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    Eating mixed nuts for 16 weeks might improve insulin sensitivity in the brain, study suggests

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    A recent study involving overweight or obese older adults found that consuming 60 grams of a mixture of walnuts, pistachios, cashews, and hazelnuts daily for 16 weeks improved insulin sensitivity in five distinct regions of the brain. However, there were no significant changes in body weight, body composition, or peripheral insulin sensitivity. The research was published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.

    Insulin is a hormone produced by the pancreas that regulates blood sugar levels by facilitating the uptake of glucose into cells for energy production and storage. It helps cells in the body absorb glucose from the bloodstream to use for energy or store as glycogen in the liver and muscle tissues. When blood sugar levels rise, such as after eating, the pancreas releases insulin to help maintain a balanced and healthy sugar level.

    Dysfunction in insulin production or its activity can lead to metabolic disorders such as diabetes, characterized by insufficient insulin production or ineffective use of insulin by the body. This dysfunction also extends to brain cells, known as brain insulin resistance, which can impair the function of neural cells and contribute to various neurological and mental health disorders, including Alzheimer’s disease, where it is associated with cognitive decline.

    Study author Kevin MR Nijssen and his colleagues wanted to investigate whether a diet including various nuts would enhance brain insulin sensitivity in overweight or obese older adults. They highlighted that nuts are nutrient-rich foods, abundant in unsaturated fats and other bioactive compounds. Previous studies have shown that incorporating nuts into the diet lowers the risk of developing metabolic and cognitive disorders. The researchers designed an experiment to test this hypothesis.

    The study involved 28 participants aged between 60 and 70 years, half of whom were female, all overweight or obese. The participants were divided into two groups. One group began by consuming 60 grams of unsalted, unroasted mixed nuts daily for 16 weeks, followed by an 8-week break, and then another 16 weeks without nut consumption. The second group followed the reverse order.

    The researchers collected blood samples from the participants at the beginning, middle, and end of the intervention period to measure peripheral insulin sensitivity, lipid profiles, systemic inflammation, and levels of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (a protein essential for neuron survival and growth). Additionally, participants underwent magnetic resonance imaging and had their blood pressure measured throughout the study.

    The results indicated no changes in the participants’ weight or body composition throughout the study. However, during the nut consumption phase, participants reduced their carbohydrate intake and slightly increased their fat intake.

    Brain imaging analysis identified five clusters of brain cells that exhibited increased insulin sensitivity, located in the left and right occipital lobes and one cluster in the left frontal lobe. Peripheral insulin sensitivity remained unchanged.

    The authors concluded, “The longer-term daily intake of mixed nuts for 16 weeks improved brain insulin action in occipital and frontal regions. Therefore, regional brain insulin resistance observed in older adults with overweight or obesity can be beneficially affected by intervention strategies, which may be important for the prevention of age-related metabolic diseases.”

    The study highlights the potential dietary impacts on insulin resistance in the brain of overweight or obese older adults. However, it is important to note the small number of participants and the fact that the improved insulin sensitivity was confined to specific brain regions. Additionally, the study’s design does not clarify whether the observed effects were solely due to nut consumption or if they resulted from a reduction in other food intakes when nuts were included in the diet daily.

    The paper, “Mixed nut consumption improves brain insulin sensitivity: a randomized, single-blinded, controlled, crossover trial in older adults with overweight or obesity”, was authored by Kevin MR Nijssen, Ronald P Mensink, Jogchum Plat, Dimo Ivanov, Hubert Preissl, and Peter J Joris.

    Donald Trump won Indiana primary. Is Nikki Haley’s success a concern?

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    It was clear long before Tuesday’s primary election in Indiana who would win the Republican and Democratic presidential races, as President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump secured the delegates for their party’s nominations nearly two months ago.

    Biden ran unopposed on Democratic ballots in the Hoosier State and former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley dropped out of the Republican contest following Super Tuesday in March, leaving Trump to sweep up the rest of primary season. 

    Trump handily won the Republican race in Indiana on Tuesday with 78% of the vote, but it was Haley’s performance as a non-candidate that turned heads of political watchers in what has been a reliable Trump state. Haley was still on Republican ballots Tuesday after making the filing deadline in early February and pulled nearly 22% of the vote statewide. The last time Haley hit above 20% in a contest against Trump was the day before she ended her campaign, and since then she has won much lower percentages in battleground states like Wisconsin and Pennsylvania.

    But Haley performed even better than that in some of central Indiana’s suburban communities where populations are growing and the voter base can skew more moderate in political views. On Tuesday, Haley won 34% of the Republican vote in Hamilton County and 32% of the vote in Boone County just north of Indianapolis, an area that Democrats have targeted for several years as a path to breaking the Republican supermajority at the Statehouse. 

    As eyes shift to November, some campaigns and political experts question if Haley’s showing Tuesday could be a warning sign for both Trump in more competitive states and down-ballot Indiana candidates who want to ride the former president’s coattails in a state he won easily in 2016 and 2020. In Indiana specifically, a Trump victory is all but inevitable because Trump dominated in this same match up four years ago. But, that’s not necessarily the case for local candidates in more competitive wings of the state.

