Tag Archives: Donald Trump

Report: Joe Biden Didn’t Recognize Longtime Friend George Clooney at Fundraiser Four Months Before Election

Former President Joe Biden reportedly failed to recognize his longtime friend George Clooney at a fundraiser for his reelection campaign last year.

Biden did not recognize Clooney at a June 2024 fundraiser for his presidential campaign, according to an excerpt from the upcoming book, “Original Sin: President Biden’s Decline, Its Cover-Up, and His Disastrous Choice to Run Again” by CNN’s Jake Tapper and Axios’ Alex Thompson, posted in The New Yorker.

Importantly, while Tapper is now revealing behind the scene tidbits, it is worth noting that the CNN host was also an active participant in the massive coverup regarding Biden’s cognitive decline.

As Breitbart News’ John Nolte pointed out earlier this year, Tapper’s “Orwellian desire” to “play firefighter” via his new book after he himself “was one of the chief arsonists who kept the blaze of this conspiracy alive” is “not in the least surprising.”

“What is sad,” Nolte added, is that the CNN host’s co-author, Alex Thompson, was “one of the only — if not the only — corporate media reporter who was willing to actively point to Biden’s decline before the infamous June of 2024 presidential debate.”

Why Thompson is letting Tapper crouch behind his shield of credibility remains unclear — but nonetheless, the book’s excerpt noted that Clooney had known Biden for decades by the time his reelection campaign began.

After last seeing Biden on December 4, 2022, the Ides of March star reportedly attended a June 15, 2024 fundraiser spearheaded by Hollywood mogul Jeffrey Katzenberg at the Peacock Theatre in Los Angeles.

Clooney and fellow actor Julia Roberts were schmoozing potential donors and posing for photos when attendees began to murmur. The Michael Clayton star then turned to see Biden “hobbl[ing] out from around the corner,” Tapper and Thompson’s book revealed.

The actor knew that Biden “had just arrived from the G-7 leaders’ summit in Apulia, Italy, that morning and might be tired, but, holy shit, he wasn’t expecting this,” the excerpt read.

“The president appeared severely diminished, as if he’d aged a decade since Clooney last saw him,” the journalists’ forthcoming book continued, noting that Biden “was taking tiny steps, and an aide seemed to be guiding him by the arm.”

An unnamed Hollywood VIP was quoted in the excerpt saying, “It was like watching someone who was not alive,” adding, “It was startling. And we all looked at each other. It was so awful.”

Biden reportedly approached Clooney and said, “Thank you for being here” twice. An aide then informed the president, “You know George,” to which Biden replied, “Yeah, yeah,” and then said to the actor “Thank you for being here” for a third time.

“Hi, Mr. President,” Clooney said, to which Biden responded, “How are ya?”

“How was your trip?” the Up in the Air star asked, to which the 46th president simply answered, “It was fine.”

It seemed clear that Biden failed to recognized Clooney, an old friend of his, Tapper and Thompson wrote in their book.

“It was not okay,” the Hollywood insider who witnessed the moment said in the excerpt published Tuesday in The New Yorker.

“That thing, the moment where you recognize someone you know — especially a famous person who’s doing a fucking fundraiser for you — it was delayed. It was uncomfortable,” the Hollywood VIP recalled.

After that, the aide reportedly clarified to Biden that he was standing in front of “George Clooney,” to which the president replied, “Oh, yeah! Hi, George!”

“Clooney was shaken to his core,” the excerpt read, adding, “The President hadn’t recognized him, a man he had known for years.”

As Breitbart News reported, weeks after that fundraiser, Clooney published an op-ed in the New York Times saying he no longer believed Biden could win in the then-upcoming November presidential election, and called on Democrats to find a replacement candidate.

Alana Mastrangelo is a reporter for Breitbart News. You can follow her on Facebook and X at @ARmastrangelo, and on Instagram.



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Schumer says he’ll place holds on Trump’s DOJ nominees over Qatar jet offer

Washington — Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer announced Tuesday that he intends to place holds on President Trump’s political nominees to the Justice Department in response to a Qatari-offered jet for the president’s use, while calling on Attorney General Pam Bondi to testify before Congress.

“In light of the deeply troubling news of a possible Qatari-funded Air Force One, and the reports that the attorney general personally signed off on this clearly unethical deal, I am announcing a hold on all DOJ political nominees until we get more answers,” Schumer said in remarks on the Senate floor Tuesday morning. 

