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NFL Week 2 latest buzz, questions, news and fantasy tips

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We’ve turned the page to Week 2 of the NFL season, and league insiders Jeremy Fowler and Dan Graziano are breaking down the latest news and notable buzz.

Week 1 brought a lot of questions. What should the Giants do about Russell Wilson and their quarterback situation — and what will they do? What’s going on with the Dolphins after their awful loss to the Colts in their opener? Does Justin Fields‘ big performance mean the Jets might have a long-term fix under center?

Jeremy and Dan made some calls around the league to get the latest on those situations. Then they also broke down how some of the most talked-about backfield timeshares shook out in Week 1 for fantasy football purposes and what comes next. It’s all here, as Dan and Jeremy answer big questions and empty their reporting notebooks heading into Week 2.

Jump to:
Latest on Giants’ QB plan | Panic in Miami?
Is Fields the answer? | RB timeshare updates
More notes for Week 2

Has anything changed with the Giants’ QB plan?

Graziano: Nope! Coach Brian Daboll said Monday that Russell Wilson would start again in Week 2, and their plan, as of now, is to keep going with him. Part of me wonders if the plan might change once left tackle Andrew Thomas is back healthy and the offensive line is more trustworthy. But I do know that Daboll and offensive coordinator Mike Kafka have a very specific strategy for Jaxson Dart‘s development that includes specific benchmarks he must hit before they’re convinced he’s ready. They’ve crafted this plan based on previous experiences breaking in young quarterbacks, which include prominent success stories such as Josh Allen and Patrick Mahomes.

No one is saying Dart is Allen or Mahomes, but Daboll and Kafka are using their past successes to inform the plan. To this point, they insist that they have belief in Wilson in the short term while they get Dart ready for the long term. That’s their current story, and they’re sticking to it — even after Wilson looked completely lost against the Commanders’ pass rush Sunday.

Fowler: Despite Wilson’s struggles, money usually talks in these situations, and to bench Wilson after Week 1 means the Giants would have paid him more than $10 million for one game. Sensible teams don’t typically do such things. And I believe the Giants are trying to be sensible here. This is a team that needs to stick to a plan, and having Dart sit and learn — at least in the short term — can help him. Wilson is a declining player but should play better this week against the Cowboys. He provides experience for a team that needs it.

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3:06

Stephen A.: Jaxson Dart should start in Week 3

Stephen A. Smith contends that Jaxson Dart should start at quarterback for the Giants sooner rather than later.

Now, I do believe Dart has expedited the process based on his stellar preseason. Things clicked late in the spring, and Dart took off from there. The Giants’ staff has found him to be a fast learner, highly motivated and, as one team source calls him, “tough as s—.” At the very least, Dart has made a compelling case. And I’m not naïve; it feels inevitable that Dart will play — probably sooner than later. But I’m not overreacting to Week 1. But what happens if Wilson records another dud in Week 2?

Graziano: The drumbeat gets louder. Look, I get the idea of sticking to the plan. But the Giants made Dart the No. 2 quarterback for Sunday’s game, which means they are comfortable with the idea of him going into the game should something happen to Wilson. If that’s the case, why wouldn’t they be comfortable starting him? This is a matter of time, and if Wilson looks as lost and ineffective Sunday in Dallas as he did in Washington, I don’t know how much longer the Giants can hold off.

One question I have, though, is whether they’d turn to Jameis Winston first if they decide Wilson needs to be benched but aren’t ready to put in Dart. I haven’t heard anything to indicate that, but it could represent a compromise of sorts.

Fowler: When I visited the Giants’ joint practice with the Jets, Winston was running the third-team offense and immediately connected on a deep ball. It wouldn’t be the worst decision to play Winston and ride with his fearless style. But on that same day, the Giants inserted Dart on a drive that Wilson had started, which I filed away. Implementing a package for Dart in the flow of Wilson’s offense still feels like a very real option.


Are the Dolphins already pressing the panic button? What are you hearing out of Miami?

Fowler: It hasn’t been pressed yet, but there’s one somewhere inside the Dolphins’ facility. When or if they press it is anyone’s guess. Remember … it’s only one week.

But it does feel like the Dolphins’ season — and the purveyors of it, GM Chris Grier and coach Mike McDaniel — is approaching a rather early crossroads. The Dolphins looked uninspired and inexplicably flat Sunday in Indianapolis. Miami seems as if it’s much better than what it showed, but a few themes emerged when asking people around the league their impressions of the Dolphins. There are concerns about the roster’s overall talent. The Dolphins moved on from several key players perceived as bad fits, which can improve a locker room. But they relinquished proven talent and replaced it with more cost-effective options that do not appear as capable in some cases.

There are also questions about player leadership. Good teams have bona fide leaders, true alphas. With all the change, who fills that role in Miami’s locker room right now? I’m not saying those players don’t exist, but they aren’t obvious from the outside. It’s possible strong voices will emerge. They will be needed immediately, with division opponents looming the next three weeks.

Graziano: I’m not sure there’s a team that needs a Week 2 win more than Miami. After visiting its training camp, I was sort of buying the idea that this season was going to be a bit of a cultural reset and that things might not be as awful as feared. But the Dolphins looked disastrously dreadful on both sides of the ball against the Colts, and suddenly there was a whole bunch of fresh evidence suggesting they could be the league’s worst team this season. If Week 1 was a true representation of how Miami’s season will go, things could get really ugly quickly. And that could mean big changes.

Fowler: Trade rumors around Tyreek Hill will be worth watching. My understanding is that Miami received calls on Hill but did not show interest in trading him. If the losing persists, perhaps those phone lines reopen. The Dolphins already exercised Hill’s $15.85 million option bonus, leaving a $10 million base salary and $1.8 million in per-game bonuses.

A Chiefs reunion is low-hanging fruit and could be what Kansas City needs. The Chiefs can’t seem to get their receiving trio of Xavier Worthy, Rashee Rice and Hollywood Brown on the field at the same time, and a boost of explosiveness would help.

Graziano: It would, for sure, but the Dolphins need to help themselves first and foremost. There are legit questions about what kind of player Hill is at this point, even apart from the issues he has had in the locker room and on the sidelines (which he and others have publicly discussed). The Chiefs obviously know Hill from early in his career and could convince themselves he’d play better for them than he’s playing for Miami. But it has been a long time since we’ve seen Hill be an explosive player. If he doesn’t start playing better, it’s going to be tough for the Dolphins to find a trade partner.

Hill is also facing domestic violence allegations from his estranged wife, according to TMZ. In addition to being a serious non-football matter, the allegations could affect the interest of other teams in acquiring him if they result in any kind of NFL investigation and potential discipline.


Are you buying or selling the idea that Justin Fields is the answer to the Jets’ QB woes?

