Archive November 8, 2025

US judge rules Trump illegally ordered National Guard troops to Portland

United States President Donald Trump unlawfully ordered National Guard troops to Portland, Oregon, a federal judge has ruled, marking a legal setback for the president’s use of the military for policing duties in US cities.

The ruling on Friday by US District Judge Karin Immergut is the first to permanently block Trump’s use of military forces to quell protests against immigration authorities.

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Immergut, a Trump appointee, rejected the administration’s claim that protesters at an immigration detention facility were waging a rebellion that legally justified sending troops to Portland.

Democrats have said Trump is abusing military powers meant for genuine emergencies such as an invasion or an armed rebellion.

Oregon Attorney General Dan Rayfield described the ruling as a “huge victory” and the “decision confirms that the President cannot send the Guard into Oregon without a legal basis for doing so”.

“The courts are holding this administration accountable to the truth and the rule of law,” Rayfield said in a post on social media.

Portland’s Mayor Keith Wilson also applauded the decision, saying it “vindicates Portland’s position while reaffirming the rule of law that protects our community”.

“As I have said from the beginning, the number of federal troops needed in our city is zero,” Wilson said, according to local media reports.

The City of Portland and the Oregon Attorney General’s Office sued in September, alleging that the Trump administration was exaggerating occasional violence to justify sending in troops under a law permitting presidents to do so in cases of rebellion.

Echoing Trump’s description of Portland as “war-ravaged”, lawyers from the Department of Justice had described a violent siege overwhelming federal agents in the city.

But lawyers for Oregon and Portland said violence has been rare, isolated and contained by local police.

“This case is about whether we are a nation of constitutional law or martial law,” Portland’s lawyer Caroline Turco had said.

The Trump administration is likely to appeal Friday’s ruling, and the case could ultimately reach the US Supreme Court.

A review by the Reuters news agency of court records found that at least 32 people were charged with federal crimes stemming from the Portland protests since they began in June. Of the 32 charged, 11 pleaded guilty to misdemeanours, and those who have been sentenced received probation.

About half the defendants were charged with assaulting federal officers, including 14 felonies and seven misdemeanours.

Prosecutors dismissed two cases.

Charging documents describe protesters kicking and shoving officers, usually while resisting arrest.

Russia-Ukraine war: List of key events, day 1,353

Here is how things stand on Saturday, November 8:

Fighting

  • Ukraine’s top general Oleksandr Syrskii said Kyiv’s troops were stepping up assaults on Russian forces around the eastern Ukrainian town of Dobropillia to ease pressure on the embattled hub of Pokrovsk.
  • Ukrainian forces carried out a long-range drone strike on a petrochemical plant in Russia’s Bashkortostan region. Kyiv’s military intelligence agency said the attack on the Sterlitamak plant sparked a fire in part of the facility that produces an additive for aviation fuel.
  • Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Russia is massing troops near the city of Vovchansk in Ukraine’s northeastern Kharkiv region.
  • Ukrainian energy provider DTEK has returned electricity to 170,000 households in Ukraine’s southeastern Dnipropetrovsk region, after overnight Russian drone strikes on energy infrastructure. The company said 373 settlements had been left without power, but utility workers had returned electricity to all critical infrastructure and most residential consumers.
  • The Russian Ministry of Defence said its forces have taken control of the village of Uspenivka in Ukraine’s southeastern Zaporizhia region.
  • More than 1,400 citizens from three dozen African countries are fighting alongside Russian forces in Ukraine, Kyiv’s Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha has said. He said Russia was enticing Africans to sign contracts he described as “equivalent to … a death sentence”, and urged African governments to warn their citizens.

