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Pogacar inspired by Djokovic after Tour de France jeers
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Trump backtracks on plan to toll Hormuz ships
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Balogun admits red card furore affected US World Cup team
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France, Spain battle for place in World Cup final
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Pogacar inspired by Djokovic amid Tour de France jeers
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Pogacar inspsired by Djokovic amid Tour de France jeers
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'Gus' the T. rex fetches record $50.1 mn at US auction
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Croatia ex-international Simic held in graft case
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Dollar slides as rate hike prospects ease, oil gains moderate
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Record-smashing US heat wave surges from West to East
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England won't be drawn into Argentina World Cup rivalry: Kane
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Why does Brazil's PIX payment system bother Donald Trump?
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Swiss World Cup squad return home to heroes' welcome
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Pogacar wins Tour de France 10th stage on Bastille Day
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Too hot: Buttoned-up Tokyo officials ditch suits for 'cool' shorts
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US Supreme Court justices defiant as threats hit home
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Arsenal agree Trossard fee for Beskitas switch
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Brighton sign Croatia defender Veskovic for record fee
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France flaunts firepower, unity with allies in huge parade
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US inflation cools in June before renewed Mideast fighting
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Ticking time bomb? Europe's ageing population brings challenges
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India spark collapse before Root leads England to 258 in 1st ODI
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Oil gains on fresh attacks, dollar slides as inflation slows
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Dua Lipa backs Albanian protests against Trump-linked resort
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Fire ravages popular forest outside Paris
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Dangote's mega oil project threatens fragile Kenyan ecosystem: Greenpeace
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US consumer inflation cools in June on lower energy costs
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Rose says there's still time to realise British Open dream
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Israel says ready to move on pilot zones amid new Lebanon talks
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Ukraine PM resigns in Zelensky-ordered reshuffle
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Croatia ex-international Simic held in graft case: report
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Glasner warns 'no button to press' for Forest success
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SCANDIC TRADE & SNC SCANDIC COIN:
AI Meets Non-Custodial Trading
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Swiss probe Google dropping search choice on Android phones
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France and Spain clash in World Cup semi-final
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MEXC Reports 7.1 Billion USDT in SpaceX Futures Volume as Q2 Closes the Gap to Wall Street
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Knight wants England women to play more red-ball cricket after India loss
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DR Congo health workers on Ebola front line threaten strike
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Oil extends gains after fresh US strikes
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Turn off addictive features on social media for children, say EU lawmakers
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EU population to peak in 2029 before long-term decline
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Bumrah returns for India as England bat in 1st ODI
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Fire ravages historic forest outside Paris
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US strikes Iran, vows to reimpose naval blockade
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57 gored or bruised during Spain's San Fermin bull runs
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Oil extends gains after fresh US strikes, stocks mostly rise
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Wildfires advance in forest south of Paris
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Families claim bodies as Bangkok fire toll rises to 30
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Ukrainian men in Poland face legal limbo
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Egg-free school meals scramble politics in India
US judges challenge Trump cuts as legal battles mount
The Trump administration was on a collision course with the US courts Monday, with federal judges questioning the legality of the White House’s cost-cutting onslaught of government and Vice President J.D Vance warning the judiciary to back off.
In his first three weeks in office, President Donald Trump has issued a flurry of executive orders aimed at slashing federal spending, appointing SpaceX and Tesla CEO Elon Musk to lead efforts that critics widely denounce as unconstitutional.
Trump's sweeping plans, which have effectively shuttered some federal agencies and sent staff home, have sparked legal battles across the country. Multiple lawsuits seek to halt what opponents characterize as an illegal power grab.
Musk's team has moved aggressively through federal agencies, freezing aid programs and pushing workforce reductions through controversial buyout offers and termination threats.
Democrats, unions, and activists, after initially struggling to respond, are now pursuing legal action and their numerous cases challenging Trump's plans have drawn sharp criticism from the White House.
In a social media post Sunday, Vance argued that judges lack authority to "control the executive's legitimate power," comparing judicial intervention to a judge dictating military strategy to a general.
"Judicial tyranny is grossly improper!" Musk said, echoing the White House pushback.
Their comments followed a judge's emergency order early Saturday blocking Musk's government reform team from accessing millions of Americans' personal and financial data stored at the Treasury Department.
Democratic attorneys general from 19 states filed that case Friday against the Republican president, the Treasury Department and the man who leads it, Scott Bessent.
Separately, a federal judge in Rhode Island on Monday said the Trump administration had violated a previous order lifting a sweeping federal funding freeze.
"The broad categorical and sweeping freeze of federal funds is, as the Court found, likely unconstitutional and has caused and continues to cause irreparable harm to a vast portion of this country," the order stated.
It was the first time since Trump took office and unfurled his "shock and awe" reform campaign that a federal judge accused his administration of defying a court order.
- 'Unprecedented' -
In Boston, another federal judge ruled Monday that the government must extend the deadline for a controversial federal worker buyout offer that legal experts consider vague and potentially illegal.
The plan, announced January 28 in an email to federal employees titled "Fork in the road" -- echoing Musk's 2022 message to Twitter employees when he acquired and renamed the platform to X — offered workers eight months' pay in exchange for resigning, or risk future termination.
While the US Office of Personnel Management, now run by Musk associates, extended the original Thursday deadline to Monday at 11:59 pm (0459 GMT), Judge George O'Toole ordered a further delay pending his decision.
Civil service unions had filed for a preliminary injunction to pause the offer until courts could resolve the matter.
"This is an unprecedented action taken on an unprecedented timeline that is causing irreparable harm," attorney Elena Goldstein told the federal judge, according to WHDH-TV news.
US media reported that at least 65,000 federal workers had accepted the so-called deferred resignation program as of last week.
Despite the legal challenges, the Trump administration continued its cost-cutting campaign Monday, effectively closing the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, an agency long criticized by Republicans as engaging in overreach.
Acting CFPB director Russell Vought informed staff that the agency's Washington office would close this week and directed employees not to report to work.
K.Brown--BTB