Graziano: I am renting with an option to buy. Fields looked a lot better than I — or almost anyone — expected in his first game with the Jets. Unless this is the worst Steelers defense in decades, a 72.7% completion percentage and 9.9 yards per pass attempt is worth sitting up and noticing. We know what Fields adds with his legs, and that was on display Sunday. But what really stood out was the previously elusive accuracy and touch on his downfield throws. If he has taken a big leap in that regard, the Jets might be able to scheme around his limitations, lean into his strengths and have success with a very talented former top-12 pick who’s still only 26 years old.

Fowler: I am buying a low-cost duplex that I can rent out if I want to move. Look, Fields has a lot to offer — hard worker, liked by teammates, a willing leader and incredibly dynamic with plenty of arm strength. But we kind of know what he is at this point. He has 45 career starts and has won only 14 of them (not all his fault). He has never thrown more than 17 touchdown passes in a season and completes 61% of his throws.

Baker Mayfield, Sam Darnold and Geno Smith have made QB resurgence trendy, and perhaps Fields is next in line. That would be a great story. But I’m somewhat reluctant to believe he can pass with consistent precision and touch throughout an NFL season. The Jets signed him as a bridge quarterback, and that’s what I think he is. But I’m very open to being wrong. What’s clear is Fields’ supporting cast on offense is pretty good, particularly along the offensive line. Did Sunday change your perception of the Jets, Dan?

Graziano: Yes. I had been told to expect a slowed-down, ball-control, keep-away type of offense that relied on the run game (including Fields’ running ability) and didn’t ask a ton of Fields as a passer outside of key third-down situations. But it was clear Sunday that the Jets had done enough work with him as a passer that they trust him to throw it more than we expected. Garrett Wilson has true No. 1 wide receiver ability, and I know they like their running backs a lot.

I remain a little concerned about the loss of guard Alijah Vera-Tucker and its long-range impact on the offensive line, and I believe the Jets could use another reliable outside wide receiver to complement Wilson. But I thought the Jets’ offense looked better than the Steelers’ offense did Sunday, regardless of the final score.

Fowler: Fields’ performance was promising, and he looks capable of providing the Jets’ offense more versatility than I anticipated. But offensive coordinator Tanner Engstrand also did a nice job keeping the game manageable for Fields, having him throw 22 times (vs. 39 team rushing attempts). Asking Fields to be a volume thrower could be problematic, but scheming easier throws to Wilson and impressive rookie tight end Mason Taylor will help the quarterback thrive.


Which team’s RB hierarchy got some clarity in Week 1?

Fowler: The Bears-Vikings game was telling. Word out of Minnesota was that Jordan Mason and Aaron Jones Sr. would see a 50-50 split. That played out Monday night, with Mason getting 30 snaps to Jones’ 28. Mason is the younger (26) and more explosive runner at this stage, and he had 15 carries for 68 yards compared to Jones’ 23 yards on eight carries, though Jones added three catches for 44 yards and a touchdown. I expect the even workload to continue, with Mason serving as the hammer and Jones the do-it-all option.

On the other side, D’Andre Swift logged 54 of Chicago’s 67 snaps. He’s clearly the No. 1 in a de facto contract year (the guaranteed money on his three-year deal is up after 2025).

Graziano: The Jaguars’ situation got a little bit clearer Sunday, when Travis Etienne Jr. got 19 of the team’s 26 running back touches. It got a lot clearer Monday night when they traded Tank Bigsby to the Eagles. That leaves them with Etienne, fourth-round rookie Bhayshul Tuten and seventh-round rookie LeQuint Allen Jr.

Tuten is the big-play burner who could push for a more significant role as he learns the league and Jacksonville’s playbook. Allen is the Jaguars’ third-down pass-catching back. But for now, Etienne looks as if he best fits what they want to do on early downs, and I know they think his skill set fits well into their screen-game plans. The question will be whether Tuten can earn more touches as his rookie season goes on, or whether we need to wait until 2026 to see what he can do.

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0:53

Is Travis Etienne Jr.’s fantasy stock higher after Tank Bigsby trade?

Field Yates details how the Jags trading away Tank Bigsby impacts Travis Etienne Jr.’s fantasy numbers.

Fowler: The hope is Tuten can become a similar home run hitter for Liam Coen in Jacksonville that Bucky Irving was for him last season in Tampa Bay, easing the load on Etienne. Both Irving and Tuten are fourth-round picks with a similar stature. That said, Etienne has found his 2022-23 groove again based on the open-field explosion he displayed in Week 1. Last season was a slog, but the traits are there. Coen is skilled at creating a successful run game.

I kept hearing how high Washington was on Jacory Croskey-Merritt in the preseason, and he delivered Sunday with 82 yards and a touchdown on 10 carries. I’m expecting his momentum to continue. Austin Ekeler will remain a factor, and the Commanders trust Jeremy McNichols and Chris Rodriguez Jr. Croskey-Merritt might not be the lead back yet, but he will be eventually. Commanders players have been impressed by the patience and vision he showed when running with the first-team offense in camp.

Graziano: I tentatively agree. When Rodriguez was announced as inactive Sunday, it was a clear sign that Croskey-Merritt was in for a significant role. A tiny part of me wonders if the Commanders might have Rodriguez up for Thursday night’s game with the Packers and give some other backs more work to avoid overloading Croskey-Merritt with two high-usage games in a five-day span. But I have no inside information to suggest that, and being in that locker room after Sunday’s game, I can say they were very happy with what they got from the seventh-round rookie. I expect him to be their main guy for the bulk of this season along with Ekeler, who has his own specific role.

We also came out of Week 1 certain that Javonte Williams is the Cowboys’ top running back — a position that should be more solidified after Miles Sanders‘ costly third-quarter fumble against the Eagles. Kenneth Gainwell should also have a significant role ahead of rookie Kaleb Johnson in Pittsburgh, at least in the short term while Johnson works on pass protection and other areas that need ironing out.


What else are you hearing this week?

Graziano’s notes:

• The headline item from Tampa Bay’s season-opening victory over Atlanta might have been the two touchdown catches by rookie wide receiver Emeka Egbuka. (Though I’ll not-so-humbly point out that if you read this column last week you shouldn’t have been surprised.) But the under-the-radar performance that had folks in the Buccaneers’ building beaming with pride was the way Graham Barton played left tackle in that game. He played left tackle at Duke but was taken in the first round of the 2024 draft to play center, which he did for the Bucs all of last season. When Tampa Bay got the news that starting left tackle Tristan Wirfs would miss the start of the season while recovering from offseason knee surgery, its first instinct was to try Charlie Heck, the veteran swing tackle it signed in free agency, as Wirfs’ early-season replacement. But a couple of weeks into training camp, the Bucs tried out an alignment with Barton at left tackle, trying to figure out if they could use it as a contingency plan in case of emergency or if something were to happen to Heck.

