Category: Politics

  • To fix the problems left by Trump, the UK should look to Europe, and Keir Starmer sees that’s the best way.

    To fix the problems left by Trump, the UK should look to Europe, and Keir Starmer sees that’s the best way.

    Keir Starmer was back at the Emirates Stadium on Tuesday to watch Arsenal’s 3-0 win over Real Madrid, a result that far exceeded expectations of his team’s chances in Europe. And, over the next few days, I wouldn’t be surprised if he tries to snatch a short Easter break in the warmth and sunshine of that same continent.

    Football and family holidays offer him some much needed relief from the grim reality of a faltering economy, towering public debt and terrifying global insecurity, which are all being made worse on a daily – sometimes hourly – basis by Britain’s closest ally of the previous 80 years.

    But that mayhem being caused by Donald Trump’s extended stag party in the White House means that Europe is much more than an occasional distraction for the prime minister. Slowly, if not always surely, it is once again becoming the direction towards which Britain must turn.

    This is not exactly where Starmer thought he would to be. For all his talk of an EU “reset”, the plan had been to “make Brexit work” within self-imposed “red lines” ruling out joining the single market or a customs union, blocking freedom of movement and appearing to allow only some minor mitigation of the damage done by Boris Johnson’s deal.

    In the immediate aftermath of Trump’s inauguration, new horizons on the other side of the Atlantic briefly seemed rather more exciting. There was genuine interest in, if not admiration for, this insurgent disruptor of the US’s stuffy political establishment. There was also a prospect that Britain might gain advantage over the EU from a repurposed special relationship being gilded by inviting Trump to hang out with the royals.

    And, even now, securing some sort of US trade deal that might save thousands of British jobs, or the promise of the minimal military cooperation needed to maintain European security, are still prizes worth having. It’s silly to blame Starmer for trying to win them, or to expect him to strike poses against Trump for the sake of cheap headlines and not much else.

    What’s changed, however, is a recognition around the cabinet table that the US president is much more of a problem than part of any solution. Gone are the days when a government source would brief it had more in common with Maga Republicans than US Democrats, or Rachel Reeves could tell Britain to learn from Trump’s optimism and “positivity”. Nowadays ministers say it has become almost futile to anticipate his next move because “he’s only ever reliable in his unpredictability”. Whatever happens next, this is a US administration that can’t be regarded as a stable ally either on the economy or security.

    Those who think Starmer, in his repeated calls for “cool and calm heads”, is still being excessively polite have perhaps been too busy complaining to have noticed a subtle shift in his language. For instance, when the Times last week ran the headline: “Why Keir Starmer hopes Trump’s tariffs could be good news for the UK”, the rebuttal came from the prime minister himself, with an article in the same newspaper the next day, which began by stating: “Nobody is pretending that tariffs are good news.”

    Donald Trump and Keir Starmer meeting in the White House on 27 February 2025. Photograph: Daniel Torok/The White House

    One well-placed Downing Street adviser now describes how Trump “wants to destroy the multilateral institutions” that Starmer believes are essential “to span divides and bring the world together”. Another mentions polling evidence that apparently shows even if a big US trade deal can be done, British voters would still prefer closer links to the EU because they don’t trust Trump to deliver.

    Certainly, efforts to reset those relations have been pursued with more vigour over recent weeks. These began with Starmer’s “coalition of the willing” to replace the military support for Ukraine that Trump appears so intent on taking away, and will continue ahead of the EU-UK summit on 19 May. More focus on shared interests and values and less on “red lines” should mean a security and defence pact is agreed. Also within reach is a so-called veterinary deal to make agricultural trade easier, while legislation is already going through parliament that would enable UK ministers to align with EU regulations in other areas to the benefit of small exporters.

    There may yet be a workable youth mobility scheme for those aged 18-30, which some EU members, notably Germany, regard as a test of whether this government is really different to the last one. Although the proposal was hastily ruled out during last year’s general election, the Treasury is increasingly sympathetic to it because, by some estimates, it could do more for growth than planning reform and housebuilding combined. At the same time, new cooperation on North Sea windfarms and negotiations to align the UK and EU carbon trading scheme could increase investment, improve energy security and generate billions of pounds in additional revenue.

    But there are still limits to this revived EU-UK relationship and it will never go far enough or fast enough to satisfy the many Labour supporters convinced that Brexit was a catastrophic mistake. Those close to Starmer emphasise he’s less interested in “relitigating old arguments from the previous decade” than in finding new ways to pursue the national interest now that “the era of globalisation is over”. Downing Street believes that part of the appeal of both Trump and our homegrown strain of rightwing populism lies in how institutions like the EU became too detached from the people they were meant to serve. In short, they’re determined not to be seen defending the status quo.

    The UK wants any security pact to include data-sharing on illegal immigration, which the EU, for its own arcane reasons, may be unwilling to accept. The government will insist that any defence deal must also allow British industry to bid for contracts from a massive new European rearmament fund. That agreement, in turn, could yet be held up by rows with a French government demanding concessions over fish quotas. The hope is that our political leaders prove big enough to hurdle such obstacles. But economic nationalism is not confined to the White House and making meaningful progress in Europe has never been easy.

    Though Arsenal’s Champions League victory will have been the high point of Starmer’s week, he may reflect that his team haven’t yet reached the semi-final stage of the competition. In politics, as in football, there is much to play for in Europe, and a long way to go.

  • Meta appoints Dina Powell McCormick and Patrick Collison as new board directors amid a refresh.

    Meta appoints Dina Powell McCormick and Patrick Collison as new board directors amid a refresh.

    The tech giant Meta Platforms Inc. continues to refresh its board of directors, naming Dina Powell McCormick and Patrick Collison as board members, effective April 15.

    Collison is the co-founder and CEO of the payments platform Stripe, while Powell McCormick is vice chair, president and head of global client services at the merchant bank BDT & MSD Partners. 

    Powell McCormick also has strong connections in Republican politics, serving as deputy National Security Advisor to President Trump, and as an assistant Secretary of State for Condoleezza Rice. She is also married to Republican Senator Dave McCormick of Pennsylvania.

    The additions of Collison and Powell McCormick to Meta’s board comes just a few months after Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced three new board members, including UFC CEO Dana White. The company has now added five new board members in just four months.

    “Patrick and Dina bring a lot of experience supporting businesses and entrepreneurs to our board,” Zuckerberg said in a statement. “Patrick is deeply committed to expanding economic opportunity, and Dina has a long career advocating for economic development and supporting entrepreneurs. Their perspective will be extremely valuable to businesses that rely on our services to grow.”

    “Between WhatsApp, Instagram and Facebook, Meta is one of the internet’s most important platforms for businesses. I look forward to helping them navigate the abundant opportunities of the coming years,” said Collison.

