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Today — 16 December 2025Main stream

Epstein's UK flights had alleged British abuse victims on board, BBC finds

16 December 2025 at 06:00
US Department of Justice/PA Jeffrey Epstein, a man with grey hair wearing a bright blue polo shirt and an orange anorak, smiling broadly as he stands in front of his private plane - a black jet with chrome detailing on the wings and around the engines, with five porthole-style windows visible on the right-hand side.US Department of Justice/PA
Epstein took dozens more flights to the UK than were previously known

Almost 90 flights linked to Jeffrey Epstein arrived at and departed from UK airports, some with British women on board who say they were abused by the billionaire, a BBC investigation has found.

We have established that three British women who were allegedly trafficked appear in Epstein's records of flights in and out of the UK and other documents related to the convicted sex offender.

US lawyers representing hundreds of Epstein victims told the BBC it was "shocking" that there has never been a "full-scale UK investigation" into his activities on the other side of the Atlantic.

The UK was one of the "centrepieces" of Epstein's operations, one said.

Testimony from one of these British victims helped convict Epstein's accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell of child sex-trafficking in the US in 2021. But the victim has never been contacted by UK police, her Florida-based lawyer Brad Edwards told the BBC.

The woman, given the name Kate in the trial, was listed as having been on more than 10 flights paid for by Epstein in and out of the UK between 1999 and 2006.

The BBC is not publishing further details about the women in the documents because of the risk this might identify them.

US lawyer Sigrid McCawley said the British authorities have "not taken a closer look at those flights, at where he was at, who he was seeing at those moments, and who was with him on those planes, and conducted a full investigation".

US Attorney's Office SDNY Epstein, a man with grey hair and glasses perched on his head, sitting on a bench outside a log cabin on the Balmoral estate, wearing a pale sweatshirt. His left arm is around Maxwell's shoulder, who rests her hand on his knee. Maxwell has short brown hair and wears and blue checked shirt.US Attorney's Office SDNY
More information has emerged about Epstein, pictured here with Maxwell, and his UK links

Under the Jeffrey Epstein Transparency Act, the deadline to release all US government files on the sex-offender financier is Friday.

But the flight logs were among thousands of documents from court cases and Epstein's estate which have been already made public over the past year, revealing more about his time in the UK, such as trips to royal residences.

The BBC examined these documents as part of an investigation trying to piece together Epstein's activities in the UK.

It revealed that:

  • The incomplete flight logs and manifests record 87 flights linked to Epstein - dozens more than were previously known - arriving or departing from UK airports between the early 1990s and 2018
  • Unidentified "females" were listed among the passengers travelling into and out of the UK in the logs
  • Fifteen of the UK flights took place after Epstein's 2008 conviction for soliciting sex from a minor, which should have raised questions from immigration officials

Although Epstein died in jail in 2019, before his trial on charges of trafficking minors for sex, legal experts have told the BBC a UK investigation could reveal whether British-based people enabled his crimes.

Two months ago the BBC sent the Metropolitan Police, which has previously examined allegations about Epstein's activities in Britain, publicly available information about the UK flights with suspected trafficking victims on board.

Later, we sent the Met a detailed list of questions about whether it would investigate evidence of possible British victims of Epstein trafficked in and out of the UK.

The Met did not respond to our questions. On Saturday, it released a broader statement saying that it had "not received any additional evidence that would support reopening the investigation" into Epstein and Maxwell's trafficking activities in the UK.

"Should new and relevant information be brought to our attention", including any resulting from the release of material in the US, "we will assess it", the Met said.

Sigrid McCawley, a woman with wavey blond hair and wearing a black dress, pictured in close-up in an office, looking to the left of the camera, with the background out of focus.
Sigrid McCawley, who represents hundreds of Epstein victims, criticised the Met for declining to investigate

US lawyer Brad Edwards, who has been representing Epstein victims since 2008, told us "three or four" of his clients are British women "who were abused on British soil both by Jeffrey Epstein and others".

Other victims were recruited in the UK, trafficked to the United States and abused there, he said.

Mr Edwards said he is also representing women of other nationalities who say they were trafficked to the UK for abuse by Epstein and others.

Our analysis shows Epstein used commercial and chartered flights, as well as his private planes, to travel to the UK and to arrange transport for others, including alleged trafficking victims.

More than 50 of the flights involved his private jets, mostly flying to and from Luton Airport, with several flights at Birmingham International Airport, and one arrival and departure each at RAF Marham in west Norfolk and at Edinburgh Airport.

Limited records of commercial and chartered flights taken by Epstein, or paid for by him, show dozens more journeys, mainly via London Heathrow, but also Stansted and Gatwick.

In a number of the logs of Epstein's private planes, including some detailing trips to the UK, women on the flight are identified only as unnamed "females".

A graphic showing entries in a page of the Epstein flight logs with airport codes in one column, the flight number in another and a column with notes which includes details of the passengers in most cases and the word "reposition" in two cases. The names of the people on board have been redacted, except for the initials JE and GM - Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell - on all of the flights with passengers named. One note is highlighted, with the text spelling out that the cramped handwriting says simply "1 FEMALE".

"He's absolutely choosing airports where he feels it will be easier for him to get in and out with victims that he's trafficking," said Ms McCawley.

Private aircraft did not have to provide passenger details to UK authorities before departure in the same way as commercial aircraft during the period covered by the documents we examined. The Home Office told us they were "not subject to the same centralised record-keeping".

That loophole was only closed in April last year.

Kate, the British woman who testified against Maxwell, was on some of the commercial flights in the records we examined. She described in court that she had been 17 when Maxwell befriended her and introduced her to Epstein - who then sexually abused her at Maxwell's central London home.

In the 2021 trial, she described how Maxwell gave her a schoolgirl outfit to wear and asked her to find other girls for Epstein. As well as the dozen flights to and from the UK, Kate told the court she had been flown to Epstein's island in the US Virgin Islands, New York and Palm Beach in Florida, where she says the abuse continued into her 30s.

Reuters A court sketch of Kate testifying in Ghislaine Maxwell's trial. Kate is shown as wearing a black shirt and having fair hair but her face is blurred in the sketch to protect her identity. She stands in the witness box with a judge wearing a black Covid-era face mask to the left of her. In front of her is the stenographer and one of the attorneys, a woman with a long brown ponytail. Ghislaine Maxwell is pictured in the foreground, frowning under her own black face mask, and looking away from the witness.Reuters
Kate, pictured on the right with her face blurred, testified at Maxwell's trial

Mr Edwards, her lawyer, told BBC News that even after that testimony, Kate has "never been asked" by any UK authorities any questions about her experience - "not even a phone call".

He said that if British police were to launch an investigation into Epstein's activities and his enablers, Kate would be happy to help.

Prof Bridgette Carr, a human-trafficking expert at the University of Michigan Law School, said trafficking cases usually require many people working together.

"It's never just one bad person," she said. "You don't think about the accountant and the lawyer and the banker - or all the bankers - and all these people that had to implicitly, and sometimes explicitly, be OK with what was happening for it to continue."

There are also questions about how Epstein was able to travel freely to the UK after his 2008 conviction for soliciting a minor for sex, which meant he had to register as a sex offender in Florida, New York and the US Virgin Islands.

Epstein was released from prison in 2009 after serving 13 months. Documents suggest Epstein took a Virgin Atlantic flight from the US to London Heathrow in September 2010, just two months after he completed his probation on house arrest.

A graph showing the number of Epstein-related flights to the UK by year, starting at one flight a year in the early 1990s and sometimes rising, sometimes falling until it reaches a peak of 17 flights in 2006. There is a gap then until after his release from prison in 2009, when there are 15 flights scattered among the years up until 2018.

Home Office rules at the time said foreign nationals who received a prison sentence of 12 months or more should, in most cases, have been refused entry.

But immigration lawyer Miglena Ilieva, managing partner at ILEX Law Group, told us that US citizens did not usually require a UK visa for short stays, so there was no application process where they would be asked about criminal convictions.

"It was very much at the discretion of the individual immigration officer who would receive this person at the border," she said.

The Home Office said it does not hold immigration and visa records beyond 10 years and added "it is longstanding government policy that we do not routinely comment on individual cases".

During the 1980s, Epstein also used a foreign passport - issued in Austria with his picture and a false name - to enter the UK as well as France, Spain and Saudi Arabia, according to US authorities.

Epstein also listed London as his place of residence in 1985, when he applied for a replacement passport, ABC News has previously reported.

Brad Edwards, a man with short brown hair and a determined look on his face, pictured in a close-up portrait with the background blurred. He wears a navy suit, a pale blue shirt and a blue and grey tie.
Brad Edwards says his British client Kate has never been contacted by UK police

In its statement on Saturday, the Met said it had contacted "several other potential victims" when it examined 2015 allegations by Virginia Giuffre that she had been trafficked for sexual exploitation by Epstein and Maxwell.

Ms Giuffre also said she was forced to have sex with Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor on three occasions, including when she was 17 at Maxwell's home in London, in 2001. The former prince has consistently denied the allegations against him.

The Met said its examination of Ms Giuffre's claims "did not result in any allegation of criminal conduct against any UK-based nationals" and it concluded that "other international authorities were best placed to progress these allegations".

That decision was reviewed in August 2019 and again in 2021 and 2022 with the same result, it said.

But for lawyer Sigrid McCawley, the message the Met is sending to victims is "that if you come to law enforcement and this is a powerful person you're reporting on… it will not get investigated."

Whole-of-society effort needed to deter Russia threat, armed forces chief says

16 December 2025 at 07:22
PA Media Sir Richard Knighton speaking behind a lectern. The lectern reads RUSI on the front and the background also says RUSI. PA Media

More UK families will "know what sacrifice for our nation means" as the nation seeks to deter a potential confrontation with Russia, the head of the military has said.

Sir Richard Knighton said the country's security "cannot be outsourced to the armed forces" and "requires a whole-of-society response", including harnessing UK universities and manufacturing.

While the chief of the defence staff suggested there was only a remote chance of Russia directly attacking the UK, he told an event at the Royal United Services Institute that so-called hybrid attacks showed the threat was worsening.

He referenced a Russian spy ship that was recently suspected of mapping undersea cables near UK waters.

"Every day the UK is subject to an onslaught of cyber-attacks from Russia and we know that Russian agents are seeking to conduct sabotage and have killed on our shores," he added.

At the same time, Russia's military had become a "hard power [which] is growing quickly".

While Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine had been a strategic failure, he said, "we should be under no illusions that Russia has a massive, increasingly technically sophisticated, and now highly combat-experienced military".

Sir Richard said the UK needed to make itself a "harder target" for hybrid threats and to avoid war.

Building the nation's resilience went beyond strengthening the military and "more people being ready to fight for their country", and included harnessing the UK's universities, energy and manufacturing industries, and the NHS.

It also meant building industrial capacity "to meet the demands in the UK and of our allies to re-stock and re-arm".

"Building this industrial capacity also means we need more people who leave schools and universities to join that industry."

He added that "we need defence and political leaders to explain the importance of the industry to the nation, and we need schools and parents to encourage children and young adults to take up careers in the industry".

Addressing a skills gap highlighted in a recent report by the Royal Academy of Engineering, Sir Richard also talked about the need to work with industry and young people, announcing £50m for new defence technical excellence colleges.

