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Almost 4% of the workforce has been reduced

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Almost three months after celebrating its 50th anniversary, Microsoft has settled around 4% of its workforce, the company said Wednesday.

According to Reuters, the tech giant intends to reduce its organizational tier by having fewer managers and streamlining its products, procedures and roles.

The layoffs affecting employees of various teams, geography and experience levels will come on the second day of Microsoft’s fiscal year 2026, CNBC reports, citing people who are familiar with the issue.

A Microsoft spokesperson said, according to CNBC, The Associated Press and Seattle Times, “We continue to implement the organizational changes necessary to position our company and teams to succeed in a dynamic market.”

According to the AP, Microsoft began sending layoff notifications to employees on Wednesday, July 2nd. CNBC and the Seattle Times report that the cuts will affect around 9,000 workers.

USA Today has contacted Microsoft.

What’s behind the layoff?

According to Reuters, the layoffs could be attributed to Microsoft’s desire to cut costs as they continue to invest heavily in artificial intelligence.

Microsoft has pledged to capital expenditures of $80 billion in 2025. However, the increase in AI infrastructure costs will affect margins, with cloud margins expected to shrink in the June quarter from last year.

Other large tech companies that invest heavily in artificial intelligence have also decided to fire workers. Facebook’s parent meta said it would fire around 5% of its “lowest performers” earlier this year, while Alphabet’s Google has also fired hundreds of employees in the past year.

Previous rounds of Microsoft layoffs

In May, Microsoft announced that it would fire around 3% of its total workforce. CNBC and Verge reported that the decision would affect approximately 6,000 employees. In January, Microsoft cut less than 1% of its employees based on performance, CNBC reported.

“At Microsoft, we focus on high-performance talent,” a Microsoft spokesperson told CNBC in January. “We’re always committed to helping people learn and grow. When people aren’t playing, we take the right action.”

Other notable layoffs from Microsoft came when the company cut 10,000 jobs in 2023, eliminating 18,000 jobs after the acquisition of Nokia’s device and services business in 2014.

According to the Microsoft website, as of June 2024, it employs approximately 228,000 workers worldwide, including 126,000 in the US.

Contributions: Melina Kahn, USA Today and Reuters

Jonathan Limehouse covers USA Today’s broken and trending news. Contact him at jlimehouse@gannett.com.

Trump’s record defense budget reaches $1 trillion despite the doge

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Defence budget demands are the biggest in US history.

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WASHINGTON – Before the very public feud between President Donald Trump and Elon Musk in February, the president boasted that his allies would find “hundred millions of dollars of fraud and abuse” at the Department of Defense’s Budget Office.

Less than five months later, the Pentagon officially announced its first domestic $1 trillion defense budget proposal for fiscal year 2026, covering the previous year’s total with more than $100 billion. What about the direct “Doge Collaboration” advertised in the Department of Defense budget deployment? Just $6 billion.

Congress must legislate and approve the full budget, but the first tranche of financing for fiscal year 2026 ($1.01 trillion, $119.3 billion) could arrive via Trump’s tax and spending package, called “Big Beauty Building.” The administration has put a key part of Trump’s megaville defense budget, including controversial and conservative policy priorities.

“We argued that a budget is needed to end our four-year chronic investment in our military,” Defense Secretary Pete Hegses said before the Senate’s Armed Worship Committee.

Former President Joe Biden called for an increase in levels of defense spending, but Republicans in Congress called for more. A DOD spokesman told USA Today that Hegseth continues to review cuts or further real contest programs.

Pentagon and NNSA spending contrasts with the substantial cuts in other programs that Congressional administration and Republican majority are seeking. The Settlement Megaville, which passed the Senate on July 1, must win the house approval again before going to Trump for his signature. (The White House did not immediately respond to requests for comment.)

Over the next decade, the settlement bill will cut $1 trillion from Medicaid, according to the Non-Participant Congressional Budget Office. $300 billion from food stamps. Over tens of billions of people from the Clean Energy Program.

Foreign aid and education programs are located in the major budget chopping blocks that Congress has not yet begun deliberation.

Mike Rogers, chairman of the House Armed Services Committee of R-Alabama, said defense spending on the settlement bill is “necessary to restore American deterrence, revitalize defense industrial bases and modernize the military.”

Figures on both sides of the political spectrum, including Trump’s former chief strategist Steve Bannon, have expressed dissatisfaction with the continued growth of the defense budget.

“Unless you’re going to go to the pentagon, you can’t talk about fraud, waste, or abuse in this town,” Bannon said on an April 24 podcast. “And do you know what happened since (Doge) went there? Cricket… the system we have is not sustainable.”

William Harton, a defense spending expert at the Quincy National Institute of Responsibility, told USA Today that the U.S. Department of Defense’s rushing budget deployment omitted key documents detailing the “nuts and bolts” of funding requests.

“It’s going to be very difficult to analyze…their priorities,” Harton said. “There’s a lot of stuff short if you’re a member of Congress trying to evaluate this.”

This could have led lawmakers and analysts to rush to fly blindly during the push of a settlement bill, and Trump ordered Congressional GOP leaders to be on their desks by July 4th.

Hartun argued that more spending on defense is not necessarily equivalent to getting better results, as Congress often spends money based on what Congressional districts or states receive jobs rather than how proposals match US strategy.

Former Rep. John Tierney, who now heads the council for a livable world and arms management and non-proliferation nonprofit organizations, said he believes the political climate will discourage both parties from questioning defence spending.

“There’s not much thought into what the strategy is,” Tierney added.

Nuclear modernization, missile defense will win billions

According to the Pentagon, the proposed defense budget of around $85 billion will be directed towards the US nuclear capabilities and Trump’s Golden Dome missile defense initiative. Much of the funding will go to the American Triad of nuclear-armed bombers, intercontinental ballistic missiles, and nuclear submarines, which are the center of a broader $1.7 trillion nuclear modernization effort.

Halton highlighted the poor track record of the Pentagon and NNSA to maintain such protections on time and on budget.

The government’s Accountability Office estimated in June that the entire cost of developing and deploying the Sentinel ICBM, which is set to replace the Minuteman III missiles that have been monitored since 1970, would rise to “approximately $170 billion” after the new missiles realized they could not use the Legacy Minuteman III silo.

“This project is completely out of control,” claimed Tierney.

The administration hopes the restructured Sentinel program will receive $4.5 billion in fiscal year 2026, according to budget documents. The new silo is not included in the diagram.

The NNSA, which designs, builds and maintains the country’s nuclear warhead, is lined up to increase funding for the arms activities sector by $55.6 billion (or nearly 30%) compared to the previous year.

The agency is struggling to meet its timeline and cost goals to reestablish mass production of nuclear warhead explosive cores known as plutonium pits.

In a May USA Today investigation, the NNSA detailed decades of struggle to ensure adequate federal employees with adequate technical backgrounds and oversees the agency’s complex and vast projects. Government Watchdog consistently highlights the issue of staffing as an agency Achilles heel.

The NNSA’s 2026 budget request does not include significant funding for additional federal employees despite testifying to Congress on May 20th.

“This is a recipe to waste money,” said Hartun, NNSA fundraising boost.

Davis Winkie’s role in covering nuclear threats and national security at USA Today is supported by partnership with Autorider Foundation and Journalism Funding Partner. Funders do not provide editor input.

Contributed by Cybele Mayes-Osterman, USA Today

Israel: Will the ceasefire finally be hit in Gaza? Here’s what you need to know

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CNN

Donald Trump was not shy about his desire to end the war in Gaza.

After a 12-day conflict between Israel and Iran was concluded in a ceasefire, the US president has been pushing hard for a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, and when Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was ready to visit the White House, he said he was “looking for that to happen next week.”

Trump announced Tuesday that Israel has “accepted the necessary conditions” to finalize the 60-day ceasefire. Israeli officials confirmed that the country has accepted the latest proposal. On Saturday, Netanyahu will convened his full cabinet to discuss it. Hamas, meanwhile, said he is considering the latest proposal, not indicating whether or not to accept it.

Both sides have long had conflicting demands that negotiators cannot bridge, but as the war enters 21 months, there is a new hope for a deal. Here’s what you need to know.

Since the ceasefire between Israel and Iran on June 24, mediators Qatar and Egypt, as well as the United States, have doubled their calls for a new Gaza ceasefire. A Qatar Foreign Ministry spokesman told CNN that the Israeli-Iran agreement created “momentum” for the latest talks between Israel and Hamas.

The Netanyahu government faces international criticism of the suffering that the Palestinians in Gaza are being subjected to.