    “I’m excited to bring my experience in finance, government and economic development to support the people and entrepreneurs who use Meta’s services,” added Powell McCormick.

  • Trump eased one trade war. Another may just be getting started.

    Trump eased one trade war. Another may just be getting started.

    The United States and China have sharply raised tariffs on each other’s imports over the last week, raising the prospect of a long and painful trade war between the world’s two largest economies.

    Even as investors rallied to his decision to pause “reciprocal” tariffs on imports from dozens of countries Wednesday, President Donald Trump raised tariffs on Chinese goods to 145 percent — an increase of nearly 50 percent in a day, and his fourth tariff action against Beijing since January. President Xi Jinping has not backed down, either, retaliating by raising China’s tariffs on U.S.-made goods to 84 percent and imposing new curbs on critical resources. (Trump on Wednesday said the tariff rate on China would be 125 percent, but a White House official, speaking on the condition of anonymity to explain government policy, said Thursday the actual rate would be 145 percent.)

    The intensifying financial hostilities represent a potentially significant threat to the United States and global economies regardless of the delay in higher tariffs for other trading partners. Government officials in Beijing and Washington have, for years, girded for a major clash between the two superpowers, and some economists say further escalation could do perhaps as much to push the U.S. into a recession as Trump’s initial tariff proposal would have.

    Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said Wednesday morning that “everything is on the table” to respond to China, and lawmakers in Congress have begun pushing measures designed to increase financial pressure on Beijing.

    The two nations have become increasingly interlinked over the past several decades, with Americans dependent on cheap consumer imports and Chinese exporters reliant on the vast U.S. market. The trade ties include iPhones (made in China), soybeans (grown in the United States) and financial instruments that form the bedrock of the U.S. financial system. The consequences of an all-out trade war would be global; combined, the two countries account for more than 40 percent of the world economy.

    China accounts for about 14 percent of U.S. imports, and the tariffs on Chinese goods are now so high that the overall U.S. tariff rate rose slightly Wednesday even though Trump simultaneously lowered duties on many other countries, according to Ernie Tedeschi, a former Biden administration official now at Yale University’s Budget Lab.

    “Everyone is breathing a sigh of relief today, but if we’d just started with just 100-plus percent tariffs with the world’s two largest economies, we’d be saying we’re in a global trade war the likes of which we have not seen in decades‚” said Josh Lipsky, senior director of the Atlantic Council’s GeoEconomics Center. “If these tariffs were to stay on at this level … the recession risks are still high, in part because there’s still so much uncertainty.”

    Jason Furman, a Harvard University economist who served in the Obama administration, said Trump’s tariffs are “now higher and more inflationary” than they were when the president unveiled major trade measures on April 2.

    There are indications that de-escalation remains possible. On Wednesday, Trump appeared to express sympathy for the Chinese position, saying that Xi wanted to reach an agreement but that Beijing was not sure how to do so. The president said he was optimistic further escalation would not prove necessary and called Xi “a friend of mine” who understood how to reach a deal.

    “China wants to make a deal. They just don’t know how quite to go about it,” Trump told reporters. “They don’t know quite how to go about it, but they’ll figure it out.”

    Later in the day, he said he did not think higher tariffs on China would be necessary: “I don’t think we’ll have to do it more.”

    Beijing had not retaliated by Thursday afternoon local time. “We will not sit and watch the destruction of international trade rules,” said Lin Jian, a spokesman for the Foreign Affairs Ministry. “If the U.S. insists on launching a tariff or trade war, China will fight to the end.”

    Other experts warn that it’s possible both leaders would be unable to soothe the tensions inflamed by a rapid set of new trade barriers. And many officials influential with the Trump administration are pushing measures that could deepen, rather than calm, economic hostilities. Economists and policymakers in both parties have long accused China of unfair trade practices, such as stealing U.S. intellectual property and undercutting labor and environmental standards.

    Sen. Rick Scott (R-Florida), a close Trump ally, has pushed legislation to require stockbrokers to provide warning labels for investors on firms linked to Chinese entities. While in the Senate, Secretary of State Marco Rubio also pushed significant restrictions preventing Chinese firms from accessing U.S. capital markets, blocking them or their subsidies from U.S. exchanges. Investor Kevin O’Leary, who has spoken with Trump, has called for tariffs of 400 percent on China.

    “There’s not a high enough tariff for me. I don’t think we should buy anything from China,” Scott said in an interview. He added, of the Trump administration: “I think they get it — they understand that China wants to destroy us, destroy our allies, destroy our way of life.”

    Top Trump advisers such as Bessent and Stephen Miran, the chair of the White House Council of Economic Advisers, have said they believe China is in a much more vulnerable position than the U.S. That has suggested their willingness to push even greater punitive measures, perhaps beyond import duties.

    “We might end up with escalation that goes beyond tariffs,” said Eswar Prasad, a Cornell University professor who was previously chief of the financial services division at the International Monetary Fund. “As of today, many of the scenarios considered completely unrealistic are looking more likely.”

    Beijing has tools for further retaliation. China could move faster to shed its large U.S. Treasury holdings, which would drive up the price of issuing debt and disrupt the bond market. It could choose to target the U.S. housing market by selling hundreds of billions in mortgage-backed securities, which could push rates up. Other options include restricting pharmaceutical exports, semiconductor chips, critical minerals and other resources essential to the U.S. economy, said Adam Posen, president of the Peterson Institute for International Economics, a centrist think tank.

    “They can create shortages of things we really need and can’t switch away from anytime soon,” Posen said.

    Posen also said China could cut off tourism to U.S. cities.

    “Essentially, China does not have to engage in the tariffs game with Trump,” he said. “They can deprive us of things we need directly either for households or for our everyday lives.”

    China cannot back down in the face of what amounts to an attack on Chinese manufacturing, said Wang Yiwei, an international relations scholar at Renmin University in Beijing.

    “When no common ground exists between ‘the great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation’ and ‘make America great again,’ decoupling becomes the underlying reality and tensions will only escalate,” Wang said, referring to a favored slogan of Xi’s and Trump’s slogan.

    Yet Trump may not be seeking more confrontation. Hawkish voices in the administration believe China is weak and that the U.S. should take advantage of this opportunity to increase financial pressure, according Michael Pillsbury, a leading scholar on China at the Heritage Foundation, a right-leaning think tank. But Pillsbury said Trump’s comments suggest a desire to bring down the temperature.

    “The super-hawks are saying, ‘China is down now; we really have to finish this off.’ I oppose that approach,” Pillsbury said. “Trump is right: The Chinese don’t know exactly how to get out of this situation. We need to find a back-channel way to help them see what they should do next.”

