Ghislaine Maxwell's prison transfer adds to Trump's Epstein morassNew Foto - Ghislaine Maxwell's prison transfer adds to Trump's Epstein morass

The Trump administration made interviewing Jeffrey Epstein's accomplice,Ghislaine Maxwell, a key part of its efforts to climb out from beneath its Epstein files problems. Over a week later, we still don't know what transpired during that meeting. But the Maxwell situation has only grown to epitomize a series of very curious maneuvers that call into question precisely what everyone in the administration is thinking and suggest the controversy is going nowhere fast. Indeed, it's almost as if those involved aretryingto make this look bad. We learned Friday that Maxwell had beenmoved from a low-security federal prison in Floridato a minimum-security prison camp in Texas called Camp Bryan – a significant upgrade for an inmate serving a 20-year sentence. Neither the Justice Department, the Bureau of Prisons nor Maxwell's lawyer has addressed precisely why the transfer was made. We don't know who was involved. But it's conspicuous for a host of reasons. To wit: News of the transfer broke after Maxwell met with Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche, a political appointee and Trump's former defense lawyer, in a meeting that remains shrouded in secrecy. Maxwell doesn't appear to have been eligible for such a transfer, unless someone granted her a waiver.Bureau of Prisons policystates that anyone who had "sexual contact with a minor," as Maxwell did when she participated in the sexual abuse, "will be housed in at least a Low security level institution," without such a waiver. (Maxwell was sentenced in 2022 for carrying out a years-long scheme with Epstein to groom and sexually abuse underage girls.) Experts have said such a transfer is highly unusual. Prison consultant Holli Coulman on Fridaytold CNN's Phil Mattinglythat she had "never seen this in my life. Never seen it by women that I've either served time with, clients, never have seen this. This is unprecedented." Maxwell's upgrade comes as Trump has repeatedly seemed todangle a favor – specifically, a potential pardon– as she spoke with the Justice Department and entered into talks to testify to Congress. The White House told CNN last week that "no leniency is being given or discussed" for Maxwell, but then Trump againconspicuously noted that he had the power to pardon her. A lower-security prison could certainly be construed as a form of "leniency." Trump has a history of suggesting favors for those whose actions could impact him. He dangled pardons over witnesses in the Russia investigation in ways that special counsel Robert Mueller saidcould have impacted their decisions on cooperating with the government. And more recently, Trump's Justice Department seemed to tie the dismissal of New York Mayor Eric Adams's criminal charges tohim helping with Trump's immigration crackdown. The favorable prison transfer comes even as Maxwell's lawyer has openly sought concessions for her. There is plenty we don't know about all of this, in large part because the key players aren't talking. It's theoretically possible this is all just a major coincidence. But it certainly raises questions that the key officials involved would seem to have motivation to put to rest – and quickly. Maxwell's testimony could bear on Trump personally, given continuing revelations abouthis ties to Epsteinand his desire to put the entire Epstein files fiasco to rest. Now we learn she got a highly unusual perk. And it's merely the latest in a series of very questionable developments. The other concession the Trump administration made after failing to produce the Epstein documents that it had promised was moving to unseal grand jury testimony. But its own filing last week reinforcedthat information is likely to be quite limited, if it even sees the light of day. Trump has been very slow to acknowledge his own proximity to Epstein. Last week, after days of confusion, the president ultimately said he had been aware in real time that Epstein "stole" one of his Mar-a-Lago employees,a then-minor named Virginia Giuffrewho became one of Epstein's highest-profile accusers. Given Giuffre's age at the time and a paper trail that suggests Trump's awareness of Epstein's affinity for young women and girls, that raises valid questions aboutwhat Trump knew or might have suspected at the time. Family members of Giuffre's have raised the possibility that Trump knows more than he has let on, but the president has balked at expanding on his statements about why this episode made him decide Epstein was a "creep." Trump, who has not been accused of wrongdoing in connection with Epstein, claimed Thursday that "I don't know really why" Epstein was taking his employees. But he's repeatedly madefalse and misleading claims about hispastties to Epstein. Most recently, he denied that Attorney General Pam Bondi had told him his name was in the Epstein files, whichCNN later reportedshe had – back in May. What's more, the timeline suggests the administration's reversal on promising full disclosurecoincided with Trump being told he was in the files. And then there is the Maxwell situation. Even before the news of her prison transfer, the administrationtook very little care to make its handling of her appear proper. It sent Blanche,Trump's former personal lawyer, to meet with her. Blanche has called Maxwell's lawyer his "friend." Maxwell's lawyer has been solicitous of Trump. And, of course, Trump has repeatedly left open a pardon. Trump late last week said he didn't know what would be produced from the Blanche meeting, saying, "I don't know because I haven't spoken about it." But he again suggested it might be limited by a desire not to create suspicion of people who haven't been charged with crimes. The confusion around all of this only seems to be growing, in large part because of Trump's and the administration's own actions and lack of transparency. And perhaps nothing looms larger right now than the unanswered questions about the prison transfer. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Ghislaine Maxwell’s prison transfer adds to Trump’s Epstein morass