Israel imposed a comprehensive lockdown on humanitarian delivery in March. The lockdown was somewhat eased in May after a global expert chorus warned that hundreds of thousands were soon hungry.

Hundreds of Palestinians in Gaza have been recently killed by an Israeli strike. And the distribution of aid has been undermined by violence, with hundreds being killed on their way to get food from the controversial US aid aid initiative, the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF).

Pressure is also growing from within Israel on Netanyahu. Opposition leader Oia Rapid said Wednesday that she has joined the coalition government to enable hostage trade.

Trump predicted on Tuesday that Netanyahu would like to end the war. “He wants to. I can say he wants to. I think we’ll have a deal next week,” Trump told reporters.

Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar said on Wednesday that the country is “serious” to reach deals. “There are some positive signs. We don’t want to say anything more now, but our goal is to start proximity consultations as soon as possible,” he told reporters in Estonia.

Palestinian children will check out the tile ble at a home in Deir Elbara in the central Gaza Strip in the Gaza Strip following the Israeli strike on July 1, 2025.

The exact details of the new proposal for a 60-day ceasefire and hostage release deal remain vague.

Qatar’s Prime Minister previously said that Qatar and Egypt were working to find a “center” to advance from the US conflict proposed several months ago. The proposal outlined the bodies of 10 living Israeli hostages that Hamas took during the attack on October 7, 2023, as well as 18 more hostages in a 60-day ceasefire.

According to the Israeli government, of the 50 hostages still in Gaza, at least 20 are believed to be alive.

The US and mediators are offering stronger assurances about reaching a settlement to end the war in Gaza, as part of their updated proposal, Israeli officials told CNN. Officials did not provide a specific language for the document, but said the language was stronger than previous guarantees.

Israel has agreed to allow a surge in humanitarian aid through traditional UN humanitarian channels, not through the controversial US-backed Humanitarian Foundation, Israel said.

According to sources familiar with negotiations, the stronger language of the proposal aims to maintain a ceasefire and to keep both sides at the negotiation table in the past for 60 days if the contract to end the war is not reached by then.

What is Israel’s demand?

In addition to his purpose of bringing hostages into the house, Netanyahu was not shaking from his greatest purpose: disarmament in Gaza and the destruction of Hamas’ military and governance capabilities.

“I’m telling you – there’s no Hamas. There’s no Hamastan. We’re not back to that,” Netanyahu said Wednesday. “We’ll take all the hostages back.”

But over the weekend, the Prime Minister brought about a rhetorical change in laying out Israeli goals. For the first time, we prioritized the return of hostages before what was called “the best objective” to defeat Hamas.

Netanyahu said “many opportunities have been opened” following Israeli military operations in Iran. “First, to save the hostages,” he said. “Of course we need to solve the Gaza problem and defeat Hamas, but I think we’ll complete both missions.”

This week, Israeli forces began to recommend pursuing a diplomatic path in Gaza after nearly two years of fighting and the removal of many of Hamas’ senior leaders.

On Tuesday, military officials told CNN that Israel has not fully achieved all war goals, but as Hamas’ troops have been reduced and become more difficult to effectively target the rest of the militant group. “It’s hard to achieve tactical goals now,” the official said.

Hamas has three main requirements: To ensure the end of the battle, the humanitarian assistance provided by the United Nations, and to retreat to the position held on March 2 this year, Israel renewed its attacks and occupied the northern part of the strip.

A Hamas official told CNN in late May that the group was “prepared to return hostages in one day. There’s a need for assurance that war will not come again afterwards.”

In response to a previous Trump administration-backed ceasefire proposal in May, Hamas asked us to assure us that permanent ceasefire negotiations would continue and that combat would not resume after a 60-day suspension.

According to Israeli sources, Hamas officials are expected to meet on Thursday to discuss the latest proposals. Israeli sources added that if Hamas agreed, Israel and Hamas would soon enter into close consultations, with officials from both sides in the same building and messages would pass quickly to reach the final deal.

Sources say one important issue to resolve during close consultations is the timeline and location of Israeli forces’ withdrawal in Gaza during a 60-day ceasefire.

Whether a ceasefire is temporary or a path to a permanent ceasefire is the biggest sticking point between the parties fighting.

Hamas also shows no willingness to abandon political and military power in Gaza.

In the 21-month war between Israel and Hamas, the ceasefire is only in place for a total of nine weeks.

According to the Palestinian Ministry of Health, more than 57,000 children have been killed in Gaza during the battle.

Palestinian children line up to pick up their meals at Nusyrat's food distribution points on June 30, 2025.

The first ceasefire came into effect in November 2023, but lasted only a week. Meanwhile, 105 hostages were released from Gaza in exchange for the Palestinian prisoner scores.

The second ceasefire was not hit until January 2025 just before Trump returned to the White House. In the first “stage” of the ceasefire, more than eight weeks, Hamas released 33 hostages, and Israel released about 50 Palestinian prisoners for all that the Israelites were released.

In the second phase planned, Israel was to agree to a permanent ceasefire. However, Israel said it had resumed its attack on March 18, crushing the ceasefire, derailing consultations and putting pressure on Hamas to release the remaining hostages.

CNN’s Jeremy Diamond, Kristen Holmes, Kylie Atwood, Dana Karni, Michael Schwartz and Orenly Berman contributed to this report.

31% of shoppers are boycotted. Find out who participated and why

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As the boycott of consumers, launched earlier this year, continues and expands, new surveys show that almost a third of the consumers surveyed are taking part in such behavior.

Consumers boycott retailers and businesses for several reasons, including diversity, equity, inclusive efforts, and corporate rollbacks on what some organizers call corporate greed.

A new study by Lending Tree surveyed over 2,000 people and found that 31% boycott businesses, while 23% are targets of boycotting, particularly supporting businesses.

Does consumer boycott work?

Boycotts can have a variety of results. They have worked for political rights.

Conservative activists have been successful in recent years in forcing DEI efforts by staging boycotts on retailers and businesses to undermine sales.

Campaigns using hashtags and slogans such as “Go Woke Go Broke,” the boycott of conservative activists aims to become the country’s largest consumer name, including retail chain targets. Some have managed to cut sales and force policy changes.

Now, Target and other companies have found themselves under attack from the other side and are facing a boycott call from day supporters who are angry at the rollback.

Supporters point to targets citing decisions to end some diversity policies as contributors to a sharp pullback of retailer consumer spending that occurred in the first quarter.

Which businesses do consumers boycott?

The target was launched on February 1st and was the subject of several boycotts, including one led by Minnesota activist Nekimalevy Armstrong. Bryant’s group is now encouraging supporters to boycott their targets forever.

Target did not respond to the latest request for comment on its boycott efforts due to the USA Today publication deadline, but previously provided the following statement to USA Today:

In late May, Bryant also called for a digital protest from General Dollar, saying that retailers had left Day’s efforts and hadn’t invested in the black community. In an interview with USA Today, Bryant said protests continued and refused to meet him in a letter that Dollar General sent to the retailer.

Dollar General responded to inquiries from USA Today by providing a copy of the letter it sent to Bryant. In the letter, Dollar General Executive Bace Bild Bace Pristence and Geaner Counsel Rhonda M. Taylor said that Bryant’s claims about the company do not show the company that the meeting is productive.

Taylor included information about General Dollar to “fix some of the misconceptions of the company and our business.” Taylor included details of the retailer’s charitable contributions, including a donation of $500,000 to the National Museum of African Americans in Nashville.

The People’s Union USA also held several boycotts and economic power outages, starting with the economic power outages on the 1st February 28th. The group then held a weekly boycott of retailers and companies such as Target, Walmart, Amazon and McDonald’s.

Organizer John Schwartz has encouraged supporters in his Instagram post, boycotting July 4th festivities, including parades and fireworks, instead staying home with friends and supporting local businesses. The group said it will be expanding its retailer boycott to Home Depot, Starbucks and Amazon throughout July.

In an Instagram post, Schwarz criticized Amazon, saying workers were struggling, and the company’s sales helped Amazon founder Jeff Bezos pay for a gorgeous wedding in Venice.

Starbucks is opposed to the employee union, and Home Depot quietly erased DEI’s webpage, Schwarz said.

In a statement from USA Today, spokesmen from all three companies defended the company.

An Amazon spokesperson said the company remains committed to building a diverse and inclusive company. The company maintains many mechanisms to ensure employees are safe during high temperature events. The company also said that employees in regular full-time operations earn average hourly base wages of $22 or more per hour, and average compensation of $29 or more per hour when including benefits.

