Chelsea striker Nicolas Jackson is set to join Bayern Munich on loan with an option to buy, while Christopher Nkunku has completed a £36m move to AC Milan.
France forward Nkunku, 27, has signed a five-year contract with the Serie A side to end his two-year stay at Stamford Bridge.
The Blues, meanwhile, will receive an initial loan fee of £13m (15m euros) for fellow attacker Jackson, while Bayern have a £56.2m (65m euro) purchase option for the Senegal international.
Jackson, 24, has already agreed a pre-contract with Bayern and has been given permission to travel to Germany to complete the move, while a sell-on clause has been included in the deal.
The sale of Nkunku, coupled with Jackson’s impending departure, will further boost Chelsea’s financial position.
The Blues have raised about £309m this summer from player sales, once add-ons are included, having spent about £277m on new signings.
Sales are important to Chelsea this summer because of Uefa sanctions – which included a fine of 31m euros (£26.7m)- to maintain a “positive transfer balance” in this window to register new signings for the Champions League.
Nkunku scored 18 goals and provided five assists in 62 matches for the Blues, having joined from RB Leipzig for about £52m in 2023.
He played a significant role in Chelsea winning the Club World Cup and Conference League last season.
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What to know about Trump’s ‘pocket rescission’
President Trump is using a tool known as a “pocket rescission” to cut roughly $5 billion in congressionally approved funding, sparking bipartisan pushback.
The rare move, which Trump announced in a letter sent to Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) late Thursday, is the latest step by Trump and his team to test the bounds of presidential authority and root out what officials say is wasteful spending that does not align with the president’s agenda.
The Impoundment Control Act (ICA) lays out rules governing the rescissions process.
It allows the administration to temporarily withhold funding for 45 days while Congress considers the rescissions request. If lawmakers opt not to approve the request, the funds must be released.
But a pocket rescission is when the president sends the same type of request to Congress within 45 days of the end of the fiscal year on Sept. 30.
The request is made close to that fiscal year deadline so the funding is essentially paused until it runs out at the end of the year, regardless of congressional action.
A federal judge on Friday weighed President Trump’s attempted ouster of Federal Reserve board of governors member Lisa Cook, acknowledging that the case raises “important questions” that courts may not have mulled before.
Federal Trade Commission (FTC) Chair Andrew Ferguson warned Gmail, the world’s largest email service, this week that it may face a federal investigation over allegations the company intentionally suppresses messages sent by Republicans.
Novavax, Inc. (NASDAQ:NVAX) is a biotechnology company specializing in vaccines for serious infectious diseases, with its leading product, Nuvaxovid™, a recombinant protein-based COVID-19 vaccine approved for adults 65+ and high-risk individuals aged 12–64 in the U.S. The vaccine combines recombinant protein technology with nanoparticle and Matrix-M adjuvant to enhance immune responses.
In August 2025, Novavax, Inc. (NASDAQ:NVAX) received FDA approval for Nuvaxovid’s Biologics License Application, triggering a $175 million milestone payment from partner Sanofi. The company transferred U.S. commercial leadership of Nuvaxovid to Sanofi for the 2025–2026 vaccination season, with further marketing authorization transfers in the U.S. and EU expected later in 2025, generating additional milestone payments.
The business is expanding its pipeline beyond COVID-19, including COVID-19–influenza combination vaccines and a standalone influenza vaccine in Phase 3, showing strong immune responses and T-cell activity. Its H5N1 avian flu candidate also produced promising preclinical results, boosting investor confidence.
Novavax, Inc. (NVAX) Wins FDA Approval for Nuvaxovid BLA
Financially, Novavax, Inc. (NASDAQ:NVAX) reported an unexpected net income of $107 million in Q2 2025, aided by milestone payments, cost reductions, and organizational efficiencies. The corporation also refinanced convertible debt in August 2025, improving terms and extending maturities to support pipeline advancement and partnership strategies.
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A string of demonstrations have been held outside The Bell Hotel in Epping this summer, including this protest in early August
Some councils say they are still pursuing legal action to stop asylum seekers from being housed in hotels in their areas, despite a Court of Appeal ruling.
The court on Friday overturned a temporary injunction which would have prevented asylum seekers from being housed at The Bell Hotel in Epping, and was seen as a possible precedent for legal challenges elsewhere in the country.
