Trump opponents move a mountain of legal challenges
And Zelenskiy applies the art of the deal
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Weekend Briefing
Weekend Briefing
From Reuters Daily Briefing
By Robert MacMillan, Reuters.com Weekend Editor
Welcome to the Weekend Briefing. We're positively crammed with good stories below, but first: Reporters Mari Saito, Anastasiia Malenko and Erin Banco join the World News podcast to discuss what went wrong with Joe Biden's arms shipments to Ukraine. In this week's City Memo, editor Donna Bryson delivers a tasty tour of Denver. And I must correct the record: I wrote in last week's edition that Trump imposed tariffs on Canada, China and Mexico. I was half a day early, which means I was wrong.
See all of you in court: President Trump's broad assertion of executive power has left judges across the U.S. as the only significant check on his moves to upend the government. From restricting birthright citizenship to withholding funding to firing members of independent federal agencies to buying out federal workers, it looks like the Supreme Court could be the ultimate check on his authority. Recommended: This story on how Trump's funding freeze is affecting projects in America that Congress already agreed to support.
Speaking his language: Volodymyr Zelenskiy in an interview with Reuters said he wants Ukraine to supply the U.S. with rare earths and other minerals in return for financial support for its war effort against Russia.
Insurance: Cigna Group will tie executive compensation to customer satisfaction as it tries to address criticism over medical-care denials and delays. The move comes two months after the killing of the head of UnitedHealth's insurance unit, which sparked anger from many Americans who struggle to receive and pay for medical care. State Farm wants to raise its premiums in California to offset wildfire payouts.
A Tunisian courtsentenced top politicians, former officials and journalists to long prison terms. President Kais Saied called his critics criminals, traitors and terrorists, and warned that any judges who freed them would be considered to be abetting them.
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