Mr. Trump is making his first international trip of his second term this week, where he arrived in Saudi Arabia Tuesday before visiting Qatar and the United Arab Emirates in the coming days. Meanwhile, an unprecedented offer by the royal family of Qatar to donate a jumbo jet for Mr. Trump’s exclusive use as a presidential plane has sent shockwaves through the political sphere back home.

Schumer, a New York Democrat, called the possible gift “so corrupt” that Russian President Vladimir Putin “would give a double take,” while calling it a “grave national security threat.” 

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer speaks at a press conference with other members of Senate Democratic leadership following a policy luncheon at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, DC May 6, 2025.

Nathan Posner/Anadolu via Getty Images


The minority leader outlined a number of requests of the Justice Department, calling on its Foreign Agent Registration Act unit to disclose all activities by Qatari foreign agents inside the U.S. that could benefit Mr. Trump or his family’s organization, while urging that the American people “deserve to know the facts.”

Schumer asked who would install security measures on the jet, how the measures would be verified, what modifications would be needed to ensure its safety, along with who would pay for the installations and how much would they cost. He also asked what Qatar is being offered in return, while calling on the attorney general to testify before the House and Senate to explain why the gift does not violate any ethics law or the emoluments clause, which prohibits government officials from accepting compensation from a foreign state without the approval of Congress.

“Until the attorney general explains her blatantly inept decision, and we get answers to these questions, I will place a hold on all political nominees to the Department of Justice,” Schumer said. 

The practical impact of the holds remains unclear. The holds would be expected to slow the nominations by requiring Senate Republicans to take each procedural vote rather than moving forward with the nominees under an expedited timeframe. And Justice Department nominees aren’t voted on en bloc like military promotions, further delaying the process. 

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Monday that the Qatari government had “graciously offered to donate a plane to the Department of Defense,” while noting that the details were still being worked out. And the president defended accepting the gift of the plane Monday, saying “I could be a stupid person and say, oh no, we don’t want a free plane.” He added that it would “go directly” to his presidential library when he leaves office. 

But Democrats have vehemently denounced the offer, while a number of Republicans have called the ethics and national security implications of the potential gift into question. 

Senate Majority Leader John Thune, who was asked whether Mr. Trump should reject the Qatari jet, told reporters Tuesday that he didn’t know whether there had been an official offer yet. But he added that he thinks there are “lots of issues associated with that offer,” which he said should be further discussed.

contributed to this report.

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Doctors Discover ‘Small Nodule’ in Biden’s Prostate During Physical Exam

Doctors discovered a “small nodule” in former President Joe Biden’s prostate during a recent physical, which required more examination, according to several reports.

A spokesperson confirmed to ABC News that “In a routine physical exam a small nodule was found in the prostate which necessitated further evaluation.”

Per the outlet:

A “small nodule” can mean a wide range of things and will require further testing to understand the underlying cause. It is too early to say if it is a benign lump caused by inflammation or something more serious.

A spokesman also confirmed to the New York Times that Biden had “spent last Friday at a hospital in Philadelphia” after doctors made the discovery during the physical exam.

Breitbart News reported in February 2023, that former White House physician Kevin O’Connor declared Biden “fit for duty,” while adding that “one small lesion” had been found on Biden’s chest:

“One small lesion on the president’s chest was excised today and sent for traditional biopsy,” O’Connor said, according to Reuters.

The summary also said that the president does not appear to be experiencing symptoms associated with “long COVID” and that his stiff gait has not worsened since his November 2021 exam.

The reports of a small nodule being discovered on Biden’s prostate comes as CNN’s Jake Tapper and Axios reporter Alex Thompson have written in their upcoming book, Original Sin, that Biden’s “physical deterioration was so severe in 2023 and 2024” that there were reportedly discussions about the possibility of Biden needing to use a wheelchair, Axios reported.

“The discussions reflected the extent of the president’s declining health — particularly the significant degeneration of his spine — and his aides’ alarm over it as Biden sought a second term at age 81,” the outlet added.

In April, after taking a cognitive test during his physical examination, President Donald Trump took a jab at Biden, claiming he “got every answer right.” Trump’s jab came after the White House in February 2024, revealed that Biden had not received a cognitive test during his physical examination.



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Trump says he will lift Syria sanctions:

President Trump said Tuesday he will move to normalize relations and lift sanctions on Syria’s new government to give the country “a chance at peace.”