In recent weeks, both France and Germany have outlined plans for voluntary national service.

Last year, the then-Conservative government set out its own compulsory proposals, which Labour dismissed as a gimmick.

Sir Richard, who became chief of the defence staff in September, said he found himself in a position none of his predecessors had: "looking at the prospect of the largest sustained increase in defence spending since the end of the Cold War".

The government announced earlier this year that UK defence and security spending would rise to 5% of GDP by 2035 at the latest.

"Sons and daughters, colleagues, veterans will all have a role to play - to build, to serve, and if necessary, to fight," Sir Richard said. "And more families will know what sacrifice for our nation means.

"That is why it's so important we do explain the changing threat and the need to stay ahead of it."

UK and South Korea strike trade deal

16 December 2025 at 06:31
Department for Business and Trade Trade minister Chris Bryant and his Korean counterpart Yeo Han-kooDepartment for Business and Trade
Trade minister Chris Bryant and his Korean counterpart Yeo Han-koo announced the deal in London

The UK and South Korea have finalised a trade deal which the government says will create thousands of jobs and bring billions into the British economy.

British industries including pharmaceuticals, car manufacturing, alcohol and financial services are expected to benefit from an extension to the current tariff-free trade on most goods and services.

The deal is the fourth such agreement struck by the Labour government, following deals with the EU, US and India — none of which have had a material impact on the UK's economy so far.

South Korean culture, including music, cosmetics and food, has become much more popular in the UK in recent years.

Trade minister Chris Bryant announced the deal in Samsung's flagship store in London on Monday night, accompanied by his Korean counterpart Yeo Han-koo.

Under the deal, 98% of trade will continue to be tariff free, the same terms that the EU has with South Korea, and which the UK maintained temporarily after Brexit.

The UK's agreement with South Korea was set to expire in January 2026, but the new agreement will protect £2bn of UK exports from an increase in tariffs.

Prime Minister Keir Starmer said the deal was "a huge win for British business".

"This deal making trade even easier between us will help boost the economy - supporting jobs and growth which will be felt all over the country," he said.

Bryant said the deal would give "cast-iron protections to our key industries to speed up economic growth as part of our Plan for Change".

South Korea is the UK's 25th largest trading partner, according to the Department for Business and Trade. In the 12 months to the end of June this year, it accounted for 0.8% of the UK's total trade.

Over that same 12-month period, official figures show UK exports to South Korea fell 16.4% and South Korean exports to the UK fell 10.8%.

South Korea's trade minister told the BBC that South Korea and Britain's economies "are complimentary", and denied that the fall in trade between the nations suggested the relationship wasn't as important as it used to be.

South Korea's trade minister Yeo Han-koo sits in a cream leather chair with his country's flag in the background as he is interviewed by a BBC reporter.

Han-koo said the new agreement was more about reducing non-tariff barriers, such as making rules around product origin more business friendly, and creating new digital and investment protections.

"So these two economies can win by cooperating closer through this kind of framework," he added.

Han-koo also said Britain can serve as a gateway for South Korea in its trade with Europe, while South Korea can serve as a gateway to Asia for British companies.

The South Korean deal is the latest in a series of post-Brexit trade agreements, but the independent budget forecaster, the OBR, has so far deemed deals done with those larger partners as unlikely to make a measurable impact on the UK economy by 2030.

The government has said that its various trade agreements struck this year will grow the British economy by creating jobs and cutting red tape for small businesses.

But its own assessment showed that the deal with India will only increase GDP by between 0.11% and 0.14%.

That deal in particular was criticised for potentially undercutting British workers.

India is the UK's 10th-largest trading partner, accounting for 2.5% of British trade.

'Great news'

UK companies including Bentley Motors, Jaguar Land Rover (JLR) and Guinness owner Diageo welcomed the news of the South Korean deal.

Frank-Steffen Walliser, chairman and chief executive of Bentley Motors, said that South Korea is a key market for the company and the wider luxury vehicle market.

"To secure immediate ongoing access to South Korea and a positive long term trade deal, is great news. Smooth international trade is vital to UK automotive business growth."

Diageo's interim chief executive Nik Jhangiani said it would "help satisfy the growing demand from South Korean consumers" for Guinness, which is canned in Runcorn, Cheshire.

Emily Weaver Roads, interim international director at the Scotch Whisky Association, said the Asia-Pacific region was the largest regional market by value for whisky.

"The reduction of trade barriers in the Republic of Korea will further enhance Scotch Whisky's access to an important market, especially for single malts."

20251216

16 December 2025 at 08:17

From today's featured article

Edith Swan (left) and Rose Gooding (right)
Edith Swan (left) and Rose Gooding (right)

The Littlehampton libels were a series of letters sent to numerous residents of Littlehampton, in southern England, over a three-year period between 1920 and 1923. The letters, which contained obscenities and false accusations, were written by Edith Swan, a thirty-year-old laundress; she tried to incriminate her neighbour, Rose Gooding, a thirty-year-old married woman. Swan and Gooding (both pictured) had once been friends, but after Swan made a false report to the National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children accusing Gooding of maltreating one of her sister's children, the letters started arriving. Many of them were signed as if from Gooding. Swan brought a private prosecution against Gooding for libel. Gooding was imprisoned twice, but Scotland Yard investigated and cleared her. Swan was prosecuted in December 1921. A similar case of letters being sent over several years was reported in 2024, in the village of Shiptonthorpe, East Yorkshire. (Full article...)

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Today's featured picture

African chaffinch

The African chaffinch (Fringilla spodiogenys) is a species of passerine bird in the genus Fringilla. The African chaffinch is found from southern Morocco to northwestern Libya, and in Italy on the islands of Lampedusa and Pantelleria. There is also an isolated population in northeastern Libya. Its habitat includes deciduous forests and lowlands, and during the nonbreeding season extends its habitat to open areas including weedy fields and olive groves. The diet of the African chaffinch is similar to the Eurasian chaffinch, consisting mostly of small invertebrates and their larvae as well as flowers, seeds, and buds. This female African chaffinch was photographed in Sfax, Tunisia.

Photograph credit: Charles J. Sharp

早报|iPhone 20或将采用「四曲面」全面屏设计/首批L3车型获批,两家车企入围/麦当劳涨价,涨幅0.5–1元

16 December 2025 at 08:15
cover

🚗

首批 L3 车型获工信部准入许可,长安与极狐限定路段试点

📱

曝 iPhone 20 将采用「四曲面」无边框设计,LG 投资改造生产线

🤯

小米交付中心发生事故,知情人士:事发时处于人驾状态

🍎

苹果推送 iOS 26.3 开发者测试版:开放「传输至安卓」与第三方手表通知转发

🤖

扫地机器人「鼻祖」破产,中国代工厂接盘

❄

董明珠回应空调「铝代铜」:一定研究、未必采用

📺

微软 Copilot「强势入驻」LG 电视,不可卸载引争议

🖊

腾讯元宝推出「写作模式」,聊天即可写出万字小说

🏥

阿里达摩院医疗AI模型入选国家级榜单,攻克主动脉夹层漏诊难题

💡

摩根大通 CEO:在 AI 时代,情商等「软技能」对就业更重要

🧑⚕

「蚂蚁阿福」AI 健康助手上线:报告解读准确率 95%+

🍔

麦当劳上调多款餐品价格,经典汉堡与小食涨 0.5 – 1 元

重磅

首批 L3 车型获工信部准入许可,长安与极狐限定路段试点

据央视新闻和网易财经报道,工信部已在第 401 批《公告》中附条件许可了我国首批 L3 级「有条件自动驾驶」车型产品,两款车型分别来自重庆长安汽车股份有限公司与北汽蓝谷麦格纳汽车有限公司。

  • 长安牌 SC7000AAARBEV 型纯电动轿车可在交通拥堵环境下,于高速公路和城市快速路单车道内实现最高时速 50km/h 的自动驾驶功能,目前仅限重庆市内环快速路、新内环快速路(高滩岩立交—赖家桥立交)及渝都大道(人和立交—机场立交)等路段开启;
  • 极狐牌 BJ7001A61NBEV 型纯电动轿车可在高速公路和城市快速路单车道内实现最高时速 80km/h 的自动驾驶功能,目前仅限北京市京台高速(大兴区旧宫新桥—机场北线高速)、机场北线高速(大渠南桥—大兴机场高速)及大兴机场高速(南六环—机场北线高速)等路段开启。

报道指出,两家企业已完成并通过了产品测试与安全评估,下一步将由两家公司在上述区域开展上路通行试点。

消息传出后,北汽集团随即官宣:极狐阿尔法 S(L3 版)获批工业和信息化部自动驾驶车型产品准入许可,即将在北京市限定区域内开展 L3 级有条件自动驾驶上路通行试点。

结合此前央视新闻报道,广汽昊铂 A800 已获全国首张高速 L3 道路测试牌照,搭载华为乾崑 ADS 4.0 系统,最高测试时速达 120km/h。

目前,华为方案已在七城开展大规模路测,预计 2026 年实现高速 L3 商用,多家车企亦已获得测试许可。

工信部强调,L5 才是「完全自动驾驶」,当前推进的是 L3 级「有条件自动驾驶」的通行试点与生产准入。

曝 iPhone 20 将采用「四曲面」无边框设计,LG 投资改造生产线

据 Wccftech 报道,苹果未来的 iPhone 20 或将采用「四曲面」的全面屏设计,追求近乎无边框的外观。

为配合这一屏幕形态,LG 被曝正投入接近 300 万美元以升级与改造其生产线,因实现该设计需要对现有工艺进行「大幅改造」。该消息于美国东部时间昨天晚间发布,目前仍以传闻为主,尚未获得苹果或 LG 的官方确认。

报道指出,「四曲面」设计具体来说是屏幕四个方向均在边缘处下折,以实现边框几乎不可见的观感,这对薄化堆叠、边缘封装与耐用性提出更高要求。

LG 的投入被形容为「巨额」,主要用于适应全新面板结构与模组装配流程的换线与升级,但具体产能计划与量产时间表尚未披露。

报道同时提到,若要在保持机身薄型化的前提下实现全面屏,相关机型可能需要在传感器方案上做权衡,但并未具体提及 iPhone 20 的生物识别(指纹/人脸)最终选型。

大公司

小米交付中心发生事故,知情人士:事发时处于人驾状态

据澎湃新闻报道,昨天,浙江杭州小米下沙交付中心发生一起交通事故:一名新车车主在园区内倒车时撞倒园区内某公司工作人员,警方和 120 救护车迅速到场并将伤者转移,目前事故仍在进一步调查处理中。

据小米内部知情人士称,事发时车辆处于人驾而非智驾状态,在狭窄过道倒车过程中,驾驶者误将电门踏板当成刹车踏板深踩,导致车辆突然加速并碰撞到车后行人。

杭州市交警部门确认,下沙交付中心确有交通事故发生;对于当事人是否当场身亡,因事故正在按照法律程序处置,不便透露进一步信息。

现场信息显示,事故地点位于杭州市钱塘区梦马汽车小镇、中升杭州汽车维修服务有限公司门前附近。

目击者称车辆「速度挺慢的,就突然一瞬间加了个速」,并指向倒车时左前轮区域发生碰撞;多名园区工作人员证实昨天下午园区内确有小米车辆撞倒中升公司员工的情况。

网络流传的现场视频显示,伤者倒地后有人在旁进行心肺复苏,随后交警与急救人员抵达参与救援。

苹果推送 iOS 26.3 开发者测试版:开放「传输至安卓」与第三方手表通知转发

据 MacRumors 报道,今天凌晨,苹果推送 iOS 26.3 首个开发者测试版,引入两项面向跨平台与第三方生态的重要改动:

  • 新增「传输至安卓」数据迁移工具;
  • 在「通知转发」设置中允许将 iPhone 通知转发至第三方可穿戴设备。

「传输至安卓」支持在两部设备置于近距离、连接 Wi‑Fi 且开启蓝牙的条件下,直接从 iPhone 迁移照片、信息、备忘录、App、密码与电话号码等,无需额外下载应用。健康数据、已配对的蓝牙设备以及受保护内容(如锁定备忘录)暂不支持迁移。

「通知转发」选项位于「设置‑通知‑通知转发」。启用后,iPhone 入站通知可选择按 App 白名单转发至一台第三方设备;一旦开启,Apple Watch 将不再接收与显示相关通知。

除 iOS 外,苹果还面向开发者发布 watchOS 26.3、tvOS 26.3、visionOS 26.3 与 macOS Tahoe 26.3 的首个测试版,参照既往周期,正式版大概率在 1 月底前后推出。

值得注意的是,该版本中 Apple Intelligence 国行版本仍未上线,且暂无明确时间表。

此前,欧洲数字市场法(DMA)与美国司法部反垄断诉讼对苹果在跨平台互通与第三方设备支持方面施压,此次调整被视为合规与生态开放的进一步回应。

扫地机器人「鼻祖」破产,中国代工厂接盘

据界面新闻报道,扫地机器人「鼻祖」iRobot 于当地时间 12 月 14 日向美国特拉华州法院提交第 11 章破产保护申请,并与最大债权人兼主要代工方深圳杉川机器人(Picea)达成《重组支持协议》。

「重组协议」拟由杉川获得 iRobot 100% 股权;在破产程序推进期间,iRobot 将维持正常运营,包括应用与客户服务、全球合作伙伴与供应链协同等不受影响。

重组获批后,公司将成为杉川全资控股的私人企业,其普通股将在纳斯达克等全国性交易所摘牌,已发行与流通股权被注销,普通股股东面临「全额损失」。

截至 9 月 27 日,公司现金及等价物约 2480 万美元、总负债约 5.08 亿美元,股东权益为负,现金流几近枯竭。

iRobot 成立于 1990 年,2002 年推出家用扫地机器人 Roomba,开创消费级清洁机器人品类;首年销量约 5 万台,2005 年销量破 200 万台并在纳斯达克上市,巅峰时期全球市占率曾超过 80%。

2022 年,亚马逊曾拟以约 17 亿美元现金收购 iRobot,但受美国联邦贸易委员会与欧盟反垄断审查影响,交易在 2024 年初告吹,外部资金支持随之中断。

外界普遍认为,iRobot 破产源于日益激烈的市场竞争。

随着石头、科沃斯、追觅、小米等中国品牌普及激光雷达导航与「全能基站」等方案,iRobot 坚守传统视觉导航并较晚推出扫拖一体机与多功能基站,产品路线与节奏落后且定价维持高位。

IDC 数据显示,2025 年前三季度全球扫地机器人出货量同比增长 18.7%,中国品牌包揽全球前五;iRobot 份额降至 7.9%,已被挤出前五。

iRobot CEO 加里・科恩(Gary Cohen)表示:「此次交易将强化我们的财务状况,确保为消费者、客户及合作伙伴提供业务连续性保障。」

公司已向法院提交相关动议,以确保在程序启动前、期间及之后按常规运营、履行员工与供应商的承诺与支付。

🔗 相关阅读:iRobot 终于「死」了,击垮它的是中国家电军团

董明珠回应空调「铝代铜」:一定研究、未必采用

据新浪科技报道,格力电器董事长董明珠就空调行业「铝代铜」再度回应称,铝「可以代」,但目前「还没有达到铜的同等技术条件和保障」,在没有百分之百把握前,格力不会采用「铝代铜」。

近日举办的「2025 中国家电科技年会」上,由海尔、海信等参与的《房间空调器用铝管翅式热交换器生产线建设规范》团体标准已发布,铝制换热器原材料技术要求等多项团体标准正在编制。

《房间空气调节器用热交换器》国家标准亦在修订,新一轮讨论预计将于 2026 年 1 月举行;海尔、美的、海信、TCL、奥克斯、小米、美博等企业联合宣示遵守自律公约,科学宣传铝换热器特点并杜绝夸大或虚假承诺。

值得注意的是,格力缺席此次联合发声。

昨天,董明珠向新浪科技强调,格力坚持不用「铝代铜」的主因在于耐久性、稳定性与长期可靠性的把握不足;此前她与格力管理层在股东大会及业绩说明会上也多次表示,在性能、质量和可靠性未完全保证前,暂无「铝代铜」计划。

从成本与供应链角度看,铜是空调核心原材料、约占整机成本 20% 左右;同等情况下,铝材成本约为铜材的十分之一(价格约三分之一、密度约三分之一),但在熔点、热传导系数、电阻率、耐腐蚀和长期可靠性等参数上存在差距。

中国约 80% 的铜依赖进口,而电解铝产量占全球约 60%,可控性更强;在国际铜价突破每吨 1 万美元的背景下,「铝代铜」被视为降本路径,但技术与可靠性争议仍在。

产业侧观点也出现分歧。有专家称家电业两年前已具备「全面铝代铜」的技术能力,推进受制于舆论与大众接受度;同时强调全球家电企业正沿「少铜化」路径演进,「铝代铜」具有战略意义。

另一方面,行业共识亦指出铜在导热性、耐腐蚀性与长期可靠性方面具备物理优势,铝的焊接工艺更复杂,对制造与焊接能力要求更高,这也是头部品牌谨慎推进的原因之一。

微软 Copilot「强势入驻」LG 电视,不可卸载引争议

据 TechPowerUp 和 igor´sLAB 报道,LG 电视的 webOS 系统近日推送更新,自动安装微软 Copilot AI 应用,用户无法卸载,仅能隐藏该应用入口。

多位用户在 Reddit 等社区反馈同样情况,称 Copilot 以系统应用形式存在,无法通过常规方式卸载;目前该应用在电视端的具体功能尚不明确。

网上普遍猜测,此举或为 LG 电视的「Live Plus」功能做铺垫:开启后,电视会识别屏幕上播放的内容,以个性化推荐内容与广告。

用户可在设置中关闭以减少跟踪,但即使关闭,「Copilot」仍会保留为系统应用。

微软在 AI Agent 市场的竞争压力正在加剧。

根据 Windows Central 的统计,ChatGPT 占据超过 61% 的市场份额,而 Copilot 约为 14%,Google Gemini 与 Copilot 差距不到 1%,并在上季度实现 12% 的增长,正在逼近成为第二选择。

此外,微软还被曝下调部分 AI Agent 产品的销售目标,幅度最高达 50%,显示其在用户采用度与商业化方面面临挑战。

腾讯元宝推出「写作模式」,聊天即可写出万字小说

昨天,腾讯元宝官宣上线写作模式,用户可在对话中完成中长篇小说创作。

据介绍,新功能支持自动补全剧情、人设与大纲,并可一键从大纲生成成稿,单次可直出数万字文本,强调人物性格前后一致、情节环环相扣并可记忆伏笔。

官方在示例中展示了多题材适配,包括历史、末日科幻、同人续写与娱乐行业题材等,并可实现技术树演进、逻辑严谨且长稿不失忆的叙事连续性;用户可基于一句话设定让元宝补全大纲与章节结构,并自定义故事走向与结局。

官方表示,元宝可在约 14 分钟生成约 3 万字,半小时写出 5 万字,并支持将长稿一键导出至本地文档或腾讯文档。

新功能同时支持电脑版与网页版,网页版在对话框输入 @,点击写作选择小说即可调用;移动端可在对话框右侧 + 进入 AI 写作。

阿里达摩院医疗AI模型入选国家级榜单,攻克主动脉夹层漏诊难题

达摩院 DAMO 昨日发文称,工信部与国家药监局联合公布「2025 年人工智能医疗器械创新任务揭榜挂帅」入围名单,阿里达摩院牵头研发的「急性主动脉综合征 CT 图像智能辅助分诊软件」iAorta 成功入选。

这一成果已在全国十余家医院落地应用,旨在降低急性主动脉综合征的漏诊与误诊率。

iAorta 基于阿里达摩院在「平扫 CT + AI」领域的技术积累,联合浙江大学医学院附属第一医院历时三年研发完成。

该模型能够在常规平扫 CT 上快速勾画主动脉及血管腔,判断血管壁结构变化,从而精准识别急性主动脉综合征(AAS)。专家指出,该模型无需额外设备即可部署,尤其适合偏远地区和基层医院,具有显著的医疗普惠价值。

在覆盖 20 万人的大规模临床试验中,iAorta 的敏感性与特异性分别达到 95.5% 与 99.4%,漏诊率由 48.8% 降至 4.8%,平均确诊时间从 4.3 小时缩短至 1.7 小时。

目前,达摩院正联合浙大一院在全国推广 iAorta。浙江首批 10 家医院以及山东省立医院等多家省外医院已率先开展科研合作与落地。

💡 摩根大通 CEO:在 AI 时代,情商等「软技能」对就业更重要

据《财富》报道,摩根大通 CEO Jamie Dimon 上周末在福克斯新闻节目「Sunday Morning Futures」中的采访表示,AI 正在重塑就业市场并「会消除岗位」,但他不认为在「一年内」会出现大规模的裁员。

他建议求职者强化「批判性思维、学习新技能、情商(EQ)、会议表现、沟通与写作」等「软技能」,并称「你会有大量工作机会」。

Dimon 补充,AI 快速落地对员工的影响可能比再培训更快,政府与企业应通过「安置支持、收入补助」等措施帮助员工顺利过渡,「下一个工作可能更好,但需要学习如何胜任」。

报道指出,自 2023 年以来,雇主已明确以人工智能为由宣布超过 70000 个岗位裁员,原因包括自动化重复性工作与围绕新工具重组团队。

在此背景下,多位 CEO 强调软技能的重要性。微软 CEO Satya Nadella 在 11 月的访谈中称,随着 AI 接管更多分析与技术任务,「同理心与情商」的重要性正在上升;

IBM 前 CEO 吉妮 · 罗梅蒂在 2023 年对 Fortune 表示,生成式 AI 的全面融入将让「协作、判断力与批判性思维」成为溢价能力,这些适应性是人类所长,无法通过学位直接教授。

新产品

2999 元起,vivo S50 系列正式发布

昨晚,vivo 正式发布 S50 系列新机,强调长续航和影像配置,包含 S50 和 S50 Pro mini 两款新机型。具体配置如下:

vivo S50:

  • 搭载 骁龙 8s Gen3 平台、LPDDR5X 内存 + UFS 4.1 闪存;
  • 6.59 英寸 OLED 直屏,120Hz 刷新率,4320Hz 高频 PWM 调光、全局峰值亮度 1800 尼特;
  • 50MP LYT700V OIS 主摄、8MP 超广角、50MP IMX882 OIS 潜望长焦、50MP 前置;
  • 搭载 6500 毫安时电池,支持 90W 有线充电;
  • 整机重量 197 克,支持 IP68 / 69 防尘抗水;
  • 支持红外遥控、全功能 NFC 和超声波屏下指纹识别。

vivo S50 Pro mini:

  • 搭载骁龙 8 Gen5 平台、LPDDR5X 内存 + UFS 4.1 闪存;
  • 6.31英寸 OLED 直屏,支持 120Hz、LTPO;
  • 50MP IMX921 F1.57 OIS 主摄、8MP 超广角、50MP IMX882 OIS 潜望长焦、50MP 前置;
  • 内置 6500 毫安时电池,支持 90W 有线快充和 40W 无线充电、支持反向无线充电;
  • 整机重 192 克,支持 IP68 / IP69 防尘抗水;
  • 支持红外遥控、全功能 NFC 和超声波屏下指纹识别。

售价方面,vivo S50 起售价为 2999 元(12GB + 256GB),16GB + 512GB 版本售价 3599 元;vivo S50 Pro mini 3699 元起售(12GB + 256GB),16GB + 512GB 版本售价则为 4299 元。

2899 元起,OPPO Reno15c 正式发布

昨天,OPPO 发布新机「Reno 15c」,定位入门机型,主打更大直屏与长续航。具体配置如下:

  • 搭载第四代骁龙 7 平台、LPDDR5X + UFS 3.1;
  • 采用 6.59 英寸 OLED 直屏,分辨率 2760×1256、支持 120Hz 高刷新率与高频 PWM 调光;
  • 50MP 主摄、50MP 潜望长焦与 8MP 超广角以及 50MP 前置,主摄支持两轴 OIS 防抖;
  • 内置 6500mAh 电池,支持 80W 有线快充;
  • 搭载短焦光学指纹,支持红外遥控与 NFC;
  • 整机约 197g、厚度 7.7mm,支持 IP69 防尘防水。

售价方面,OPPO Reno 15c 起售价为 2899 元(12GB + 256GB),12GB + 512GB 版本售价为 3199 元,将于 12 月 19 日开售。

华为 nova 15 系列定档 12 月 22 日,易烊千玺代言

昨天,华为宣布 nova 15 系列及全场景新品发布会定于 12 月 22 日 14:30 举行,并在线上线下渠道开启预售。官方同步释出代言人易烊千玺手持 nova 15 Ultra 的首张海报。

nova 15 系列预计包括 nova 15、nova 15 Pro、nova 15 Ultra 三款机型,提供「带感绿」「好搭紫」「零度白」「幻夜黑」四种配色,nova 15 标准版延续单挖孔屏设计;Pro 与 Ultra 采用横向大矩阵镜头模组,预计全系搭载红枫原色镜头

具体配置方面,据网传爆料,nova 15 标准版预计搭载麒麟 8020 芯片;nova 15 Pro 预计搭载搭载麒麟 8030 芯片;nova 15 Ultra 则预计配备更高一档的麒麟 9020 芯片。

目前,三款机型已在官网展示完整外观、配色与存储方案,nova 15 与 nova 15 Pro 均提供 12GB + 256GB、12GB + 512GB 两档,nova 15 Ultra 额外增加 12GB + 1TB 版本。

399 元起,徕芬扫振电动牙刷 i2 正式发布

昨天,徕芬正式发布全新一代扫振电动牙刷 i2,延续自研伺服系统与一体无缝压感按键的设计,强调趁手、可靠的产品理念,新增「透明探索版」和钛金属版两种机身材质。

本次新品最显著的改进包括将充电方式从上代的触点改为无线充电、并新增 Pro/Max 共五款不同大小和刷毛硬度的新刷头,覆盖不同用户需求,同时新增过压提醒功能,防止用力过猛损伤牙齿。

核心配置方面,徕芬表示 i2 采用自研自产伺服电机,最高扫振频率可达 6.6 万次/分,性能为行业标杆。

值得注意的是,本次徕芬特别强调新品电动牙刷在耐用性上的提升,并提出两年只换不修的售后承诺。

售价方面,i2 提供多材质与版本选择:ABS 材质售价 399 元、透明探索版 459 元、铝合金 499 元、不锈钢 599 元、钛合金 799 元。

「蚂蚁阿福」AI 健康助手上线:报告解读准确率 95%+

昨天,蚂蚁集团将旗下 AI 健康应用 AQ 品牌升级为「蚂蚁阿福」,围绕「健康+」战略,完善健康陪伴、健康问答、健康服务三大能力,定位由 AI 工具转向「AI 健康朋友」。

新版通过数据记录、目标管理与提醒等机制,帮助用户和家人持续养成健康习惯、管理日常健康,并连接线下医疗服务体系。

用户可建立家人健康档案,平台以「家庭医生」方式进行趋势追踪与风险提醒;同时上线「健康小目标」「健康小提醒」,为运动、饮食与生活习惯定制专属计划并日常提示。

在健康问答上,平台可理解语音、文字与图片,支持「拍皮肤」「拍报告」「拍药盒」等场景科普与解读。蚂蚁阿福强调一对一「一人一策」的专业性,利用陪伴模块的动态数据提供更具针对性的解答。

值得注意的是,「拍报告」功能支持拍照、上传 PDF、上传照片,覆盖 99% 常见报告,支持多报告对比与单报告解读,官方称解读准确率在 95% 以上。

蚂蚁阿福 App 月活用户已超 1500 万,跻身国内 AI App 前五,成为国内最大的健康管理 AI App;当前平台每日回答健康提问超过 500 万个,55% 用户来自三线及以下城市,体现普惠特征。

蚂蚁集团副总裁、健康事业群总裁张俊杰表示,命名「阿福」意在「健康是福」,升级的核心是从「工具」走向「朋友」,「能像朋友一样陪伴、了解并守护隐私」。

蚂蚁阿福强调,其回答不构成医疗诊断,亦不替代医生。平台已链接全国 30 万真人医生提供在线问诊,并可协助挂号、购药与医院电子医保码支付。

张俊杰称,数字平台与智能技术可「让 1 个医生变成 10 个医生」,提升专业健康服务的可及性。

新消费

麦当劳上调多款餐品价格,经典汉堡与小食涨 0.5 – 1 元

据澎湃新闻报道,昨日,多地消费者发现麦当劳大部分餐品上调价格,涨幅普遍为 0.5 元至 1 元,涵盖多款汉堡、小食及部分套餐。

麦当劳中国回应称,自 2025 年 12 月 15 日起,部分餐品价格上调 0.5 至 1 元;同时仍在开展「麦麦农场美食节之十元吃堡」优惠活动,强调为消费者提供「超值美味和便捷服务」。

麦当劳小程序菜单显示,巨无霸、双层深海鳕鱼堡、麦香鱼等经典汉堡单价均上涨 1 元;麦乐鸡、那么大鸡排涨价 1 元;麦麦脆汁鸡、中份薯条上调 0.5 元;麦旋风、新地等甜品同步上涨 0.5 元。

值得注意的是,被网友称为「穷鬼套餐」的「1+1 随心配」仍维持 13.9 元起,但部分组合因配料涨价间接增加 1 元成本;例如选择双层吉士汉堡需额外加 1 元,到手价为 14.9 元;若不选择「特制」食品,套餐价格保持不变。

喜茶推出红心芭乐季节限定新品

昨天,HEYTEA 喜茶宣布推出「奇兰芭乐莲雾」、「雪毫茉王芭乐」两款新品,主打「一杯更『柔和』的芭乐茶」。

本次新品以当季红心芭乐为核心,采用经九次窨香的雪毫茉王作前调,搭配轻焙火乌龙奇兰带来的花香尾韵,强调从果香到茶感的层次过渡与持久留香。

除饮品外,芭乐莲雾 · 香薰蜡烛套装和奇兰芭乐莲雾灵感小卡也将于今日起上线。

瑞幸咖啡 × 小黄人联名上线「巴拿拿拿铁」

昨天,瑞幸咖啡携手小黄人上线联名饮品「巴拿拿拿铁」,并推出限定周边活动。

据介绍,新品采用厄瓜多尔进口香蕉浆,口感偏绵密、带冰淇淋风味,与丝滑咖啡液融合呈现热带甜香。

周边与套餐方面,官方列出联动贴纸、派对吹吹卷(随机 1 款,合计 5 款)、迷你杯挂件、旋转手机支架、毛绒发声挂件等,通过指定单杯或双杯套餐获取,每单或每个套餐限得 1 件。

好看的

《复仇者联盟5:毁灭之日》将发四条预告,要看四遍《阿凡达3》

据 Collider 报道,漫威新作《复仇者联盟5:毁灭之日》的首支预告将在 12 月 19 日随即《阿凡达3》院线拷贝同步曝光。

不同于以往系列仅推出一支首发预告,此次迪士尼向院线投放了「四个版本」,每支预告片播放一周后更换下一支,观众若想在影院完整观看全部预告,需要至少四次走进《阿凡达3》的放映厅

韩国媒体分级机构「Korea Media Rating Board」信息显示,首支预告时长为「1 分 25 秒」,创下系列首支预告最短纪录。

此前四部《复仇者联盟》电影的首支预告均在 2 分钟以上,显示漫威在宣发策略上更为克制。业内人士分析,漫威或通过「分期投放 + 多版本组合」的方式,在未来数周持续制造话题热度,既保证院线观众的触达,又避免过早泄露剧情关键信息。

《复仇者联盟5:毁灭之日》目前定档 2026 年 12 月 18 日,由 Anthony Russo 与 Joe Russo 执导,编剧包括 Stephen McFeely、Michael Waldron 等。

《什么意思夫妇》正式开机,小沈阳沈春阳真夫妻演夫妻

沈春阳执导、小沈阳与沈春阳领衔主演的爆笑喜剧电影《什么意思夫妇》已于昨天正式开机,并同步发布概念海报。

影片围绕一对结婚 N 年的「对抗路夫妻」展开:两人在递交离婚申请后遭遇意外,生活迎来翻天覆地的变化,引发一场失控又爆笑的故事。

小沈阳与沈春阳首次以夫妻身份亮相银幕,凭借舞台与影视累积的国民度与角色口碑,叠加「真夫妻演夫妻」的默契与喜剧表达,有望提供鲜明反差与看点。

革命历史题材片《十三根金条》定档 12 月 26 日

革命历史题材影片《十三根金条》正式定档 12 月 26 日上映,片长 93 分钟。

影片故事以江西赣南中央苏区的真实历史事迹为蓝本,聚焦共产党人在艰苦岁月中对信念与忠诚的坚守,核心叙事围绕 1934 年 10 月红军第五次反「围剿」失败后被迫长征的历史背景展开。

角色谢福生奉命携带全县百姓支援红军的「十三根金条」前往瑞金寻觅部队,因红军转移与党组织转入地下而失联,影片以个人命运折射家国大义,强调「忠诚重于黄金」的主题表达。

#欢迎关注爱范儿官方微信公众号:爱范儿(微信号:ifanr),更多精彩内容第一时间为您奉上。

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FBI foils New Year's Eve terror plot across southern California, officials say

16 December 2025 at 02:26
Watch: Aerial video shows alleged explosive device testing

A suspected New Year's Eve terror plot by an extremist group has been foiled by federal authorities in Los Angeles, officials say.

