Tesla Inc. is raising prices in Canada and encouraging buyers to snap up cars imported before counter-tariffs were imposed on US-made vehicles.
The electric carmaker’s Canadian website featured a banner on Saturday which said: “Explore pre-tariff priced inventory while supplies last.”
After President Donald Trump imposed sweeping tariffs on Canadian goods last month, including 25% on vehicle content produced outside of the US within a US-Mexico-Canada trade pact, Canada announced retaliatory import taxes. Those in-kind levies are designed to mirror the US duties.
Pricing for new orders on Tesla’s site as of April 26 was higher than for the same models listed as being in inventory. For example, the sticker price of long-range Model 3 cars with all-wheel drive was listed as C$79,990 ($57,700) for a new order, but those same 2025 model year vehicles already in inventory were being offered for around C$69,000.
The company did not respond to a request for comment. The price increases were reported earlier by specialist website driveteslacanada.ca, which said the cost to Canadian buyers for new orders of certain models such as the all-wheel drive Cybertruck are as much as 22% higher.
Tesla’s CEO Elon Musk has come in for criticism in Canada as a result of his support for the US President, who’s repeatedly said he’d like Canada to be part of the US. Musk has said he will devote more time to Tesla starting next month after the carmaker had its worst first-quarter financial results in years.
Donald Trump Jr. told a business forum in Budapest that Hungary and the region should pick the US over China as its economic partner, according to the Portfolio news website.
Trump Jr., who’s holding a roadshow headlined “Trump Business Vision 2025,” said China posed a bigger threat than Russia to the region, according to the business site, which helped organize the closed-door meeting late Friday with Hungarian entrepreneurs.
US President Donald Trump’s eldest son, who’s also an executive vice president of the Trump Organization, hailed Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s nationalist vision and underscored the close ties between the two countries’ leaders, Portfolio reported.
At the same time, his call to shun China is likely to sit uncomfortably in Hungary and other parts of eastern Europe, which have opened up their economies to investments from the Asian nation.
Orban has attracted billions of dollars of investments from China, including in the battery sector and the electric vehicle industry, with BYD Co. building a factory in Hungary’s south. Hungary and Serbia are also constructing a Budapest-Belgrade freight line, which is part of China’s Belt and Road global infrastructure initiative.
Trump Jr. was in the Serbian capital on Saturday, his third visit to the Balkan country since October, before traveling to Bulgaria on Sunday and Romania on Monday, where he’ll hold similar events as he pitches for business opportunities.
Executives of more than 30 biggest Serbian companies met with the US president’s son in Belgrade, seizing the “opportunity to talk to a man who is at the center of global events and knows what is happening in world markets,” said Marko Cadez, head of the Serbian Chamber of Commerce, in comments to Bloomberg Adria.
“We did not leave any sector uncovered,” and discussions included tourism, information technology and auto industry, according to Cadez.
President Donald Trump, from right, Donald Trump Jr., executive vice president of development and acquisitions for Trump Organization Inc., and Vice President JD Vance during the 60th presidential inauguration in the rotunda of the US Capitol in Washington, DC, US, on Monday, Jan. 20, 2025.
Times are tough. But Kevin Hart, one of the most successful comedians and actors on the planet, said there's one thing he has "no care [about] when it comes to spending": Experiences. "I think that's an amazing investment," he told Fortune.
Kevin Hart knows what it takes to be successful. He was the world's highest-paid comedian in 2024, earning $108 million. That’s also third-most among Hollywood entertainers overall, more than what Brad Pitt or Tom Cruise made last year.
That said, times are tough for most Americans right now. With consumer confidence down and market volatility up—partly influenced by global tensions stoked by Trump’s tariffs rollout and his will-he-won't-he approach with Fed Chair Jerome Powell—Americans are tightening their belts and are being very choosy on how and where they spend their money.
In an interview with Fortune, Hart revealed the one thing he says is absolutely worth splurging on, even in uncertain times.
“Anything experience-driven,” Hart told Fortune. “Anything where you’re able to better understand the world, see the world, and experience the world. I think it’s justified.”
“We’re not walking out of it with crazy lessons, but just extreme joy that we were able to see and do things together, create these memories,” he said. “It’s extremely humbling when you’re traveling just to see how the world works and see it through multiple different lenses.”
Hart said “discovery” is a critical human experience, and believes any opportunity where you can experience “what life can provide or present to you, I think that’s an amazing investment.”
“Creating and building memories for me and my family will always be something that I have no care when it comes to spending,” Hart added.
Hart, now 45, has become an entrepreneur in his own right through ventures like HartBeat, his production company (his majority stake was valued at $650 million in 2022), as well as his tequila brand Gran Coramino and the Laugh Out Loud Network. He also earns millions from endorsements every year. His Coramino Fund just recently started accepting applications for its latest round of $10,000 grants, intended for small business owners from marginalized communities.
Kevin Hart attends Apple TV+'s "Number One On The Call Sheet: Black Leading Men In Hollywood" New York premiere at Crosby Street Hotel on March 10, 2025 in New York City.
HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — Coal-fired power plants, long an increasingly money-losing proposition in the U.S., are becoming more valuable now that the suddenly strong demand for electricity to run Big Tech's cloud computing and artificial intelligence applications has set off a full-on sprint to find new energy sources.
President Donald Trump — who has pushed for U.S. “energy dominance” in the global market and suggested that coal can help meet surging power demand — is wielding his emergency authority to entice utilities to keep older coal-fired plants online and producing electricity.
While some utilities were already delaying the retirement of coal-fired plants, the scores of coal-fired plants that have been shut down the past couple years — or will be shut down in the next couple years — are the object of growing interest from tech companies, venture capitalists, states and others competing for electricity.
That’s because they have a very attractive quality: high-voltage lines connecting to the electricity grid that they aren’t using anymore and that a new power plant could use.
That ready-to-go connection could enable a new generation of power plants — gas, nuclear, wind, solar or even battery storage — to help meet the demand for new power sources more quickly.
For years, the bureaucratic nightmare around building new high-voltage power lines has ensnared efforts to get permits for such interconnections for new power plants, said John Jacobs, an energy policy analyst for the Washington, D.C.-based Bipartisan Policy Center.
“They are very interested in the potential here. Everyone sort of sees the writing on the wall for the need for transmission infrastructure, the need for clean firm power, the difficulty with siting projects and the value of reusing brownfield sites,” Jacobs said.
Rising power demand, dying coal plants
Coincidentally, the pace of retirements of the nation's aging coal-fired plants had been projected to accelerate at a time when electricity demand is rising for the first time in decades.
The Department of Energy, in a December report, said its strategy for meeting that demand includes re-using coal plants, which have been unable to compete with a flood of cheap natural gas while being burdened with tougher pollution regulations aimed at its comparatively heavy emissions of planet-warming greenhouse gases.
There are federal incentives, as well — such as tax credits and loan guarantees — that encourage the redevelopment of retired coal-fired plants into new energy sources.
Todd Snitchler, president and CEO of the Electric Power Supply Association, which represents independent power plant owners, said he expected Trump's executive orders will mean some coal-fired plants run longer than they would have — but that they are still destined for retirement.
Surging demand means power plants are needed, fast
Time is of the essence in getting power plants online.
Data center developers are reporting a yearlong wait in some areas to connect to the regional electricity grid. Rights-of-way approvals to build power lines can also be difficult to secure, given objections by neighbors who may not want to live near them.
Stephen DeFrank, chairman of the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission, said he believes rising energy demand has made retiring coal-fired plants far more valuable.
That's especially true now that the operator of the congested mid-Atlantic power grid has re-configured its plans to favor sites like retired coal-fired plants as a shortcut to meet demand, DeFrank said.
“That’s going to make these properties more valuable because now, as long as I’m shovel ready, these power plants have that connection already established, I can go in and convert it to whatever," DeFrank said.