Sanctions

  • The United States has granted Hungary a one-year exemption from sanctions connected to Russian energy, the White House and Hungary have said, after President Donald Trump heaped praise on Prime Minister Viktor Orban at a White House meeting that glossed over differences about Hungary’s use of Russian oil and gas.
  • Trump, who has been pushing Europe to avoid using Russian energy in order to pressure Moscow to end its war with Ukraine, expressed sympathy with his ally, Orban, before the announcement, saying: “We’re looking at it [a sanctions exemption], because it’s very different for him to get the oil and gas from other areas.”
  • Greece has agreed to import 700 million cubic metres of US liquefied natural gas per year starting in 2030 in its first long-term deal with Washington, as the country seeks to replace Russian supplies to Europe.
  • Two tankers carrying about 1.5 million barrels of Russian Urals crude have dropped anchor at sea on either end of the Suez Canal, in an apparent sign of the difficulty Moscow is having selling oil due to Western sanctions. The vessels Sikar and Monte 1 were both loaded with oil from Russia’s Baltic port of Primorsk in early October and have remained anchored near the canal for over a week.
  • Moldovan Energy Minister Dorin Junghietu said Russian energy company Lukoil will have to stop its operations in the country as of November 21 due to US sanctions. Junghietu said the company, which owns petrol stations and operates an airport fuel storage facility, will not be able to provide petrol, diesel and kerosene.

Ukrainian affairs

  • President Zelenskyy has appointed Yuri Cherevashenko as the new commander responsible for drone air defences, a role seen as critical in defending against Russian attacks.
  • The president’s website said Cherevashenko had experience in helping create Ukraine’s first group of reaction forces of air defence mobile brigades. He also played a role in developing interceptor drones, which Zelenskyy portrayed as a key part in countering intensive Russian drone assaults.
  • Ukrainian state oil and gas firm Naftogaz said it was increasing imports of US liquefied natural gas through Polish firm Orlen and US partners to ensure supplies for the winter amid continuing Russian strikes on the energy system. In a statement, CEO Serhiy Koretskyi said the imports would total at least 300 million cubic metres.

Regional security

  • The European Union has adopted stricter visa rules for Russian nationals in light of what it describes as the “weaponisation of migration, acts of sabotage and potential misuse of visas”. Russian nationals will no longer be eligible for multiple-entry visas and must apply for a new visa each time they travel to the EU.
  • Russia is set to double its stocks of artillery, missiles and munitions by 2030 compared with 2022, despite the ongoing war in Ukraine, said the chief of Germany’s joint operations command, Lieutenant General Alexander Sollfrank.
  • German Defence Minister Boris Pistorius suggested a link between recent drone incidents in Belgium and discussions over the use of frozen Russian assets, which are held by Belgian financial institution Euroclear, to fund a giant loan to Ukraine.
  • Sightings of drones over airports and military bases have become a constant problem in Belgium and have caused major disruptions across Europe in recent months.
  • A British man who offered the United Kingdom’s then-Defence Minister Grant Shapps’s personal information to purported Russian spies has been jailed for assisting a foreign intelligence service.
  • Howard Phillips offered Shapps’s home address and phone number to two people he believed were Russian agents, but who were in fact British undercover officers, prosecutors said. The 66-year-old denied one count of engaging in conduct intended to materially assist a foreign intelligence service.

Russian affairs

  • A man whose lawyer says he accidentally stumbled on information about pro-Ukrainian combat units while browsing the internet on a bus is the first Russian known to be investigated under a new law banning online searches for material Moscow deems “extremist”.
  • Russian media quoted Sergei Barsukov, a lawyer in the Sverdlovsk region of the Urals, as saying he was representing 20-year-old Sergei Glukhikh, who had been reported by his internet service provider to the FSB security service for viewing information about units Russia regards as terrorists.

Cameron Diaz’s husband Benji Madden makes rare comment on daughter after years of privacy

Hollywood actress Cameron Diaz’s husband Benji Madden has made a very rare comment on their daughter Raddix after the couple decided to keep their kids out of the spotlight

Cameron Diaz’s husband Benji Madden has made a very rare comment on their daughter, despite them fiercely protecting her privacy. His remarks have come as a surprise to fans, who have now been given a look into their home lives.

The Hollywood actress, 53, and Good Charlotte guitarist, 46, have been married for a decade now and welcomed a “really cute” baby boy named Cardinal Madden last year. They even managed to keep the news under wraps by maintaining their low profile.

Cameron and Benji also share a five-year-old daughter, Raddix, but have shared little about her publicly. However, Benji has now opened up about their little girl while taking part in a TikTok series with his brother Joel Madden.

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The show tests guests on their music knowledge, and the brothers were tasked with trying to identify excerpts of songs. Host Jack Coyne played Paramore tune Misery Business, which prompted Joel to say: “Hayley [Williams] is a star, man.”

In a surprise comment, Benji added: “I have a daughter and she’s just getting [into] playing her stuff and whatever.” He said Raddix “loves Paramore” before he was asked if his daughter likes Taylor Swift.

