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Tesla, Inc. (TSLA) “Is A Terrific Buy Here,” Says Jim Cramer

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We recently published 12 Stocks Jim Cramer Discussed As He Said SpaceX’s Starlink Internet Could Help President Trump. Tesla, Inc. (NASDAQ:TSLA) is one of the stocks Jim Cramer recently discussed.

Tesla, Inc. (NASDAQ:TSLA)’s shares have lost 9.4% year-to-date as the firm has struggled to shake off the effect of a global delivery slowdown. Despite CEO Elon Musk’s repeated assertions that his firm is more of a robotics company instead of a car company, investors continue to judge Tesla, Inc. (NASDAQ:TSLA)’s shares through the firm’s ability to sell cars. For his part, Cramer agrees with Musk’s assertion that the firm is a tech company. The CNBC TV host has previously recommended the stock due to Tesla, Inc. (NASDAQ:TSLA) being a tech company, and he did so again this time as well:

“[On reports saying the stock building a nice base] “I think it’s a terrific buy here.

Hadrian / Shutterstock.com

Here are Cramer’s previous thoughts about Tesla, Inc. (NASDAQ:TSLA):

“Oh, hey, look, you’re fine in Tesla. Tesla’s morphing right now. It’s in transition from being a car company to being a technology company, and you want to be in there because the tech is worth a lot more than what it’s selling for right now. Don’t worry, I don’t care where you bought it. I care where it’s going to.”

While we acknowledge the potential of TSLA as an investment, our conviction lies in the belief that some AI stocks hold greater promise for delivering higher returns and have limited downside risk. If you are looking for an extremely cheap AI stock that is also a major beneficiary of Trump tariffs and onshoring, see our free report on the best short-term AI stock.

READ NEXT: 30 Stocks That Should Double in 3 Years and 11 Hidden AI Stocks to Buy Right Now.

Disclosure: None. This article is originally published at Insider Monkey.

Tories pledge to get ‘all our oil and gas out of the North Sea’

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Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch has said her party will remove all net zero requirements on oil and gas companies drilling in the North Sea if elected.

Badenoch is to formally announce the plan to focus solely on “maximising extraction” and to get “all our oil and gas out of the North Sea” in a speech in Aberdeen on Tuesday.

Reform UK has said it wants more fossil fuels extracted from the North Sea.

The Labour government has committed to banning new exploration licences. A spokesperson said a “fair and orderly transition” away from oil and gas would “drive growth”.

Exploring new fields would “not take a penny off bills” or improve energy security and would “only accelerate the worsening climate crisis”, the government spokesperson warned.

Badenoch signalled a significant change in Conservative climate policy when she announced earlier this year that reaching net zero would be “impossible” by 2050.

Successive UK governments have pledged to reach the target by 2050 and it was written into law by Theresa May in 2019. It means the UK must cut carbon emissions until it removes as much as it produces, in line with the 2015 Paris Climate Agreement.

Now Badenoch has said that requirements to work towards net zero are a burden on oil and gas producers in the North Sea which are damaging the economy and which she would remove.

The Tory leader said a Conservative government would scrap the need to reduce emissions or to work on technologies such as carbon storage.

Badenoch said it was “absurd” the UK was leaving “vital resources untapped” while “neighbours like Norway extracted them from the same sea bed”.

In 2023, then Prime Minister Rishi Sunak granted 100 new licences to drill in the North Sea which he said at the time was “entirely consistent” with net zero commitments.

Reform UK has said it will abolish the push for net zero if elected.

The current government said it had made the “biggest ever investment in offshore wind and three first of a kind carbon capture and storage clusters”.

Carbon capture and storage facilities aim to prevent carbon dioxide (CO2) produced from industrial processes and power stations from being released into the atmosphere.

Most of the CO2 produced is captured, transported and then stored deep underground.

It is seen by the likes of the International Energy Agency and the Climate Change Committee as a key element in meeting targets to cut the greenhouse gases driving dangerous climate change.

GOP rehabilitates 'thoughts and prayers' after Minneapolis shooting   

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GOP politicians backed by conservative media figures are seeking to turn the tables on “thoughts and prayers” after mass shootings, arguing that dismissing prayer minimizes the importance and comfort many find in religious faith at times of tragedy and crisis. 

The idea of offering “thoughts and prayers” after a mass shooting has been a point of criticism or even ridicule in some quarters as mass shootings at schools and other public places become a constant, dark part of American life. 

