysters from the Passamaquoddy tribe collecting them in shallows - "protein that doesn’t run away" - to them morphing into an 1800s status symbol to their decline and then resurgence after academic efforts to revive them: Indigenous and working-class economy to capitalist decimation to rebirth through science. Today, he touts aquaculture as key to a sustainable future; he also gets to sometimes work with his mom, whose restaurant serves his catch.
He cares deeply about his home town and state, has long supported community efforts - food banks, indigenous rights, veterans' health care - and is beloved by locals as "an everyday guy interacting with regular people." He recently spoke at an event for Troy Jackson in nearby Belmont; his entry into electoral politics is so new he was originally booked to cater the event, so he worked shucking free oysters for two hours, got up and gave a speech, then cleaned up his kitchen and talked to people. They were impressed he doesn't even wear a glove for shucking: "He's the man of steel!" He's a Star Trek fan and firearm instructor who spends many weekends at the gun range, and has mostly working-class friends, Trump voters among them. He and his wife Amy hope to start a family; for now they have a cat and two dogs, including one named Zevon, for Warren.
He's seen an avalanche of support since his entry into the Senate race, which was sparked by current horrors: People getting kidnapped by masked federal agents, friends who can't afford housing, the genocide in Gaza, outrage over Dems' failures to "impede the destruction of every American institution that matters (by) people who have already torched the rulebook." And, of course, the egregious hypocrisies and transgressions of Collins, from her obscene vote for fascist frat boy Kavanaugh to her support for Trump's disastrous big ugly bill that will cut Medicaid and rural health care even as she babbles about her support for them. "Symbolic opposition does not open hospitals, and weak condemnations do not bring back Roe v. Wade," he says. "Performative politics that enable the destruction of our way of life is disqualifying for the role of a U.S. Senator."
Eyeing her sixth stale term, Collins has seen her approval rate plummet. She's famously declined to hold a town hall for years, and at her rare public events she's often jeered and heckled. After she was booed at a recent road opening in Searsport, she whined, "Demonstrators seem to be part of the political world nowadays. It was interesting to see how much misinformation they had." After a Labor Day post so lame and tone-deaf it sounded like parody - "Let us not forget those who are working hard on this holiday" - "healthcare providers" (whose jobs she's helping kill), "hospitality workers" (who aren't called that anymore), "public safety officials keeping us safe" (and rounding up brown people), "the employees in our grocery stores and those responsible for transporting vacationers" (say what?) - she was savaged by Mainers basically telling her, "Go fuck yourself."
"Oh honey, you forgot years ago," ran one comment. Also: "Remove and replace," "Hollow words," "Silent complicity," "Oysterman '26," "Tell us more at your next town hall," "Cool, now tell us about the Epstein files," "Girl pack your bags," "Susan, you're flailing," "Get stuffed," "Do better," "Your time has come," "Don't you have something to be concerned about?" "Have you ever gotten Cheeto dust in your eyes at work?" "We need more than platitudes," "Whatever, Susan," "Are you clutching your $3,000 pearls?" "Let us remember them, salute them, and then forget about them until next Labor Day," "Remember all the federal workers who would still be doing their jobs if they hadn't been fired," "Labor Day is about THE UNIONS. Thank you for your attention to this matter," "The people are pissed," and "Have you found the Epstein files yet? Or are you only concerned about them?"
Because, per Platner, anyone challenging Collins or trying to raise up working people "has to be labeled the most lefty nut-job ever," her spokesperson babbled in response, "Susan Collins has a proven record of putting Mainers first...Graham Platner, on the other hand, is spending his time cozying up to Bernie Sanders and (his) radical, anti-Israel agenda." In truth, Platner's insurgent campaign must first win over establishment Dems, who want the safe Gov. Janet Mills to run; as proof, he notes he hasn't heard from any outside Maine. Still, he thinks of community organizing as the ultimate endurance test: "If you believe in a better world, you need to get right with the fact you may never see it....It’s not about getting me or anybody elected. It’s about using this as a mechanism (to) build a working-class movement, an apparatus for change even if no one else shows up."