Two councils told the BBC they will continue to pursue legal action. Epping Forest District Council, which had obtained the injunction, said it is looking at options, including appealing to the Supreme Court.
Reform UK said all 12 councils it controls should be exploring legal optionsto stop asylum seekers being housed in local hotels.
The leader of Reform-controlled West Northamptonshire Council said Friday’s ruling did not change its plans to take legal action regarding hotels in the area, which he said were “already under way”.
Cllr Mark Arnull said: “It also doesn’t change our view that the use and locations of the three hotels have never been suitable for asylum accommodation and place unreasonable and unsustainable strain on local services.”
He added: “We will continue to do everything we can within our powers to address our residents’ concerns over these hotels and keep them safe.”
Hertfordshire’s Conservative-run Broxbourne Council also said it would press on with pursuing legal action.
Cllr Jim Clune told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “We have grave concerns that from a planning perspective, the hotel or the premises is not being used as set out when planning permission was given.”
In its original case, Epping Forest had argued that The Bell Hotel had become a public safety risk as well as an alleged planning law breach, arguing it had stopped functioning as a true hotel.
The leader of Epping Forest District Council told the BBC on Saturday it was “looking at all options, including appealing to the Supreme Court”.
A full High Court hearing to decide on a permanent injunction for The Bell Hotel is expected in mid-October, but Cllr Chris Whitbread said the Conservative-run council would meet on Monday to plan its next steps.
He told BBC Breakfast that “people are very disappointed” by the judgement and that he expected protests near the hotel to continue.
“I don’t think it will change, people want that hotel closed” he said, urging people to demonstrate peacefully.
Three arrests were made at a protest outside the hotel on Friday after the Court of Appeal ruling. Thousands had attended protests against the hotel and counter-demonstrations there over the summer.
Meanwhile, the Times reported that it understood at least 13 councils planned on pressing ahead with legal action.
In his ruling on Friday, Lord Justice Bean said the High Court’s decision to award the injunction was “seriously flawed in principle” and had failed to consider the consequence of relocating 138 asylum seekers who would have been forced to leave The Bell Hotel by 12 September.
He also said it was “worrying” that the council’s legal team cited protests outside the hotel as a reason it was seeking the original injunction.
Lord Justice Bean said in his ruling: “If an outbreak of protest enhances a case, this runs the risk of acting as an impetus for further protests – some of which may be disorderly – around asylum accommodation.”
“There is a risk of encouraging further lawlessness.”
The protests began after an asylum seeker housed at the hotel was arrested and subsequently charged with several offences, including the sexual assault of a 14-year-old girl. Hadush Kebatu denies the offences and has been on trial.
The chief executive of the Refugee Council said the Court of Appeal’s ruling did not “solve the problems we’re facing”.
Enver Solomon told BBC Breakfast on Saturday: “It doesn’t address the fact that the taxpayer is having to pay millions of pounds a day for hotels, and those that are in the hotels feel they’ve got a target on their back.”
He said the government had to “move much faster” to end the use of hotels to house asylum seekers – which it has committed to do by 2029 – and suggested it put a plan in place “to close hotels in the coming months”.
Border Security and Asylum Minister Dame Angela Eagle said after the ruling that the government would “stop using hotels, which aren’t a sustainable solution, by the end of this Parliament”.
“This judgement assists us by allowing us to do that in a planned and orderly fashion”.
The state of Florida could lose $218 million after a judge ordered the closure of Alligator Alcatraz, a detention facility based in the Everglades that was once a training airport.
The site was created with funding from the Florida Division of Emergency Management and was quickly retrofitted to house people detained for federal immigration purposes.
Its permanent closure could cost the Sunshine State $15 million to $20 million immediately, and another $15 million to $20 million to reinstall structures if Florida is allowed to reopen it, according to court filings as reported by The Associated Press.
The AP reported a state official in court papers said the Florida Division of Emergency Management could lose most of the value of the $218 million it has invested in making the airport suitable for a detention center.
Detainees have reported a series of health hazards including bathrooms flooded with feces, limited access to legal resources and a lack of food.
Officials told the wire there would soon be no remaining inmates at Alligator Alcatraz as detainees, portable bathrooms and other items were swiftly being removed to comply with court orders.
However, state leaders have already signed at least $405 million in vendor contracts after allocating $245 million for site management in July, according to the AP.
