-3.1 C
New York
Monday, January 26, 2026
Home Blog

Trump shifts focus from attack mode as backlash grows over Minneapolis shooting

0

Anthony ZurcherNorth America correspondent

Reuters President Trump talks to reporters on Air Force One on Saturday. He is holding both hands up and Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt is watching on from behind.Reuters

President Trump talks to reporters on Air Force One on Saturday

The Trump administration has quickly abandoned its familiar “deny and attack” playbook after initially using it when federal agents shot dead Alex Pretti in Minneapolis on Saturday morning.

Within 24 hours, as various videos of the shooting circulated online, it became clear that the White House was out of step with public opinion and what Americans could see with their own eyes.

Since then, the administration – and the president himself – have changed tack, blaming Democrats for what happened and focusing less on the actions of the American nurse who was killed.

Democrats, meanwhile, have increased their criticism of the president’s mass deportation policy and the aggresive tactics of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), leaning into a political fight that could result in a new government shutdown on Friday.

On Monday morning, Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche described the situation as a “powder keg”. While he blamed the Democrats, many on both sides of America’s political divide will agree that the current situation is fraught with peril.

The initial administration response to Pretti’s death was straightforward. The 37-year-old was portrayed as a domestic terrorist bent on bloodshed.

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said that Pretti wished to “inflict harm” and was “brandishing” a weapon. US Border Patrol Commander Gregory Bovino said that it “looks like a situation where an individual wanted to do maximum damage and massacre law enforcement”.

Senior presidential adviser Stephen Miller called Pretti a “would-be assassin”.

This White House has typically been quick to push back when criticised. “Deny and attack” has long been a bedrock Trump strategy for handling adversity.

But, perhaps tellingly, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt refused to echo Miller’s comments herself on Monday when pressed on whether the president agreed with his senior adviser. Instead, she said a full investigation would be carried out.

It was a notably more muted tone than that struck immediately after the shooting.

Unpicking the second Minneapolis shooting frame by frame

That initial response had echoed the path the administration took three weeks ago, when federal law enforcement shot and killed another Minneapolis resident, Renee Good. They said Good was a terrorist who had “weaponised” her vehicle in an attempt to injure ICE agents.

As with Good’s case, the federal government’s version of events has been challenged by local officials, eyewitnesses and the victim’s family.

In a statement on Sunday, Pretti’s parents asked for the truth to come out, adding: “The sickening lies told about our son by the administration are reprehensible and disgusting.”

Multiple videos of Saturday’s deadly encounter contradict many of the administration’s initial claims. The footage shows Pretti filming ICE agents with his mobile phone and helping a woman who is pushed over before both are pepper-sprayed. Pretti is visibly not holding a gun when he is wrestled to the ground.

DHS says Pretti had a 9mm semi-automatic handgun and two magazines of ammunition. Local police have said Pretti was a legal gun owner. Under Minnesota law, citizens can legally carry a concealed handgun in public, if they have a permit.

Watch: Federal and state officials gave conflicting accounts on Saturday of Alex Pretti’s death

This time around, the administration’s initial response quickly had become difficult for the administration to maintain.

“People have had enough,” Minneapolis Police Brian O’Hara said, noting that his officers made hundreds of arrests of violent offenders last year without resorting to shooting. “This is not sustainable.”

Republicans in Washington DC and elsewhere have expressed growing unease with how the administration was handling the situation. Vermont Governor Phil Scott called the federal efforts in Minnesota “a complete failure of coordination of acceptable public safety and law enforcement practices, training and leadership” – at best.

At worst, he said, it was “deliberate federal intimidation and incitement of American citizens”.

Utah Senator John Curtis criticised Noem’s “premature” response to the shooting, which he said “came before all the facts were known and weakened confidence” in the law enforcement mission.

Homeland security chairmen in both the House and Senate say they plan to hold public hearings

Since Sunday night, there has been a marked change in tone from the White House. Veteran’s Affairs Secretary Doug Collins offered condolences to the Pretti family. The president posted a message on his Truth Social website calling the death “tragic” and blaming it on “Democrat ensued chaos” – a message echoed by Vice-President JD Vance.

On Monday morning, Trump posted that he was dispatching “border czar” Tom Homan to Minnesota to direct law-enforcement efforts there. Homan, who handled deportations during Democrat Barack Obama’s administration, is considered a more measured, politically attuned operator less prone to the kind of bombastic declarations recently made by Noem and Bovino.

