Speaking to reporters on Air Force One, Donald Trump refused to tamp down speculation about the health of Mitch McConnell, the Republican senator who was hospitalized four weeks ago.
Asked if he had spoken to McConnell since his hospitalization, Trump said, “No, I haven’t.”
Pressed for an update on the condition of the senator, who broke with Trump and blamed him for the storming of the US Capitol on January 6 2021, the president said: “I have no idea how he’s doing.”
Donald Trump said on Wednesday that he would ask the US supreme court to reconsider its ruling that the 14th amendment to the US constitution guarantees birthright citizenship in light of what he described as shocking new evidence: a hospital in Texas advertised its services to expectant mothers in Mexico on a pair of billboards.
“Signs and Billboards are being put up all over our Southern Border, and Mexico, advertising BIRTHRIGHT CITIZENSHIP, with ‘Deliveries starting at $4000’, the president wrote on his social media platform, in what appeared to be a wild exaggeration of a Fox News report on just two billboards.
The president went on to claim that the justices “will destroy America if they don’t change their absolutely insane decision,” after Fox News confirmed that a single hospital in Mission, Texas, which is located just five miles from the border with Reynosa, Mexico, had advertised “delivery packages” in South Texas on two Spanish-language billboards in Mexico, and on social media.
The Fox News report was based on a photograph of one billboard posted on social media in April by Mayra Flores, a Trump-backed former Republican congresswoman from Texas who was born in Mexico and is running to return to Congress.
The image has been recirculated recently on social media, as Trump supporters have called for a total and complete shutdown of pregnant women being allowed to enter the United States after the president’s attempt to deny birthright citizenship to children born to non-citizens in the US was rejected by the supreme court.
Flores, who said she took the photograph in Reynosa, did not initially claim that the billboard was inviting Mexicans to give birth in the US to obtained US citizenship for their children. She expressed outrage, instead, at the idea that the price of the birthing services, $3,950 for a natural birth or $5,525 for a caesarean section, was far lower than the typical cost for American citizens. She offered no proof for her claim that these prices were available only to foreign citizens at the hospital.
The Texas hospital, Mission Regional Medical Center, told the Guardian that the billboards and a website directed people to, havemybabyinTEXAS.com, “are no longer in use due to any unintended misunderstanding.”
“Mission Regional Medical Center, a public nonprofit hospital, is committed to providing high-quality, compassionate healthcare and expanding access for the communities we serve,” the hospital said in a statement. “Like hospitals across the nation, we share information about the healthcare services we provide. We do not support or facilitate any unlawful activity and work to comply with all applicable federal and state laws and regulations.”
“The marketing materials regarding maternity services are no longer in use due to any unintended misunderstanding. We intend to work cooperatively and transparently with local and state officials. Our focus remains on delivering safe, high-quality care to every patient who seeks our services.”
While the prospect of US citizenship was not mentioned in the text of the hospital’s billboard advertisement, or on an archived copy of the associated website that is no longer online, the governor of Texas, Greg Abbott, ordered an investigation of the hospital on Tuesday, accusing it of promoting “Birth tourism”.
After the backlash this week from furious Trump supporters, the hospital also deleted an Instagram post in Spanish promoting their birthing services, even though it was crafted as an invitation to women “living abroad” who want to give birth in the US, with no mention of citizenship at all.
“Are you pregnant, living abroad, and looking to welcome your baby in South Texas?” the Instagram post read, according to a screenshot published by the Houston Chronicle. “Look no further! Come and learn about the maternity packages Mission Regional Medical Center has for you and discover why thousands of families choose to have their baby with us every year.”
After the supreme court struck down Trump’s executive order to deny citizenship to the children on non-citizens born on US soil, his supporters loudly demanded a ban on travel to the US by pregnant foreigners. None mentioned the fact that the president’s own father was born to a non-citizen mother who arrived in New York six months pregnant after being expelled from her native Germany.
Speaking to reporters on Air Force One, Donald Trump refused to tamp down speculation about the health of Mitch McConnell, the Republican senator who was hospitalized four weeks ago.
Asked if he had spoken to McConnell since his hospitalization, Trump said, “No, I haven’t.”
Pressed for an update on the condition of the senator, who broke with Trump and blamed him for the storming of the US Capitol on January 6 2021, the president said: “I have no idea how he’s doing.”
Polling commissioned by Graham Platner’s campaign shows that three possible replacements for him as the Democratic nominee for US Senate from Maine would have a better shot at defeating Susan Collins, the Republican incumbent, Politico reports.
