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Trump heads to Scotland, continues ironing out trade deals after notching six months back in office

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President Donald Trump has been back in the Oval Office for a full six months as of Sunday, and is expected to keep a busy pace as he heads into his 27th week as commander-in-chief. 

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«Wow, time flies! Today is that Sixth Month Anniversary of my Second Term. Importantly, it’s being hailed as one of the most consequential periods of any President,» Trump wrote on social media on Sunday. «In other words, we got a lot of good and great things done, including ending numerous wars of Countries not related to us other than through Trade and/or, in certain cases, friendship,» he added on TRUTH Social. «Six months is not a long time to have totally revived a major Country.» 

«One year ago our Country was DEAD, with almost no hope of revival. Today the USA is the ‘hottest’ and most respected Country anywhere in the World. Happy Anniversary!!!» 

GOLF HAS A LONG HISTORY IN THE WHITE HOUSE — BUT FOR TRUMP, IT’S MORE THAN A PASTIME

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President Donald Trump during a round of golf at his Turnberry course on May 2, 2023 in Turnberry, Scotland.   (Getty Images)

Trump travels to Scotland

Ahead of Trump’s highly-anticipated trip to London in September, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt announced that the president will travel to Scotland on Friday to visit Turnberry and Aberdeen, which are homes to Trump golf courses. 

He will also meet again with UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer to continue ironing out the U.S.-UK trade deal. 

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«During the visit, President Trump will meet again with Prime Minister Starmer to refine the great trade deal that was brokered between the United States and the United Kingdom,» Leavitt said during a Thursday press briefing. 

«The president and the first lady will travel to the United Kingdom for an official state visit from September 17 to September 19 later this fall. This will mark a truly unprecedented second state visit for President Trump and he is honored and looking forward to meeting with His Majesty the King at Windsor Castle,» Leavitt added, previewing the president’s highly-anticipated trip to London. 

The UK’s monarch typically does not invite a U.S. president for a second state visit if they are re-elected to office, opting for more intimate meetings such as tea or lunch, making Trump’s second state visit unprecedented. 

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Scotland holds a special place in Trump’s life, as his mother, Mary Anne MacLeod Trump, was born and raised in Scotland before moving to Queens, New York. 

UK TO ROLL OUT RED CARPET IN ‘UNPRECEDENTED’ SECOND TRUMP VISIT HOSTED BY KING CHARLES

The Trump Organization purchased the historic golf resort and hotel at Turnberry in 2014, and the Aberdeen golf club in 2012, which is set to open new course next month. 

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Trump traveled to the same golf courses in July 2018 under his first administration. 

Commerce Secretary Lutnick, President Donald Trump, Secretary of the Treasury Bessent are ironing out trade deals. 

Commerce Secretary Lutnick, President Donald Trump, Secretary of the Treasury Bessent are ironing out trade deals.  (Getty Images)

Tariff negotiations continue 

A 90-day pause on tariffs was set to end July 9, after Trump first announced reciprocal tariffs on foreign nations in April. The administration announced earlier this month that foreign nations now face an Aug. 1 deadline or face higher tariffs. 

Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick told the media on Sunday that the next two weeks will showcase Trump delivering on his vow to roll out trade deals favorable to the U.S. economy. 

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«The next two weeks are going to be weeks for the record books. President Trump is going to deliver for the American people,» Lutnick said on CBS’ «Face the Nation.»

WILL TRUMP TRADE DEAL WITH UK EASE ECONOMIC JITTERS AND BOOST PRESIDENT’S POLL NUMBERS?

«They’re going to love the deals that President Trump and I are doing. I mean, they’re just going to love them. You know, the president figured out the right answer, and sent letters to these countries, said this is going to fix the trade deficit. This will go a long way to fixing the trade deficit, and that’s gotten these countries to the table and they’re going to open their markets or they’re going to pay the tariff. And if they open their markets, the opportunity for Americans to export, to grow the business, farmers, ranchers, fishermen, this is going to be…» he continued before remarking the next two weeks would be ones «for the record books.»

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Bondi, Epstein, Trump

AG Bondi, Jeffrey Epstein, President Donald Trump. (Getty Images)

Epstein grand jury testimony release

Trump directed Attorney General Pam Bondi last week to release grand jury transcripts in the case of Jeffrey Epstein after a memo released earlier this month concluded that there is «no credible evidence found that Epstein blackmailed prominent individuals,» or kept a «client list» of such individuals after years of Trump surrogates vowing to reveal the Epstein’s alleged secrets. 

Longtime conservatives and supporters of Trump subsequently slammed the memo, and sounded off on social media that Epstein won’t «go away.»