“Tom is tough but fair, and will report directly to me,” Trump wrote.

While Homan’s assignment to Minneapolis may not necessarily reflect a change in policy – this administration has yet to show signs of backing away from its aggressive immigration enforcement – it could be a change in presentation, as the president tries to come to grips with a public mood that opinion surveys suggest is souring on how his immigration crackdown is being carried out.

In a CBS survey taken before the weekend’s shooting, 61% of respondents said that ICE is being “too tough when stopping and detaining people”, while 58% disapproved of his handling of immigration as a whole.

EPA Trump's border czar Tom Homan appears in pensive mood as he hold his hand to his face and stares into the distance in a close-up photo taken in the White House grounds.EPA

Trump is sending Tom Homan to oversee the immigration operation in Minnesota

Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison, when asked by BBC News about Homan’s involvement, said that he may provide a new avenue to work with the administration.

“I don’t want to foreclose the possibility that reasonable minds can prevail,” he added, “but we are here exactly because the federal government had unreasonable positions.”

Another potential thaw came when Trump announced on Monday that he had spoken with Minnesota’s Democratic governor, Tim Walz.

“It was a very good call,” Trump wrote. “We, actually, seemed to be on a similar wavelength.”

That represents a marked cooling of what had been a series of heated exchanges between the two men in recent weeks – and could portend the kind of de-escalation in Minnesota that many politicians have been calling for.

That may not be enough for Washington Democrats, however, who have come under increasing pressure to draw a bright line against the Trump administration’s rhetoric and policy.

Senate Democrats have announced they will now block that funding measure in their chamber, which would trigger a partial government shutdown on Friday night.

“I am voting against any funding for DHS until and unless more controls are put in place to hold ICE accountable,” said Senator Brian Schatz of Hawaii. “These repeated incidents of violence across the country are unlawful, needlessly escalatory and making all of us less safe.”

Such a move is not without its own political risks, however. Democrats triggered a record-setting shutdown last autumn over health care subsidies but ultimately relented with little to show for it. And they will also be wary of pushing too far on immigration and law and order, two issues where they poll poorly.

At the moment, both Republicans and Democrats are grappling with how to handle what has become an explosive situation. At stake is the public perception of Trump’s immigration policy, a core political issue for the president and one that helped him win back the White House.

Israel announces successful recovery of remains belonging to last Gaza hostage Ran Gvili

0

The Israeli military says it has retrieved the body of the last hostage in Gaza, paving the way for the next phase of US President Donald Trump’s peace plan to get under way.

It had been searching for Master Sgt Ran Gvili since the ceasefire with Hamas began in October.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called Gvili’s return “an extraordinary achievement”.

The Israeli military began searching a cemetery for Gvili on Sunday morning. Hamas’s armed wing said it had provided mediators with “all the details and information” about Gvili’s location.

Netanyahu’s office said Israel would reopen Gaza’s key border crossing with Egypt once the operation to find and return Gvili was complete.

The prime minister hailed the return of Gvili’s body, saying: “We promised – and I promised – to bring everyone back. We brought them all back, down to the very last captive,” he said.

The Israeli military said the clarification of existing intelligence over the weekend had enabled the search of the cemetery near Gaza City. A military official said the cemetery “was located in the area of the Yellow Line”, the boundary to territory still controlled by Israeli forces under the ceasefire deal.

Hamas said it had “kept updating the mediators with the necessary information, which resulted in retrieving the body”.

Spokesman Hazem Qassem said the discovery “confirms Hamas’s commitment to all the requirements of the ceasefire agreement”.

In Israel, Itzik Gvili, the hostage’s father, paid an emotional goodbye to his son in front of his coffin.

“You had the option to stay home, but you said to me: ‘Father, I’m not going to leave my friends to fight alone.’

“You came out, and you need to see the honour you have here, all the people who brought you. All the police are here with you, the entire army is here with you, the entire nation is here with you. I’m proud of you, my son,” Itzik Gvili said.

Rani Gvili’s sister Shira earlier told the Hostages and Missing Families Forum: “I feel an insane sense of relief. I feel relieved. I am sad. I’m very sad that it ended this way, but it had to end at some point. I am so happy he’s coming back home.”