Mr. Trump was set to meet Wednesday in Saudi Arabia with Syrian President Ahmad al-Sharaa, the onetime insurgent who last year led the overthrow of former leader Bashar Assad. He said the effort at rapprochement came at the urging of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the Saudi de facto ruler, and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

“There is a new government that will hopefully succeed,” Mr. Trump said of Syria, adding, “I say good luck, Syria. Show us something special.”

The developments were a major boost for the Syrian president who at one point was imprisoned in Iraq for his role in the insurgency following the 2003 U.S.-led invasion of the Arab country. Al-Sharaa was named president of Syria in January, a month after a stunning offensive by insurgent groups led by al-Sharaa’s Hayat Tahrir al-Sham or HTS that stormed Damascus ending the 54-year rule of the Assad family.

The U.S. has been weighing how to handle al-Sharaa since he took power in December. Gulf leaders, have rallied behind the new government in Damascus and will want Mr. Trump to follow, believing it is a bulwark against Iran’s return to influence in Syria, where it had helped prop up Assad’s government during a decade-long civil war.

Then-President Joe Biden left the decision to Mr. Trump, whose administration has yet to formally recognize the new Syrian government. Sanctions imposed on Damascus under Assad also remain in place.

“The President agreed to say hello to the Syrian President while in Saudi Arabia tomorrow,” the White House said before Mr. Trump’s remarks.

The comments marked a striking change in tone from Mr. Trump and put him at odds with longtime U.S. ally Israel, which has been deeply skeptical of Al-Sharaa’s extremist past and cautioned against swift recognition of the new government.

Formerly known by the nom de guerre Abu Mohammed al-Golani, al-Sharaa joined the ranks of al Qaeda insurgents battling U.S. forces in Iraq after the U.S.-led invasion in 2003 and still faces a warrant for his arrest on terrorism charges in Iraq.

Al-Sharaa, whom the U.S. once offered $10 million for information about his whereabouts because of his links to al-Qaida, came back to his home country after the conflict began in 2011 where he led al-Qaida’s branch that used to be known as the Nusra Front. He later changed the name of his group to Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) and cut links with al-Qaida.

Al-Sharaa is set to become the first Syrian leader to meet an American president since the late Hafez Assad met Bill Clinton in Geneva in 2000.

Mr. Trump was in Saudi Arabia on Tuesday for the first stop of his four-day trip to the Middle East. The trip is Mr. Trump’s first of his second term and later this week, he will travel to Qatar and the United Arab Emirates.

The president delivered remarks at a U.S.-Saudi investment summit in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia’s capital, as the White House announced a $600 billion investment from Saudi Arabia, including what it touted as the “largest defense sales agreement in history.”

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Rand Paul: Trump Should Reject Qatar Jet, ‘It’s a Mistake’

Senator Rand Paul (R-KY) said Monday on Fox News Channel’s “Jesse Watters Primetime” that President Donald Trump should not accept a $400 million jet from Qatar.

Watters said, “Qatar just made Trump an offer he can’t refuse. A $400 million Air Force One replacement because Boeing didn’t deliver their jet on time. Trump can ride it until his term is up. Democrats are calling this a bribe, but Pam Bondi says it’s legal as long as he transfers the jet to his library and eventually switches back to Trump Force One. He says only a stupid person would not take the deal.”

Paul said, “The Constitution in Article II talks about the president can’t take emoluments or gifts from foreign leaders. And so, there is a provision in the Constitution that says you can’t do this. And so, the question is, can you do it only if it’s only for official purposes?”

He continued, “I think it’s not worth the appearance of impropriety, whether it’s improper or not, it’s not worth it.”

Watters said, “So, if Qatar does give it to him and he says, Hey, Rand, you wanna hop on the jet down to Palm Beach, you’ll say, no?”

Paul said, “No. I think it’s a mistake, and it’s just bringing up something he doesn’t need.”

Follow Pam Key on X @pamkeyNEN



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Ukraine says Russia attacking with drones despite ceasefire calls; Zelenskyy challenges Putin to meet in Turkey

Kyiv, Ukraine — Russia launched more than 100 Shahed and decoy drones at Ukraine in nighttime attacks, the Ukrainian air force said Monday, after the Kremlin rejected an unconditional 30-day ceasefire in the war it sparked more than three years ago. There was no response from the Kremlin, meanwhile, to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s challenge for President Vladimir Putin to meet with him for face-to-face peace talks in Turkey this week.