Thing is, Barton looked pretty good out there. And in the week that followed the Bucs’ roster cutdown to 53 players, coach Todd Bowles and the offensive staff decided it was the best way for them to go in Week 1. So they practiced with Barton at left tackle, left guard Ben Bredeson at center and veteran Mike Jordan at left guard. Most impressively, they managed to keep the whole thing a secret until the offense ran out onto the field for the opener Sunday in Atlanta. Barton played well, they won the game, and I would expect them to use this same offensive line combo until Wirfs is ready to return from his injury. Barton might not be able to hold up at left tackle over an entire season, but it’s working so far as a patch, and the Bucs are thrilled to know he’s an option at other O-line spots besides center.

• Veteran pass rusher Von Miller — who is 36 years old and playing in his 15th NFL season — played a little more than 40% of the defensive snaps for the Commanders on Sunday. That’s a bit more than he played last season in Buffalo, and he anticipates being able to contribute at a higher level in Washington this year. “I’ll be three years removed from tearing my ACL in November,” Miller told me last week. “I tore the same ACL when I was 24 years old, and I guess I thought it would recover at the same speed it did then, but that wasn’t the case. Now I feel good, feel strong, ready to help this team win.”

Miller is a two-time Super Bowl champion who ranks 16th all-time with 129.5 sacks — just three behind Leslie O’Neal and Lawrence Taylor. He’s a surefire Hall of Famer with nothing left to prove in the league. I asked him what still drives him at this point. “I just love football, man,” he said. “I love all aspects about it. I love practice, watching film, being in the locker room with the guys. I guess if I got bored, I might want to do something other than this, but so far I haven’t. I just love it.”

• The Lions got a contract extension done with 2022 first-round pick Jameson Williams, but they still haven’t reached agreement with their other 2022 first-rounder, Aidan Hutchinson, on a long-term deal. They’ve had productive talks but no agreement yet, and considering the extent to which the Micah Parsons deal set a new bar for edge rusher contracts, it could get complicated. The Lions have a lot of incentive to get this done before next spring, when their stellar 2023 draft class — including Jahmyr Gibbs, Jack Campbell, Sam LaPorta and Brian Branch — become extension-eligible for the first time. Lions GM Brad Holmes has been talking since the spring about the tough decisions Detroit might have to make as it works to get its young stars signed long-term. The Lions have drafted almost too well for their own good.

• The Jalen Carter discipline solution was an interesting one from a precedent standpoint. In the past, spitting incidents such as this one resulted in fines and not suspensions. The NFL announced Carter’s discipline as a one-game suspension without pay. The fine was equivalent to one-eighteenth of Carter’s base salary — so one game check — and the suspension was deemed to have already been served because Carter was ejected from the Eagles’ season opener before there had been a single play from scrimmage.

In its announcement of the suspension, the NFL specifically mentioned its renewed emphasis on policing unsportsmanlike acts this season. Putting two and two together, it’s easy to come to the conclusion that Carter’s punishment represents a new precedent, and that unsportsmanlike acts that used to result in only fines could now carry the potential for suspension.

• The Chiefs are frustrated that injuries and other issues (i.e., the Rashee Rice suspension) have kept them from holding their wide receiver room together the past couple of years. They had a Xavier Worthy-heavy game plan designed for last Friday’s opener against the Chargers in Brazil, and after Worthy got injured on the game’s third play, the offense looked out of sync … because it was. The Chiefs consider former Patriots second-rounder Tyquan Thornton one of the pleasant surprises of their offseason, but the fact is, quarterback Patrick Mahomes hadn’t worked as much with him in practice as he had with Worthy. So just sending Thornton in to run Worthy’s plays didn’t work because Mahomes and Thornton didn’t have their timing down.

If Worthy has to miss time, the Chiefs hope and believe that the practice time with Mahomes will have better prepared him and Thornton to deliver on those downfield shots. Hollywood Brown will continue to be a big part of the game plan, and Kansas City expects more from the run game and Isiah Pacheco, who had a great camp and should be a bigger part of the offense moving forward. Pacheco and the entire offense had a frustrating opener, but Kansas City doesn’t believe that is reflective of where it is right now as a team.

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Why Patrick Mahomes is a top-10 fantasy QB

Field Yates breaks down Patrick Mahomes’ stellar Week 1 performance despite losing.

• Fantasy football managers might not love hearing this, but the Steelers’ coaching staff was thrilled with the way Aaron Rodgers spread the ball around in Sunday’s victory over the Jets. The Steelers believe they have a collection of unselfish players on offense, and in their ideal world, they will continue to use all of them.

Example: Running back Kenneth Gainwell might have had a bigger role in the offense than many on the outside anticipated. But offensive coordinator Arthur Smith was extremely impressed with Gainwell in early preseason action and quickly identified him as a player who deserved a larger role. Gainwell also boosted his case with a huge forced fumbled on a Jets kick return that helped get the Steelers back in the game in the fourth quarter. New WR1 DK Metcalf also impressed in his Steelers debut, and it wouldn’t shock anyone to see Rodgers work to get Metcalf heavily involved Sunday against Metcalf’s former team, the Seahawks.

• The offensive coordinator change in Houston didn’t get off to a stellar debut. Nick Caley and quarterback C.J. Stroud have some work to do to get fully on the same page, and the Texans will make a point to find ways to get top receiver Nico Collins more involved moving forward. Nobody in Houston is worried about the defense, which could be the best one in the league this season. But replacing Bobby Slowik with Caley was supposed to help boost the passing game, and it got off to a rough start in Sunday’s 14-9 loss to the Rams. Without a run game to stress opposing defenses, Stroud and Caley need to show improvement in the pass game quickly, especially if the Colts are going to be as strong a challenger in the AFC South as they looked Sunday.

• One thing that came out of the Bills’ comeback victory over the Ravens on Sunday night was validation about second-year wideout Keon Coleman, a player they believe has taken a major step forward in his second season. The Bills haven’t seemed to have a true No. 1 wide receiver since trading Stefon Diggs to the Texans in the 2024 offseason, but Coleman is the guy they believe can be that. And after a strong offseason, they were thrilled that he looked the part in the opener.

Fowler’s notes:

• The Packers-Commanders matchup on Thursday night is a Week 2 beauty, featuring two playoff teams that looked impressive in their openers. I’ll be at Lambeau Field for the action. We will have much more on that game Thursday, but here are a few notes to keep in mind:

  • Every week, Packers coach Matt LaFleur asks running back Josh Jacobs how he’s feeling. It’s essentially code for “are you ready for a big workload?” LaFleur has asked Jacobs this entering Thursday night, and Jacobs indeed wants a rather large volume of touches. In fact, Jacobs feels like having a Thursday night game early in the season is good for a running back from a recovery standpoint. He saw several eight- and nine-man boxes last week against Detroit and might see the same against Washington.

  • The Commanders will be all-in on stopping Jacobs, but tight end Tucker Kraft has the defense’s full attention. Washington’s defensive players feel he’s the full package and will be a big factor in the outcome of the game.

