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Bessent afirmó que Trump no aceptará “un mal acuerdo” con Irán para poner fin a la guerra: “ha dejado muy en claro sus líneas rojas”

El presidente de Estados Unidos, Donald Trump, no aceptará “un mal acuerdo” con Irán para poner fin a la guerra, afirmó el jueves el secretario del Tesoro, Scott Bessent, después de que la Casa Blanca informara que negociadores de ambos países alcanzaron un pacto tentativo pendiente de aprobación definitiva.
“Los equipos han estado yendo y viniendo, y el presidente Trump ha dejado muy en claro sus líneas rojas. Irán tiene que entregar su uranio altamente enriquecido; no puede seguir adelante con un arma nuclear; y el estrecho de Ormuz debe tener libre tránsito”, declaró Bessent durante una rueda de prensa.
El funcionario sostuvo además que Trump “no va a aceptar un mal acuerdo”, sino que “va a lograr un gran acuerdo para el pueblo estadounidense”.
Las declaraciones de Bessent llegaron después de que fuentes estadounidenses confirmaran este jueves que representantes de Washington y Teherán alcanzaron un acuerdo tentativo para avanzar en un entendimiento destinado a reducir la tensión en Medio Oriente y abrir negociaciones sobre el programa nuclear iraní.
Según un borrador obtenido por el medio digital estadounidense Axios, el entendimiento contempla desbloquear el estrecho de Ormuz y extender durante 60 días la tregua actual para iniciar conversaciones formales sobre las actividades nucleares de la República Islámica.

El documento también establece que Estados Unidos pondría fin al bloqueo marítimo contra buques iraníes y evaluaría un eventual levantamiento de sanciones económicas, además de la liberación de fondos iraníes congelados en el exterior.
La cuestión del estrecho de Ormuz se convirtió en uno de los puntos centrales de la negociación. La vía marítima concentra una parte significativa del tránsito mundial de petróleo y gas, por lo que cualquier restricción genera preocupación internacional sobre el suministro energético y la estabilidad de los mercados.
En ese contexto, Bessent reveló que mantuvo el jueves una conversación telefónica con el embajador de Omán, quien le aseguró que su país no planea aplicar peajes al tránsito marítimo en el estrecho, pese a versiones periodísticas publicadas en las últimas horas.
“Tuve una llamada con el embajador de Omán y me aseguró que no tienen planes de cobrar peajes”, explicó el secretario del Tesoro durante la conferencia de prensa.
Las declaraciones buscaron desactivar la tensión surgida después de que Trump amenazara el miércoles con “hacer volar por los aires” a Omán si el país árabe se sumaba a Irán en la aplicación de cobros para el paso de embarcaciones por el estrecho de Ormuz.

Omán mantiene históricamente una relación de cooperación con Washington y, al mismo tiempo, suele desempeñar un papel de mediador regional en contactos diplomáticos con Teherán. Sin embargo, las recientes versiones sobre posibles peajes generaron una fuerte reacción de la Casa Blanca.
El propio Bessent advirtió el jueves que Estados Unidos podría imponer sanciones a Omán si avanzaba en medidas que afectaran la libre circulación marítima en la zona.
El acuerdo tentativo entre Washington y Teherán todavía requiere la aprobación final de Trump, quien endureció públicamente sus condiciones para cualquier entendimiento con la República Islámica. La entrega del uranio altamente enriquecido iraní aparece como una de las principales exigencias de la administración estadounidense.
La Casa Blanca también insistió en que Irán no podrá continuar con ningún programa destinado al desarrollo de armas nucleares. Las negociaciones se producen en medio de una escalada regional marcada por ataques militares, sanciones económicas y amenazas cruzadas entre ambos países.
(Con información de EFE)
Business,Domestic Politics,Corporate Events,North America,Government / Politics
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Fox News Poll: Move over Big Brother, voters see Big Tech as greater threat to US