Democrats and liberal pundits in particular have seen expressions of thoughts and prayers, particularly coming from the GOP and prominent commentators on the right, as an empty gesture when uncoupled with specific actions on gun control to prevent mass shootings. 

Those arguments were reignited this week after two children, aged 8 and 12, were killed by a lone shooter targeting a mass at a Minneapolis Catholic school on Wednesday. 

Former White House press secretary and current MSNBC host Jen Psaki was in the middle of the discussion for a series of posts on the social platform X in which she said “enough with the thoughts and prayers” as she expressed frustration with another senseless shooting that left young people dead. 

Psaki wrote that “prayers does not end school shootings” and “prayers do not make parents feel safe sending their kids to school. 

“Prayer does not bring these kids back,” she continued. “Enough with the thoughts and prayers.” 

Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey (D) in emotional comments shortly after the shooting also remarked on the language surrounding mass shootings. 

“Don’t just say this is about thoughts and prayers right now, these kids were literally praying,” he said. 

Vice President Vance and White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt the next morning both criticized Psaki while defending the offering of thoughts and prayers. 

“We pray because our hearts are broken. We pray because we know God listens. We pray because we know that God works in mysterious ways and can inspire us to further action,” Vance replied to Psaki on X.    

“Why do you feel the need to attack other people for praying when kids were just killed praying?” 

Leavitt, speaking from the White House podium, was sharper with her criticism, calling Psaki’s remarks “incredibly insensitive and disrespectful to the tens of millions of Americans of faith across this country who believe in the power of prayer, who believe that prayer works.” 

Fox News ran a number of segments about Psaki’s remarks, a perhaps predictable move given the constant sniping between Fox and MSNBC. 

But there were other signs Republicans wanted to have this discussion, particularly as more figures piled on later in the week. 

“It’s incredible to me that Jen Psaki, Gavin Newsom and others would attack religion, diminish the faith of millions of Americans at a time of such great tragedy,” House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) said Friday during an appearance on Fox. “There are a lot of common-sense things that can be done to protect children at school. This is not a time to politicize these issues.”   

At the same time, some figures said the debate over “thoughts and prayers” itself was being used by both sides in negative ways. 

“To me this is the saddest example I’ve ever seen of how faith is used and abused in our political discourse,” said Joe Ferullo, CEO and publisher of the National Catholic Reporter. “Everybody understands that praying helps and focuses us on how to move forward. But praying is not enough.”   

The frustration over thoughts and prayers is often reflective of broader frustrations with the government for not taking action on gun control. Repeated efforts in Congress have resulted in generally weak gun control measures, including after 20 elementary school children were killed in the Sandy Hook shootings in 2012 in Newton, Conn. 

Police have said the suspect in Wednesday’s mass shooting obtained guns lawfully.   

The suspect apparently obsessed over other mass killings and used weapons that had anti-Trump, antisemitic and other offensive language written on them. 

The debate over thoughts and prayers is hardly new. 

Former President Obama, after a shooter killed more than 10 people at a community college in Oregon in 2015, said “our thoughts and prayers are not enough” when it comes to mass shootings. 

“It’s not enough. It does not capture the heartache and grief and anger that we should feel,” he said at the time. “And it does nothing to prevent this carnage from being inflicted someplace else in America.”   

Many Democrats contend the debate over the usefulness or appropriateness of prayer is an unhelpful distraction from what they see as the root cause of mass shootings: Ease of access to guns.   

“On this, Republicans are trying to own the space of faith just like they do patriotism,” one national Democratic strategist told The Hill this week. “Scripture says faith without works is dead. The difference between us and them is we follow our thoughts and prayers up with action and they do not.”   

Complicating the debate is a fundamental difference between how religious Americans and those who do not hold religious conviction view prayer, noted Michael Emerson, an expert and researcher on religion and politics at Rice University’s Baker Institute for Public Policy.   

“Prayer in almost every religion is at the core of one’s faith,” Emerson said. “The challenge then is do you let the divine handle whatever the issue at hand is or are you also supposed to be the hands and feet, like we hear. 

“When you see someone hungry on the street, do you say, ‘I pray for you,’ or do you say ‘I pray for you’ and give them something to eat? It’s the same issue here.”   

Other observers say Democrats are seizing on an opportunity to expose Republicans on a potential political vulnerability, and casting doubt on prayer is just a means to that end.   