  • Deebo Samuel‘s presence paid off Sunday with seven catches for 77 yards. As one Commanders player told me, the passing game’s biggest strength (aside from Jayden Daniels) is that they “are not redundant,” and Samuel embodies that. Samuel is tough to account for because of his tailback/receiver combo skills. Washington is seeing the benefits of that early. After all, Green Bay wasn’t the only team to make a splash trade before the season; Washington acquired Samuel and left tackle Laremy Tunsil in offseason deals.

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Why Louis Riddick isn’t worried about Micah Parsons’ health

Louis Riddick expects Micah Parsons to be “good to go” vs. the Commanders on Thursday night.

• Staying on Green Bay, I’m told pass rusher Rashan Gary — who produced 1.5 sacks Sunday against Detroit — was a part of Dallas’ internal trade discussion on the Micah Parsons deal. The Cowboys were looking to add a premier defensive player, and Gary’s name came up in the building before the move. The Cowboys ultimately wanted Kenny Clark, focused on defensive tackle play and run-stopping, but Gary as a Cowboy was at least a notion kicked around at The Star. Despite losing Clark, Green Bay now has a vicious three-man pass rush with Parsons, Gary and Lukas Van Ness, who can play inside or outside.

• The Browns looked fully capable of winning games based on Sunday’s performance against Cincinnati. Joe Flacco looked crisp, and young receivers Cedric Tillman and Harold Fannin Jr. have big upside. But the key for Cleveland is a defense that’s showing shades of the vaunted 2023 attack under Jim Schwartz. Holding Joe Burrow to 113 passing yards is an impressive feat. Cornerback Denzel Ward told me last week his defense can “go out there and lead the team” weekly.

“We can be a special defense. … We have the right guys in the building and are capable of doing it,” Ward said. “We just have to go out there and put it on tape to get back to where we were.” Slot cornerback is still a mild concern, but the defensive front is plenty deep, and rookie linebacker Carson Schwesinger has impressed in a hurry.

• The sense from around the league is that Titans rookie quarterback Cam Ward performed much better than his stat line (12-of-28, 112 passing yards). Playing a top-five defense in a hostile Denver environment and working with a receiving corps that committed several drops was a lot to overcome for Ward, who hung in the pocket and delivered several high-difficulty throws. As one NFL coordinator who watched the game said: “I think he is super talented and will have a great year. When he had time, he was accurate with unquestionable poise for a young QB. Athletic enough to stay alive to make off-script plays down the field. He is aggressive for a young guy, which will surprise lots of teams.”

• The Panthers could tweak their defensive personnel in light of their Week 1 struggles in Jacksonville. Coach Dave Canales said publicly he’d like to see young players get more snaps. I anticipate rookie edge rushers Nic Scourton and Princely Umanmielen getting a harder look this week. They played 18 and eight snaps, respectively, last week. This would be an upside play to see if the Panthers can generate pass rush after a zero-sack debut against the Jaguars.

Trump administration appeals ruling blocking removal of Fed Governor Cook

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By Daniel Wiessner

(Reuters) -President Donald Trump‘s administration on Wednesday moved quickly to appeal a federal judge’s ruling temporarily blocking Trump from taking the unprecedented step of firing Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook.

The U.S. Department of Justice filed a brief notice that it was appealing the ruling from late Tuesday by U.S. District Judge Jia Cobb, who said Trump’s claims that Cook committed mortgage fraud prior to taking office were likely not sufficient grounds for her removal.

Trump moved to fire Cook in late August, but the Fed has said she remains in her position. Cobb’s ruling prevents the Fed from following through on Cook’s firing while her lawsuit moves forward.

White House spokesperson Kush Desai on Wednesday, before the appeal was filed, said that Trump had lawfully removed Cook for cause over the mortgage allegations and that “this ruling will not be the last say on the matter.”

Cook, who denies any wrongdoing, sued in late August saying Trump’s claim she engaged in mortgage fraud before she joined the central bank did not give him legal authority to remove her, and was a pretext to fire her for her monetary policy stance.

The case, which will likely end up before the U.S. Supreme Court, has ramifications for the Fed’s ability to set interest rates without regard to politicians’ wishes, widely seen as critical to any central bank’s ability to keep inflation under control.

Trump has demanded that the U.S. central bank cut rates immediately and aggressively, berating Fed Chair Jerome Powell for his stewardship over monetary policy. The central bank is expected to deliver a rate cut at its September 16-17 policy meeting.

The law that created the Fed says governors may be removed only “for cause,” but does not define the term nor establish procedures for removal. No president has ever removed a Fed governor, and the law has never been tested in court.

Cobb on Tuesday found that the best reading of the law is that it only allows a Fed governor to be removed for misconduct while in office. The mortgage fraud claims against Cook all relate to actions she took prior to her U.S. Senate confirmation in 2022.

Trump and William Pulte, the Federal Housing and Finance Agency director appointed by the president, say Cook inaccurately described three separate properties on mortgage applications, which could have allowed her to obtain lower interest rates and tax credits.

The U.S. Justice Department has also launched a criminal mortgage fraud probe into Cook and has issued grand jury subpoenas out of both Georgia and Michigan, according to documents seen by Reuters and a source familiar with the matter. Cook has denied wrongdoing.

(Reporting by Daniel Wiessner in Albany, New York; Editing by Alexia Garamfalvi and Andrea Ricci)

UK’s first ‘super-university’ to be created as two merge from 2026

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Branwen Jeffreys Education editor

Universal Images Group via Getty Images Male students at the University of Greenwich posing for pictures on graduation day in the grounds of the Old Royal Naval College in London.Universal Images Group via Getty Images

The universities of Kent and Greenwich will collaborate in 2026

The UK’s first “super-university”, stretching across an entire region, is to be created through the merger of the universities of Kent and Greenwich, the BBC has learned.

Under the proposed name of London and South East University Group, the single institution will have one vice-chancellor from the academic year starting in autumn 2026.

The Office for Students, England’s higher education regulator, welcomed the move and suggested more universities may explore similar options as they battle economic challenges, with 40% of English universities now believed to be in financial deficit.

But the University and College Union told the BBC there would “almost certainly” be redundancies as a result.

UCU’s general secretary Jo Grady says that what is being described as a merger is “a takeover by Greenwich” as Kent was on “the brink of insolvency”.

“I also think this is a broader problem for the sector. Both of these institutions should have been on the government’s radar, and rather than stepping in, we’re seeing that this is how a crisis is managed. This isn’t offering stability to students, to staff or to the sector”, Ms Grady added.

The Department for Education (DfE) said ministers “welcome innovative approaches such as this one”.

This is the first merger of its scale in the UK with the total number of students in the new institution reaching almost 50,000. Smaller mergers like the amalgamation of three colleges within the University of the Highlands and Islands network have happened previously.

The new university will operate across the existing campuses, including in Medway, where students from both Greenwich and Kent already share facilities, including the library.

Kent has one other campus, in Canterbury, about 30 miles (48km) from Medway.