A Starbucks spokesman told USA Today that he will receive an average salary worth $30 per hour for people who work at least 20 hours.

“At Starbucks, our success starts and ends with our partners (employees). We respect the right to choose to be represented by or not represented by our unions through a fair and democratic process, and continue to work to make Starbucks the best job in retail,” the company said.

A spokesman for Home Depot shared a statement saying that eight core values ​​have driven business success over the past 45 years.

“We are proud to have a culture that welcomes everyone, and we believe it will help us achieve our business goals by supporting our peers, building relationships and fostering innovation. As we continue to improve our communication, we have been used for a long time to represent the welcoming culture we have built here.”

Almost a third of those surveyed boycotted business

In the Lending Tree survey, consumers who said they boycotted the company cited a variety of reasons, including discrimination (43%), political contributions or affiliation (41%), and religious messages or practices (29%). 45% of the consumers surveyed said they were looking at the value and stance of their business at least once before making a purchase. General Zers is the generation to do the most research, with 59% saying they do so.

Of the respondents, 23% said they are specifically supporting their business as they are targets for boycotts. Of these, 31% said they were Republicans and 20% said they were Democrats.

“So many people are boycotting the company for some reason,” Matt Schultz, chief consumer finance analyst at Lending Tree, told USA Today. “One of the things that I found most interesting about our data is that high-income earners are more likely to boycott them,” Schultz said 43% of six-figure earners boycotted their business.

“It’s important that people talk to the extent that they know the power they have,” Schultz said.

The boycott organizers were pleased with the findings.

“This report confirms what we already know,” Schwartz told USA Today. “People are awake and paying attention. Almost a third of Americans have already boycotted their businesses, and almost half are studying the value of their companies before using DIM.

Levy Armstrong said the loan tree findings confirmed what she and other organizers were looking on the ground.

“Consumers no longer tolerate corporate hypocrisy,” she told USA Today. “This is not a symbolic protest, it’s economic resistance.”

Bryant was happy with the findings, but believes the numbers could be even higher.

“It’s amazing how people get engaged and plugged in. Our community rarely, or rarely, so I think it’s probably higher than that,” Bryant told USA Today. “I see it all as a good indication and I think the bank receipts are even more eloquent than the number of votes.”

Target stock has been falling sharply since the beginning of this year. On January 31st, the shares closed at $137.91 before the first boycott began on February 1st. It reached a minimum of $88.76 on April 8th, down 35.6%. It has started to rise again, but it fell below the stock price earlier this year. On July 1st, the stock closed at $103.88, down 24.6% from January.

Target also cut its annual forecast in its final revenue report on May 21, reporting a sharp decline in the same store sales quarterly as customers pulled back purchases due to inflation and economic concerns. Target also acknowledged that its performance was affected by a boycott of consumers.

In-person pedestrians at targets are also affected, according to Placer.ai. Placer.ai uses panels of tens of millions of devices and employs machine learning to estimate in-store visits. Traffic fell by 8.10% in the week of February 17th, waning and flowing, and sometimes increasing. According to the latest available information, traffic remains negative as in-store visits for the week of June 16th fell 2.9%.

According to Placer.ai, in-store traffic at other retailers and large food chains changed over that period. Costco rose 2.0%, Walmart rose 0.1%, Best Buy fell 1.4%, McDonald’s fell 0.3%, and Starbucks rose 0.4%.

Some Boycotters are back in business

Of those surveyed, 48% of boycotters said they ended up boycotting and then returned to business. That number rises to 70% of people with children under the age of 18.

Schulz of Lending Tree said 53% of men have returned to businesses they’ve boycotted earlier, while 41% of women say it’s not.

“Women may be less likely to boycott, but once they do it, it shows that they are much more likely to never return,” he said.

Betty Lin-Fisher is a consumer reporter for USA Today. Contact her at blinfisher @usatoday.com or follow her on X, Facebook, or Instagram @Blinfisher, @Blinfisher.bsky.social.. Sign up for our free daily money newsletter. This includes Friday’s Consumer News.

There are lots of surprises in the Senate tax bill.

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From gun silencers to child tax credits, there are several secluded provisions lurking in the Senate version of the Republican tax bill.

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WASHINGTON – The Republican massive tax and spending policy bill extends income tax cuts, removes millions of Americans from Medicaid and food stamps, and leads surge funds to Trump’s deportation campaign.

The roughly 900-page bill the House is due to vote on July 2 includes a lesser-known stipulational rash that directly affects American lives, ranging from an increase in child tax credits to punishment for new solar energy facilities.

Some House Republicans are not satisfied with the changes the Senate has made to the bill, so amendments are possible, but the House must engulf the Senate version without revisions, as Trump hopes, to pass the measure by July 4th.

The White House has declared it a must-see bill. This means that it’s the place where pet projects land to secure votes for nervous senators and representatives.

Below are some provisions of the bill that have not been paid much attention to so far.

Benefits for the rich

Wealthy Americans benefit far more than lower income measures, according to an analysis by the Senate Bill’s Center for Tax Policy. The bill holds the current top personal income tax rate of 37%, set by the Tax Cuts and Employment Act. – – End of the year.

All households see taxes falling, but about 60% of the benefits go to those earning more than $217,000 (the top 20% of incomes). In 2026, analysis found that those people received an average tax cut of $12,500, or 3.4% of their after-tax income.

In contrast, the lowest-income households earning less than $35,000 will receive an average tax cut of $150, which is less than 1% of their after-tax income. On average, middle-income households will see taxes dropping by around $1,800, or 2.3% in their after-tax income.

Other provisions in the bill that involve direct benefits to the wealthiest Americans include reducing property taxes imposed on large inheritance assets and passing business income.

Child Tax Credit

The law will forever increase the child tax credit from the current $2,000 to $2,200 per person.

Single parents who earn up to $200,000 and earn up to $400,000 will qualify. Credits for people with high incomes will be phased out.

Cheap gun silencer

Republicans added clauses to the bill that eliminated taxes from almost ten centuries ago to buy or manufacture silencers, short barrel rifles and shotguns and other weapons. They also removed the requirement for gun owners to register silencers.

Move the Space Shuttle to Houston

The bill will move the discovery of the space shuttle from its current home at the Udval Hazy Center in Virginia to the Johnson Space Center in Houston. This is Sen, a Texas Republican. It is the legal goal brought to you earlier this year by Ted Cruz and John Cornyn.

The bill set aside $85 million to relocate to the Johnson Space Center to a space vehicle that meets three criteria. It jumps into space and carries astronauts. Selected by the organization chosen by the NASA administrator.

There are only four space vehicles that meet the first two criteria. Enterprises belonging to the Brave Museum of New York. Efforts to be a part of the California Science Center in Los Angeles. It was discovered at the Smithsonian, Atlantis, on display at the Kennedy Space Center. Only Atlantis and the Discoveries are still owned by the US government.

Smithsonian estimates that moving the discoveries across the country will cost between $300 million and $400 million in taxpayer dollars.

At an event at Space Center Houston last week, Cornyn said Houston’s role in the space program deserves discovery, and although the space shuttle was not manufactured in Houston, it was not released by Houston, the space shuttle should “go home.” The Johnson Space Center served as mission control for the Space Shuttle program.

Mars mission

The bill set aside $999.5 billion for the Artemis Moon Mission and exploration of Mars.

Tax credits for whaling captains

The Senate has increased the deduction that whaling ship captains can charge whaling costs related to whale hunting from $50,000 to the current $10,000.

The addition appears to be a move to get votes from Alaska Republican Sen. Lisa Murkovsky.

It was first added to the tax law in 2004, allowing people to deduct the cost of maintaining boats and weapons as a charity contribution. According to the IRS, the recipient must be recognized as a whaling captain by the Alaska Eskimo Whaling Commission and engaged in a licensed, self-sufficient hunt for bowhead whales.

“Trump Account” for Kids

The bill will create a new savings account called the “Trump Account,” which allows babies born between January 2025 and January 2029 to benefit from a single $1,000 payment from the federal government placed in their account.

Parents can then donate up to $5,000 a year. Savings are invested in equity funds that grow along with the stock market.

Once a child reaches 18 years old to education, training, or to buy a first home, they may have access to some of their money. They can use the full balance at age 30.

Student loan changes

The bill places a new cap on how much a student can borrow from federal student loans for graduate school and how many parents can borrow to pay their students’ tuition fees.

There will be fewer opportunities for postponement and tolerance, and new restrictions on loans for part-time students.