  • Trump Changes Stance on Global Tariffs, Introduces 90-Day Delay

    Trump Changes Stance on Global Tariffs, Introduces 90-Day Delay

    President Trump on Wednesday abruptly reversed course on steep global tariffs that have roiled markets, upset members of his own party and raised fears of a recession. Just hours after he put punishing levies into place on nearly 60 countries, the president said he would pause them for 90 days.

    But Mr. Trump did not extend that pause to China, opting instead to raise tariffs again on all Chinese imports, bringing those taxes to a whopping 125 percent. That decision came after Beijing raised its levies on American goods to 84 percent on Wednesday afternoon in an escalating tit-for-tat between the world’s largest economies.

    In a post on Truth Social, the president said that he had authorized “a 90 day PAUSE” in which countries would face “a substantially lowered Reciprocal Tariff” of 10 percent. As a result, nearly every U.S. trading partner now faces a 10 percent blanket tariff, on top of 25 percent tariffs that Mr. Trump has imposed on cars, steel and aluminum.

    Slumping markets quickly rallied after Mr. Trump’s post. The S&P 500 climbed several percentage points in a matter of minutes and closed with a rise of more than 9 percent, sharply reversing days of losses. Wednesday was the best day for the S&P 500 since the recovery from the 2008 financial crisis.President Trump on Wednesday abruptly reversed course on steep global tariffs that have roiled markets, upset members of his own party and raised fears of a recession. Just hours after he put punishing levies into place on nearly 60 countries, the president said he would pause them for 90 days.

    But Mr. Trump did not extend that pause to China, opting instead to raise tariffs again on all Chinese imports, bringing those taxes to a whopping 125 percent. That decision came after Beijing raised its levies on American goods to 84 percent on Wednesday afternoon in an escalating tit-for-tat between the world’s largest economies.

    In a post on Truth Social, the president said that he had authorized “a 90 day PAUSE” in which countries would face “a substantially lowered Reciprocal Tariff” of 10 percent. As a result, nearly every U.S. trading partner now faces a 10 percent blanket tariff, on top of 25 percent tariffs that Mr. Trump has imposed on cars, steel and aluminum.

    Slumping markets quickly rallied after Mr. Trump’s post. The S&P 500 climbed several percentage points in a matter of minutes and closed with a rise of more than 9 percent, sharply reversing days of losses. Wednesday was the best day for the S&P 500 since the recovery from the 2008 financial crisis.

    Nearly every stock in the index rose. Airlines, some tech companies and Tesla were among those companies to soar over 20 percent. Shares of automakers rose sharply even though 25 percent tariffs on imported cars remain in place. Ford and General Motors both rose more than 7 percent.

    Mr. Trump, who for days had insisted he was not concerned about the market rout, acknowledged on Wednesday that the downturn had fed into his decision.

    “Over the last few days it looked pretty glum,” Mr. Trump said. “I thought that people were jumping a little bit out of line,” he said, in explaining his decision. “They were getting yippy. They were getting a little bit afraid.”

    Mr. Trump’s change in course came amid a sharp sell-off in U.S. government bond markets and the dollar, which are typically seen as the safest corner for investors during times of turmoil. Investors large and small had watched trillions in stock market value vanish in a matter of days, and economists increasingly sounded urgent alarms that the United States might be careening toward a recession of its own making.

    Asked Wednesday if the bond market reaction had caught his attention, Mr. Trump said he noticed over the weekend that investors were getting “queasy.”

    “I was watching the bond market; the bond market’s very tricky, but if you look at it now, it’s beautiful,” he said.

    The 90-day halt to tariffs ultimately caused stock prices to skyrocket, prompting the president to suggest on the sidelines of an event at the White House that the gains might have set a “record.”

    Earlier in the day, Mr. Trump had told Americans to “BE COOL!” and quickly followed up with a post saying “THIS IS A GREAT TIME TO BUY!!!”

    That prompted some Democrats to suggest that Mr. Trump was intentionally manipulating stock markets. In a hearing in the House of Representatives Wednesday, several Democrats questioned Jamieson Greer, the U.S. trade representative, about the president’s aim.

    “It’s not market manipulation,” Mr. Greer said. “We’re trying to reset the global trading system.”

    The president announced last week that he would raise tariffs to levels not seen for a century, a change he said would make global trade more fair even if it caused some “discomfort.” As markets gyrated, Mr. Trump and his advisers insisted that they were committed to keeping the tariffs on until other countries lowered their trade barriers and made other economic changes.

    Dozens of foreign countries raced to assemble delegations to appeal to the Trump administration. In his hearing on Wednesday, Mr. Greer said he had meetings Tuesday with officials from Europe, South Korea, Ecuador and Mexico, in addition to conversations with countries such as the United Kingdom in recent weeks.

    Vietnamese officials had offered to cut their tariffs on American apples, cherries and ethanol, and brought along a term sheet to a meeting spelling out changes they were willing to make, Mr. Greer said. He predicted the negotiations would lead to “open markets overseas,” creating a “virtuous cycle” for American manufacturing.

    Mr. Greer criticized the typical way to negotiate trade deals, describing them as “where you ask others nicely to give you market access and to do a dialogue with you for several years, and at the end you have no more market access.”

    “And then there’s the Trump way,” he added.

    As the hearing was nearing its end, Mr. Trump sent out his post announcing the pause, which took the gathering by surprise and rippled through the chamber.

    “This is amateur hour,” shouted Representative Steven Horsford, Democrat of Nevada. “It looks like your boss just pulled the rug out from under you.”

    Image source: Apples at the 4PFoods distribution warehouse
    Image source: Apples at the 4PFoods distribution warehouse

    But while Mr. Trump lowered tariffs on most countries globally, at least until July 9, Wednesday’s events left punitive tariffs in place on China, the second-largest source of U.S. imports last year.

    China makes the bulk of the world’s cellphones, computers, toys and many other products. When those items are brought into the United States, importers — most of which are American companies — are expected to pay more than the cost of the item itself in fees to the government.

    Beijing and Washington have been engaged in a tit-for-tat conflict since Mr. Trump returned to the White House. The president has vilified China as an economic aggressor whose entry into the World Trade Organization decimated workers and communities across the United States. While China has become a manufacturing powerhouse, many U.S. industries have benefited from access to the Chinese market.

    Asked on Wednesday whether he expected to continue raising levies on China, Mr. Trump said no and suggested he was waiting for a call from China’s leader, Xi Jinping, so the two could work out a deal.

    “China wants to make a deal,” he said. “They just don’t know quite how to go about it.”

    Last week, after Mr. Trump imposed a 34 percent tariff on China, Beijing responded with an equal levy. Mr. Trump then added an additional 50 percent tariff, which China matched with a 50 percent levy of its own.