According to the outlet, which obtained a copy of the survey conducted by Public Policy Polling, former Maine state senate president Troy Jackson leads Collins 49%-44%; Maine’s secretary of state, Shenna Bellows, is level with Collins at 47% each; and former public health official Nirav Shah is also tied with Collins on 45% apiece, with more undecided voters.
Platner’s support in the match-up with Collins has fallen to just 42%, after a sexual assault allegation, with the incumbent senator at 47%.
Two other potential replacement candidates tested in the poll did worse than Platner: Maine’s governor, Janet Mills, who lags 11 points behind Collins, and Jordan Wood, who finished third in a recent Democratic primary for the House and trails Collins by 9 points.
Jackson has already filed to potentially replace Platner if the Democratic nominee drops out, as is widely expected.
Bellows, who was trounced by Collins in the 2014 Maine Senate race, despite support from Zohran Mamdani, a Maine college student at the time, said she would seriously consider joining the race if Platner withdraws. Bellows lost to Collins in a bad midterm year for Democrats, without much support from the national party, and has gone on to hold statewide office and build a reputation in the state as a fighter against Donald Trump.
A spokesperson for Graham Platner has denied a report that he offered to thrown his support behind a Democratic state lawmaker, Valli Geiger, if he withdraws from the race for the US Senate.
“He’s not made any decision on endorsing,” the spokesperson told a Notus correspondent. “Graham called Valli to thank her for her support and encouraged her to consider running if he stepped down.”
Maine’s ABC affiliate MWTM reported earlier on Wednesday that Geiger said “called her on Monday night and said he was throwing his support behind her”.
The Pentagon announced new strikes on Iran, ordered Donald Trump, in a statement posted on social media 15 minutes ago.
“At the direction of the Commander in Chief, U.S. Central Command forces have started conducting additional strikes against Iran to further degrade their ability to threaten freedom of navigation in the Strait of Hormuz,” the statement said. “The United States is holding Iran accountable for recent unjustified aggression against commercial shipping and civilian crews freely navigating a vital international waterway.”
During an exchange with reporters at the Nato summit in Turkey earlier on Wednesday, Trump had expressed his frustration, and some confusion, at missiles being fired at a US aircraft carrier in the region. “Two months ago, we had 111 missiles shot by the Islamic Republic of Japan,” Trump said, twice.
As Democrats launch a frantic search for a US Senate candidate in Maine, to replace their nominee Graham Platner, who is expected to withdraw after being accused of sexual assault, the actor and Maine native Patrick Dempsey just announced that he will not enter the race, after giving it some thought.
In an opinion article for the Portland Press Herald published on Wednesday afternoon, headlined “Why I’m not running for US Senate,” Dempsey wrote:
Over the past several days, I’ve been asked a question more than once: Would you ever run for the United States Senate?
It’s flattering, and I don’t take it lightly. I love my home state of Maine. I care deeply about the people who live there and, like so many Americans, I’m concerned about the direction our country is heading.
I gave it real thought.
The actor went on to explain that he concluded that he can do more productive work through his non-profit, the Dempsey Center in Maine, which provides supportive care to people affected by cancer at no cost.
“As I reflected on all of this, I kept coming back to one question: Do I truly want to serve in Congress?” he wrote. “After a lot of thought, I realized the answer is no. Not because public service isn’t honorable – it absolutely is. But because I believe I can contribute more effectively through the life I’ve already built.”
The Maine Democratic party (MDP) has continued to chide Graham Platner’s operation, accusing the campaign of “distracting from the job of defeating Susan Collins in November with false accusations against us”.
The statement appeared to be in reference to a text message sent by Platner campaign manager to volunteers, accusing the state party of bringing in the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee (DSCC) and cutting the Platner campaign out of the process, according to a report by Politico.
Party leaders in Maine say they remain “hyper focused on developing a representative, transparent and inclusive process” for selecting a replacement nominee. At the same time, they’ve made clear their irritation with Platner’s attempts to shape that process, describing “frustration” with his “continued efforts to manipulate” it.
Still, officials are taking pains to keep Platner’s supporters close. MDP executive director Devon Murphy‑Anderson called them “a vital part of our party” and said they “deserve to participate in an open process to select Platner’s replacement”.
Platner hasn’t formally bowed out of the Maine Senate race, but the vacuum he’s created is still drawing potential replacements.
Dan Kleban – co‑founder of Maine Beer Company, who exited the primary earlier this year and endorsed Governor Janet Mills – said on Wednesday he was prepared to step in if Platner withdraws. Mills suspended her campaign but stayed on the June ballot, and her team has not indicated whether the term‑limited governor would consider re-entering the race.