The bill also includes a much more limited repayment option, including the end of the long-standing loan forgiveness program and a Biden-era program tailored to the person’s income. It will be replaced by a new fixed-rate program that will be at a disadvantage for low-income families.

Green Energy Program

The bill dramatically rolls back tax credits from the Biden era, designed to boost clean energy projects fueled renewable sources such as energy and wind.

Democrats say it will destroy the growth of the wind and solar industry, trigger a surge in Utility Bills for Americans, and put hundreds of renewable energy projects that will boost the country’s electricity grid.

Additionally, for those who purchase new or used electric vehicles, the tax cuts will end on September 30th, not the end of 2032.

The GOP bill will also increase oil and gas leases on public land and revive coal leases in several states.

Charging foreign workers

Immigrants often move to other countries and send money home to their families and communities. The United States is the world’s largest source of these relocations known as remittances.

The Republican bill would implement a 3.5% tax on these transfers, which must be paid by the person sending the money. This includes exemptions for American citizens.

Prisons, prisons, lawsuits, what comes next

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Sean “Diddy” Combs’ trial ended with a mixed verdict after the ju judge acquitted the music mogul on top of the charges.

But while the two-month trial of the once-celebrated rap icon revealed surprising and widespread allegations of physical, sexual and psychological abuse, this chapter of combs’ troubles does not end.

While some companies and institutions have broken ties, much of the hip-hop world has yet to tackle the incident completely. Whether or not a previous collaborator has admitted the allegation, its suspicion, or lack thereof, reflects a broader calculation of genres with power, abuse, and accountability.

After the verdict, the hip-hop figures fought were taken into custody, awaiting his possible release and decision on the verdict. And with nearly 80 civil lawsuits for physical and sexual assaults still pending and new accusers continue to appear, the fallout from the allegations could continue to unfold in court and publicly publicly for the coming years.

That’s what you need to know about what’s coming next.

Did Didi win his trial?

Yes, no. After appearing in court for two months every day in his New York City hometown, Combs faced a split verdict on July 2, convicted of two modes of transportation engaged in prostitution and two counts of sex trafficking and assault.

How long does Didi go to prison?

The founder of Bad Boy Records is engaged in prostitution charges, sentenced to a maximum of 10 years in prison for every transport. With two convictions, he could face up to 20 years in prison.

On the charges that he was acquitted, the assault was the biggest prison life sentence. Sex trafficking had 15 years of mandatory minimum prison and maximum life in the largest prison.

When did Didi go to prison? Will Diddy be released?

Combs has been jailed at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn since his arrest on September 16th. Combs’ lawyers are fighting to release him, and prosecutors are retreating. The judge asked both sides to submit a letter outlined the argument in court on July 2nd.

Diddy still faces nearly 80 civil lawsuits

There is still a mountain of civil lawsuits waiting for the comb.

To date, around 80 cases have been filed against combs, many of which have been filed by Texas-based attorney Tony Busby. The alleged victims, represented by Buzbee, accounts for roughly half of the lawsuits filed so far.

The lawsuit includes both named and anonymous accusers with various sexual assault and physical violence claims dating back to 1991 until 2024.

The music mogul denied all allegations.

Contributions: Kimmi Robinson and Anna Kaufman

Rubio is at the end of USAID, with research saying exclusion could contribute to 14 million deaths over the next five years

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CNN

Secretary of State Marco Rubio welcomed the end of the US Agency for International Development (USAID) on Tuesday. A new analysis shows that its demolition could contribute to 14 million deaths over the next five years.

“This era of government-sanctioned inefficiency is officially over. Under the Trump administration, we will ultimately carry out foreign funding missions in the United States, where our national interests are prioritized.”

“As of July 1, USAID will formally cease to implement foreign aid. Foreign aid programs that advance management policies and American interests will be administered by the State Department where they will be provided with more accountability, strategy and efficiency,” he said.

The rapid destruction of USAID led by the Office of Government Efficiency (DOGE) supported by Elon-Musk has cut thousands of foreign aid programs, including many people focused on life-saving work.

A study released Monday in the Lancet estimated that cuts in USAID funding could result in more than 14 million deaths by 2030. It is estimated that one-third of these deaths (more than 4.5 million children under the age of five).

The authors of the study stated that the impact of funding cuts is “similar to a global pandemic or major armed conflict.”

“However, unlike these events, this crisis is attributable to conscious and avoidable policy choices. The burden can fall disproportionately on children and young groups, and the consequences can echo over decades,” they write.

According to a Lancet study, USAID funding was most likely to reduce HIV/AIDS-related mortality rates, with malaria most likely to follow suit. We also found strong associations with tropical diseases, diarrheal diseases, nutritional deficiency, respiratory infections, maternal mortality and tuberculosis.

A senior State Department official disparaged the Lancet investigation and said on Tuesday:

“I think he’s very clear that much of the life-saving work we do is continue and become more efficient,” the official said.

But the aid group says that, coupled with the sudden cleaning of foreign aid in January, the sudden demolition of USAID, has already resulted in catastrophic results.

Officials have largely denied criticism of the administration’s moves.

“You can go back and relate all these little decisions. It’s not our focus. It’s not our secretary’s focus. We’re excited about what America’s first foreign aid agenda looks like and how much of an impact we can have in the future,” they said.

Rubio described the new approach as “prioritizing opportunities and investment in support over aid over dependence.”

“As we move forward, our support is targeted and time is limited. We support countries that have demonstrated both the ability and willingness to help ourselves, and target our resources to areas where they can have multiplier effects and catalyze the durable private sector, including American businesses and global investments,” he writes.

Officials said the administration is considering new indicators to assess the success of US aid work.

“We want to see a kind of bilateral engagement. We want to see investments, co-investments from partners. We want to work with trade contracts, compacts, contracts, cooperation, and work with things,” they said. “These are great indicators of success for us.”

“What we want to do with this is Build Bridges, in a broader alignment with the president’s kind of mission and diplomatic agenda,” they said.

The USAID closure took thousands of jobs and had a ripple effect across the broader humanitarian world. A senior State Department official said he did not anticipate an operational “gap” with the USAID closure, saying “several staff from USAID and elsewhere were employed by the State Department.” A source who spoke to CNN described the recruitment process as opaque and non-merit-based.

The senior official repeatedly raised the example of Pepfer, the US president’s emergency plan for AIDS relief, saying their work will continue in a “more efficient” and “more influential” way. Bipartisan lawmakers have long supported the initiative launched by President George W. Bush.

According to the Lancet survey, in 2023, 60% of PEPFAR’s two-sided HIV support was mandated and implemented by USAID.

“Most of the PEPFAR programs are running today. 85-90% of direct treatment beneficiaries are receiving the medication,” they said. “We’re going to put out a really long-term comprehensive roadmap as to what we’re going to do with Pepfar in the coming weeks and months.”

US teenage influencer Ethan Guo was detained in Antarctica while attempting a solo flight to seven continents

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CNN

The teenage pilot, who is about to fly solos for all seven continents, hit a patch of rough air this weekend when Chilean authorities changed his flight plan without his permission and detained him by landing in Antarctica.

Chilean prosecutors say American influencer Ethan Guo, 19, has broken “multiple domestic and international regulations” by changing his flight plan without prior notice and landing in parts of Antarctica, where the South American country maintains its territorial claims.

CNN requested comment from Guo, who said that lawyers on Sunday had experienced “complications” by the young pilot while flying.

Guo says he is trying to raise $1 million for cancer research by becoming “the first person to fly to solos on all seven continents.”

His last post on June 23rd records flights over the Philippines.

Chilean authorities say on Saturday Guo submitted a false flight plan and took off from Carlos Ibañez del Campo airport in the southern city of Punta Arenas as the only passenger and crew member aboard the Cessna 182Q aircraft registered as the N182WT. At one point during that flight, authorities say he turned off the course towards Antarctica.

Ethan Guo will take a photo in Geneva, Switzerland in August.

“The accused provided false information to the aviation agency. He submitted a flight plan that showed he would fly around the city of Punta Arenas,” said Christian Cristo Rifo, a regional prosecutor for Magalan and Chile’s Antarctica.

“However, he continued to head towards Antarctica without giving anyone permission and landed at Li’s airfield in Rodolfo Marsh, Chilean Antarctic Territory. This action put the accused seriously at risk of air traffic safety into Antarctica and Magalan areas.