The United States and European governments have made a concerted push to stop the fighting, which has killed tens of thousands of soldiers on both sides as well as more than 10,000 Ukrainian civilians. Russia’s invading forces have seized control of around one-fifth of Ukraine.

In a flurry of diplomatic developments over the weekend, Russia shunned the ceasefire proposal tabled by the U.S. and European leaders but offered instead to hold direct talks with Ukraine on Thursday. The Kremlin has not said whether Putin himself is willing to travel to Turkey to engage in those talks.

Ukraine, along with European allies, had demanded Russia accept a ceasefire starting Monday before holding peace talks. Moscow effectively rejected that proposal and instead called for direct negotiations in Istanbul.

President Trump insisted that Ukraine accept the Russian offer. Zelenskyy went a step further and put the pressure on Putin by offering a personal meeting between the leaders.

“Ukraine wants to end this war and is doing everything for this,” Zelenskyy said on Telegram Monday. “We expect appropriate steps from Russia.”

Zelenskyy has first conversation with Pope Leo

The Ukrainian leader said he told Pope Leo XIV about peace efforts during his first phone conversation with the new pontiff.

Ukraine is counting on the Vatican’s help in securing the return of thousands of children that the Kyiv government says have been deported by Russia, Zelenskyy said, adding that he had invited the pope to visit Ukraine.

“Ukraine counts on the Vatican’s assistance in bringing them home to their families,” Zelenskyy said of the children in a post on X. “I informed the Pope about the agreement between Ukraine and our partners that, starting today, a full and unconditional ceasefire for at least 30 days must begin. I also reaffirmed Ukraine’s readiness for further negotiations in any format, including direct talks — a position we have repeatedly emphasized. Ukraine wants to end this war and is doing everything to achieve that. We now await similar steps from Russia.”

In his first Sunday noon blessing as pontiff, Leo called for a genuine and just peace in Ukraine.

“I carry in my heart the sufferings of the beloved Ukrainian people,” said the first U.S.-born leader of the Roman Catholic Church.

In 2022, in the war’s early months, Zelenskyy repeatedly called for a personal meeting with the Russian president but was rebuffed, and eventually enacted a decree declaring that holding negotiations with Putin had become impossible.

Putin and Zelenskyy have only met once, in 2019. Mr. Trump says “deep hatred” between the sides has made it difficult to push peace efforts forward.

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Did Trump cave to China in tariff deal?



Did Trump cave to China in tariff deal? – CBS News










































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For the past 6 weeks, President Trump’s trade war caused havoc in markets and seriously disrupted global supply chains. That turmoil has died down — for now. But what’s most surprising is that China made very few concessions for the U.S. to drop its tariffs by more than 100%. Anna Coren and Kelly O’Grady report.

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Trump’s Tariffs Will Make It More Expensive To Drink Alcohol — Here’s How

These days, the subject of Donald Trump’s tariffs finds its way into just about any conversation about politics, the economy and life in general. These additional taxes on most items brought into the United States from other countries have caused a consumer panic, and those feelings of anxiety and uneasiness extend to the bar and restaurant business.

Bar owners, beverage directors and spirits distributors must now grapple with what these tariffs mean for their business costs and their bottom lines.

Raj Bhakta, founder of Bhakta Spirits and WhistlePig Whiskey, is actually a supporter of Trump’s tariffs, and he thinks these policies may be worth the risk: “We find ourselves in a moment of potential short-term pain for guaranteed long-term gain. This passing economic pinch will be a small price to pay for the American prosperity to come. I say all of this as a business owner willing to take the short-term hit now, personally, for the greater long-term good.”

But the vast majority of beverage industry folks we interviewed don’t have high hopes for these tariffs reaping any long-term benefits for their own businesses, or for the American public at large.

“We learned the lesson 100 years ago about tariffs, and it is deeply frustrating to revisit a topic that has been resoundingly denounced,” said Kristin Evans, general manager of Red Tail Ridge Winery in Penn Yan, New York. Evans allows that “tariffs can be a part of an effective economic policy, but tariffs in and of themselves are not economic policy. They’re just one piece of the puzzle.”

So what exactly will these tariffs do to the beverage industry, to foreign and domestic producers, and to your bar tab? Read on to find out.

Trump’s tariffs will unquestionably raise the prices of foreign wines, spirits and beers.

