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Republicans Propose Paring Medicaid Coverage but Steer Clear of Deeper Cuts

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House Republicans released a plan late on Sunday that would cause millions of poor Americans to lose Medicaid health coverage and millions more to pay higher fees when they go to the doctor, but that stopped short of an overhaul that would make the deepest cuts to the program.

The proposal, which is one piece of a sweeping bill to enact President Trump’s domestic agenda, including large tax cuts and increased military spending, omits the structural changes to Medicaid that ultraconservative Republicans have demanded. Instead, it bows to the wishes of a group of more moderate and politically vulnerable G.O.P. lawmakers whose seats could be at risk if they embraced deep Medicaid cuts.

It was published late Sunday night by the House Energy and Commerce Committee, which under the G.O.P. budget blueprint had to find $880 billion in savings over a decade. The panel is scheduled to meet on Tuesday afternoon to debate and refine the package.

Republicans have toiled to assemble a number of cuts large enough to meet that goal, which fiscal hawks have insisted upon, while appeasing lawmakers from districts where Medicaid enrollment is widespread.

Overall, the legislation would reduce federal spending by an estimated $912 billion over the decade and cause 8.6 million people to become uninsured, according to a partial analysis from the Congressional Budget Office that was circulated by Democrats on the committee. Most of those cuts —$715 billion — would come from changes to Medicaid and the Affordable Care Act.

The legislation’s remaining savings would come largely from changes in energy policy, including the repeal of two Biden-era regulations that affect car pollution and auto efficiency.

But the Medicaid portion was the most divisive and is likely to continue to be the most hotly debated as the proposal — which must be approved by the committee this week and then pass the House and Senate — makes its way through Congress.

The legislation released on Sunday tries to split the difference between Republicans agitating for deep cuts to Medicaid and those eager to protect their states from changes that could force them to shoulder much higher costs. It excludes several policies under consideration that would create large holes in state budgets and instead focuses on policies that cause Medicaid beneficiaries to pay more fees and complete more paperwork to use their coverage.

It also adds a work requirement to Medicaid for poor, childless adults, mandating that they prove they are working 80 hours every month to stay enrolled. That is a less flexible version of a work requirement briefly imposed in Arkansas in 2018 that caused 18,000 people to rapidly lose coverage.

Even some Republicans in the Senate who have been vocal about their opposition to cutting Medicaid benefits, including Senators Susan Collins of Maine and Josh Hawley of Missouri, have said they are open to adding some work requirements to the program. Mr. Trump, who has been adamant that he did not want to do anything that could be characterized as a Medicaid cut, has also endorsed the policy.

But the legislation also ratchets up paperwork requirements across the program, by allowing states to check the income and residency of beneficiaries more often, and by permitting them to terminate coverage for people who do not respond promptly. The use of such strategies had been curtailed under a regulation published during the Biden administration.

An analysis of the paperwork change published by the Congressional Budget Office last week suggested that it would cause 2.3 million people to lose Medicaid coverage, many poor older and disabled people who are also enrolled in Medicare but use Medicaid to cover co-payments they cannot afford. Because this population is at special risk, the budget office found, the policy would cause only 600,000 more Americans to lose any form of health insurance, but it would cause many more to have trouble paying for medical care.

The bill would also require Medicaid beneficiaries who earn more than the federal poverty limit — around $15,650 for a single person — to pay higher co-payments for doctor visits. Typically, Medicaid requires very limited cost sharing from its beneficiaries, given their low incomes. The legislation would require co-payments of $35 for many medical services.

Democrats in Congress immediately assailed the package as an attack on health coverage for vulnerable populations.

“In no uncertain terms, millions of Americans will lose their health care coverage, hospitals will close, seniors will not be able to access the care they need, and premiums will rise for millions of people if this bill passes,” Representative Frank Pallone of New Jersey, the top Democrat on the Energy and Commerce Committee, said in a statement.

The provision most likely to affect state budgets is a change to longstanding rules that allow states to impose taxes on hospitals, nursing homes and other providers and to use various accounting maneuvers to use the taxes to obtain more federal funding. The bill would freeze all state taxes at their current rates, and prevent states from using special related payments to pay hospitals higher prices for Medicaid services than Medicare pays.

The bill also takes direct aim at a handful of states controlled by Democrats that fund health coverage for undocumented immigrants, who are barred under the law from enrolling in Medicaid. The legislation would reduce federal funding for all childless adults without disabilities to 80 percent from 90 percent if the state subsidized coverage for such people. The change would mean significant funding cuts to states including California, New York and Washington unless they eliminated their state programs that enroll undocumented people.