“Democrats are losing on so many fronts right now, but this is something they feel like they can win on heading into the midterms,” one national Republican strategist told The Hill. 

“Everyone knows lawmakers aren’t going to take much action legislatively and that’s what they’re trying to highlight in a way, but I’m not sure attacking prayer is the smartest way to go about it.”

Spirit Airlines files for second bankruptcy in a year as financial challenges persist

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By Shivansh Tiwary and Rajesh Kumar Singh

(Reuters) -U.S. no-frills pioneer Spirit Airlines filed for bankruptcy protection on Friday for the second time in a year after a previous reorganization failed to put it on firmer financial footing.

The Florida-based carrier, which emerged from its first bankruptcy in March, has been grappling with dwindling cash and mounting losses.

In the three months to end-June it reported a net loss of about $246 million. Faced with a cash crunch, the company said last week it borrowed the entire $275 million available under its revolving credit facility.

Spirit’s Chapter 11 filing was widely expected after it issued a warning earlier this month that it might not continue to operate if its financial results failed to improve rapidly.

“Since emerging from our previous restructuring, which was targeted exclusively on reducing Spirit’s funded debt and raising equity capital, it has become clear that there is much more work to be done and many more tools are available to best position Spirit for the future,” said CEO Dave Davis.

The company made the Chapter 11 filing in bankruptcy court in the Southern District of New York. Spirit said it was working productively with its secured noteholders, including with respect to potential financing that may become necessary later in the proceedings.

Industry analysts and executives say Spirit’s troubles stemmed from its failure to fix its bloated cost structure in the first bankruptcy. Its total operating expense in the latest quarter was $1.2 billion, which amounted to 118% of its quarterly revenue.

Spirit is also locked in a dispute with aircraft lessor AerCap Holdings over a deal covering 36 Airbus planes due for delivery between 2027 and 2028.

As part of its restructuring, the airline said it would reduce its presence in certain markets. It will also cut its fleet to significantly lower its debt and lease obligations. It estimates that would generate hundreds of millions of dollars in annual operating savings.

The airline’s struggles have created opportunities for rivals, with Frontier Airlines adding routes and eyeing further expansion. Analysts and industry executives say carriers such as Frontier, Southwest and United Airlines might be interested in picking up Spirit aircraft and other assets as it restructures.

Spirit said wages and benefits will continue to be paid and honored for those employed by the airline, including contractors. It will also meet go-forward obligations to its vendors and suppliers throughout the bankruptcy process.

‘I’ve seen more sheriffs than Robin Hood’

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Hayley Jarvis and Chris ClementsBBC Scotland News

BBC Jimmy Stringfellow, a well-dressed man in his 70s, stands in his yard, with chalets behind him. He is looking off to his right, wearing his trademark blue fedora hat and a blue jacet with a white patterned shirt.BBC

Jimmy Stringfellow is facing the fight of his life to stop his eviction

“There was nothing on this. This was a dump,” says Jimmy Stringfellow as he stands by the chalet he built near Glasgow’s River Clyde.

Wearing his trademark brightly coloured Fedora, the flamboyant showman looks around the yard where more than half a dozen self-built homes sit.

“We came here and we hired machinery: JCBs and tippers and God knows what.”

Jimmy and his family have been living on the yard on Water Row in Govan for more than 40 years, but now a legal case to evict them is heading to Scotland’s highest court.

The 76-year-old comes from a long line of showpeople.

He travelled the country for decades with fairground rides, games and snack vans, the remnants of which can be seen around the yard, including a carousel horse displayed in a lounge window.

The view from the new Govan Bridge across to the area where the showpeople yard is. There are modern flats on the left of the bridge and on the right, a wall and low chalets and mobile homes sitting behind a high grafitti-ed wall

The show people yard – here on the right – sits beside the regenerated area which is due to be extended

Jimmy is now retired and so is his traditional way of life.

“It’s just an existence, to be a showman,” he said, describing touring with their carousel rides, games and attractions – known in Scotland as “the shows”.

“We were operating with the shows and getting a living that was keeping us going.”

But Jimmy’s deteriorating health has made this increasingly difficult and now he is under pressure to vacate the site to make way for a new development.

Times are changing and the Clyde waterfront is changing too. A multi-million pound regeneration plan is under way in what was once part of the city’s industrial heartland.

