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CEOs, tech leaders jump at chance to shmooze with Trump

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Top CEOs and tech leaders have jumped at the chance to be in President Trump’s good graces, a theme of the second administration that was on display in the State Dining room on Thursday night.

The president’s economic policies, between sweeping tariffs, instability at the Federal Reserve and unemployment ticking up, have led to headaches in the business community but it has also served as a major incentive for CEOs to get face time with Trump.

Aside from help navigating new global trade relations and the volatile stock market, top leaders also want a part of the boost in data center construction, artificial intelligence (AI) policy and a hand in pending antitrust cases.

“Sometimes it’s a bit of a circus but they feel like he hears them. In that sense, they feel like he compares more favorably,” a senior Washington lobbyist described. “It’s the only chance you get of getting something out of it. You have to kiss the ring, you have to show up. That’s just the way it is.”

Meta founder Mark Zuckerberg, Microsoft founder Bill Gates, OpenAI founder Sam Altman, and Apple CEO Tim Cook were part of a group of over two dozen high profile tech and business leaders who went to Thursday night’s event, during which Trump asked them to say how much their companies are investing in U.S. manufacturing.

Trump has sold his tariff plan, which has shaken up how companies operate and their bottom-lines, as a way to bring manufacturing back to the U.S. He pitches to companies that the way to not get hit with high tariffs is to produce at home.

At the dinner, Zuckerberg told Trump his company plans to invest at least $600 billion in the U.S. through 2028.

Sundar Pichai, CEO of Google, said his company will be investing $250 billion.

And, Cook said his company will be investing $600 billion.

The CEOs around the table thanked Trump for hosting them and many of them also expressed thanks for his work on AI.

“Like Trump, business leaders are far more transactional than ideological. To be on the right side of a transaction with Trump, business leaders must accept his invitation,” said former Rep. Chris Carney (D-Pa.), a senior policy adviser at Nossaman LLP. “CEOs have a responsibility to protect their business equities. If they aren’t at the table, they may be on the menu.”

Thursday was Cook’s second visit to the White House in a month— he joined Trump in the Oval Office in early August to announce Apple’s latest $100 billion investment in U.S. manufacturing. Trump had threatened to hit Apple with 25 percent tariffs if it did not move its manufacturing to the U.S. but has since backed off.

Still, while Apple has long manufactured most of its products in China, it has been hit hard by Trump’s tariffs. Cook said he expected the company would face $1.1 billion in tariff-related costs next quarter, on top of $800 million from the previous three-month period.

Also Thursday, Trump asked Pichai, Google’s exec,  about the win he had when a federal judge ruled Google could hold onto its Chrome browser on Tuesday. But, instead of discussing the court decision, Pichai turned to discuss AI, saying that the Trump administration’s action plan is “a great start.”

Google secured a much-needed victory on Tuesday in a legal battle over its monopoly on online search, but the judge did bar the company from entering exclusive agreements prioritizing its products and required it to share some data with competitors.  The Justice Department had argued Google’s dominance over search could give it a leg up in the AI race.

Leaders with companies in that race were also at the event, which occurred hours after first lady Melania Trump hosted tech leaders at a White House roundtable. Greg Brockman, president of OpenAI, Alexandr Wang, founder of Scale.ai and head of super intelligence at Meta, and Sunny Madra, president of Groq were at the dinner.

Still, some business leaders have struggled with the uncertainty of the Trump years.

“Several of my clients are simply trying to understand how to navigate in a political environment as fraught as this,” said Carney. “Many are impacted by tariffs, the [big, beautiful bill], and fears of another government shutdown. They are trying to play a game where the rules seem to be in constant flux.”

The senior Washington lobbyist said they counsel clients about what rhetoric to use when meeting with Trump, especially on his tariff plan.

“Do not go into the White House and tell them why the president’s policy is wrong and these are the facts and they need to be doing anything differently— that is not going to produce a successful outcome,” the source said. “What you need to be able to say is ‘we understand the president’s policies and we are supportive of what the president is trying to achieve here and if he approaches it in a slightly different way, he will be more successful.’”