    The Ministry of Commerce announced separately on Wednesday that it was putting export controls on 12 American companies and had added six more American companies to its list of “unreliable entities,” meaning they will be mostly barred from doing business in China or with Chinese companies.

    Mr. Trump’s advisers quickly tried to spin his decision to remove most tariffs globally as a win and not a capitulation. Mr. Bessent said that the tariffs had worked to get some of China’s closest neighbors such as Vietnam and Cambodia to seek deals with the United States.

    On Wednesday afternoon, the president told reporters that he might consider exempting some U.S. companies from the tariffs, in addition to the 90-day pause. He said his decision on this would be made “instinctively.”

  • Kari Lake to be detailed to State Department to dismantle VOA parent agency

    Kari Lake to be detailed to State Department to dismantle VOA parent agency

    Kari Lake, senior adviser to the parent agency of Voice of America, is set to be detailed to the State Department, a move that could thwart her ambition of transforming U.S.-backed news content worldwide, according to two people with knowledge of the move who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to share internal decisions.

    President Donald Trump tapped Lake to lead VOA, which delivers news to audiences around the world, after she had eagerly sought a position in the new administration. Lake, a one-time Republican candidate for Arizona governor and U.S. Senate, had told her associates that she wanted to transform the outlet into a powerful “weapon” to fight an “information war.”

    But Trump’s campaign to dismantle the federal bureaucracy effectively gutted VOA and its parent, the U.S. Agency for Global Media (USAGM), through an executive order. Lake never became director of VOA. She was instead named a senior adviser to USAGM with an uncertain long-term role.

    The individuals did not say exactly what post she will fill at the State Department, or whether Trump’s initial plan of eventually installing her over VOA fizzled after billionaire Elon Musk’s U.S. Doge Service called for the news agency to be shut down. This is the first high-profile shuffle for a political appointee of the new administration.

    Lake’s move is intended to help her coordinate closely with USAGM and the State Department to scale back the agency and its affiliated outlets to their statutory minimum, a third person familiar with her movements said: “She will be detailed over to State to accomplish this mission.”

    Those plans face their own uncertainty. Trump’s executive order initiating the process faltered in the wake of a string of judicial decisions blocking the effort, leaving the news operations and their employees in a holding pattern.

    Lake’s new role is expected to take effect as early as this week, the two people said.

    “I remain committed to effectuating President Trump’s mission to modernize and reform the way we tell America’s story around the world while protecting the interest of the American taxpayer,” Lake said in a statement to The Washington Post on Tuesday. “In order to do that effectively, we look forward to working with interagency counterparts including the Department of State under the strong leadership of Secretary of State Marco Rubio.”

    Lake initially pushed back against Musk’s efforts to dismantle VOA in February in a speech at the Conservative Political Action Conference.

    “I believe it is worth trying to save,” she told the audience, just before she was named special adviser to USAGM. Trump intended to install her as VOA director later this year before abandoning those plans, according to the two people familiar with Lake’s future moves.

    Voice of America was founded to deliver news coverage to countries around the world where a free press is threatened or nonexistent. At its start, VOA told stories about democracy to people in Nazi Germany. VOA and affiliates such as Radio Free Europe and Radio Free Asia were designed as a form of soft diplomacy, a way to tout the United States’ free-press values in countries where antidemocratic forces prevail.

    Trump has accused VOA of speaking “for America’s adversaries — not its citizens.” And Lake, an ardent Trump surrogate who has echoed his false claims that the 2020 election was stolen, also repeated his criticism of national media outlets — and of the content at VOA.

    Trump’s directive targeted both VOA and its parent agency, and severedcontracts for privately incorporated international broadcasters that the agency also oversees, including Radio Free Europe, Radio Free Asia and the Middle East Broadcasting Networks. All told, about 3,500 journalists and other media workers were affected by the moves.

    The swift action threatened to force VOA to go dark for the first time since it launched during World War II. It also revealed the uncertainty facing the people Trump has installed to lead federal agencies — and the tension between their ambitions to be relevant and his own desire to cut those agencies out of existence.

    Various federal judges have temporarily halted the administration’s efforts to shut down the different news outlets, ruling that the administration cannot shut down a news organization that Congress established by law.

    Lake, a former local TV news anchor, became one of Trump’s favorite surrogates over the past few years, largely because she adhered to his “Stop the Steal” message and delivered it with her signature soft-focus style.

    At times, Trump expressed skepticism about her political viability in Arizona and wondered whether she could “drag” down his vote margins in a state he saw as key to his electoral success.

    At one point in 2023, after grumbling that she visited his Mar-a-Lago Club too frequently, Trump suggested she should leave his Florida retreat and campaign for Senate in her home state.

    Trump won the state last November. But Lake lost her U.S. Senate race in Arizona to Democrat Ruben Gallego — and quickly positioned herself for a role in Trump’s administration. Her name was mentioned as a possible contender for ambassador to Mexico or as an agency spokesperson. She fixed her attention on a position with VOA, according to a person familiar with Lake’s thinking.

    At the time, according to an Arizona associate, there was “some uncertainty” about her long-term prospects in Washington because the Trump administration aimed to “gut” VOA.

    “Then we’ll figure out something else for you to do,” the person recalled of the discussions.

    “The idea was: Just come out here and we’ll figure it out. There’s a zillion comms jobs, face-of-the-franchise jobs,” the person said.

    Amid a legal battle over the administration’s moves to essentially shut down VOA and other U.S.-funded outlets, Lake has mused about her future prospects with the administration.

    During one recent conversation, she told the Arizona associate that she was enjoying the job, and she marveled at her efforts to ferret out waste.

    “She said she was enjoying it,” the person recalled. “She had a mindset of trying to fix things and make it doable — but not a lot was worth saving.”

    Lake presented the latest move as a continuation of her role as a storyteller for the country.

    “I am thrilled to be working on behalf of President Trump and this administration. He put me in this role because I’m a fighter,” her statement read. “And I’m disgusted how Washington DC and this agency, in particular, has been screwing over hardworking Americans.”

  • Many lawyers who argue for Trump at Supreme Court are heading for the exit

    Many lawyers who argue for Trump at Supreme Court are heading for the exit

    At least half of the front-line lawyers in the elite Justice Department office that represents the Trump administration at the Supreme Court are preparing to leave or have already announced their departures — an unusually high amount of turnover at a time of intense litigation involving the president’s initiatives.

    The people planning to leave the solicitor general’s office have various reasons, according to several people close to the workforce, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss upcoming personnel changes.

    Many are uncomfortable or turned off by directives from Justice Department leaders, including Attorney General Pam Bondi’s demand for “zealous advocacy” of President Donald Trump’s agenda, these people said.