    It’s also not clear who exactly these voters were that selected Haley: Democrats pulling a Republican ballot, Republicans hoping to get a message across that they don’t like Trump or voters who simply didn’t realize Haley had already dropped out. Or perhaps a combination of all three.

    A Trump campaign official in an email to IndyStar suggested Democrats in races earlier this year “were more than happy” to vote for Haley. In Indiana, the political action committee ReCenter Indiana put up billboards around the state reminding Democrats that they could vote in the Republican primary, and some Democratic voters took that suggestion on Tuesday.

    U.S. Senator Mike Braun, who saw a decisive victory in the Republican gubernatorial primary with Trump’s endorsement, said it will be important to appeal to everyone in the party leading up to November, including voters that supported Haley. Trump’s support doesn’t hurt, especially in Indiana, but Braun said his individual record in the Senate is what he believes helped him defeat five other Republicans on Tuesday.

    “The agenda that was in place pre-COVID, when you look at that, I think that’s what is going to win (Trump) the victory this November,” Braun said. “It’s an honor to have that support, but I’ve been independent my entire life and how I do things and I will be running this race.” 

    Does Nikki Haley’s primary performance signal an opportunity for Democrats?

    Some of the counties across the state where Haley performed well are communities that Biden won in 2020, such as Tippecanoe County where Purdue University is located. These are also areas where controversial candidates have not succeeded in past elections. 

    For example, President Joe Biden won over Trump in the city of Carmel in 2020 and Destiny Wells won in Carmel over Diego Morales in the 2022 Secretary of State race following allegations that Morales exaggerated his military experience and sexually assaulted two women, which he denied.

    These past examples and Haley’s success across the state Tuesday, are warning signs for Republicans about suburban voters, and not just in Indiana, said Chad Kinsella, an associate professor of political science at Ball State University. 

    “These are critical, critical voters,” Kinsella said. “If Trump doesn’t do well at the top of the ticket. It’s going to hurt everybody on down.” 

    Key takeaways from the primary: A quick Indiana governor’s race and some Statehouse upsets

    Indiana Democrats are aware of this and see opportunities in the areas where Haley achieved more votes than expected. State Democratic Party Chair Mike Schmuhl said the dissatisfaction with Trump, especially in suburban communities, is something for Democrats to capitalize on. 

    “The Republican ticket is going to be Donald Trump, Mike Braun, Jim Banks and Todd Rokita and that is like the MAGA starting lineup,” Schmuhl said. “I think that in places like central Indiana, that’s just a turnoff for folks. It’s not really exciting or inspiring for voters.” 

    Democrats, though, have to give voters something to vote for, Schmuhl said, and the party believes former Republican schools superintendent Jennifer McCormick in the governor’s race and psychologist Valerie McCray in the U.S. Senate race are stark comparisons to Braun and U.S. Rep. Jim Banks, the Republicans in those races. Both face an uphill battle against far better-funded candidates in a red state that hasn’t elected a Democrat to a statewide office since 2012.

    “Donald Trump every single day is sitting in a courtroom somewhere,” Schmuhl said. “There’s just this negative feeling in our politics nationally that is permeating down the ballot, and I think it shows that he’s a flawed candidate.” 

    But Biden does not have the highest favorability either heading into November. Pew Research found in late April that 35% of Americans approve of Biden’s performance in the White House while 62% disapprove. The president’s approval rating is even lower — just 6% — among Republicans and individuals leaning Republican, according to the Pew report.

    Trump’s popularity remains high

    While Haley’s primary success sparks questions about down-ballot Republican races, this is Indiana. 

    Trump won the state in the general presidential elections in 2016 and 2020, beating Biden by 16 percentage points. Just this year, a March poll from Emerson College Polling found the former president’s favorability remains high with Hoosiers as 55% of registered voters surveyed at the time supported Trump over 34% for Biden. 

    Trump country?: New poll shows Trump leads Biden in Indiana. But by how much?

    The Trump campaign official dismissed Haley’s performance in an email to IndyStar, writing that the former president spent no money or resources on a primary campaign after clinching the needed delegates in March. 

    “With the enthusiasm of Republicans, the failed policies of weak Biden, and as polling indicates, we will win Indiana and the White House in November,” the campaign official wrote. 

    Republicans can also look to municipal elections just six months ago in some of the suburban communities where Haley performed well. In 2023, local Democratic candidates won just two races across all of Hamilton County. 

    In Carmel, specifically, then-candidate Sue Finkam saw a significant 14 percentage-point win in the mayor’s race and Republicans nearly swept the Carmel City Council races. Republicans also gained a seat on the Fishers City Council last year. 

    Kory Wood, a Republican consultant who worked on Finkam’s campaign, said down-ballot Republicans should not be concerned about Haley’s performance across Indiana. Candidates in the areas where Haley pulled above 30% should focus on local issues rather than engage in some of the national debates that appear in campaigns. That’s what Finkam did with the mayor’s race in Carmel, Wood said.

    Primary elections are intended to give voters choices, Wood said. Because of that, the vote for Haley in the primary isn’t necessarily indicative of a party-wide struggle come November, he said.