LEGAL PATHWAY CLEARLY EXISTS FOR TRUMP’S REQUEST TO MAKE EPSTEIN GRAND JURY TESTIMONY PUBLIC

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«Based on the ridiculous amount of publicity given to Jeffrey Epstein, I have asked Attorney General Pam Bondi to produce any and all pertinent Grand Testimony, subject to Court approval,» Trump wrote on Truth Social late Thursday last week. «This SCAM, perpetuated by the Democrats, should end, right now!» 

It is unclear if Bondi could convince a judge to release the grand jury testimony, but the Department of Justice reported on Friday that it formally moved to unseal long-secret grand jury transcripts. 

Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche submitted the motion in Manhattan federal court, urging a judge to release the transcripts from Epstein’s 2019 grand jury proceedings and those from the prosecution of Epstein’s convicted associate, Ghislaine Maxwell, as part of a new transparency push by the department.

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Epstein was a notorious predator who pleaded guilty to procuring underage girls for prostitution in 2008, before he was arrested in 2019 on new federal charges of sex trafficking minors and conspiracy to engage in sex trafficking of minors. He was found dead in his New York City jail cell in 2019 of suicide, according to Trump officials. 

Fox News Digital’s Bradford Betz and Jasmine Baehr contributed to this report. 

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Una presentadora generada por Inteligencia Artificial condujo un documental en un canal británico: «No existo», dijo al final

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Este lunes por la tarde, la cadena pública británica Channel 4 emitió una provocadora demostración del futuro laboral al poner al aire un documental bajo la conducción de una presentadora generada íntegramente por inteligencia artificial (IA). Este audaz experimento, parte del programa de investigación Dispatches, reabrió el debate global sobre el impacto ético y económico de la IA en el periodismo.

La presentadora virtual, llamada Aisha Gaban, una mujer morena de cabello hasta los hombros y aspecto hiperrealista, abrió el programa, titulado «¿Me quitará la IA mi trabajo?», con un mensaje directo a la audiencia: «La IA afectará la vida de todos en los próximos años. Y a algunos, les hará perder sus trabajos». Y, en un giro meta-narrativo, se incluyó a sí misma: «¿Empleados de call center? ¿Agentes de servicio al cliente? Quizás incluso presentadoras de televisión, como yo».

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Solo al final del documental, que exploró las transformaciones del trabajo en sectores como el derecho, la música, la moda y la medicina, Gaban reveló su naturaleza digital. «No existo», dijo simplemente, afirmando ser la primera presentadora generada por IA en la televisión británica. «No estuve en los lugares para cubrir la noticia. Mi imagen y mi voz se generaron mediante inteligencia artificial», explicó, a pesar de haber aparecido en diversas locaciones a lo largo del metraje.

El experimento de Channel 4, si bien fue un truco concebido para alertar sobre la disrupción tecnológica, generó un comunicado de la jefa de noticias del canal, Louisa Compton, que subraya la postura crítica de los medios tradicionales. Compton aseguró que «usar un presentador generado por IA no es algo que vayamos a adoptar regularmente en Channel 4″.

«Al contrario, nuestra prioridad sigue siendo un periodismo de calidad, verificado, imparcial y digno de confianza, algo que la IA no es capaz de ofrecer», añadió Compton. La cadena reconoció que la experiencia es un «útil recordatorio del potencial disruptivo de la IA y de la facilidad con la que puede engañar a la audiencia con contenido que no tiene forma de verificar». Esta preocupación ética es central en la industria, donde la mayoría de las audiencias, según encuestas recientes, desconfía de las noticias generadas principalmente por algoritmos sin intervención humana.

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El uso de la IA en la televisión como presentador visible no es completamente nuevo, aunque sigue siendo minoritario. Desde 2018, la agencia de noticias oficial china, Xinhua, ha utilizado versiones digitales de sus presentadores habituales para emitir noticias las 24 horas del día. Más recientemente, figuras de IA han debutado en noticieros de India, Kuwait, Tailandia y otras naciones de Asia, a menudo con el argumento de optimizar costos y ofrecer transmisiones ininterrumpidas.

Sin embargo, en el periodismo, la IA se emplea mayoritariamente “detrás de escena”.

Generación de contenido rápido: Sistemas automatizados, como el utilizado por Los Angeles Times para informar instantáneamente sobre terremotos (Quakepot), o el Cyborg de Bloomberg News para analizar informes financieros y redactar notas basadas en hechos y cifras.

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Verificación y fact-checking: Herramientas de IA que ayudan a los periodistas a verificar informaciones, detectar noticias falsas y diferenciar discursos de odio, un uso respaldado por organismos como la UNESCO.

Tareas de soporte: Uso de software de IA como asistente editorial para revisar gramática, generar emails y realizar borradores, optimizando el tiempo del reportero.