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and GOP governors in 22 other states have urged the courts to overturn a late August ruling issued by U.S. District Judge Kathleen Williams, an appointee of former President Obama, to halt operations at the detention center.
The group argued the state is not subject to federal environmental regulations because it’s not a federal agency.
Alligator Alcatraz is located in Florida’s sensitive wetlands, which houses special species. Williams said in her ruling that generators, gas, sewage and other waste creates “irreparable harm in the form of habitat loss and increased mortality to endangered species in the area.”
Additionally, it blocks Miccosukee Tribe members from accessing the land.
President Trump touted the site’s seclusion from society and the dangerous path required to escape the facility in July as a prime location for immigrants in the country illegally to be detained while awaiting additional court hearings or removal.
But in her 82-page ruling, Williams said the state of Florida did not present evidence that outlined “why this detention camp, in this particular location, is uniquely suited and critical.”
She said officials also failed to provide statistics on the number of violent offenders detained at the site and “could not directly testify that even one of the detainees had a criminal record, much less a record of violent crimes necessitating their seclusion from society in the Everglades.”
DeSantis has pledged to push back against the site’s closure while lauding the opening of another detention facility dubbed “Deportation Depot” in the state at Baker Correctional Institution.
Apple Inc. (NASDAQ:AAPL) is one of the most profitable tech stocks to invest in now. On August 25, Bloomberg reported that Elon Musk’s companies X and xAI filed a lawsuit against Apple Inc. (NASDAQ:AAPL) and OpenAI in federal court in Fort Worth, Texas, seeking billions of dollars in damages. The complaint alleges that Apple’s integration of ChatGPT into the iPhone operating system unfairly favors OpenAI, stifles competition, and limits consumer choice.
Musk’s team argued that Apple’s arrangement makes it impossible for rival chatbots to reach the top of the App Store rankings, thereby curbing innovation in generative AI. The filing also contends that Apple Inc. (NASDAQ:AAPL) and OpenAI’s exclusive setup has effectively locked up markets to maintain monopolistic power, mirroring concerns raised by regulators and the U.S. Department of Justice in ongoing antitrust actions against Apple.
Apple Inc. (NASDAQ:AAPL) has already drawn regulatory scrutiny worldwide for how it runs the App Store, most notably during its extended clash with Epic Games. Earlier this year, the U.S. government filed a separate lawsuit accusing the company of using its dominance in app distribution to block competition and slow the rise of so-called “super apps.”
Even with the latest legal challenges, investor sentiment has not wavered much. On August 26, Goldman Sachs reiterated its Buy rating on Apple Inc. (NASDAQ:AAPL) with a $266 target price, pointing to catalysts such as design changes expected in the iPhone 17, potential adjustments in pricing, and stronger carrier-led promotions.
Apple Inc. (NASDAQ:AAPL) designs, manufactures, and markets innovative products, including the iPhone, iPad, Mac computers, Apple Watch, and Apple TV. The company also offers a range of software and services, such as the iOS and macOS operating systems, iCloud, advertising, payment services, Apple Music, and the App Store.
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For Drew Barrymore, a day of work has never been missed. Though her current gig helming The Drew Barrymore Show fills her days now, when the child star found herself emancipated from mom Jaid Barrymore at age 14, she scrambled to pay the bills.
Noting her friend worked at a coffee shop in the Valley, the actress shared in her 2015 memoir Wildflower that she had to find something closer to their rental because she didn’t have a driver’s license.
“It was the start of the 1990s, and coffeehouses were where everyone hung out,” she detailed of working at L.A. hot spot the Living Room. “People poured out on to the street every night.” Unfortunately, she continued, “I wasn’t great at my job. I wasn’t really great at anything. I had only done two things: acted and had wild life experiences.”
She served up the tea on one tense experience in her book.
“I could tell my boss, who had hired me on the novel idea of having a washed-up former child actor behind the counter, was patient with all my learning curves, but was also irritated with me,” she wrote, revealing how he walked in while she was doing the dishes “and said, very sharply and exasperatedly, ‘Don’t use the abrasive side of the brush! All the pastry cases are getting scratched and foggy, and you can’t see what’s inside!'”
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Emergency services were called to the A830 on Thursday night
Three teenagers have died after the car they were in crashed on the A830 in the Highlands, police have said.