    “At the end of the day, when we’re going into ballot boxes in November, Republicans are going to are going to get behind the Republican nominee, because our policies are better,” Wood said. “They’re better leaders and our Republican policies connect better with with voters, especially in the Hoosier State.”

    IndyStar reporter Kayla Dwyer contributed to this story.

    Contact IndyStar state government and politics reporter Brittany Carloni at brittany.carloni@indystar.com or 317-779-4468. Follow her on Twitter/X@CarloniBrittany.

    Sweetgreen, Chipotle and Wingstop aren’t seeing a consumer slowdown

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    A food delivery messenger carries a take-out bag outside a Sweetgreen in Manhattan, New York City, on Sept. 14, 2023.

    Jeenah Moon | The Washington Post | Getty Images

    Chris Mason: Sunak, Starmer and their small boats row

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    • By Chris Mason
    • Political editor

    Image caption, As of 21 April, 6,265 people had crossed the English Channel in small boats since the start of 2024

    There is a single word at the heart of the political row between the prime minister and Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer when it comes to unauthorised immigration.

    The issue of people in small boats crossing the English Channel is so contested, even the terminology of the topic is disputed.

    There are asylum seekers, who have applied for refugee status and are waiting for a decision. There are refugees. There is illegal immigration. Overlapping descriptions and labels, many of which provoke fury and anger.

    And so to that word – amnesty. Both Rishi Sunak and Sir Keir are seeking to weaponize it, to make what they see as a negative point about their opponent.

    The Labour leader accused Mr Sunak of a “Travelodge amnesty” – people who have arrived in small boats and are, in UK law, illegal immigrants. They are stuck in limbo in UK hotels at significant expense to the taxpayer.

    Incidentally, Sir Keir did this while projecting a confidence I’ve not seen before in him.

    Not just his manner on stage, but his willingness to praise a Conservative idea – the Small Boats Operational Command – strictly up to a point, which he claims he would build on. And praise a Conservative cabinet minister, Justice Secretary Alex Chalk.

    It amounted, in the round, I thought, to a man with the air of an heir.

    A man – after those local election results and the second defection to his party from the Conservatives in a fortnight – who might just feel closer to the prospect of becoming prime minister than ever before.

    Sir Keir’s label of a claimed Conservative “Travelodge amnesty” is an attempt to push back at the Tory description of Labour’s plan to allow people who have arrived on small boats to apply for asylum.

    Yes, you guessed it, the Conservatives describe that as an amnesty too.

    Both leaders clearly see a political value in projecting an aggression on this topic and portraying their opponent as weak, even soft.

    The big picture here, acknowledged by them both and illustrated in this example, is this is deeply complex and there is no off the shelf panacea on offer.

    What do you do about the huge backlogs of people? How do you create deterrents to crossing the Channel? Are deterrents even possible?

    What does fairness and justice look like, to people contemplating a crossing, others seeking a legal route to the UK, and the British taxpayer? Are international legal frameworks, domestic laws, or agreements with other countries up to scale of the challenge?

    Returning more people not granted asylum to their country of origin is key.

    BBC Verify has been looking at how this might apply to recent small boat arrivals.

    Vietnamese people – 1,266 in total – and Afghans – 1,216 people – make up the top two nationalities arriving in the UK this way so far this year.

    The next most common nationalities to have arrived this way between 1 January and 21 April 2024 were Iranians, Syrians and Eritreans.

    Of these five countries, the government only has a returns agreement with Vietnam, so ministers in this government or any future one would have to negotiate agreements with the other four if the asylum seekers’ claims were rejected.

    Plus none of them currently feature on the government’s list of where people can be safely returned, which poses a further potential challenge.

    It is for Mr Sunak, Sir Keir and others to win arguments and gain trust on this most difficult, emotional, diplomatic and political of issues – and to grapple for solutions. As partial, long winded and expensive as they may prove to be.

    Elon Musk’s nightmare continues as almost 800 protesters rally against Tesla Gigafactory expansion in Germany

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    The Protesters of around 800 camped outside Tesla’s Gigafactory plant in Grueneheide, Germany Friday, which seeks to halt the expansion project and the abhorring environmental impact thereof.

    A police officer uses pepper spray as they try to block activists running in the direction of Tesla Gigafactory during a protest against its expansion, in Gruenheide near Berlin, Germany, May 10, 2024. REUTERS/Christian Mang(REUTERS)

    And Elon Musk is not happy about it as his Tesla nightmare continues.

    Unlock exclusive access to the latest news on India’s general elections, only on the HT App. Download Now! Download Now!

    The expansion, which has been a contentious issue, drew criticism from Ole Becker, a spokesperson for the protest’s organizing group, Disrupt.

    Becker remarked, “The fight against this car factory is a fight against every car factory,” in a press release on the coalition’s website.

    Disrupt’s press release further accused the Gigafactory of being constructed unlawfully and argued that its expansion would inflict harm on the neighboring woodlands.

    With over 60 percent local populace reportedly voting against the 50-hectare expansion in a recent poll, as reported by Wired.