Gas, solar and more at coal power sites
In Pennsylvania, the vast majority of conversions is likely to be natural gas because Pennsylvania sits atop the prolific Marcellus Shale reservoir, DeFrank said.
In states across the South, utilities are replacing retiring or retired coal units with gas. That includes a plant owned by the Tennessee Valley Authority; a Duke Energy project in North Carolina; and a Georgia Power plant.
The high-voltage lines at retired coal plants on the Atlantic Coast in New Jersey and Massachusetts were used to connect offshore wind turbines to electricity grids.
In Alabama, the site of a coal-fired plant, Plant Gorgas, shuttered in 2019, will become home to Alabama Power’s first utility-scale battery energy storage plant.
Texas-based Vistra, meanwhile, is in the process of installing solar panels and energy storage plants at a fleet of retired and still-operating coal-fired plants it owns in Illinois, thanks in part to state subsidies approved there in 2021.
In Arizona, lawmakers are advancing legislation to make it easier for three utilities there — Arizona Public Service, Salt River Project and Tucson Electric Power — to put advanced nuclear reactors on the sites of retiring coal-fired plants.
At the behest of Indiana's governor, Purdue University studied how the state could attract a new nuclear power industry. In its November report, it estimated that reusing a coal-fired plant site for a new nuclear power plant could reduce project costs by between 7% and 26%.
The Bipartisan Policy Center, in a 2023 study before electricity demand began spiking, estimated that nuclear plants could cut costs from 15% to 35% by building at a retiring coal plant site, compared to building at a new site.
Even building next to the coal plant could cut costs by 10% by utilizing transmission assets, roads and buildings while avoiding some permitting hurdles, the center said.
That interconnection was a major driver for Terrapower when it chose to start construction in Wyoming on a next-generation nuclear power plant next to PacifiCorp’s coal-fired Naughton Power Plant.
Jobs, towns left behind by coal
Kathryn Huff, a former U.S. assistant secretary for nuclear energy who is now an associate professor at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, said the department analyzed how many sites might be suitable to advanced nuclear reactor plants.
A compelling factor is the workers from coal plants who can be trained for work at a nuclear plant, Huff said. Those include electricians, welders and steam turbine maintenance technicians.
In Homer City, the dread of losing its coal-fired plant — it shut down in 2023 after operating for 54 years — existed for years in the hills of western Pennsylvania’s coal country.
“It’s been a rough 20 years here for our area, maybe even longer than that, with the closing of the mines, and this was the final nail, with the closing of the power plant,” said Rob Nymick, Homer City's manager. “It was like, ‘Oh my god, what do we do?’”
That is changing.
The plant's owners in recent weeks demolished the smoke stacks and cooling towers at the Homer City Generating State and announced a $10 billion plan for a natural gas-powered data center campus.
It would be the nation’s third-largest power generator and that has sown some optimism locally.
“Maybe we will get some families moving in, it would help the school district with their enrollment, it would help us with our population,” Nymick said. “We’re a dying town and hopefully maybe we can get a restaurant or two to open up and start thriving again. We’re hoping.”
The smokestacks of the former coal-fired Homer City Generating Station crumble in a planned demolition to make way for a new natural gas-fired power plant in Homer City, Pa., March 22, 2025.
Parisa Tabriz, general manager for Google Chrome, testified Friday during the DOJ’s antitrust case against Google’s illegal monopoly in the search market. Tabriz said it’s impossible to “disentangle” Google from the success of Chrome, adding she doesn’t “think it could be recreated” elsewhere.
Google believes it’s the only company that can operate Chrome, the world’s most popular web browser, and that it would suffer in anyone else’s hands.
“Trying to disentangle that is unprecedented,” Parisa Tabriz, general manager of Google Chrome, said in federal court Friday.
Tabriz said Google Chrome is the result of “17 years of collaboration” between the Chrome team, Google, and the companies that submit technical contributions to the company’s open-source Chromium Project, which is also utilized for several other Google projects like the Android operating system. “Google invests hundreds of millions of dollars” into Chromium, Tabriz said, but noted other companies “are not contributing now in any meaningful way.”
Over the course of several hours on Friday, Tabriz made it clear that Google being forced to sell Chrome, which is what the Justice Department has asked it to do (as well as sharing some of the data it collects to power search results), would ultimately hurt Chrome.
“I don’t think it could be recreated,” Tabriz said of Chrome’s success under Google.
Tabriz also mentioned the Chrome team is currently working to bake artificial intelligence into the browser to make it more “agentic”: in other words, Google wants Chrome to be able to automate tasks on behalf of users, from filling out forms to doing research to shopping.
The dollar is on pace for its worst performance during the first 100 days of a US presidency since Richard Nixon was in the White House as Donald Trump imposes tariffs and attempts to reshape global trade.
Trump’s trade policy — aimed at rejuvenating domestic manufacturing, shoring up the industrial base and improving national security — has pushed investors into assets outside of the US. That’s led to a weakening in the greenback and lifted other currencies alongside gold.
Meanwhile, data this week showed China remains dependent on foreign demand and South Korean exports to the US declined this month. Government forecasts pointed to a German economy that will struggle to expand this year.
U.S. & Canada
A dollar gauge is on track for its worst performance during the first 100 days of a US presidency in data going back to the Nixon era, when America abandoned the gold standard and switched to a free-floating exchange rate. The US dollar index has lost about 9% between Jan. 20 — when Trump returned to the White House — and April 25, putting it on course for the biggest loss through the end of the month since at least 1973.
Forecasters see the US economy taking a hit from Trump’s trade policy. The economy is set to expand 1.4% in 2025, according to the latest Bloomberg survey of economists, compared with 2% in last month’s poll. The median respondent now sees a 45% chance of a downturn in the next 12 months, up from 30% in March.
Canada’s next prime minister is set to inherit a half-year of flat economic growth, economists predict, an immediate test of their governance as President Donald Trump’s trade war grinds business investment and exports lower.
Asia
China’s stronger-than-expected growth in the first quarter masks a key vulnerability: a growing dependence on foreign demand, which increases the threat of a sharper economic hit as trade tensions soar. The strong contribution from trade also shows how fragile the domestic economy remains as it faces pressure from deflation, sluggish consumer demand and a prolonged property slump.
Service prices among businesses in Japan stayed elevated last month, indicating sustained inflationary pressures before the impact from US tariffs kicks in, as the Bank of Japan prepares to set policy next week.
South Korea’s preliminary April trade data gave an early glimpse of how US policies could dent shipments of export-reliant economies. It showed outbound shipments to the US and China were down 14.3% and 3.4%, respectively, while exports to the European Union and Taiwan were up.
Europe
Germany will probably fail to generate even minimal economic growth this year, according to revised government forecasts, a reminder of the scale of the challenge facing conservative Chancellor-in-waiting Friedrich Merz when he takes office next month. Gross domestic product will likely stagnate after shrinking the previous two years. Government economists previously expected expansion of 0.3% this year.
European car sales returned to growth last month for the first time since December, with gains in the UK and robust demand for electric vehicles making up for weaker sales in Germany and France. Demand in Italy and Spain was also strong.
Emerging markets
Kenya’s economy is set to surpass Ethiopia’s to become East Africa’s largest this year, the International Monetary Fund said, after the birr was devalued. The fund estimates Kenya’s gross domestic product will be $132 billion in 2025, higher than Ethiopia’s $117 billion.
Brazil’s annual inflation accelerated to the highest level since mid-February 2023 in a report coming days after central bank directors assured investors that tight monetary policy is working.
World
The International Monetary Fund sharply lowered its forecasts for world growth this year and next, warning the outlook could deteriorate further as US President Donald Trump’s tariffs spark a global trade war. The IMF cut its projection for global output growth this year to 2.8%, which would be the slowest expansion of gross domestic product since 2020. It would also be the second-worst figure since 2009.
California Governor Gavin Newsom boasted that his state has become the world’s fourth-largest economy, following only the US, China and Germany in global rankings. The state’s nominal gross domestic product reached $4.1 trillion last year, edging past Japan’s $4.02 trillion, Newsom said in a statement, citing newly released IMF country-level data and preliminary state data from the US Bureau of Economic Analysis.