In Portland, many people showed up, and they were hyped from the moment Platner sheepishly began, "Until recently, I thought harbormaster of Sullivan Maine was going to be the extent of my political career." He offered hard truths. On mainstream pols: "Blame cannot simply be left at the feet of one political party. We have two parties that want the votes of working people, but neither has done anything lately to earn it. No one is owed allegiance (as) long as Democrats are part of the same corporate apparatus (as) Republicans." On Collins' stale "charade" wearing thin: "No one cares you pretend to be remorseful as you sell out to lobbyists...corporations... a president all engineering the greatest redistribution of wealth in American history." On labor, women's, civil rights, gay rights, anti-genocide movements, "legacies not of asking permission" but organizing and taking power for "the society we deserve." And the candidates to make it happen.
- YouTube www.youtube.com
Five people on a helicopter rescue team were among nearly 200 people killed by extreme rainfall and flooding in Pakistan in a single day on Friday—the country's latest emergency caused by increasingly severe monsoon seasons, which scientists say are being fueled by the human-caused climate crisis.
The vast majority of deaths were recorded in mountainous areas in the northwestern region, with at least 171 people killed on Friday in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa.
As the Associated Press reported, "cloudbursts," or sudden and intense downpours over small areas, have become increasingly common in India and northern Pakistan in recent years and have caused landslides and flooding.
Pakistan has faced more extreme heatwaves and abnormal torrential downpours during its monsoon season, which typically occurs from June-September. Glaciers like those in the Gilgit-Balistan region, which hold 75% of Pakistan's stored water supply, have also been melting faster due to higher temperatures—another cause of flash floods. Several landslides have been reported along the Karakoram Highway in that region, which is heavily used by tourists and for trade.
International scientists at the World Weather Attribution said last week that rainfall in Pakistan from June 24-July 23 was 10-15% higher than it would have been without planetary heating linked to fossil fuel emissions, which have steadily risen since the 1950s with wealthy countries including the United States being the biggest contributors.
The death toll from the current ongoing extreme weather, which is expected to continue in the coming days, will likely rise significantly, said officials on Friday.
Authorities suspended an annual Hindu pilgrimage to a Sufi shrine in the northwestern Buner district, which began July 25 and was supposed to continue until early September.
About 78 people have been killed in Buner, mostly by floodwaters that swept them away and houses that collapsed.
Officials were helping nearly 4,000 pilgrims evacuate the area on Friday, building makeshift bridges to help people cross waterways and using dozens of excavators to move boulders, uprooted trees, and other debris.
"The death toll may rise as we are still looking for dozens of missing people," provincial emergency service spokesperson Mohammad Suhail told the AP.
A merchant in the Buner district told the New York Times that he had lost thousands of dollars in goods.
"Everything I had, groceries, edible items, is destroyed," Syed Mehmood Bacah said. "I could not save anything."
The disaster comes three years after Pakistan's worst monsoon season on record, in which flooding killed more than 1,700 people and caused an estimated $40 billion in damages.
Pakistan has become the world's fifth-most vulnerable country to climate disasters despite contributing only about 1% of the world's fossil fuel emissions.
The National Disaster Management Authority said the total number of rain-related deaths has now reached at least 556 since June 26, with more than 700 people injured.
Northern India has also been affected by flash flooding this week, with at least 44 people killed and more than 100 others injured in the Indian-controlled part of Jammu and Kashmir.
In what Public Citizen called "the greatest corruption in presidential history," US President Donald Trump and his family added $5 billion in cash to their fortunes this Labor Day as his new cryptocurrency was opened to the public market.
The currency, known as WLFI, is owned by World Liberty Financial, a company founded by the president's sons, Donald Trump, Jr., and Eric Trump. A Trump business entity owns 60% of the company and is entitled to 75% of the revenue from coin sales.
As the Wall Street Journal reported Monday:
The trading debut was most likely the biggest financial success for the president's family since the inauguration...
WLFI is likely now the Trumps' most valuable asset, exceeding their decades-old property portfolio. While the president's family has continued to pursue property deals around the world since taking office, the fast-moving crypto business has had the biggest early impact.