    ALSO READ| Elon Musk wants this Tesla network to expand after firing employees making it

    A group of protestors are camping in the forest since then.

    The environmental toll of lithium mining, essential for the production of electric car batteries, was another focal point of the protest. According to Reuters, the demonstrators aimed to draw attention to the ecological damage caused by lithium extraction, which releases toxic chemicals and heavy metals into the air, water, and soil globally.

    The day of the protest saw a considerable turnout from across Germany

    A video shared online captured the chaotic scenes as protesters clashed with law enforcement while attempting to approach the factory.

    Musk responded to the footage, assuring that the facility’s security perimeter remained intact.

    “Protesters did not manage to break through the fenceline. There are still 2 intact fence lines all around,” he wrote.

    “Note, this is ‘National Protest Week’ in Germany, so there are a lot of protests for many different reasons.”

    Musk appeared perplexed by the environmentalists’ decision to target Tesla.

    He expressed his bewilderment, stating, “Something super weird is going on, as Tesla was the only car company attacked.”

    ALSO READ| Elon Musk shares ‘what Earth looks like in radio frequency’. Unseen pic will stun you

    Musk openly criticized the perceived leniency of the police, questioning, “Why do the police let the left-wing protestors off so easily?”

    Becker told CNN he experienced a lot of police torture at the protest, and a video published on X shows police shooting pepper spray at the fleeing protesters. Dozens of protesters were arrested to ensure the disturbances will ceased. The police estimated that hundreds were injured during the demonstration.

    Biden admin says it’s ‘reasonable to assess’ Israel used American weapons in Gaza in ways ‘inconsistent’ with international law

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    CNN
     — 

    The Biden administration said Friday that it is “reasonable to assess” that US weapons have been used by Israeli forces in Gaza in ways that are “inconsistent” with international humanitarian law but stopped short of officially saying Israel violated the law.

    The report which was drafted by the State Department said that investigations into potential violations are ongoing but noted that the US does “not have complete information to verify” whether the US weapons “were specifically used” in alleged violations of international humanitarian law.

    “Given the nature of the conflict in Gaza, with Hamas seeking to hide behind civilian populations and infrastructure and expose them to Israeli military action, as well as the lack of USG personnel on the ground in Gaza, it is difficult to assess or reach conclusive findings on individual incidents. Nevertheless, given Israel’s significant reliance on U.S.-made defense articles, it is reasonable to assess that defense articles covered under NSM-20 have been used by Israeli security forces since October 7 in instances inconsistent with its IHL obligations or with established best practices for mitigating civilian harm,” the report said.

    The report, which covers the period from the outbreak of the war with Hamas on October 7 to late April, did not find that Israel has withheld humanitarian aid to Gaza in violation of US law.

    Although the report does not find Israel in violation of either of the terms of the memorandum, it is sharply critical of the toll of Israel’s military campaign. The findings of the report mark another stark moment in US-Israeli relations in the same week President Joe Biden threatened to restrict weapons transfers if Israel goes ahead with a major offensive in Rafah.

    Still, the ultimate finding that Israel’s assurances made under the national security memorandum are “credible and reliable” has already raised scrutiny among some lawmakers and incredulity among human rights and humanitarian organizations.

    The report did not mandate any actions be taken by the Israeli government, and it does not trigger any policy changes. The administration has largely avoided restricting military assistance to Israel, but in a significant shift ahead of the release of the report, Biden declared publicly in an interview with CNN this week that if Israel proceeds with a major offensive in the Gazan city, he would restrict the transfer of certain offensive weapons to Israel.

    The high-stakes report was declassified and transmitted to Capitol Hill on Friday afternoon. The administration was required to make a determination on those two matters under a February national security memorandum, which Biden issued under pressure from Democratic lawmakers. It was the first time the US government had to make an assessment about Israel’s conduct in the seven months of the war with Hamas in Gaza, triggered by the terror group’s brutal October 7 attack, that has left more than 34,000 people dead and much of the coastal enclave destroyed.

    Democratic Sen. Chris Van Hollen, the driving force behind the creation of the national security memorandum, expressed disappointment in the report.

    “The administration ducked all the hard questions about making the actual determination,” the Maryland Democrat told reporters Friday evening. “I think what they’re trying to do is make clear that they recognize how bad the situation is, but they don’t want to have to take any action to hold the Netanyahu government accountable for what’s happening.”

    Democratic Sen. Jeff Merkley, who is on the Foreign Relations Committee, agreed with Van Hollen’s remarks, telling CNN that the report is “a massive diplomatic dodge.”

    “On the one hand, it says that it’s very reasonable to conclude that there’s been restriction of aid, it’s very reasonable to conclude that our weapons have been used in violation of international law and then it proceeds to say that we just don’t want to give an answer on that yet,” Merkley said on “Erin Burnett OutFront.”

    The Oregon Democrat is one of the few members of Congress to step foot in Rafah, visiting in January.

    “Clearly, politics come into this and strategy comes into this, but it is frustrating because it’s so important at this moment that we use the leverage we have to persuade Israel to change its conduct,” he said.