The legislation includes numerous other small changes to Medicaid, including one to prevent owners of expensive homes from obtaining nursing home coverage, another barring coverage of gender-affirming care for transgender minors and several provisions meant to purge the program’s rolls of ineligible immigrants and people who have died.

One provision is aimed squarely at reducing federal money for Planned Parenthood. The bill would prevent Medicaid from funding health providers that also offer abortion services. House Republicans inserted similar language into their unsuccessful legislation to repeal the Affordable Care Act — commonly known as Obamacare — in 2017.

The bill would also make numerous changes to enrollment processes for people who buy their own insurance coverage in Obamacare marketplaces. The legislation would shorten enrollment periods, tighten income verification, restrict access for immigrants in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program and make it harder for some people to automatically renew coverage at the end of the year.

On energy, scrapping the Biden-era environmental rules is projected to increase federal revenues because drivers of less-efficient cars pay more in gas taxes. It would also rescind unspent money in a number of environmental programs that were created as part of the Inflation Reduction Act and that made it easier to construct new energy pipelines, a change that generates fees to the government.



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Pope Leo Is Celebrated in the Peruvian City Where He Served as Bishop

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The ceremony to honor Pope Leo XIV in the Peruvian city where he served as bishop for roughly eight years began on Saturday night with a procession of altar boys and priests. It ended long past dark with dancers in devil costumes swirling on the steps of his former church.

In between, there was a Mass, communion, many hymns, a student band, a chorus, fireworks, a musical performance by one of the priests — cheered like a rock star in a white robe — and chant after chant about the “papa Chiclayano,” the pope from Chiclayo.

Chiclayo, in northern Peru, is the country’s fifth-largest city and was the pope’s home from 2014 to 2023. Here he is known for traveling the region’s mountains and coast for long hours by car, and occasionally on horseback, and for his forceful sermons in fluent Spanish.

To celebrate him, hundreds of people filled the lush plaza in front of the city’s towering, yellowing cathedral. There were nuns in white habits and church groups in matching vests. Flanking the cathedral doors were two giant banners with pictures of a smiling Pope Leo.

The swirling dancers — performing the “dance of the little devils of Túcume,” a nearby region — were the capstone event. Fireworks shot out of a headdress worn by the principal devil, who fought an angel. Several who were present called the dance a representation of the battle between good and evil.

In the religious segment of the event, tambourines rattled as the new bishop of Chiclayo, Edinson Farfán, took to the microphone.

He recalled the pope as “a shepherd who smelled of the sheep” — a phrase used repeatedly in Chiclayo in recent days to refer to Pope Leo as a man who was close to his congregation.

“Leo XIV has taught us to live the Gospel through closeness to the poor, to the most vulnerable, to those who suffer, the migrants, the refugees,” said Bishop Farfán. “He is a man deeply sensitive to social justice.”

Chiclayo has rarely, if ever, had such a celebrity connection, and in recent days it has glittered with excitement. New street signs have gone up: “Welcome to Chiclayo, the city of Pope Leo XIV.” Restaurants are offering Pope specials. (“Happy Mother’s Day!” read the board outside the Trebol, a restaurant next to the cathedral. “Today: Chiclayan goat, the favorite of Pope Leo XIV. WELCOME!!!”)

And by the weekend, the regional tourism board had organized a pope tour for the news media, featuring places that figured prominently in the former bishop’s time in Chiclayo.

Chiclayo was religious before the pope arrived in 2014, and it still is. There are eight separate masses in the main cathedral on Sundays, and hundreds of people attend each one, said Father Jorge Millán, a priest in Chiclayo who is close to the pope. What the pope did was encourage people to take their faith beyond the church and participate in social work, he said.

During the ceremony on Saturday, Bishop Farfán said that the pope, as bishop, had “accompanied the Holy Father Leo XIV on his pilgrimage so that he may now accompany and guide the universal church. From Chiclayo, from Latin America — the continent of hope — to the rest of the world!”

The crowd burst into a cheer: “Papa! Amigo! Chiclayo está contigo!” (“Pope! Friend! Chiclayo stands with you!”)



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Virat Kohli: India batter announces retirement from Test cricket days after captain Rohit Sharma | Cricket News

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India batter Virat Kohli announced his retirement from Test cricket, bringing down the curtain on a sparkling career in the longest format just days after captain Rohit Sharma did the same.

The 36-year-old’s decision comes the week after Rohit Sharma, who succeeded Kohli as skipper, also retired from the red-ball format and a month before India start a five-match Test series in England.

“It’s been 14 years since I first wore the baggy blue in Test cricket. Honestly, I never imagined the journey this format would take me on. It’s tested me, shaped me, and taught me lessons I’ll carry for life,” Kohli said on Instagram.