Crypto is now the dominant source of Trump's wealth. As an investigation by the anti-corruption group Accountable.US found last month, "President Trump's net worth could roughly be $15.9 billion, with about $11.6 billion in uncounted crypto assets," meaning that the digital currencies now make up 73% of his total net worth.
In addition to the tokens owned by World Liberty Financial, it found that two Trump-affiliated companies owned 80% of the $TRUMP meme coin as of May and had collected over $324 million in fees since Trump took office in January.
Meanwhile, Trump Media, which owns his online platform Truth Social, bought $2 billion worth of Bitcoin in July and reserved another $300 million in Bitcoin options.
As America's self-proclaimed "first crypto president," Trump has sought to curb regulations against the volatile financial assets.
In July, Trump signed the GENIUS Act, which purports to establish the US's first regulatory framework for crypto. However, critics noted that the law designated so-called "stablecoins," of which Trump owns many, as "commodities" rather than "securities," allowing them to face much looser oversight.
Though the bill passed with support from over 100 Democrats, Rep. Maxine Waters (Calif.), the ranking Democrat on the House Financial Services Committee, warned that the bill "legitimizes Trump actively building the most corrupt self-dealing crypto environment this country has ever seen."
Rep. Ayanna Pressley (D-Mass.) described Trump's latest $5 billion windfall as "blatantly corrupt and a brazen abuse of power."
"The current occupant of the White House," she said, "is putting personal profit above the people, using his power to illegally line the pockets of his family and billionaire friends while hanging everyday families out to dry by ripping away their healthcare, food assistance, raising the cost of consumer goods, gutting the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, and more."
While cryptocurrency is often billed as an asset available to everyone that levels the playing field of the finance world, in practice, its ownership is largely concentrated among the wealthiest Americans. According to a Harris poll published in April, nearly half of all crypto owners have a yearly income of over $150,000, putting them in the wealthiest 10% of the country.
"Your family gets higher energy prices and cuts to healthcare. [Trump's] family gets billions," said Rep. Greg Casar (D-Texas), the chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus. "Corruption, plain and simple."
Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash), a strong advocate for crypto regulation, said that such blatant profiting from the presidency makes Trump "easily the most corrupt president in our country's history," and emphasized that "Republicans in Congress are not lifting a single finger to exercise basic oversight."
According to data from OpenSecrets, just three crypto industry-backed political action committees (PACs) poured over $133 million into the 2024 election. Though they spent the majority of that money supporting Republicans, nearly 40% of it went to Democrats.
But although all this money helped to buy what Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong called "America's most pro-crypto Congress ever," according to Reuters, just 3% of legislators in the US House of Representatives and Senate own these assets themselves, including Sens. Dave McCormick (R-Pa.) and Tim Sheehy (R-Mon.), as well as Reps. Nick Begich (R-Ark.) and Mike Collins (R-Ga.).
But Trump's profiteering far exceeds the crypto holdings of every congressperson put together.
"We have only seen the tip of the iceberg when it comes to the damage that this corruption will inflict on the American people," said Bartlett Naylor, a financial reform advocate with Public Citizen. "The impact of attempts by the Trump family and others to buy and sell politics and politicians will continue to ricochet."
Government watchdog groups on Wednesday cheered the bipartisan introduction of the Restore Trust in Congress Act, which would ban federal lawmakers, along with their spouses and children, from trading individual stocks.
"The legislation would require lawmakers to sell all individual stocks within 180 days," according to NPR. "Newly elected members of Congress would also have to divest of individual stock holdings before being sworn in. Members who fail to divest would face a fine equivalent to 10% of the value of the stock."
The bill's lead supporters in the House of Representatives span the full ideological spectrum: Reps. Tim Burchett (R-Tenn.), Brian Fitzpatrick (R-Pa.), Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.), Anna Paulina Luna (R-Fla.), Seth Magaziner (D-Pa.), Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.), and Chip Roy (R-Texas).
"In a strong display of bipartisanship, leaders from both sides of the aisle in the House have worked together to produce a comprehensive and commonsense legislative measure to ban congressional stock trading," said Craig Holman, government affairs lobbyist with the group Public Citizen, which is endorsing the bill.