The retrieval of Gvili may bring closure to his family and it finally ends Israel’s hostage agony after 843 days.

It also opens the way for further progress in Gaza’s ceasefire deal. Israel had resisted moving forward until Gvili was found.

Phase two is meant to involve the reconstruction and full demilitarisation of Gaza, including the disarmament of Hamas and other Palestinian groups. The plan is also meant to see the deployment of an as-yet unconstituted International Stabilization Force (ISF) and the progressive withdrawal of Israeli forces from Gaza.

On Friday, the Gvili family gathered in Tel Aviv’s Hostages Square, as they had every week since he and the other 250 were abducted on 7 October 2023.

“I looked them in the eyes and said: ‘We will bring Rani home’,” Netanyahu recounted on Monday. “I promised you, citizens of Israel: We will bring everyone home.”

It is a promise finally delivered, and will be celebrated, but his critics say it has taken too long and cost too many lives – Israeli and Palestinian.

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) announced Gvili’s retrieval in a statement, saying: “According to the information and intelligence available to us, Sgt Maj (res) Ran Gvili… a Yamam commando fighter, aged 24 at the time of his death, fell in battle on the morning of October 7, 2023, and his body was abducted to the Gaza Strip.

“The IDF shares in the family’s grief. The IDF will continue to accompany the families and the returned hostages and to act to strengthen the security of Israel’s citizens.

“With this, all of the hostages from the Gaza Strip area have been returned.”

Netanyahu said he sent soldiers into Gaza to return the hostages and defeat Hamas.

Opening the Rafah border crossing is an important next step but other difficult issues have to be confronted.

How will Hamas be disarmed and unpicked from the fabric of Gaza? When will Israel’s army withdraw? And who will make up the international force delivering security for the future?

This is the first time since 2014 there are no Israeli hostages, alive or dead, being held in Gaza – a reminder of the deep roots of this conflict and how difficult it could still be to shape a lasting peace.

Reacting to the return of Gvili’s body, Trump posted on Truth Social: “Just recovered the last Hostage body in GAZA. Thus, got back ALL 20 of the living Hostages, and ALL of the Dead! AMAZING JOB!”

The president said “most thought of it as an impossible thing to do” and congratulated his “great team of Champions”.

Hamas was meant to return all hostages, alive and dead, within 72 hours of the ceasefire taking effect. The process took far longer, but eventually 20 living Israeli hostages and the bodies of 27 dead Israeli and foreign hostages were handed over, leaving only Gvili missing.

The policeman was one of 251 hostages taken in the Hamas-led attack on Israel on 7 October 2023 in which about 1,200 people were killed. Most of the hostages were released alive over the course of the next two years in exchange for 250 Palestinian prisoners and 1,718 detainees from Gaza.

Israel’s military campaign in Gaza, launched in response to the attack, has killed 71,660 Palestinians, the Hamas-run health ministry has said.

Pipeline Funded by Matt Spetzler and Merlin to Support Independent Artists with $200 Million

0

Last week, a new $200 million-backed indie music financing platform emerged from “stealth” after more than a year of development.

Pipeline was launched by Matt Spetzler’s investment firm Jamen Capital, with ambitions to become the “largest funder of independent music globally”.

Just days after going public with the new platform, Spetzler’s Pipeline has already struck a partnership with independent power player Merlin.

Pipeline’s deal with the indie licensing agency, which claims to represent 15% of the global recorded music market, will give Merlin members access to advances against digital royalties.

In what’s being billed as a “significant expansion of Merlin’s suite of member services,” Pipeline says that it can offer the org’s members access to advance funding “without the bureaucracy of traditional financing sources or the need to hand over rights as the price of access to funds”.

The companies claimed in a press release that the “new tool is designed to enable Merlin members to grow their businesses and unlock the value of future revenues without disrupting existing commercial relationships”.

They stressed that the service is “entirely optional” and that “participation does not prevent Merlin members from entering into financing or commercial arrangements with other parties”.

Pipeline Co-Founder and Executive Chairman Matt Spetzler has completed more than 10 investments in music/audio, totaling over $5 billion in value, and currently serves on the boards of companies including Kobalt, Soundtrack, Recognition Music Group, and Muse Group.

