President Donald Trump’s administration proposed revoking a scientific finding that has long been the central basis for U.S. action to regulate greenhouse gas emissions and fight climate change.
Also Tuesday, Senate Democrats were imploring Trump 's administration to intervene as Palestinians suffer and starve in Israeli-controlled Gaza, with more than 40 senators signing on to a letter urging the resumption of ceasefire talks and sharply criticizing an Israeli-backed American organization created to distribute food aid.
Trump played more golf in Scotland on what the White House has called a working trip including meetings with world leaders.
Here's the latest:
Sen. Cory Booker in angry outburst says ‘complicit’ Democrats need a ‘wake-up call’
In a rare public outburst on the floor Tuesday, the senator from New Jersey took his Democratic colleagues to task, declaring his party “needs a wake-up call!”
Angrily screaming at two of his shocked Democratic colleagues, Booker blocked the passage of several bipartisan bills that would fund police programs, arguing that the Trump administration has been withholding law enforcement money from Democratic-leaning states.
“This is the problem with Democrats in America right now,” Booker bellowed. “Is we’re willing to be complicit with Donald Trump!”
The surprise Senate spat over bills that have broad bipartisan support — mental health resources and other help for police officers — strikes at the heart of the beleaguered Democratic party’s dilemma in the second Trump era: Do they cooperate where they can, or do they fight everything and shut down governance in the process?
▶ Read more about Booker and Democrats
Cargo surge amid tariff turmoil drives the Port of Savannah to its second-busiest year
Retailers rushing to stock up before expected tariffs has boosted activity at the port. The Georgia Ports Authority reported Tuesday that the port moved 5.7 million container units in the 2025 fiscal year, an 8.6% increase over the previous year.
The surge is partly due to the president’s promises to enact heavy tariffs on U.S. trading partners. However June saw a drop in container volumes amid ongoing uncertainty.
Other major U.S. ports also saw gains. The Port of Los Angeles reported its busiest June ever, while the Port of New York and New Jersey saw a 6.5% increase in container volumes from January through May.
▶ Read more about port activity and tariff uncertainty
Senate confirms Trump lawyer Emil Bove, pushing past whistleblower claims
The Senate confirmed Bove 50-49 for a lifetime appointment as a federal appeals court judge Tuesday as Republicans dismissed whistleblower complaints about his conduct at the Justice Department.
A former federal prosecutor in the Southern District of New York, Bove was on Trump’s legal team during his New York hush money trial and defended Trump in the two federal criminal cases. He will serve on the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which hears cases from Delaware, New Jersey and Pennsylvania.
Democrats vehemently opposed Bove’s nomination, citing his current position as a top Justice Department official and his role in the dismissal of the corruption case against New York City Mayor Eric Adams.
They also criticized his efforts to investigate department officials who were involved in the prosecutions of hundreds of Trump supporters who were involved in the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol.
Trump gave the USOPC cover on its transgender athlete policy change. It could end up in court anyway
In its push to remove transgender athletes from Olympic sports, the administration provided the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee a detailed legal brief on how such a move would not conflict with the Ted Stevens Act, the landmark 1978 federal statute governing the Olympic movement.
That gave the USOPC the cover it needed to quietly change its policy, though the protection offers no guarantee the new policy won’t be challenged in court.
Olympic legal expert Jill Pilgrim called the Trump guidance “a well thought-out, well-reasoned set of arguments for people who want to look at it from that perspective.”
“But I’d be pretty shocked if this doesn’t get challenged if there is, somewhere along the line, a trans athlete who’s in contention for an Olympic team or world championship and gets excluded,” said Pilgrim, who has experience litigating eligibility rules for the Olympics and is a former general counsel for USA Track and Field.
▶ Read more about the USOPC and the administration
States sue Trump administration over Planned Parenthood funding cuts
The lawsuit filed Tuesday by more than 20 mostly Democratic-led states targets the administration’s efforts to cut Medicaid payments to the nation’s largest abortion provider.
The move comes in response to the package of tax breaks and spending cuts Trump signed this month. Part of the cuts focus on services such as cancer screenings and tests, birth control and treatment for sexually transmitted infections by ending Medicaid reimbursements for a year for major providers of family planning services.
The cuts apply to groups that received more than $800,000 from Medicaid in 2023.
Plaintiffs in the lawsuit say the provision’s language is unclear about which groups it applies to and it unconstitutionally retaliates against Planned Parenthood for advocating for abortion access.