    The planned departures, and the newly announced retirement of veteran Edwin S. Kneedler, come as the Trump administration has repeatedly asked the high court to clear the way for its efforts to dramatically reshape the federal government, expand immigration enforcement and halt federal spending.

    The justices handed Trump a string of temporary, procedural victories over the past week in response to requests from the office. A divided court on Monday allowed the administration to use a wartime statute to try to deport alleged Venezuelan gang members, though it said the migrants must have an opportunity to challenge their removals. On Tuesday, the court paused a judge’s order requiring the government to rehire thousands of probationary employees, and last week it said the government could freeze tens of millions of dollars in teacher training grants.

    Attrition from the office also coincides with an abrupt restructuring in leadership following the arrival of Solicitor General D. John Sauer, who was confirmed by the Senate last week along party lines. Sauer successfully represented Trump at the Supreme Court last year in his case seeking broad presidential immunity from criminal prosecution for official acts while in office.

    The solicitor general is the fourth-highest-ranking official in the Justice Department, sometimes referred to as the “10th justice” because he or she is so often involved in the cases the court accepts.

    In addition to presenting the government’s views at the court, the office develops the department’s broader appellate strategy. It has traditionally hired lawyers from politically diverse backgrounds to provide an array of legal perspectives.

    The Trump administration’s demand for loyalty, as well as its removal of prosecutors and FBI officials deemed not supportive of the president’s agenda, go against that tradition, outside analysts said. So too does Trump’s directive that Bondi “seek sanctions” against attorneys and law firms that the administration believes are engaging in “frivolous, unreasonable and vexatious litigation against the United States.”

    Georgetown University law professor Steve Vladeck, who closely tracks the work of the court, said the solicitor general’s office has “spent its entire history building a reputation of trust and credibility that the Supreme Court relies upon and takes very seriously.”

    “The question is, who is left?” Vladek said. “Who is going to argue against positions that might be good for team Trump but are inconsistent with the standards of the office — and potentially the long-term interests of the government?”

    Asked through a spokesperson about the departures, Bondi defended the office in a statement: “As evidenced by this week’s significant victories at the Supreme Court, the Office of the Solicitor General led by John Sauer is staffed with brilliant and highly qualified attorneys to defend President Trump’s agenda and uphold the rule of law.”

    Traditionally, all of the lawyers in the office except two — the solicitor general and his or her principal deputy — are nonpartisan career employees who span administrations, rather than political appointees. When the office takes legal positions, it has historically taken a long view about what is best for the U.S. government.

    Attorney Sarah M. Harris, a former law clerk to Justice Clarence Thomas, filled the role of solicitor general temporarily in advance of Sauer’s confirmation. She then slid into the No. 2 spot.

    This week, Sauer took the unusual step of bringing in Hashim M. Mooppan as a second principal deputy. Mooppan held high-level political appointments during the first Trump administration and has a similar legal pedigree to Sauer. Both were law clerks for the late Justice Antonin Scalia and the retired appeals court judge Michael Luttig. A Justice Department spokesperson declined to say whether the dual principal deputy structure would remain in coming weeks.

    Some turnover in the office is not unusual when there is a change in administration, typically in May after oral arguments are completed for the term. But the anticipated number of departures among the 16 assistants — at least eight, by some counts — is significantly higher than normal, according to the people familiar with how the office works.

    Those people said the exodus raises questions about whether the department will be able to recruit attorneys from top law schools with clerkship experience and diverse backgrounds at a time when the administration is rapidly filing emergency requests at the high court.

    The lawyers who remain include veteran Malcolm Stewart and Curtis E. Gannon, another former Scalia clerk.

    The office has already lost attorney Colleen Sinzdak, who argued 11 cases during her nearly six years in the office. Sinzdak clerked for Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. and former attorney general Merrick Garland during his tenure on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit.

    Separately, Kneedler announced his retirement from the office after 46 years. He has served as deputy solicitor general, a career civil service position that endures from one administration to the next, and argued more than 150 cases at the high court during his tenure. He is known as the conscience of the office because of his advocacy among his colleagues for taking positions in the best interest of the government.

    “For decades, he has been the office’s institutional memory, the keeper of its core values, a wise counselor to countless members of the office, a role model to Department lawyers, and a valued personal friend to his colleagues,” said Michael Dreeben, a veteran of the office who alsoserved as a deputy solicitor general and represented the federal government in more than 100 cases.

    Kneedler defended President Barack Obama’s Affordable Care Act and worked on a range of cases involving separation of powers and most of the court’s cases involving Native Americans. He will be honored this week at his alma mater, the University of Virginia Law School.

    While in the office, he overlapped with three future Supreme Court justices. Kneedler worked on briefs and legal strategy with Roberts, mentored Samuel A. Alito Jr. and helped Elena Kagan prepare for her first court argument.

    “Whenever Ed is on the brief or is arguing, I know — and I won’t speak for my colleagues, but I bet they all feel the same way — we’re getting the best possible argument that can be made for the position that he is defending,” Alito in 2014.

  • Washington Post Opinion Editor Resigns Over Jeff Bezos’ Revamp Plans

    Washington Post Opinion Editor Resigns Over Jeff Bezos’ Revamp Plans

    Jeff Bezos is shaking up the Washington Post again. The billionaire owner of the newspaper said Wednesday he will change the focus of the opinion section to focus on “support and defense of two pillars: personal liberties and free markets.”

    According to Bezos, he offered Washington Post editorial opinion page editor David Shipley “the opportunity to lead this new chapter. I suggested to him that if the answer wasn’t ‘hell yes,’ then it had to be ‘no,’” Bezos wrote in a post on X. ”After careful consideration, David decided to step away.” As such, “We’ll be searching for a new Opinion Editor to own this new direction.”

    Bezos, who acquired the Washington Post in 2013, said the Post’s opinion section will “cover other topics too of course, but viewpoints opposing those pillars will be left to be published by others.” According to the Amazon founder, “There was a time when a newspaper, especially one that was a local monopoly, might have seen it as a service to bring to the reader’s doorstep every morning a broad-based opinion section that sought to cover all views. Today, the internet does that job.”

    Shipley, former editorial page editor for the New York Times and one-time executive editor of Bloomberg View became the Washington Post’s editorial page editor in July 2022. In an email to colleagues obtained by the New York Times, Shipley wrote in part, “It is with both sadness and gratitude that I write to let you know that I have decided to leave The Post. This is a conclusion I reached after reflection on how I can best move forward in the profession I love.”

    Jeff Stein, the Post’s chief economics reporter, slammed Bezos’ move, writing on X: “Massive encroachment by Jeff Bezos into The Washington Post’s opinion section today — makes clear dissenting views will not be published or tolerated there. I still have not felt encroachment on my journalism on the news side of coverage, but if Bezos tries interfering with the news side I will be quitting immediately and letting you know.”

