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Electricity prices jump in Europe as demand soars in the heatwave | Energy industry

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The heatwave has prompted a sharp rise in electricity prices across European markets as millions turn to air conditioners and electric fans to battle record high temperatures, which have also caused a string of power plant outages across the continent.

Great Britain imported electricity from Europe at more than six times the normal price on Tuesday as the high pressure heat dome has slowed wind speeds, hitting renewable energy generation, and caused outages at multiple gas plants across the country.

The heatwave has caused windfarms on the continent to slow, and led to lower output at some nuclear plants in France, where high riverwater temperatures are making it more difficult to cool the reactors.

The combination of rising electricity demand and falling generation across Europe has caused market prices to climb to multi-year highs.

Great Britain’s energy system operator has resorted to paying about £470 per megawatt-hour to secure electricity imports from the continent between 5pm and 7pm on Tuesday evening to help meet the country’s peak electricity demand.

These prices are more than six times the electricity market price in June last year, which averaged about £71/MWh, and more than three times the market price of £123/MWh on Monday.

In Germany, Europe’s biggest electricity market, power market prices were forecast to reach highs of more than €545 per megawatt-hour on Tuesday evening, the highest since June 2024, according to the Epex Spot exchange.

In France, which is bracing for temperatures of up to 43C (109F) this week, the power market price has climbed to over €268 per megawatt-hour, the highest since August 2023.

Shivam Malhotra, the head of power trading at consultancy LCP Delta, said it was “not unusual” to see a string of unplanned outages at British gas plants, which “tend to really struggle in extreme temperatures”.

Five gas plants reported that they would need to reduce their output due to “ambient” conditions, cutting about 2.5 gigawatts from the UK’s gas fleet or enough electricity to power 2.5m UK homes. The loss of capacity is about 40% higher than before the heatwave, according to Malhotra.

Wind power output has also fallen due to the high pressure weather system, which has slowed wind speeds and is expected to set a new record for June temperatures in the UK. Wind power made up between 13% and 15% of the UK’s electricity on Tuesday, compared with an average of about 30% in June last year.

“Wind speeds are lower too, so the energy system operator has secured around 1.5 gigawatts of extra electricity to help meet the evening peak. This is likely to come from the continent, which is having its own problems due to the heatwave,” Malhotra said.

Households are also expected to play a role in helping the UK energy system to weather the heatwave, by cutting their energy use to save about 115 megawatts of electricity during peak hours through a scheme that pays energy users to cut their demand.

The National Energy System Operator, which is owned by the government, has been contacted for comment.



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PGA Tour announces sweeping 2028 overhaul with relegation and match play

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Seismic changes are coming to the PGA Tour with a completely revamped model and schedule set to be implemented beginning in 2028.

The introduction of relegation and promotion, two separate series, match play and courses the Tour has never paid a visit to are among the many exciting changes the golf world will see in the near future.

While there are still plenty of details to be fully ironed out, which will be announced at a later date, the information the Tour formally announced on Tuesday painted a rather clear picture of just how different — and exciting — the new-look structure will be from a fan perspective.

Brian Rolapp

Brian Rolapp is pictured during a Press Conference with PGA TOUR CEO Brian Rolapp prior to the Travelers Championship 2026 at TPC River Highlands on June 23, 2026 in Cromwell, Connecticut. (Photo by Andrew Redington/Getty Images) (Andrew Redington/Getty Images)

Everything you need to know about the new-look PGA Tour

PGA Tour Championship Series

  • This will be the new top-tier on the PGA Tour, consisting of 23 to 24 events including The Players, the four major championships and international team events. Purses will be at least $20 million.
  • Ten of the expected 15 Championship Series regular events have been finalized, with the remaining five to be filled out in larger, new markets.
  • The field size will be, on average, 120 players, and all events will feature a 36-hole cut with the top 65 players and ties playing the weekend.
  • The Tour Championship, the finale of the playoffs, will rotate around to different golf courses, and match play will be integrated in some format.
  • There will be no alternates or sponsor exemptions into events.