    Earlier Friday, Van Hollen also said that “the purpose of this report was not to provide a snapshot in time” and accused the administration of taking Israel’s assurances at “face value,” despite investigations by human rights groups finding violations of the law.

    However, a senior State Department official said that it was always intended to be retrospective, and that there are processes underway to evaluate ongoing activity. There is no deadline for any conclusions to be made under those processes.

    The report notes that “in any conflict involving foreign partners, it is often difficult to make swift, definitive assessments or determinations on whether specific U.S. defense articles or services have been used in a manner not consistent with international law.”

    “However, there have been sufficient reported incidents to raise serious concerns,” it said.

    “While Israel has the knowledge, experience, and tools to implement best practices for mitigating civilian harm in its military operations, the results on the ground, including high levels of civilian casualties, raise substantial questions as to whether the IDF is using them effectively in all cases,” the report said.

    According to the senior State Department official, the compilation of the report has been a useful tool for the Biden administration to go to the government of Israel and insist on getting information, and on behavior changes. That official said the report would be shared with the Israeli government.

    Biden administration officials have for months called on Israel to do more to curb the civilian death toll and allow more aid into Gaza. On humanitarian aid, the report notes the US government “has had deep concerns during the period since October 7 about action and inaction by Israel that contributed significantly to a lack of sustained and predictable delivery of needed assistance at scale, and the overall level reaching Palestinian civilians – while improved – remains insufficient.”

    However, it states that they “do not currently assess that the Israeli government is prohibiting or otherwise restricting the transport or delivery of U.S. humanitarian assistance within the meaning of section 620I of the Foreign Assistance Act,” which bars assistance to governments found to be intentionally restricting aid.

    The report calls the “the impact of Israel’s military operations on humanitarian actors” a specific area of concern, citing a series of incidents, including the deadly strike on a World Central Kitchen aid convoy.

    Following that strike last month, Biden warned Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu in a call that Israel had to do more to address the humanitarian situation or there would be a change in US policy. In recent weeks, US officials said Israel had taken important measures following that conversation, but that more still needed to be done. However, following the launch of “limited” Israeli military operations in Rafah, where millions of Palestinians have fled, humanitarian aid access has once again plummeted.

    The report was the subject of intense debate for months across the administration. Human rights organizations have assessed that Israel’s military campaign has violated humanitarian law.

    Late last month, Amnesty International assessed that US-supplied weapons to Israel have been used “in serious violations of international humanitarian and human rights law, and in a manner that is inconsistent with US law and policy.”

    An Amnesty International official said Friday that “this report seems like the international version of ‘thoughts and prayers’: admitting there’s a problem but not doing anything meaningful to prevent the further loss of lives.”

    “Despite President Biden’s vague comments earlier this week, his administration today made its position loud and clear: it points fingers and takes swift action when an actor the US government considers an adversary violates international law, but treats the government of Israel as above the law, even while acknowledging the overwhelming evidence that Israeli forces are violating international law and killing Palestinian civilians with US weapons on US taxpayer dime,” said Amanda Klasing, National Director of Government Relations and Advocacy at Amnesty International USA.

    Van Hollen on Friday said that “it is not credible that the US government has less information than organizations like Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, Oxfam.”

    A senior State Department official said they couldn’t speak to the standards for the assessments made by those organizations but said the US government process was very diligent and took into consideration any accountability measures undertaken by the Israeli government.

    The president also acknowledged to CNN that “civilians have been killed as a consequence of” US-supplied bombs. State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller on Thursday said Biden was speaking to “the tragic loss of civilian life throughout this conflict,” not a legal determination under international humanitarian law.

    Humanitarian aid organizations also questioned the findings of the report.

    “We are confused and dismayed by the Biden administration’s report to Congress, and in particular, its findings that Israel is not impeding the provision of aid to Gaza,” said Kate Phillips-Barrasso, vice president of global policy and advocacy at Mercy Corps.

    “Humanitarian organizations have publicly and repeatedly detailed a litany of obstructions by Israel over the last seven months that have made it impossible to deliver humanitarian assistance to the 2.2 million people in Gaza whose lives depend on it,” she said.

    “Yet more compelling than the testimony of aid organizations is the horrifying situation of the population of Gaza, trapped in a conflict zone and facing starvation,” she continued. “If humanitarian aid were being adequately facilitated—as the NSM calls for—1.1 million people would not be facing catastrophic famine conditions a few miles away from available food. The very fact that the US government has airdropped assistance and spent significant effort and resources constructing a floating pier for maritime deliveries indicates officials had already come to the conclusion that aid delivery was being ‘directly or indirectly’ impeded.”

    This story has been updated with additional reporting.

    Trump trial key witness Michael Cohen expected to testify Monday

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    Former President Donald Trump’s criminal trial in New York is expected to see its key witness, ex-attorney Michael Cohen, testify Monday. 

    Now six years removed from being a key confidante to Trump, Cohen has emerged as the Republican presidential candidate’s de facto arch nemesis. In books, podcasts and on social media, he has become among Trump’s most ardent critics. The withering criticism has chafed Trump, who has violated a gag order in the case to lash out at Cohen — and repeatedly asked the judge to allow him to do so.