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As artificial intelligence (AI) companies race toward IPOs and scramble to construct data centers, a new Fox News Poll finds voters now view Big Tech — not Big Government — as the greater threat to the nation’s future, a striking turnaround from seven years ago.
By a 5 percentage-point margin, more see Big Tech as the greater threat to the outlook of the country rather than big government (52% vs. 47%). That’s a 28-point reversal since 2019 — three years before ChatGPT burst onto the scene — when more were concerned about the government (58%) than tech companies (35%).
FOX NEWS POLL: VOTERS DOUBT NEW AGREEMENT WILL STOP IRAN FROM DEVELOPING NUKES
The swing toward a greater dread of Big Tech can be seen across most groups, with only a few exceptions, like very conservative voters (by 11 points) and moms (+8), who view big government as the bigger villain. Republicans and independents are split on which is worse.
«As AI integrates into daily life, voters are reevaluating where power resides,» says Democratic pollster Chris Anderson, whose firm Beacon Research conducts the poll with Republican Daron Shaw. «Concerns about government overreach are shifting toward tech companies, as voters question whether rapid growth has concentrated too much power in institutions largely outside of public accountability.»
Feelings on AI remain a mixed bag. Equal numbers describe it as either innovative or helpful or a bad idea (14% each). Another 12% are cautious, 10% say afraid or dangerous, 9% have mixed feelings, while excitement and curiosity/interested sit at 7% each. Fewer mention threats to jobs (5%), general confusion (4%), potential for abuse (3%), more research and privacy and regulation issues (2% each), fears of science fiction (1%), and preventing data centers (1%).
FOX NEWS POLL: MOST RATE THE ECONOMY NEGATIVELY, INCLUDING HALF OF REPUBLICANS
The share saying they’re afraid of AI, or it is dangerous has dropped from 16% in 2023 to 10% today, as most demographics feel less negative about AI. The clear exception is voters ages 65 and up, who mostly still feel afraid, concerned, or just don’t like it.
There is also a modest rise in those who feel cautious or distrust the booming technology: from 8% in 2023 to 12% today.
On the flip side, the number saying they find AI to be innovative and helpful has doubled from 7% in 2023 to 14% today. While most demographics feel more positive toward AI compared to 2023, this tendency is especially pronounced among voters under age 30 and nonwhite voters, each seeing double-digit increases in positive sentiment.
Daily AI usage is on the rise: 18% of voters say they use the technology every day, up from 11% last June.
The increase mainly comes from more men (+10 points since June 2025) and independents (+13) saying they use AI daily. Despite their skepticism, voters 65 and over say they are using it more as well (+4). Daily usage for voters under 30 is up 8 points since last summer.
Still, many say they rarely (21%) or never (32%) use it, roughly the same as last summer.
Voters balk at building AI infrastructure in their backyard. Two-thirds (67%) oppose having data centers in their area, including 43% who strongly oppose it, while one-third favor it (32%).
Most groups oppose data centers, but the strength of opposition varies. Fewer than 6 in 10 men, Hispanic voters, voters under 30, and Republicans oppose them, while opposition increases to roughly 7 in 10 or more among women, White voters, those ages 65+, and Democrats.
Some of the only groups to favor data centers being built are those who find AI innovative (68% favor) and those who use AI at least weekly (54%).
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«AI data centers emerging as a political issue is one of the most intriguing storylines of 2026,» says Shaw. «Opposing them is a short-term win, but attitudes about AI efficacy and regulation remain fluid.»
Even with mixed views on AI, a large majority remain confident they control technology (79%), rather than tech controlling them (20%) — the same as nearly 30 years ago.
Women, voters ages 65+ and Republicans are slightly more likely to feel they have a grip on technology compared to men, those under 30, and Democrats.
Conducted June 12-15, 2026, under the direction of Beacon Research (D) and Shaw & Company Research (R), this Fox News survey includes interviews with a sample of 1,002 registered voters randomly selected from a national voter file. Respondents spoke with live interviewers on landlines (101) and cellphones (644) or completed the survey online after receiving a text (257). Results based on the full sample have a margin of sampling error of ±3 percentage points. Sampling error for results among subgroups is higher. In addition to sampling error, question wording and order can influence results. Weights are generally applied to age, race, education, and area variables to ensure the demographics are representative of the registered voter population. Sources for developing weight targets include the most recent American Community Survey, Fox News Voter Analysis, and voter file data.
fox news poll, politics, artificial intelligence, technologies, republicans, democratic party, understanding ai
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Tensión en el final de la campaña en Colombia: temen protestas si gana el candidato de derecha y escalan las acusaciones cruzadas

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Obama Center’s opening ceremony ridiculed for far-left ritual before star-studded show