The entrance to the Stringfellows' yard is a locked metal gate, with warning signs about a dog and  5mph speed suggestion. Four green wheelie bins sit in a haphazard fashion outside the gates. Tenement flats run up to the entrance of the yard.

The entrance to the Stringfellows’ yard at Water Row in Govan

Tom Manley Jimmy Stringfellow in a thick checked shirt and grey trousers, sits astride a carousel horse with several more on either side of him, within his yard. Tom Manley

Jimmy Stringfellow has been a showman all his life, taking carnival rides and games to attractions across the country

Glasgow City Council says the family has no right to occupy the land and is taking legal action as a last resort.

Jimmy says his family moved to the site in the 1980s, but since then the local authority has threatened him with eviction more than 20 times.

“I’ve had more sheriffs than Robin Hood,” he said.

“Every case we went to, we won it.

“They don’t like me because I stand up to them and I’m not frightened of their fictitious authority.”

But this case is different. Next week, the Stringfellows will be fighting eviction at the Court of Session in Edinburgh, Scotland’s highest court.

There are seven occupied chalets on the Water Row site, including the home of Jimmy’s daughter Chanel and his five-year-old granddaughter.

The case could set a legal precedent in what is believed to be the first test of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child in a civil court since it was incorporated into Scots law last year.

The act requires all Scotland’s public authorities, including the government, to seek to protect children and young people’s rights, and consider them when making policy decisions.

It is unlawful for them to contravene UNCRC requirements.

Chanel, a tanned lady with her brown hair pulled back into a bun, smiles. She wears a white and navy striped top.

Chanel wants her daughter to remain in the only home she has known

Just Right Scotland, the legal team representing the Stringfellows, will argue the rights of the child have not been taken into account and eviction would breach her right to a secure home.

Chanel, 46, has been living on the yard since she was the same age as her daughter.

“It’s my home. It’s my memories. It’s my granny’s apple trees on the yard. I’ve been here for all my life,” she says.

“It’s like you being put out of your family home.”

Chanel says the local authority has offered alternative sites, but insists they do not meet the family’s needs.

“They’re just not suitable, they’re not big enough.”

A charming wooden playhouse for a child stands on the Stringfellows' yard - with a butterfly sculpture on the wall, lower boxes at the windows and hanging baskets from the eaves.

Chanel’s daughter has grown up on the site and Chanel wants her to stay there

She says it has been difficult explaining to her daughter what is happening.

“She doesn’t really understand what’s going on because she’s only she’s young,” she said. “But she knows something. She knows people are trying to take her out of her yard, out of her home. She’s worried, she was having nightmares.”

She is also concerned about the impact on her parents Jimmy and Diane.

“My mum’s the glue, she’s a rock, but she’s crumbling. I’m a bit like my dad: stubborn, strong, fight.”

Barbara Bolton, partner at Just Right Scotland, says the legal team will also argue that the Stringfellows should have the same rights as tenants in social housing when it comes to eviction.

She said: “In 2001 the Scottish Parliament passed a law to give protection against eviction to those who rent their home from local authorities and social landlords.

“In doing so, they recognised the importance of having a level of stability so that tenants can put down roots and invest in their home, knowing they will not be asked to leave at any moment.

“That need for stability applies equally to travelling showpeople who live in chalets and caravans in accordance with their cultural heritage.”

A shot through some trees to a green space and then several blocks of modern, attractive flats in a pale brick.

Phase 1 of the development is complete and has brought sustainable social housing to Govan

In a statement Glasgow City Council said: “The council has raised proceedings against the occupiers of the site who have no right or title to occupy it.

“These proceedings have been raised as a last resort. The evidential hearing in the case begins on Tuesday 2 September and therefore, it would be inappropriate to comment further.”

The case will call before the Court of Session and is expected to last about two weeks, although a decision may not be made for several months.

Jimmy thinks the outcome will not only affect his family.

He said: “If they get me off of here – and I’m 76 – there’s not another showperson, not another person living in a chalet anywhere, and any caravan site, that will be safe.

“When I die there’s going to be nobody with the guts to take them on like I’ve done.”

California Highway Patrol offers Harris security: LA Times

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The California Highway Patrol (CHP) has offered to provide protection for former Vice President Harris after President Trump canceled her Secret Service protection, according to new reporting from the Los Angeles Times, which cited law enforcement sources.

The Times, in a report published Friday, said the CHP offer came in the wake of discussions between the offices of California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) and Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass (D).