The Department of Health and Human Services, which is named as a defendant, defended the provision.
“States should not be forced to fund organizations that have chosen political advocacy over patient care,” spokesperson Andrew G. Nixon said via email.
As US grapples with China relations, Taiwan’s president scraps stopover on American soil
The Taiwanese government has called off the proposed stopover by President Lai Ching-te on his way to Latin America, The Associated Press has learned, a decision leading to conflicting accounts of the reason for the cancellation.
The cancellation is certain to hand a major diplomatic victory to Beijing and has drawn concerns from experts that the White House is setting a bad precedent for U.S.-China relations.
▶ Read more about the cancelation
P&G to increase prices in part due to tariffs as shoppers remain cautious and delay purchases
Consumer products giant Procter & Gamble offered an annual earnings outlook that was below analysts’ projections and said it would raise prices on about a quarter of its products in the U.S. in part due to higher costs from the president’s tariffs.
The assessment delivered Tuesday came a day after the Cincinnati-based maker of such products as Crest toothpaste, Tide detergent and Charmin toilet paper named current COO Shailesh Jejurikar as its next president and CEO.
The price increases, implemented starting next month, will be in the mid-single-digit percentages and will also be combined with improved features, CFO Andre Schulten told reporters on a call.
P&G said in April that it was doing whatever it could to reduce higher costs from tariffs, from shifting sourcing to changing formulation to avoid duties. Schulten said then that the company still would likely have to pass on higher costs to consumers as early as July.
P&G estimates that tariffs will increase its costs by about $1 billion before tax for fiscal 2026.
UCLA reaches $6 million settlement with 3 Jewish students and professor over campus protests
The plaintiffs in the lawsuit argued that the university violated their civil rights by allowing pro-Palestinian protesters to block their access to classes and other areas on campus in 2024.
The settlement comes nearly a year after a preliminary injunction was issued, marking the first time a U.S. judge ruled against a university over the handling of campus demonstrations against Israel and the war in Gaza.
UCLA argued that it had no legal responsibility because protesters, not it, blocked Jewish students’ access. The university also worked with law enforcement to thwart attempts to set up new protest camps.
But U.S. District Judge Mark Scarsi disagreed and ordered UCLA to create a plan to protect Jewish students on campus. The University of California, one of the nation’s largest public university systems, has since created systemwide campus guidelines on protests.
The Trump administration joined the lawsuit in March as it opened new investigations into allegations of antisemitism at multiple campuses.
Los Angeles County seeks ordinance preventing law enforcement agents from concealing their identities
The Board of Supervisors voted 4-0 Tuesday to direct county counsel to draft an ordinance barring officers, including federal agents, from wearing masks, with limited exceptions such as for medical protection or during undercover operations. Officers would also be required to visibly display identification and agency affiliation while out in public.
It is a response to recent immigration raids in which some federal agents refused to identify themselves or covered their faces.
Supervisor Janice Hahn, who co-authored the motion, said the raids under the Trump administration have sparked fear and residents have a right to know who is stopping, questioning or detaining them.
Hahn conceded that it is unclear if the county will be able to enforce the law when it comes to actions by ICE and other federal agencies.
Administration officials have defended the use of masks, saying immigration agents have faced harassment as they have gone about enforcement. They say agents are hiding their identities for their safety to avoid things like death threats and having their personal information made public.
Mike Waltz’s path to becoming ambassador to UN eases with support from key GOP senators
Sens. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Thom Tillis of North Carolina told reporters Tuesday that they plan to vote in favor of confirming Waltz.
His nomination cleared the Senate Foreign Relations Committee this month, and his path to final confirmation now appears smoother with the support of two Republicans who previously opposed some of the president’s nominations.
Waltz was ousted as Trump’s national security adviser in May after he mistakenly added a journalist to a private Signal chat used to discuss sensitive military plans.
Trump lashes out at Senate tradition on judicial nominees, urges Grassley to end it
The president said he wants to end what he called the “‘Blue Slip’ SCAM” under which home-state senators weigh in on judicial and U.S. attorney nominations, something that carries significant weight for whether they proceed.
Trump said on his Truth Social platform that Democratic senators are using the tradition of stating their opinions of potential nominees to stop him from getting the federal judiciary he wants.
He criticized the Senate Judiciary chairman, Republican Sen. Charles Grassley of Iowa, for preserving the practice.