Ghislaine Maxwell's prison transfer adds to Trump's Epstein morass The Trump administration made interviewing Jeffrey Epstein's ...
White House Claims It Has Achieved Net Negative MigrationNew Foto - White House Claims It Has Achieved Net Negative Migration

U.S. Marine Corps deployed at the southern border in San Diego, reinforce the US-Mexico border wall as pictured from Colonia Libertad in Tijuana, Baja Calif. state, Mexico on Feb. 5, 2025. Credit - Guillermo Arias—AFP/Getty Images President Donald Trump'sWhite House has been celebrating reports that 2025 could be the first year in at least 50 years that the United States could have negative net migration. The Administrationpromoted a segment on CNNMonday that claimed Trump's "hawkish" immigration policies will lead to net negative migration, down from anet 2.8million-person increase in population in 2024. "The United States is on track to see negative net migration for the first time in at least five decades, according to CNN, as President Donald J. Trump fulfills his promise to end the migrant invasion and deport criminal illegal immigrants from our communities," the press release reads. The White House laterposted a graphicon X that appeared to claim it had already met that target. The graphic showed a border patrol agent and was emblazoned with the words: "NEGATIVE NET MIGRATION for the First Time in 50 Years" and "Promises made, promises kept." Read More:What the Data Reveals About Trump's Push to Arrest and Deport More Migrants It did not provide any evidence to back up that claim, and the CNN story originally shared by the White House did not make that claim. The CNN report was nonetheless celebrated online by Administration officials, including by Trump's Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller, who is often credited with shaping Trump's hardline immigration policies. "During the last period in which America was the undisputed global superpower — finically [sic], culturally, militarily — immigration was net negative. All population growth was from family formation," Millerwrote on XSunday afternoon. When asked by TIME if it had achieved negative net migration already, the White House initially responded by sharing a link to Miller's tweet. In a later statement to TIME, White House spokeswoman Abigail Jackson said that "President Trump was elected on his promise to end illegal immigration, deport criminal illegal aliens, and put Americans First – that's exactly what he's doing." "For the third month in a row, there have been zero illegal aliens released into the country," she said. "And last month, Border Patrol averaged just 141 apprehensions per day, which is unheard of for the nearly 2,000-mile-long southern border. Since President Trump took office, all employment gains have gone to American workers. President Trump's policies are delivering for the Americans who elected him." Here's what you need to know. Negative net migration is the term to describe a scenario in which the number of people leaving a country is greater than the number immigrating. In such a situation, population growth is mostly dependent on those being born within the country. While he didn't specifically campaign for a second term on achieving negative net migration, Trump promised the largest mass deportation effort in U.S. history. "I don't believe this is sustainable for a country, what's happening to us, with probably 15 million and maybe as many as 20 million by the time Biden's out. Twenty million people, many of them from jails, many of them from prisons, many of them from mental institutions," Trump told TIME in May 2024. TIME had fact-checkedthis claim,finding that the number of undocumented people in the United States was estimated to be closer to 11 million. During the first six months of Trump's second term, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) has recorded nearly 150,000 deportations — or an average of more than 800 per day. If those continue at the same pace, the agency should carry out more than 300,000 deportations by the end of the year, which would be the highest annual tally since 2014. AJuly 2025 reportfrom the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), a conservative think tank, estimated that migration levels in 2025 would reach somewhere between negative 525,000 and negative 115,000, "reflecting a dramatic decrease in inflows and somewhat higher outflows." This is just one prediction, though. In a separate report, the Federal Reserve Bank in San Franciscoestimated on July 17that the 2025 net international migration (NIM) numbers would decrease significantly from 2024. They write that NIM levels for 2025 are currently on track to be around 1.0 million—over 1.5 million less than 2024 and 2.5 million less than in 2025—but this still would not substantiate a net negative. Still, Trump's aggressive immigration tactics at the border are, undoubtedly, causing a decrease in those entering the United States. The Federal Reserve Bank in San Francisco highlights how the overall number of encounters at the border has drastically declined since 2024, and the Migration Policy Institute reports that the Customs and Border Patrol (CBP) at the U.S.-Mexico border has reached record lows, not seen since the 1960s,with border patrol claiming just over 6,000 apprehensionsin June. Despite all that, some experts are skeptical. Julia Gelatt, Associate Director of the U.S. Immigration Policy Program at the Migration Policy Institute, said it's "hard for [her] to imagine" there will be a negative net migration this year, despite Trump's policies. "Border arrivals are down a lot this year (building on declines that started last year), and all of the parole pathways that the Biden administration opened—for Ukrainians, Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans, Venezuelans, and others—have now closed," she told TIME over email. "On the other side of the equation, well over a million people come legally to the United States each year as permanent and temporary immigrants. We haven't yet seen the kinds of big changes to legal immigration policies or practices that would drastically slow legal immigration, though it could happen," she added. However, she said she expects net migration to be "significantly lower this year than in the past couple of years." TheU.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics datashows that foreign-born individuals contributed more than half of the total new workers to the labor force in the years 2022 through 2024. In fact, a Federal Reserve Bank of Dallasstudyin July 2024 found that in the aftermath of the pandemic, immigrant laborers helped boost job growth while keeping inflation down. Read More:What to Know About the Jobs Report That Led Trump to Fire the Labor Statistics Chief Amid Trade War Fallout Economists have warned that the sharp drop in immigrants coming into the U.S., and Trump's aggressive deportation policies, could have detrimental effects on the country's economy. The Economic Policy Institutewrote in Julythat Trump's deportation efforts will reduce jobs for immigrants and U.S.-born workers alike, as deportations will "[threaten] the ability of employers to generate revenue and pay for business expenses like rent, machinery, and even the labor of any remaining workers." A new study from Dallas' Federal Reserve Bank in 2025showed thatdeclining immigration is "weighing" on the country's gross domestic product (GDP). In their simulations on GDP growth, they found that "[r]educed immigration inflows at the border, not deportations, account for most of the negative effect on GDP growth." The Center for Budget and Policy Prioritiesalso shared a reportthat immigration benefits the Social Security Trust Fund, and that "plans to drastically cut immigration and increase deportations would significantly worsen Social Security's financial outlook." This happens as theSocial Security Administration is already feeling the weightof hefty cuts from the Trump Administration. Contact usatletters@time.com.

White House Claims It Has Achieved Net Negative Migration

White House Claims It Has Achieved Net Negative Migration U.S. Marine Corps deployed at the southern border in San Diego, reinforce the US-M...
Marjorie Taylor Greene suggests she may abandon the Republican partyNew Foto - Marjorie Taylor Greene suggests she may abandon the Republican party

