Newsom accuses Trump of directing DOJ to investigate him

California governor Gavin Newsom has accused ​Donald Trump of directing the US justice department to investigate him ⁠and his wife.

Donald Trump isn’t just coming after me because ⁠of my mean Tweets,” Newsom said in ​a video ‌statement posted to ‌X. “He’s coming after me because I ‌am considering running for President.”

I have reached out to the Department of Justice for comment and I will update this post if I get a response.

Newsom said federal agents had in recent days been ‌knocking on the door of members of his family, friends and ​former employees demanding documents and records. “Not because they found a crime. Because they are simply trying to find one,” ⁠he said.

Newsom and Trump have long ​been ​critical of each ​other, clashing on major issues including ​the climate ‌emergency, pipelines ​and the president’s deployment of national guard troops to Los Angeles last summer.

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Key events

The day so far

  • A memorandum ⁠of understanding ⁠between the ​United States ⁠and Iran ⁠to end hostilities on “all fronts” has ​been ‌signed by ‌president Donald ‌Trump, vice-president JD ‌Vance and Iranian parliament ​speaker Mohammad Bagher ⁠Ghalibaf, a ​senior US official ​said ​today. The precise terms of the deal remain unclear, but it will reportedly give the two sides 60 days to iron out what to do about Iran’s stockpile of highly enriched uranium, its nuclear programme, and sanctions relief. In the meantime, the strait of Hormuz would be opened and the US naval blockade of Iranian ports lifted. Despite Lebanon’s inclusion in the ceasefire deal, Israel remains defiant and said it will not withdraw from a vast swathe of territory it has seized in the country’s south.

  • The text of the deal has yet to be released, and Trump said earlier that it would be published “pretty soon”. He and Vance signed the document electronically, US officials said, but the president will not be at the formal signing ceremony in Geneva on Friday. Vance, Trump’s special envoy Steve Witkoff, and Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner will lead the US delegation instead.

  • But there are remains a lack of clarity over the strait of Hormuz. Trump said today that ships are starting to pass through the strait of now and that by Friday, the strait “will be completely open”. A more cautious Vance had told CNBC this morning that the US’s expectation is that the critical waterway would opened in a toll-free way for the long term – but added that those details would be figured out in the upcoming technical talks. Then, a US official told reporters it could be two weeks before shipping gets back to normal. Iran’s foreign ministry spokesperson Esmail Baghei, meanwhile, told a news briefing that Iran would not seek to collect tolls on ships passing through the strait, but suggested they could still charge fees “in exchange for the services that are provided”.

  • Trump is in Évian-les-Bains, France, for the G7 summit, where it is hoped he will stay for the whole three days. In recent months he’s fallen out with the leaders of the UK, Germany and Italy who have criticized his war on Iran and declined to join his earlier efforts to reopen the strait of Hormuz. More on how the host, French president Emmanuel Macron, has shaped the agenda around the G7’s most haphazard participant here.

  • And finally, UFC chief executive Dana White insisted that yesterday’s event at the White House exceeded his expectations “in every way you gauge success” – but stood by his claim that it is a one-and-done. “It was an amazing, experience, this was a one of one,” he said. “It will never happen again.”



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