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2025

Élysée Palace silver steward arrested for stealing thousands of euros’ worth of silverware

Élysée Palace silver steward arrested for stealing thousands of euros’ worth of silverware 150 150 admin

PARIS (AP) — Three men will stand trial next year after a silver steward employed at the official residence of the French president was arrested this week for the theft of items of silverware and table service worth thousands of euros, the Paris prosecutor’s office said.

The Élysée Palace’s head steward reported the disappearance, with the estimated loss ranging between 15,000 and 40,000 euros (($17,500-$47,000).

The Sèvres Manufactory — which supplied most of the furnishings — identified several of the missing items on online auction websites. Questioning of Élysée staff led investigators to suspect one of the silver stewards, whose inventory records gave the impression he was planning future thefts.

Investigators established that the man was in a relationship with the manager of a company specializing in the online sale of objects, notably tableware. Investigators discovered on his Vinted account a plate stamped “French Air Force” and “Sèvres Manufactory” ashtrays that are not available to the general public.

Around 100 objects were found in the silver steward’s personal locker, his vehicle and their home. Among the items recovered were copper saucepans, Sèvres porcelain, a René Lalique statuette and Baccarat champagne coupes.

The two were arrested Tuesday. Investigators also identified a single receiver of the stolen goods. The recovered items were returned to the Élysée Palace.

The three suspects appeared in court Thursday on charges of jointly stealing movable property listed as part of the national heritage — an offense punishable by up to 10 years in prison and a 150,000-euro fine, as well as aggravated handling of stolen goods.

The trial was postponed to Feb. 26. The defendants were placed under judicial supervision, banned from contacting one another, prohibited from appearing at auction venues and barred from their professional activities.

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At least 10 killed, 10 wounded in shooting in South Africa

At least 10 killed, 10 wounded in shooting in South Africa 150 150 admin

The motive for the attack in Bekkersdal, 25 miles southwest of Johannesburg, was not clear, police said.
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Heading into midterm year, Trump hopes to make economy a winning issue

Heading into midterm year, Trump hopes to make economy a winning issue 150 150 admin

By Steve Holland and Trevor Hunnicutt

ROCKY MOUNT, North Carolina, Dec 19 (Reuters) – U.S. President Donald Trump talked up his party’s prospects in the election battleground of North Carolina on Friday during a speech aimed at convincing Americans that his handling of the economy is sound.

Despite consumers’ glum holiday mood and sagging opinion polls, Trump took a victory lap highlighting rising stock prices, lower-than-expected inflation numbers and a deal to cut pharmaceutical costs.

“This achievement alone should win us the midterms,” Trump said of the drug deal. On inflation, Trump said: “I told you!”

In a meandering, 90-minute speech billed as an economic address that touched on his cognitive tests, former Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton’s intelligence and law enforcement allegedly rifling through his wife Melania’s undergarments, Trump did not discuss Friday’s release of thousands of heavily redacted documents related to the late financier and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

TRUMP’S AGENDA ON THE LINE IN TOUGH 2026 ELECTIONS

With prices increasing and unemployment up, Trump has his work cut out for him ahead of November’s midterm elections, which could spell trouble for him and his ruling Republicans. A Reuters/Ipsos poll released on Tuesday showed just 33% of U.S. adults approve of how Trump has handled the economy.

Trump again argued that the economy is poised for a surge due to his policies and that any problems people are experiencing are the fault of the Democrats. He made a similar case last week in competitive Pennsylvania and in a nationwide broadcast on Wednesday. On Friday, Trump vented that the networks airing that speech had failed to show White House charts illustrating his economic points.

He contends that he has lowered the price of gasoline, imposed tariffs that are generating billions of dollars for the U.S. Treasury and attracted hundreds of billions of dollars in investment pledges by foreign governments.

Republicans worry, however, that economic woes could jeopardize their chances in the elections that will determine whether they will keep control of the House of Representatives and the Senate for the remaining two years of Trump’s term.

Democrats have argued that Trump himself has bungled the economy, the central issue that propelled him back to the White House last year.

Trump’s event took place in Rocky Mount. The city is represented by a Democrat in the House, Don Davis, who faces a tough re-election fight in 2026 after the boundaries of his congressional district were redrawn in a manner that is seen to favor Republicans.