Greenwich has two other campuses, one on the banks of the River Thames in Greenwich itself about 28 miles (45km) from Medway, and the other in Avery Hill, south-east London, about 24 miles (38km) from Medway.

The universities said the combined institution will provide a strong financial foundation to weather the economic challenges facing universities now and in the future.

Speaking exclusively to the BBC, the vice-chancellors of both universities insisted the move was not a takeover, nor driven by a financial crisis for either, although they argued the new university model would be “resilient and financially viable”.

A map which shows where the University of Greenwich's main campus is and where the University of Kent's main campus is. It shows a line joining the two which states they are 54 miles apart. In the middle of both is an arrow pointing to the shared Medway campus

Prof Georgina Randsley de Moura will remain the interim leader of Kent until the merger, when Prof Jane Harrington, who runs Greenwich, will become the vice-chancellor of the new institution.

Prof Randsley de Moura said the “trailblazing model” would enable the universities within the new group to retain their name, identity and campuses.

Prof Harrington said the universities had worked together on the Medway campus for 20 years and now wanted to go further to contribute to the economy across London and the South East.

“This is about taking the best of both universities and saying what do we want to offer to our communities,” she said.

BBC/Branwen Jeffreys Standing outside in front of greenery in the sunshine are the two female Vice Chancellors who have negotiated the merger.  On the left is Professor Georgina Randsley de Moura, the interim Vice Chancellor of the University of Kent wearing a black jacket and top.  On the right is Professor Jane Harrington the Vice Chancellor of the University of Greenwich wearing a pale grey jacket with a patterned floral top. Both women are smiling
BBC/Branwen Jeffreys

Prof Georgina Randsley de Moura and Prof Jane Harrington

For students, there will be no visible change, with applications continuing as normal to each institution and degrees awarded in the name of Kent or Greenwich.

Prof Harrington said she could tell students “absolutely categorically” they could complete any course they are already enrolled on, including those starting university this autumn.

The universities said there are no immediate plans for job losses, but both have had to make recent cuts.

After hearing the news, some staff in Canterbury this morning told the BBC that it felt “very last minute” and they were concerned for jobs.

Researcher Jack Davis said it was a bit too early to know exactly what it means in terms of restructuring but he could see the benefits of collaborating.

“If other institutions have other bits of kit, it might mean we’re able to foster relations and maybe do experiments there too”, he said.

In May, Greenwich confirmed it was cutting the equivalent of 15 full-time posts by August.

Kent has already started winding down some courses to reduce costs as it posted a deficit for another year in 2024.

The planned merger is likely to provoke anxiety about long-term prospects among staff.

Prof Harrington said she recognised there would be concern about posts, and said they would be saving costs by reducing senior roles.

Across England, job losses at many institutions over the last couple of years have been adding up, with the University and College Union (UCU) estimating the overall number of posts cut is about 5,000.

Mergers, once rare, have become more common, with City St George’s created from two separate parts of the University of London last year.

Most others have involved smaller or specialist institutions.

The plans unveiled on Wednesday are on a bigger scale, with two universities offering a full range of courses and spread over a wider geographical area.

The merger will be watched with interest by other universities looking at ways to collaborate to stabilise their finances.

Tuition fees have increased to £9,535 this academic year, but the real value to universities has fallen because of rising costs since the big uplift 13 years ago increased fees from just over £3,000 to £9,000 a year.

In the last academic year, the number of applications from international students, who pay higher fees, was 16% lower than universities had hoped.

It followed visa restrictions introduced in 2024 which prevented international students bringing family members.

Line chart showing actual tuition fees from 2012-13 to 2025-26, which were £9,000 in 2012-13, before increasing to £9,250 in 2017-18 and £9,535 in 2025-26. A second line shows how tuition fees would look if they had increased with the Retail Prices Index excluding mortgage payments (RPIX) every year since 2012-13, with this line immediately increasing above actual tuition fees, and reaching £14,582 in 2025-26. The government uses RPIX to set tuition fees.

Vivienne Stern, from Universities UK, said the merger was significant, and a sign of how universities were thinking differently.

She said the “slow erosion” of university finances needed to be stopped and the government “was needed on the pitch pretty fast” with longer-term solutions.

Those government plans for the future funding of universities in England are expected later this autumn.

Ministers have already said they are looking at applying a 6% tax on income from international students.

A DfE spokesperson said: “This collaboration shows how strong partnerships in higher education can help enable delivery of world-class teaching and research whilst maintaining the best interests of students.”

Any change on this scale has to be overseen by the OfS, which regulates universities in England, and makes sure students’ studies are not disrupted.

“In any merger, effective communication with students will be crucial,” a spokesperson said.

“Current students will continue to study for the courses they signed up for, and should continue to expect excellent teaching and support.”

Iryna Zarutska murder video draws outrage — don’t blame the bystanders 

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The main topic of conversation on social media today continues to be the horrific killing of Iryna Zarutska, the Ukrainian woman who was murdered on a train in Charlotte, N.C., last month. Right now, I want to focus on a common reaction I’ve seen, which is to criticize and condemn the other passengers on the train — the bystanders — who did not intervene to help Zarutska. 

We’ve already talked about the justifiable conservative outrage that this story did not merit a mention by the national media, even though one-off incidents are frequently seized upon when they fit a liberal narrative. Think of all the attention the wrongful killing of George Floyd received from activists, from the Democratic Party and from the media. Think of the firestorm it caused. But this killing, which was no less horrifying than Floyd’s death — and if we are being honest, arguably more horrifying, given how utterly random and senseless it was — is being framed as an example of conservatives pouncing or seizing on a story that it is inconvenient for the left.  

Why on earth is this always the framing? Well, that’s a question for later. I want to turn, instead, to a point I’ve seen many people make, including many conservatives, and one I actually disagree with.  

Ben Shapiro, for instance, wrote this on X: “ONE MINUTE, 35 SECONDS. That is how long it was between Iryna Zarutska being stabbed in the neck by an evil and crazed psychopath and anyone — ANYONE — doing anything. Many people stood by and looked apathetically at their phones.” 

I understand why some are looking to blame the bystanders, because it’s true — there was no one who immediately rushed to Zarutska’s aid. But I think we’re not putting what happened in context. Because of my own history, I’m always wary of these kinds of things. 

I first came to national media attention for debunking a viral video that appeared to show kids at the Lincoln Memorial harassing a Native American man. You know this as the Covington Catholic scandal. The video was selectively clipped, and shot from a deceptive angle. This has taught me never to fully trust what we think we see on video. And indeed, it’s important to remember that the viral surveillance footage of Zarutska’s death is not what the bystanders themselves witnessed. 

I’m not going to show that video, though it’s available online if you want to watch it for yourself. I am going to describe what can be seen: If that’s not something you want to hear, you should skip the rest of this radar. 