Still, Trump has successfully been able to get CEOs to clamor to ingratiate themselves with him since he was elected back to the White House in November.

That’s largely seen in the way companies have made an about-face on diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) initiatives, which many have shedded. Such initiatives had been championed by the Biden administration then largely cast aside once Trump took the White House.

The fetting by tech and business CEOs was apparent from Trump’s first day when the likes of Zuckerberg, Pichai and Altman attending Trump’s inauguration. Trump also hosted various leaders in Mar-a-Lago before he took office for his second term like Gates, Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos and TikTok CEO Shou Zi Chew.

“President Trump’s resounding Election Day victory sent a clear message to the world: America is, once again, open for business,” White House spokesman Kush Desai said. 

He added, “President Trump’s friendly relationship with CEOs and industry titans at home and abroad has been critical to securing trillions in investments for American manufacturing and technology, and business leaders know they have a friend and fellow businessman occupying the Oval Office.” 

Trump, too, acknowledges the shift. After meeting with Cook in December, he said at a press conference  the “biggest difference” between his first administration and his second “is that people want to get along with me this time.”

“The first one they were very hostile … and this one is very much less hostile,” he said.

Goldman Sachs revamps S&P 500 target for 2026

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Rate cuts are coming, and that’s good news for the S&P 500. The question is: How big, and how good?

The latest jobs data is bad enough to force the Fed off its seat and reduce interest rates for the first time since late 2024, when it cut its Fed Funds Rate by one percentage point.

The labor market’s weaknesses are widespread, reflecting increased unemployment, layoffs, and less hiring.

Since encouraging low unemployment is one of the Federal Reserve’s mandates, most Wall Street analysts are convinced that Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell will shift gears and target jobs instead of inflation at its next meeting on Sept. 17, including Goldman Sachs.

Goldman Sachs is considered one of Wall Street’s gold standard companies for research and analysis, with roots tracing back to 1869.

On Sept. 6, its analysts revisited their S&P 500 targets for the rest of 2025 and 2026 based on their rate cut expectations.

The S&P 500 performs best when interest rates are heading lower. The Fed doesn’t control bank lending rates, but it does indirectly influence them because it sets the Fed Funds Rate, the interest banks charge one another on overnight loans of reserves.

The higher the rate, the more banks charge for consumer and business loans. As rates fall, bank loan rates usually follow, providing more wiggle room for households and businesses to spend, propping up corporate revenue, profits, and stock prices.

According to Bank of America, the S&P 500 gains 1.7% per month on average during “rate-cutting regimes.” When rates are rising, it loses 0.5% monthly.

Goldman Sachs updated its S&P 500 targets for 2025 and 2026 following the August unemployment report.Image source: TheStreet
Goldman Sachs updated its S&P 500 targets for 2025 and 2026 following the August unemployment report.Image source: TheStreet

The Fed has resisted lowering rates this year, fearing that doing so would fan inflationary fires, even as the full impact of tariffs flows through to consumer prices.

There’s evidence that the Fed isn’t wrong to be nervous, since Consumer Price Index (CPI) inflation has risen since April:

  • July: 2.7%

  • June: 2.7%

  • May: 2.4%

  • April: 2.3%

Nevertheless, Goldman Sachs thinks the shift in the jobs data this summer will trump that fear, clearing the way for Chairman Powell and company to embrace dovish rate cuts soon.

Related: Bank of America announces huge shift in Fed rate cut forecast

The U.S. unemployment rate has been stuck between 4% and 4.2% for one year; however, the August jobs data showed unemployment rose to 4.3% — a new cycle high and the highest level since October 2021, when it was 4.5%.

England 2-0 Andorra: Thomas Tuchel’s side have ‘arguably regressed’

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Tuchel gave a debut to Nottingham Forest’s Elliott Anderson, who was one of the brighter performers in this mediocre England effort.