Trump said as a result of the “custom” only Democrats or “a weak and ineffective Republican” can get nominated. He called on Grassley to have the “Courage” to end it.
Senate confirms Susan Monarez as CDC director under Trump administration
Monarez, 50, was named acting director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in January and then tapped as the nominee in March after the president abruptly withdrew his first choice, David Weldon.
The Atlanta-based federal agency, which is tasked with tracking diseases and responding to health threats, has been hit by widespread staff cuts, key resignations and heated controversy over longstanding CDC vaccine policies upended by Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
With Tuesday’s vote, Monarez becomes the first CDC director to pass through Senate confirmation following a 2023 law.
Wife of Marine Corps veteran released from ICE custody
Mexican national Paola Clouatre was released following advocacy from Sen. John Kennedy, a Louisiana Republican who backs the president’s hard-line immigration crackdown.
Clouatre is one of tens of thousands of people who have been detained as the Trump administration presses immigration officers to arrest 3,000 people a day suspected of being in the U.S. illegally.
Emails reviewed by AP show that Kennedy’s office said Friday that it put in a request for the Department of Homeland Security to release her after a judge halted her deportation order earlier that week. By Monday she was out of a remote ICE detention center in north Louisiana and home in Baton Rouge with husband Adrian Clouatre and their two young children.
Kennedy’s constituent services representative congratulated Adrian Clouatre on his wife’s release and thanked him for his military service.
DHS did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Previously it has said it considered Clouatre to be in the country illegally.
Civil rights agency sued over handling of transgender worker discrimination complaints under Trump
Legal groups sued the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission on Tuesday, claiming it is unlawfully refusing to enforce federal workplace protections for transgender workers.
Led by Acting Chair Andrea Lucas, a Republican, the agency charged with enforcing laws against workplace discrimination has moved swiftly to comply with the president’s executive order declaring two unchangeable sexes. The EEOC has dropped several lawsuits on behalf of transgender workers, stalled progress on some cases and subjected others to heightened scrutiny.
The lawsuit also says the agency halted payments to state and local civil rights agencies for investigating gender identity discrimination claims.
“The Trump-Vance administration’s unlawful effort to erase protections for transgender people is cruel, and a violation of the law and the Constitution,” said Skye Perryman, president and CEO of Democracy Forward, which alongside the National Women’s Law Center brought the case on behalf of Maryland LGBTQ+ advocacy group FreeState Justice.
The EEOC referred questions to the Department of Justice, which did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
New whistleblower emerges against Trump lawyer ahead of confirmation vote
The Senate is set to vote as soon as Tuesday evening to confirm former Trump lawyer Emil Bove for a lifetime appointment as a federal appeals court judge despite vocal Democratic opposition and a new whistleblower complaint against him.
The whistleblower provided Congress with an audio recording of Bove that runs contrary to some of his testimony at his confirmation hearing last month, according to two people familiar with the recording. The audio is from a private video conference call at the Department of Justice in February in which Bove, a top official at the department, discussed his handling of the dismissed corruption case against New York City Mayor Eric Adams, according to transcribed quotes from the audio reviewed by AP.
The people spoke on the condition of anonymity because the whistleblower has not made the recording public. The whistleblower’s claims were first reported by the Washington Post.
▶ Read more about the confirmation vote
— Mary Clare Jalonick and Eric Tucker
Trump says Jeffrey Epstein ‘stole’ young women from Mar-a-Lago spa, including Virginia Giuffre
The president said Tuesday that the disgraced financier “stole” the women who worked for the spa at Mar-a-Lago, the latest evolution in his description of how their highly scrutinized relationship ended years ago.
One of the women, he acknowledged, was Giuffre, who was among Epstein’s most well-known sex trafficking accusers.
Trump’s comments expanded on remarks a day earlier when he said he banned Epstein from his private club in Florida two decades ago because his onetime friend “stole people that worked for me.” At the time he did not make clear who those workers were.
The president has faced an outcry over his administration’s refusal to release more records about Epstein after promises of transparency, a rare example of strain within his tightly controlled political coalition. Trump has attempted to tamp down questions about the case, expressing annoyance that people are still talking about it six years after Epstein died by suicide while awaiting trial, even though some of his own allies have promoted conspiracy theories about it.