Because the tariffs directly apply to products from other countries, it’s no surprise that they will cause higher retail and bar prices for imported wines, beers and spirits. In 2022, 14% of all agricultural imports in the U.S. were from wine, spirits and beer, and 17% of the wine consumed in the U.S. comes from the European Union. The National Beer Wholesalers Association says that 21% of beer sold in the U.S. in 2023 was imported.

“The tariffs will make every sip more expensive. If importers have to pay more, then they will charge more,” said Kyle Davidson, wine and beverage director at Rose Mary and il Carciofo in Chicago.

The fast rate of the tariff implementations has wreaked immediate havoc on businesses that rely on imports, causing them to reevaluate their needs and make some drastic changes. “One of our best friends in the industry, someone that has given us great wines at great prices for years, had to tell two ships that were in the water to turn around. If they had landed while the tariff was at the proposed percentage, it would have put him out of business,” Davidson explained.

Restaurants and bars that focus their concepts on international cuisines may find it difficult or impossible to pivot their beverage menu to domestic wines. Georgia Harrison, the logistics manager at Zev Rovine Selections, a natural wine importer and distributor based in Brooklyn, put it this way: “The [restaurant] industry relies on beverage sales to keep things afloat.” These tariffs could put your favorite Italian, Spanish and Greek restaurants at serious risk of closure.

Seventeen percent of the wine consumed in the U.S. comes from the European Union.

Also, the higher prices on imports may hamper bartender creativity when it comes to designing new cocktails. Tariffs on imported spirits don’t just raise prices — they restrict access to the global ingredients that define modern American cocktail culture. For example, if the Oaxacan mezcal we use becomes significantly more expensive or harder to source, that doesn’t just affect bar costs — it limits creative expression for bartenders and founders like myself who rely on those flavors to innovate,” said Robert Haynes, cofounder of Hoste Cocktails and Apologue Liqueurs.

The tariffs will cause higher prices for necessary supplies like glass bottles, corks and paper labels.

It’s easy to assume that, if prices go up on imported wines, spirits and beers, domestic producers will benefit from higher demand. But even if a wine, beer or spirit is made in the United States, many of the materials required for production, bottling and packaging come in from overseas. “Increased tariffs on imported grains, hops and aluminum will drive up production costs for breweries, forcing them to raise beer prices, reduce profit margins or compromise on ingredient and packaging quality, ultimately affecting consumer affordability and the variety of craft beer available,” said Courtney White, owner of Intermission Beer Company in Richmond, Virginia.

For wineries, “packing materials, bottles, corks, oak barrels and bottling equipment are often imported for domestic wine production,” said Ted Rink, beverage director at BLVD Steakhouse in Chicago.

Louis Kernans, director of operations at JW Marriott Dallas Arts District, added that “bottles, corks and cartons can account for nearly a third of a small winery’s budget, so tariffs on imported glass or natural cork squeeze margins and make distributors more cautious with niche domestic labels.”

The foreign tariffs will put a major strain on wine and spirits distributors.

Speaking of distributors, it’s important to recognize the role that these third-party groups play in the beverage industry and how tariffs on foreign products will fundamentally change the way that they do business. “In the United States, you have to use a third-party distribution company to get your product out into the marketplace. That’s how it’s set up,” Evans said.

While it’s not generally required for wineries and distilleries to sell their products to restaurants and shops through a distributor, the three-tiered system (producer, distributor and retailer) that Evans described accounts for the vast majority of alcohol that you see on the market nowadays. Distributors make it easy for restaurants and bars to identify and acquire wines and spirits that fit their concept and price point, and they also help smaller producers raise their sales and visibility.

But, as Evans explained to us, “most distributors do not just focus on American wine [and spirits]. They have a book that contains wines from America, wines from South America, wines from Australia, wines from Europe and so on.” If a distributor has to deal with foreign tariffs “on three-quarters of the products that they’re selling, they’re going to truncate the product lines they’re representing, and they’re only going to go with the products that are guaranteed best-sellers.” So instead of pushing wines and spirits made by artisanal producers making specialty bottles with great care and precision, distributors will put more energy and effort into promoting “big wineries like Mondavi and E&J Gallo.”

Tariffs will make it more expensive for distributors to get foreign wines and spirits into the U.S., but that doesn’t just mean that they’ll increase retail prices for those particular bottles. “[Distributors] can raise the prices of the items that they’re getting tariffed on, but if [those] account for three-quarters of your products, then the easier route for the business would be to raise the prices across the entire spectrum of products that you provide,” Evans said. Dividing the increases among all of their items (both foreign and domestic) will allow the distributors to offer lower price rises on each individual wine/spirit, but you’ll be paying more all the same.