He also restored Marcus Rashford on the left flank but the forward, on loan at Barcelona from Manchester United, faded after the odd early flourish while captain Harry Kane struggled and Eberechi Eze was kept on the margins.

Tuchel insists Rashford is a left-winger but he looked short on confidence and faded as the game went on. Tuchel may need to seek alternatives in Belgrade on Tuesday.

Serbia, in those more hostile surroundings, will present the sternest challenge of Tuchel’s reign. This will be the real acid test of Tuchel’s new England and they must improve.

Tuchel demanded greater urgency and aggression but there was little of that on show here.

England lacked spark, irrespective of the fact it was a game played against an Andorra side devoid of any ambition other than to avoid being embarrassed.

Tuchel’s side edged a 1-0 victory against Andorra in June but, despite Tuchel himself suggesting this was an improved showing, the stats do not necessarily back that up.

Shots were down from 20 to 11 while big chances were down from six to four. Touches in the opposition box were down from 52 to 41, while expected goals were down from four to 2.21.

England’s early strategy was clearly to get the ball forward more quickly but the overall percentage of forward passes was identical to June’s game against Andorra at 23%.

Tuchel insists England are moving in the right direction. If they are, they are doing it at a snail’s pace.

Anderson’s debut delighted England’s head coach but there are areas where he wants to see improvement.

He said: “I think we missed some little moments to accelerate the game. Maybe Eberechi Eze did not have his best day in the No 10 position. He trained so well but he struggled a bit with his decision-making.

“The last pass from Noni Madueke was not clinical enough. Marcus Rashford had some good moments but couldn’t finish them with an assist. It’s stuff that can happen against a narrow 5-4-1.”

This was the first England game at Aston Villa’s ground for 20 years. None of those inside Villa Park will be rushing to say it was worth the wait.

Biden selects Delaware as site of presidential library, begins fundraising push

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Former President Biden selected his home state of Delaware as the site for his presidential library, tasking a group of friends and former aides with beginning a fundraising push to complete the venture. 

The library’s governing board, greenlighted by the Joe and Jill Foundation, will consist of 13 members, including former Secretary of State Anthony Blinken, ex-ambassador and Democratic fundraiser Rufus Gifford, senior adviser Steve Ricchetti, and others, the Associated Press (AP) reported on Saturday. 

“There’s certainly folks — folks who may have been not thinking about those kinds of issues who are starting to think about them. That being said … we’re not going to create a budget, we’re not going to set a goal for ourselves that we don’t believe we can hit,” Gifford, who was tapped as the library’s board chairman, told the AP. 

The team is hitting the fundraising circuit at a time when the Democratic Party is looking for a way forward after suffering losses in the 2024 election and with the Democratic National Committee widely trailing the Republican National Committee in garnering political contributions. 

The price tag for presidential libraries has gone up over time. 

Former President Clinton’s library cost around $165 million, while former President George W. Bush’s raised $500 million for his library, according to the AP. Former President Obama’s library price tag has soared to north of $800 million. 

Gifford, who was the U.S. ambassador to Denmark between 2013 and 2017 and worked as finance chair of the Harris 2024 presidential campaign, estimated that Biden’s project will likely “end up somewhere in the middle” of the Obama Presidential Center and the George H.W. Bush Presidential Library and Museum, the AP reported. 

The library, once it opens, will be a “hub for leadership, service and civic engagement,” according to a senior member of the board.

“The project will serve as a vibrant and lasting space where history, learning, and civic leadership come together, inspiring future generations to lead with purpose, serve their communities, and strengthen our nation,” the senior member told CNN. 

I’m middle class, but feel like I’m always on the brink of financial collapse — how do I finally pull ahead?

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The American middle class is shrinking. While 61% of Americans were considered middle class in 1971, that number fell to 51% by 2023, according to Pew Research [1].

Pew defines middle class households as those with an income that is two-thirds to double that of the U.S. median household income, which is around $80,000.