    Prosecutors have reached the home stretch of their case, nearly a month after this trial began. They said in court Friday that they could rest their case by the end of next week. 

    Cohen’s role is to tell the court that Trump understood that records related to reimbursement checks to Cohen would be falsified in order to cover up the fact that they were tied to the purchase of Stormy Daniels’ story. 

    As proceedings came to a close Friday, Trump attorney Todd Blanche complained that Cohen has continued to talk about the case and Trump — even as recently as Wednesday on TikTok, Blanche said.

    Witnesses are asked not to discuss the case, but they’re not subject to the gag order imposed on Trump. Judge Juan Merchan instructed prosecutors to tell Cohen to stop talking.

    This week’s testimony seesawed between sex and bookkeeping. Thursday saw the conclusion of a furious back and forth between prosecutors and Trump’s lawyers, who dueled with adult film star Stormy Daniels on the stand for a second day

    Friday was less explosive, with former White House executive assistant Madeleine Westerhout returning to the stand to be questioned by the defense. In her testimony, Westerhout portrayed her time working for Trump as positive and discussed his closeness to his family. 

    Trump attorney Susan Necheles also established that Trump did not call all of the people on the list Westerhout received from Rhona Graff, Trump’s assistant at the Trump Organization. Graff testified earlier that the list contained the contact information for Daniels and Karen McDougal, the two women who have said they had affairs with Trump. Trump has denied both claims.

    The jurors were also shown a document illustrating the records Trump is accused of falsifying in the case. It listed 11 invoices, 12 vouchers and 11 checks, a total of 34 documents corresponding to 34 counts — all allegedly connected to the reimbursement payments to Cohen.

    Here’s how the trial unfolded Friday:

    U.S. to Announce New Tariffs on Chinese Electric Vehicles

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    The Biden administration is set to announce new tariffs as high as 100 percent on Chinese electric vehicles and additional import taxes on other Chinese goods, including semiconductors, as early as next week, according to people familiar with the matter.

    The move comes amid growing concern within the administration that Mr. Biden’s efforts to jump-start domestic manufacturing of clean energy products could be undercut by China, which has been flooding global markets with cheap solar panels, batteries, electric vehicles and other products.

    The long-awaited tariffs are the result of a four-year review of the levies that former President Donald J. Trump imposed on more than $300 billion of Chinese imports in 2018. Most of the Trump tariffs are expected to remain in place, but Mr. Biden plans to go beyond those by raising levies in areas that the president showered with subsidies in the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act.

    That includes Chinese electric vehicles, which currently face a 25 percent tariff. The administration is expected to raise that to as much as 100 percent in order to make it prohibitively expensive to buy a Chinese EV.

    Mr. Biden has previously raised concerns about Chinese electric vehicles, saying that internet-connected Chinese cars and trucks posed risks to national security because their operating systems could send sensitive information to Beijing. He took steps earlier this year to try and block those vehicles from entering the United States.

    The president is looking to ratchet up pressure on China and demonstrate his willingness to protect American manufacturing ahead of his face-off against Mr. Trump in the November presidential election.

    The fate of the China tariffs has been the subject of intense debate within the White House since Mr. Biden took office, with economic and political advisers often clashing over how to proceed. But this year China has begun ramping up production of the same products — electric vehicles, lithium batteries and solar panels — that the Biden administration has been investing billions of dollars to start producing in the United States. Beijing’s move has re-inflamed trade tensions between the two countries, compelling Mr. Biden to press ahead with more aggressive trade restrictions.

    Mr. Trump has said that he would escalate his trade war with China if re-elected and said earlier this year that he is considering imposing tariffs of 60 percent or more on Chinese imports. In March, Mr. Trump said that he would impose a 100 percent tariff on cars made in Mexico by Chinese companies.

    The scale of the Biden administration’s tariffs, which are expected to be applied to Chinese electric vehicles, batteries and solar products, are not clear. The new tariffs on Chinese electric vehicles are not expected to apply to traditional gasoline powered cars that are made in China, according to a person familiar with the plans.

    The planned release of the review, which is being conducted by the Office of the United States Trade Representative, was reported earlier by Bloomberg News.

    Strategic tariffs are also expected to include new levies on semiconductors, which Mr. Biden sought to boost in the bipartisan CHIPS and Science Act of 2022, which includes grants and other incentives for chip-makers.

    Some Democrats, including Senator Sherrod Brown of Ohio, have been urging the Biden administration to take more dramatic measures to protect the U.S. automobile industry. Last month, Mr. Brown called for Chinese electric vehicles to be barred from the United States, arguing that they pose an “existential threat” to American carmakers, and on Friday he said that import duties are insufficient.

    “Tariffs are not enough,” Mr. Brown wrote on the social media platform X. “We need to ban Chinese EVs from the US. Period.”

    Mr. Biden said last month that he was asking the trade representative, as part of the review, to also raise tariffs on imported steel and aluminum products from China. The president and his aides have accused the Chinese of selling heavy metals at artificially low prices worldwide in order to gobble up market share, to the detriment of American producers.