Cristoso explained that as soon as Guo landed in Antarctica, he was detained and formally charged. “The defendant not only violated the aviation code, but also violated several national and international regulations regarding routes to Antarctica and access to the White Continent,” stressed Chrisst.

His lawyer told reporters Sunday at a press conference after the young pilot was accused of experiencing “complications” while flying. “While already in the air, he began to experience a series of complications,” Karina Ulloa said, adding that Guo “arguing that he is making exploratory flights to see if he can follow this route.”

CNN requested comment from Ulloa on Tuesday.

Magalan and Chilean Antarctic Prosecutors’ Office on Sunday determined that teens must remain in the Chilean division of the frozen continent until authorities grant permission to return to Punta Arenas city.

A Chilean court ordered a 90-day investigation period for the case. Meanwhile, the guo must remain in Chile.

Have egg prices been lowered?

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The Waffle House Index may be a more useful indicator than extreme weather.

The diner chain announced on July 1 that it would lower the egg charge four months ago, indicating a drop in egg prices from an all-time high seen earlier this year.

“Egg cell news… As of June 2nd, the extra egg charges have officially been off the menu,” Post said. “Thank you for understanding!”

USA Today has contacted Waffle House to confirm the changes.

Why did the waffle house charge extra for the eggs?

An extra 50 cent egg charge was implemented at about 2,100 locations in Waffle House in early February, offsetting a higher than normal price due to “continuous egg shortages due to HPAI (vine flu).”

Waffle House offers around 272 million eggs a year, according to its website, well outperforms nominal waffles, which sell just 124 million. The temporary rates are said to have been adopted to avoid price increases on other menu items.

Have egg prices been falling?

The price of eggs averaged around $6.22 in March, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. This rise phase was set when the current avian flu outbreak began in the US in 2022, killing highly pathogenic avian flu, the bird flu, that is, bird flu, and leaving chickens behind to maintain their supply.

By February 3, when Waffle House implemented an additional fee, the virus had infected around 150 million poultry in all 50 states since January 2022, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Because of its spread, infected birds are being selectively massacred throughout the United States, including millions of birds in a single location.

The consumer price index for May shows that egg prices have started to ease from their highs earlier this year, but overall prices last year are still 40% higher.

“Families are seeing relief at egg prices that promote food deflation,” Agriculture Secretary Brook L. Rollins said in a June 26 statement regarding the USDA’s response to avian flu. “We are proud to have over 900 biosecurity assessments conducted so far, but the resources remain available, urging poultry farmers of all sizes to do their ratings before the difficult and potential fall.”

Will Trump’s tax bill help or hurt you? It may depend on your income

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New analysis shows that higher earners will benefit most from the Senate tax bill in the short term, but future generations in all income bands could be “bad.”

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President Donald Trump’s tax bill could “deteriorate” future generations, regardless of income, according to a new report in Penn Wharton’s budget model.

Like other analyses, the latest findings from the nonpartisan research initiative suggest that most Americans see tax cuts. In the long run, however, a July 1 report from Penn Wharton Budget Lab predicts lifetime losses for all revenue brackets.

Kent Smetters, a professor at Penn Wharton’s budget model, said:

The analysis found that the version of the Senate tax bill, which was passed slightly on July 1, leads to a higher deficit and delayed economic growth compared to its counterparts from the House.

The bill heads to the House for final approval. Trump requested the final version on his desk, and is ready to sign by July 4th, but admitted that the deadline could be “very difficult” as some House Republicans expressed dissatisfaction with the changes in the Senate.

What’s the difference under the Senate version of the tax bill?

The law, dubbed “One Big Beautiful Bill,” will provide tax cuts from Trump’s first term in 2017, increase child tax credits and introduce other tax cuts, including hints and no tax on overtime wages.

To help pay for the cuts, the government will cut spending on the Supplementary Nutrition Assistance Program, previously known as Food Stamps, and cut Medicaid, a program that provides health insurance to more than 71 million low-income Americans.

The Senate version has some important differences from the House bill, including:

  • A permanent tax credit for companies that allows companies to immediately deduct all costs of qualification investments and research projects, not for years. Under the House bill, these tax cuts were effective from 2025 to 2029.
  • There was a temporary adjustment that permanently strengthened the standard deduction, adding $750 for single filers, $1,125 starting in 2025, $1,500 for married couples, $1,500 for one filer, $1,000 for heads of households, and $2,000 for couples between 2025 and 2028.
  • The child tax credit has been permanently increased to $2,200 compared to a temporary increase between 2026 and 2026-2028.

“The Senate makes things more permanent,” Smetters told USA Today. “On the other hand, we don’t have to revisit the same politics in four years. On the other hand, there is the financial costs associated with it. That means more debt and more burdens depending on future generations.”

Medicaid will also be reduced in the Senate version, according to the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office. By 2034 there is an estimated 11.8 million people who are not insured, compared to the 10.9 million estimate based on the House proposal.

Impact on future generations

Various analyses suggest that Trump’s tax bill rewards Americans with higher incomes than counterparts with lower incomes.

For example, a June analysis of the House bill by the Congressional Budget Office found that under the law, resources for the poorest people would be reduced by about $1,600 a year, primarily due to Medicaid and food aid reductions. On the other hand, the wealthiest people earn an average of around $12,000.

Another June report from Yale Budget Lab suggests that the fifth of the earners loses about $560 a year, while the top 20% wins $6,000.

However, according to Penn Wharton’s budget model, all future generations will experience lifetime losses, regardless of income. High-income households are expected to lose $5,700 under the Senate bill, while low-income households lose $22,000. The report points to a decline in social security network and a decline in wages as key drivers.

Under the House bill, Penn Wharton’s budget model projected lifetime losses from $500 for high-income households to $15,800 for low-income households.

“They’re going to get worse, in future generations. It doesn’t matter where they fall,” Smutters said. “In the end, someone has to pay (the tax bill) and essentially pass that on to the next generation.”

Slow economic growth

According to previous analysis of the budget model, the House version showed a 0.4% increase in GDP by the tenth year, while the Senate version brings a 0.3% loss. Thirty years later, GDP fell 4.6% in the Senate bill and 1.5% in the 1.5% House version.

Higher deficits

According to Penn Wharton’s budget model, the main deficit is projected to increase $3.1 trillion over the next decade under the Senate tax bill.

Other reports also found higher debt loads under the Senate bill. The Congressional Budget Office plans to add $3.3 trillion to citizen debt over the next decade, predicting it will be $800 billion more than the House bill. A July report from Yale Budget Lab says the Senate bill would add $3 trillion to its debt by 2034, compared to the estimated $2.4 trillion in the House bill.

How much do low-income Americans lose?

According to the latest Penn Wharton budget model analysis, the lowest-earning households will lose their after-tax income in both the short and long-term, while higher workers will benefit under the Senate bill.

  • Income under $18,000 will lose an average of $235 in 2027 and $1,380 by 2033.
  • Those who make between $18,000 and $52,999 will lose $75 in 2027 and $1,625 by 2033.
  • Those who earn between $53,000 and $95,999 will win $1,350 in 2027, but will lose $130 by 2033.
  • Those who earn between $96,000 and $178,999 will earn $3,880 in 2027 and $2,825 by 2033.
  • Those who earn between $179,000 and $271,999 will earn $6,615 in 2027 and $4,985 by 2033.
  • Those who make between $272,000 and $400,999 will earn $9,360 in 2027 and $7,670 by 2033.
  • Those who earn between $401,000 and $1,019,999 will earn $20,605 in 2027 and $18,645 by 2033.
  • Those who earn between $1,020,000 and $4,450,999 will earn $36,020 in 2027 and $29,430 by 2033.
  • Those who earn more than $4,451,000 will earn $290,485 in 2027 and $82,255 by 2033.

Smetters said the numbers could be slightly adjusted as more information becomes available for specific corrections.

US judges say Department of Health and Human Services layoffs are illegal and must be stopped

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A federal judge ruled that the recent major layoffs in the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services were likely to be illegal and ordered the Trump administration to halt plans to scale back and restructure the country’s health workforce.

US District Judge Melissa Dubose granted the interim injunction sought by the coalition of 19 states and the District of Columbia attorney generals and the District of Columbia in a lawsuit filed in early May.

Dubose said the state has shown “irreparable harm” from the cuts and is likely to win the allegation that “HHS’ actions are arbitrary and whimsical and against the law.”

“An administrative agency has no authority to order, organize or implement wholesale changes to the structure and function of the agency created by Congress,” Dubose wrote in a 58-page order taken over Tuesday to the U.S. District Court in Providence, Rhode Island.

