Office of ex-president says allegations of attempted coup are ‘attempt at distraction’. Plus, why are people opting out of traditional funerals?
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Barack Obama has broken his silence on Donald Trump’s calls to prosecute him, unequivocally rejecting his successor’s accusations that he tried to engineer a “coup” after Trump’s 2016 election victory by “manufacturing” evidence of Russian interference.
Obama’s office took the unusual step of issuing an emphatic refutation after Trump told reporters his predecessor had tried to “lead a coup” against him and was guilty of “treason” over intelligence assessments suggesting that Russia had intervened to help defeat Hillary Clinton in the campaign.
“Out of respect for the office of the presidency, our office does not normally dignify the constant nonsense and misinformation flowing out of this White House with a response,” the statement said. “But these claims are outrageous enough to merit one. These bizarre allegations are ridiculous and a weak attempt at distraction.”
What else did the statement say? It went on to criticize claims made in an 11-page document released last week by Tulsi Gabbard, the director of national intelligence. It said: “Nothing in the document issued last week undercuts the widely accepted conclusion that Russia worked to influence the 2016 presidential election but did not successfully manipulate any votes. These findings were affirmed in a 2020 report by the bipartisan senate Intelligence Committee, led by then Chairman Marco Rubio.”
Donald Trump has announced a trade deal with Japan, potentially resolving weeks of fraught negotiations between the two allies which had caused economic uncertainty in Tokyo and mounting speculation over the future of the prime minister, Shigeru Ishiba.
“We just completed a massive Deal with Japan,” the US president announced in a post online, adding that “Japan will invest, at my direction, $550 Billion Dollars into the United States”.
Ishiba said his country’s tariff negotiator had received the details of the deal and he would examine them before responding. “Our overarching concern is the interests of the nation,” he said.
Why is there speculation about Ishiba’s future? He is facing growing opposition from within his own party after he vowed to stay on as leader after his coalition lost its upper house majority in elections last weekend, as well as their majority in the lower house in October last year. His position is widely regarded as untenable in light of the two consecutive electoral defeats.
Will he resign? After the deal was announced by Trump, Japan’s Mainichi newspaper reported that Ishiba would announce his resignation as prime minister by the end of next month.
Republicans announced yesterday that the House of Representatives would call it quits a day early and head home in the face of persistent Democratic efforts to force Republicans into voting on the release of the Jeffrey Epstein files.
The chamber was scheduled be in session through Thursday before the annual five-week summer recess, but on Tuesday, the Republican majority announced that the last votes of the week would take place the following day.
What did the Democrats say about the decision? “They are actually ending this week early because they’re afraid to cast votes on the Jeffrey Epstein issue,” said Ted Lieu, the vice-chair of the House Democratic caucus.
Tributes have poured in from across the music industry after the death of Ozzy Osbourne. The pioneering Black Sabbath frontman and reality TV star died aged 76 “with his family and surrounded by love”.
Civil society and opposition groups in Eswatini have expressed outrage after the US deported five men to the country, with the largest opposition party calling it “human trafficking disguised as a deportation deal”.
Israel is facing intensifying international condemnation for its killing of starving Palestinian civilians in Gaza as the UN secretary general, António Guterres, said the “last lifelines keeping people alive [in the strip] are collapsing”.
Venus Williams became the second-oldest woman to win a tour-level singles match in professional tennis, producing some of her familiar big serves and ground strokes at age 45 while beating Peyton Stearns – 22 years her junior – by a 6-3, 6-4 score at the DC Open last night.
Although my father-in-law, Cliff, died in a hospital in Powys, Wales, writes Tim Burrows, he was cremated 140 miles away. His ashes then travelled 220 miles east. The delivery man arrived holding a gift bag containing Cliff in one hand and a small bunch of flowers in the other. In the UK and the US, “direct cremations” – where no mourners are present and relatives and friends can organise their own ceremonies – are on the rise. Is it time to rethink how we say goodbye our loved ones?
The plastics treaty negotiations resume in August in Geneva, Switzerland, having failed to reach agreement at the fifth round of talks in December. At stake is whether the torrent of toxic plastic pollution pouring into the environment can be stemmed. Doing so is not only vital to protect people and the planet but also to curb the climate crisis and the global losses of wildlife.
Robert F Kennedy Jr raised eyebrows at the weekend when he took a strenuous hike up Camelback Mountain, situated near Phoenix, Arizona. Despite the temperature rising above 90F (32C), the US health secretary conducted the hike in dark blue jeans, posing for pictures along the way in a sweat-drenched green T-shirt.
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First Thing: Obama breaks silence on Trump’s ‘outrageous’ call to prosecute him – The Guardian