    “My U.S. Trade Representative is investigating trade practices by the Chinese government regarding steel and aluminum,” Mr. Biden told steelworkers in Pittsburgh, referring to Katherine Tai, who heads U.S.T.R. “If that investigation confirms these anti-competitive trade practices, then I’m calling on her to consider tripling the tariff rates for both steel imports and aluminum imports from China.”

    The president added: “I’m not looking for a fight with China. I’m looking for competition — and fair competition.”

    The U.S. solar industry has also been lobbying the Biden administration to impose new tariffs on Chinese imports as an influx of cheap solar panels and components have caused prices in that sector to drop by around 50 percent over the last year. Last month, a group of seven leading solar manufacturers filed trade complaints formally requesting that the Biden administration impose tariffs on solar products being imported to the U.S. from Southeast Asia, where Chinese companies have relocated their operations to avoid existing tariffs.

    “We are hopeful the tariff review is done with an eye toward aligning tariffs with strategic priorities including the continued build out of domestic solar manufacturing,” said Philippa Martinez-Berrier, a spokeswoman for the Solar Energy Manufacturers for America coalition

    The prospect of the United States imposing new China tariffs was criticized in Beijing on Friday. The spokesman for China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Lin Jian, said that the Trump administration’s tariffs “severely disrupted normal trade and economic exchanges between China and the U.S.” and argued that they were in violation of the World Trade Organization’s rules.

    “Instead of ending those wrong practices, the U.S. continues to politicize trade issues, abuse the so-called review process of Section 301 tariffs and plan tariff hikes,” Mr. Lin said, referring to the legal provision that Washington is using to justify the tariffs. “China will take all necessary measures to defend its rights and interests.”

    In 2020, during the Trump administration, the United States and China agreed to a sweeping “phase one” trade agreement that allowed each of the two countries to review their bilateral tariffs after four years. That bilateral agreement remains in force but the United States deferred the outcome of its review when the four-year mark came up in January.

    That pact probably gives Washington the latitude to increase tariffs. Beijing never complied with that agreement’s specific targets for Chinese imports of American manufactured goods, initially citing the onset of the pandemic. It later pursued a policy of replacing imports with domestic production.

    Greta Peisch, a former general counsel at U.S. trade representative’s office who helped oversee the trade investigation for the Biden administration, noted that the European Union is also weighing new tariffs on Chinese electric vehicle imports, and that the anticipated action by Washington is the result of China’s persistently aggressive trade policies. Without higher tariffs, she said, the U.S. auto sector will not be able to compete with heavily subsidized Chinese electric cars.

    “When you look at the impact of China’s longstanding policies on E.V.s, they are producing much more and have a lot more capacity than they can absorb,” Ms. Peisch said. “You really want to go high enough to make sure that you’re counteracting the trend that we’re seeing.”

    Keith Bradsher contributed reporting.

    Novavax stock doubles after Sanofi deal marks ‘new chapter’ for company

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    Novavax stock (NVAX) skyrocketed on Friday, nearly doubling on the news French drug and vaccine giant Sanofi (SNY) would invest $1.2 billion in a deal for Novavax’s COVID-19 vaccine and take a minority stake in the struggling biotech company.

    The deal gave Novavax a much-needed cash boost as the company had flagged after a pandemic-era surge.

    “This is a new chapter in the history of our company,” Novavax CEO John Jacobs told Yahoo Finance in an interview Friday.

    Novavax struggled after its COVID-19 vaccine was delayed by manufacturing issues early in development, which resulted in the company missing out on the multibillion-dollar pandemic boom that Pfizer/BioNTech (PFE/BNTX) and Moderna (MRNA) enjoyed.

    While Novavax’s vaccine did finally reach the market in mid-2022 targeting the booster market, it continued to struggle with $1.7 billion in liabilities of promised COVID doses globally weighing on its books.

    The news, which overshadowed Novavax’s first quarter earnings release on Friday, has turned the company around from near failure.

    “This company was likely headed for real trouble, and we put a going concern on the company my second month on the job,” Jacobs said.

    Jacobs took the helm from longtime CEO Stanley Erck in January 2023. In the 15 months since, he has decreased the company’s liabilities to $1.7 billion, compared to a previous $2.5 billion, and reduced expenses from manufacturing and R&D.

    “[This] in and of itself doesn’t save Novavax, but what it does … is now put us toward a future of growth back on our biotech strength, back on a platform-based growth strategy that allows us to drive growth,” Jacobs said.

    The deal with Sanofi includes a $500 million up-front payment to Novavax and up to $700 million as certain milestones are met for COVID-19 vaccine co-commercialization, the development of a combination COVID-flu vaccine, and royalties. Sanofi is licensing the technology for the combination COVID-flu vaccine, which is separate from the one currently in Novavax’s pipeline.

    In addition to that $1.2 billion, Sanofi is committing up to $200 million for each new vaccine it develops using Novavax’s technology. That represents a multibillion-dollar future for the company, Novavax CFO Jim Kelly said on the company’s earnings call Friday.

    On top of all that, Sanofi is acquiring a minority stake through a $70 million equity investment.