“There’s something deeply personal about playing in whites. The quiet grind, the long days, the small moments that no one sees but that stay with you forever.

“As I step away from this format, it’s not easy – but it feels right. I’ve given it everything I had, and it’s given me back so much more than I could’ve hoped for.

“I’m walking away with a heart full of gratitude – for the game, for the people I shared the field with, and for every single person who made me feel seen along the way.

“I’ll always look back at my Test career with a smile.”

Virat Kohli's Test batting stats
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Virat Kohli’s Test batting stats

Kohli scored 9,230 runs in 123 Tests to stand fourth in India’s all-time list of Test run-scorers.

He had already told the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) that he wished to retire from Test cricket ahead of this summer’s series in England.

It is understood the 36-year-old told chief selector Ajit Agarkar in April of his desire to step away before the start of the 2025-2027 World Test Championship cycle in June.

Virat Kohli’s India Test stats

  • Matches: 123
  • Runs: 9230
  • Hundreds: 30
  • Fifites: 31
  • Average: 46.85
  • Highest score 254no (vs South Africa, 2019)

England vs India Test schedule

All games at 11am UK and Ireland; all live on Sky Sports

  • First Test: Friday June 20-Tuesday June 24 – Headingley
  • Second Test: Wednesday July 2-Sunday July 6 – Edgbaston
  • Third Test: Thursday July 10-Monday July 14 – Lord’s
  • Fourth Test: Wednesday July 23-Sunday July 27 – Emirates Old Trafford
  • Fifth Test: Thursday July 31-Monday August 4 – The Kia Oval



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U.S. and China Hail Progress, but Does That Mean There’s a Trade Deal?

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Deal or no deal? That’s what financial markets and businesses are waiting to learn.

A weekend of productive trade talks in Geneva between the United States and China resulted in a “deal,” said Jamieson Greer, the United States Trade Representative and one of the main negotiators for the Trump administration. His Chinese counterpart expressed optimism, but with a less emphatic take.

He Lifeng, China’s vice premier for economic policy, who led the talks for the Chinese, said the discussions had been constructive and that an “important consensus” had been reached. Without providing details, he said the two sides had agreed to establish a “consultation mechanism,” but he seemed to stop short of declaring a done deal.

That difference in initial framing over what two days of negotiations had achieved underlined the sensitivities around trade between the world’s two largest economies.

During a news briefing in Switzerland on Sunday, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said the talks had resulted in “substantial progress.” Mr. Greer said the two countries had reached an “agreement” quickly and that “perhaps the differences were not so large as maybe thought.”

Shortly thereafter, the White House issued a statement, entitled “U.S. Announces China Trade Deal in Geneva,” that offered no new details. When asked about the White House’s statement, Chinese officials said the outcome of the meetings would be reflected in a joint statement on Monday by the two countries. They did not elaborate but said it would be good news for the world.

In Asia, financial markets were mostly higher, as was trading in S&P 500 futures that indicate how stocks could respond in the morning in New York.

In a research note on Monday, Nomura Securities said that while the apparent progress on trade talks had helped to lift market sentiment, it had also raised the risk of disappointment if tariffs are not significantly reduced.

The negotiations were the first significant attempt to ease the tensions that flared this year after President Trump imposed heavy tariffs on Chinese imports. Mr. Trump imposed a minimum tariff of 145 percent on Chinese imports, and China countered with an import duty on American products of 125 percent. The tariffs have brought trade between the two countries to a halt and served as a drag on the global economy.

In the weeks before the meetings in Geneva, the two sides also differed on whether they were talking. The White House repeatedly said it was speaking with Chinese officials, while Beijing denied that such talks were taking place.

Beijing had adopted a tough stance since Mr. Trump imposed his punitive tariffs. Last month, Mao Ning, a senior Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman, posted on X a video of a speech that Mao Zedong made during the Korean War — known in China as the War to Resist U.S. Aggression and Aid Korea — in which he declared, “No matter how long this war is going to last, we’ll never yield.”

China has carefully framed its involvement in the Geneva negotiations not as a concession to Mr. Trump’s tariffs, but as a necessary step to avoid further escalation. China was acting on behalf of the global economy by defending the “shared interests of the wider international community,” according to a commentary in the state-run China Daily on Saturday.

The commentary also said that American businesses and consumers had appealed to China to engage in sustained dialogue.

Chinese factories are feeling the sting of the trade slowdown. Orders for export to the United States are already slumping, and many American importers are pausing shipments in the hopes that Beijing and Washington can reach an agreement resulting in lower tariffs.

In China, news of progress in the trade discussions was not prominently featured by government-controlled media on Monday. On the website of the state-run Xinhua News Agency, the story about the talks was below headlines about a state visit to Russia by Xi Jinping, China’s top leader, and Beijing’s efforts to strengthen communication and coordination with Latin American countries in the face of America’s tariff campaign.

