Epstein files fallout: Republicans divided as Johnson cancels votes and House committee subpoenas Ghislaine Maxwell - live

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Trump administration must submit more information in the Ghislaine Maxwell case, judge orders

The New York federal court handling the Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell case said it would like to “expeditiously” resolve the Trump administration’s request to unseal grand jury testimony, but it could not do so due to a number of missing submissions.

“The Court cannot rule on the motion without additional submissions,” the federal judge, Paul Engelmayer, wrote.

The justice department did not submit to the court the Jeffrey Epstein-related grand jury transcripts it wants to unseal, the judge said, and requested that the justice department submit the transcripts by next Tuesday under seal, so that the court can decide on the request to unseal them.

The government had also not “adequately” addressed the “factors” that district courts weigh in considering applications for disclosure, including “why disclosure is being sought in the particular case” and “what specific information is being sought for disclosure,” he wrote.

The government must file a memorandum of law no later than 29 July, the judge went on. He also ordered the government to submit under seal: an index of Maxwell grand jury transcript materials, a complete set of the transcripts, and a set with proposed redactions.

Engelmayer ordered Maxwell and the victims to file their positions on the proposed disclosure by 5 August.

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White House faces backlash after barring WSJ from Scotland trip press pool over Epstein story

The White House is facing backlash after banning the Wall Street Journal from the press pool set to cover Donald Trump’s upcoming trip to his golf courses in Scotland.

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said the change was made “due to the Wall Street Journal’s fake and defamatory conduct”, referring to the newspaper’s recent article alleging the US president sent Jeffrey Epstein a 50th birthday letter that included a drawing of a naked woman. The US president promptly sued the paper for $10bn. The WSJ has stood by its reporting.

“This attempt by the White House to punish a media outlet whose coverage it does not like is deeply troubling, and it defies the First Amendment,” said Weijia Jiang, the president of the White House Correspondents’ Association, in a statement to the Guardian. She went on:

Government retaliation against news outlets based on the content of their reporting should concern all who value free speech and an independent media.

We strongly urge the White House to restore the Wall Street Journal to its previous position in the pool and aboard Air Force One for the President’s upcoming trip to Scotland. The WHCA stands ready to work with the administration to find a quick resolution.

Jiang said the administration had yet to clarify whether the ban was temporary, or if it was permanently barring Wall Street Journal reporters from the press pool.

Seth Stern, director of advocacy at the Freedom of the Press Foundation, said in a statement to CNN:

It’s unconstitutional — not to mention thin-skinned and vindictive — for a president to rescind access to punish a news outlet for publishing a story he tried to kill.

But hopefully the Journal reporters who were planning to join Trump for his golf trip are relieved that they can spend their newfound free time investigating more important stories, from Trump’s ties to Jeffrey Epstein to his unprecedented efforts to bully the press.

It marks the second time the Trump administration has punitively barred a publication from the press pool in this way. Earlier this year the White House banned the Associated Press from the Oval Office, Air Force One and other exclusive access after the outlet declined to use Trump’s new moniker for the Gulf of Mexico. A decision for the administration to control the press pool came shortly after.

Trump administration must submit more information in the Ghislaine Maxwell case, judge orders

The New York federal court handling the Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell case said it would like to “expeditiously” resolve the Trump administration’s request to unseal grand jury testimony, but it could not do so due to a number of missing submissions.

“The Court cannot rule on the motion without additional submissions,” the federal judge, Paul Engelmayer, wrote.

The justice department did not submit to the court the Jeffrey Epstein-related grand jury transcripts it wants to unseal, the judge said, and requested that the justice department submit the transcripts by next Tuesday under seal, so that the court can decide on the request to unseal them.

The government had also not “adequately” addressed the “factors” that district courts weigh in considering applications for disclosure, including “why disclosure is being sought in the particular case” and “what specific information is being sought for disclosure,” he wrote.

The government must file a memorandum of law no later than 29 July, the judge went on. He also ordered the government to submit under seal: an index of Maxwell grand jury transcript materials, a complete set of the transcripts, and a set with proposed redactions.

Engelmayer ordered Maxwell and the victims to file their positions on the proposed disclosure by 5 August.

Donald Trump meeting with the Filipino president Ferdinand Marcos Jr in the Oval Office.
Donald Trump meeting with the Filipino president Ferdinand Marcos Jr in the Oval Office. Photograph: Yuri Gripas/EPA

Trump once again pushed the false claim that the Biden administration and “his group of thugs” allowed 21 million immigrants into the US, following a question about the customs officer who was shot in New York over the weekend. Trump, without proof, said that many immigrants under the Biden administration came from “jails, gangs, drug dealers, mental institutions.”

Trump said that the Biden administration allowed the millions of immigrants into the US for two reasons: for electoral advantage and also because “they hate our country.”

Philippine president Ferdinand Marcos Jr said that the US is assisting the country in building up its defense system.

“This is an ongoing process and, again, I will stress the point because we feel it is necessary,” Marcos said.

Trump said that, during his first administration, the US went into the Philippines and helped “wipe out terrorists.”

Trump said that former president Barack Obama led a “gang”, including Joe Biden, Hillary Clinton, FBI director James Comey, James Clapper and John Brennan, that orchestrated false allegations of Trump and Russia colluding.

This follows a release of documents by director of national intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, alleging that the Obama administration led the groundwork to accuse Trump of colluding with Russia.

Trump again echoed theories that Democrats, including former president Barack Obama, tried to “rig the election” from 2016 “up to” 2020. He claimed there should be “very severe consequences”.

Trump lashes out at Powell again

Trump called Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell a “numbskull” during a meeting at the White House, saying he was refusing to cut interest rates “probably for political reasons”. Trump said that Powell did not cut interest rates enough.

“I think he’s done a bad job. But he’s going to be out pretty soon anyway, in eight months he’ll be out,” Trump said.

Philippine president Ferdinand Marcos Jr said that he was “very happy” to be meeting with Trump to “reaffirm the very strong ties between the Philippines and the United States.”

The United States is the Philippines’ only treaty partner, Marcos Jr said, emphasizing that the “strongest, closest” ally to the Philippines is the US.

Trump: 'very close' to finishing trade deal with Philippines

Trump said on Tuesday that the US and the Philippines are “very close” to finishing a trade deal.

“We do a lot of business with you,” Trump told the Philippines president Ferdinand Marcos Jr. “I was surprised to see the kind of numbers – they’re very big and they’re going to get bigger under what we’re doing and what we’re proposing.”

Trump said during a White House meeting that Philippine president Ferdinand Marcos Jr. comes from a “great family” with a “great family legacy.”

Marcos Jr’s father, Ferdinand Marcos, was a right-wing dictator in the Philippines, having ruled under martial law for a period during his two-decade presidency. His rule, violently targeting political dissidents, led to extreme poverty for much of the Philippine population. Marcos was overthrown in 1986.

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