PGA Tour Challenger Series

  • The new second-tier on Tour that will also be the primary pathway onto the Championship Series.
  • At least 20 Challenger Series events will take place, with seven expected to be standalone tournaments that will not overlap with Championship Series events. All events will feature a 36-hole cut.
  • Fields will feature approximately 144 players and carry purses of at least $4 million.

TIGER WOODS MAKES FIRST PUBLIC APPEARANCE SINCE DUI, REHAB STINT AS PGA TOUR ANNOUNCES SWEEPING CHANGES

Tiger Woods of the United States looks towards Brian Rolapp

Tiger Woods of the United States looks towards Brian Rolapp during a Press Conference with PGA TOUR CEO Brian Rolapp prior to the Travelers Championship 2026 at TPC River Highlands on June 23, 2026 in Cromwell, Connecticut. (Photo by Andrew Redington/Getty Images) (Andrew Redington/Getty Images)

Relegation and promotion

The Championship Series will have a points structure, and the top 90 players on the points list will be retained and remain on the top-tier series. Players who finish outside the top 90 will face relegation to the Challenger Series.

A minimum of 20 players from the Challenger Series will be promoted each season, with remaining spots determined through multiple criteria including tournament winners, medical extensions, career milestones and a new “last chance” series.

RORY MCILROY GETS THE BEST OF EMBARRASSING US OPEN HECKLER WITH VICIOUS COMEBACK AT SHINNECOCK HILLS

The last chance series, which will take place in the fall, will consist of four to six events to determine the final spots on the following season’s Challenger Series.

PGA Tour qualifying school will still take place, but prior to the last chance series offering players to earn their way onto the Challenger Series.

Key takeaways about the Tour’s sweeping changes

One could easily make the argument that there has long been a two-tiered system on the PGA Tour. By putting it in writing, it only adds intrigue and, most importantly, clarity.

Jay Monahan (commissioner of the PGA TOUR) shakes hands with Brian Rolapp as it is announced Rolapp will become the next commissioner

Jay Monahan (commissioner of the PGA TOUR) shakes hands with Brian Rolapp as it is announced Rolapp will become the next commissioner of the PGA TOUR effective Jan. 1 2027 during a Press Conference with PGA TOUR CEO Brian Rolapp prior to the Travelers Championship 2026 at TPC River Highlands on June 23, 2026 in Cromwell, Connecticut. (Photo by Andrew Redington/Getty Images) (Andrew Redington/Getty Images)

You have a top-tier system and a second-tier system. Players who play well in the top-tier system remain there, play for huge purses and stay atop the best circuit in professional golf. The second-tier system rewards the best players with a shot at promotion, but also features tournaments with $4 million purses, where the ‘middling’ player, even on the Challenger Series, can comfortably make a living.

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On the topic of clarity, it’s something PGA Tour fans have not been accustomed to, ever, with the various iterations of the FedEx Cup Playoffs over the years. Not only will the introduction of match play make things as straightforward as possible, but it’s also the format that golf fans have been clamoring for since the WGC match-play event was taken off the schedule after the 2023 edition.

Many minute details still have to be put in place, but the vision has been presented, and it’s a complete revamp of the PGA Tour.



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Who’s being left out of the World Cup? | World Cup 2026 News

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Can football’s biggest stage stay global as visa denials and border restrictions mount?

The excitement of the World Cup has arrived in North America. But behind it have been stories of fans being denied visas, players being searched by sniffer dogs, and Iran’s team being forced to base itself outside the US. What happens when a global tournament collides with US President Donald Trump’s immigration policies?

In this episode:

  • Boima Tucker (@chiefboimah), director of operations, Africa Is a Country

Episode credits:

This episode was produced by Sonia Bhagat and Tamara Khandaker with Marcos Bartolomé, Spencer Cline, Jana Dabliz, Catherine Nouhan, and our host, Malika Bilal. It was edited by Noor Wazwaz and Sarí el-Khalili. 

Our sound designer is Alex Roldan. Our video editors are Hisham Abu Salah and Mohannad al-Melhem. Alexandra Locke is The Take’s executive producer. 

Connect with us:

@AJEPodcasts on XInstagramFacebook, and YouTube



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Reporter’s Notebook: Trump visits Capitol Hill for tense lunch with Senate Republicans

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Hope they have Maalox and Pepto-Bismol on hand when President Donald Trump visits Capitol Hill to meet with Senate Republicans over lunch.