Central banks in Indonesia, Paraguay, Russia and Uzbekistan all kept interest rates unchanged this week.
Billionaire hedge fund manager Bill Ackman said China will need to strike a trade deal with the US quickly as it can’t win a drawn-out trade war that will do severe damage to its economy.
In a post on X, Ackman said Beijing “should be highly incentivized to make a trade deal as quickly as possible” because the longer high tariffs persist, the greater the likelihood that companies will lose faith in China as a market in which they can source or produce goods on economically viable terms. If a deal is not struck soon, “every company that has a supply chain based in China relocates it to India, Vietnam, Mexico, the U.S. or some other country,” he said.
“If instead China stubbornly decides to hold out and not negotiate due to pride or other emotional issues, China will suffer that much more severe and permanent economic consequences,” Ackman said. “Time is the friend of the US and the enemy of China’s in this negotiation.”
The hedge fund manager’s assessment flies in the face of those who say China will be able to withstand President Donald Trump’s trade war and the general tone of defiance that has marked Beijing’s position. President Xi Jinping has rebuffed Trump’s efforts to get him on the phone, and China has said the US must show respect and rein in disparaging remarks before talks between the two countries can commence.
Trump has hit China with tariffs of 145% on most goods since taking office, prompting Beijing to retaliate and threatening to wipe out most of the trade between the world’s biggest economies. Still, Bloomberg News reported on Friday that the Chinese government is considering suspending its 125% tariff on some US imports as the economic costs of the trade war weigh on certain industries.
Given the economic harm posed by the tariffs, both China and the US have good reasons to take the levies down “to a more sensible level” of 10% to 20% as quickly as possible, said Ackman. The only thing stopping the reduction in tariffs “is the fear on the part of both countries’ leadership of looking weak,” he said.
“Both countries know that the 145% tariffs have to come down now,” Ackman said. “They are just trying to manage the diplomacy in such a manner to make clear that it is a mutual decision as opposed to one country ‘going first’.”
Ackman, a long-time donor to Democrats, has in recent years become a supporter of Trump, backing him on issues ranging from foreign policy to combating antisemitism.
Bill Ackman speaks at The 2024 Pershing Square Foundation Prize Dinner at the Park Avenue Armory at the Park Avenue Armory on June 17, 2024 in New York City.
Mark Carney said he expects US President Donald Trump will try to extract “major concessions” from Canada in negotiations, and that he takes seriously the president’s stated desire to turn the country into a US state.
“Take what the president says literally. I take it literally. I always have,” the Canadian prime minister told reporters on the final weekend before national elections.
“Right from the start, I took it seriously. And because of that, that drives our actions, that drives the strength of our response to their tariffs.” Canada has retaliated against US tariffs with its own import taxes on tens of billions of dollars of American-made goods.
Trump said in an interview published by Time this week that he’s “really not trolling” when he talks about turning Canada into the 51st US state. He repeated, without evidence, his claim that the US spends hundreds of billions of dollars a year to “take care of Canada.” A large majority of Canadians are opposed to the idea of joining the US.
Canada’s economy is vulnerable to Trump’s trade protectionism, however: About three-quarters of its exports go to the US, including almost all its oil and gas exports.
Carney, 60, is campaigning in the battleground province of Ontario on the last weekend of the campaign. Canadians vote on Monday, and most opinion surveys show Carney’s Liberal Party with a narrow lead over the Conservative Party, led by Pierre Poilievre.
The latest poll from Leger Marketing has the Liberals around 43% and the Conservatives at 39%, with Carney holding about a 10-point advantage on the question of who would make the best prime minister. Leger found the Liberals are far ahead in Quebec but have a smaller lead in Ontario; the two provinces control the majority of the seats in the country’s House of Commons. Conservatives are the dominant political party in much of western Canada.
Carney has based his campaign on the theme that Canada has no choice but to forge stronger alliances with the rest of the world while renegotiating its relationship with the US.
“America wants our land, our resources, our water, our country. President Trump is trying to break us so that America can own us,” he told supporters on Saturday, repeating a line he has said frequently.
Trump has made a number of complaints about trade — saying Canada makes it too hard for the US to do business in sectors including banking and dairy. The president also doesn’t like it that Canadian factories export more than 1 million cars and trucks a year to the US.
Asked later by a reporter whether he believes Trump would try to use military force against Canada to accomplish his goals, Carney said no.
Carney and Trump have spoken by phone but not met in person since the former central banker took over from Justin Trudeau last month.
Ye, the rapper formerly known as Kanye West, created his own Twitch account early Friday. "Yeezy_Stream" was taken down just seven minutes after going live after the rapper almost immediately launched into a tirade against Jewish and LGBTQ+ people.
Despite regularly appearing in streams with, and alongside, famous Twitch streamers like Kai Cenat, Adin Ross, and Amouranth, it looks like Ye's own Twitch career will be short-lived. After creating his own Twitch account on Friday, the rapper formerly known as Kanye West got banned by the platform for sharing hateful rhetoric.
According to The Daily Beast, Ye almost immediately launched into a tirade about Jewish people and the LGBTQ+ community during his inaugural Twitch stream, using slurs and throwing up a Nazi salute while saying “Heil Hitler.”
Ye also notably claimed Elon Musk gave him “free passes” to post his unfiltered thoughts, including a series of disparaging posts about his ex-wife Kim Kardashian, on X.
In just about seven minutes, Ye’s stream was replaced by a message from Twitch that said, “This channel is temporarily unavailable due to a violation of Twitch’s Community Guidelines or Terms of Service.”
According to Dexterto, Ye accumulated about 3,000 followers and over 1,000 viewers during his minutes-long stream.
Twitch did not immediately respond to Fortune's request for comment.
It's unclear how long the ban will last, but Ye has a history of getting banned from social networks for his speech and rhetoric. Ye, who is worth roughly $2.7 billion as of 2025 thanks to his long successful career in music, was banned from Twitter (now X) in October 2022 for saying he would go "death con 3 on Jewish people." He was also suspended just two months later for tweeting an image that combined the Star of David with a swastika. In a recent sitdown with DJ Akademiks this month, Ye showed up to the interview wearing an all-black KKK-inspired hood and outfit.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy hailed the potential for “reliable and lasting peace” after speaking with US President Donald Trump at the Vatican.
“We discussed a lot one on one. Hoping for results on everything we covered,” Zelenskiy said on X. “Very symbolic meeting that has potential to become historic, if we achieve joint results.”
The 15-minute meeting took place just before the funeral for Pope Francis as Trump presses for a peace deal between Ukraine and Russia to end the longest European conflict since World War II. The White House said Trump and Zelenskiy had a “productive discussion.”
Good meeting. We discussed a lot one on one. Hoping for results on everything we covered. Protecting lives of our people. Full and unconditional ceasefire. Reliable and lasting peace that will prevent another war from breaking out. Very symbolic meeting that has potential to… pic.twitter.com/q4ZhVXCjw0— Volodymyr Zelenskyy / Володимир Зеленський (@ZelenskyyUa) April 26, 2025
A spokesman for Ukraine’s presidential office said a possible second round of talks floated earlier didn’t happen. The schedules of the two men were too tight, said Zelenskiy spokesman Serhiy Nykyforov. Trump headed back to the US on Saturday shortly after the papal funeral.
Trump has been dialing up pressure for a peace deal that critics fear may favor Russia in his bid to reach an accord by April 30, the 100-day mark of his second term in the White House.
Saturday’s meeting with Zelenskiy was the first since contentious talks in the Oval Office in late February.
Zelenskiy also met in Rome with French President Emmanuel Macron and plans to meet with European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, Ukraine’s foreign minister said.
Pope Francis’s funeral was attended by dozens of international delegations, many of whom were hopeful of getting access to the US leader, who made his first overseas trip since taking office in January.