"These members worked for months in drafting a strong consensus bill that addresses all the key elements of an effective ban on congressional stock trading," he continued, welcoming that the prohibition applies to immediate family members and "covers a wide range of investments, including cryptocurrency, and is fortified with strong enforcement measures."
Brett Edkins, managing director of policy and political affairs at the progressive advocacy group Stand Up America, also applauded the bill, highlighting that "our representatives in Washington have access to an enormous amount of information about our economy that isn't available to the public."
"They should not be allowed to use what they learn in the course of their legislative duties to gain an unfair advantage and enrich themselves," he said. "It's time to ban sitting members of Congress from buying and selling stocks. Members of Congress cannot be trusted to police themselves, and existing ethics laws do not go far enough to prevent members from using their insider knowledge for personal gain."
Lawmakers behind this new proposal have long advocated for a full ban, arguing that existing protections—including those in the Stop Trading on Congressional Knowledge (STOCK) Act of 2012—are inadequate.
Advocacy groups, including the Campaign Legal Center, have also "been fighting for years to improve laws regulating the way members of Congress trade stocks," noted Kedric Payne, CLC's vice president, general counsel, and senior director for ethics.
"As long as sitting lawmakers are allowed to trade stocks connected to the industries they oversee, the public will question whether they are prioritizing their own personal profits over the public interest," Payne said. "We applaud this bipartisan legislation that incorporates the key provisions of stock act reform CLC has fought to advance—a ban on stock ownership that is enforceable and holds lawmakers accountable."
Jamie Neikrie, legislative director at the political reform group Issue One, pointed out Wednesday that "three years have passed since House leadership made a commitment to bring a congressional stock trading ban bill to the floor for a vote."
"It's time to get this much-needed reform across the finish line—no more excuses," Neikrie declared. "Members of Congress have a responsibility to hold themselves to the highest ethical standards, and passing the Restore Trust in Congress Act is how Congress shows it's serious about restoring trust and integrity in government."
"Today is a critical step for a more transparent and stronger institution," he added, urging "leadership in both chambers to seize this moment" and send the bill to President Donald Trump's desk.
Earlier this summer, Trump lashed out at Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.), who worked with Democrats to advance out of committee a stock trading ban, claiming that "he is playing right into the dirty hands of the Democrats."
Hawley initially called his proposal the Preventing Elected Leaders from Owning Securities and Investments (PELOSI) Act—a nod to former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), whose husband's stock trading has drawn scrutiny. After Hawley worked with Democrats on the bill, it was renamed the Halting Ownership and Non-Ethical Stock Transactions (HONEST) Act.
After the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee's July vote, Pelosi said that "while I appreciate the creativity of my Republican colleagues in drafting legislative acronyms, I welcome any serious effort to raise ethical standards in public service. The HONEST Act, as amended, rightly applies its stock trading ban not only to Members of Congress, but now to the president and vice president as well. I strongly support this legislation and look forward to voting for it on the floor of the House."
Meanwhile, Fox News' Jesse Watters at the time asked Hawley about Trump lashing out at him. The Senate Republican responded, "I had a good chat with the president earlier this evening, and he reiterated to me he wants to see a ban on stock trading by people like Nancy Pelosi and members of Congress, which is what we passed today."
Washington, DC Attorney General Brian Schwalb on Thursday filed a lawsuit against the Trump administration aiming to end what he described as the "illegal deployment" of National Guard troops in the nation's capital.
In a complaint filed with the United States District Court for the District of Columbia, Schwalb charged the Trump administration with violating the District of Columbia Home Rule Act, a 1973 law that delegated certain powers over the city once held by the federal government to local officials.
The complaint zeroed in on Trump's claim that Washington, DC is a "filthy and crime-ridden embarrassment" that should be "federalize[d]," so that the Trump administration can "run it the way it's supposed to be run." Schwalb then noted that Trump deployed National Guard forces in DC without receiving consent from local elected officials.