Police Scotland said emergency services were called to the road near Arisaig, west of Fort William, at about 23:15 on Thursday. All three were confirmed dead at the scene.
Police said formal identification had still to take place, but they believed the driver and the two passengers in the Ford Fiesta were male and in their mid teens.
Insp Donnie MacKinnon said: “Our thoughts are with the family and friends of the people who died as a result of this crash.”
The officer added: “Our inquiries are ongoing to establish the full circumstances, and I am appealing for anyone who witnessed the crash and hasn’t already spoken to officers to get in touch.
“I would also appeal to anyone who was in the area and who may have dashcam footage which could assist to contact us.”
The crash happened on a stretch of road near the Borrodale House hotel.
Police, ambulance and fire crews were sent to the scene.
The Scottish Fire and Rescue Service said it was alerted just before 23:30, and two appliances were sent to assist the other emergency services.
‘Deeply saddened’
The road was closed until about 11:55 on Friday.
Lochaber High School in Fort William has posted a message to pupils, parents and staff on social media.
It said: “We are deeply saddened by the recent tragedy in our community.
“Our hearts and thoughts are with everyone affected at this difficult time.”
Lochaber High added that support services would be available for pupils and parents from Monday.
A federal appeals court on Friday rejected President Trump’s assertion that emergency powers justify his worldwide tariffs, a blow to his efforts to refashion global trade.
In a 7-4 decision, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit affirmed a lower court’s ruling that the tariffs were not authorized by the statute Trump cited to justify them.
The International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) authorizes the president to issue certain economic sanctions to counter an “unusual and extraordinary threat” in an emergency, but it does not permit the president’s sweeping moves, the court ruled.
“Because we agree that IEEPA’s grant of presidential authority to ‘regulate’ imports does not authorize the tariffs imposed by the Executive Orders, we affirm,” the majority wrote.
The ruling does not take effect immediately, as the court withheld the mandate for its decision until Oct. 14, so the administration can appeal to the Supreme Court.
Trump, in a Truth Social post reacting to the ruling, emphasized that all tariffs are still in place, which he said a “Highly Partisan Appeals Court incorrectly” decided. He called tariffs the “best tool” to help workers and support companies in producing American products, acknowledging the proximity to Labor Day weekend.
“If allowed to stand, this Decision would literally destroy the United States of America,” the president said.
The majority — one Republican-appointed judge and six Democratic-appointed judges — said that Trump’s use of tariffs amounts to a decision of vast economic and political significance, meaning the government must “point to clear congressional authorization” for its interpretation of IEEPA.
However, the judges discerned “no clear congressional authorization” for levies of the “magnitude” of those that Trump imposed, they said.
“Reading the phrase ‘regulate … importation’ to include imposing these tariffs is ‘a wafer-thin reed on which to rest such sweeping power,’” the majority wrote.
Judge Richard Taranto, appointed by former President Obama, was joined in dissent by three other judges, another Obama appointee and two appointees of former President George W. Bush.
“We conclude that IEEPA’s authorization of presidential action in this realm is not an unconstitutional delegation of legislative authority under the Supreme Court’s decisions, which have upheld broad grants of authority, including tariffing authority, in this foreign-affairs-related area,” Taranto wrote for the dissenters.
He argued that IEEPA “embodies an eyes-open congressional grant of broad emergency authority” in the realm of foreign affairs, remarking that it’s not a surprise its authorities extend beyond those available under nonemergency laws.
By tying IEEPA’s authority to a requirement to keep Congress looped in with the executive’s decisionmaking, the legislative branch “confirmed the understood breadth,” he said.
Trump is the first president to have attempted to impose tariffs by invoking IEEPA, citing the emergency law in February to announce levies on Canada, China and Mexico, and pointing to the fentanyl crisis.
Then, in April, he called an emergency over trade deficits a reason to expand that to a 10 percent global baseline tariff, with higher rates for some countries — a move he deemed “Liberation Day.”
Five small businesses and a dozen Democratic-led states filed suit. The U.S. Court of International Trade invalidated the tariffs in May, though they have remained in effect as the mid-level court weighed the administration’s appeal.
White House spokesman Kush Desai said in a statement that Trump “lawfully exercised” the tariff powers Congress gave him to defend the country’s national and economic security from foreign threats, reiterating the president’s emphasis that the tariffs remain in effect.
“We look forward to ultimate victory on this matter,” he said.