Zelenskiy’s trip to the Vatican followed a massive Russian attack on the Ukrainian capital Kyiv and eastern city of Kharkiv, killing at least 12 people. Thursday’s attack, Russia’s largest airstrike on Ukraine this year, prompted the Ukrainian leader to return early from a visit to South Africa.
Trump’s special envoy, Steve Witkoff, met with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow on Friday for the fourth time since the inauguration. On the same day, Zelenskiy appeared to make an overture to Trump when he acknowledged that Ukrainian forces would be unable to regain control over Crimea, saying the US won’t have to commit troops as part of security guarantees but could instead provide intelligence and anti-air capabilities.
In a social media post Saturday, Trump said “there was no reason for Putin to be shooting missiles into civilian areas” in recent days, and suggested further sanctions might result.
“It makes me think that maybe he doesn’t want to stop the war, he’s just tapping me along, and has to be dealt with differently, through ‘Banking’ or ‘Secondary Sanctions’?”
Washington’s proposals include the recognition of Russia’s 2014 annexation of Crimea and freezing the conflict largely along existing battle lines, leaving Putin in control of large parts of eastern and southern Ukraine, Bloomberg News has reported. Ukraine would also have to abandon its goal of joining the North Atlantic Treaty Organization.
Trump said Thursday that he’s “using a lot of pressure on both” sides in the war. He said he thinks Putin “wants to make a deal. We’re going to find out very soon.” Asked what concessions Russia has offered, Trump said, “Stopping the war, stopping taking the whole country — pretty big concession.”
Moscow failed to seize Ukraine’s capital and topple its government when it launched its full-scale invasion in February 2022 — in what was conceived as a potential weeks-long “special military operation” — because of strong resistance from Kyiv.
While the Russian army now controls about 20% of Ukrainian territory, including Crimea, it hasn’t significantly advanced during the last two years. Kremlin forces seized less than 1% of Ukrainian land in 2024 despite huge losses in personnel and equipment during a grinding ground campaign in Ukraine’s east.
Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky (R) meets with French President Emmanuel Macron (L), British Prime Minister Keir Starmer (2nd L) and U.S. President Donald Trump (2nd R) during Pope Francis's funeral at St. Peter's Basilica at the Vatican, on April 26, 2025 in Vatican City, Vatican.
The Vatican had a strict dress code for Pope Francis' funeral Sunday. President Donald Trump did not get the memo. Several other world leaders, including former President Biden and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, also deviated from the norm.
Some of the most powerful people in the world descended on Vatican City early Sunday to attend the funeral of Pope Francis, who died Monday at the age of 88. The Vatican, as it typically does, had a strict dress code for attendees. For men, it dictated dark suits with white shirts and long black ties. Shoes, long socks, coats, and umbrellas were also asked to be black to mark the occasion.
President Donald Trump, however, wore an all-blue suit with an American flag pin on his lapel. He sat in the front row during the event.
VATICAN - 2025/04/26: Heads of State and Government attend Pope Francis' funeral ceremony at St. Peter's Square. Over 160 official delegations participated in the funeral ceremony of Bergoglio. (Photo by Vincenzo Nuzzolese/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)
For what it's worth, Trump wasn't alone in deviating from The Vatican's dress code. Former President Joe Biden, a devout Catholic, wore a blue tie. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky did wear all black, but didn't don a tie at all.
Women were similarly asked to wear long black dresses, black closed-toe shoes, gloves, and a veil. First Lady Melania Trump wore a pair of black pumps.
US President Donald Trump and US First Lady Melania Trump attend the funeral of Pope Francis in St. Peter's Square on April 26, 2025 in Vatican City, Vatican. Pope Francis died on April 21st at the age of 88.
Bob Bakish, who was ousted as CEO of Paramount in last April, received $69.3 million as part of his severance compensation. The package was revealed in a Paramount filing disclosed by the SEC on Friday.
Bob Bakish, the chief executive who was ousted by Paramount in April 2024 in the midst of contentious takeover battle, was reportedly given $69.3 million in severance, new SEC filings show.
According to the agreement—signed April 29, 2024 but filed in an 8-K with the SEC on April 25—Bakish received $6.2 million in salary continuation, $24.8 million in bonus continuation, $10.36 million as a pro-rata bonus for 2024, $88,160 in insurance continuation, $25,000 in outplacement assistance, and $27.81 million in acceleration/continuation of equity awards.
His compensation for 2024 totaled $86.96 million. The year prior, he received $31.3 million.
Bakish climbed the ranks at Viacom starting in 1997, moving up from VP of planning and development to executive VP of operations in 2004 before eventually becoming CEO of the company in 2016. He continued on in his chief executive role even after Viacom merged with CBS to form ViacomCBS, now Paramount Global, in December 2019.
Bakish reportedly had a major falling out with Shari Redstone, chair of Paramount and CEO of the theater chain National Amusements. Shari, of course, is also the daughter of Sumner Redstone, the founder and chairman of Viacom and the chairman of CBS Corporation who died in 2020, just one year after CBS and Viacom merged. According to The Wall Street Journal, Bakish reportedly went behind Shari Redstone's back in floating a potential streaming deal with Comcast in early 2024, which Redstone had previously been against. The two had also reportedly fought over Bakish's handling of the sale of Paramount's Showtime division; Bakish had balked at several offers, including one of which that was close to $6 billion.
After Bakish left the company, Paramount created a three-person "Office of the CEO." George Cheeks was named president and CEO of CBS; Chris McCarthy became president and CEO of Showtime/MTV Entertainment Studios and Paramount Media Networks; and Brian Robbins was named president and CEO of Paramount Pictures and Nickelodeon.
If you’ve ever been to Europe, you might have returned raving about the food—French bread, Italian pasta, Portuguese seafood, Spanish tomatoes. But while the cuisine in European countries is famously tasty, increasingly people have taken to social media to claim the food also boasts superior quality.
“Can we just talk about how not once when we were in London and Paris did either of us feel like s--t after eating, feel bloated, or just feel flat-out disgusting?” one TikTok user posted last year.
Others have posted on social media about how they effortlessly lost weight and felt physically better while vacationing or living in European countries. Based on those experiences, people have concluded that European food is simply better.
Health secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has long railed against aspects of the U.S. food system, calling ubiquitous ultra-processed foods “poison” that drive chronic disease rates among Americans.
Does Europe really have healthier, higher-quality food than the U.S.? Here’s what experts say.
Does Europe have better quality food?
“You can get food that’s just as good in the U.S., but on average, it’s easier to get good food [in Europe],” says Harry Klee, professor emeritus of the University of Florida Horticultural Sciences Department.
When it comes to fresh produce, Europe’s agricultural practices are actually no different from those in the U.S., according to Klee. Fruits and vegetables are largely produced on a global scale, Klee says, rather than locally except for when certain foods are in season.
For example, “I would argue their tomatoes are no better than ours,” Klee tells Fortune. “They’re the same genetic material, they’re grown the same way. They’re grown in Dutch hot houses, ours are grown in Canadian hot houses—and they’re the exact same varieties. It’s exactly the same tomato, produced in exactly the same way.”
Food scientist Abbey Thiel agrees that Europe doesn’t have superior food quality to the U.S. In fact, the U.S. was ranked third for food quality and safety in the 2022 Global Food Security Index, behind Canada and Denmark.
Meat and poultry, however, is much better quality in Europe, Klee adds, because they have more varieties to choose from, and consumers are more aware of where the meat comes from because they are labeled with their origins.
How cultural differences impact perception
Both Klee and Thiel point out that Europeans’ grocery shopping habits are a lot different from Americans’.
“[Europeans are] shopping regularly, almost every day, so things are by nature fresher,” Klee says.
Thiel, who lived in the Netherlands, says that it was normal to shop nearly every day for fresh groceries—meanwhile in the U.S., it’s much more common to shop for groceries on a weekly, or sometimes monthly, basis. Because that’s what consumers want, she explains, bread that lasts weeks on end is more prevalent in the U.S., for example, over fresh European bread that will get moldy in a matter of days.