Senate GOP Steering Committee Chairman and Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla., invited Trump for the luncheon Wednesday. Some Senate Republicans may wonder if they’re the ones on the menu. Both Sens. Bill Cassidy, R-La., and John Cornyn, R-Texas, are out after the president refused to endorse them and they lost their primaries. Trump has also sparred with Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., exasperated that he can’t execute his legislative agenda.

Scott is a close ally of the president. He lost to Thune and Cornyn in the race to become majority leader in late 2024. In fact, Scott didn’t even request a blessing from the top Senate GOP leadership team to invite the president.

Scott’s teamed up with Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, advocating that the Senate approve the SAVE America Act. It requires proof of citizenship to vote. This advocacy is driving Thune and other members of the GOP brass batty since the bill failed twice. Scott and Lee want the Senate to get onto the SAVE America Act and stay on it until the measure passes. But few understand how exhaustion somehow conjures a majority of senators to suddenly support the bill.

GOP TRIGGERS MARATHON SENATE FIGHT TO EXPOSE DEMS’ OPPOSITION TO TRUMP-BACKED VOTER ID BILL

President Donald Trump speaking in the Oval Office of the White House

President Donald Trump speaks in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington on June 10, 2026. (Julia Demaree Nikhinson/AP)

Moreover, the president demands that they eliminate the filibuster. If the SAVE America Act doesn’t have the necessary votes to pass, there’s no way it commands 60 yeas to break a filibuster.

Simple solution, right?

Not really. Thune has said repeatedly that there aren’t the votes to alter the filibuster, either.

It’s about the math.

So expect some intense discussions Wednesday over what the president wants the Senate to do. Thune has tried to tell the president repeatedly what the Senate is capable of, based on the various parliamentary equations.

And there’s fear among Republicans that the president may attempt to sow discord about the midterm election outcomes if Democrats flip the House and/or Senate — and Republicans never passed the SAVE America Act.

Trump sports plenty of supporters in the Senate, but he’s frustrated Senate Republicans by repeatedly yanking the legislative rug out from under his own party for weeks now. 

The Senate was on the precipice of beginning a “vote-a-rama” to finally pass funding for ICE and Border Patrol in May. Then the administration announced its weaponization fund. A meeting between Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche and GOP senators devolved into pointed conversations. Blanche continued to defend the fund. Some Republicans threatened their own amendments during the vote-a-rama to either block the fund or shield themselves from political fallout.

Thune pulled the bill from the floor and sent everyone home for more than a week.

SENATE GOP ERUPTS OVER TRUMP DOJ ‘ANTI-WEAPONIZATION’ FUND, PUNTS ICE, BORDER PATROL FUNDING

Jay Clayton speaking next to Jessica S. Tisch at New York Police Department headquarters

Jay Clayton, U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York, speaks next to Jessica S. Tisch, New York Police Department commissioner, during a press conference at NYPD headquarters in New York City on March 9, 2026. (Brendan McDermid/Reuters)

Then there was a carefully crafted bipartisan agreement to renew FISA Section 702, the nation’s most effective program to track terrorists. Its authorization ran out after the president sidetracked the nomination of Jay Clayton, his own pick to become Director of National Intelligence (DNI).

Republicans couldn’t pass the FISA authorization on their own, so they engineered a bipartisan compromise with Democrats. But Democrats withdrew their support for the bill once the president announced that housing czar Bill Pulte would take over as acting DNI for former Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, who resigned. Democrats viewed Pulte as a partisan who had no experience in intelligence. Senate Intelligence Committee Chairman Tom Cotton, R-Ark., quickly scheduled a confirmation hearing for Jay Clayton once  Trump tapped him as the nominee.

It was believed that the Senate may be able to confirm Clayton within a matter of days after his confirmation hearing. That would limit time on the job by Pulte. So, once Clayton was in place, the Senate could prospectively return to the bipartisan FISA deal and pass it.

But Trump detonated all of that last week. He insisted that Senate Republicans cancel Clayton’s confirmation hearing and not advance his nomination until it has confirmed Jamie McDonald as U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York. That’s the position Clayton held. The president made those demands at 3:59 a.m. ET Wednesday — all without consulting Thune.