Mr. Trump has vacillated between talking tough on China and seemingly extending an olive branch by suggesting that he would be open to lowering the tariffs to 80 percent. He hailed the talks as a breakthrough.

“A very good meeting today with China, in Switzerland,” Mr. Trump wrote on Truth Social on Saturday night. “Many things discussed, much agreed to. A total reset negotiated in a friendly, but constructive, manner.”

Christopher Buckley contributed reporting from Taipei, Taiwan.



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Can More Military Spending Revive an Economy? This British Town Hopes So.

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On a wet Wednesday morning in April, Ashley Holroyd had a steady but slow stream of customers into his coffee shop in Barrow-in-Furness, an industrial town in northwest England. The cafe, Coffee D’Ash, had been open for only about six months, and it barely filled the cavernous space.

Despite the empty storefronts on the same street, Mr. Holroyd is certain he has a prime location. BAE Systems, Britain’s largest defense company, is planning to open a training facility for hundreds of workers right next door.

Mr. Holroyd, 33, jumped at the chance to expand his coffee business from a trailer into a brick-and-mortar store after he heard about BAE’s plans to move into the town center — crucially, without a cafeteria for the employees.

“If I don’t, someone else will,” he said. “It was a bigger risk not to do it.”

BAE is the major employer in Barrow, where it makes nuclear submarines for the Royal Navy in a shipyard at the edge of town. Like many other defense companies, BAE is in the midst of a rapid expansion because of an increase in military spending in Britain.

Governments throughout Europe are pledging to spend more on defense. They are re-evaluating their military capabilities and reliance on American defense after they became concerned about President Trump’s commitment to supporting Ukraine in its war against Russia.

The British government is increasing military spending to 2.5 percent of the country’s gross domestic product by 2027, and to 3 percent by the end of the decade. This year, the Treasury will spend an extra 2.2 billion pounds ($2.9 billion). But officials want to ensure that the money feeds through to create domestic jobs and generate local prosperity.

The prime minister, Keir Starmer, wants Barrow to be the blueprint for this strategy. Over the next decade, the town will receive £200 million in government funding. For many residents, the money has the potential to be transformative.

BAE, which is flush with orders for a new class of ballistic missile submarines that can launch nuclear weapons and others that strike land targets, is teaming up with the local and national governments to rejuvenate Barrow.

It’s not an altruistic move. A government report in 2023 found that without intervention, the town would not be able to support the expected growth at BAE and other economic opportunities. Something needed to be done to stop a decline in the working-age population, fix infrastructure problems, and attract and retain workers.

Delivering submarines and safeguarding Britain’s nuclear defenses “is not possible without intervening and improving Barrow as a place,” said Phil Drane, the program director of Team Barrow, the public-private partnership.

This model could work around Britain, said Arnab Bhattacharjee, an economist at the National Institute of Economic and Social Research, a think tank in London. The government’s ambitions for higher military spending should reach the poorer parts of the country and not be concentrated in the wealthy areas of London and the southeast, he said, adding that “this has the potential of generating positive effects on the local community.”

But for the money to rejuvenate struggling towns, it must do more than increase household consumption, he said. “What it will require is business coming in.”

Barrow has long played a central role in Britain’s military capabilities, building vessels for the Royal Navy since the 1870s. Today, BAE Systems, which owns the shipyard, employs about 14,500 people there. For many locals, a well-paid job at BAE is the most traditional and highly sought-after career path.

And yet the town suffers in many ways. It scores lower than national averages on health and educational outcomes. Over the past few years, the town center has come to represent decline because of its many boarded-up retailers. Coffee D’Ash’s new home is in a former Topshop, once a popular clothing store, which had sat empty for more than four years.

BAE’s training facility, which will simulate some of the work the company does, including design and engineering as well as office tasks, will move into a former Debenhams, a department store chain that closed in 2021 after more than 240 years of business. In Barrow, the closure of Debenhams and a Marks & Spencer department store seemed to sap the life out of the town center, setting off a domino effect that led to more shops closing.

The facility will not open until the end of next year at the earliest, but some business owners say it is already encouraging more businesses to open nearby.

“It’s a catalyst for more confidence,” said Jenny Fazackerley, who owns a nearby fabrics and sewing supplies store.

A gift shop opened a year and a half ago near the old Debenhams, spurred by the news of BAE’s plans. More stores have followed, including a dessert restaurant coming next month. Independent stores are starting to “reclaim the high street” away from the chains that used to cover the country, Ms. Fazackerley said, but “it’s not going to happen overnight.”