Shopping more frequently leads to greater turnover in European stores, Klee explains, meaning that there will be fresher ingredients more readily available as food gets bought up.
Fresher food may influence taste, but does it affect weight?
“I lost 15 pounds without trying when I moved to France,” one TikTokker said in a video. “I was not trying to lose weight—I even exercised a lot less when I lived in France.”
She went on to explain that while she was regularly eating baguettes, cheese, and butter, she attributed her weight loss to the smaller portion sizes in France, and the fact that meals included fruits and vegetables, or a small salad to start—which upped her fiber intake, helping to keep her fuller for longer and support overall health—and that desserts were often fruit, yogurt, and tea.
Thiel says changes like these can be attributed to cultural differences. “I think there are some lifestyle aspects that have nothing to do with the quality and safety of the food,” she tells Fortune.
Thiel notes that in Europe, more people walk and bike, keeping residents more active than the car-centric Americans. Home-cooked meals focused on socialization and family time are also central to European culture, while Americans on average eat out at least three times per month and order takeout or delivery four to five times per month.
Eating what’s in-season
Seasonality can also impact how Americans experience food in Europe, he adds—as many American tourists visit Europe in the summer, when foods like peaches and tomatoes are at their peak, perception of the food quality will be based on eating foods when they taste the best.
Europeans, Klee argues, are more informed about what’s in season and are more likely to buy in-season produce over Americans, who may be used to buying strawberries or tomatoes year-round.
Klee also believes that Europeans are willing to pay higher prices for better quality food than Americans. Even though foods are available out of season across Europe, it’s not as common that Europeans will cook with those foods because they know the quality will suffer.
Eating seasonally could have big health perks as well. The American Heart Association explains, that you are eating foods at their peak nutritional quality. Shifting your diet seasonally will also make you more likely to eat a greater diversity of foods—which is shown to boost gut health—as you eat a spectrum of fruits and vegetables throughout the year.
How to find high quality food in the U.S.
Klee argues there’s no reason we can’t have tasty, quality food in the U.S.—we just have to know where to look. Here are some of Klee’s top tips for eating food at its best:
Think seasonally: Inform yourself about when foods are in-season—and which have been shipped from far away. “If you see a peach that’s been shipped from Chile, you know it’s not going to be very fresh,” Klee says.
Be willing to pay a little extra for better quality meats, poultry, and produce.
If you want to buy fruits and vegetables out of season, opt for frozen. Fruits and veggies are typically frozen when they are at their freshest, ripest stage, which helps to preserve the quality—the texture may suffer a bit, but they’re your best option, Klee says.
VATICAN CITY (AP) — World leaders and Catholic faithful bade farewell to Pope Francis in a funeral Saturday that highlighted his concern for people on the “most peripheral of the peripheries” and reflected his wishes to be remembered as a simple pastor. Though presidents and princes attended the Mass in St. Peter’s Square, prisoners and migrants welcomed Francis' coffin at his final resting place in a basilica across town.
According to Vatican estimates, some 250,000 people flocked to the funeral Mass at the Vatican and 150,000 more lined the motorcade route through downtown Rome to witness the first funeral procession for a pope in a century. They clapped and cheered “Papa Francesco” as his simple wooden coffin travelled aboard a modified popemobile to St. Mary Major Basilica, some 6 kilometers (3.5-miles) away.
As bells tolled, the pallbearers brought the coffin past several dozen migrants, prisoners and homeless people holding white roses outside the basilica. Once inside, the pallbearers stopped in front of the icon of the Virgin Mary that the church is famous for and that Francis deeply revered. Four children deposited the roses at the foot of the altar before the burial ceremony began.
“I’m so sorry that we’ve lost him,” said Mohammed Abdallah, a 35-year-old migrant from Sudan who was one of the people who welcomed Francis to his final resting place. “Francis helped so many people, refugees like us, and many other people in the world.”
Earlier, Cardinal Giovanni Battista Re eulogized Francis during the Vatican Mass as a pope of the people, a pastor who knew how to communicate to the “least among us” with an informal, spontaneous style.
“He was a pope among the people, with an open heart towards everyone,” the 91-year-old dean of the College of Cardinals said in a highly personal sermon. He drew applause from the crowd when he recounted Francis’ constant concern for migrants, exemplified by celebrating Mass at the U.S.-Mexico border and travelling to a refugee camp in Lesbos, Greece, and bringing 12 migrants home with him.
“The guiding thread of his mission was also the conviction that the church is a home for all, a home with its doors always open,” Re said, noting that with his travels, the Argentine pontiff reached “the most peripheral of the peripheries of the world.”
An extraordinary meeting about Ukraine on the sidelines
Despite Francis’ focus on the powerless, the powerful were out in force at his funeral. U.S. President Donald Trump and former President Joe Biden, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres and British Prime Minister Keir Starmer joined Prince William and continental European royals leading more than 160 official delegations. Argentine President Javier Milei had pride of place given Francis’ nationality, even if the two didn’t particularly get along and the pope alienated many in his homeland by never returning there.
In an extraordinary development, Trump and Zelenskyy met privately on the sidelines of the funeral. A photo showed the two men sitting alone, facing one another and hunched over on chairs in St. Peter’s Basilica, where Francis often preached the need for a peaceful end to Russia’s war in Ukraine.
Tens of thousands flocked before dawn to the Vatican
Francis choreographed the funeral himself when he revised and simplified the Vatican’s rites and rituals last year. His aim was to emphasize the pope’s role as a mere pastor and not “a powerful man of this world.”
It was a reflection of Francis’ 12-year project to radically reform the papacy, to stress priests as servants and to construct “a poor church for the poor.” He articulated the mission just days after his 2013 election and it explained the name he chose as pope, honoring St. Francis of Assisi “who had the heart of the poor of the world,” according to the official decree of the pope's life that was placed in his coffin before it was sealed Friday night.
The white facade of St. Peter's glowed pink as the sun rose Saturday and throngs of mourners rushed into the square to get a spot for the Mass. Giant television screens were set up along the surrounding streets for those who couldn't get close.
Police helicopters whirled overhead, part of the massive security operation Italian authorities mounted, including more than 2,500 police, 1,500 soldiers and a torpedo ship off the coast, Italian media reported.
Many mourners had planned to be in Rome anyway this weekend for the now-postponed Holy Year canonization of the first millennial saint, Carlo Acutis. Groups of scouts and youth church groups nearly outnumbered the gaggles of nuns and seminarians.
“He was a very charismatic pope, very human, very kind, above all very human," said Miguel Vaca, a pilgrim from Peru who said he had camped out all night near the piazza. "It’s very emotional to say goodbye to him.”
A special relationship with the basilica
Francis, the first Latin American and first Jesuit pope, died Easter Monday at age 88 after suffering a stroke while recovering from pneumonia.
Even before he became pope, Francis had a particular affection for St. Mary Major, home to a Byzantine-style icon of the Madonna, the Salus Populi Romani. He would pray before the icon before and after each of his foreign trips as pope.
The popemobile that brought his coffin there was made for one of those trips: Francis' 2015 visit to the Philippines, and was modified to be able to carry a coffin.
The choice of the basilica was also symbolically significant given its ties to Francis’ Jesuit religious order. St. Ignatius Loyola, who founded the Jesuits, celebrated his first Mass in the basilica on Christmas Day in 1538.
The basilica is the resting place of seven other popes, but this is the first papal burial outside the Vatican since Pope Leo XIII, who died in 1903 and was entombed in another Roman basilica in 1924.
Following the funeral, preparations can begin in earnest to launch the centuries-old process of electing a new pope, a conclave that will likely begin in the first week of May. In the interim, the Vatican is being run by a handful of cardinals, key among them Re, who is organizing the secret voting in the Sistine Chapel.