Mark, aged 40, lives alone in Ithaca, New York and is technically middle class with his $60,000 per year salary, but he doesn’t feel very financially secure at all. Mark has no debt, but he only has $10,000 in emergency savings, and he lives in a one-bedroom apartment. He worries that some crisis such as losing his job or a health emergency could plunge him into serious financial difficulty.

If you’re feeling the same about your financial situation, here’s what you can do to become more financially stable, prepare for a potential future emergency, and start building wealth.

Pew Research reported that growth in middle-class income has fallen behind the income growth in the upper tier, and the share of total U.S. income held by households within the middle class has plummeted. The middle class’s share of all household income is just 43%, while 51% of the population is considered to be middle class. Their share of income is below their share of the population, as the incomes of middle-class households haven’t kept pace with the rise in the incomes of upper-income households.

While the middle-class lifestyle once meant having a nice house, two cars, a couple of kids, and some money in the bank, that’s not necessarily the case anymore.

How far middle-class individuals can stretch the income they do have depends on location, as well as which end of the scale their income falls. As a result, it doesn’t really matter which class you are in when it comes to your finances. What does matter is whether you feel secure in how much money you have in the bank, and whether your income stretches far enough to cover what you need. If it doesn’t, then you need to make a change, regardless of whether you’re lower, middle, or upper class.

Italian Grand Prix: How Max Verstappen surpassed fastest F1 cars in history in taking Monza pole

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Verstappen has not won since the Emilia-Romagna Grand Prix in May.

One might have expected the four-time champion to be pessimistic of turning this into a win, as the McLaren has generally had a much bigger advantage in races this year than in qualifying, because it is so good on its tyres.

But Verstappen was relatively optimistic after qualfiying.

“I don’t sit here and think it is going to be easy to be in front of McLaren,” he said. “The whole season has shown that.

“This season we have had a few good qualifyings but in the race we always seem to struggle a little bit compared to them.

“I am going to give it a good go. Friday, my long run was nice. I’m not sure it is going to be enough but if we can do something similar and they don’t improve too much then I have a feeling that maybe we have a chance.

“To stay here will be tough but we will see what we can do.”

McLaren team principal Andrea Stella explained the technical reasons why Verstappen might be more competitive over a race distance this weekend than previously.

Stella explained that the McLaren was the fastest car in the corners but was losing time on the straights in qualifying.

“In racing, the corners become quite a bit longer, because you brake earlier, you go later on throttle, so the grip-limited area extends, and this would make our car just naturally more competitive,” he said.

“However, from what we have seen in terms of lap times in practice, if we take the lap times that Verstappen was able to do, they were very comparable to ours. I think he has done a whole long run in 1.23s, which is very fast, very competitive.

“We have seen good lap times for Ferrari, good lap times for Mercedes.

“The Tarmac is very high grip after the resurface last year. I think there won’t be necessarily much degradation, and it won’t be the natural characteristic of McLaren being very good when the grip is low.

“I think the field will be much more compact, not only in qualifying like we have seen today, but also in the race.”

Here's how you can get tickets to the 2026 FIFA World Cup

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KANSAS CITY, Mo. (WDAF) — This time next week, ticket sales open for the 2026 FIFA World Cup.

Here’s all you need to know.

Phase 1

The first phase of ticket sales will open with the Visa Presale Draw.

The Visa Presale Draw entry period will open at 11 a.m. EDT on Wednesday, Sept. 10, and close at 11 a.m. ET on Friday, Sept. 19. Fans should register and create a FIFA ID at FIFA.com/tickets, if they have not done so already.

Qualifying Visa cardholders can log in during this window using their FIFA ID to enter the draw (subject to terms and conditions).

“With just 10 months to go until the FIFA World Cup 26 kicks off, we are excited to launch the first phase of ticket sales for the tournament,” said FIFA World Cup 2026 Chief Operating Officer Heimo Schirgi.

“This marks a momentous milestone as we build up to this historic event, and we look forward to millions of fans joining us in North America next June,” he added.

