Trump, Scotland and golf
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President Donald Trump’s administration proposed revoking a scientific finding that has long been the central basis for U.S. action to regulate greenhouse gas emissions and fight climate change.Also Tuesday,
President Trump attended a ribbon-cutting at the new golf course in Scotland. His sons Eric Trump and Donald Trump Jr. were there. How tall are they?
As the president and his team promote one of his for-profit enterprises, ethical lines have been blurred to a point they practically no longer exist.
In the latest instance of him blending diplomacy, pageant and the profit motive, Trump on Tuesday inaugurated another golf course bearing his name in the town of Balmedie as he concluded a five-day visit to Scotland.
But The Trump Organization’s lawsuit isn’t your run-of-the-mill trademark case — look at the filing and you won’t find a list of sellers the firm is going after. Instead, there’s a vague stand-in for the defendants: “The individuals, corporations, limited liability companies … identified on Schedule A.”
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House Republicans are moving to give hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars to an organization the Trump administration has sought to defund for its long history of bias against conservatives, censorship of dissent and alleged interference in foreign affairs.
Despite the name of the new cellular company and its association with the President’s family, the Trump Organization will not be directly involved in making Trump Mobile’s products or providing the phone service to customers. Instead, the company is using Trump’s name under a licensing deal.
The decision comes roughly two years after former President Joe Biden reentered the U.N. Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, following Mr. Trump's decision to withdraw the U.S. from the entity during his first term.
A federal judge recently ruled that a Republican effort to withhold Medicaid funds from the organization’s clinics was likely unconstitutional.