"None of this is lawful," he said. "For one thing, defendants' deployment of National Guard units to police district streets without the mayor's consent violates both the Home Rule Act and a congressionally approved compact governing the interstate mobilization of state National Guard troops."
Schwalb also charged the administration with violating the Posse Comitatus Act, an 1878 law that bars the US military from being used for domestic law enforcement.
"Defendants have established a massive, seemingly indefinite law enforcement operation in the district subject to direct military command," he argued. "The danger that such an operation poses to individual liberty and democratic rule is self-evident."
The state of California also accused Trump of breaking the Posse Comitatus Act in its lawsuit against Trump's use of National Guard forces in Los Angeles; a federal court ruled that deployment was illegal this week.
Schwalb's lawsuit comes as new reports published by CNN and Mother Jones revealed that the deployment to Washington, DC is taking its toll on National Guard members, who have been sent far away from their families for a mission that is bogged down by legal and political controversy.
CNN''s report featured interviews with several National Guard soldiers who expressed bewilderment at what their mission in the city was supposed to be, as one explained that his only duty seems to be walking around Chinatown for 12 hours a day, while another said she regularly gets cursed at by locals.
"We haven't gotten critically low on morale, but we're falling fast," one soldier told CNN.
A National Guard soldier who spoke with Mother Jones told a similar story, and said he felt that he and his fellow soldiers were being used as political props.
"I think people have hit their limit," he said. "This is an encroachment on everything we signed up for, and it feels like a violation. They just see us as little toy soldiers to put on the street to show some muscle. There's no clear mission or understanding of that mission."
Trump in recent weeks has said that he will soon be sending the National Guard into Chicago, despite warnings from Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker and other local officials that such a military presence is not wanted in the city. The president has made baseless claims about high crime rates in large cities across the country; as Common Dreams reported last month, crime is falling in all of the cities Trump has threatened to send troops into.
Activist Greta Thunberg on Wednesday expressed her contempt for the international community for its continued inaction on ending the mass suffering being inflicted on Gaza by the Israeli government.
Thunberg, who is a passenger on the Global Sumud Flotilla attempting to break through the Israeli blockade of Gaza, told Middle East Eye that her decision to join the voyage was "the bare minimum" she could do as Palestinians are facing mass starvation.
Thunberg then turned her ire to the rest of the world, which she accused of sitting on its hands while Gazans are suffering from a full-blown famine.
"I am absolutely disgusted by how there are so many people who are unable to say anything," she said. "Who are unable to do the very bare minimum to acknowledge the genocide, to even go to a demonstration, to even attend a protest when people are fighting for their lives to survive and to sustain their families."
The Swedish-born Thunberg went on to say that "I am ashamed as a human being, especially by my government, who are supposed to represent me," and she cited a recent quote from Swedish Deputy Prime Minister Ebba Busch, who said last month that Israel was doing the world a "favor" with its military operations in Gaza.
"Our complicity is worsening every day, as this genocide is escalating, that we aren't able to do more," Thunberg said. "That politicians aren't able to do the very bare minimum to uphold international law and prevent even the worst war crimes from happening. This is a textbook example of how our systems have failed."
In an exclusive interview with MEE from aboard one of the Global Sumud Flotilla boats destined for Gaza, vocal Palestine activist Greta Thunberg described the initiative as "inspired by the words of Palestinians." pic.twitter.com/a7CGGJlJiG
— Middle East Eye (@MiddleEastEye) September 4, 2025
The flotilla, which departed from Spain earlier this week, aims to pass through an Israeli military blockade to deliver humanitarian aid to people in Gaza.
Thunberg was also a passenger on a previous flotilla mission that was intercepted by Israeli forces, who detained its passengers and then returned them to their home countries.
In addition to Thunberg, other prominent passengers on the current flotilla include American actress Susan Sarandon, Irish actor Liam Cunningham, Portuguese politician Mariana Mortágua, former Barcelona Mayor Ada Colau, and Mandla Mandela, the grandson of former South African President Nelson Mandela.
"They should get their money back!" Trump said while defending America's tech giants.