Marjorie Taylor Greene, one of the most prominent voices in Donald Trump's Maga movement, has declared in an interview that she feels that the Republican party has lost touch with its base, and suggested she may abandon the party entirely. The Georgia congresswoman told theDaily Mailthis week she was questioning whether she still belongs in the Republican fold and expressed resounding frustration with GOP leadership. "I don't know if the Republican party is leaving me, or if I'm kind of not relating to Republican party as much any more," Greene said. "I don't know which one it is." Greene, who boasts 7.5 million followers on X and commands one of the largest social media audiences of any Republican woman, accused party leaders of betraying core conservative principles. She did not criticize Trump himself, instead preferring to express her ire for what she attempted to paint as political elites. "I think the Republican party has turned its back on America First and the workers and just regular Americans," she said, warning that GOP leadership was reverting to its "neocon" past under the influence of what she termed the "good ole boys" network. The 51-year-old lawmaker, in the roughly six-month mark following Trump's return to the White House, said she was particularly frustrated with the House speaker, Mike Johnson, saying: "I'm not afraid of Mike Johnson at all." Her remarks reflect a broader pattern of voter dissatisfaction with traditional party structures. Americans appear to also be holding deeply unfavorable views of both major parties: a JulyWall Street Journal pollfound 63% view the Democratic party unfavorably, its worst rating in 35 years, while Republicans fare only marginally better in most surveys. Independent or independent-leaning Americans now account for nearly half the electorate, according toJuly Gallup polling, and public support has increasingly shifted toward Democrats through those leaners in recent months. On Monday, Greene used social media tocriticizethe lack of accountability over what she deems key issues to the base, sharing a table showing no arrests for the "Russian Collusion Hoax", "Jan 6th", and "2020 Election". "Like what happened all those issues? You know that I don't know what the hell happened with the Republican Party. I really don't," she said in the interview. "But I'll tell you one thing, the course that it's on, I don't want to have anything to do with it, and I just don't care any more." Her recent bills have targeted unconventional Republican territory: preventing cloud-seeding, making English the official US language, and cutting capital gains taxes on homes. She is also the first Republican in Congress to label the crisis in Gaza a genocide, and has called for ending foreign aid and using the so-called "department of government efficiency" (Doge) to cut down fraud and waste in the government. Greene acknowledged her isolation within the party, saying: "I'm going alone right now on the issues that I'm speaking about."

Marjorie Taylor Greene suggests she may abandon the Republican party

Marjorie Taylor Greene suggests she may abandon the Republican party Marjorie Taylor Greene, one of the most prominent voices in Donald Trum...
Trump's rewriting of reality on jobs numbers is chilling, but it could backfireNew Foto - Trump's rewriting of reality on jobs numbers is chilling, but it could backfire