Before launching Jamen Capital, Spetzler was a Partner and Co-Head of Europe at private equity firm Francisco Partners, where he played a key role in the firm’s ~$750 million majority acquisition of Kobalt Music Group in 2022.

“Merlin represents the heart of the independent music sector, and we’re proud to partner with them on a solution that addresses a long-standing gap in the market,” said Spetzler.

“Merlin represents the heart of the independent music sector, and we’re proud to partner with them on a solution that addresses a long-standing gap in the market.”

Matt Spetzler

He added: “Advances against digital royalties for the independent music community are now not only possible, but practical and scalable.

“Our goal with Pipeline is to provide transparent, creator-friendly capital, and this partnership allows us to deliver that value directly to Merlin members worldwide.”

Charlie Lexton, CEO of Merlin, added: “Merlin’s partnership with Pipeline is a gamechanger.

“We can now offer Merlin members a streamlined path to advance funding that doesn’t require them to compromise their rights or business plans.

“We’re supporting our members’ ability to compete, while preserving their freedom to work as they choose.

“As the independent sector continues to grow it is essential that our members have access to sophisticated financial tools on fair, transparent terms.”

Charlie Lexton, Merlin

He added: “Merlin members work on their own terms. They need support that speeds them up, not processes that slow them down.

“With Pipeline, we have found a partner that understands that, and together we have developed an offering that meets that challenge.”

Charlie Lexton continued: “As the independent sector continues to grow it is essential that our members have access to sophisticated financial tools on fair, transparent terms.

“This partnership with Pipeline is about removing friction, empowering independence, and ensuring our members are best positioned to invest in their businesses and their artists with confidence.”


Pipeline has launched into an increasingly active landscape of alternative funding options for indie artists, labels, and distributors.

Elsewhere in the space, prominent music financing platform beatBread has deployed over $100 million across 1,700 funding agreements since its founding in 2020.

The company raised $124 million in fresh funding last year from backers including equity capital from Citi, Deciens Capital, Mucker Capital, and Advantage Capital.

Elsewhere, music investment company Duetti secured $200 million in fresh financing last week.

Music Business Worldwide

Multiple fatalities reported as ferry sinks in southern Philippines

0

new video loaded: Ferry Sinks in Southern Philippines, Leaving Several Dead

A ship carrying more than 350 people sank early Monday near the island of Baluk-baluk in the southern province of Basilan, leaving at least 18 dead, according to the Philippine Coast Guard.

By Nader Ibrahim

January 26, 2026

Popular train route in Spain reduces speed limit after fault discovery

0

Spanish rail authorities have temporarily reduced the speed limit on part of the high-speed line between Madrid and Barcelona after a fault was detected on the track.

Transport Minister Óscar Puente said a crack had been found on Sunday night in the line 110km (68 miles) west of Barcelona, between Alcover and l’Espluga de Francolí, in the Catalonia region.

It comes days after a high-speed collision killed 45 people in southern Spain and amid severe disruption to local rail services in the north-east of the country.

The transport ministry said the fault in the line did not pose a danger to trains travelling along it and that they would continue to move along it.

This is the latest and most drastic of several speed reductions on high-speed lines in recent days, following the accident in Adamuz, in Andalusia, earlier this month.

The speed limit on the section of track affected will be 80km/h (50mph) until further notice. High-speed trains travel as fast as 300km/h between Madrid and Barcelona – one of Spain’s most heavily used long-distance links.

Last week, the limit on several sections of the Madrid-Barcelona line was temporarily reduced to 230 km/h after drivers had reported vibrations or other anomalies on the route, before being restored to 300km/h following technical checks.

Some sections of the Madrid-Valencia line also had their speed limit cut temporarily to 160km/h and 200km/h.

Meanwhile, the local Rodalies rail service in Catalonia has been severely disrupted.

Last week, a trainee driver was killed when a train struck a collapsed wall, the Rodalies service was grounded as drivers demanded improved safety guarantees and lines were reviewed.

On Monday, two separate incidents caused further chaos in the region, as the service was again suspended, before partially resuming later in the day. The Spanish government said it did not know the cause of the incidents – but did not rule out a cyberattack.

The Catalan Republican Left (ERC) party said the Rodalies network had suffered “decades of lack of investment”.

“The reputational damage is as bad as or worse than the economic losses,” said Ramon Talamàs, president of the Chamber of Commerce of Terrassa.