Four alleged members of the Turtle Island Liberation Front - an offshoot of a pro-Palestinian anti-government group - have been arrested on suspicion of planning a coordinated bombing attack in at least five locations across southern California, the FBI and LA law enforcement said on Monday.

The suspects were apprehended last week while traveling to the desert east of Los Angeles to test improvised explosive devices, officials said.

The FBI believes it has "disrupted the plot", but an investigation to identify other potential suspects is ongoing.

US Attorney General Pam Bondi said on X on Sunday that the agencies prevented "far-left" extremists from executing "a massive and horrific terror plot".

Audrey Illeene Carroll, 30; Zachary Aaron Page, 32; Dante Gaffield, 24; and Tina Lai, 41, face charges including conspiracy and possession of an unregistered destructive device, according to the complaint filed in the US District Court for the Central District of California.

On 12 December, the group travelled to the desert with "precursor chemicals" and were allegedly going to create bombs with their wares, officials said during a media conference on Monday.

A surveillance plane captured footage of their movements and the Los Angeles FBI SWAT team, along with the FBI, moved in and arrested the quartet without incident.

The bombing plot involved explosive devices being planted at locations that targeted two US companies described as logistic centres at midnight on New Year's Eve in the Los Angeles area.

The group also allegedly discussed attacking Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents and vehicles with pipe bombs in January or February, according to the complaint said.

Carroll allegedly said: "That would take some of them out and scare the rest of them."

"The successful disruption of this plot is a powerful testament to the strength of our unified response," said LAPD Chief Jim McDonnell, adding that work through allied agencies "prevented a potential tragedy and reaffirmed our shared commitment to safeguarding our communities".

How the Maga world became divided - and what it means for Trump

16 December 2025 at 06:11
BBC A treated image showing a slice of Trump's face in the middle, surrounded by  crowds holding Maga signs on either side BBC

At a meeting of his cabinet at the White House two weeks ago, US President Donald Trump looked around the long room filled with his top advisers, administration officials and aides, and made a prediction.

The next Republican presidential candidate, he said, is "probably sitting at this table".

"It could be a couple of people sitting at this table," he added, hinting at possible electoral clashes to come.

Despite a constitutional amendment limiting him to two four-year terms, his supporters chanted "four more years" at a rally last Tuesday night in Pennsylvania. Trump said at the time that the final three years of his second term amount to an "eternity".

But in the cabinet room last week, when talking about prospects for the 2028 Republican president nomination, he was clear: "It's not going to be me."

The next presidential election may seem a long way off, but Trump's own speculation – and certain frictions within Trump's coalition - suggest that the jockeying to succeed and define the Make America Great Again (Maga) movement after Trump is well under way.

EPA/Shutterstock US President Donald Trump (C) makes his opening remarks as he holds a meeting with his cabinet in the Cabinet Room of the White House EPA/Shutterstock
At 78 when he was sworn in for the second time, Trump was the oldest person ever elected president - some media outlets suggested may be slowing him down; Trump called such speculation "seditious"

In last month's local elections, the Republican Party lost support among the minority and working-class voters who helped Trump win back the White House in 2024.

Members of his team have feuded over policy. And some, most notably Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene, have cut loose from his orbit, accusing the president of losing touch with the Americans who gave him power.

There has been speculation about fractures within the Maga base in certain quarters of the international press, as well as at home. On Monday, a headline in The Washington Post asked: "Maga leaders warn Trump the base is checking out. Will he listen?"

The warning signs are there. While Trump has long been known for being in tune with his base, the months ahead will pose a series of challenges to the president and his movement. Nothing less than his political legacy is at stake.

From Vance to Rubio: A team of rivals?

It was all smiles and talk of historic presidential achievements inside the friendly confines of Trump's newly redecorated, gold-bedecked cabinet room two weeks ago.

But the presidential aspirants Trump may have had in mind as he looked around the table hint at just how hard it could be to keep his Maga movement from stretching apart at the seams.

Vice-President JD Vance sat directly across from the president. As his running mate, he is widely considered to be Trump's most likely heir apparent – the favourite of Trump's sons and libertarian Silicon Valley tech billionaires.

Getty Images  J.D. Vance is sworn in as U.S. vice president as his wife Usha Vance and family and President Donald Trump look on 
Getty Images
Vance, more than perhaps anyone in Trump's inner circle, is allied with those trying to give Trumpism an ideological foundation

Secretary of State Marco Rubio was on the president's immediate right. The former Florida senator, who competed with Trump for the Republican nomination in 2016, had spent the past 10 years undergoing a Maga transformation.

He has jettisoned his past support for liberalising immigration policy and his hard line on Russia in lieu of Trump's America First foreign policy. But if there is anyone close to an old-guard Republican with influence in Trump's party, Rubio tops the list.

Then there is Secretary Robert F Kennedy Jr, whose vaccine scepticism and "Make America Healthy Again" agenda have sent earthquakes through the US health bureaucracy; he sat two down from Rubio. The Democrat-turned-independent-turned-Republican is a living embodiment of the strange ideological bedfellows Trump made on his way to re-election last year.

And finally, Kristi Noem, the homeland security secretary, was tucked off to the corner of the table. While the former South Dakota governor is not considered a major presidential contender, her advocacy for aggressive immigration enforcement – including a recent call for a full travel ban on "every damn country that's been flooding our nation with killers, leeches and entitlement junkies" – has made her a prominent face of administration's policies.

Reuters A hand reaches out and tries to reach a MAGA hat
Reuters
The jockeying to succeed and define the Maga movement after Trump is already under way

Each might believe they could, if they chose to run, become Trump's political heir and take control of the political movement that has reshaped American politics over the last decade.

But to paraphrase Benjamin Franklin's comments at the birth of American democracy, whoever wins the Republican nomination will have been given a winning coalition – if they can keep it.

The Republican empire transformed

Of course none of this is guaranteed - nor is it certain that the next generation of Maga leaders will be someone from the president's inner circle. Trump stormed the White House as a political outsider. The next Republican leader may follow a similar path.

"It's going to be up to the next Republican president who follows Trump to set him or herself apart," says former Republican Congressman Rodney Davis of Illinois, who now works for the US Chamber of Commerce.

"But at the same time make sure that you don't go too far away, because clearly it's Donald Trump [who] got elected president twice."

When the November 2028 presidential election rolls around, American voters may not even want someone like Trump. Some public opinion polls suggest that the president may not be as popular as he once was.

A survey by YouGov earlier this month indicated the president had a net approval rating of -14, compared with +6 when he took office again in January. Then there are concerns about the economy and his relentless efforts to push the boundaries of presidential power.

Getty Images President Donald Trump gestures to supporters following a campaign rally
Getty Images
Leadership of Trump's movement still represents the keys to the Republican empire

Leadership of Trump's movement still represents the keys to the Republican empire, however, even if that empire has drastically changed in recent years.

"I think the Republican coalition has become fundamentally different over the last few decades," said Davis, who served in Congress from 2013 to 2023. "The Republican coalition that existed when Ronald Reagan was elected is not the Republican coalition anymore."

Back in the 1980s, the Reagan coalition was a fusion of free-market economics, cultural conservatism, anti-communism and international foreign affairs, says Laura K Field, author of Furious Minds: The Making of the Maga New Right.

Trump's party, she continues, was perhaps best described by long-time Trump adviser and current state department official Michael Anton in a 2016 essay advocating for Trump's election. In contrast with the Reagan era, its core principles include "secure borders, economic nationalism and America-first foreign policy".

'Normie Republicans' versus 'the edgelords'

Earlier this month, the conservative Manhattan Institute released a comprehensive survey of Republican voters, shedding more light on the composition of Trump's coalition.

It suggested that 65% of the current Republican Party are what it calls "core Republicans" – those who have supported party presidential nominees since at least 2016. (If they were alive in the 1980s, they may well have voted for Reagan.)

On the other hand, 29% are what the Institute called "new entrant Republicans". It is among those new Republicans that the challenge to the durability of Trump's coalition presents itself.

Only just over half said they would "definitely" support a Republican in next year's mid-term congressional elections.

According to the survey, the new entrants are younger, more diverse and more likely to hold views that break with traditional conservative orthodoxy. They hold comparatively more left-leaning views of economic policy, they tend to be more liberal on immigration and social issues, and they may also be more pro-China or critical of Israel, for example.

AFP via Getty Images Someone wears a MAGA ring AFP via Getty Images
Trump was able to attract 'new entrant Republican' voters into his coalition - the question is whether he and his political heirs can keep them, or if they even want to

Jesse Arm, vice-president of external affairs at the Manhattan Institute, told the BBC in an email: "A lot of the conversation about the future of the right is being driven by the loudest and strangest voices online, rather than by the voters who actually make up the bulk of the Republican coalition."

Perhaps not surprisingly, the so-called new entrant Republican voters are significantly less supportive of some of Trump's would-be heirs. While 70% of core Republicans have positive views of Rubio and 80% for Vance, just over half of new entrants feel that way about either.

Other findings could be more concerning for Republicans.

More than half of new entrants believe the use of political violence in American politics "is sometimes justified" – compared to just 20% among core Republicans.

It also suggests they may be more likely to be tolerant of racist or anti-Semitic speech and more prone to conspiratorial thinking – on topics like the moon landings, 9/11 and vaccines.

Trump was able to attract these voters into his coalition. The question is whether he and his political heirs can keep them there – or if they even want to.

"The real takeaway is not that these voters will 'define' the post-Trump GOP, but that future Republican leaders will have to draw clear lines about who sets the agenda," argues Mr Arm.

"The heart of the party remains normie Republicans, not the edgelords that both the media and the dissident right are strangely invested in elevating."

Clashes in the conservative ranks

The divides revealed in the Manhattan Institute poll helps explain some of the most notable frictions within the Trump coalition over the past few months.

The Trump-Greene feud that culminated in the latter's resignation from Congress began with her backing of a full release of the government files connected to the Jeffrey Epstein underage sex-trafficking case – long a source of conservative conspiracy theories.

It broadened, however, into a critique of Trump's Middle East policy and accusations of his failure to address cost-of-living and healthcare concerns for low-income American voters.

An earlier high-profile Maga split erupted over Trump's economic policy, with billionaire Elon Musk, a strong supporter and member of Trump's inner circle at the start of the year, going on to condemn certain tariffs and government spending policies.

Reuters Elon Musk speaks during a press conference with US President Donald Trump (not pictured), at the White House 
Reuters
An earlier high-profile Maga split erupted over Trump's economic policy

The president has, for the moment, largely tried to stay out of another bitter clash within conservative ranks over whether Nick Fuentes, a far-right political commentator and Holocaust denier, is welcome within the conservative movement.

It's a dispute that has roiled the influential Heritage Foundation and pitted some powerful right-wing commentators against each other.

According to Ms Field, those who follow Trump may find it a difficult conflict to avoid. "Nick Fuentes has a huge following," she says. "Part of how the conservative movement got the energy and power that they've got is by peddling to this part of the Republican Party."

In the halls of the Republican-controlled Congress, some signs of friction with the president's agenda are showing. Despite White House lobbying, it couldn't stop the House from passing a measure mandating release of the Epstein files.

The president has also been unable to convince Senate Republicans to abandon the filibuster, a parliamentary procedure Democrats in the minority have been able to block some of Trump's agenda.