▶ Read more about Trump and Epstein
No details yet after Trump said the US would set up new food centers in Gaza
White House spokeswoman Anna Kelly said details would be forthcoming and that Trump “wants to alleviate suffering for the people of Gaza because he has a humanitarian heart.”
State Department spokeswoman Tammy Bruce defended Gaza Humanitarian Foundation’s work and said Trump would announce new plans once he returns from his trip to Scotland.
“The issue here is getting more food, more access, more everything. That has always been at the top of our list,” Bruce said, declining to discuss specifics at a briefing.
Democrats want a “large-scale expansion” of food and water into Gaza, channeled through established aid organizations. Sen. Tim Kaine of Virginia said he’s “very skeptical” that Trump’s plans will do enough to address starvation among Palestinians.
“Could the U.S. set up food centers? Yes, but what about the World Food Program, Mercy Corps and all the groups have been doing it for decades? Why don’t we allow them to do it?” Kaine told The Associated Press.
China and US discussed possibly extending a deadline for new tariffs
China’s top trade official said Tuesday that China and the U.S. agreed to work on extending a deadline for new tariffs beyond the latest deadline of Aug. 12 for a comprehensive trade deal. The U.S. side said extension plans were discussed, but not decided.
Li Chenggang didn’t say how the extension would work. U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer acknowledged that such an extension was discussed, but said the U.S. team would head back to Washington and “talk to the president about whether that’s something that he wants to do.”
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said the U.S. side expressed concerns that China is producing goods at a rate beyond what is sustained by global demand, and that China was purchasing Iranian oil and supplying Russia with dual-use tech that could be used on the battlefield.
▶ Read more about the US China trade talks
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene calls situation in Gaza ‘genocide’
By JILL COLVIN
“It’s the most truthful and easiest thing to say that Oct 7th in Israel was horrific and all hostages must be returned, but so is the genocide, humanitarian crisis, and starvation happening in Gaza,” the Georgia Republican posted on X Monday night. The staunch Trump ally previously called for an end to the war and pushed to cut U.S. defense aide to Israel.
Her statement was aimed at Florida Rep. Randy Fine, who last week dismissed reports that children in Gaza were dying of starvation as “all a lie” and “Muslim terror propaganda.”
“Release the hostages,” Fine wrote. “Until then, starve away.”
Greene said it’s “disgraceful” for “a Jewish U.S. Representative” to be “calling for the continued starvation of innocent people and children.”
Trump administration wants Harvard to pay far more than Columbia as part of settlement
The Trump administration is pressing for a deal with Harvard University that would require the Ivy League school to pay far more than the $200 million fine agreed to by Columbia University to resolve multiple federal investigations, according to two people familiar with the matter.
Harvard would be expected to pay hundreds of millions of dollars as part of any settlement to end investigations into antisemitism at its campus, said the people, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal deliberations. Harvard leaders have been negotiating with the White House even as they battle in court to regain access to billions in federal research funding terminated by the Trump administration.
The White House’s desire to get Harvard to pay far more than Columbia was first reported by The New York Times, which said the school has signaled a willingness to pay as much as $500 million. Harvard did not immediately comment.
▶ Read more about Trump and Harvard
— Collin Binkley
Trump says he’ll likely meet with Chinese leader before the end of the year
The U.S. president has long been angling for a meeting with Xi Jinping, the leader of China, and expects to have one shortly.
“I would say before the end of the year,” Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One on Tuesday. The president said he spoke by phone with U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent about the trade meeting in Sweden with Chinese officials.
That meeting resulted in the extension of the 30% tax the U.S. is charging on goods from China and the 10% tariffs that China is levying in retaliation, down significantly from tariff rates that reached triple digits earlier this year.
“He felt very good about the meeting there, better than he felt yesterday,” Trump said of his call with the treasury secretary.
Trump says he’s gotten no reaction from Russia to his new deadline for peace
The president says new tariffs intended to isolate the Russian economy will take effect in 10 days, but the president said he hasn’t heard from the Kremlin about it.
“I haven’t had any response. It’s a shame,” he said.
Trump says he could fly on airplane gifted by Qatar as soon as February
Trump said he’s been told he could take his first flight on the new plane as early as February.
Qatar gifted the president a plane earlier this year and the Air Force is converting it to be used as Air Force One. Next generation Air Force One aircraft under development are way behind schedule.
Trump has brushed off ethical concerns about his decision to accept such an expensive gift free of charge from a foreign government.