One of the major hurdles facing Team Barrow is how to make the town an enticing place to live as BAE grows.

Barrow is a short drive away from untouched beaches and the mountains and lakes of Britain’s Lake District, a national park. But because it is at the bottom of a peninsula, with only one way in and out, it gets no passing tourist traffic.

And it is also not as picturesque as the towns nearby that have stone walls and cobbled streets, such as Ulverston. It was planned by a Victorian industrialist as it expanded rapidly in the second half of the 19th century, making it less attractive as a place to live to the BAE employees who move to the area.

The contracts for new submarines will keep the Barrow shipyard busy for years to come. BAE is expecting to increase its staff in Barrow by about 20 percent, or 2,500 people, over the next decade or so.

Although the town center is among the top priorities, Mr. Drane said the public investment was also focused on improving health care and educational offerings, to help ensure it attracted families and to develop a homegrown skilled work force. This fall, a university campus is opening in the town on land donated by BAE and financed using money from a previous government grant.

“We’re being ambitious with the level of change that we could be looking at,” he said.

For some, the pace of change has been too sluggish. The £200 million was first promised by the previous government over a year ago. The town had also received other pots of funding in previous years.

“We are the home of defense — what are they doing to secure that future?” said Jenna Strickland, who works in a local hotel. It feels like the money leaves the town on a Friday afternoon when the yard closes, she added, because there are not enough new businesses open or entertainment for young people.

Mr. Drane emphasizes that the government investment is a 10-year commitment, but he also knows the town is impatient for change. Despite long-term plans for housing, education and health care, many residents and business owners call for smaller, more urgent interventions to improve the town center, such as cheaper parking and lower taxes on commercial real estate.

Jackie Maguire, who runs the Hive, a restaurant in town, wants more businesses to open up nearby. People don’t know where to go after they leave the restaurant, she said. For now, she’s planning to open a cocktail bar downstairs where there is currently a home décor and gift shop.

“There’s lots going on in the town, but we’re in the very the early stages,” Ms. Maguire said. “I’m hopeful.”



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Crystal Palace chasing Chelsea-linked Strasbourg striker Emanuel Emegha if Jean-Philippe Mateta is sold – Paper Talk | Football News

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The top stories and transfer rumours from Monday’s newspapers…

THE SUN

Crystal Palace are chasing Chelsea-linked Strasbourg striker Emanuel Emegha – in case Jean-Philippe Mateta is sold.

Isaac Sinclair, son of former England winger Trevor Sinclair, is set to sign for Accrington Stanley.

DAILY MAIL

Casemiro is set for a hefty pay rise if Manchester United win the Europa League this month, according to a report.

Manchester United's Casemiro reacts at halftime during the English League Cup soccer match between Manchester United and Barnsley at Old Trafford, Manchester, England, Tuesday, Sept. 17, 2024. (AP Photo/Dave Thompson)

Manchester United fans vented against Sir Jim Ratcliffe and Ineos at Old Trafford on Sunday after a season of brutal ticket price hikes and controversy.

Paul Scholes believes Tottenham Hotspur will be considered the favourites going into the Europa League final, but still expects Manchester United to come out on top.

Emma Raducanu has revealed that she keeps being banned from the Italian Open grounds because she has repeatedly lost her accreditation.

DAILY MIRROR

Mikel Arteta has promised a major summer spending spree after admitting Arsenal’s squad was “super short” this season.

Arne Slot said the home fans were” allowed to have their opinion” after Trent Alexander-Arnold copped boos from sections of the Liverpool crowd.

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Arne Slot gives his reaction as he saw his side squander a 2-0 lead against Arsenal, as well as Trent Alexander-Arnold receiving a mixed reception upon his return to Anfield since announcing his departure.

Sir Jim Ratcliffe’s plans to sell Nice have suffered a blow after the French side missed out on automatic qualification for the league phase of the Champions League.

Hamburg’s promotion celebrations saw 25 people taken to hospital with one suffering life-threatening injuries. A 6-1 win over Ulm confirmed the side’s return to the Bundesliga and resulted in a pitch invasion that saw the Volksparkstadion swarmed by supporters.

DAILY EXPRESS

Real Madrid have reportedly considered a move for Arsenal’s David Raya this summer as part of their major rebuild.

Mikel Arteta was furious with the first-half performance of his Arsenal players in Sunday’s 2-2 draw at Anfield.

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Speaking on Sky Sports’ Super Sunday, Micah Richards and Jamie Carragher gave their reaction to Mikel Arteta’s emotional post-match interview after Arsenal’s 2-2 draw against Liverpool.

DAILY TELEGRAPH

An “embarrassed” Ruben Amorim has claimed he will not survive at Manchester United next season unless there is a rapid uplift in results.