Her orders block the Trump administration from issuing a final or further shooting of the layoffs announced in March. HHS has been instructed to submit a status report by July 11th.

This ruling applies to employees who have terminated in four departments of HHS. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in the US. Food and Drug Administration’s Tobacco Products Center. Offices within the Administration will start under management for children, families and employees in the local office working on Head Start issues. Secretary Assistant Office for Planning and Evaluation.

Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. eliminated more than 10,000 employees in late March and merged 28 agencies into 15. Since then, agencies, including the CDC, have repeatedly cancelled layoffs affecting hundreds of employees, including branches monitoring HIV, hepatitis and other illnesses.

The Attorney General argued that the massive restructuring was arbitrary and out of the scope of the agency’s authority. The lawsuit says the lawsuit has destroyed key programs and promoted costs that would be burdened by the state.

“The intended effect was… the abolishment of wholesale of many HHS programs that are essential to public health and safety,” the lawsuit allegedly.

The reductions are part of the federal “Again American Health” directive to streamline expensive agencies and reduce redundancy. Kennedy told the Senator on May 14 that there was “so much confusion and confusion” in HHS.

However, the restructuring eliminated key teams regulating food safety and drugs, supporting a wide range of programs on tobacco, HIV prevention, and maternal and infant health. Kennedy has since said that 20% of those fired for mistakes could be revived.

The states that took part in the lawsuit include a Democratic governor, many of the same states, and a few other states, also appealed to the Trump administration for more than $11 billion in public health funding. In that case, a provisional injunction was granted in mid-May.

Recent polls show:

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President Donald Trump’s average approval rate has been stable this week. This is because his legislative package, which promised to extend the tax cuts in 2017, cleared the Senate and landed in the House of Representatives heading for the July 4 holiday.

The average recent poll from the New York Times shows that as of Thursday, July 2nd, Trump had a 44% approval rate, with 52% disapproving his duties. It’s basically the same as all his ratings in May and June, with the Times’ average approval shaking between 44% and 46%.

A similar polling aggregation tracks similar overall plateaus in American recognition of Republican presidents.

Pollster Nate Silver’s “Silver Bulletin” newsletter calculated that the president calculated the average of 45% approvals and 51% disapprovals this week. This is roughly the same as the end of last week’s June 24th.

In mid-February, Trump finished the first 100 days of his second term with an average job approval rate of 45%, according to an analysis by Gallup, who has been involved in the aggregation in the weeks after giving or taking two points. He is above 41% he won in his first term near the 100-day mark, but well below the average approval rate for a modern president in the same time frame. All other US presidents, dating back to Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1952, achieved an average approval rate of 60% during the first three months of work.

This shows some of the latest polls. Except for the RMG investigation conducted on June 18-26, the following polls were conducted after the US launched airstrikes at Iranian nuclear sites on June 21.

Marist University’s polls

  • 43% will approve
  • 52% disapproved

The survey of 1,381 US adults was conducted between June 23rd and 25th with an error of ±2.9 percentage points.

YouGov/Economist Poll

  • 42% will approve
  • 53% disapproved

The survey of 1,648 US adults was conducted between June 27th and 30th with an error of ±3.3 percentage points.

Morning polls

  • 47% will approve
  • 50% disapproved

The survey of 2,202 registered voters was conducted between June 27th and 29th with an error of ±2 percent points.

Tipp Insights Poll

  • 44% will approve
  • 45% disapproved

A survey of 1,421 US adults was conducted June 25-27 with an error range of ±2.7 percentage points.

RMG Research Polls

  • 51% will approve
  • 47% disapproved

A survey of 3,000 US adults was conducted June 18-26 with an error of ±1.8 percentage points.

Kathryn Palmer is a national trending news reporter for USA Today. You can contact her kapalmer@usatoday.com And with x @Kathrynplmr.

What we know about Disney Cruise father and child rescue

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Investigators are challenging rumors about father and daughter who were rescued after boarding a Disney cruise ship over the weekend.

The Broward County Sheriff’s Office told CBS News Miami that “the little girl was not in custody, as was misreported on several social media sites.”

The sheriff’s office told people: “It doesn’t seem suspicious here, but detectives from the Broward Sheriff’s Office are investigating the situation where a child has fallen overboard.”

USA Today contacted the Broward County Sheriff’s Office for updates on the investigation. In the meantime, here is what we know.

what happened

The girl went overboard on Sunday, June 29th, as Disney dreams were back from the Bahamas to Fort Lauderdale, Florida.

The father entered after her, and both were quickly rescued by the crew.

Jen Young, a cruise passenger, remembers hearing the announcement of the captain and mob (the “man” outboard”), and sees the crew “running around” on the ship, throws an orange ring into the water and turns the ship.

A rescue ship went out to rescue passengers. He said Young was “sitting, moving, being conscious, trying to tell everyone it’s okay.”

“We praised the members of the crew for their extraordinary skills and prompt action, ensuring that it would return to both guests’ safe ships within minutes,” a Disney Cruise Line spokesman told USA Today on Sunday.

What’s next?

Investigators are still piecing together what happened.

It is unclear whether the findings could affect any future sailing, but Disney Cruise Line said, “We are committed to the safety and well-being of our guests, and this incident underscores the effectiveness of safety protocols.”

Cruise participants praised the crew’s prompt response.

A major insurance change has come to GLP-1 drugs to lose weight. Here’s how it affects patients

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Last week, Tara Eacobacci was appointed a doctor who is dedicated solely to the topic of health insurance. A major change in the merits of her prescription meant that the medication she used to manage her weight, the treatment she had been doing the right thing over many years, was no longer covered by insurance.

“I’m totally furious,” Ecobatch said. “It’s not only causing me stress, it’s making me mad.”

Starting Tuesday, CVS Caremark will stop covering the Zepbound of Eli Lilly, a major pharmacy benefit manager that will serve as an intermediary for managing health insurance companies, large employers and other prescription drug regimes, and is now ending the zepbound of Eli Lilly, a blockbuster GLP-1 drug approved by US Food and Drug Management for historic weight management of obesity by chronic drug management in November 2023.

“This change is happening because this change can be safe, effective and costly for your condition,” CVS Caremark said in a letter sent to patients in May using Zepbound. “Remember, if you refill your current medication after July 1, 2025, you will need to pay the full fee.”

Wegovy, the GLP-1 drug for treating obesity from Lily’s competitor Novo Nordisk, is covered by plans managed by CVS Caremark and several other plans Generally, it is a drug that is not effective.

CVS covers Wegovy and the decision to rule out Zepbound is to “force manufacturers of pharmaceutical companies to compete with each other,” encouraging both Eli Lilly and Novo Nordisk to lower prices for US products.

“The terrible, high dating prices set by GLP-1 manufacturers for weight loss are the biggest barrier to patient access,” CVS Health said in a statement. “Our formal strategy maintains clinically appropriate coverage while using competition to promote lower costs.”

But pharmacy profit managers, one of the biggest, face scrutiny about their role in rising drug costs in the US.

Coverage changes apply to the most common formulary templates in CVS Caremark. If the selection became available, a subset of members taking weight loss medications chose Wegovy and Zepbound at roughly comparable levels, CVS Health said.

When it comes to weight loss, providers and patients argue that GLP-1 drugs are not one-to-one exchanges, but rather that unstable insurance coverage conflicts with the science and experience of people managing obesity as a chronic disease.

“Mainly across society, we have not embraced obesity as a long-term chronic disease, and are looking for quick fixes and quick solutions that are not real in the biology and disease process. The mindset has yet to keep up with science.”

“If decision makers don’t understand that obesity is a long-term chronic disease, then it’s when we see these exclusive policies, or these very troublesome use management practices, that are just really one after another, set up to prevent people from getting the care they need.

Trial system

Dr. Jodi Dushay, an endocrinologist at Beth Israel Deecones Medical Center and an assistant professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, said it will take time to develop treatment plans using GLP-1 drugs that work with each patient. Some people have side effects that may cause an allergic reaction at the injection site due to one drug, or have certain side effects such as severe constipation, nausea, and stomach pain.

She often disrupts patients’ weight loss trajectories by adapting to drug changes, and trial and error can create a lot of waste due to medications that were lacking a while ago.

“As soon as these announcements (about changes to insurance coverage) come out, there’s a flood of messages from patients,” she said. “It’s extremely stressful for patients who are really good, have tolerant and feel like they’ve made their way in drug therapy, nutrition and exercise.

As Dushay looks at the patient’s medical chart, she says her stomach is shaking when she sees a small box showing insurance information.