You can learn more about the Visa Presale Draw here. Fans must be 18 or older to enter, and no purchase is necessary to enter or win.

After a randomized selection process, successful applicants will be notified via email starting Sept. 29 — and will be given a date and time slot to purchase tickets (subject to availability), with time slots starting from Oct. 1.

A successful draw application does not guarantee that tickets will be available for purchase during the time slot. When ticket sales start, single-match tickets to all 104 matches will be made available. Venue-specific tickets and team-specific tickets will also be made available.

At the start of the sale, fans will be able to secure group-stage tickets from just $60, offering an accessible entry point to the tournament, while the most exclusive seats will reach up to $6,730 for the final – where the two best national teams will compete for the iconic FIFA World Cup trophy.

“Group stage, maybe $250 a person, I’d say. I think that’s a reasonable price,” said Travis Broom, a fan looking to buy tickets. “I mean, it is a lot. I mean, they do have to go through a lot. But at the end of the day, if there’s a big outcome at the end. So if they’re willing to go through the effort in the end, it’s worth it.”

Due to the anticipated high demand, FIFA World Cup tickets are released in phases, with the Visa Presale Draw marking the first phase. Further ticket sales will be launched in the coming months. Fans who are not eligible to be part of the Visa Presale Draw, were unsuccessful in the draw or would like to make additional purchases will be able to do so in subsequent sales phases.

The additional ticket sales phases will begin in October, through to the final match on Sunday, July 19, 2026.

Phase 2

“Early Ticket Draw,” with the registration window is expected to take place from Oct. 27 to Oct. 31 and time slots for purchase from mid-November to early December.

Similar to the first phase, this will consist of an application, followed by a randomized selection process. Successful applicants will receive a time slot to purchase tickets (subject to availability).

Phase 3

“Random Selection Draw,” with registration will begin shortly after the “Final Draw” for the FIFA World Cup 26. During this phase, fans will be able to submit applications for specific matches after the final draw has revealed most of the group-stage matchups.

“Do an application, everything. I mean. Yeah. Why are you going to try to fill an application now when you’re just trying to see the game pay whatever it takes to pay and see the game. You don’t need all that,” Evelyn Aguilar said.

Closer to the tournament, fans will be able to buy any remaining inventory on a first-come, first-served basis.

The purchasing process may vary depending on the phase, payment method and ticket products. Additional products, including “supporter tickets” (for fans who want to sit with others cheering for the same team) and “conditional supporter tickets” (for supporters who want to reserve a seat for one of their team’s potential matches in a knockout round) are expected to be available closer to the tournament.

“It’s the way I would kind of base that is, who am I watching? How good are they? Are we playing? Are we watching championship caliber teams, people that could possibly be winning it all? Or are we watching the guys that are like the Raiders?” Lavel Bowles said.

Members of American Airlines AAdvantage loyalty program will also be given a perk that may help them secure tickets to the matches next summer.

Through a partnership with the tournament, the airline is giving program members the chance to redeem tickets using their accumulated miles.

“Members can save the date and start saving up miles to get first access to redeem miles and lock in their seats for the world’s largest soccer matches,” the airline said in a press release.

The date you are able to redeem tickets depends on your status within the program with executive platinum members getting the first chance on October 13.

Additionally, FIFA will launch a secure, official resale platform for eligible ticket holders at FIFA.com/tickets later this year. This initiative aims to safeguard fans against invalid or unauthorized resale.

Fans can already purchase single-match and multi-match hospitality packages, inclusive of match tickets, at FIFA.com/hospitality. FIFA encourages fans to purchase tickets only through FIFA.com/tickets, the official and preferred source of tickets for the FIFA World Cup.

Hospitality packages and tickets sourced from unofficial sales channels may not be valid.

Elite Amazon sellers explain how they pick which high-upside products to focus on

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lisa harrington
Lisa Harrington is the founder of Purrfect Portal.Courtesy of Lisa Harrington
  • Selling on Amazon has become increasingly more competitive and expensive.