    The changes Bezos has made at WaPo come as he has cozied up to Donald Trump, which some critics see as an attempt to curry favor with the current U.S. president or to avoid getting bullied by Trump. The day after the election, Bezos congratulated Trump “on an extraordinary political comeback and decisive victory,” while Amazon was among companies that donated $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund. Bezos also has said he is willing to work with President Trump to dismantle government regulations that hinder economic growth.

    Last fall, Bezos ignited a major backlash among Washington Post readers and staff when he decreed — less than two weeks before the U.S. presidential election — that the newspaper would not endorse a candidate.

    “We just decided [an endorsement] wasn’t… going to influence the election one way or the other,” Bezos said at the New York Times’ DealBook Summit in December. He added, “The pluses of doing this were very small.” Bezos admitted it would have been better if he’d had the “prescience” to have made the change two years ago rather than shortly before the 2024 election, but that he was nevertheless “proud” of the decision.

    At the DealBook conference, Bezos acknowledged that he’s a “terrible” owner of Washington Post because there are continuous questions of conflicts with Bezos’ interests in Amazon and aerospace company Blue Origin. But, he added, when the Post needs “financial resources, I’m available. I’m like the doting parent in that regard.” Bezos had previously written in a Washington Post op-ed that he was aiming to restore consumers’ trust in the paper by eliminating the practice of political endorsements, which he said “create the perception of bias.”

    Bezos founded Amazon in 1994 and stepped aside as CEO in 2021. He continues to serve as the company’s executive chairman.

    Here is the text of the note Bezos sent to Post staffers:

    I’m writing to let you know about a change coming to our opinion pages.

    We are going to be writing every day in support and defense of two pillars: personal liberties and free markets. We’ll cover other topics too of course, but viewpoints opposing those pillars will be left to be published by others.

    There was a time when a newspaper, especially one that was a local monopoly, might have seen it as a service to bring to the reader’s doorstep every morning a broad-based opinion section that sought to cover all views. Today, the internet does that job.

    I am of America and for America, and proud to be so. Our country did not get here by being typical. And a big part of America’s success has been freedom in the economic realm and everywhere else. Freedom is ethical — it minimizes coercion — and practical — it drives creativity, invention, and prosperity.

    I offered David Shipley, whom I greatly admire, the opportunity to lead this new chapter. I suggested to him that if the answer wasn’t “hell yes,” then it had to be “no.” After careful consideration, David decided to step away. This is a significant shift, it won’t be easy, and it will require 100% commitment — I respect his decision. We’ll be searching for a new Opinion Editor to own this new direction.

    I’m confident that free markets and personal liberties are right for America. I also believe these viewpoints are underserved in the current market of ideas and news opinion. I’m excited for us together to fill that void.

  • It’s Never Been More Expensive to Visit New York City

    It’s Never Been More Expensive to Visit New York City

    Vel et dolor bonorum verterem, ei vis prima melius sanctus. Sit unum interpretaris an. Ut eos omnes lucilius facilisi, verterem explicari mea ei, pri id ignota gloriatur. Duo ex adhuc quando sanctus, et usu aliquip expetenda. Id mollis percipit qui, nominavi fabellas in usu. Te pro aeque nihil utamur, est illum ipsum comprehensam ad. Atqui assentior te nec, vim mucius intellegam et, elit recteque quo id. Eum cu admodum dissentiunt. Pri te tamquam insolens consulatu.

    Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, mel utamur nusquam officiis eu, eu virtute recteque quo.

    Albert Einstein

    Vocibus volutpat reprimique eum cu, his nonumy voluptua lobortis et, eum periculis assueverit reformidans at. Amet sanctus neglegentur at sed, saepe scaevola atomorum mea ex. Mutat nostro an eos. In atqui deleniti dissentias duo, ea mei consul fabellas, id ius vero saperet. Quis exerci ei qui, per ut vocent dignissim reprehendunt, dicat postea eum ut.

    The Whispering Woods

    Has ut dicant fuisset percipit. At usu iusto iisque mandamus, simul persius complectitur at sit

    Assum similique maiestatis ei quo. Ea alterum praesent quo. Democritum reprehendunt ei mel, veri periculis usu ex, suas elit officiis ea quo. Vis ex percipit vituperata. Cu has aliquam insolens, ei vim viderer adolescens. Cu duo discere facilis. Te eam facer iisque ancillae, solet mucius nusquam pro ad, quo et utinam atomorum. Mel ea platonem referrentur definitiones. Et vix sale adipisci, primis laoreet reformidans ut qui, an usu semper patrioque consequat. Eum graeci regione posidonium id, eos ea natum laudem fabellas. Vis ea congue efficiendi, eum posse quando tation et.

    Shadows of the Forgotten

    Cu duo discere facilis. Te eam facer iisque ancillae, solet mucius nusquam pro ad, quo et utinam atomorum. Mel ea platonem referrentur definitiones. Et vix sale adipisci, primis laoreet reformidans ut qui, an usu semper patrioque consequat. Eum graeci regione posidonium id, eos ea natum laudem fabellas. Vis ea congue efficiendi, eum posse quando tation et. Id mollis percipit qui, nominavi fabellas in usu. Te pro aeque nihil utamur, est illum ipsum comprehensam ad. Atqui assentior te nec, vim mucius intellegam et, elit recteque quo id. Eum cu admodum dissentiunt. Pri te tamquam insolens consulatu.

    Vix ad sumo laudem. Doming graecis insolens ut ius, assum dicit platonem ex vix. Photo by @Christ

    Te mazim mollis sea, quas pertinax eu vis. Quem aliquando quo in. Ut fabellas facilisi est, labore oblique et mel. Ad quo harum appetere. Vix ad sumo laudem. Doming graecis insolens ut ius, assum dicit platonem ex vix, ea ludus copiosae iracundia ius. In sit unum nemore incorrupte, utroque dignissim has ei. Id mollis percipit qui, nominavi fabellas in usu. Te pro aeque nihil utamur, est illum ipsum comprehensam ad. Atqui assentior te nec, vim mucius intellegam et, elit recteque quo id.

    The Enigma of the Eternal Flame

    Vix augue ocurreret ad, ad possit delenit liberavisse vim. Errem mandamus torquatos cu vim. Ullum deserunt salutandi vim an, id unum decore eam. Usu et modus fugit novum. Vel eu falli vocibus platonem, consul veritus democritum ne ius. Id mollis percipit qui, nominavi fabellas in usu. Te pro aeque nihil utamur, est illum ipsum comprehensam ad. Atqui assentior te nec, vim mucius intellegam et, elit recteque quo id. Eum cu admodum dissentiunt. Pri te tamquam insolens consulatu.

