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Library of Congress Website Deleted Part of the Constitution That Trump Doesn’t Like. Now They’re Calling It a ‘Coding Error’

- Portions of the United States Constitution have vanished from the official government website. The website, Constitution.Congress.gov—operated by the Library of Congress and the U.S. Copyright Office—returns broken links when users attempt to view Article I, Section 9 and Article I, Section 10. The sections disappeared at some point this month, according to the WaybackMachine, though the exact timing remains unclear.

- The Library of Congress said the missing sections were a ‘coding error’

- The Library of Congress claimed it was an error and restored the missing text.

- The online Constitution website is maintained by the Library of Congress, which Trump is trying to take over

- (Reuters) -Brian Robbins, who helped grow the Paramount+ streaming service, is stepping down as Paramount Global’s co-CEO, according to a memo seen by Reuters on Wednesday, following the completion of its merger with Skydance Media. David Ellison, the CEO of Skydance, will lead the new company as chief executive after the merger is completed by August 7. “The company is in exceptionally capable hands with David Ellison and the incoming team from Skydance,” Robbins said in the memo.

- The conservative attorney warned that the president could be steering the nation into a major crisis.

- A former ambassador to the US who quit after calling Donald Trump’s administration “inept” in leaked private emails has said he was proved right.

- Japan has clinched the sale of 11 Mogami-class stealth frigates, beating out warships from Germany, Spain, and South Korea in the bid.

- Robert F. Kennedy Jr says President Donald Trump is ‘keeping him under pressure’ with incessant phone calls

- Political group issues apology for wearing sanitary pads as face masks to protest appointment of senator

- Little by little, the costs of U.S. President Donald Trump’s tariffs are starting to show for American businesses and consumers.News of the tariff impact is mounting, from the Detroit Three automakers announcing they’ll face extra costs this year totalling into the billions, to the stainless steel cookware manufacturer in Tennessee hit with a $75,000 (US) tariff bill on one shipment, right down to the coffee shops considering boosting the price of a cup because of tariffs on Brazil. Until recent

- It’s not an immigration or population shock—fewer people are working, amid shorter hours and lower demand. “The drop in the labor force participation rate has masked how much slackening is actually taking place.”

- Former Georgia Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan said his decision was “centered around [a] daily struggle” many people might find relatable.

- Ukrainian special forces on Tuesday claimed to have killed more than 330 Russian troops in a dawn raid behind enemy lines.

- For years, India has balanced close partnerships with both Washington and Moscow, even throughout Ukraine war. Trump is finally demanding it picks a side

- Voters confronted Nebraska Rep. Mike Flood on Medicaid cuts, Epstein and fascism in a raucous event.

- The new launcher can carry a variety of long-range precision fires and is designed to work with allied and partner systems.

- A month after the end of the conflict between Iran and Israel, the damage caused by the Islamic republic remains unclear largely because of Israeli censorship. Images analysed by the FRANCE 24 Observers team show that Iran caused extensive damage and hit at least eight strategic and military targets.

- SYDNEY/BEIJING (Reuters) -Foreign Minister Penny Wong said on Tuesday that Australia would not tolerate surveillance of its community by foreign governments, after a Chinese woman was charged with foreign interference and denied bail by a court. The woman, who has not entered a plea, appeared in court in Australia’s capital Canberra on Monday after police charged her with “reckless foreign interference” for allegedly monitoring a Buddhist group in the city on behalf of a Chinese security agency. The court heard the woman’s husband was a vice captain in a public security ministry in a Chinese province, and she had visited the Chinese consulate in Canberra in the days after her property was raided by police, the Australian Broadcasting Corporation reported.

- “The pain, fear, and uncertainty she and her family endured over the past five days should never have happened,” an official said after Yeonsoo Go’s release