Crowds waited hours to bid farewell to Francis
Over three days this week, more than 250,000 people stood for hours in line to pay their final respects while Francis’ body lay in state in St. Peter’s Basilica. The Vatican kept the basilica open through the night to accommodate them, but it wasn’t enough. When the doors closed to the general public at 7 p.m. on Friday, mourners were turned away in droves.
By dawn Saturday, they were back, some recalling the words he uttered the very first night of his election and throughout his papacy.
“We are here to honor him because he always said ‘don’t forget to pray for me,’” said Nigerian Sister Christiana Neenwata. “So we are also here to give to him this love that he gave to us.”
In this handout photo released via the official social media channels of the Office of the President of Ukraine, Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky (R) meets with U.S. President Donald Trump (L) during Pope Francis's funeral at St. Peter's Basilica at the Vatican, on April 26, 2025 in Vatican City, Vatican. Pope Francis died on April 21st, aged 88.
MUSCAT, Oman (AP) — Iran and the United States held in-depth negotiations in Oman over Tehran's rapidly advancing nuclear program on Saturday, talks that likely will hinge on the Islamic Republic's enrichment of uranium.
Iranian state television reported the talks had begun in Muscat, the mountain-wrapped capital of this sultanate on the eastern edge of the Arabian Peninsula. A person close to U.S. Mideast envoy Steve Witkoff, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss the closed-door talks, also acknowledged the meeting had started.
Araghchi arrived Friday in Oman and met with Omani Foreign Minister Badr al-Busaidi, who has mediated the two previous round of talks in Muscat and Rome. Araghchi then visited the Muscat International Book Fair, surrounded by television cameras and photojournalists. Video late Saturday morning showed Araghchi heading to the talks.
Witkoff was in Moscow on Friday meeting Russian President Vladimir Putin. He arrived Saturday to Oman, where the talks were expected to start in the coming hours, a source familiar with Witkoff's travels told The Associated Press, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss the closed-door negotiations.
Meanwhile Saturday, a massive explosion rocked a port in southern Iran just after the talks began, injuring at least 516 people. Authorities offered no immediate cause for the blast, which appeared to have been caused by a highly combustible material — though officials ruled out its oil and gas industry.
Nuclear talks come after decades of tensions
The talks seek to limit Iran’s nuclear program in exchange for the lifting of some of the crushing economic sanctions the U.S. has imposed on the Islamic Republic closing in on half a century of enmity.
Iran's 2015 nuclear deal with world powers did limit Tehran's program. However, Trump unilaterally withdrew from it in 2018, setting in motion years of attacks and tensions. The wider Middle East also remains on edge over the devastating Israel-Hamas war in the Gaza Strip.
Trump, traveling to Rome for the funeral of Pope Francis, again said he hoped negotiations would lead to a new nuclear deal. However, he still held out the possibility of a military strike if they didn't.
“The Iran situation is coming out very well,” Trump said on Air Force One. “We've had a lot of talks with them and I think we're going to have a deal. I'd much rather have a deal than the other alternative. That would be good for humanity."
He added: “There are some people that want to make a different kind of a deal — a much nastier deal — and I don’t want that to happen to Iran if we can avoid it.”
Talks turn to experts
While Araghchi and Witkoff are again expected to speak through the Omanis, experts on both sides also will begin negotiating details of a possible deal.
From the Iranian side, Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister Majid Takht-e Ravanchi will lead Tehran’s expert team, said Mohammad Golzari, an Iranian government official. Takht-e Ravanchi took part in the 2015 nuclear talks.
The U.S. technical team, which is expected to arrive in Oman on Friday, will be led by Michael Anton, the director of U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio’s policy planning staff. Anton does not have the nuclear policy experience of those who led America’s efforts in the 2015 talks.
Iran has insisted that keeping its enrichment is key. But Witkoff has muddied the issue by first suggesting in a television interview that Iran could enrich uranium at 3.67%, then later saying that all enrichment must stop. That demand all enrichment stop also has been repeated by U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio.
However, Iranians remain hopeful the talks could be successful, as the Iranian rial has rebounded from historic lows during which it took over 1 million rial to buy $1.
“It’s OK to negotiate, to make the nuclear program smaller or bigger, and reach a deal,” Tehran resident Farzin Keivan said. “Of course we shouldn’t give them everything. After all, we’ve suffered a lot for this program.”
In this photo released by Iranian Foreign Ministry, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, left, speaks with an unidentified Omani official upon his arrival at Muscat, Oman, Friday, April 25, 2025, a day prior to negotiations with U.S. Mideast envoy Steve Witkoff.
WASHINGTON (AP) — Many Americans do not agree with President Trump’s aggressive efforts to quickly enact his agenda, a new poll finds, and even Republicans are not overwhelmingly convinced that his attention has been in the right place.
Further, about 4 in 10 Americans say Trump has been a “terrible” president in his second term, and about 1 in 10 say he has been “poor.” In contrast, about 3 in 10 say he has been “great or ”good,” while just under 2 in 10 say he has been “average.”
Most haven’t been shocked by the drama of Trump’s first 100 days. About 7 in 10 U.S. adults say the first few months of Trump’s second term have been mostly what they expected, and only about 3 in 10 say the Republican president’s actions have been mostly unexpected.
But that does not mean they are pleased with how those opening months have gone.
In fact, Democrats seem even unhappier with the reality of the second Trump term than before he was sworn in on Jan. 20. About three-quarters of Democrats say Trump is focused on the wrong topics and about 7 in 10 think he has been a “terrible” president so far. That is an increase from January, when about 6 in 10 anticipated that he would be “terrible.”
Rahsaan Henderson, a Democrat from California, said “it has been one of the longest 100 days I’ve ever had to sit through.”
“I think the next four years will be a test of seeing who can resist the most and continue defying whatever he’s trying to do, since he defies everything, including the Supreme Court,” said Henderson, 40.
Republicans are largely standing behind the president, but are ambivalent about what he has chosen to emphasize. About 7 in 10 say he has been at least a “good” president. But only about half say he has mostly had the right priorities so far, while about one-quarter say it has been about an even mix and about 1 in 10 said Trump has mostly had the wrong priorities.
“He’s really doing the stuff that he said he was going to do,” said Tanner Bergstrom, 29, a Republican from Minnesota. He is “not making a bunch of promises and getting into office and nothing happens. ... I really like that. Even if it’s some stuff I don’t agree with, it’s still doing what he said he was going to do.”
Those who were surprised by Trump’s first few months seem to have had a rude awakening. The people who say Trump’s actions were not what they expected — who are mostly Democrats and independents — are more likely to say Trump has had mostly the wrong priorities and that he has been a poor or terrible president, compared with the people who mostly expected his actions.
About 4 in 10 in the survey approve of how Trump is handling the presidency overall. The issue of immigration is a relative strength. According to the poll, 46% of U.S. adults approve of his handling of the issue, which is slightly higher than his overall approval. But there are also indications that foreign policy, trade negotiationsand the economy could prove problematic as he aims to prove his approach will benefit the country.
Trump’s approval on those issues is much lower than it is on immigration. Only about 4 in 10 U.S. adults approve of how he is handling each. Republicans are less likely to approve of Trump’s approach to trade and the economy than immigration.
There are additional signals that some Trump supporters may not be thrilled with his performance so far. The share of Republicans who say he has been at least a “good” president has fallen about 10 percentage points since January. They also have grown a bit more likely to say Trump will be either “poor” or “terrible,” although only 16% describe his first few months that way.
Republican Stephanie Melnyk, 45, from Tennessee, is supportive of Trump’s handling of the presidency more broadly but said she did not approve of his handling of foreign affairs, particularly on the war in Ukraine. Melnyk’s family emigrated from Ukraine and she said Trump is “trying for a quick fix that’s not going to last” and that Russian President Vladimir Putin “is not to be trusted.”
Melnyk, who voted for Trump largely for his positions on immigration, said she wished the president would stay on script.