DAILY STAR

Ruben Amorim’s reaction to Leny Yoro’s injury speaks volumes, according to fans, as Manchester United slip and slide down the Premier League table.

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FREE TO WATCH: Highlights from West Ham’s win against Manchester United in the Premier League.

The Premier League’s Match Centre account has explained the decision to send off Chelsea striker Nicolas Jackson.

SUNDAY RECORD

Hearts could land Derek McInnes as their new boss swiftly by meeting a minimum compensation clause.

Derek McInnes during a William Hill Premiership match between St Johnstone and Kilmarnock at McDiarmid Park, on May 03, 2025, in Perth, Scotland. (Photo by Mark Scates / SNS Group)

David Strelec would score a “minimum” of 20 goals if he signs for Celtic, according to former Hoops player Lubo Moravcik.

SCOTTISH SUN

Barry Ferguson has revealed he loves Nico Raskin’s fiery temperament because it reminds him of himself.



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Trump Plan Would Tie Some Drug Prices to What Peer Nations Pay

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President Trump will sign an executive order on Monday aimed at lowering some drug prices in the United States by aligning them with what other wealthy countries pay, he said on Truth Social on Sunday evening.

The proposal he described, which alone cannot shift federal policy, is what he calls a “most favored nation” pricing model. Mr. Trump did not provide details about which type of insurance the plan would apply to or how many drugs it would target, but he indicated that the United States should pay the lowest price among its peer countries.

“Our Country will finally be treated fairly, and our citizens Healthcare Costs will be reduced by numbers never even thought of before,” he wrote in his social media post.

Any such plan will most likely be subject to challenges in court, and it is not clear whether it will pass legal muster, especially without action by Congress.

In his first term, Mr. Trump tried unsuccessfully to enact a version of this idea for Medicare, the health insurance program that covers 68 million Americans who are over 65 or have disabilities. That plan would have applied only to 50 drugs, administered at clinics and hospitals, that are paid for by Medicare. A federal court blocked it, ruling that the administration had skipped steps in the policymaking process.

The pharmaceutical industry bitterly opposes the idea, which would almost certainly cut into its profits, and has been lobbying against it as discussions of the policy have regained steam in Washington in recent weeks. Companies have warned that such a policy would lead them to spend less on research, depriving patients of new medicines.

“Government price setting in any form is bad for American patients,” Alex Schriver, an official at the drug industry’s main lobbying group, PhRMA, said in a statement. He added, “Policymakers should focus on fixing the flaws in the U.S. system, not importing failed policies from abroad.”

Mr. Trump’s embrace of the idea sets him apart from most Republicans, who have tended to be skeptical of government price setting. Democratic lawmakers have proposed versions of the idea.

Ameet Sarpatwari, an expert in pharmaceutical policy at Harvard Medical School, said that Mr. Trump was tapping into an idea that had “populist appeal.”

Mr. Trump has long complained that the United States pays much more than other wealthy countries do for the same drugs. And he is right. In the United States, prices for brand-name drugs are three times as high, on average, as those in peer nations.

That is in spite of the fact that much of the research that leads to new drugs takes place in American laboratories and hospitals.

Drugmakers generate a substantial majority of their worldwide profits from sales in the United States and typically design their business strategy around the U.S. market.

Pharmaceutical companies argue that the higher prices in the United States come with an added benefit: Industry-funded analyses have found that patients in the United States get medicines faster, and with fewer insurance restrictions, than those in other countries.



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Asia Stocks Rise on Hope for Lower Tariffs After U.S.-China Talks

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Stocks in Asia gained on Monday after weekend talks signaled that progress had been made in easing trade tensions between the United States and China.

Benchmark indexes in Japan and South Korea edged higher in early trading on Monday morning. Futures pointed to the S&P 500 gaining more than 1 percent when trading begins in New York.

Meetings in Geneva between U.S. and Chinese officials concluded on Sunday with Scott Bessent, the U.S. Treasury secretary, saying that “substantial progress” had been made. China’s vice premier, He Lifeng, called the talks “candid, in-depth and constructive.” Details are expected to be released on Monday, both sides said.

The meetings were the first between Washington and Beijing since President Trump ratcheted up tariffs on Chinese imports to 145 percent and China retaliated with its own taxes of 125 percent on U.S. goods. The tariffs are so high as to effectively block much of the trade between the two countries.

The escalating trade war has left financial markets uneasy, and the meeting raised investors’ hopes that tariffs could eventually be lowered.

Analysts at the financial services firm Wedbush Securities said the talks were a “positive step in the right direction.” They anticipated that an initial agreement, once unveiled during the U.S. day on Monday, would “at a minimum” involve a “much lower level” for tariffs.