When authoritarianism encroaches, apologists often present a strongman's power grabs as rational — even imperative for the national good. Top Trump administration aides followed that playbook on Sunday, justifying the president's abrupt firing of the government's top labor official in charge of employment statistics over jobs numbers that dented his proclamation of a new "golden age." But theouster of Bureau of Labor Statistics Commissioner Erika McEntarfer, taken alongside President Donald Trump's concurrent bid to destroy the independence of the Federal Reserve, threatens the US economy's reputation as a bulwark of stability and integrity that has undergirded generations of prosperity. Such political interference might bolster Trump's ever-growing power. But it could backfire by eroding the trust of investors, companies and organizations that depend on accurate and truthful statistics on the economy's health to make major decisions that can impact the lives of millions of people. Even the Federal Reserve uses it to decide on monetary policy. And when countries don't firewall official data, they risk ending up like Argentina or Greece, where the invention of rosy statistics masked economic malaise and sparked financial crises. Or China, where fantastical official figures designed to bolster the regime's credibility fostered corruption — and benefited the US by comparison. Trump's assault on the BLS is also more than a narrow economic question. It's the latest erratic move by a president who believes he has total power and is immune from consequences, and who has become increasingly hubristic following a string of political wins this summer. Trump's domination of Congress and testing of constitutional limits have compromised constraints on presidential authority in a nation founded on the rejection of punitive and impetuous economic decisions by an all-powerful ruler. His quest for omnipotence across society can also be seen in his successful attempts to impose his ideology on top universities, his coercion of big-time law firms and his attacks on the media. Mirroring his assault on economic data, Trump and his aides have launched a purge of government scientists and experts whose findings conflict with the MAGA movement's doctrine on climate and vaccines. And while Republican presidents have sometimes had a point in arguing that their goals can be thwarted by a bureaucracy that they regard as overly liberal, Trump's assault on the federal government that he leads has funneled ever more unaccountable power into the Oval Office. But the president is taking a big economic risk. In the short term, his attack on the credibility of government data may exacerbate the economic uncertainty already gathering around the White House and darkening GOP prospects in next year's midterm elections. "BLS is the finest statistical agency in the entire world. Its numbers are trusted all over the world," former Commissioner for the Bureau of Labor Statistics William Beach told Kasie Hunt on CNN's "State of the Union." "I do believe, though, that the president's attack on the commissioner and on the bureau is undermining that infrastructure, could undermine that trust over the long term." Senior Trump aides went onto Sunday shows to make a case for his volatile reaction to the jobs numbers that subverted his own version of reality. "The president wants his own people there so that when we see the numbers, they're more transparent and more reliable," Kevin Hassett, the director of the White House Economic Council,said Sundayon NBC's "Meet the Press." On Monday, Hassett went even further, making a remarkable statement for someone in his position. Without offering any evidence, Hassett alleged in a CNBC interview that the jobs numbers could be "politically manipulated because they're so untransparent." "There's a black box system out there making the jobs numbers that needs to be improved," Hassett continued. Senate Democratic Minority leader Chuck Schumer responded to Hassett's defense of Trump's move by demanding his dismissal. "Kevin Hassett should be fired. He is defending Trump's lies about the jobs report and the firing of Erika McEntarfer," Schumerwrote on XMonday. "The business community should demand a flack like him has no role at the Fed." Another top Trump official, US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer, argued on Sunday that "you want to be able to have somewhat reliable numbers." He said on CBS' "Face the Nation" that "there are always revisions, but sometimes, you see these revisions go in really extreme ways. … The president is the president. He can choose who works in the executive branch." Trump was irked by job data that showed the economy created only 73,000 jobs in July. The monthly totals for May and June were also revised downward by a combined 258,000 jobs. Such recalculations are integral to the bureau's task of presenting an accurate picture of the economy over the longer term, and not just month to month. In this case, the jobs numbers appeared to confirm other indicators that contradict Trump's claims the economy is roaring, amid data showing slowing growth and a rise in inflation last month. One big danger now is that Trump's economic fabulism will gather its own momentum and infect confidence in government statistics that will long outlive his presidency. Employment data is published as part of a multilayered process that would be almost impossible for one official to corrupt. But if Trump appoints a politicized official to head the BLS with an incentive to please him, the pressure on officials to produce corrupted data would be intense. If jobs numbers are worse next month, will he fire someone else? And if the numbers improve, will anyone believe in their integrity? "Suppose that they get a new commissioner, and this