North Carolina is also hosting one of the most competitive Senate races of 2026, to replace the retiring lawmaker Thom Tillis.

North Carolina is often considered a swing state because its statewide elections are closely contested between Democrats and Republicans, although Trump won the state in 2016, 2020 and 2024.

The North Carolina event was a stop on the way to Trump’s oceanfront Mar-a-Lago club in Palm Beach, Florida, where he plans to spend the Christmas and New Year’s holidays.

Thursday’s Consumer Price Index report for November lent Trump some early holiday cheer. It showed that housing costs rose by the smallest margin in four years, while food costs rose by the least since February. Egg prices – a subject Trump raises regularly – fell for a second month, and by the most in 20 months.

But the report also showed that some other prices, such as for beef and electricity, soared.

(Reporting by Steve Holland and Trevor Hunnicutt; Editing by Sergio Non and William Mallard)

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PHOTO ESSAY: Tibetans depart Nepal, a former safe haven transformed under Chinese pressure

PHOTO ESSAY: Tibetans depart Nepal, a former safe haven transformed under Chinese pressure 150 150 admin

DHARAMSHALA, India (AP) — Sonam Tashi refuses to let his son inherit the same fear.

Once active in the Free Tibet movement in Kathmandu, he found himself silenced. Unable to secure identity papers for his son, he left for the Tibetan capital in exile in India this year where his son will begin an education he can’t have at home.

There he joined a rare protest in a city so reminiscent of what Kathmandu once was — where monks walk freely and the Dalai Lama’s portrait is not a risk.

An investigation by The Associated Press found that much of the Chinese technology used to surveil Tibetans in Nepal originally came from American companies. Despite warnings that Chinese firms were copying or outright stealing their designs, these firms built, customized, and expanded China’s surveillance apparatus over the past quarter-century.

Born in Nepal to Tibetan refugees, Tashi spent years on the frontlines of protest, a regular presence outside the Chinese embassy in Kathmandu. In the early days, arrests were brief — just a day or two — but by 2015, police were holding protesters for weeks. The crowds thinned. Eventually, Tashi was one of the last still showing up.

Surveillance trailed them beyond the protests.

Police began showing up hours before any gathering could start, demanding answers to questions they shouldn’t have known to ask: What are you doing tomorrow? Where are you going?

Cameras multiplied — around Tibetan settlements, in temples, even near private homes. In Boudha, the comfort of lingering beneath the stupa’s all-seeing eyes curdled.

Now 49, Tashi is focused on his 10-year-old son. Once an organizer, he’s now just a father trying to get his son out — before the net pulls tighter. On a winding bus ride toward the Indian border, Sonam stared out the window as terraced hills gave way to forest, thinking about what comes next.

“There are cameras everywhere,” he said. “There is no future.”

This surveillance has helped silence Nepal’s once-vibrant “Free Tibet” movement. Thousands of Tibetans once fled to Nepal every year, but last year, the number was down to the single digits, according to Tibetan officials in Nepal.

Across the world, in Washington, D.C., Namkyi’s eyes hold the loneliness that haunts Tibetans in exile.

Arrested at 15 and sentenced to three years in prison for protesting Chinese rule, Namkyi traveled to the U.S. to recount her story of what it means a lose a home.

Dressed in black, with two small pins — Tibetan and American — on her coat, she recounts how under withering surveillance, silence has become survival for Nepal’s dwindling Tibetan community.

“They know they are being watched,” she said.

Her eyes shine, not with certainty, but with the fragile hope that being heard might one day matter.

This is a documentary photo story curated by AP photo editors.

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Long lines at the food pantry: Inflation tests Trump’s base in Michigan

Long lines at the food pantry: Inflation tests Trump’s base in Michigan 150 150 admin

CAPAC, Michigan, Dec 21 (Reuters) – On a recent snowy morning in a Trump-loving part of rural Michigan, three dozen cars idled outside a firehouse-turned-food pantry. Inside, volunteers packaged lettuce, apples and other household staples that have surged or stayed high in price this year.

Taylor Ludwig, a 35-year-old mother of three, had lined up in her pickup truck well before the pantry’s 10 a.m. opening in the town of Capac, seeking the kind of help she hoped would not be necessary when she voted last year for President Donald Trump, who campaigned on lowering prices.