“I’m ready to fight for Mainers and bring a new generation of leadership to Washington. I believe I can unite our party and finally defeat Susan Collins in November,” Kleban said.
David Costello, who finished third in the Democratic primary, also signaled he would “jump in” if the field reopens. Costello, who was raised in Maine but spent much of his career as a senior Maryland official, has urged state Democrats to treat Platner’s exit as if he placed last, triggering Maine’s ranked‑choice process.
Under that method, Platner’s votes would be redistributed according to second and third‑choice preferences until a remaining candidate crosses the 50% threshold.
“This would be the simplest approach, and the precedent there is the current gubernatorial nominee,” Costello told the Guardian in a phone interview. He argued that this method allows Platner voters to “have some choice and some involvement” moving forward. “It also guards against a smaller caucus approach, or even if party leaders themselves, like the state committee, just make a determination,” Costello added.
A Manhattan federal court judge has ordered the release of the more than $5m Donald Trump owes E Jean Carroll following her successful 2023 sexual abuse and defamation trial against him. Less than an hour after the judge issued his order, Trump filed paperwork indicating he is appealing the decision.
Trump had deposited this $5m million jury award, plus 11% interest, into a court-controlled account about six weeks after Carroll’s win. Judge Lewis Kaplan’s order directs the disbursement of these court-controlled funds, which now total some $5.8m due to interest accrual.
Kaplan’s decision comes more than three years after Carroll bested Trump in her bombshell civil case; jurors determined that he sexually abused the former Elle writer and unlawfully impugned her reputation with false, vitriolic denials. Trump denied all wrongdoing.
The order stems from the US supreme court’s 29 June decision not to review Trump’s appeal. Trump had asked for the supreme court to weigh his appeal after lower courts repeatedly rejected his fight against this verdict.
After Trump first appealed the verdict, he received an automatic 30-day stay barring collection. Carroll and Trump’s teams agreed in June 2023 that he could put the money into the court’s registry investment system (Cris) while his appeals played out.
The Cris system in effect serves as an escrow agent for money awarded during litigation; funds are secured while whatever post-judgment processes unfold. If someone ultimately loses their appeals, the money is available for collection – since they don’t have it in their possession, it can’t be hidden or shielded with legal maneuvering.
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Pressure continues to mount on embattled Maine Senate nominee Graham Platner to withdraw from the race, as his campaign faces accusations of trying to “put their thumb on the scale” to pick a replacement. Leaders in the Maine Democratic party said that Platner’s campaign would have “no role” in selecting a new nominee, claiming that his team had tried to sway the process. The Platner campaign did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Wednesday, but has told other outlets that it simply reached out to the party to understand the process.
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Kentucky governor Andy Beshear has sent a letter to the office of Republican senator Mitch McConnell – requesting an update on his condition, as concerns grow about the lawmaker’s health since he was admitted to hospital on 14 June. “Allowing speculation to continue in the media is not fair to the Senator or to Kentuckians, and my hope is that this provides him the opportunity to share the information in a transparent manner, direct from the source. I wish him a safe and speedy recovery,” Beshear said. Since the 84-year-old was hospitalized, his office declined to say what he was being treated for.
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While speaking to reporters alongside Mark Rutte, the Nato secretary general, Trump said that memorandum of understanding signed last month by the US and Iran is “over”, in the wake of the latest strikes. Later, during a bilateral meeting with Volodymyr Zelenskyy, the US president said the US will hit Iran “hard again tonight”, adding: “I give them a little warning.” At a wider press conference, Trump reiterated he did not think the Iran war would start again and that the US would eventually “take” Iranian nuclear material. More here.
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Chuck Schumer, the Senate minority leader, has slammed the latest US strikes on Iran. “Trump’s so-called ‘deal’ to end hostilities with Iran has turned into total, utter disaster,” the top Democrat said in a statement. Schumer also noted that since both chambers of Congress have passed war powers resolutions, the administration would need lawmakers’ approval to resume the military campaign against Iran.
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Meanwhile, in Washington, a US appeals court has ruled that the Trump administration cannot restore Donald Trump’s name to the facade of the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts while he challenges a judge’s order that required its removal. The decision by a three-judge panel of the US court of appeals for the District of Columbia circuit denied the administration’s request to pause a lower court judge’s order in a lawsuit brought by Democratic representative Joyce Beatty, a Kennedy Center board member.
Disclaimer : This story is auto aggregated by a computer programme and has not been created or edited by DOWNTHENEWS. Publisher: theguardian.com