person, male or female, are just the best people possible, right? And they do a bad number. Well, everybody's going to think, 'Well, it's not as bad as it probably really is,' because they're going to suspect political influence," Beach said on "State of the Union." The president's turn against his own government's nonpartisan number-crunchers when they produced a report that he didn't like was rather predictable. In 2018, he coaxed supporters from the real world into his illusory political environment,saying, "Just remember, what you're seeing and what you're reading is not what's happening." This mantra was borne out during his first term. In his first hours in office, Trump furiously ignited a controversy over the size of the crowd at his inauguration, which he claimed, despite photographic evidence, was the biggest ever. At the time, this seemed an absurd sideshow. But it turned out to set the stage for an entire presidency of fabricating facts. His attempt now to invent jobs numbers that fit with his version of reality recalls his negligent handling of the Covid-19 pandemic. Trump frequently claimedthat if the US stopped testing for the virus, it would simply have no more cases. And Trump's claim that Friday's jobs numbers were "rigged" recalls his greatest-ever attack on truth: his false claims that the 2020 election was stolen. When voters produced a result that he didn't like, he attempted to destroy the credibility of the system that produced it and to fix the outcome. Memories of 2020 are especially sobering in the light of Friday's developments because of the way Trump's personal embarrassments often lead him to pursue authoritarian outcomes. Often, Trump's critics have proclaimed that authoritarianism is on the march whatever he does. There's an entire political and media industrial complex devoted to the idea that Americans are already living under a dictatorship. There's no comparison to the one-party police state endured by citizens of China. The dynastic tyranny of North Korea has no echoes in the United States, and this country is far short of the psychological torture suffered by the people of Myanmar, who live under a pervasive, repressive state. But Trump's actions are adding to growing evidence that he is engineering a degradation of democratic and pluralistic institutions. Comparisons between the president and populist authoritarian strongmen leaders such as Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán or Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan look increasingly apt. The new controversy over jobs numbers comes at a moment when the second Trump administration is acting almost without restraint. Trump single-handedly remade the global trading system byimposing tariffs, apparently according to his whims, while completely bypassing a genuflecting GOP Congress that has done nothing to defend its constitutional authority to dictate policy in that area. His transformation of the intelligence services into a vessel for his political convenience has led to false claims and probes accusing President Barack Obama's administration of treason over Russian election meddling in 2016. Trump's weaponization of the Justice Department is creating immense suspicion after Ghislaine Maxwell was moved to a more lenient prison after two days of talks with Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche. Trump is struggling to end a political crisis over his ties to her late associate Jeffrey Epstein, an accused sex trafficker and convicted sex offender. And on Sunday, Trump's demands fora rewriting of congressional districts in Texasto make it easier for Republicans to cling onto the House next year precipitated a political crisis that is now having national implications. Trump's second term has often seemed like an attempt to recast the world as he'd prefer it to be. He's pardoned or released criminals convicted in connection with the Capitol riot on January 6, 2021. The Pentagon has removed photos of top brass who contradicted him from its walls. And Trump has repeatedly attacked judges and claimed their actions are illegal as part of a pattern of behavior that CNN's Aaron Blake hasjustifiably called Orwellian. An apparent sense that there's no restraint on his power now seems to be feeding into Trump's foreign policy. Angered by Russia's failure to sign up to his Ukraine peace plan, Trump last week reacted to threats by former Russian president Dmitry Medvedev by saying he'd repositioned US nuclear submarines. Medvedev is now mostly known as an online troll and has only a minor position in Russian politics, so it's hard to understand why Trump was so easily goaded. And Trump's reaction ignored the fact that submarines that prowl the oceans in silence, carrying the second tier of the US nuclear deterrent, are constantly in position to fire off their missiles. But the spectacle of an American president indulging in nuclear saber-rattling, just before this week's 80th anniversary of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima, was chilling. Meanwhile, Trump had a volcanic reaction following a rare show of dissent from Capitol Hill when Democrats, using their minority privileges in the Senate, blocked an attempt to ram through his conservative judicial nominees before the summer recess.Trump on Saturday told Schumerto "GO TO HELL!" after the collapse of a deal to swap some nominee confirmations for the restoration of some government funding cuts. Such an extreme reaction to a rather routine example of congressional gridlock only underscores how Trump has become used to getting his way. And he's determined that no one will stop him. This article has been updated with new details. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Trump’s rewriting of reality on jobs numbers is chilling, but it could backfire