AFP via Getty Images Supporters hold signs during a Make America Great Again campaign rally 
AFP via Getty Images
Even a defeat next year – or in 2028 – is unlikely to mark the end of Trumpism

Meanwhile, Trump's party has been stumbling at the polls, with the Democrats winning governorships in Virginia and New Jersey last month by comfortable margins.

In dozens of contested special elections for state and local seats over the past year, Democrats have on average improved their margins by around 13% over similar races held in last November's national elections.

The future of Trumpism

All of this will be front of mind for Republicans ahead of the 2026 mid-term congressional elections - and it will do little to ease the concerns held by some that, without Trump at the top of the ticket, their coalition will struggle to deliver reliable ballot-box victories.

Yet even a defeat next year – or in 2028 – is unlikely to mark the end of Trumpism.

The ascent by Trump's Maga movement to the pinnacle of American power has been far from a smooth one. It includes a mid-term rout in 2018 and Trump himself losing in 2020, before his re-election last November.

But the changes that Trump has wrought within the Republican Party itself appear to be foundational ones, according to Ms Field. His Maga coalition builds on strains of populist movements in the US that date back decades or more – from Barry Goldwater's insurgent presidential campaign in 1964 to the Tea Party protests during Barack Obama's presidency.

"These things are not coming out of nowhere. They are forces in American politics that have been underground for a while, but have been just kind of fermenting."

The old Republican order, she argues, is a relic of the past.

"The Trump movement is here to stay and there's no real likelihood of the old establishment returning with any sort of clout - that much is clear."

Top picture credit: Getty Images

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Epstein's UK flights had alleged British abuse victims on board, BBC finds

16 December 2025 at 06:00
US Department of Justice/PA Jeffrey Epstein, a man with grey hair wearing a bright blue polo shirt and an orange anorak, smiling broadly as he stands in front of his private plane - a black jet with chrome detailing on the wings and around the engines, with five porthole-style windows visible on the right-hand side.US Department of Justice/PA
Epstein took dozens more flights to the UK than were previously known

Almost 90 flights linked to Jeffrey Epstein arrived at and departed from UK airports, some with British women on board who say they were abused by the billionaire, a BBC investigation has found.

We have established that three British women who were allegedly trafficked appear in Epstein's records of flights in and out of the UK and other documents related to the convicted sex offender.

US lawyers representing hundreds of Epstein victims told the BBC it was "shocking" that there has never been a "full-scale UK investigation" into his activities on the other side of the Atlantic.

The UK was one of the "centrepieces" of Epstein's operations, one said.

Testimony from one of these British victims helped convict Epstein's accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell of child sex-trafficking in the US in 2021. But the victim has never been contacted by UK police, her Florida-based lawyer Brad Edwards told the BBC.

The woman, given the name Kate in the trial, was listed as having been on more than 10 flights paid for by Epstein in and out of the UK between 1999 and 2006.

The BBC is not publishing further details about the women in the documents because of the risk this might identify them.

US lawyer Sigrid McCawley said the British authorities have "not taken a closer look at those flights, at where he was at, who he was seeing at those moments, and who was with him on those planes, and conducted a full investigation".

US Attorney's Office SDNY Epstein, a man with grey hair and glasses perched on his head, sitting on a bench outside a log cabin on the Balmoral estate, wearing a pale sweatshirt. His left arm is around Maxwell's shoulder, who rests her hand on his knee. Maxwell has short brown hair and wears and blue checked shirt.US Attorney's Office SDNY
More information has emerged about Epstein, pictured here with Maxwell, and his UK links

Under the Jeffrey Epstein Transparency Act, the deadline to release all US government files on the sex-offender financier is Friday.

But the flight logs were among thousands of documents from court cases and Epstein's estate which have been already made public over the past year, revealing more about his time in the UK, such as trips to royal residences.

The BBC examined these documents as part of an investigation trying to piece together Epstein's activities in the UK.

It revealed that:

  • The incomplete flight logs and manifests record 87 flights linked to Epstein - dozens more than were previously known - arriving or departing from UK airports between the early 1990s and 2018
  • Unidentified "females" were listed among the passengers travelling into and out of the UK in the logs
  • Fifteen of the UK flights took place after Epstein's 2008 conviction for soliciting sex from a minor, which should have raised questions from immigration officials

Although Epstein died in jail in 2019, before his trial on charges of trafficking minors for sex, legal experts have told the BBC a UK investigation could reveal whether British-based people enabled his crimes.

Two months ago the BBC sent the Metropolitan Police, which has previously examined allegations about Epstein's activities in Britain, publicly available information about the UK flights with suspected trafficking victims on board.

Later, we sent the Met a detailed list of questions about whether it would investigate evidence of possible British victims of Epstein trafficked in and out of the UK.

The Met did not respond to our questions. On Saturday, it released a broader statement saying that it had "not received any additional evidence that would support reopening the investigation" into Epstein and Maxwell's trafficking activities in the UK.

"Should new and relevant information be brought to our attention", including any resulting from the release of material in the US, "we will assess it", the Met said.

Sigrid McCawley, a woman with wavey blond hair and wearing a black dress, pictured in close-up in an office, looking to the left of the camera, with the background out of focus.
Sigrid McCawley, who represents hundreds of Epstein victims, criticised the Met for declining to investigate

US lawyer Brad Edwards, who has been representing Epstein victims since 2008, told us "three or four" of his clients are British women "who were abused on British soil both by Jeffrey Epstein and others".

Other victims were recruited in the UK, trafficked to the United States and abused there, he said.

Mr Edwards said he is also representing women of other nationalities who say they were trafficked to the UK for abuse by Epstein and others.

Our analysis shows Epstein used commercial and chartered flights, as well as his private planes, to travel to the UK and to arrange transport for others, including alleged trafficking victims.

More than 50 of the flights involved his private jets, mostly flying to and from Luton Airport, with several flights at Birmingham International Airport, and one arrival and departure each at RAF Marham in west Norfolk and at Edinburgh Airport.

Limited records of commercial and chartered flights taken by Epstein, or paid for by him, show dozens more journeys, mainly via London Heathrow, but also Stansted and Gatwick.

In a number of the logs of Epstein's private planes, including some detailing trips to the UK, women on the flight are identified only as unnamed "females".

A graphic showing entries in a page of the Epstein flight logs with airport codes in one column, the flight number in another and a column with notes which includes details of the passengers in most cases and the word "reposition" in two cases. The names of the people on board have been redacted, except for the initials JE and GM - Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell - on all of the flights with passengers named. One note is highlighted, with the text spelling out that the cramped handwriting says simply "1 FEMALE".

"He's absolutely choosing airports where he feels it will be easier for him to get in and out with victims that he's trafficking," said Ms McCawley.

Private aircraft did not have to provide passenger details to UK authorities before departure in the same way as commercial aircraft during the period covered by the documents we examined. The Home Office told us they were "not subject to the same centralised record-keeping".

That loophole was only closed in April last year.

Kate, the British woman who testified against Maxwell, was on some of the commercial flights in the records we examined. She described in court that she had been 17 when Maxwell befriended her and introduced her to Epstein - who then sexually abused her at Maxwell's central London home.

In the 2021 trial, she described how Maxwell gave her a schoolgirl outfit to wear and asked her to find other girls for Epstein. As well as the dozen flights to and from the UK, Kate told the court she had been flown to Epstein's island in the US Virgin Islands, New York and Palm Beach in Florida, where she says the abuse continued into her 30s.

Reuters A court sketch of Kate testifying in Ghislaine Maxwell's trial. Kate is shown as wearing a black shirt and having fair hair but her face is blurred in the sketch to protect her identity. She stands in the witness box with a judge wearing a black Covid-era face mask to the left of her. In front of her is the stenographer and one of the attorneys, a woman with a long brown ponytail. Ghislaine Maxwell is pictured in the foreground, frowning under her own black face mask, and looking away from the witness.Reuters
Kate, pictured on the right with her face blurred, testified at Maxwell's trial

Mr Edwards, her lawyer, told BBC News that even after that testimony, Kate has "never been asked" by any UK authorities any questions about her experience - "not even a phone call".

He said that if British police were to launch an investigation into Epstein's activities and his enablers, Kate would be happy to help.

Prof Bridgette Carr, a human-trafficking expert at the University of Michigan Law School, said trafficking cases usually require many people working together.

"It's never just one bad person," she said. "You don't think about the accountant and the lawyer and the banker - or all the bankers - and all these people that had to implicitly, and sometimes explicitly, be OK with what was happening for it to continue."

There are also questions about how Epstein was able to travel freely to the UK after his 2008 conviction for soliciting a minor for sex, which meant he had to register as a sex offender in Florida, New York and the US Virgin Islands.

Epstein was released from prison in 2009 after serving 13 months. Documents suggest Epstein took a Virgin Atlantic flight from the US to London Heathrow in September 2010, just two months after he completed his probation on house arrest.

A graph showing the number of Epstein-related flights to the UK by year, starting at one flight a year in the early 1990s and sometimes rising, sometimes falling until it reaches a peak of 17 flights in 2006. There is a gap then until after his release from prison in 2009, when there are 15 flights scattered among the years up until 2018.

Home Office rules at the time said foreign nationals who received a prison sentence of 12 months or more should, in most cases, have been refused entry.

But immigration lawyer Miglena Ilieva, managing partner at ILEX Law Group, told us that US citizens did not usually require a UK visa for short stays, so there was no application process where they would be asked about criminal convictions.

"It was very much at the discretion of the individual immigration officer who would receive this person at the border," she said.

The Home Office said it does not hold immigration and visa records beyond 10 years and added "it is longstanding government policy that we do not routinely comment on individual cases".

During the 1980s, Epstein also used a foreign passport - issued in Austria with his picture and a false name - to enter the UK as well as France, Spain and Saudi Arabia, according to US authorities.

Epstein also listed London as his place of residence in 1985, when he applied for a replacement passport, ABC News has previously reported.

Brad Edwards, a man with short brown hair and a determined look on his face, pictured in a close-up portrait with the background blurred. He wears a navy suit, a pale blue shirt and a blue and grey tie.
Brad Edwards says his British client Kate has never been contacted by UK police

In its statement on Saturday, the Met said it had contacted "several other potential victims" when it examined 2015 allegations by Virginia Giuffre that she had been trafficked for sexual exploitation by Epstein and Maxwell.

Ms Giuffre also said she was forced to have sex with Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor on three occasions, including when she was 17 at Maxwell's home in London, in 2001. The former prince has consistently denied the allegations against him.

The Met said its examination of Ms Giuffre's claims "did not result in any allegation of criminal conduct against any UK-based nationals" and it concluded that "other international authorities were best placed to progress these allegations".

That decision was reviewed in August 2019 and again in 2021 and 2022 with the same result, it said.

But for lawyer Sigrid McCawley, the message the Met is sending to victims is "that if you come to law enforcement and this is a powerful person you're reporting on… it will not get investigated."