Economists have warned that the tit-for-tat trade barriers have significantly increased the possibility of an economic downturn. That includes in Asia, where some of the biggest economies, including Japan and South Korea, are heavily reliant on both China and the United States as trade partners.

The World Trade Organization has forecast that the continuing division of the global economy into “rival blocs” could cut global gross domestic product by nearly 7 percent over the long run. Earlier this month, Japanese officials slashed their growth forecast for this year by more than half.

Last week, China reported that its exports to the United States in April dropped 21 percent from a year earlier. Recession warnings are beginning to emerge in the United States.

Heading into the weekend, investors had relatively low expectations for a breakthrough at the talks that would result in a meaningful reduction in tariffs. Many analysts expected the discussions to revolve around determining what each side wanted and how negotiations could move forward.

Recently, Mr. Trump has opened the door to lower tariffs. Last week, he suggested that tariffs could come down to 80 percent. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick told Fox News that so-called reciprocal tariffs on trade with China may settle near 34 percent.



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Trump Is Poised to Accept a Luxury 747 From Qatar for Use as Air Force One

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The Trump administration plans to accept a luxury Boeing 747-8 plane as a donation from the Qatari royal family that will be upgraded to serve as Air Force One, which would make it one of the biggest foreign gifts ever received by the U.S. government, several American officials with knowledge of the matter said.

The plane would then be donated to President Trump’s presidential library when he leaves office, two senior officials said. Such a gift raises the possibility that Mr. Trump would have use of the plane even after his presidency ends.

Mr. Trump confirmed the fact that he anticipates receiving the plane in a post on social media on Sunday evening, after a day of controversy in which even some Republicans privately questioned the wisdom of the plan. Mr. Trump suggested that Democrats were “losers” for questioning the ethics of the move.

“So the fact that the Defense Department is getting a GIFT, FREE OF CHARGE, of a 747 aircraft to replace the 40 year old Air Force One, temporarily, in a very public and transparent transaction, so bothers the Crooked Democrats that they insist we pay, TOP DOLLAR, for the plane,” Mr. Trump wrote. “Anybody can do that! The Dems are World Class Losers!!!”

While a Qatari official described the proposal as still under discussion and the White House said that gifts it accepted would be done in full compliance with the law, Democratic lawmakers and good government groups expressed outrage over the substantial ethical issues the plan presented. They cited the intersection of Mr. Trump’s official duties with his business interests in the Middle East, the immense value of the lavishly appointed plane and the assumption that Mr. Trump would have use of it after leaving office. Sold new, a commercial Boeing 747-8 costs in the range of $400 million.

“Even in a presidency defined by grift, this move is shocking,” said Robert Weissman, a co-president of Public Citizen, a consumer advocacy organization. “It makes clear that U.S. foreign policy under Donald Trump is up for sale.”

Mr. Trump’s own private plane, known as “Trump Force One,” is an older 757 jet that first flew in the early 1990s and was then used by the Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen. Mr. Trump bought it in 2011. The Qatari jet, if Mr. Trump continued flying it after leaving office, would give him a substantially newer plane for his own use.

ABC News reported Sunday morning that the gift of the plane was to be announced in the coming days as Mr. Trump made the first extended foreign trip of his presidency to three nations in the Middle East, including Qatar. The plan would fulfill the president’s desire for a new Air Force One after repeated delays involving a government contract to Boeing for two new jets to serve that purpose.

In a statement, the White House press secretary, Karoline Leavitt, said: “Any gift given by a foreign government is always accepted in full compliance with all applicable laws. President Trump’s administration is committed to full transparency.”

An agreement for the government to accept the luxury aircraft and ultimately pass it along to Mr. Trump’s library would be the clearest example yet of how he has further intertwined his personal and presidential business in his second term. While Mr. Trump faced criticism during his first term for the way his properties collected money from the government, the last four months have included a flurry of deals around a cryptocurrency firm that has erased centuries-old presidential norms.

While two senior U.S. officials said the plane would be accepted as a gift for use by the government, Ali Al-Ansari, a spokesman for the Qatari government, said that reports of the plane being offered “during the upcoming visit of President Trump are inaccurate.”

He added, “The possible transfer of an aircraft for temporary use as Air Force One is currently under consideration between Qatar’s Ministry of Defense and the U.S. Department of Defense, but the matter remains under review by the respective legal departments, and no decision has been made.”

A White House official echoed that the plane would not be presented or accepted this week. The Justice Department and the Defense Department did not comment.

Mr. Trump toured the Qatari-owned 747, which is just over a decade old, while it was parked at Palm Beach International Airport in February. The New York Times reported then that the jet was being considered as a possible new Air Force One.