“He sounds like he can be very condescending, and it sounds like my way or the highway,” Melnyk said. “It’s like, dude. You’re not 12.”
It’s common, though, for a president’s standing to be at its best before taking office and beginning the work of governing. And Trump continues to hold high approval from Republicans.
About 4 in 10 Americans have a favorable opinion of Trump, roughly in line with his approval number. Among Republicans, the figure is about double: About 8 in 10 Republicans have a positive view of the president, and about the same share approves of how he is handling the presidency. About one-third of U.S. adults have a favorable opinion of Vice President JD Vance, including about 7 in 10 Republicans.
Those Republicans interviewed were particularly fond of efforts to scale back the size of the federal government led by billionaire outside adviser Elon Musk and Trump’s cost-cutting initiative, the Department of Government Efficiency, known as DOGE.
“Overall, I would have to say that I’m happy with the Trump presidency,” said Matthew Spencer, 30, a Republican from Texas. “I think that the Department of Government Efficiency has made great strides in reducing our spending, and I also agree with putting America first. I agree with the policies he’s put in as far as border protection and America standing for itself again as far as the tariffs.”
“We’re only three months in, but so far, so good,” said Carlos Guevara, 46, who lives in Florida. Guevara, a Republican, said DOGE has been a “smash hit” and on tariffs, and while there may be short-term pain, “if that does encourage businesses to start manufacturing here ... then that’ll wash out over time.”
Democrats have a much bleaker outlook on the economy than they held before Trump took office. The poll also found that the vast majority of Democrats think he has “gone too far” on deportations and tariffs.
Gabriel Antonucci, 26, a Democrat who recently moved to South Carolina, said Trump’s second term is “just a lot more ridiculous” than he had anticipated.
“It really seems like he is doing everything he can to make the wrong decisions,” Antonucci said. “Things are probably going to be worse in four years than they are right now.”
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The AP-NORC poll of 1,260 adults was conducted April 17-21, using a sample drawn from NORC’s probability-based AmeriSpeak Panel, which is designed to be representative of the U.S. population. The margin of sampling error for adults overall is plus or minus 3.9 percentage points.
President Donald Trump speaks with reporters as he and first lady Melania Trump depart on Marine One from the South Lawn of the White House, Friday, April 25, 2025, in Washington.
Virginia Giuffre, who accused Britain's Prince Andrew and other influential men of sexually exploiting her as a teenager trafficked by financier Jeffrey Epstein, has died. She was 41.
Giuffre died by suicide Friday at her farm in Western Australia, her publicist confirmed.
“Virginia was a fierce warrior in the fight against sexual abuse and sex trafficking. She was the light that lifted so many survivors,” her family said in a statement. “Despite all the adversity she faced in her life, she shone so bright. She will be missed beyond measure.”
Her publicist Dini von Mueffling described Giuffre as “deeply loving, wise and funny."
“She adored her children and many animals. She was always more concerned with me than with herself," von Mueffling wrote in a statement. "I will miss her beyond words. It was the privilege of a lifetime to represent her.”
EDITOR'S NOTE: This story includes discussion of suicide. If you or someone you know needs help, the national suicide and crisis lifeline in Australia is available by calling 13 11 14. In the U.S., it is available by calling or texting 988. There is also an online chat at 988lifeline.org
The American-born Giuffre, who lived in Australia for years, became an advocate for sex trafficking survivors after emerging as a central figure in Epstein's prolonged downfall.
The wealthy, well-connected New York money manager killed himself in August 2019 while awaiting trial on U.S. federal sex trafficking charges involving dozens of teenage girls and young women, some as young as 14. The charges came 14 years after police in Palm Beach, Florida, first began investigating allegations that he sexually abused underage girls who were hired to give him massages.
Giuffre came forward publicly after the initial investigation ended in an 18-month Florida jail term for Epstein, who made a secret deal to avoid federal prosecution by pleading guilty instead to relatively minor state-level charges of soliciting prostitution. He was released in 2009.
In subsequent lawsuits, Giuffre said she was a teenage spa attendant at Mar-a-Lago — President Donald Trump's Palm Beach club — when she was approached in 2000 by Epstein's girlfriend and later employee, Ghislaine Maxwell.
Giuffre said Maxwell hired her as a masseuse for Epstein, but the couple effectively made her a sexual servant, pressuring her into gratifying not only Epstein but his friends and associates. Giuffre said she was flown around the world for assignations with men including Prince Andrew while she was 17 and 18.
The men denied it and assailed Giuffre's credibility. She acknowledged changing some key details of her account, including the age at which she first met Epstein.
But many parts of her story were supported by documents, witness testimony and photos — including one of her and Andrew, with his his arm around her bare midriff, in Maxwell’s London townhouse.
Giuffre said in one of her lawsuits that she had sex with the royal three times: in London during her 2001 trip, at Epstein’s New York mansion when she was 17 and in the Virgin Islands when she was 18.
“Ghislaine said, ‘I want you to do for him what you do for Epstein,’” Giuffre told NBC News’ “Dateline” in September 2019.
Andrew categorically rejected Giuffre’s allegations and said he didn't recall having met her.
His denials blew up in his face during a November 2019 BBC interview. Viewers saw a prince who proffered curious rebuttals — such as disputing Giuffre's recollection of sweaty dancing by saying he was medically incapable of perspiring — and showed no empathy for the women who said Epstein abused them.
Within days of the interview, Andrew stepped down from his royal duties. He settled with Giuffre in 2022 for an undisclosed sum, agreeing to make a “substantial donation” to her survivors' organization. A statement filed in court said that the prince acknowledged Epstein was a sex trafficker and Giuffre “an established victim of abuse.”
She also filed, and in at least some cases settled, lawsuits against Epstein and others connected to him. In one case, she dropped her claims against a prominent U.S. attorney, saying she might have erred in identifying him as one of the men to whom Epstein supplied her.
Maxwell was convicted in 2021 on federal sex trafficking and conspiracy charges and was sentenced to 20 years in prison. She said she wasn’t to blame for Epstein’s abuse.
Giuffre, born Virginia Roberts, told interviewers that her childhood was shattered when she was sexually abused as a grade-schooler by a man her family knew. She later ran away from home and endured more abuse, she said.
She said she met her now-husband in 2002 while taking massage training in Thailand at Epstein's behest. She married, moved to Australia and had a family.
Giuffre founded an advocacy charity, SOAR, in 2015.
Giuffre separated from her husband and children this year. She had been charged with breaching a family violence restraining order over an incident in February, and was set to apepar in court in June in the city of Perth, where her estranged husband and children live.
She had yet to enter a plea to the charge. A conviction would have carried a potential maximum sentence of two years in prison.
Giuffre was hospitalized after a serious accident, her publicist said last month. She didn’t answer questions at the time about the date, location, nature or other specifics of the accident and about the accuracy of an Instagram post that appeared to come from Giuffre. The post said she had been in a car that was hit by a school bus and her prognosis was dire.
She is survived by her three children, whom the statement described as the “light of her life.”
Sigrid McCawley, an attorney for Giuffre, said in a statement, “Her courage pushed me to fight harder, and her strength was awe-inspiring. The world has lost an amazing human being today. Rest in peace, my sweet angel.”
The AP does not identify people who say they were victims of sexual assault unless they have come forward publicly.
As trade between the U.S. and China collapses, small businesses will be hit hard, according to Torsten Sløk, chief economist at private equity giant Apollo. Many independent toy, hardware, and clothing stores rely on cheap imports, and firms with 500 employees or less account for nearly half of America’s private workforce.
Trade between the U.S. and China is falling off a cliff. Vacant shipping containers will soon mean empty shelves—and perhaps the dreaded combo of higher prices and unemployment. President Donald Trump is touting talks of a trade deal between the world’s two biggest economies, but Beijing denies any negotiations have taken place.