Ludwig said she had expected Trump to have made greater progress on inflation nearly a year into his presidency. But, the cost of basics such as cereal, fruit and vegetables remains painfully high.

While Ludwig blames the high cost of living on Democratic former President Joe Biden, the Republican-leaning independent said the party could lose her vote in next November’s congressional elections if Trump does not move faster to fulfill his 2024 campaign promise.

“I’m not just gonna follow along somebody like a sheep,” she said of her current backing of Trump. “I will follow you until I know it’s not OK to.”

Trump swept rural Michigan on promises to ease the cost of living. But now, persistent inflation is testing that pledge — and the patience of voters who helped put him in office. Their frustration could ripple far beyond Ludwig’s corner of the state, threatening Republican hopes in the midterms and giving Democrats an opening in a state that will help decide control of the Senate.

Ludwig was among 19 Trump voters Reuters interviewed in Capac and other parts of St. Clair County, which has grown steadily more Republican in recent years, backing Trump by 66.5% of the vote in 2024.

REPUBLICANS STILL BLAME BIDEN FOR FINANCIAL HARDSHIP

St. Clair runs along Michigan’s eastern edge on the Canadian border, linking the blue-collar river city of Port Huron with a patchwork of farms and small towns connected by two-lane highways. The county’s population of 160,000 is predominantly white. Auto suppliers and other manufacturers anchor parts of the local economy, but limited access to high-paying jobs means many residents feel left behind economically.

Inflation has cooled this year in the Detroit metropolitan statistical area, which includes St. Clair County. In August — the latest month with available data — the region’s all-items price index rose just 0.7% annually, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, as an 8.3% drop in gasoline prices offset a 9.4% surge in fruit and vegetable costs.

Nationwide, inflation is running at roughly a third of its mid-2022 peak of more than 9%, easing to 2.7% in November, but that headline figure masks sharp increases in everyday staples such as beef, coffee and orange juice, which have climbed at double-digit rates this year. Meanwhile, an AI-driven investment boom has begun to strain the nation’s power supply, pushing electricity prices in the U.S. up 6.9% last month, the largest year-on-year increase since April 2023.

Most of the 19 people interviewed said they still blamed Biden for inflation, and all pointed to a drop this month in gasoline prices as a positive development under Trump. Half said they or their families were struggling to make ends meet, including a Marine veteran, a disabled man and several retirees living on Social Security checks.

Four told Reuters that if inflation and other economic conditions did not improve by next November, they could see themselves giving Democrats a serious look. A dozen said they would still vote Republican, and three said they were unsure or did not share their voting plans.

Bob Benjamin, a retired auto worker, said he came to the food pantry to pick up groceries for his adult grandchildren, who are struggling to keep up with the cost of food, rent, healthcare and car insurance. While he voted for Trump in 2024, Benjamin said he would consider voting Democrat next year depending on economic conditions.

“I would probably vote the way the conditions are going. If he’s doing good, if you can see it coming out of a hole, then I give it two more years,” he said. “But if it’s starting to go back down again, well maybe we need a little change.”

Economists say there is little a president can do to quickly bring down prices and note that Trump’s tariffs raise import costs that are largely passed on to consumers. Trump has not said how he would lower prices and has pointed to tax cuts passed by Congress this year that are set to take effect in January. The White House says Trump will hit the campaign trail in 2026 to emphasize the economic benefits of his policies.     

White House spokesman Kush Desai said the administration was working hard to address the “generational economic crisis” caused by Biden, who he accused of dismissing or ignoring inflation. “The reality is that Democrats still have no actual solutions for everyday Americans,” Desai said in a statement.

DEMOCRATS LAUNCH ‘PRICE HIKE MIKE’ CAMPAIGN

Democrats plan to make rising prices central to their 2026 election campaign, sensing a vulnerability as Trump downplays the “affordability” issue, calling it a Democratic “hoax.” Trump’s statements worry Republican Party strategists, who say they could make him appear out of touch and prompt some of his supporters to sit out the election.

Still, most of the 19 interviewees were unaware of Trump’s comments on affordability, although only a few agreed with his assertion that the economy is booming and inflation is under control.

“I think he’s doing an amazing job as far as the economy goes,” said Kerry Ange, a county commissioner in St. Clair.