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At Thursday’s ceremony marking the beginning of the Obama Presidential Center’s opening weekend, the master of ceremonies began with a left-wing «land acknowledgment ritual,» for which the entire event was promptly mocked.
Valerie Jarrett, the former senior advisor to Obama when he was president and the current CEO of the Obama Foundation, kicked things off.
«We’d also like to take a moment to recognize the original inhabitants of the land upon which we are gathered today,» she said. «We honor the Anishinaabe, the Council of Three Fires, the Ojibwe, the Odawa and the Potawatomi nations.»
Obama Foundation CEO Valerie Jarrett stands near the Obama Presidential Center under construction in Chicago’s Jackson Park. The foundation reported nearly $210 million in total revenue in 2024, according to federal filings. (Steven Ferdman/Getty Images)
Land acknowledgments have been mocked as performative left-wing routines completed to commemorate the Native Americans who once lived on the land where an event is happening.
OSCARS FEATURES INDIGENOUS LAND ACKNOWLEDGMENT, ROASTED AS ‘PERFORMATIVE NONSENSE’ ON SOCIAL MEDIA
They are an extension of the belief that the United States exists on «stolen land.»
But as many keen online observers noted, Democrats hosting the Obama Presidential Center’s grand opening have no intention of returning the land to the people they believe are its rightful owners.
«Wouldn’t they prefer you just give them their land back?» conservative commentator Steve Deace asked sarcastically.

Barack Obama speaks during the dedication of the Barack Obama Presidential Center in Chicago, Illinois. (Kent NISHIMURA / AFP via Getty Images)
CARVILLE REBUKES DNC OVER WOKE ‘LAND ACKNOWLEDGMENT’ LAMENTING TREATMENT OF NATIVE AMERICANS
«Land acknowledgements are funny because the real message is ‘I want to say I care, but I don’t really care or I wouldn’t have built this on land which I just said is yours,’» said Beth Anne Mumford of Americans for Prosperity.
«So you just went ahead and built on that land anyway, huh,» said conservative commentator Stephen Miller
Townhall senior strategist Siraj Hashmi weighed in with a reference to infamous Chicago rapper Chief Keef.
REWARDING RACISM: HOW TRIBAL POLITICS IS TEARING AMERICA APART
«Pretty disrespectful for the Obama Presidential Center to not acknowledge the current tribe leader of the South Side of Chicago: Chief Keef,» he quipped.

Musician Bruce Springsteen performs during the opening of the Obama Presidential Center in the Jackson Park neighborhood of Chicago, Illinois, on June 18, 2026. (Talia Sprague/Bloomberg)
An anonymous user balked at the logic, or apparent lack thereof, of building «a communist monument» on «stolen land» that the new owners refused to give back.
«The mental hurdles are Olympics level,» the user said.
OBAMA PRESIDENTIAL CENTER’S $470M SAFETY NET UNDER SCRUTINY AS SUBCONTRACTORS SAY THEY’RE OWED MILLIONS
Thursday’s event featured high-profile Democrats, including former Vice President Kamala Harris, former President Bill Clinton and former Secretary of State and failed presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, along with A-list performers like John Legend, Stevie Wonder and Bruce Springsteen who put on a concert.
Oprah Winfrey, Tom Hanks, David Letterman and others were also present.
The presidential center itself, which cost nearly $1 billion to build and has been embroiled in controversy, will officially open on Friday. It was initially estimated to cost about half that amount.

A view of the Obama Presidential Center from a nearby roadway in Chicago. (Michael Dorgan/Fox News Digital)
Despite the explicitly stated goal that the center would help uplift minority-owned contracting businesses by hiring them to work on high-profile projects, some claim they’ve been stiffed and are facing financial ruin, according to a Fox News Digital investigation.
One subcontractor says his firm is owed $4 million for work it completed on the center.
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The project was announced in 2015, and the site — Jackson Park on Chicago’s South Side — chosen in 2016, but the groundbreaking was delayed until 2021 due to bureaucratic red tape. The project required numerous local and federal approvals to build on the location, which is a historic preservation site, multiple environmental reviews and was subject to several lawsuits.
After construction began, the price tag on the project continuously skyrocketed. The center was scheduled to open in March 2025, but was delayed for another year
barack obama, the clintons, chicago, land, inauguration, politics
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