  • BI spoke with elite sellers doing seven figures in sales about how they select products to list.

  • Key strategies include patenting products, calculating market potential, and solving problems.

Gone are the days when you could pick virtually anything to list on Amazon and make a profit.

“Every year gets harder,” seven-figure Amazon seller Lisa Harrington, who listed dog harnesses on the platform in 2013 before pivoting to interior cat doors, told Business Insider. “2013 was as easy as it comes: Make a great product, ship it in, make a listing, and just don’t break it. Don’t run out of stock.”

When Eugene Khayman, cofounder of the exclusive Million Dollar Sellers club, started listing fitness and kitchen items on Amazon about a decade ago, his product selection wasn’t based on data or metrics.

“It was just 100% feeling,” he said. “There wasn’t much research as far as what had traffic because such tools and data weren’t even available at that point, so it was very much like looking for a product and thinking, ‘Oh, that looks cool. Maybe I should try selling it.'”

In 2025, selling on Amazon is much more competitive — and to survive, product selection is key.

BI asked elite sellers, including Harrington, Khayman, and Alex Yale, who runs two seven-figure Amazon brands, to weigh in on the keys to selecting a winning product.

“Try for some IP advantage if you can,” said Yale, whose Flip-It! Cap product is patent-protected. “I stay away from any Chinese-sourced products that don’t have a patent or any kind of IP protection, because within two months, if you see success on a product that you import from China, they’ll be selling it for 20% to 30% less on Amazon and competing with you.”

He explained that a major problem for e-commerce entrepreneurs in 2025 is competing with Chinese sellers who can cut the middleman by manufacturing their own products, then selling directly on Amazon. One way to avoid the competition outright is to sell patented products that nobody can copy.

That’s what Harrington does. A few years into selling interior cat doors, she decided to patent her product.

lisa harrington
Harrington has designed and patented multiple interior cat doors.Courtesy of Lisa Harrington

“My gut told me that it was going to be a big deal, and I should really invest in intellectual property, so I found the best attorney I could and spent $10,000 on a patent application,” she said. She now has 10 patented products, and her brand, Purrfect Portal, is the No. 1 selling cat door on Amazon.

Reform conference shows party’s growing ambition like never before

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This is the most fascinating party conference I have ever been to.

Yes, I am an insufferable nerd: I have been coming to things like this for 20 years.

I have been to Labour, Conservative, Liberal Democrat, Scottish National Party, UKIP and Green Party conferences.

Firstly, an admission. I arrived late here.

I’m blaming Angela Rayner and the government reshuffle that followed her resignation, which meant I had to be in London on Friday.

What is fascinating about this gathering is it illustrates the pace of growth of Reform UK.

It is a vastly bigger gathering than the party had last year.

It now feels like a big party conference – but retains the insurgency vibe that the party is seeking to channel.

That is the unique combination I have never seen before.

Scaling up while holding onto that newbie energy will be a challenge, they seem to be managing both for now.

UKIP in its pomp had an insurgency feel about it, but its focus was much narrower and it was never talked of as a potential government.

Its conferences, at Doncaster Racecourse, Exeter and Torquay among other places, were proudly rather homespun in feel.

This year, Reform has hired Birmingham’s NEC.

It is huge and it would be easy to leave a sense of rattling around in a tin in here, but it is busy.

I recognise one of the big catering trucks in here from one of the other party’s conferences.

The corporate lounge sponsored by Heathrow Airport is another staple of the big conferences.

So far, so conventional, if you like – for a big party.

But then I spot a queue of folk waiting for Nigel Farage to sign their light blue Reform UK football shirt, bought at the nearby merchandise shop.

The number 10 and Farage on the back of them all is not exactly subtle about this movement’s ambitions.

Can you imagine Keir Starmer, Kemi Badenoch, Ed Davey or John Swinney pulling that off?

Not in a million years.