He then made his signature on the FISA renewal conditional on passage of the SAVE America Act. 

“That tells me he’s not very serious about FISA or intelligence,” said one senior congressional Republican about Trump. “And Pulte is a big middle finger to the intelligence community.”

So Senate Republicans aren’t enamored with all of these demands. Some began to lose faith in the president once he ditched support for Cassidy and Cornyn. Now they believe he’s being unreasonable, jerking around Thune, moving the goalposts for critical national security legislation and expecting the impossible on the SAVE America Act and the filibuster.

For his part, Scott believes he and the president can change minds.

Trump has criticized Senate Republican leaders generally of late. But he’s tiptoed around potentially calling out Thune by name. Thune is well-liked by his GOP colleagues and, like most congressional leaders, has an impossible job. That is why former Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott, R-Miss., likened the job to that of “herding cats.”

THUNE ‘ADAMANT’ ABOUT TRUMP SUPPORT, DRIVING MAGA AGENDA DESPITE TENSE PAST RELATIONSHIP 

Senate Majority Leader John Thune speaking at a news conference with Republican senators at the US Capitol

Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., and Republican senators speak at a news conference at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., on March 24, 2026. (Stefani Reynolds/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

It’s clear that the president has better relations right now with House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., compared to Thune. But turning on Thune by name would truly infuriate many of the president’s best allies in the Senate.

Trump routinely excoriated former Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., for not ditching the filibuster. But it was McConnell who delivered Trump three of the most lasting legacies: Supreme Court Justices Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett.

McConnell established a new Senate precedent for the method he used to confirm Gorsuch. Gorsuch would have faced an unprecedented filibuster for an associate justice on the High Court and never scored confirmation.

McConnell stuck by Kavanaugh during the raucous confirmation process to confirm Kavanaugh in the fall of 2018. And he rammed through Coney Barrett’s confirmation days before the 2020 election. Yet McConnell refused to hold a confirmation hearing for President Barack Obama’s Supreme Court nominee and future Attorney General Merrick Garland for nearly 11 months — because it was an election year. Blocking confirmation of Garland held the seat open for Gorsuch. Yet Trump railed against McConnell at every turn.

Thune passed the One Big Beautiful Bill Act last year. But through no fault of his own, Thune hasn’t delivered any wins as enduring as the Supreme Court for Trump yet. However, the president has extended some grace to the South Dakota Republican — despite his criticism of the Republican Senate.

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We’ll see if that continues after Wednesday’s luncheon.

The legislative contretemps between the president and Senate Republicans over the past few weeks has just been an appetizer. Anguish and frustration are on the bill of fare Wednesday. And if the meeting doesn’t go well, some Republicans may yell “Check, please!” to get out of there as fast as they can.



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Bev Craig to stand as Labour candidate for Greater Manchester mayor | Mayoral elections

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Labour’s candidate to replace Andy Burnham as Greater Manchester mayor has been named as Bev Craig, the leader of the city council.

Burnham, who could be prime minister in under four weeks, is expected to campaign heavily for Labour in a tight contest with Reform UK on 30 July.

As many as 2 million people will be eligible to vote in the Greater Manchester byelection, making it the biggest in modern times in British politics.

Craig, 41, has long been seen as a rising star within Labour and took over Manchester city council in 2021 at the age of 36, becoming only the third holder of the office in four decades and its first woman.

Like many council leaders, however, she remains little-known to ordinary voters. A huge publicity blitz will pitch her as continuing the work of Burnham, who won the 2024 contest with nearly two-thirds of the vote and a 351,000-vote majority.

However, Labour figures are braced for a bitter dogfight with Reform UK after losing more than 100 seats across Greater Manchester in May’s elections.

Reform UK won 106 seats in the area’s 10 local authorities, including 18 out of 19 contested in Tameside, 24 out of 25 in Wigan and seven on Manchester city council.

Nigel Farage’s party has not yet named its candidate but the frontrunner is Dan Barker, a nuclear industry project manager who came fourth with 7.5% of the vote in the 2024 mayoral election.