Trump clarifies his new deadline for Russia
The president told reporters that his new deadline for Russian President Vladimir Putin to reach a deal to stop the fighting with Ukraine will be in 10 days. That gives Putin until Aug. 8 to reach a deal or face steep tariffs or sanctions from the U.S.
Trump had originally given Putin 50 days, but said earlier this week that he was shortening the deadline because he didn’t see any progress being made.
U.S. says no final word yet on tariff extension with China
By DIDI TANG
U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer said following two days of talks with China that the U.S. team would head back to Washington and “talk to the president about whether that’s something that he wants to do,” meaning pause changes in tariffs beyond the Aug. 12 deadline.
China’s trade officials earlier said that the two sides agreed to “pushing” for the tariff pause beyond the existing deadline.
Epstein’s former girlfriend may cooperate with Congress under certain conditions
By ERIC TUCKER
Lawyers for Ghislaine Maxwell, Jeffrey Epstein’s former girlfriend, say they are open to having their client cooperate with Congress but want her to be guaranteed immunity by lawmakers first.
Maxwell’s attorneys also say that any interview with members of the House Oversight Committee should be scheduled only after her petition for the Supreme Court to take up her case has been resolved. Maxwell is serving a long prison sentence in Florida after having been convicted in 2021 of conspiring with Epstein to sexually abuse underage girls. She was questioned at a courthouse last week by Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche.
Rep. James Comer, the Republican chairman of the House Oversight Committee, issued a subpoena for her deposition. In a letter to Comer on Tuesday, Maxwell’s attorneys say that though their “initial reaction” was that Maxwell would invoke her Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination, they are now looking for ways to cooperate.
Was Trump’s trip for promoting his golf courses?
“I haven’t heard that,” Trump said when asked by a reporter on Air Force One.
Then he shifted the topic.
“Did you get to see my drive on the first hole?” he said. “Pretty long.”
Trump takes aim at the National Environmental Policy Act
By MELINA WALLING, MATTHEW DALY
A key goal of Trump’s plan to boost artificial intelligence and data centers is wiping away barriers to rapid growth. And that means taking aim at NEPA, a 55-year-old bedrock law that requires agencies to consider a project’s possible environmental impacts and allows public input before approval.
Data centers demand vast amounts of energy and water, arousing strong opposition. The AI Action Plan Trump announced last week would seek to sweep aside NEPA, giving “categorical exclusions” to data centers for “maximum efficiency” in permitting.
“It’s par for the course for this administration. The attitude is to clear the way for projects that harm communities and the environment,” said Erin Doran, senior staff attorney at environmental nonprofit Food & Water Watch.
▶ Read more on AI and federal permitting
Environmental groups say Zeldin’s action denies reality
By MATTHEW DALY
“As Americans reel from deadly floods and heat waves, the Trump administration is trying to argue that the emissions turbocharging these disasters are not a threat,’′ said Christy Goldfuss, executive director of the Natural Resources Defense Council. “It boggles the mind and endangers the nation’s safety and welfare.”
Under Zeldin and Trump, “the EPA wants to shirk its responsibility to protect us from climate pollution, but science and the law say otherwise,’′ she added. “If EPA finalizes this illegal and cynical approach, we will see them in court.”
Zeldin: Climate change rules ‘cost Americans a lot of money’
By MATTHEW DALY
“There are people who, in the name of climate change, are willing to bankrupt the country,” Zeldin said. “They created this endangerment finding and then they are able to put all these regulations on vehicles, on airplanes, on stationary sources, to basically regulate out of existence, in many cases, a lot of segments of our economy.”
The EPA proposal must go through a lengthy review process, including public comment, before it is finalized, likely next year. Environmental groups are likely to challenge the rule change in court.
China’s top trade official says China and U.S. agree to extend pause on tariffs
By DIDI TANG
Coming out of two days of trade talks with the U.S. in Stockholm, Li Chenggang, China’s top trade official, told the press on Tuesday that the two sides agreed to continue the tariff pause after past the Aug. 12 deadline. That means the U.S. will continue to tax Chinese goods at 30%, and the Chinese side will keep taxing U.S. products at 10%.
Li said the two sides had “comprehensive and in-depth” discussions on microeconomic issues and that they agreed to keep close contact and “communicate with each other in a timely manner on trade and economic issues.”
U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent is expected to speak with the press soon.
▶Read more on U.S.-China tariffs talks
The Associated Press