Karen Moscow
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
is carrying out the biggest military buildup in the Middle East since 2003 before the invasion of Iraq.
That suggests Trump may launch a far more sweeping campaign than the overnight attack against Iran's nuclear program last June.
Taking a look at NYMEX crude oil, it's at $66.09 a barrel, while Brent is at $71.30.
It's down about half percent.
President Trump is shifting his messaging on cost of living concerns as he prepares for his State of the Union address next week.
And Bloomberg government's Maeve Sheehy has more from Washington.
And Bloomberg Government's Maeve Sheehy reports it's a change in tone on an issue that the president has called a Democratic hoax in the past.
The Supreme Court has another opportunity to rule on the legality of most of President Trump's tariffs, and Bloomberg's Tyler Kendall says there's no way of knowing if today is the day.
And that's Bloomberg's Tyler Kendall.
The arrest of the U.K.
's former Prince Andrew has placed the royal family in its deepest crisis in decades.
Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor has been released from custody on suspicion of misconduct in office following the latest revelations from the Justice Department's Jeffrey Epstein files.
Bloomberg's Michelle Hussain reports Andrew's brother, King Charles, has already taken an extraordinary step by releasing a statement saying the law must take its course within hours of Andrew's arrest.
And Bloomberg's Michelle Hussain reports Andrew has repeatedly denied any wrongdoing and no charges have been filed against him.
Michelle has much more on the impact of Andrew's arrest on the UK and the royal family on a special episode of Bloomberg's Michelle Hussain Show.
Find it and subscribe for one important interview every week wherever you get your podcasts.
Meanwhile, police today are searching Royal Lodge, Andrew's 30-room former home on the grounds of Windsor Castle.
The Jeffrey Epstein reckoning continues in the U.S.
The late sex offender's estate and its two co-executors have agreed to pay as much as $35 million to at least 40 women.
who claim they were abused or trafficked between 1995 and the day of Epstein's jailhouse death.