In 2024, Reform finished nearly 4,000 votes ahead of the Green party’s Hannah Spencer, who won the Gorton and Denton byelection in February.

The Greens, who unveiled their candidate as Trafford councillor Geraldine Coggins, have pitched the battle to replace Burnham as a contest between its party and Reform UK.

Rupert Lowe’s hardline rightwing Restore Britain is expected to try to make the campaign a fight over grooming gangs, an issue that scarred communities in Oldham and Rochdale, and over which it has garnered influential support from Elon Musk, the trillionaire owner of X.

Its candidate, mental health nurse Marlon West, is the father of grooming gang victim Scarlett.

Craig has spoken of her childhood in council housing in Greenisland, about seven miles north of Belfast, before moving to Manchester in 2003.

She was awarded an Order of the British Empire in December for services to local government – a commendation for which she is understood to have received a congratulatory call from Keir Starmer.

Craig told the Manchester Evening News in 2021 that when she came out as gay at the age of 14, “everyone told me my life would be a disaster, nobody would love me” and that she did not want to be “pigeonholed” by being the first woman or openly gay leader of Manchester city council.

She said at the time: “I don’t want to be pigeonholed, to just be invited to panels to talk about how it feels like to be a woman. Talk to me about my economic policy, talk about inclusive growth, transport, infrastructure, business, like the stuff that I enjoy reading about.”



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Aaron Boone rips Jazz Chisholm Jr. for sucking lollipop during game

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At least Jazz Chisholm Jr. did not have chewing tobacco in his mouth.

The New York Yankees’ second baseman, however, was caught sucking on a lollipop while playing defense in Detroit on Tuesday.

As opposed to perhaps sunflower seeds or bubble gum, it was a rather striking sight, as the Yankees were trailing 4-1 in the bottom of the fifth inning against the Tigers amid a mini-skid.

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New York Yankees second baseman Jazz Chisholm Jr. fielding at Comerica Park in Detroit

New York Yankees second baseman Jazz Chisholm Jr. fields the ball during the first inning against the Detroit Tigers at Comerica Park in Detroit, Michigan, on June 22, 2026. (Rick Osentoski/Imagn Images)

Chisholm is normally pretty nonchalant, and manager Aaron Boone is rather stoic and defends his players sometimes to a fault. But the lollipop is where the line was drawn.

“That p—-s me off,” Boone told “Talkin’ Yanks.” “I didn’t know about it until after the game. He and I talked about that. That won’t be going on. I’m not on that.”

Jazz Chisholm Jr. looking on during a baseball game at Globe Life Field

Jazz Chisholm Jr. of the New York Yankees looks on during a game against the Texas Rangers at Globe Life Field in Arlington, Texas, on April 28, 2026. (Kelcee Skoug/MLB Photos via Getty Images)

JAZZ CHISHOLM PLAYS 2B WITH A BLOW POP IN HIS MOUTH, A FORMER MLB PITCHER IS ABSOLUTELY JACKED & TEXAS MEAT

Chisholm is certainly not one to hide away from, well, anything. He embraced boos in Kansas City after saying the Royals “got lucky” against the Yanks in Game 2 of the 2024 American League Division Series.

Before this season, he boldly claimed he would produce 50 home runs and 50 stolen bases (he is at 11 and 23 roughly halfway through the season), and earlier this month, he predicted the Yankees would win their 28th World Series title.

Chisholm is currently on pace for his worst season in the big leagues, as his .226 average, .406 slugging percentage and .716 OPS are all the worst marks of his career.

Jazz Chisholm Jr. rounding bases after hitting a home run at Daikin Park

Jazz Chisholm Jr. of the New York Yankees celebrates as he rounds the bases after hitting a solo home run in the fourth inning during the game against the Houston Astros at Daikin Park in Houston, Texas, on April 24, 2026. (Michaela Schumacher/MLB Photos via Getty Images)

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He is set to hit free agency after this season, and before the season, he made it known he wanted a contract in the range of $350 million.

Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.



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Canadian police warn of possible copycat attacks after deadly shootout in Montreal | Canada

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Police in Canada are warning of possible copycat attacks after three people died in a shootout in Montreal and the assailant’s lengthy manifesto, which called for “a new bloodletting”, was posted online by a far-right outlet.