One senior U.S. government official said that the Defense Department had determined it could accept the plane. Two people familiar with the language of an analysis conducted by the office of the White House counsel, David Warrington, and the attorney general, Pam Bondi, whose past work as a lobbyist included Qatar as a client, said they had determined it would fall within the law for Mr. Trump’s library to receive the plane. The two people spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss plans that have yet to be publicly announced.

The plane that would be donated by Qatar is expected to be retrofitted by a military contractor called L3Harris, in Texas, and that work can begin once the government approves how the plane is being acquired, one of the senior officials said. Assuming the transfer of the plane goes forward, it is expected to be finished being equipped with military capabilities by the end of the year, the official added, allowing Mr. Trump to use it while in office.

The status of the expected contract with L3Harris was not immediately clear.

A Defense Department official said on Sunday that the Air Force has not yet reached any agreement on a contract to refurbish the Qatari 747 to make the security upgrades and modifications necessary for an AF1, and the Air Force could not legally do so until it actually took ownership of the plane.

Assuming that happens, the official said, it would still take an extended period of time to complete the contract and, more important, to make the actual modifications to match a full Air Force One upgrade.

“We’re talking years, not months,” the Defense Department official said, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive details about a future Air Force One.

Others with knowledge of the project have suggested that the Qatari plane could be a more modified version of an Air Force One, and therefore could be built out faster.

Since shortly after his election, Mr. Trump has been frustrated with the budget overruns and delays with the two new Air Force One planes that Boeing is on contract to deliver to the federal government. The two current Air Force Ones are more than 30 years old and need frequent servicing, sometimes taking months.

Mr. Trump renegotiated the contract for the planes in his first term, and has wanted to fly on them while in office now.

Throughout the White House, officials have repeatedly complained about the Boeing delays.

Mr. Trump asked Elon Musk, the billionaire chief executive of SpaceX, to find ways to accelerate the planes’ delivery. Mr. Musk had insisted that one of the planes could be delivered in a year’s time.

One option that company officials and Mr. Musk had discussed was lowering security clearance requirements for those working on parts of the plane that do not relate to the most secure parts of an Air Force One jet. It is unclear where those talks led.

Some involved in developing a plane that could survive the fallout of a nuclear attack as well as avoid some missile attacks have said that Mr. Musk’s projected time frame is unrealistic.

But the Trump administration considered acquiring a Qatari-owned plane as a potential alternative to waiting for the two other Boeing jets, and a possible motivator for the company to move faster.

The model that the government is using for addressing the ethical issues raised by the donation, one of the officials said, is the one followed by President Ronald Reagan’s presidential library when it received the Air Force One he had flown on after it was retired from use. But at the time, Mr. Reagan did not use the plane to fly around. It was set up in the museum portion of his library.

Another person with knowledge of the effort to acquire the plane said that the Qataris had initially discussed donating it immediately to the Trump library, and Mr. Trump would then use it while in office. But government lawyers said that would violate the emoluments clause of the Constitution, the person said, which prohibits federal officials from accepting financial benefits from foreign governments without congressional approval.

The plan, if it goes through, is almost certain to revive those concerns. In 2021, the Supreme Court declined to adjudicate similar questions. That January, it vacated lower court rulings in cases accusing Mr. Trump of violating the clause in his first term, as he was no longer in office.

A spokesman for the government watchdog group Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, which sued him over what it described as violations of the emoluments clause during his first term, said the president’s acceptance of the plane would raise a range of ethical issues far beyond whether it violated the Constitution, in part because he may continue using it after leaving office.

“It’s hard to see it as a coincidence when Trump’s company just announced a new golf resort in Qatar, reportedly partnered with a company owned by the country’s government, and will soon be meeting with senior Qatari officials in a Middle East trip that also features meetings with heads of state of two other countries he has property developments in,” the spokesman, Jordan Libowitz, said in a statement.

“At this point, it’s impossible to tell the difference between decisions being made by the White House for the good of the country and for the good of the Trump Organization,” he added.

The reported deal also drew fierce criticism from Democrats.

Senator Adam B. Schiff of California, who as a House member led the first impeachment case against Mr. Trump, assailed the plan. “The corruption is brazen,” Mr. Schiff wrote on social media.

Representative Jamie Raskin of Maryland criticized the gift on social media, saying the president must first seek Congress’s consent.

“The Constitution is perfectly clear: no present ‘of any kind whatever’ from a foreign state without Congressional permission,” he wrote.

Erica L. Green and Michael Gold contributed reporting from Washington.



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Heartbreak for Lowry as dramatic finale sees Straka take title

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Sepp Straka claimed the Truist Championship after a dramatic finale, where Shane Lowry made a costly error on the final hole to end any victory hopes.



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