The CHP declined to provide further information when reached by The Hill.

“Respectfully, the California Highway Patrol does not comment on security arrangements,” said CHP office of media relations spokesperson Lt. Matt Gutierrez. The office of Newsom, who would need to sign off on the protection, could not be immediately reached for comment by The Hill. Newsom’s office declined to provide further comment to The Times.

Harris’s protection was revoked through a letter titled “Memorandum for the Secretary of Homeland Security” dated Thursday. Her protections are set to end Sept. 1, according to CNN.

“You are hereby authorized to discontinue any security-related procedures previously authorized by Executive Memorandum, beyond those required by law, for the following individual, effective September 1, 2025: Former Vice President Kamala D. Harris,” reads the letter, a copy of which was obtained by CNN.

Harris’s security protections ran for six months following the end of the Biden administration, as is standard for vice presidents; however, former President Biden extended the deadline for protection by a year before leaving office, per CNN. Presidents receive lifetime Secret Service protection.

Bass denounced Trump’s decision to revoke Harris’s Secret Service protection in a statement to The Hill, saying she will work with Newsom to ensure Harris’s safety.

“This is another act of revenge following a long list of political retaliation in the form of firings, the revoking of security clearances and more,” Bass said. “This puts the former Vice President in danger and I look forward to working with the Governor to make sure Vice President Harris is safe in Los Angeles.”

“We’re Just Not Going to Go There”

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Texas Pacific Land Corporation (NYSE:TPL) is one of the stocks that Jim Cramer shared insight on. A caller asked for Cramer’s view on the stock, and he stated:

“See, I’m not positive on oil right now. That was one of our favorites last year. I’m going to say, you know what, we’re just not going to go there. It’s just not right to own the oil and gas right now. They’re just on the wrong side of the trade.”

A technical stock market chart. Photo by Energepic from Pexels

Texas Pacific Land Corporation (NYSE:TPL) engages in land and resource management. The company also provides water services, leases land, and sells materials. Whilst listing 20 best performing stocks over the past 20 years back in April, Cramer mentioned the company, and commented:

“Fifth place, odd one, Texas Pacific Land Corporation, up nearly 13,000% since we first went on air. It’s a fun story with its origins dating back to the 1800s when a planned railroad line went bankrupt, and the only remaining asset for creditors to take was some land in western Texas. Turns out it was very valuable land sitting on vast reserves of oil and gas. These days, Texas Pacific simply leases its land holdings to oil and gas-related companies or pipeline operators. It’s a great business, but it’s not necessarily one that I want to recommend, with West Texas Crude sinking to $60 a barrel today [Don’t buy, don’t buy, don’t buy].”

While we acknowledge the potential of TPL as an investment, we believe certain AI stocks offer greater upside potential and carry less downside risk. If you’re looking for an extremely undervalued AI stock that also stands to benefit significantly from Trump-era tariffs and the onshoring trend, see our free report on the best short-term AI stock.

READ NEXT: 30 Stocks That Should Double in 3 Years and 11 Hidden AI Stocks to Buy Right Now.

Disclosure: None. This article is originally published at Insider Monkey.

‘Gift of the jab and ‘Rayner lobby row’

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The Observer's front page shows a map of the United Kingdom with a measuring tape around its middle.  The headline reads "The waist land".

A map of the UK with a measuring tape around its middle takes up the front page of the Observer which reports on “Britain’s blackmarket in weight loss drugs” under the headline “The waist land”.

"Gift of the jab" reads the Daily Star's headline alongside a picture of an overweight man wearing an NHS t-shirt holding a needle.

The front page of Daily Star also focuses on the injections. It says the NHS “stabs the flab 200 times an hour” with slimmers scrambling to stock up on supplies before prices at private clinics go up next month.

Sunday People shows someone having their blood pressure checked alongside the headline "gamechanger heart pill 'on NHS in a year'".

Sunday People takes a look at a different health story as it reports on a “powerful” new blood pressure drug, baxdrostat, which could help millions. It says the medicine has been hailed a “gamechanger” and could be offered on the NHS in a year.

The Sunday Times lead story is "Emails 'show Andrew was in contact with Epstein in 2015'".

The Sunday Times reports on emails which, it suggests, indicate the Duke of York was in contact with the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein five years after Prince Andrew said they had last spoken. The duke strenuously denies any wrongdoing.