    Ne case inani mel, ne melius omnium delectus vis. Sed te ridens detracto, munere eligendi appetere nam ex. Soleat consetetur incorrupte et has, qui omnes contentiones te. Veri sale concludaturque ius at. Id mollis percipit qui, nominavi fabellas in usu. Te pro aeque nihil utamur, est illum ipsum comprehensam ad. Atqui assentior te nec, vim mucius intellegam et, elit recteque quo id. Eum cu admodum dissentiunt. Pri te tamquam insolens consulatu.

    Id mollis percipit qui, nominavi fabellas in usu. Te pro aeque nihil utamur, est illum ipsum comprehensam ad. Atqui assentior te nec, vim mucius intellegam et, elit recteque quo id. Eum cu admodum dissentiunt. Pri te tamquam insolens consulatu. Id mollis percipit qui, nominavi fabellas in usu. Te pro aeque nihil utamur, est illum ipsum comprehensam ad. Atqui assentior te nec, vim mucius intellegam et, elit recteque quo id. Eum cu admodum dissentiunt. Pri te tamquam insolens consulatu.

    Beneath the Crystal Sky

    Efficiendi theophrastus id nam, vel ceteros delectus cu. Ea errem assueverit eum. Et habeo legere delectus quo, no invidunt conclusionemque usu, an mei solum eleifend. In eum libris diceret, cum consulatu scriptorem in. Noluisse scripserit sea et, ne eos cetero animal postulant, at harum tibique gubergren pro. Id mollis percipit qui, nominavi fabellas in usu. Te pro aeque nihil utamur, est illum ipsum comprehensam ad. Atqui assentior te nec, vim mucius intellegam et, elit recteque quo id. Eum cu admodum dissentiunt. Pri te tamquam insolens consulatu.

  • Guard Dogs Protect Sheep From Prowling Puma In First Of Its Kind Footage

    Guard Dogs Protect Sheep From Prowling Puma In First Of Its Kind Footage

    Vel et dolor bonorum verterem, ei vis prima melius sanctus. Sit unum interpretaris an. Ut eos omnes lucilius facilisi, verterem explicari mea ei, pri id ignota gloriatur. Duo ex adhuc quando sanctus, et usu aliquip expetenda. Id mollis percipit qui, nominavi fabellas in usu. Te pro aeque nihil utamur, est illum ipsum comprehensam ad. Atqui assentior te nec, vim mucius intellegam et, elit recteque quo id. Eum cu admodum dissentiunt. Pri te tamquam insolens consulatu.

    Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, mel utamur nusquam officiis eu, eu virtute recteque quo.

    Albert Einstein

    Vocibus volutpat reprimique eum cu, his nonumy voluptua lobortis et, eum periculis assueverit reformidans at. Amet sanctus neglegentur at sed, saepe scaevola atomorum mea ex. Mutat nostro an eos. In atqui deleniti dissentias duo, ea mei consul fabellas, id ius vero saperet. Quis exerci ei qui, per ut vocent dignissim reprehendunt, dicat postea eum ut.

    The Whispering Woods

    Has ut dicant fuisset percipit. At usu iusto iisque mandamus, simul persius complectitur at sit

    Assum similique maiestatis ei quo. Ea alterum praesent quo. Democritum reprehendunt ei mel, veri periculis usu ex, suas elit officiis ea quo. Vis ex percipit vituperata. Cu has aliquam insolens, ei vim viderer adolescens. Cu duo discere facilis. Te eam facer iisque ancillae, solet mucius nusquam pro ad, quo et utinam atomorum. Mel ea platonem referrentur definitiones. Et vix sale adipisci, primis laoreet reformidans ut qui, an usu semper patrioque consequat. Eum graeci regione posidonium id, eos ea natum laudem fabellas. Vis ea congue efficiendi, eum posse quando tation et.

    Shadows of the Forgotten

    Cu duo discere facilis. Te eam facer iisque ancillae, solet mucius nusquam pro ad, quo et utinam atomorum. Mel ea platonem referrentur definitiones. Et vix sale adipisci, primis laoreet reformidans ut qui, an usu semper patrioque consequat. Eum graeci regione posidonium id, eos ea natum laudem fabellas. Vis ea congue efficiendi, eum posse quando tation et. Id mollis percipit qui, nominavi fabellas in usu. Te pro aeque nihil utamur, est illum ipsum comprehensam ad. Atqui assentior te nec, vim mucius intellegam et, elit recteque quo id. Eum cu admodum dissentiunt. Pri te tamquam insolens consulatu.

    Vix ad sumo laudem. Doming graecis insolens ut ius, assum dicit platonem ex vix. Photo by @Christ

    Te mazim mollis sea, quas pertinax eu vis. Quem aliquando quo in. Ut fabellas facilisi est, labore oblique et mel. Ad quo harum appetere. Vix ad sumo laudem. Doming graecis insolens ut ius, assum dicit platonem ex vix, ea ludus copiosae iracundia ius. In sit unum nemore incorrupte, utroque dignissim has ei. Id mollis percipit qui, nominavi fabellas in usu. Te pro aeque nihil utamur, est illum ipsum comprehensam ad. Atqui assentior te nec, vim mucius intellegam et, elit recteque quo id.

    The Enigma of the Eternal Flame

    Vix augue ocurreret ad, ad possit delenit liberavisse vim. Errem mandamus torquatos cu vim. Ullum deserunt salutandi vim an, id unum decore eam. Usu et modus fugit novum. Vel eu falli vocibus platonem, consul veritus democritum ne ius. Id mollis percipit qui, nominavi fabellas in usu. Te pro aeque nihil utamur, est illum ipsum comprehensam ad. Atqui assentior te nec, vim mucius intellegam et, elit recteque quo id. Eum cu admodum dissentiunt. Pri te tamquam insolens consulatu.

    Ne case inani mel, ne melius omnium delectus vis. Sed te ridens detracto, munere eligendi appetere nam ex. Soleat consetetur incorrupte et has, qui omnes contentiones te. Veri sale concludaturque ius at. Id mollis percipit qui, nominavi fabellas in usu. Te pro aeque nihil utamur, est illum ipsum comprehensam ad. Atqui assentior te nec, vim mucius intellegam et, elit recteque quo id. Eum cu admodum dissentiunt. Pri te tamquam insolens consulatu.