法国参议院一读通过修改过的2026年法国国家预算案 - RFI - 法国国际广播电台

16 December 2025 at 07:45
16/12/2025 - 00:40

法国参议院通过2026年国家预算草案,文本将提交参众两院组成的联合委员会审议。

法国参议院于12月15日(周一)一读通过了经过修改的2026年法国国家预算草案。投票的结果是187票赞成、109票反对。接下来,该草案将提交给由参众两院议员组成的联合委员会(commission mixte paritaire)审议,这一联合委员会将于12月19日星期五召开会议,试图达成一致。

法国参议院周一通过的预算案文本是在主导参议院的右翼和中间派联盟的推动下重新调整过的。而法国国民议会在此前几周的一读表决中否决了这一预算案。

如果联合委员会的成员们(CMP)能够达成妥协的话,那么,他们形成的文本将于下周提交给两院表决,以期最终通过。如果联合委员会的成员们无法达成一致,预算的辩论可能将延续至明年1月份,那么,届时,就需要通过一项特别的法案,以确保国家能够连续运转。

本周对法国总理勒科尔尼来说至关重要。勒科尔尼在9月份时承诺,要在不动用宪法第49.3条的情况下通过预算案,目前仍坚持这一立场。

在社保预算案方面,法国总理的这一策略几乎已经成功了:社保预算已于上周在国民议会以微弱的优势获得通过。议员们将于12月16日(周二)就社保预算案进行最后一次表决。现在就看这一策略是否也能在国家预算案上奏效。

How the Winklevoss Twins Won Big in Trump’s Pro-Crypto Washington

16 December 2025 at 07:00
Few industry players seem closer to Trump than the 44-year-old billionaire brothers. And they have gotten more than just invitations to the White House this year.

© Haiyun Jiang/The New York Times

Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss at the White House.

中国外交部驻港公署:外部干预黎智英案注定失败

16 December 2025 at 07:16

香港法院裁定,壹传媒集团创办人黎智英三项国安罪名皆成立,中国外交部驻港公署称“正义审判不容置喙,外部干预注定失败”。

据中新社报道,外交部驻港公署发言人星期一(12月15日)说,坚决支持香港特区依法裁决黎智英串谋勾结外部势力危害国家安全罪及串谋发布煽动刊物罪等罪名成立。针对英国、澳大利亚、美国、德国等国家、欧盟及个别政客就此定罪裁决说三道四、公然干预抹黑香港司法,表示强烈不满和坚决反对,予以严厉谴责。

发言人称,香港是法治社会,法律面前人人平等,没有任何人拥有凌驾于法律之上的特权。黎智英是反中乱港事件的主要策划者和参与者,是外部反华势力的“代理人”和“马前卒”,其言行严重危害国家安全。香港特区司法机关依法履职尽责,维护法律权威,捍卫国家安全,合情合理合法,不容置喙。黎案与“新闻自由”毫无关系。任何企图为黎洗白、通过政治施压干预司法的行径,都是对法治精神的公然践踏。

发言人称,个别国家和政客,长期以来打着“人权”“自由”幌子抹黑香港法治,妄图破坏香港繁荣稳定、干涉中国内政。当他们执行维护自身国家安全的法律时,他们称之为“捍卫法治”;而当香港特区依法采取同等性质行动时,却被污蔑为“压制自由”。这种典型的双重标准,充分暴露其虚伪面目和险恶用心。

发言人称,有关司法案件纯属香港特区内部事务,不容干涉。有关国家和政客的拙劣表演阻挡不了香港由治及兴的历史大势,虚张声势的制裁威胁注定徒劳无功。中方敦促有关国家和政客认清现实、悬崖勒马,立即停止干预香港事务和中国内政。

78岁的黎智英是已停刊的《苹果日报》创办人,2020年8月涉违反《香港国安法》被捕。案件于2023年12月开审,经过156天审讯,今年8月完成聆讯。

香港法院星期一公布裁决,裁定黎智英两项串谋勾结外国或境外势力危害国家安全罪,以及一项串谋发布煽动刊物罪,罪名全部成立。

黎智英定罪后,数国政府和国际组织予以谴责。英国外长顾绮慧(Yvette Cooper)指,黎智英因和平行使言论自由权利而成打压对象,呼吁立即释放黎智英。澳大利亚政府也发声明,对黎智英被定罪表达关切。

E.U. Flies 110 Tons of Aid to Darfur. But Will It Reach Those In Need?

16 December 2025 at 06:39
The European Union has mounted an “air bridge” effort, with at least eight aid flights planned to Sudan. But getting supplies to the areas with the most dire need is an enormous challenge.

© Mohammed Jamal/Reuters

A camp in North Darfur, Sudan, for people displaced by the country’s civil war, which has created a humanitarian crisis.

Anthony Geary, Luke on ‘General Hospital,’ Dies at 78

By: Sopan Deb
16 December 2025 at 06:20
Portraying Luke Spencer, he was one of the best-known soap opera stars in American television. His onscreen romance with Laura Webber, played by Genie Francis, changed the landscape of daytime television.

© ABC Photo Archives/Disney

Rob Reiner's son Nick arrested for murder after director and wife found dead

16 December 2025 at 05:26
Getty Images Rob Reiner and wife Michele Singer ReinerGetty Images
The couple were found dead in their home with multiple stab wounds, according to the BBC's US partner CBS News

A son of film director Rob Reiner and Michele Singer Reiner has been arrested and booked on suspicion of murder after the couple were found dead in their Los Angeles home.

The Los Angeles Police Department said on Monday that Nick Reiner, 32, had been arrested and that he was in custody with no bail.

The deceased couple's 28-year-old daughter, Romy, found her parents in their home with multiple stab wounds on Sunday, sources told the BBC's US partner CBS News.

Rob Reiner is known for directing several iconic films in a variety of genres, including When Harry Met Sally, This is Spinal Tap, Stand By Me, Misery and A Few Good Men.

Emergency services were called to provide medical aid at the Reiners' Brentwood, California, home at around 15:38 local time (23:38 GMT) on Sunday.

The Los Angeles Fire Department said two people - later identified as Rob Reiner, 78, and his wife Michele, 68 - were pronounced dead at the scene.

Police said Nick Reiner was arrested several hours later, at about 21:15 local time on Sunday. Investigators have not publicly outlined a motive and said the investigation remains ongoing.

Getty Images Rob Reiner and family at an eventGetty Images
Rob Reiner and his family, including son Nick (fourth from left) attend a movie premiere

Nick Reiner has spoken publicly about his struggles with addiction and homelessness. His experiences formed the basis of the semi-autobiographical film Being Charlie, which he made with his father in 2015.

The family's home is in Brentwood, a wealthy celebrity enclave full of large mansions, boutique shops and restaurants. On Monday morning, a security guard stood outside the home as media gathered outside the front gate.

Rob Reiner, the son of comedy great Carl Reiner, began his career in the 1960s and rose to fame playing Meathead in the TV sitcom All in The Family.

He cemented his success with the cult mockumentary This Is Spinal Tap in 1984, which he directed and starred in.

Reiner was married to Laverne & Shirley actress Penny Marshall from 1971 to 1981 and is the adoptive father to Marshall's daughter, actress Tracy Reiner.

He married Michele Reiner in 1989, who he said he met during the making of the romantic comedy-drama film When Harry Met Sally. The couple have three children together.

EPA A guard stands in front of the Reiner homeEPA
A guard stood in front of the Reiner home on Monday as people and media gathered after hearing the news

Michele Reiner was an actress, photographer and producer, and the founder of Reiner Light, a photography agency and production company.

Rob Reiner was also known for his outspoken political activism and support for Democratic candidates.

In a post calling their deaths "very sad", President Donald Trump criticised Reiner, saying that they "reportedly" died "due to the anger he caused others through his massive, unyielding, and incurable affliction" with "Trump Derangement Syndrome".

"He was known to have driven people CRAZY by his raging obsession of President Donald J. Trump," the president wrote.

It is not clear what reports the president was referring to, and while the investigation is being treated as a homicide, police have yet to comment on any possible motive.

The president and his allies often used the term Trump Derangement Syndrome in reference to those who are critical of him. Reiner was a vocal critic of Trump's.

Several Republicans criticised Trump over the post, including former ally Marjorie Taylor Greene, who said the deaths were a "family tragedy, not about politics or political enemies".

"Many families deal with a family member with drug addiction and mental health issues. It's incredibly difficult and should be met with empathy especially when it ends in murder," she said.

"These go to 11" - watch Rob Reiner in the amplifier scene from This is Spinal Tap, one of the films he directed

Trump's post was also met with anger by some of the Reiners' friends.

In a post on X, Maria Shriver, the former first lady of California and longtime friend of the Reiners, said the couple were "devoted parents".

"They deeply loved all their children and they never gave up trying to care for them," she said.

Sir Elton John, who made an appearance in this year's Spinal Tap sequel, said: "I am in disbelief at today's news of Rob and Michele.

"They were two of the most beautiful people I'd ever met and they deserved better."

Fellow actor John Cusack, who appeared in Reiner's 1985 film The Sure Thing, called him "a great man", while Elijah Wood, who starred in 1994's North, said he was "horrified" by the couple's deaths.

Darts star Menzies apologies for punching table after five-set defeat

16 December 2025 at 03:25

Menzies apologises for punching table after loss

Cameron Menzies was pictured with blood on his right hand as he left the stageImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Cameron Menzies was pictured with blood on his right hand as he left the stage

  • Published

Cameron Menzies has apologised for angrily punching a drinks table after his five-set defeat by Charlie Manby in the first round of the PDC World Championship.

The 26th seed from Scotland hit the underside of the table three times before holding his hand up in apology to the Alexandra Palace crowd as he left the stage.

Menzies, 36, was pictured with blood pouring from a gash on his right hand.

He had led 1-0 and 2-1 in sets before highly rated English debutant Manby, 20, fought back and clinched victory with his seventh match dart.

In a statement released after the match, Menzies said: "First of all, I would like to apologise for what happened. I am sorry that I reacted in the manner that I did.

"It's not an excuse, but I have had a lot of things on my mind recently and I suppose it all just became too much at the end.

"It has not been an easy time for me with my uncle Gary passing away recently. I saw him four days before he died and he gave me a look which told me how much he thought of me.

"Had I won the game against Charlie, my second match would have been on the day of Gary's funeral and that hasn't been lost on me.

"Let me say again, that's no excuse for what I did on the stage. It was the wrong thing to do and I don't want it to take anything away from Charlie. He played well.

"This is not how I would like people to view me. Yes, I can get emotional at times, but not like that and that wasn't right."

Professional Darts Corporation chief executive Matt Porter said: "I spoke with Cameron and his management before he left the venue, and he knows there is support available from the PDC and the PDPA [Professional Darts Players Association].

"Any incident of this nature is reported to the Darts Regulation Authority for review, but our main priority is the player's health and wellbeing."

It is the second year running that Menzies has been knocked out in the first round, after he broke down in tears during and following his exit to Leonard Gates last December.

Menzies later revealed his father Ricky had been ill in hospital at the time.

Cameron Menzies is directed off stage by a refereeImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Menzies was directed off stage by the referee after punching a drinks table

Cameron Menzies holds up hand in apologyImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Menzies held his hand up in apology to the crowd when leaving the stage

Players can be sanctioned under Darts Regulation Authority rules for aggressive, disruptive or abusive behaviour.

Former World Championship semi-finalist Wayne Mardle said on Sky Sports: "The frustration boiled over, the anger and the anguish of losing, but you've got to control that. That's what conducting yourself in the right way is all about.

"He let himself down and I'm sure he'll be punished accordingly by the Darts Regulation Authority, but hopefully the Professional Darts Players Association are there for him.