“In this area of ​​weight management, a small part of the chart determines the majority of their care. For me, it’s unprecedented in terms of how much insurance is important to the clinical care I offer and the options I have,” she said.

Discussion of strategies to manage insurance mandatory changes in clinical care treatment violations.

“We rarely have time to ask patients how they feel, whether they are side effects and weight loss, or general health updates,” says Dushay. “There is a loss of time in patient care and the burden of time outside of visits by doctors and pharmacists has increased dramatically.”

Another major insurance change that will occur next year will affect another large sash of Dushay patients. In January, BCBS Massachusetts excludes all GLP-1 from coverage for the treatment of obesity and reserves coverage for these drugs only if it indicates treatment of type 2 diabetes.

“The nation is facing an obesity crisis, so we are working hard to support our members by improving access to nutritious foods, physical activity programs and quality clinical care when needed,” David Merritt, senior vice president of foreign affairs for the Blue Cross Blue Shield Association, said in a statement. “We share the enthusiasm for the success of true weight loss experienced by countless patients taking GLP-1. Like new medications, we can learn to ensure that patients are set up for success. Last year, we found that about 60% of people were long enough to stay on GLP-1 and couldn’t see any meaningful weight loss.

Zepbound and Wegovy are both effective in treating obesity and are approved by the FDA to do so, but there are differences.

The study found that those who used tilzepatide injections such as Zepbound were more likely to lose weight and reach a specific weight loss target than those who used semaglutide drugs such as Wegovy. The two drugs have a different set of broader indications, and Zepbound is also approved to treat sleep apnea, for example, in people with obesity. Side effects vary, and one drug may be more acceptable than another.

Successful people with Zepbound may be able to file for exceptions after their insurance coverage changes, but CVS Caremark has limited options to actively plan changes, with many patients getting angry and worried about their health and well-being.

For Eacobacci, the changes in insurance and the emotions behind it are furious and based on prejudice.

CVS Caremark had requested that she attempt multiple alternative treatments and proved that they didn’t work before she got Zepbound’s approval this year. When she was using Wegovy, she began to approach prediabetic levels despite her A1c glucose levels being consistent with diet and exercise habits. This all changed when she started Zepbound.

“I feel better. I’m not that bloated. My movements are definitely different. I’m suited to the clothes, but I feel validated. Everything from these years tells you. “This drug actually validated some of this. ‘Hey, I need support. I can’t do this myself as much as I’m trying this.”

Changes in medication can have unnecessary and dangerous effects on physical health. Ecobacci said she won 10 pounds and saw a surge in A1C levels in a month, as well as mental health.

“Weight stigma and bias have affected us nationwide,” said Ecobatch, who is worried about many people who felt depressed after hearing news about changes in insurance coverage. “You made me jump over the hoop. I got the advance permission you needed for me. And now you – it should be illegal because it’s so shocking to take it from me.”

Coverage exceptions may be optional, but the appeal process takes time.

“It’s really frustrating to have to justify what I want to do all the time for money,” Dushay said.

For those who lose Zepbound coverage, drug maker Eli Lilly has expanded access through LillyDirect, a company platform that coordinates and fills out copay-paying patient telehealth services. Single-dose vials are available for $499 per month through the Lillydirect Zepbound Self Journey program, with the highest doses available starting July 7th.

“We are confident in Zepbound’s performance and are still committed to ensuring patients have access to the treatment they need,” Lily said in a statement.

Iran’s president approves laws suspending cooperation with the United Nations Nuclear Watchdog

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CNN

Iranian President Masuud Pezeshkian has approved a law that will halt cooperation with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).

The decision on Wednesday comes a week after Iranian parliament passed a law suspending cooperation with the UN nuclear watchdog. Iran is denounced the IAEA for working with Israel to provide a route for strikes at nuclear facilities.

Pezeshkian has ordered Iran’s atomic energy agency, the Supreme National Security Council and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to begin implementing the law, the state-run communications agency IRNA said.

It is unclear when and how the new law will be implemented, but the decision could open up a way for Iran to rebuild its nuclear program without testing or surveillance from the IAEA. Iran is a signatory to the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and has requested members to allow monitoring and inspection of the facility to be confirmed to confirm the peaceful nature of the facility.

“We are aware of these reports. The IAEA is waiting for more official information from Iran,” an IAEA spokesperson told CNN.

Germany said Pezeschkian’s move would send a “disastrous signal.” “It is essential for Iran to work with the IAEA for a diplomatic solution,” German Foreign Ministry spokesman Martin Guyes told reporters.

UN Secretary-General spokesman Stephane Dujarric called Iran’s decision “concerns” at a press conference on Wednesday. He reiterated that Secretary-General Antonio Guterres called on Iran to cooperate with the IAEA.

Israel launched an unprecedented attack on Iran last month. It targeted military commanders, nuclear facilities and scientists developing their atomic programs. In the following weeks, the US launched a supportive strike at Iran’s nuclear facilities in Natanz, Isfahan and Fordau. The 12-day conflict between Israel and Iran ended with a ceasefire last week.

Iran said its facility has been severely damaged by the attack, but it intends to continue enriching uranium to continue its “peaceful” nuclear program. On Sunday, the IAEA said the US strike against Iran caused complete damage to the program, failing Tehran to resume enriched uranium “in a few months.”

Last month, IAEA director Rafael Grossi was at the headquarters of the United Nations Nuclear Watch Agency in Vienna, Austria.

A few days before Israel attacked Iran’s facilities, the IAEA said it could not confirm that Tehran’s nuclear program was completely peaceful and issued a report that Iran is enriching uranium to arms-grade levels.

The document sparked an IAEA resolution, censoring Iran and promoting the iranian government’s rage, accusing the agency and its director, Rafael Grossi of bias.

Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Khamenei has repeatedly denied Iran’s construction of bombs and says weapons of mass destruction are banned under Islam. The country began to enrich uranium to a higher level after the US president pulled out in 2018 from a nuclear agreement signed between the Obama administration and Iran.

As Trump’s megaville heads to the house, US stock futures

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U.S. stock futures are higher after the Senate passed a slightly legislation called “One Big Beautiful Bill” by President Donald Trump, handing it to the House for final approval.

Congress is aiming to get the law on Trump’s desk by July 4th, but it remains to be seen if that will happen. Many home representatives are still unhappy about Medicaid cuts, food aid and the deficits inflated in the days leading up to that deadline.

At 6:05am on ET, futures linked to the Blue Chip Dow rose 0.15%, while Broad S&P 500 futures rose 0.13%, while high-tech Nasdaq futures added 0.09%.

Trade issues remain

The mega-tax bill is in the spotlight, but trade issues continue to remain behind the scenes.

The deadline for Trump’s voluntary trade deal on July 9th is soon approaching, with a mixed message on whether the deadline is flexible. Last week, White House press chief Caroline Leavitt told reporters the July 9 deadline for reopening tariffs in countries that have yet to reach a trade deal “uncritical” yet.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bescent then said trade deals could take place by Labor Day in September.

But Trump said this week he wasn’t thinking of delaying the deadline for higher tariffs to resume, cutting off consultations and updating his threat to impose mandatory rates on several countries, including Japan. He shunned the US export of rice and criticised Japan for the unbalanced automobile trade between the two countries. He raised tariffs of 30% to 35% on Japanese goods, raising doubts about whether the US could reach deals with Japan.

So far, the market has eschewed fear of rising tariffs. “Investors are banking the bank for yet another Trump withdrawal and reversal,” said Mike O’Rourke, chief market strategist at Jonestrading.

Corporate News

  • According to Bloomberg, Verint Systems is in talks with acquisition company Thoma Bravo.
  • Centene has withdrawn its full-year outlook after the company said it received data indicating that it had fewer enrolled in the Affordable Care Act Insurance market than expected and was less healthy.

Medora Lee is a money, market and personal finance reporter for USA Today. mjlee@usatoday.com and Subscribe to our free daily money newsletter Personal finance tips and business news every Monday to Friday.

Trump reaches a trade deal with Vietnam as a major tariff deadline approaches

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WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump said Trump has secured a trade deal with Vietnam just to be a second agreement with another country ahead of the July 9 deadline, when U.S. tariffs could skyrocket.

Trump said the US would collect 20% tariffs on communist imports from Vietnam and 40% tariffs on transshipping of goods, but details of the transaction were not immediately clear.

“In return, Vietnam will do something they have never done before and give the United States full access to the market for trade,” Trump said in a July 2 post on social.