The document contains many of the hallmark grievances of the “involuntary celibacy” – or “incel” – movement in addition racist and misogynistic conspiracy theories.

Fear gripped Quebec’s largest city on Monday after a man dressed in military camouflage and carrying a long gun was spotted moving around the Côte-des-Neige neighborhood. Shooting broke out and when police arrived, nearly 30 shots were heard. The shootout killed one officer and the gunman.

Video from witnesses appears to show the police accidentally killing a civilian during the firefight. Another injured officer suffered critical injuries but is expected to survive. Investigators from Quebec’s police watchdog, the bureau des enquêtes indépendantes (BEI) areinvestigating the deaths.

After the shooting, Canada’s federal police sent a bulletin to police agencies across the country warning the gunman’s manifesto is “allegedly encouraging citizens to shoot police officers”. The alert called on police to “exercise extreme caution and remain highly vigilant”.

The 104-page document, which was later posted in full by Rebel News, does not specifically mention targeting police, but blames feminism, liberalism and capitalism to explain the “situation of terrible loneliness, isolation, and social degradation” he believes men currently face.

The document also lists what the shooter claims are “valid potential class A targets”, including large investment banks, powerful politicians, “influential Zionists”, corporate executives in private healthcare, companies involved in environmental destruction, plastic surgeons and cryptocurrency speculators. The manifesto also mentions targeting “the headquarters of international pornography companies”.

It ends with the words: “Be unflinching, go forth, and KILL THEM ALL!”

Montreal police identified the slain officer as Mohamed Lamine Benredouane, 34, who had been with the force since 2021. The civilian, Michel Mizrahi, was identified as an Israeli citizen by Israel’s consulate in Montreal.

Footage from witnesses, viewed by the Guardian, showed an officer appearing to accidentally shoot Mizrahi. Quebec’s domestic security minister, Ian Lafrenière, said “there have been some rumors, there has been some information stating that the civilian was shot by a police officer. This is not the kind of information that we can share at this moment,” adding the watchdog was investigating.

The fatal shooting marks the third time a Canadian police officer has been killed while on duty this month. Two Royal Canadian Mounted Police officers were also shot and wounded Monday in the province of Saskatchewan during a property dispute.

In recent years, Canada has witnessed a string of attacks apparently inspired by extreme misogyinst incel ideology.

In 2018, the driver of a van killed 10 and injured more than a dozen others in Toronto. The perpetrator of a 2020 machete attack at a Toronto spa in which one woman was killed and another seriously injured was also motivated by the ideology and the case marked the first incel-related incident in Canada to be deemed an act of terrorism by the courts.

The country is also still grappling with the fallout of the 1989 attack on Montreal’s Polytechnique engineering school, where a young man walked into building with a semiautomatic rifle, killing 14 women and injuring 14 others (including four men). He then killed himself.

Christine Fréchette, Quebec’s premier, told reporters she was “deeply shocked and saddened” by Monday’s attack and ordered the Quebec flag to fly at half mast.

Mark Carney, Canada’s prime minister, said that he was “horrified” when he learned of the shooting. “My thoughts are with the victims, their loved ones, the first responders, and the entire community of Côte‑des‑Neiges,” he said in a statement posted to social media.

The city’s mayor, Soraya Martinez Ferrada, said she extended her “deepest condolences to the family, friends, and colleagues of the police officer who died in the line of duty”.



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Washington Post boasts it stared down Justice Department subpoena

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The Washington Post boasted that the Justice Department planned to “force” reporters to testify before a federal grand jury but withdrew subpoenas after they were challenged by the paper. 

The Post published a Tuesday story citing “a Justice Department official familiar with the matter” that reporter Ellen Nakashima received a grand jury subpoena this spring “related to sensitive reporting about a national security matter.”

The Post reported that the Jeff Bezos-owned newspaper “was fighting the demand in federal court in the Eastern District of Virginia in sealed proceedings when the government rescinded Nakashima’s subpoena.” The newspaper also reported that the “scope of the investigations that triggered the subpoenas are not clear” aside from being related to national security.