"Rayner used top wealth protection firm in deal over house" reads the headline on the front page of The Mail on Sunday.

“Rayner used top wealth protection firm in deal over house” reads the headline on the front page of The Mail on Sunday. The paper says the “controversy” over “embattled” Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner’s financial affairs has “deepened”. The paper says her office repeatedly declined its requests for comment.

The Sun on Sunday has a picture of the Deputy Prime Minister, Angela Rayner, pictured with her partner Sam Tarry alongside the headline "Rayner lobby row".

The Sun on Sunday features a photo of Rayner with her partner Sam Tarry alongside the headline “Rayner lobby row”. It reports he has worked for a lobbying group which received £280,000 from the government. It is understood the deputy PM declared Mr Tarry’s interest. The cabinet office says she followed due process. Henham Strategy told the Sun: “Sam Tarry does not conduct any work for Henham Strategy on any project related to MHCLG [Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government] departmental responsibilities. He works advising us on a number of areas unrelated to that department to ensure no conflicts of interest arises.” The paper notes there is no suggestion he acted improperly or broke any rules.

The headline on the front of the Sunday Express reads: "Most Britons would refuse to fight for country"

“Most Britons would refuse to fight for country” reports the Sunday Express. It says a “shocking” new study has revealed two in three adults would not be willing to fight in the event of war.

"Drill the North Sea dry, says Badenoch" reads the headline on the front page of the Sunday Telegraph.

Conservative Party leader Kemi Badenoch will pledge to “drill the North Sea dry”, reports the Sunday Telegraph. The paper says it will be the biggest departure from net zero yet as she will promise to “abolish all environmental restrictions” on the extraction of fossil fuel.

The Sunday Mirror has an exclusive interview with Strictly Come Dancing Judge Shirley Ballas

The Sunday Mirror has an exclusive interview with Strictly Come Dancing judge Shirley Ballas who says she feels the need to “always look over her shoulder” after an “ordeal” with a stalker.

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Trump warns Pritzker over Chicago crime: 'He better straighten it out, FAST'

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President Trump doubled down on his warnings to Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker (D) on Saturday to get Chicago crime under control or possibly be subjected to a federal law enforcement takeover.

“Six people were killed, and 24 people were shot, in Chicago last weekend, and JB Pritzker, the weak and pathetic Governor of Illinois, just said that he doesn’t need help in preventing CRIME,” Trump wrote in a post on Truth Social. “He is CRAZY!!! He better straighten it out, FAST, or we’re coming! MAGA. President DJT.”

Trump’s threat marks the latest in the back-and-forth between the president and the Democratic governor since Trump suggested he would deploy National Guard troops in Chicago in comments earlier this month.

Trump and Pritzker, a potential 2028 presidential candidate, have traded barbs in recent days, with Trump often citing Chicago crime statistics in his notes.

‘Panic stricken Governor Pritzker says that crime is under control, when in fact it is just the opposite. He is an incompetent Governor who should call me for HELP,” Trump wrote in a similar post earlier this week.

Pritzker challenged Trump’s Chicago crime assertions in a Wednesday post on X, writing, “According to federal data, 13 of the top 20 cities in homicide rates have Republican governors. None of those cities are Chicago. 8 of the top 10 states in homicide rates are led by Republicans. None of those states are Illinois. And yet Trump is sending troops here.

Pritzker earlier this week cautioned Trump against sending the National Guard to the Windy City, as he has with other Democrat-run cities, including Los Angeles and Washington, D.C. Pritzker called the move “exactly the type of overreach that our country’s founders warned against.”

Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson (D) also hit back at Trump’s plans by signing a Saturday executive order detailing how the Windy City will attempt to respond to President Trump’s potential move.

“The City of Chicago will do everything in our power to defend our democracy and protect our communities. With this executive order, we send a resounding message to the federal government: we do not need nor want an unconstitutional and illegal military occupation of our city,” Johnson said in a statement.

Trump has touted a drop in crime in Washington, D.C., since he began his federal takeover of the nation’s capital earlier this month.

“DC is virtually, in just 14 days, a CRIME FREE ZONE. The people living and working there are ecstatic!!! President DJT,” Trump also wrote on Truth Social on Saturday.

Nvidia and Other AI Stocks Are Falling. Why Investors Are Souring on Artificial Intelligence.

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Nvidia and Other AI Stocks Are Falling. Why Investors Are Souring on Artificial Intelligence.