"You've got to control yourself and he didn't and you can't do that anywhere, let alone on the biggest stage of them all. I hope he can correct his behaviour and move forward."

Former champion Wright safely through

Also in Monday's afternoon session, two-time champion Peter Wright made it through to round two with a straight-set win over Noa-Lynn van Leuven.

The 55-year-old Scot, wearing a festive-themed outfit, landed a 152 checkout in the first set and was taken to a deciding leg in the second, before closing out victory comfortably in the third.

Wright, who will face German Arno Merk in round two, told Sky Sports: "I know I didn't play well but I will play well in the next round. You've got to grow into the tournament."

Wright, the winner in 2020 and 2022, has struggled for form in recent times and has slipped to 30th in the PDC world rankings as a result.

He reached the quarter-finals last year, ending Luke Humphries' title defence on his way to the last eight before losing to Stephen Bunting.

Peter Wright celebratesImage source, PA Media
Image caption,

Peter Wright hit nine of his 16 attempts at doubles during his first-round victory

Van Leuven, who became the first transgender player to appear at the PDC World Championship last year, was one of five players from the Women's Series to qualify for the event at Alexandra Palace.

Beau Greaves topped the series and faces Daryl Gurney first on Friday as she looks to become only the second female player to win a match in the tournament, after fellow qualifier Fallon Sherrock, who won twice at the event in December 2019.

Three places were on offer from the series, along with a spot for the Women's Matchplay winner - a title taken by Lisa Ashton, who lost to 2023 world champion Michael Smith in the first round on Thursday.

With Greaves qualifying in her own right as runner-up on the Development Tour, that meant Women's Series runner-up Sherrock, Van Leuven in fourth and Gemma Hayter, who finished fifth, joined third-placed Ashton.

Northern Ireland's Brendan Dolan hit a 170 checkout to seal the second set in his 3-1 victory over England's Tavis Dudeney, while Austria's Mensur Suljovic beat Canada's David Cameron by the same scoreline.

Monday results and schedule

  • Brendan Dolan 3-1 Tavis Dudeney

  • Cameron Menzies 2-3 Charlie Manby

  • Mensur Suljovic 3-1 David Cameron

  • Peter Wright 3-0 Noa-Lynn van Leuven

From 19:00 GMT

  • Martin Lukeman v Max Hopp

  • Dirk van Duijvenbode v Andy Baetens

  • Jonny Clayton v Adam Lipscombe

  • Connor Scutt v Simon Whitlock

Related topics

Rob Reiner's son Nick arrested for murder after director and wife found dead

16 December 2025 at 05:26
Getty Images Rob Reiner and wife Michele Singer ReinerGetty Images
The couple were found dead in their home with multiple stab wounds, according to the BBC's US partner CBS News

A son of film director Rob Reiner and Michele Singer Reiner has been arrested and booked on suspicion of murder after the couple were found dead in their Los Angeles home.

The Los Angeles Police Department said on Monday that Nick Reiner, 32, had been arrested and that he was in custody with no bail.

The deceased couple's 28-year-old daughter, Romy, found her parents in their home with multiple stab wounds on Sunday, sources told the BBC's US partner CBS News.

Rob Reiner is known for directing several iconic films in a variety of genres, including When Harry Met Sally, This is Spinal Tap, Stand By Me, Misery and A Few Good Men.

Emergency services were called to provide medical aid at the Reiners' Brentwood, California, home at around 15:38 local time (23:38 GMT) on Sunday.

The Los Angeles Fire Department said two people - later identified as Rob Reiner, 78, and his wife Michele, 68 - were pronounced dead at the scene.

Police said Nick Reiner was arrested several hours later, at about 21:15 local time on Sunday. Investigators have not publicly outlined a motive and said the investigation remains ongoing.

Getty Images Rob Reiner and family at an eventGetty Images
Rob Reiner and his family, including son Nick (fourth from left) attend a movie premiere

Nick Reiner has spoken publicly about his struggles with addiction and homelessness. His experiences formed the basis of the semi-autobiographical film Being Charlie, which he made with his father in 2015.

The family's home is in Brentwood, a wealthy celebrity enclave full of large mansions, boutique shops and restaurants. On Monday morning, a security guard stood outside the home as media gathered outside the front gate.

Rob Reiner, the son of comedy great Carl Reiner, began his career in the 1960s and rose to fame playing Meathead in the TV sitcom All in The Family.

He cemented his success with the cult mockumentary This Is Spinal Tap in 1984, which he directed and starred in.

Reiner was married to Laverne & Shirley actress Penny Marshall from 1971 to 1981 and is the adoptive father to Marshall's daughter, actress Tracy Reiner.

He married Michele Reiner in 1989, who he said he met during the making of the romantic comedy-drama film When Harry Met Sally. The couple have three children together.

EPA A guard stands in front of the Reiner homeEPA
A guard stood in front of the Reiner home on Monday as people and media gathered after hearing the news

Michele Reiner was an actress, photographer and producer, and the founder of Reiner Light, a photography agency and production company.

Rob Reiner was also known for his outspoken political activism and support for Democratic candidates.

In a post calling their deaths "very sad", President Donald Trump criticised Reiner, saying that they "reportedly" died "due to the anger he caused others through his massive, unyielding, and incurable affliction" with "Trump Derangement Syndrome".

"He was known to have driven people CRAZY by his raging obsession of President Donald J. Trump," the president wrote.

It is not clear what reports the president was referring to, and while the investigation is being treated as a homicide, police have yet to comment on any possible motive.

The president and his allies often used the term Trump Derangement Syndrome in reference to those who are critical of him. Reiner was a vocal critic of Trump's.

Several Republicans criticised Trump over the post, including former ally Marjorie Taylor Greene, who said the deaths were a "family tragedy, not about politics or political enemies".

"Many families deal with a family member with drug addiction and mental health issues. It's incredibly difficult and should be met with empathy especially when it ends in murder," she said.

"These go to 11" - watch Rob Reiner in the amplifier scene from This is Spinal Tap, one of the films he directed

Trump's post was also met with anger by some of the Reiners' friends.

In a post on X, Maria Shriver, the former first lady of California and longtime friend of the Reiners, said the couple were "devoted parents".

"They deeply loved all their children and they never gave up trying to care for them," she said.

Sir Elton John, who made an appearance in this year's Spinal Tap sequel, said: "I am in disbelief at today's news of Rob and Michele.

"They were two of the most beautiful people I'd ever met and they deserved better."

Fellow actor John Cusack, who appeared in Reiner's 1985 film The Sure Thing, called him "a great man", while Elijah Wood, who starred in 1994's North, said he was "horrified" by the couple's deaths.

US offers Ukraine 'strong' security guarantees but territory still unresolved

15 December 2025 at 20:30
Reuters Several men sit around a long oval table. On the left are Volodymyr Zelensky, Ukrainian negotiator Rustem Umerov and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz and on the right are Donald Trump's son-in-law Jared Kushner, US envoy Steve Witkoff and Nato Supreme Allied Commander Europe General Alexus GrynkewichReuters
Volodymyr Zelensky, Ukrainian negotiator Rustem Umerov and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz met Donald Trump's son-in-law Jared Kushner, US envoy Steve Witkoff in Berlin on Sunday

Talks between Ukraine and the US aimed at reaching a peace deal with Russia are continuing in Berlin for a second day.

Zelensky and his chief negotiator Rustem Umerov met US envoy Steve Witkoff and Donald Trump's son-in-law Jared Kushner for five hours on Sunday, joined by German Chancellor Friedrich Merz.

"A lot of progress was made," a US readout said. The same team resumed talks on Monday morning.

Ahead of the start of the meeting, Volodymyr Zelensky signalled he would give up ambitions to join Nato in exchange for security guarantees.

Recognising that "some partners from the US and Europe" did not support Ukraine's bid for Nato membership, Zelensky said he was instead seeking strong security guarantees modelled on Nato's Article 5 clause of mutual protection.

"And this is already a compromise on our part," he said on Sunday.

Witkoff has travelled to Moscow to hold talks with Vladimir Putin on several occasions, but Sunday's meeting at the chancellery in Berlin was the first time he met Zelensky. Nato Supreme Allied Commander Europe General Alexus Grynkewich was also present at the talks.

Several European leaders as well as European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen are expected to join further talks with the Ukrainian and US delegations on Monday evening.

At the core of the discussions in Berlin is the 20-point peace plan proposal presented to the US by Ukraine last week to counter an initial American plan which was seen as heavily favouring Russia.

Details haven't been shared, but last week Zelensky said the points should be seen as a "foundation" on which to build provisions for the reconstruction of Ukraine and security guarantees.

For Russia, Kyiv's membership of Nato is a red line, and Moscow has repeatedly demanded that any ambitions for Ukraine to join the alliance are shelved forever. "This issue is one of the cornerstones and requires special discussion," said the Kremlin on Monday.

The US too has repeatedly stated it does not want Ukraine to be part of Nato. But Kyiv fears that a peace deal without watertight security guarantees would fail to detract Russia from attacking again.

Before the talks began, Zelensky also addressed the thorny issue of sovereignty over the eastern region of the Donbas, which Russia mostly occupies and which it wants Kyiv to hand over in their entirety.

The Ukrainian president said that while he was open to freezing the conflict along the current front line he was not prepared to have his troops withdraw from the percentage of the Donbas they still hold - unless Russian forces did the same in the areas they control.

For it to be a fair arrangement Russia would have to withdraw the same distance, Zelensky said. This matter was "extremely sensitive and heated," he added.

Any proposal hashed out by the Ukrainian, American and European side will still have to be presented to Moscow – although Zelensky said that the US delegation "so to speak present the Russian side's perspective, because they relay Russia's signals, demands, steps, and indications of readiness or lack thereof."

The Kremlin said it expected the US to provide us with the "concept" discussed on Monday.

The talks in Berlin come at a crucial time for Ukraine, which is enduring its fourth winter of war amid sustained power cuts caused by Russia's attacks on its energy facilities. Over the weekend more than a million households in Ukraine were left without electricity following a barrage of strikes.

Later this week, EU countries will be voting on a plan to send €90bn (£78.6bn) worth of frozen Russian assets held in a Belgium-based financial institution to prop up Ukraine's economy.

On Friday, EU governments agreed to immobilise the Russian assets indefinitely - but there is no consensus yet on whether they can be sent to Ukraine. Belgium has been resisting the legally contentious proposal, and in recent days other countries, including Italy, have said "alternative options" should be put forward.

EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas acknowledged the discussions were "increasingly difficult".

"But we're doing the work, and we still have some days," she added.

A map of Ukraine's south-eastern territories under Russian occupation

Harvard’s President Will Stay in the Role Indefinitely

16 December 2025 at 05:29
Alan M. Garber was appointed after his predecessor resigned under pressure. He has been in the role as Harvard fended off challenges from the Trump administration.

© Libby O'Neill/Getty Images

Harvard’s president, Alan M. Garber, at the college’s commencement in May.

Ford Will Take $19.5 Billion Hit as It Rolls Back E.V. Plans

16 December 2025 at 07:10
Ford Motor said the costs came from its decision to make fewer electric vehicles than it had planned and more hybrids that use both gasoline engines and batteries.

© Brittany Greeson for The New York Times

A Ford F-150 Lightning electric truck at the company’s plant in Dearborn, Mich., in 2022. The Lightning will no longer be a pure electric vehicle.
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