TRUMP CLAIMS BEZOS FRETTED TO HIM ABOUT ‘OUT OF CONTROL’ PEOPLE AT WASHINGTON POST

Washington Post reporter Ellen Nakashima.

Washington Post reporter Ellen Nakashima.

“The unwarranted subpoena of our reporter Ellen Nakashima – a clear violation of constitutionally guaranteed press freedom – was another sign of the government seeking to compel journalists to become instruments of its investigations. We will continue to stand fully behind the journalism of The Washington Post and fight all efforts by any administration that violate our First Amendment rights,” a Washington Post spokesperson told Fox News Digital.

The Post described Nakashima as “a veteran national security reporter who, during the Trump administration, has reported on the country’s most powerful intelligence officials, the Iran conflict and deadly U.S. military strikes on boats that officials alleged carried illegal drugs.”

Executive Editor Matt Murray also addressed the ordeal with Post employees on Tuesday morning. 

“With the news out and the subpoena withdrawn, I want to reiterate our unwavering support for the First Amendment rights enshrined in our constitution, the legal protections afforded journalists, and our unblinking support of our journalists and press freedom.  I also want to thank our legal colleagues who have worked aggressively on behalf of Ellen and The Post,” Murray wrote in a memo obtained by Fox News Digital. 

 “This institution stands behind each of you. It is in The Washington Post’s DNA to question, investigate, uncover and report,” he continued. “That’s why we’re here and what we’ll keep doing.”

WASHINGTON POST’S TOP EDITOR BACKS JEFF BEZOS AS CRITICS LASH OUT OVER STRUGGLING PAPER’S LAYOFFS

Washington Post headquarters at night

The Washington Post headquarters. (Graeme Sloan/Bloomberg)

The Justice Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment. 

The Post reported that three Wall Street Journal journalists who also report on national security also received subpoenas. 

“The Justice Department also withdrew the Wall Street Journal subpoenas, which the news organization had challenged in the same federal court, according to the official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss proceedings that are not public. None of the journalists testified before the grand jury, the official said,” the Post reported. 

The WSJ did not immediately respond to a request for comment. 

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Appeals court allows Trump to fast-track deportation process nationwide | Trump administration

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A federal appeals court cleared the way on ⁠Tuesday for the Trump ⁠administration to expand ​a fast-track deportation process that would allow for the expedited removal of immigrants who are living far from the border.

A panel of the US court of ⁠appeals for the District of Columbia circuit ruled 2-1 to overturn a decision by a judge who in August 2025 blocked the US Department of Homeland Security’s move to expand who ⁠qualifies for expedited removal. That expedited removal process has for nearly three decades been used to quickly return migrants apprehended ​at the border.

But in January 2025, the administration ‌expanded its scope to cover non-citizens ‌apprehended anywhere in the US who could not show that they had been in the country for two ‌years. The policy mirrored one the Trump administration adopted in 2019 that the Biden administration later rescinded.

After the immigrant rights advocacy group Make the Road New York sued, US district judge Jia Cobb blocked the enforcement of those new policies, saying they violate the constitutional due process rights of migrants who could be apprehended anywhere in the US.

But the DC circuit disagreed in a ruling authored by circuit judge Justin Walker, a ‌Trump appointee, who said that the Trump administration was allowed to expand “expedited removal to the maximum extent allowed by Congress”.

He said migrants are given notice that DHS is placing them ​in expedited removal and receive a chance to object, including by showing that they have been continually present in the US for two years.

“At most, the district court’s findings show that Congress’s expedited screening system operates quickly and with practical constraints – features the statute itself contemplates,” he wrote. “They do not show that the challenged directives deprive aliens of a meaningful opportunity ⁠to be heard.”

His opinion was joined in large part by US circuit judge Neomi Rao, ​who was also appointed by ​Trump, and drew a dissent from US ​circuit judge Robert Wilkins, an appointee of Barack Obama. Wilkins objected to allowing migrants ​to be subjected to ‌the fast-track deportation process without ​even being asked ​how long they have been living in the .S, saying such a procedure “is woefully inadequate for persons encountered in the interior of the country”.

James Percival, DHS’s general counsel, said in a statement that the ruling “vindicated our decision to apply the law as written”. Make the Road’s lawyers did not immediately respond to a request for comment.



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