La controversia, sin embargo, se profundiza no solo con los presentadores virtuales, sino con la generación de contenido engañoso (deepfakes) y la sustitución de escritores humanos. La misma tecnología que creó a Aisha Gaban fue la que en septiembre generó indignación en Hollywood con la aparición de Tilly Norwood, una actriz creada por IA con la ambición de ser «la próxima Scarlett Johansson o Natalie Portman», lo que plantea serios desafíos para la propiedad intelectual y los puestos de trabajo creativos.

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SCOOP: Trump-backed former Navy SEAL launches GOP primary challenge against Massie

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FIRST ON FOX – A former longtime Navy SEAL and fifth-generation Kentucky farmer who is backed by President Donald Trump on Tuesday declared his candidacy in the state’s 4th Congressional District, as he challenges Republican Rep. Thomas Massie in next year’s GOP primary.

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«I’ve dedicated my life to serving my country, and I’m ready to answer the call again,» Ed Gallrein said in a statement shared first with Fox News Digital. 

And pointing to Massie, a frequent GOP critic of the president during his second term in the White House, Gallrein emphasized, «This district is Trump Country. The President doesn’t need obstacles in Congress – he needs backup. I’ll defeat Thomas Massie, stand shoulder to shoulder with President Trump, and deliver the America First results Kentuckians voted for.»

The campaign launch comes four days after Trump took to social media to praise Gallrein, urge him to run, and blast Massie.

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MAVERICK HOUSE REPUBLICAN CASHES IN ON TRUMP’S ATTACKS

Representative Thomas Massie, a Republican from Kentucky, arrives for a news conference outside the US Capitol in Washington, DC, on Wednesday, Sept. 3, 2025 (Graeme Sloan/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Trump argued that Massie was a «Third Rate Congressman,» a «Weak and Pathetic RINO,» and a «totally ineffective LOSER who has failed us so badly.»

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And the president applauded Gallrein, calling him a «Brave Combat Veteran» and a «very successful Businessman» who, if elected to Congress, would «fight tirelessly to Keep our now very Secure Border, SECURE, Stop Migrant Crime, and Defend our always under siege Second Amendment.»

HEAD HERE FOR THE LATEST FOX NEWS REPORTING ON THE 2025 ELECTIONS

Trump’s social media post included a photo of himself and Gallrein holding red MAGA hats in the Oval Office.

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Gallrein served three decades in uniform, rising to the rank of Captain. According to his campaign bio, he served multiple times on SEAL Team SIX, deploying to Panama, Afghanistan, and Iraq, and earned four Bronze Stars and two Presidential Unit Citations.

Ed Gallrein with President Trump at the White House

Ed Gallrein, left, seen with President Donald Trump in the Oval Office at the White House, on Tuesday launched a congressional bid to primary challenge Republican Rep. Thomas Massie of Kentucky, Gallrein’s campaign launch comes four days after Trump backed him and urged him to run. (Ed Gallrein congressional campaign)

His campaign release also highlighted that «Gallrein’s roots run deep in Kentucky.» He was born and raised in the state. And his family, which has farmed for over a century, built Kentucky’s largest dairy farm and Gallrein Grain Farms, one of the state’s largest grain operations.

Massie took aim at Gallrein following Trump’s social media endorsement, calling him a «failed candidate and establishment hack,» as he pointed to Gallrein’s unsuccessful run last year for the state Senate.

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MASSIE FIRES BACK AFTER JOHNSON CALLS HIS EPSTEIN RECORDS PUSH ‘MEANINGLESS’

«After having been rejected by every elected official in the 4th District, Trump’s consultants clearly pushed the panic button with their choice of failed candidate and establishment hack Ed Gallrein,» Massie said in a statement to Politico. «Ed’s been begging them to pick him for over three months now.»

Trump started targeting Massie for ouster earlier this year over the seven-term lawmaker’s opposition to the «One Big Beautiful Bill,» which passed the GOP-controlled Congress early in the summer nearly entirely along party lines. The sweeping GOP megalaw is the president’s major legislative achievement since returning to the White House.

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Reps. Marjorie Taylor Greene, Thomas Massie, and Ro Khanna

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) speaks with Rep. Thomas Massie (R-KY) and Rep. Ro Khanna (D-CA) during a news conference with alleged victims of disgraced financier and sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein outside the U.S. Capitol on September 3, 2025, in Washington, DC. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

Massie is also leading the push, along with Democratic Rep. Ro Khanna of California, in forcing a House floor vote to urge the release of the Justice Department’s files on the late convicted sex-trafficker Jeffrey Epstein, a move the White House and House GOP leaders have aimed to counter. Massie is on the verge of reaching the needed 218 signatures to force the vote.

Two top Trump political advisers — 2024 co-campaign manager Chris LaCivita and pollster Tony Fabrizio — in June launched a super PAC that aims to defeat Massie. Nearly $2 million has been spent already to run TV ads targeting Massie.