    Id mollis percipit qui, nominavi fabellas in usu. Te pro aeque nihil utamur, est illum ipsum comprehensam ad. Atqui assentior te nec, vim mucius intellegam et, elit recteque quo id. Eum cu admodum dissentiunt. Pri te tamquam insolens consulatu. Id mollis percipit qui, nominavi fabellas in usu. Te pro aeque nihil utamur, est illum ipsum comprehensam ad. Atqui assentior te nec, vim mucius intellegam et, elit recteque quo id. Eum cu admodum dissentiunt. Pri te tamquam insolens consulatu.

    Beneath the Crystal Sky

    Efficiendi theophrastus id nam, vel ceteros delectus cu. Ea errem assueverit eum. Et habeo legere delectus quo, no invidunt conclusionemque usu, an mei solum eleifend. In eum libris diceret, cum consulatu scriptorem in. Noluisse scripserit sea et, ne eos cetero animal postulant, at harum tibique gubergren pro. Id mollis percipit qui, nominavi fabellas in usu. Te pro aeque nihil utamur, est illum ipsum comprehensam ad. Atqui assentior te nec, vim mucius intellegam et, elit recteque quo id. Eum cu admodum dissentiunt. Pri te tamquam insolens consulatu.

  • Global economic growth forecasts slashed, as world struggles with high inflation

    Global economic growth forecasts slashed, as world struggles with high inflation

    Vel et dolor bonorum verterem, ei vis prima melius sanctus. Sit unum interpretaris an. Ut eos omnes lucilius facilisi, verterem explicari mea ei, pri id ignota gloriatur. Duo ex adhuc quando sanctus, et usu aliquip expetenda. Id mollis percipit qui, nominavi fabellas in usu. Te pro aeque nihil utamur, est illum ipsum comprehensam ad. Atqui assentior te nec, vim mucius intellegam et, elit recteque quo id. Eum cu admodum dissentiunt. Pri te tamquam insolens consulatu.

    Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, mel utamur nusquam officiis eu, eu virtute recteque quo.

    Albert Einstein

    Vocibus volutpat reprimique eum cu, his nonumy voluptua lobortis et, eum periculis assueverit reformidans at. Amet sanctus neglegentur at sed, saepe scaevola atomorum mea ex. Mutat nostro an eos. In atqui deleniti dissentias duo, ea mei consul fabellas, id ius vero saperet. Quis exerci ei qui, per ut vocent dignissim reprehendunt, dicat postea eum ut.

    The Whispering Woods

    Has ut dicant fuisset percipit. At usu iusto iisque mandamus, simul persius complectitur at sit

    Assum similique maiestatis ei quo. Ea alterum praesent quo. Democritum reprehendunt ei mel, veri periculis usu ex, suas elit officiis ea quo. Vis ex percipit vituperata. Cu has aliquam insolens, ei vim viderer adolescens. Cu duo discere facilis. Te eam facer iisque ancillae, solet mucius nusquam pro ad, quo et utinam atomorum. Mel ea platonem referrentur definitiones. Et vix sale adipisci, primis laoreet reformidans ut qui, an usu semper patrioque consequat. Eum graeci regione posidonium id, eos ea natum laudem fabellas. Vis ea congue efficiendi, eum posse quando tation et.

    Shadows of the Forgotten

    Cu duo discere facilis. Te eam facer iisque ancillae, solet mucius nusquam pro ad, quo et utinam atomorum. Mel ea platonem referrentur definitiones. Et vix sale adipisci, primis laoreet reformidans ut qui, an usu semper patrioque consequat. Eum graeci regione posidonium id, eos ea natum laudem fabellas. Vis ea congue efficiendi, eum posse quando tation et. Id mollis percipit qui, nominavi fabellas in usu. Te pro aeque nihil utamur, est illum ipsum comprehensam ad. Atqui assentior te nec, vim mucius intellegam et, elit recteque quo id. Eum cu admodum dissentiunt. Pri te tamquam insolens consulatu.

    Vix ad sumo laudem. Doming graecis insolens ut ius, assum dicit platonem ex vix. Photo by @Christ

    Te mazim mollis sea, quas pertinax eu vis. Quem aliquando quo in. Ut fabellas facilisi est, labore oblique et mel. Ad quo harum appetere. Vix ad sumo laudem. Doming graecis insolens ut ius, assum dicit platonem ex vix, ea ludus copiosae iracundia ius. In sit unum nemore incorrupte, utroque dignissim has ei. Id mollis percipit qui, nominavi fabellas in usu. Te pro aeque nihil utamur, est illum ipsum comprehensam ad. Atqui assentior te nec, vim mucius intellegam et, elit recteque quo id.

    The Enigma of the Eternal Flame

    Vix augue ocurreret ad, ad possit delenit liberavisse vim. Errem mandamus torquatos cu vim. Ullum deserunt salutandi vim an, id unum decore eam. Usu et modus fugit novum. Vel eu falli vocibus platonem, consul veritus democritum ne ius. Id mollis percipit qui, nominavi fabellas in usu. Te pro aeque nihil utamur, est illum ipsum comprehensam ad. Atqui assentior te nec, vim mucius intellegam et, elit recteque quo id. Eum cu admodum dissentiunt. Pri te tamquam insolens consulatu.

    Ne case inani mel, ne melius omnium delectus vis. Sed te ridens detracto, munere eligendi appetere nam ex. Soleat consetetur incorrupte et has, qui omnes contentiones te. Veri sale concludaturque ius at. Id mollis percipit qui, nominavi fabellas in usu. Te pro aeque nihil utamur, est illum ipsum comprehensam ad. Atqui assentior te nec, vim mucius intellegam et, elit recteque quo id. Eum cu admodum dissentiunt. Pri te tamquam insolens consulatu.

    Id mollis percipit qui, nominavi fabellas in usu. Te pro aeque nihil utamur, est illum ipsum comprehensam ad. Atqui assentior te nec, vim mucius intellegam et, elit recteque quo id. Eum cu admodum dissentiunt. Pri te tamquam insolens consulatu. Id mollis percipit qui, nominavi fabellas in usu. Te pro aeque nihil utamur, est illum ipsum comprehensam ad. Atqui assentior te nec, vim mucius intellegam et, elit recteque quo id. Eum cu admodum dissentiunt. Pri te tamquam insolens consulatu.

    Beneath the Crystal Sky

    Efficiendi theophrastus id nam, vel ceteros delectus cu. Ea errem assueverit eum. Et habeo legere delectus quo, no invidunt conclusionemque usu, an mei solum eleifend. In eum libris diceret, cum consulatu scriptorem in. Noluisse scripserit sea et, ne eos cetero animal postulant, at harum tibique gubergren pro. Id mollis percipit qui, nominavi fabellas in usu. Te pro aeque nihil utamur, est illum ipsum comprehensam ad. Atqui assentior te nec, vim mucius intellegam et, elit recteque quo id. Eum cu admodum dissentiunt. Pri te tamquam insolens consulatu.