Container shipping from China spiked in late March and early April as firms presumably tried to front-run tariffs, said Torsten Sløk, chief economist at private equity giant Apollo. However, it went into free fall soon after April 9, when the full slate of Trump’s taxes on Chinese imports went into effect. It takes about 20-to-30 days for Chinese cargo ships to reach U.S. ports, Sløk said, and another one-to-10 days for those goods to reach stores and factories across the country.
“It’s probably sometime by the middle of May that we should begin to see more significant impacts of this in the form of empty shelves in stores with goods that are no longer arriving,” he told Fortune, “because [of trade] collapsing the way it is.”
The U.S. tariff on most Chinese goods, barring a significant carve-out for many electronics, sits at 145%. China has retaliated with a 125% tax on most U.S. imports but also rolled out exceptions for semiconductors and other sectors, like aviation, early Friday.
China is America’s third-largest trading partner, accounting for nearly $440 billion worth of U.S. imports in 2024, according to the United States Trade Representative. Meanwhile, shipping costs have roughly been cut in half since early January, per the Freightos Baltic Index, which tracks the spot rates for standard 40-foot containers across major international trade lanes.
In other words, reduced demand is already hitting the industry’s revenues.
Significant layoffs in trucking and logistics could further drag down the economy, Sløk said in a note Friday morning.
“In addition, we will soon begin to see higher inflation because there are a significant number of product categories where China is the main provider of certain goods into the U.S. market,” he wrote.
That’s especially devastating for small businesses like independent toy, hardware, and clothing stores, he added. Most smaller firms rely on importing cheap goods to stay afloat, he explained, and do not have the working capital, or liquidity, that bigger businesses can leverage to weather the storm.
“Large businesses have flexible balance sheets,” Sløk said. “They are more nimble. They have several product lines and are, therefore, able to easier adjust relative to a small business.”
Mom-and-pop shops loom almost just as large, however, when it comes to the health of the broader economy. Small businesses employed about 62 million Americans in 2023, or more than 46% of the private-sector workforce, according to the U.S. Small Business Administration. These companies, which have 500 employees or less on the payroll, also accounted for nearly two-thirds of net job growth from 1995 to 2021, per the agency.
Firms of all sizes, meanwhile, must deal with added uncertainty caused by the opposing messaging coming from Washington and Beijing. Trump and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent have signaled tariffs will come down when a new trade agreement is reached. The president has insisted such talks are taking place, but China has denied those claims, saying it will not come to the table unless the U.S. walks back its “unilateral” measures.
The anxiety is apparent, Sløk said, in recent surveys from regional Federal Reserve banks, some of which showed big declines in new orders and plans for capital expenditures at a standstill. Companies like Southwest, Chipotle, and PepsiCo, he added, have warned on their most recent earnings calls that nervous consumers are starting to cut back.
Veteran investment experts at Bridgewater Associates say the current economic outlook imperils the existing global hierarchy. In a newsletter obtained by Quartz, the executives criticized the Trump administration’s shift to mercantilism and its “exceptional risks.” The assessment stands in stark contrast to November, when one of Bridgewater’s executives recommended investing in U.S. stocks under Trump.
Chief investment officers at the hedge fund Ray Dalio founded, Bridgewater Associates, warned of an upheaval of the “existing world order” amid the fall-out from President Donald Trump’s trade policy in its latest newsletter.
Trump’s trade, ignited by his so-called “Liberation Day” tariffs, have ripped through the stock market and left investors worried about a potential recession. In Bridgewater Associates’ latest newsletter, obtained by Fortune, co-CIOs Bob Prince, Greg Jensen, and Karen Karniol-Tambour, emphasized “exceptional risks” to U.S. assets as the Trump administration prioritizes a “rapid shift to mercantilism.”
“We expect a policy-induced slowdown, with the rising probability of a recession,” the three wrote.
While JPMorgan predicts a 60% probability the US enters a recession, the Bridgewater co-CIO’s think the impact will go beyond just a recession and impact the economic hierarchy.
“To state the obvious: We are facing a radically different economic and market environment that threatens the existing world order and monetary systems,” Prince, Jensen, and Karniol-Tambour wrote. “We have been through many big economic shifts over Bridgewater’s 50-year history, so we don’t speak lightly when we say this looks like a once-in-a-generation one.”
The sentiment is different from Karniol-Tambour’s announcement at a Yahoo Finance Invest event in November where she said that holding U.S. stocks was a “good thing” under Trump.
Historically, U.S. assets are reliant on foreign inflows and a “shift in asset allocations has created risks if the future is different than the past,” according to the newsletter. The hedge fund outlined portfolio vulnerabilities that include “any weakness in growth,” “central banks not being able to ease into problems,” “equity underperformance,” and “U.S. underperformance relative to the rest of the world.”
At its core, a new geopolitical and macroeconomic standard will create an acute threat to investment portfolios amid a “once-in-a-generation technological disruption,” the newsletter said.
“Facing a new reality, everyone must adapt,” they wrote. “Those who adapt fast and well will gain at the expense of those who adapt slowly and poorly.” The White House did not return Fortune’s request for comment.
Tide maker Procter & Gamble said this week that its customers were doing fewer loads of laundry to save money on detergent, the latest sign of a consumer pullback amid economic anxiety caused by trade-war talk and volatile markets. Elsewhere, nervous customers are spending less on body wash, snacks, and burritos as they hunker down for economic turmoil.
The White House’s ever-changing tariff regime is injecting record amounts of uncertainty into the economy, and that’s now made its way to consumers’ spending habits. After pulling back on everyday luxuries like travel and self-care and even big-ticket purchases, the uncertainty has come to settle in Americans’ laundry rooms.
Procter & Gamble CEO Jon Moller told Yahoo Finance that customers are doing fewer laundry loads each week to save on detergent. P&G, a major consumer-goods conglomerate, makes Tide, the U.S.’ best-selling detergent, as well as dozens of brands including Gillette razors, Pampers diapers, and Dawn dishwashing liquid.
It cut its financial outlook for the year due to consumer stress, to just 2% growth.
Competitor Colgate-Palmolive corroborated the trend on Friday. CEO Noel Wallace told investors on the earnings call that, while “consumers are still brushing their teeth, taking showers, cleaning their floors and feeding their pets,” they were feeling less inclined to stock up on purchases.
“You'll see consumers destock their pantries and not necessarily buy that extra tube or that extra body wash as they see, obviously, a very volatile external environment,” he said. “Uncertainty creates a pensive and anxious consumer,” he noted, calling the February tariff announcements a “shock to the system” that made shoppers “very cautious.”
Makers of household staples from cleaning solutions to snacks are sounding the alarm over the possible impacts of tariffs on China and dozens of global trading partners. Even for companies that source domestically, tariffs represent a major headwind as they threaten to squash economic growth or possibly even lead America into a recession—which would make consumer spending dry up.
PepsiCo, which makes soda and snacks such as Doritos and Cheetos, said it was making smaller snack packs and individual servings, priced at under $2, to attract customers who were spending less, according to the company’s earnings call Thursday and the New York Times. The company expects flat earnings growth this year. And burrito chain Chipotle saw its first drop in same-store sales since the 2020 lockdowns, which the CEO attributed to “the consumer sitting on the sidelines.”
“Saving money because of concerns around the economy was the overwhelming reason consumers were reducing the frequency of restaurant visits,” Chipotle CEO Scott Boatwright told investors on a call.
So far, April consumer spending has held up after taking a dive in February, according to Bank of America spending data. But the mood is bleak. Consumer sentiment has fallen for four months straight, according to the University of Michigan’s flagship survey, the steepest decline in mood since the 1990 recession, and their assessment of where their own finances will be in a year fell to the lowest level in the 40-plus years the survey has been run.
“Consumers’ views of current conditions are as bad as at the end of 2022, when the Ukraine war and an overheating domestic economy sent home heating prices surging,” said Comerica Bank chief economist Bill Adams.
“Consumers are freaked out about tariffs, the stock market, inflation, and recession fears,” he added. “The U.S. economy is pointed in a bad direction, and the further it goes, the higher the risk of a recession.”