US President Donald Trump on Friday angrily lashed out after the European Commission slapped tech giant Google with a $3.45 billion fine for violating antitrust laws.
The European Commission ordered Google to end its anticompetitive practices such as its payments to ensure its search engine receives preferential treatment on internet browsers and mobile phones. The commission also demanded that Google "implement measures to cease its inherent conflicts of interest along the adtech supply chain."
EU competition chief Teresa Ribera said that the decision demonstrated that "Google abused its dominant position in adtech harming publishers, advertisers, and consumers" and that it must "must now come forward with a serious remedy to address its conflicts of interest, and if it fails to do so, we will not hesitate to impose strong remedies."
Shortly after the ruling, Trump took to Truth Social to blast Europe for enforcing its antitrust laws.
"Europe today 'hit' another great American company, Google, with a $3.5 billion fine, effectively taking money that would otherwise go to American investments and jobs," Trump wrote. "Very unfair, and the American taxpayer will not stand for it! As I have said before, my administration will NOT allow these discriminatory actions to stand. Apple, as an example, was forced to pay $17 billion in a fine that, in my opinion, should not have been charged—they should get their money back!"
Trump added that "we cannot let this happen to brilliant and unprecedented American Ingenuity and, if it does, I will be forced to start a Section 301 proceeding to nullify the unfair penalties being charged to these taxpaying American companies."
Max von Thun, Europe director for anti-monopoly think tank Open Markets Institute, had a decidedly different take from the president, and praised the European Commission for taking an "important first step in breaking Google's chokehold over the underlying architecture not merely of the internet, but of the free press in the 21st century."
"It is only right that Google pays the price for its blatant and long-standing lawbreaking," he added. "More importantly however, the commission has given Google two months to end its illegal practices and resolve the profound conflicts of interest which arise from its control of every layer of the adtech stack."
The European Commission's decision stood in stark contrast to a decision issued earlier this week from Judge Amit Mehta of the US District Court for the District of Columbia, who declined to force Google to sell off its Chrome web browser or share all requested data with its competitors despite finding that the company had violated American antitrust laws.
The policy shift—which began during the first Trump administration—came after lobbying from US drone makers and amid stiff competition from Chinese, Israeli, and Turkish manufacturers.
After years of lobbying from US weapons makers, President Donald Trump is reportedly set to implement his first-term reinterpretation of a Cold War-era arms control treaty in order to sell heavy attack drones to countries including Saudi Arabia, according to a report published Friday.
In July 2020, Trump announced that his administration would reclassify unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) with flight speeds under 500 miles per hour—including General Atomics' MQ-1 Predator and MQ-9 Reaper and Northrop Grumman's Global Hawk—as exempt from certain restrictions under the Missile Technology Control Regime (MTCR).
Signed by the United States in 1987 during the administration of President Ronald Reagan, the 35-nation MTCR "seeks to limit the risks of proliferation of weapons of mass destruction by controlling exports of goods and technologies that could make a contribution to delivery systems" for such weapons, as the US State Department website explains.
The end of Trump's first term limited his first administration's implementation of the MTCR policy shift, which was not continued under former President Joe Biden, who adopted a somewhat stricter stance on arms exports to some gross human violators including Saudi Arabia, but not others—most notably Israel.
Now, a US official and four people familiar with the president's plan tell Reuters that Trump is preparing to complete the MTCR revision, a move that "would unlock the sale of more than 100 MQ-9 drones to Saudi Arabia, which the kingdom requested in the spring of this year and could be part of a $142 billion arms deal announced in May."
As Reuters reported:
Under the current interpretation of the MTCR, the sale of many military drones is subject to a "strong presumption of denial" unless a compelling security reason is given and the buyer agrees to use the weapons in strict accordance with international law.
The new policy will allow General Atomics, Kratos, and Anduril, which manufacture large drones, to have their products treated as "Foreign Military Sales" by the State Department, allowing them to be easily sold internationally, according to a US official speaking to Reuters on condition of anonymity.
This effort is the first part of a planned "major" review of the US Foreign Military Sales program, the official said.
The US State Department did not respond to Reuters' request for comment on the policy shift.