“In other words, they mean “opening the market to the US.” This means we can sell our products to Vietnam with zero tariffs,” the president added.

Trump announced the deal after speaking with Lam, the general secretary of the Communist Party of Vietnam. Vietnam’s state media said the US and Vietnam have reached an agreement to a joint statement on a “mutual, fair and balanced” trade agreement.

In Trump’s call with Lam, Vietnam’s leaders have called on the US to recognize Vietnam as a market economy and remove restrictions on exporting high-tech products to Vietnam, Vietnam News reported.

Businesses are currently paying the 10% universal tariffs Trump has imposed on imports from Vietnam and around 180 other countries.

However, the rather large mutual tariffs Trump initially imposed in early April are due to return on July 9, shortly after a 90-day suspension amid the turbulence of the market.

“No, I’m not,” Trump told reporters on July 1 when asked if he plans to extend the moratorium. “I’m not thinking about pauses. I write letters to many countries, and I think you’re just starting to understand the process.”

When the Trump administration delayed drastic mutual tariffs so that negotiations could continue with other countries, White House economic teams predicted that deals would come at a fierce speed.

“We’re going to do 90 transactions in 90 days. It’s possible,” White House trade adviser Peter Navarro said at the time.

But the administration is struggling to advance that pledge.

President Trump and British Prime Minister Keri have reached the first trade deal since Trump imposed new tariffs, but no other tariffs have continued.

In June, Trump announced the framework for a trade agreement with China, with the US collecting 55% tariffs on Chinese imports, and China collecting 10% on US imports. A month ago, Trump and China agreed to cut the triple-digit tariffs imposed on the other as the two parties continued talks.

The Trump administration previously pointed out Japan as another opportunity to secure a trade contract. But Trump on Tuesday said there was no chance of a US contract.

“I doubt Japan and it – they’re very strict. You have to understand, they’re spoiled,” Trump told reporters.

Contribution: Reuters

Reach Joey Garrison with X @joeygarrison.

How to use private AI to keep your business secrets safe

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Companies looking to use AI don’t need to rely on cloud-based tools such as Chat-GPT. Instead, you can install and run a private AI model locally to ensure that all your data remains private and secure.

There are several open source tools for those considering experimenting with local running AI models. All of these prioritize data privacy, cost-effectiveness and ease of deployment, ensuring they are suitable for different levels of technical expertise.

Private AI for business experiments

Local

Localai is an open source platform developed as an alternative to Openai’s API drop-in, allowing businesses to operate LLM locally. This tool supports a variety of model architectures, such as transformers, GGUFs, and diffusers.

Localai’s technical requirements are minimal and operates on consumer grade hardware. The modest specifications allow businesses to use existing hardware. Comprehensive guides and tutorials are available to enable businesses to set up their tools. From here you can generate images, run LLM and create audio on-premises using consumer-grade hardware.

Localai offers a wide range of USE cases that showcase audio synthesis, image creation, text generation and voice cloning, helping businesses explore practical applications of AI while keeping Keepind data secure.

Orama

Ollama helps you manage model downloads, dependencies, and configuration, and simplify LLM execution locally. The lightweight open source framework provides a command line and graphics interface, supports MacOS, Linux, and Windows, and allows easy download of models such as Mistral and Llama 3.2. Each model can run its own environment, streamlining the process of switching between different AI tools for different tasks.

By enhancing research projects, chatbots and AI applications that process sensitive information and data and removing cloud dependencies, Ollama allows teams to work from the public internet and meet privacy requirements such as GDPR without compromising AI capabilities.

Ollama boasts a user-friendly setup and is suitable for inexperienced or non-developers. A detailed guide and community support are available, giving your business complete control over all the elements.

Dog mind you have

Docmind AI is a streamline lighting application for detailed, advanced document analysis using Langchain and Local LLMS via Ollama. Docmind AI allows businesses to personally and safely analyze, summarize, and minate data in many file formats.

Docmind AI requires medium technical know-how. Being familiar with Python and Streamlit is considered beneficial, but it is not essential. GitHub provides comprehensive setup procedures and documented examples, highlighting data analysis, information extraction, and document summary.

Deployment Considerations

Localai, Ollama and Docmind AI are built to be accessible to everyone, but there is no doubt that technical knowledge is beneficial. Additionally, understanding Python, Docker, or the command line interface will help smooth out your deployment.

Most tools have the ability to run on standard consumer grade hardware, but performance can improve as the specifications increase. It is also essential that all security measures in the hosting environment are implemented, despite locally operated AI models enhancing data privacy by definition. However, comprehensive security helps ensure protection against unauthorized access, potential data breaches, and system vulnerabilities.

(Image Source: “Fence” by Foilman is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0.)

See also: Salesforce AgentForce 3 brings agent visibility

Want to learn more about AI and big data from industry leaders? Check out the AI ​​& Big Data Expo in Amsterdam, California and London. The comprehensive event will be held in collaboration with other major events, including the Intelligent Automation Conference, Blockx, Digital Transformation Week, and Cyber ​​Security & Cloud Expo.

Check out other upcoming Enterprise Technology events and webinars with TechForge here.

Princess Wales Catherine will be first revealed after she drops out of royal Ascot

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London
CNN

Princess Welsh Catherine reflects the “really difficult” aftermath of chemotherapy during her first public appearance since her unexpected withdrawal from Royal Ascott two weeks ago.

On a visit to the happy garden of Colchester Hospital in Essex, England on Wednesday, the princess told the patient:

“But in reality, the rest of the stages are really difficult. You’re not necessarily under a clinical team, but you can’t function at home like you used to,” she added.

According to Kensington Palace, Kate visited the hospital garden in southeast England to “celebrate the incredible healing powers of nature.”

The Princess of Wales planted roses when she visited Wellbeing Garden.

During the visit, the princess met patients and staff at the hospital’s Cancer Wellbeing Center. “To understand how gardens in a healthcare environment play an important role in promoting healthy outcomes, poor health and helping increase recovery time.”

Kate, 43, emphasizes the importance of nature on her health trip last year.

“Nature has been my sanctuary for the past year,” she said in a video posted to X, marking May’s Mental Health Awareness Week.

Kate revealed her cancer diagnosis and revealed that she began chemotherapy last March. When she was treated, she retreated from public life and only made some rare appearances last summer. In September, she announced that she had completed her chemotherapy and “doesn’t do what she can to keep her cancer.”

She has made more appearances this year, but the popular royal family is understood to work to find the right balance when she returns to official duties after treatment.

Before dropping out of ASCOT in a short time, Kate had been involved in many engagements over the past few weeks, including two major events on the Royal Calendar, the London Color Parade and the order for garter service in Windsor.

She resumed her in-person duties last week when she and Prince William invited Melinda French Gates for a meeting at Windsor Castle. According to the UK’s PA Media News Agency, it was understood that they discussed philanthropy.

Kate’s Wednesday visit to Colchester Hospital coincided with the hospital, accepting donations of 50 “Catherine’s Rose” plants. She planted some of these roses. It donates their proceeds to Royal Marsden Cancer Charities when sold commercially.

Kate has been heavily involved with charities since her diagnosis. In January, Kensington Palace announced that she had been appointed co-patron of the Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust, a specialized cancer centre in Chelsea, West London, where she was treated.

Funds from the sale of these roses will be used to help charities establish specialized programs that will help cancer patients live better with illness.

Who might lose Medicaid benefits?

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good morning! It’s Daniel de Vis with your daily money. Today we analyze the “big and beautiful bill.”

President Donald Trump’s domestic spending and tax cuts bill, which clears the Senate, will enact a sudden cut in Medicaid, a national health insurance program for low-income households.

Details are here.

Tax reductions for heels often

The Trump bill, approved by the Senate, also makes major changes to the controversial salt cap, state and local tax breaks. The Senate raised its salt deduction cap. This is predicted to inflate the deficit and benefit mostly wealthy Americans.

This is the new mathematics.

Media companies settle “60 minutes” lawsuit

CBS parent company Paramount has settled a lawsuit filed by President Trump in an October “60 Minutes” interview. This is the latest concession to the president who targeted what media companies describe as false or misleading reports.

Paramount said it would pay $16 million to settle the lawsuit, and the money was allocated to Trump’s future presidential library. However, many people question whether there is any benefit to the lawsuit.

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About daily money

Every day, Daily Money will provide you with the best consumer and financial news from USA Today, breaking complex events, providing you with the TLDR version, and explaining how everything from the Fed rate to bankruptcy will affect you.

Daniel de Visé covers USA Today personal finance.