In another corner of the main exhibition hall are 10 stands, each representing a region of England or a nation of the UK.

They are indicative of the growth and professionalising Reform is attempting at lightning speed – setting up the local branch network and army of volunteers a successful national political party requires.

It’s the unglamorous side of politics, a long way from the whizzy pyrotechnics of Nigel Farage’s conference speech, but arguably more important.

A couple from Suffolk stop for a chat.

They have never been to a party conference before and had never been in a political party until they joined Reform recently.

Another couple from Glasgow tell a similar story.

There are plenty of sharp-suited young men about too.

Two blokes having lunch together call me over. One recently worked for a Labour MP, the other had been a lifelong Conservative voter.

Those with a former political affiliation are disproportionately disgruntled Conservatives, but not exclusively.

All around us flutter the party’s banner and the conference’s slogan: “The Next Step.”

And those three words get to the essence of this: the story of Reform’s momentum has been the stand out political development of the last year.

But can they keep growing – and, ultimately, can they win the next general election?

“Can’t stop, won’t stop” is the mantra of the party’s senior figures privately, as their membership numbers tick towards a quarter of a million.

And as an indicator of their seriousness of purpose, what did Nigel Farage plead for in his closing address from his activists?

Was he tub thumping and cracking gags?

Not a bit of it.

“Discipline” is what he wants.

Activists who disagree in private, not in public. Activists willing to stand as council candidates.

Nigel Farage has a focus and sense of purpose I haven’t seen in the best part of two decades of reporting on him.

He sees an opportunity the like of which he has never seen before.

Pritzker hits Trump over deportation meme: 'This is not a joke. This is not normal'

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Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker (D) lambasted President Trump on Saturday for joking about immigration enforcement efforts, including plans to target Chicago, calling the president a “wannabe dictator.”

“The President of the United States is threatening to go to war with an American city,” Pritzker wrote on social platform X in response to a meme shared by Trump. “This is not a joke. This is not normal.”

“Donald Trump isn’t a strongman, he’s a scared man,” he added. “Illinois won’t be intimidated by a wannabe dictator.”

Trump earlier Saturday posted an image generated by artificial intelligence (AI) to his Truth Social platform that showed his likeness as a law enforcement official. The background includes an image of Chicago burning, several helicopters and text that reads “Chipocalypse Now” — a nod to the 1979 movie “Apocalypse Now.”

In the caption, the president wrote, “I love the smell of deportations in the morning… Chicago about to find out why it’s called the Department of WAR.”

The comment comes just a day after he signed an executive order to rebrand the Defense Department to the Department of War.

Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson (D) railed against the post in a Saturday social media post, stating it is “beneath the honor of our nation.”

“But the reality is that he wants to occupy our city and break our Constitution,” Johnson wrote on X. “We must defend our democracy from this authoritarianism by protecting each other and protecting Chicago from Donald Trump.”

Trump late last month signaled his administration would look to the Windy City next in its efforts to tackle crime and illegal immigration. The White House already confirmed that is looking to use a Navy base near Chicago to support its migrant detention efforts.

The president has also threatened to deploy National Guard troops to the city, pointing to what he called success in his federal takeover of Washington, D.C., to aid in the expected crackdown. While his moves in the nation’s capital are protected under the federal district’s Home Rule Act, Illinois is a sovereign state.

Any effort to deploy troops to Chicago without the governor requesting assistance would likely result in a legal battle, like the one that played out in Los Angeles over deportation raids.

Local officials in The Prairie State have pushed back on the administration’s threat, suggesting Trump is overstepping his authority. Johnson signed a protective order late last month to combat the potential deployment of soldiers.

The city’s Office of Immigrant, Migrant and Refugee Rights also rolled out an updated website earlier this week with step-by-step guidance on how immigrants can protect themselves.

Pritzker has blasted Trump for suggesting that major cities should be asking the federal government for assistance with law enforcement, citing dwindling crime statistics and calling the request “an insult.”

The president has also floated New Orleans and Baltimore as potential targets.