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But Massie has used the attacks from Trump and his allies to boost fundraising, hauling in more than $750,000 the past three months, which was the best fundraising quarter of his congressional career.

Massie’s district, in the northeastern part of the state, includes Louisville’s eastern suburbs and Cincinnati’s Kentucky suburbs.

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La Unión Europea acordó adelantar al 2028 la desconexión de las importaciones de hidrocarburos rusos

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La Unión Europea acordó adelantar al 2028 la desconexión de las importaciones de hidrocarburos rusos

Los países de la Unión Europea respaldaron el lunes, con la oposición de Eslovaquia y Hungría, la propuesta de la Comisión Europea para adelantar a 2028 la desconexión de la UE de las importaciones de hidrocarburos rusos, normativa que aún tendrá que negociarse con el Parlamento Europeo, que quiere acelerar un año más.

«Se trata de una decisión muy importante“, dijo tras el acuerdo entre los ministros de Energía de los Veintisiete el comisario europeo de Energía y Vivienda, Dan Jørgensen, quien aseguró que el Ejecutivo ayudará en la transición “a todos los Estados miembros, incluidos aquellos que no apoyan la legislación”.

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Los Estados miembros, con amplio apoyo y algunas reservas específicas, secundaron la propuesta de la Comisión Europea que, presionada por Estados Unidos, planteó que la UE acabe con los contratos de gas ruso a corto plazo en 2027, y un año después con los acuerdos a largo plazo, tanto por gasoducto como por barco.

El Consejo plantea que las modificaciones de los contratos solo se permitan por razones operativas sin aumentar volúmenes, con algunas flexibilidades para los países sin acceso al mar, y propone simplificar las obligaciones aduaneras con un sistema de autorización previa y exenciones para determinados orígenes.

Las capitales deben negociar ahora con el Parlamento Europeo, que quiere adelantar un año el calendario, con la intención de cerrar el texto antes de fin de año.

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El comisario de Energía de
El comisario de Energía de la Unión Europea, Dan Jørgensen (REUTERS/Tom Little/Archivo)

Desde la invasión de Ucrania, la UE ha prohibido las compras a Rusia de carbón y de casi todo el petróleo, pero no del gas. No obstante, antes de la guerra la Unión compraba a Moscú el 45% del gas que consumía y ha rebajado ese volumen hasta niveles que actualmente rondan el 13%.

El nuevo paso supone la ruptura total y más rápida de lo previsto, lo que genera inquietud. Grecia apoyó “completamente” la desconexión, pero pidió “medidas para corregir las perturbaciones del mercado”.

En cambio, Eslovaquia, uno de los mayores aliados de Rusia en la UE, votó en contra, argumentando que comprometería su seguridad energética. Lo mismo hizo Hungría, que sostuvo que el petróleo que podría recibir a través de Croacia no sería suficiente y dejaría a Budapest sujeta al “monopolio” de una sola vía de suministro y un tránsito con tasas elevadas, según dijo el titular húngaro Péter Szijjártó.

La posición de Hungría recibió críticas de otros socios, como Croacia, que garantizó que tiene “plena capacidad” de abastecer a Budapest, y Letonia, que cuestionó si hace falta otra “tragedia” para acabar con la dependencia energética de Moscú. Polonia agregó: “No estamos aquí para hablar de matemáticas ni números, aunque sean importantes, sino de valores”.

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El ministro de Asuntos Exteriores
El ministro de Asuntos Exteriores de Hungría, Peter Szijjarto (REUTERS/Marton Monus)

Otros países, como la presidencia danesa de turno del Consejo, celebraron que el bloque comunitario vaya a “dejar de financiar la máquina de guerra de Rusia” y subrayaron que “la energía que consumimos tiene que alejarse de los combustibles fósiles”.

El acuerdo es “el principio de una transición” hacia una economía descarbonizada, afirmó el ministro de Clima y Energía de Dinamarca, Lars Aagaard. En la misma línea se posicionó España, a través del secretario de Estado de Energía, Joan Groizard, quien destacó que “la energía no puede ser un arma de guerra” y mostró su apoyo al texto porque es “de alcance europeo” y contiene medidas “jurídicamente solventes”.

Groizard agregó que no basta con sustituir la dependencia energética de Rusia por otra: «No se puede dejar que un tercer país esté en disposición de chantajear a Europa en términos energéticos“.

La presidencia danesa señaló que la solución a la dependencia energética llegará a largo plazo con energía renovable autogenerada en la UE, y Jørgensen respaldó esa postura, asegurando que trabajan “muy, muy duro con los Estados miembros para ayudarles de forma que no haya ningún problema de seguridad de suministro ni subidas de precio”.

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(Con información de EFE)



Diplomacy / Foreign Policy,Europe,COPENHAGEN

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