Harrison explained that wine and spirit prices have already been experiencing an upswing: “Between rising costs from wineries and shipping costs driving sharply upward, we have been seeing retail costs climb steadily since 2020. No import company can absorb the additional 10% tariff — they will pass it along to their retail customers, who will pass it on to the consumer.” Harrison also told us that these pricing changes will impact a certain segment of the market in particular: “Drinkers who stay within the $25-and-under range that are going to find their selections get smaller and potentially lower in quality, especially in the under-$20 zone. Wine already has a reputation for having a high barrier to entry, and I think we are going to see retail sales decline as people get priced out of their go-to bottles.”

But what if you want to cut out the middleman, buy craft booze directly from a distiller, brewer or winemaker, and have it delivered to your house or to your restaurant? Théron Regnier, distiller and CEO at The Obscure in Los Angeles, pointed out that this idea isn’t nearly as simple as it sounds. “Interstate shipping is still restricted for craft distillers,” with rules varying wildly from state to state, so “consumer choices are about to become scarce or expensive unless we see regulatory changes.”

The unpredictability and inconsistency of Trump’s tariff policy makes it impossible to plan ahead.

Trump’s tariffs themselves have caused substantial anxiety throughout the beverage industry because of higher prices and reduced availability … but arguably the most frightening thing about these tariffs is their unpredictability. One day they’re on, the next they’re delayed, there are exceptions, there are exceptions to the exceptions — all of this volatility makes it nearly impossible for businesses of any kind (including hospitality businesses) to properly plan ahead.

As we have all seen, tariffs have been forewarned, implemented and then retracted,” said Kisong Mun, sommelier at The Dearborn in Chicago. Mun added that it may take some time for the impact of tariffs to fully register with consumers, “I think consumers might have a month or two before we start seeing big increases in pricing as inventory dwindles and the need to replace [it] becomes more pressing.”

Even under the best of circumstances, overseas wine and spirits orders must be placed well in advance. “If you’re an importer and you’re placing an order to Europe for wine, it has to get through the customs process on the port-of-exit side and it has to cross the ocean. So that’s a month, two months? And oftentimes with wine, you’re placing your orders a year in advance, especially when you’re talking about fine wine like Bordeaux and Burgundy,” Evans said.

And the big question, according to Harrison, is “What will happen at the end of the 90-day pause and negotiation period in July? Will the ‘reciprocal’ tariffs come back? Will the universal tariffs go away? We are walking a tightrope between over-ordering in case of higher future tariffs and under-ordering to not spend thousands of additional dollars in customs fees and storage.”

Harrison’s prediction for the worst-case scenario? “On the distribution side, smaller importers are not going to be able to afford to stay in business, and we will see fewer producers brought to the U.S. On the restaurant and retail side, businesses are going to struggle to stay open as their customer base struggles to afford the day-to-day necessities and can’t go out to dinner or buy a bottle of wine on the way home from work. Either way, we are looking at businesses closing, jobs lost and access to wine and spirits” — both from other countries and from independent producers in the U.S. — ”hindered severely either by lack of market presence or price.”

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Raskin: Trump Can’t Accept Jet Without Consent from Congress

On Monday’s broadcast of CNN’s “OutFront,” Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-MD) said Congress had to approve the $400 million jet from Qatar’s royal family before President Donald Trump could receive it.

Host Erin Burnett said, “So President Trump says this luxury jet from the Qatar royal family, the reported price tag, as I said, about $400 million, is a, quote, gift free of charge. And they’re they’re pushing ahead. No pushback from the attorney general, who, of course, had formerly been paid up, reportedly $115,000 a month to lobby for the country of Qatar. So are there any strings attached to this?”

Raskin said, “Well, undoubtedly there are. But it doesn’t make any difference because the Constitution forbids the president from accepting any present, emolument, office or title of any kind whatever. The Constitution says, from a king, prince, or foreign state, without the consent of Congress. So he’s got to come to Congress first.”

He added, “You’ve got to go to Congress in order to accept a gift from a foreign government, which is what this is. Obviously, there’s all kinds of national security complications because it’s a government giving us this airplane and there’s all kinds of foreign policy implications. So Congress has got to debate it.”

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