What happens is that Decarlos Brown, the suspect, is sitting behind Zarutska, stands up, and without warning stabs her repeatedly in the neck. He then walks away. There are people sitting around Zarutska, but unfortunately her wounds are on the side of her neck that is facing away from the aisle. At first, it seems that not even Zarutska understands how seriously wounded she is. But after just a few seconds, she beings to lose consciousness; she slumps to the side, and this poor, poor woman falls toward the window seat and then toward the floor. 

There are a great many possible reasons why no one approached her for another minute. One, maybe no one had actually noticed that she was in distress: The blood was not obviously visible from the vantage point of the people behind her or on the other side of the aisle from her. Those people might also have been in shock, or terrified of the knife-wielding crazy man. 

Eventually there’s enough blood for someone in front of Zarutska to take notice, and valiantly try to help her, even though by then it’s too late. But even if assistance had come a full minute earlier, I don’t know that it would have made a difference. 

The reason I’m harping on this, that it’s not the bystanders’ fault, is that I’m very wary of attempts to shift blame onto the bystanders. Let me be abundantly clear: The person who deserves blame is the perpetrator, and anyone who participated in a system that wrongfully allowed a violent, criminal, schizophrenic man to be out on the streets posing a danger to others. The relevant authorities would sure love for us to start pointing fingers at anybody but them. 

Robby Soave is co-host of The Hill’s commentary show “Rising” and a senior editor for Reason Magazine. This column is an edited transcription of his daily commentary. 

Alfa on meeting rising regulatory demands on cloud resilience

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In this Q&A, Leasing Life Editor Alejandro Gonzalez (AG) speaks with Alex Barnes (AB), Director of Cloud Hosting at Alfa, about how shifting regulatory demands and increasingly sophisticated threats are reshaping backup strategies.

Under EU’s DORA and the EBA/PRA guidelines, banks and lenders must treat outsourced digital services as integral parts of their operational resilience, enforcing a full ICT risk-management cycle, from rigorous pre-outsourcing due diligence and detailed contractual SLAs covering data security, audit rights and exit plans, to continuous monitoring, periodic reviews and clear incident-reporting protocols. The rules also mandate regular scenario-based resilience testing, including threat-led penetration exercises, and for critical providers direct supervisory oversight to ensure third-party systems can withstand disruption without compromising business continuity or compliance.

Barnes explains how Alfa Cloud’s Data Guardian architecture — with its three-layer approach to storage and recovery — is designed to meet these pressures.

AB: There’s definitely an ongoing evolution of ever-more sophisticated cyber threats – not a day goes by without hearing of a new ransomware or attack, often at supply chains.

On top of that, increased regulatory focus – such as DORA or EBA/PRA regulations – means that outsourcing to a SaaS provider doesn’t remove the obligations for continued service obligations for our customers.

We’ve always architected and operated Alfa Cloud, such that we could automatically rebuild any customer’s isolated infrastructure in a few hours, so we recognised that by evolving our backup strategy, we could provide resilience against almost any reasonably foreseeable incident. We decided to make this part of our standard platform at no additional cost to our customers because we consider this to be a critical part of incident preparedness.

AB: Our overall strategy, of which Data Guardian is a key component, is based on considering the worst-case outcomes: What if an attacker was somehow authenticated and inside our network via a phishing attack? What if there was a significant terrorist event or other outage in a particular region? What if the primary cloud platform had an extended, multi-regional outage?

Each of the different layers play a part in reducing the risk for a different scenario whether it’s a deliberate attack or otherwise. As we mentioned above, complete end-to-end infrastructure-as-code underpins all of it. Having the option to rebuild in a new account, in a new region, in a matter of hours is why cloud platforms such as AWS are so important when designing for resilience. This simply wouldn’t be possible using legacy approaches and on-premises data centres.

But we have to still be careful: it’s not possible to reduce the risk to zero, so we also augment Data Guardian with 24/7 security anomaly detection backed up by expert Alfa teams around the world.

AB: Regulatory obligations for our customers are always evolving and cover many different operational aspects of their business operations. We talked earlier about DORA and EBA/PRA guidelines which require our customers to verify the capabilities of their outsourced suppliers and therefore require transparency from vendors such as Alfa. Being transparent about our architecture, and capabilities including Data Guardian, as well as pointing to our certifications and external assessments (such as ISO 27001, ISO 27018, SOC 1 Type II and SOC 2 Type II) help give our customers those assurances.

Our commitment to infrastructure-as-code and automated deployments using standard AWS platform features allows our customers to self-select their primary and secondary regions. This allows them to meet data residency requirements whilst still getting the benefits of our SaaS platform Data Guardian is built on top of this regionally agnostic deployment approach to allow that self-selection.

We see excess data retention as an unnecessary risk for our customers and for Alfa as well as a potential compliance issue. Therefore, our triple shield is based on immutable retention policies which ensure that we keep our customer’s data in the optimum number of locations for exactly as long as we are required to do so and not longer.

AB: Data Guardian is a backend technology which describes our best-in-class resilience to unexpected scenarios for our cloud platform. It’s important that the security of the triple shield doesn’t inhibit authorized uses of that data: if customers can’t get at their data, there’s no point storing it!

We take a security-first approach to building new features and consider authentication, authorization and zero-trust techniques when implementing any new API. Data is encrypted when stored anywhere in our platform and end-to-end in transit.

Alfa Systems running in Alfa Cloud provides our customers with a variety of options for data integration both embedded in the Alfa platform via REST APIs or using Changed Data Capture streaming via Kafka and Kinesis, and we make sure that all of those provide appropriately transparent access to the data – even while it’s secured with Data Guardian.

AB: Although we value all our partners, and keep Alfa Systems agnostic on its deployment platform (ref: self-managed customers on GCP, Azure, AWS and data centres – as well as development locally at Alfa), we have a great partnership with AWS that we use as our primary deployment platform at the moment. This gives us the benefit of scale and support from a single vendor, while ensuring we regularly review and consider whether or not we’re tied in.

AB: With Data Guardian we wanted to put a name to the table stakes offerings that all enterprise software companies should be offering to their customers. We strongly think the single-tenant SaaS model, supported by Data Guardian, is the best way of getting Alfa Systems’ rich functionality to our customers in the financial sector.

When it comes to resilience, we firmly believe that we have pushed the envelope for single-regional excellence, and with Data Guardian we have laid the foundations for even more cross-regional capabilities. Our customers are increasingly asking us to consider how we can make multi-regional failover part of business-as-usual operation, even going as far as switching regions every month.

From a regulatory perspective, apart from things like DORA, mentioned earlier, the importance of understanding your software supply chain is moving from hygiene factors for a responsible company but to regulatory expectation. Even in a SaaS world, we think it’s important to explain how our software is put together – not least because we’re proud of it! In practice, that means providing our customers with Software Bill of Materials (SBOM) and Vulnerability Exploitability eXchange (VEX)-like information.

We are also continuing to leverage our relationship with AWS to review how their existing and future offerings can continue to enhance the security of our platform.

