Ministers' war chat
Investigation shows: This is what happened when Goldberg was added to the ministers' war chat
An internal investigation has now determined what happened when US national security adviser Mike Waltz added journalist Jeffrey Goldberg to a chat group about a military strike in Yemen, The Guardian reports. According to the investigation, it was preceded by a series of mistakes that began during the 2024 election campaign.
Waltz then received an email containing Goldberg's number, in connection with Trump's campaign staff wanting help handling a news event. By mistake, the number was saved under the contact of Donald Trump's then-spokesman Brian Hughes, who in his current role as spokesman for the National Security Council was the one who should have actually been invited to the chat group.
The Guardian has received the information from several sources who also claim that Trump was very close to firing Waltz after the scandal. The reason he ultimately did not do so is said to have been because he did not want it to look like the media had managed to force a top advisor out early in his term.
Greenland's future
Republicans see Trump: The talk about Greenland is embarrassing and harmful
Donald Trump's talk about taking over Greenland is "embarrassing and harmful." That's what Republican congressman Don Bacon said in an interview with the Danish newspaper Berlingske.
- No one in their right mind believes that we will invade Greenland or make Canada the 51st state. Yet (Trump) says it, says Bacon.
He is one of the few Republicans who openly dares to criticize the president, and he understands that it will make him unpopular. But he also says that he is not alone in his criticism, but that his assessment is that half the party agrees with him, even if few dare to say it.
At the same time, he urges Denmark to take Trump's statements calmly.
- I don't know what's going on in his head, but I know that he loves the commotion this is creating in the media, says Bacon.
Votes on tariffs
Treasury Secretary: Who knows how the market will react
US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent describes this week's stock market crash as a "short-term" reaction.
- The market is an organic animal, you never know what the reaction will be, he says in an interview with NBC News.
- Who knows how the market will react in a week, the Treasury Secretary continues.
Scott
Bessent then claims that the market "consistently underestimates Donald
Trump" and Bessent describes the reaction when Trump was first elected
as a "crash".
November 9, 2016, the first trading day after Trump's election, all major US stock market indexes closed in the red.
Prime Minister: "The USA will be the first victim"
French
Prime Minister Francois Bayrou warns that Donald Trump's tariffs are an
"earthquake" and that the USA will be one of the "first victims". He
says this in an interview with the French Le Parisien.
He also
says that the tariffs will hit France's economic growth hard and
increase unemployment. According to Bayrou's assessment, the country's
GDP growth will decrease by 0.5 percentage points.
Among other things, France's exports of wines and luxury consumer goods will be affected by Trump's tariffs.
-
There is an imminent risk to jobs. Trump's decision is extremely
serious for France and even more harmful for the USA, he says.
Trump's Tariffs
Hassett: 50 countries want to negotiate with the US
More than 50 countries have contacted the White House to begin negotiations after Donald Trump's tariff announcement, says Kevin Hassett, who heads the president's National Economic Council.
- They are doing it because they understand that they will have to bear a large part of the cost of the tariffs. So I don't think we will have a big effect on consumers in the US, Hassett tells ABC News.
Donald Trump has been talking about tariffs for 40 years and this tariff policy is what he wants, Hassett says.