Trump's move comes as US arms makers face stiff competition from Chinese, Israeli, and Turkish drone manufacturers. Neither China nor Israel are signatory to the MTCR, and Turkey, which did sign the agreement, features lighter and shorter-range UAVs not subject to the same restrictions as the heavier Reaper.
The US official who spoke to Reuters said the new guidelines will allow the US "to become the premier drone provider instead of ceding that space to Turkey and China."
Daryl Kimball, director of the Arms Control Association—a longtime critic of MTCR revision—warned that Trump's planned reinterpretation "would be a mistake."
A spokesperson for South Korea's foreign ministry said that "the economic activities of our companies investing in the US and the rights and interests of our nationals must not be unfairly violated."
The South Korean Ministry of Foreign Affairs on Friday expressed "concern and regret" after US agents arrested 475 immigrants at a Hyundai electric vehicle plant in Ellabell, Georgia and turned them over to Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
ICE was among several agencies involved in "the largest single-site enforcement operation in the history of Homeland Security Investigations," Steven Schrank, the special agent in charge for HSI Atlanta, said during a Friday morning press conference.
The immigrants worked for a variety of companies and were arrested "as part of an ongoing criminal investigation into allegations of unlawful employment practices," Schrank explained. The probe continues, but no criminal charges are being filed at this time.
While Schrank only confirmed that a large number of those arrested on Thursday are South Koreans, a diplomatic source told the news agency Yonhap that the figure is over 300.
Yonhap also reported on a press briefing in which a spokesperson for South Korea's foreign ministry, Lee Jae-woong, said that "the economic activities of our companies investing in the US and the rights and interests of our nationals must not be unfairly violated."
"We conveyed our concern and regret through the US Embassy in Seoul today," Lee added.
According to The Associated Press:
Hyundai Motor Group, South Korea's biggest automaker, began manufacturing EVs a year ago at the $7.6 billion plant, which employs about 1,200 people, and has partnered with LG Energy Solution to build an adjacent battery plant, slated to open next year.
In a statement to The Associated Press, LG said it was "closely monitoring the situation and gathering all relevant details." It said it couldn't immediately confirm how many of its employees or Hyundai workers had been detained.
"Our top priority is always ensuring the safety and well-being of our employees and partners. We will fully cooperate with the relevant authorities," the company said.
Hyundai's South Korean office didn't respond to AP's requests for comment. Forbes highlighted that the raid comes shortly after the company "announced it would invest $26 billion in the US over the next three years," which is expected to create 25,000 jobs.
During the Friday press conference, Schrank appeared to try to distinguish these arrests from President Donald Trump's mass deportation agenda, saying that "this was not an immigration operation where agents went into the premises, rounded up folks, and put them on buses—this has been a multimonth criminal investigation."
However, Tori Branum, a firearms instructor and Republican candidate for Georgia's 12th Congressional District who is publicly taking credit for the raid, made the connection clear.
"For months, folks have whispered about what's going on behind those gates," Branum wrote on Facebook. "I reported this site to ICE a few months ago and was on the phone with an agent."
"This is what I voted for—to get rid of a lot of illegals," she told Rolling Stone after the arrests. "And what I voted for is happening."
In addition to raids of other workplaces such as farms in California, Trump's mass deporation agenda has featured an effort to illegally deport hundreds of children to Guatemala over Labor Day weekend, masked agents in plain clothes ripping people off US streets, arresting firefighters while they were on the job, revoking Temporary Protected Status for various foreign nationals, and locking up immigrants in horrific conditions in facilities including "Alligator Alcatraz."
American Immigration Council legal director Michelle Lapointe, who is based in the Atlanta area, said in a Friday statement that "these raids don't make anyone safer. They terrorize workers, destabilize communities, and push families into chaos."
"This historic raid may make dramatic headlines, but it does nothing to fix the problems in our broken immigration system: a lack of legal pathways and a misguided focus on punishing workers and families who pose no threat to our communities," she added. "Raiding work sites isn't reform, it's political theater at the expense of families, communities, and our economy."
This article was updated with comment from the American Immigration Council.