Also see

Alfa introduces ‘triple shield’ data protection for asset finance SaaS

Alfa unveils preconfigured SaaS solution for European asset finance sector

“Q&A: Alfa on meeting rising regulatory demands on cloud resilience” was originally created and published by Leasing Life, a GlobalData owned brand.

 


The information on this site has been included in good faith for general informational purposes only. It is not intended to amount to advice on which you should rely, and we give no representation, warranty or guarantee, whether express or implied as to its accuracy or completeness. You must obtain professional or specialist advice before taking, or refraining from, any action on the basis of the content on our site.

Enhanced Games: Ben Proud becomes first British athlete to join controversial event

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The Enhanced Games were launched as a concept in 2023, with some doping measures permitted under medical supervision.

Only substances approved by the United States’ Food and Drug Administration (FDA) can be taken, which is different to the list Wada allows for elite athletes.

The event has been criticised for endangering athletes’ health and undermining fair play, with Wada describing it as a “dangerous and irresponsible project”, external and Travis Tygart, chief executive of the US Anti-Doping Agency, calling it a “clown show”., external

“We have access to some of the greatest specialists out there to make sure that everything will be an informed decision,” Proud said.

“Everything is FDA approved. Everything’s readily available to the general public. It’s done under very strict supervision from doctors and health care professionals, and I will never take anything that I am unsure of.

“They are not allowing anyone to participate if they are under any stress or health risks.”

Proud also said that organisers “aren’t asking me to take anything” and he is unsure at the moment what substances he would use.

“If you ask me in six months’ time, I’ll probably have a bit more of an answer,” he said. “I’m coming into this very new, I don’t know any pros and cons about anything that could be available.

“All I know is that it’s going to be a very interesting dynamic to learn about these things, things that have not been available to us for a long time.

“I’m very curious as to what could be done to feel better in certain aspects of the race or training. I have the next three, four months to figure out what it is. After that, ultimately, I have the decision to say I want to take it or not.”

The Enhanced Games are planned to be an annual competition, initially comprising short-distance swimming, sprinting and weightlifting, with the inaugural event set to be held in Las Vegas from 21-24 May 2026.

Qatar: Israeli strike constitutes 'flagrant violation of international laws'

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Qatar has accused Israel of violating international law with its unprecedented airstrikes Tuesday, targeting Hamas leaders in a residential area of Doha.

“This criminal attack constitutes a flagrant violation of all international laws and norms, and a serious threat to the security and safety of the State of Qatar and its people,” Qatar’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs wrote in an update Wednesday. “The Israeli violations and crimes did not stop at the brotherly Palestinian people, but rather extended to the cowardly targeting of residential buildings housing several members of the Hamas movement’s political bureau in Doha.”

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said that it tried to “mitigate harm to civilians, including the use of precise munitions and additional intelligence” before carrying out the attack targeting Hamas leaders who were allegedly involved in planning the deadly Oct. 7, 2023, attack on Israel.

“These are the terrorists whose entire aspiration was to be the spearhead for the destruction of the State of Israel — we will continue to carry out our mission everywhere, at every range, near and far, in order to hold our enemies accountable,” IDF Chief of Staff Lt.-Gen. Eyal Zamir said in a statement on Tuesday.

Qatar has played a key role as a mediator in ceasefire negotiations between Israel and Hamas, but the escalation onto Qatari soil appeared to disrupt the ongoing efforts.

The White House said Tuesday that President Trump didn’t endorse the strike within the borders of a key U.S. ally in the region and the administration was only made aware after Israel launched the attack.

“I was very unhappy about it, very unhappy about every aspect,” Trump told reporters Tuesday evening.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Israel Katz said in a joint statement that the strike was “fully justified given the fact that it was this Hamas leadership that initiated and organized the October 7 massacre, and – since then – has not ceased from launching murderous operations against the State of Israel and its citizens, including taking responsibility for the murder of our citizens in yesterday’s terrorist attack in Jerusalem.”

Netanyahu also confirmed that Israel acted on its own.

“Israel initiated it, Israel conducted it, and Israel takes full responsibility,” he said in a statement posted on X Tuesday.

Cloudbeds partners with Revenue Analytics for smarter pricing

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Revenue Analytics has announced a strategic partnership with Cloudbeds, aiming to enhance hotel revenue management through AI-driven pricing.

This collaboration allows hotels using Cloudbeds’ property management system to directly access Revenue Analytics’ N2Pricing solution, streamlining the process of setting optimised rates.

Cloudbeds customers can now benefit from a seamless integration with N2Pricing, facilitating the adoption of automated, intelligent pricing strategies.

The two-way connection between the platforms enables the exchange of crucial data, which N2Pricing analyses to produce dynamic rate recommendations.

N2Pricing’s AI models process live data from Cloudbeds, offering hoteliers the ability to automatically adjust prices in response to real-time demand, thus enhancing revenue without manual intervention.

The key advantages of this system include quick setup, tailored configurations, automated pricing, and a fast track to value realisation.

Cloudbeds’ partnerships vice-president Sebastien Leitner said: “We know hoteliers wear many hats, and time is always in short supply. That’s why we are excited to partner with Revenue Analytics to bring N2Pricing’s intelligent automation and easy-to-use pricing tools to Cloudbeds customers. Together, we’re helping properties make better decisions, faster — while delivering the kind of integrated innovation the industry truly needs.”

This integration is designed to free hospitality teams from manual pricing and spreadsheet tasks, replacing them with AI-generated rates and cloud-based management tools.

The partnership is now active, providing Cloudbeds and Revenue Analytics customers worldwide with access to the advanced revenue management solution.

Revenue Analytics CEO Bill Brewster said: “This partnership with Cloudbeds is a key part of our strategy to bring intuitive, AI-powered revenue management to hotels of all shapes and sizes.”

The new integration will extend the reach of N2Pricing to a diverse hotel market.

Revenue Analytics business development vice president James Harris said: “Our integration with Cloudbeds makes it easier than ever for hotel teams to access N2Pricing and realise near-immediate value.

“It’s fast, frictionless, and delivers the automation and insights modern hoteliers need to succeed.”

Earlier this year, Revenue Analytics expanded its revenue management software (RMS) with the launch of the N2Pricing Commercial Suite.

The company also acquired Portugal-based RMS provider Climber, expanding its reach across Europe, North America, and Latin America.

“Cloudbeds partners with Revenue Analytics for smarter pricing” was originally created and published by Hotel Management Network, a GlobalData owned brand.

 


The information on this site has been included in good faith for general informational purposes only. It is not intended to amount to advice on which you should rely, and we give no representation, warranty or guarantee, whether express or implied as to its accuracy or completeness. You must obtain professional or specialist advice before taking, or refraining from, any action on the basis of the content on our site.

More embarrassing Epstein exchanges to come, says Peter Mandelson

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Kate Whannelpolitical reporter and

Nick Eardleypolitical correspondent

Watch: Lord Mandelson says he regrets falling for Epstein’s lies

The UK’s ambassador to the US, Peter Mandelson, has said he believes further “embarrassing” correspondence between himself and convicted paedophile Jeffrey Epstein will be published.