Trump's rewriting of reality on jobs numbers is chilling, but it could backfire When authoritarianism encroaches, apologists often prese...
Trump will 'substantially' raise tariffs on goods from India over Russian oil purchasesNew Foto - Trump will 'substantially' raise tariffs on goods from India over Russian oil purchases

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. President Donald Trump said on Monday he willsubstantially raise tariffs on goods from India over its purchases of Russian oil. "India is not only buying massive amounts of Russian Oil, they are then, for much of the Oil purchased, selling it on the Open Market for big profits. They don't care how many people in Ukraine are being killed by the Russian War Machine," Trump said in a post on Truth Social. "Because of this, I will be substantially raising the Tariff paid by India to the USA." He did not elaborate on what the tariff would be. India's trade ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Trump last week said he would impose a 25% tariff on goods imported from India and added that the world's fifth-largest economy would also face an unspecified penalty but gave no details. Over the weekend, two Indian government sources told Reuters that India will keep purchasing oil from Russia despite Trump's threats. The sources did not wish to be identified due to the sensitivity of the matter. (Reporting by Doina Chiacu in Washington and Kumar Manoj in New Delhi. Writing by Caitlin Webber. Editing by Franklin Paul and Mark Potter)

Trump will 'substantially' raise tariffs on goods from India over Russian oil purchases

Trump will 'substantially' raise tariffs on goods from India over Russian oil purchases WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. President Donald ...

 

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