Socialist Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez is due to appear before Congress on 11 February to be questioned about the rail crisis.

These measures come as the investigation continues into the Adamuz high-speed crash, in which the rear carriages of a train heading north towards Madrid were derailed on a straight section of track, causing a collision with an oncoming train.

Investigators have been examining a 40cm (16in) section of track that broke loose, apparently shortly before the derailment.

The transport ministry has said that the line on which it happened had been renovated and undergone recent technical reviews.

However, it has emerged that the piece of damaged rail, which was made in 2023, had been welded onto an older section, reportedly manufactured in 1989, and the join between the two appears to be where it cracked.

The head of the independent commission investigating the crash, Iñaki Barrón, said that “everything appears to suggest that” the separation of the two welded pieces of track was the cause of the tragedy.

Opposition politicians are demanding the resignation of Óscar Puente, accusing him of misleading the public in the wake of the tragedy.

Israel recovers body of final Gaza captive, confirms military

0

Israel retrieves remains of last Gaza hostage, military says

MAX Field Hockey Announces 2025 Mid-Atlantic All-Region Teams

0

AVA BOLAND
St. Mary’s Annapolis (MD)
Junior – Midfield

19 goals, 8 assists
IAAM A Conference All-Star
First Team All-State
Capital Gazette All-County Player of the Year & First Team
Baltimore Sun All-Metro First Team
Washington Post All-Met First Team
NFHCA Third Team National All-American
NFHCA All-Mid-Atlantic Region First Team
MAXFH Preseason Player to Watch

Rebecca Kane Burton appointed as Chief Operating Officer at Superstruct Entertainment

0

UK-based venue executive Rebecca Kane Burton has joined Superstruct Entertainment, Europe’s largest independent festivals group, as Chief Operating Officer.

Kane Burton, who was previously Executive Vice President of Venue Management at Oak View Group (OVG) International, served as VP & General Manager of AEG’s The O2 in London for four and a half years until departing in 2016 to become MD of Andrew Lloyd Webber’s Really Useful Theatres (now LW Theatres).

Her 30 years of live entertainment experience also includes leadership roles at Sodexo Live! and London’s Alexandra Palace.

Speaking about Kane Burton’s appointment, Superstruct CEO Alex Mahon said: “I am so excited by the depth of experience that Rebecca brings having run such massive live venues. She has first class event management, partnership and F&B experience. She will be a fantastic addition to the Superstruct team.”

“I am so excited by the depth of experience that Rebecca brings having run such massive live venues.”

ALEX MAHON, SUPERSTRUCT

Mahon, the former boss of publicly owned British broadcaster Channel 4, took the helm at Superstruct – owner of festivals such as Sonar (Spain), Zwarte Cross (Netherlands), Wacken and Parookaville (Germany), and Field Day and Lost Village (UK) – in the fall of 2025.

Superstruct co-founder James Barton resigned from the company last month, less than 18 months after its $1.4 billion acquisition by investment fund KKR.

Last year, London-headquartered Superstruct, which was launched in 2017 with backing from Providence Equity Partners, found itself at the centre of global controversy when over 100 artists publicly boycotted the firm’s festivals in protest against KKR’s purported economic interests in Israel.

Barton’s co-founder in Superstruct, Roderick Schlosser, also left the company in 2025.

Meanwhile, venue giant OVG recently confirmed Chris Granger as its new Chief Executive Officer following his five-month tenure as Interim CEO.

The company’s leadership transition followed the departure of former CEO Tim Leiweke, who stepped down last summer after being indicted by the US Department of Justice for allegedly rigging the bidding process for an arena at the University of Texas.

US President Donald Trump pardoned Leiweke last month.Music Business Worldwide

Client Challenge: Overcoming Obstacles and Achieving Success

0



Client Challenge



JavaScript is disabled in your browser.

Please enable JavaScript to proceed.

A required part of this site couldn’t load. This may be due to a browser
extension, network issues, or browser settings. Please check your
connection, disable any ad blockers, or try using a different browser.

Video: Minneapolis holds Anti-ICE protest following the second death of a US citizen | Police

0

NewsFeed

Hundreds of protesters marched in the US city of Minneapolis on Sunday, demanding justice for the fatal ICE shooting that killed US citizen Alex Pretti. It was the second shooting death involving federal officers in Minneapolis this month.