On Tuesday, US lawmakers released a number of documents which included a letter from Lord Mandelson in which he called Epstein his “best pal”.

Speaking to the YouTube channel Harry Cole Saves the West, the diplomat said it was “very embarrassing” to see the words published but added they were written “over 20 years ago”.

Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch said Lord Mandelson was “mired in scandal,” raising questions over Sir Keir Starmer’s “bad judgement”.

In his interview, Lord Mandelson said he felt “a tremendous sense of regret” over his friendship with Epstein, and a “tremendous sense of sympathy” for his victims.

He likened his association with Epstein to “an albatross around my neck”, adding he felt “profoundly upset that I was taken in” by a “charismatic criminal liar”.

“I regret very, very deeply indeed carrying on that association with him for far longer than I should have done.”

During Prime Minister’s Questions, Badenoch asked Sir Keir whether he was aware of Lord Mandelson’s “intimate relationship” with Epstein when the prime minister appointed him US ambassador last year.

She also called for vetting documents ahead of his appointment to be made public, and for the prime minister to force Lord Mandelson to disclose all his correspondence with Epstein.

“With this government it is more strikes, more scandal, more chaos,” she added.

“Isn’t the link that between all of this his bad decisions, his bad judgement, and his total weakness?”

The prime minister did not detail what exactly he knew about Lord Mandelson’s links to Epstein prior to appointing him, but said he retained confidence in him and he was “playing an important role” in UK-US relations.

He added that the ambassador had “repeatedly expressed his deep regret” for his association with Epstein, and had been “right to do so”.

Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey pressed Sir Keir on whether he had asked Lord Mandelson “what other compromising material the Trump administration might have on him, as he leads Britain’s negotiations with the White House”.

In reply, the prime minister said that “full due process” was undertaken prior to Lord Mandelson’s appointment.

Lord Mandelson is highly rated in Downing Street because of his ability to work with the Trump administration.

But his past relationship is awkward for the prime minister. A key question will be over Lord Mandelson’s judgement – remaining friends with Epstein after it first emerged he had been investigated.

The difficult questions for the government are likely to continue if, as Lord Mandelson suggests, there are more details to come.

HOUSE OVERSIGHT COMMITTEE A copy of an undated picture of Peter Mandelson sitting in a white robe laughing while sitting opposite Jeffrey Epstein, who wears a blue top and cream chinos, on a wooden deck.HOUSE OVERSIGHT COMMITTEE

Lord Mandelson (left) wrote that Jeffrey Epstein (right) “remains my best pal” alongside the picture

Epstein had been a well-connected financier who was convicted in Florida for soliciting prostitution from a person under the age of 18 in 2008. He died in 2019 while awaiting trial on sex trafficking charges.

Lord Mandelson said he did not believe he was “named in the Epstein files” – the term that has been given to documents gathered during criminal investigations into Epstein.

However, he said he had no doubt there had been “a lot of traffic, correspondence, exchanges” between himself and Epstein.

“We know they’re going to surface, we know they’re going to come out, they’re going to be embarrassing,” he added.

Asked why he continued his friendship with Epstein, Lord Mandelson said he “fell for his lies”.

“I accepted assurances he had given me about his original indictment, his original criminal case in Florida. Like very many people I took at face value what he said.”

He said he never saw wrongdoing at any point while with Epstein and he “never sought, nor did [Epstein] offer introductions to women in the way that he did to others, perhaps it is because I am a gay man”.

He said he couldn’t “rewrite history” adding: “What I can do, what I can do is express my profound sympathy for those who were badly treated by him.”

Asked if he had ever done business deals with Epstein, Lord Mandelson said: “He operated in a financial and business way, way above my level.

“Yes, he was always saying: ‘Would you like to see so and so, I’ve got this friend, I’m having this dinner. Would you like to come?’

“He was a prolific social networker and a political networker.”

Lord Mandelson has been in and out of British politics for four decades. He was instrumental in the New Labour project which saw Tony Blair win the 1997 election with a huge landslide.

He was a minister in different departments in the government until 2010, when Labour lost power and during that time earned a reputation for bouncing back after twice being forced to resign his ministerial positions.

United States District Court Southern District of New York Peter Mandelson is wearing a blue shirt and white trousers. He is trying on a white belt. Jeffrey Epstein is looking on, wearing a navy shirt and jeans. United States District Court Southern District of New York

A picture understood to have been taken on the Caribbean island of St Barts in 2006

Mandelson’s connection with Epstein had previously been made public. In 2019 an internal report by the bank JP Morgan said Epstein kept “a particularly close relationship with Prince Andrew, the Duke of York and Lord Peter Mandelson, a senior member of the British government”.

The messages from Mandelson was one of a number of documents in an alleged “birthday book” given to Epstein in 2003 to celebrate his 50th birthday.

Mandelson’s contribution included a series of short messages each accompanied by a photograph.

In one photo of a yellow parachute in the air, he wrote: “Once upon a time, an intelligent, sharp-witted man they call ‘mysterious’ parachuted into my life.”

“You would spend many hours just waiting for him to turn up,” he said, alongside a picture of what appears to be Lord Mandelson looking out at a garden from a balcony.

“And often, no sooner were you getting used to having him around, you would suddenly be alone… again,” he added above a picture of a lone person canoeing in the sea at sunset.

“Leaving you with some ‘interesting’ friends to entertain instead,” he writes on the next page, with a photo of Lord Mandelson preparing a dining table with two women whose faces have been obscured.

Lord Mandelson goes on to write that Epstein was known for “taking you by surprise… in one of his glorious homes he likes to share with his friends (yum yum)”, alongside a single malt whiskey label and a picture of a tropical island.

On the next page, accompanied by a picture of the two chatting casually on a patio, he writes: “But whenever he is in the world, he remains my best pal!”

The book also contained messages, cards and photos sent by Epstein’s friends, including a letter carrying a signature resembling US President Donald Trump. Trump has denied writing the note.

Watch live: Senate panel looks at White House AI strategy

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The Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee on Wednesday morning is set to dive into President Trump’s artificial intelligence (AI) strategy.

Since returning to office in January, the president has signed several executive orders to bolster the technology, from an order that fast-tracks permits for more data centers to promoting the export of American-made tech and tackling “woke” AI systems from federal contractors.

The Trump administration also recently unveiled its framework for policy around AI, placing a heavy emphasis on innovation that will make the U.S. more competitive in the space. Trump and first lady Melania Trump have also promoted more use of the technology in classrooms.

“The President’s AI Action Plan is a bold step towards asserting American leadership in AI and thwarting efforts by China to attain global dominance,” Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) said in a press release ahead of the hearing. “Congress must work alongside the President to adopt a legislative framework that promotes long-term AI growth and innovation.”

Michael Kratsios, the director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, is set to testify.

The hearing is scheduled to begin at 10 a.m. EDT.

Watch the live video above.