    Novavax logo and COVID-19 virus images photographed off Apple devices. (STRF/STAR MAX/IPx) (STRF/STAR MAX/IPx)

    The investment from Sanofi, a small fraction of the company’s $46.2 billion annual revenue in 2023, is not so significant.

    But Sanofi is one of the world’s largest vaccine makers and has a robust flu portfolio that accounted for $2.8 billion of its total $8 billion in vaccine revenues last year.

    Novavax and Sanofi have similar platforms for their vaccines using recombinant protein, a well-known formula that provides long-term protection. The platform is used in Sanofi’s flu vaccine, Flublok, which along with its Fluzone for older adults, accounts for $2.8 billion of Sanofi’s annual $8 billion vaccine portfolio.

    Amid the vaccine race early in the pandemic, the scientific community was eager to see these types of vaccines reach the finish line.

    “As we headed into December 2020, it was obvious that the first two vaccines we were to consider were mRNA vaccines, where we had no experience with that technology,” said Dr. Paul Offit, director of the vaccine education center and a pediatrician at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia.

    “Novavax, on the other hand, was a tried-and-true technology,” Offit, who also served as a member on the advisory committee for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), told Yahoo Finance.

    Like Novavax, Sanofi similarly missed the pandemic market after its vaccine candidate, in partnership with GSK (GSK), was delayed during clinical trials. The duo was also late to the market with the vaccine in 2022 in Europe and targeted the booster market.

    When asked if Sanofi had previously approached Novavax for partnership, CEO Jacobs said he couldn’t comment.

    “I’m actually not sure if that ever occurred before my time,” Jacobs said. “I have to believe that over time Novavax might have had conversations with other companies, but until these barriers [liabilities] were removed … I don’t think we were a very attractive target for significant business development because there was so much uncertainty.”

    He added that if there were ever a discussion in the future of a sale or acquisition, the board “would always consider appropriately for our shareholders the right path to value.”

    Novavax beat on earnings per share, at $1.08 versus consensus estimates of $1.05, but it missed on revenues, reporting $98.3 million compared to Wall Street expectations of more than $101 million.

    Anjalee Khemlani is the senior health reporter at Yahoo Finance, covering all things pharma, insurance, care services, digital health, PBMs, and health policy and politics. Follow Anjalee on all social media platforms @AnjKhem.

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    UK Shakes Off Recession as Economy Grows Faster Than Expected

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    In the first three months of the year, economic growth was driven by the services sector, which expanded for the first time in a year, the statistics agency said. Transport services, legal services and scientific research all grew strongly, but services that include hotels and restaurants fell slightly, and the construction sector contracted sharply.

    G.D.P. per person grew 0.4 percent in the first quarter, after seven consecutive quarters of decline.

    Still, Britain’s economic data “is incredibly mixed,” said Tera Allas, director of research and economics at McKinsey’s Britain and Ireland office and a former economist in the civil service. Some sectors like professional services and technology have been doing well, but others like hospitality have struggled, she said.

    The economic picture about consumers is “even murkier,” Ms. Allas added. Sentiment is negative, and, by some measures, retail sales are down. But consumer spending has still been a key aspect of the country’s economic resilience. Household spending, adjusted for inflation, grew 0.2 percent after two quarters of declines, the statistics agency said.

    Some of that can be explained by the labor market. Even as interest rates have been at their highest level in 16 years, slowing investment, and business bankruptcies have increased, unemployment has risen only modestly, to 4.2 percent in February, up from recent lows of 3.8 percent.

    On Thursday, the National Institute of Economic and Social Research said it anticipated that the economic data on Friday would show that the recession was “in the rearview mirror” but warned that the longer-term outlook for the economy was sluggish. Economists at the institute forecast growth of about 1 percent each year over the medium term.

    The Bank of England said the impact of higher interest rates and constrained public spending would weigh on the economy, and it forecast 0.5 percent growth this year. Even as policymakers said rate cuts were on their way, they plan to take a cautious approach, which suggests rates will go down slowly.

    “There is no doubt it has been a difficult few years, but today’s growth figures are proof that the economy is returning to full health for the first time since the pandemic,” Jeremy Hunt, chancellor of the Exchequer, said in a statement on Friday.

    A general election will take place within the next eight months, and the economy is among the top priorities, with both main political parties vowing to instigate growth. Rachel Reeves of the opposition Labour Party accused the governing Conservative Party of “gaslighting” the British people about the economy’s improving.

    In a speech this week, Ms. Reeves said claims the British economy had turned a corner “do not speak to the economic reality,” as many people tell her that they are struggling to pay bills or high rents or mortgage payments.

    Many households in 2024 will feel that they are emerging from a lengthy cost-of-living crisis. Although prices are still higher than they were before the pandemic, and are expected to stay that way, there has been some relief on consumers’ budgets. Average incomes are rising faster than inflation, household energy bills are coming down, and the government has cut some taxes. On average, living standards, measured by household disposable income, will rise 6 percent this year from last year, the National Institute of Economic and Social Research said this week.

    But the benefits are not shared among everyone. Households in the lowest income groups will see their living standards fall further as they contend with sharply rising rents, the institute said.