Darryl Kalich, an out-of-work field service technician whose red truck displays a Semper Fi sticker honoring his military service as a Marine, said he regretted his vote for Trump last year. Kalich said he was upset by Trump’s focus on foreign policy, citing the president’s threats against Venezuela and recent bailout of Argentina.

Kalich, who says leaders of both parties are equally detached from the problems facing everyday Americans, is unsure how he will vote.

Michigan Democrats are already working to tie Republican Senate candidate Mike Rogers squarely to Trump on inflation, branding him “Price Hike Mike” in press releases and across social media.

Mallory McMorrow, who is running in a four-way Democratic primary to replace retiring Senator Gary Peters, said that if she wins the party’s nomination she will make criticism of Rogers on high prices a focal point of her campaign.

“The opportunity in the general (election) is to, frankly, pair Mike Rogers with Donald Trump: wealthy guys who don’t know what groceries are, who don’t understand the real challenges that people face in cost of living,” she told Reuters.

Rogers, who has reported assets between $6.7 million and $13.5 million, rejected this criticism in an interview, saying his working-class background attuned him to the needs of everyday Michiganders.

He predicted Trump’s tariffs would bring back high-paying manufacturing jobs and boost wages above the rate of inflation.

INTENSE POLITICAL TRIBALISM SPLITS VIEWS ON TRUMP POLICIES

Trump’s approval rating edged down to 39% in a Reuters/Ipsos poll released last week as some Republicans soured on his handling of the economy. His approval level on the cost of living was just 27%, with 61% of Republicans rating him favorably on the issue, down from 69% earlier this month.

Approval on cost of living was significantly lower among Democrats, at 5%, and stood at 16% among independents, a crucial group for both parties in competitive races.

The stark divide reflects political tribalism: an in-group loyalty long present in U.S. politics but which has intensified in the age of Trump.

For Democrats, that meant downplaying the impact of inflation on everyday Americans while Biden was president. And for Republicans, that can mean believing that a policy like tariffs, which many economists argue is damaging the economy, will prove beneficial in the long run.

“You don’t want to believe that your party, which you value and which is important to you, is doing the wrong thing,” said Christopher Federico, a professor of political science and psychology at the University of Minnesota.

In Port Huron, freighters move steadily along the St. Clair River, highlighting the area’s industrial and economic significance, even as downtown retailers lament a drop in business from Canadian tourists who are staying away amid trade tensions and Trump’s threat to make their country the 51st state.

Mareesa Buterakos, 44, said the high price of meat and the potential impact of tariffs on tequila were among the challenges she faced as she tries to revive the Zebra Lounge bar and restaurant in Port Huron. She said she wasn’t ready to blame Trump yet, but wants to see progress soon.

“We didn’t get here overnight, and so we just have to have some grace,” Buterakos said. “He’s been in office for a minute now, I would really like to see him speed it up.”

(reporting by Nathan Layne and Aleksandra Michalska in Michigan; additional reporting by Dan Burns in New York and Jason Lange in Washington; editing by Ross Colvin and Claudia Parsons)

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At least 15 newly-released Epstein files have disappeared from DOJ's website, records show

At least 15 newly-released Epstein files have disappeared from DOJ's website, records show 150 150 admin

The episode has deepened concerns that had already emerged from the Justice Department’s much-anticipated document release.
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A rare look inside LEGO's own secret shrine to the hugely popular toy

A rare look inside LEGO's own secret shrine to the hugely popular toy 150 150 admin

Holiday shoppers out in force, but concerns over consumer sentiment linger

Holiday shoppers out in force, but concerns over consumer sentiment linger 150 150 admin

Holiday shopping is in high gear, with the National Retail Federation predicting a record 159 million shoppers on what it calls “Super Saturday,” with nearly a third buying gifts in stores. However, consumer sentiment is down as many Americans are concerned about their economic future. Nicole Valdes explains.
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Saturday Sessions: Old Crow Medicine Show performs "Jolly Man"

Saturday Sessions: Old Crow Medicine Show performs "Jolly Man" 150 150 admin

12/20: CBS Weekend News

12/20: CBS Weekend News 150 150 admin

Parts of western U.S. contend with heavy rain, snow; Vintage WWII aircraft is turned into a Christmas sleigh
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