Benji revealed she is a fan, but was unable to get to Taylor’s huge Eras Tour shows as he added: “She was a little young.” The musician and Cameron don’t share photos of their kids and rarely speak about them publicly.

Cameron and Benji’s love story first began back in May of 2014 after meeting through mutual friends. The two were connected as Cameron was close friends with actress Nicole Richie, and her husband, Joel, is Benji’s twin brother.

The two were first introduced during a BBQ, and it seemed to be love at first sight for the Charlie’s Angels star. In an interview on Anna Faris’s Unqualified podcast, Cameron admitted that the second she walked through the door, she was captivated by Benji.

Cameron recalled: “I met mine [husband] through my now sister-in-law and brother-in-law, I met them first and then they didn’t set us up, but we were in the same room because of them, and then we found each other. I was like, ‘How come I didn’t see him before?’

She continued: “I saw him walking towards me, and I was like, ‘Huh, he’s hot, I haven’t seen him before.’ But then when I saw him, like who he was, that’s what made me really be like, ‘Oh, you, you’re special, you’re the guy, you’re the hidden gem in my life.’”

Within just six months, Benji got down on one knee and asked Cameron to spend forever with him. A month later, the couple said “I do” in an intimate wedding ceremony at their Beverly Hills mansion surrounded by their closest friends and family.

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Later, the couple shared a joint statement and said: “We couldn’t be happier to begin our new journey together surrounded by our closest family and friends.” Last year, Cameron and Benji announced the birth of their second child.

They said online: “He is awesome and we are all so happy he is here! For the kids safety and privacy we won’t be posting any pictures- but he’s really cute. We are feeling so blessed and grateful. Sending much love from our fam to yours. Best wishes and Good Afternoon!!”

Happy Mondays star shares health update after being rushed to hospital over mystery illness

Keeping her health cards close to her chest, The X Factor legend Rowetta posted a picture of herself on a ward wearing red Manchester United pyjamas

A Happy Mondays star has shared a concerning health update with her fans from her hospital bed following mystery surgery.

In December 2024 Rowetta announced her sudden departure from Happy Mondays after 34 years with the band.The X Factor star first joined the Happy Mondays in 1990, and stuck with them as a guest artist throughout the group’s breakups and reunions.

Rowetta gushed over her career when speaking to the Mirror. “I’m really, really proud to be one of the only women in this Madchester scene. All the famous people from Manchester, a lot of them are male and white. So it’s important to me to represent. It’s important to me to represent little girls from Manchester because when I was a little girl growing up, there were not very many famous women singers.”

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Rowetta added: “Look at me, I’m doing it now. I’m playing everywhere still. I’m singing with everybody still, and that’s incredible. You can do what you want, not as a backing singer.” The star also explained that she wants to keep singing with as many people and different genres as she can.

“I don’t care if I’m up there with the boys because the fame can be a double-edged sword -we all know that. It’s not the fame that I want, but it is to be recognised for what I do,” she shared.

Keeping her health cards close to her chest, The X Factor legend Rowetta posted a picture of herself on a ward wearing red Manchester United pyjamas. She captioned it: “Sorry for not replying to everyone’s texts, calls and messages. I’ve been transferred from Trafford to St Mary’s (who have been wonderful) this morning, so hopefully home tomorrow.”

In a hospital gown in bed, wearing dark glasses and attached to a drip, the performer wrote: “Big love and thanks to St Mary’s for stepping in last minute. Came out of surgery smiling. What a wonderful team. Back on the ward now, morphined up for the pain, but – all went well, home tomorrow and should be good to sing again next week.”

In 2004 she appeared on The X Factor and featured in the over 25s category, before being eliminated at the quarter-final stage of the show. Rowetta’s performances on The X Factor earned her glowing reviews and she ended up finishing fourth and was the last woman in the competition.

On the programme Rowetta was described by her mentor Simon Cowell as: “Amazing, but barking b***** mad.”

When the band reformed in 2012, Rowetta joined original members including Shaun Ryder and Bez, as they embarked on a reunion tour.

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Before joining the Happy Mondays Rowetta was a fixture on the Manchester music scene, and featured as a backing singer on Simply Red’s 1991 album Stars.

Republicans swat down Democratic offer to end US government shutdown

United States Senate Majority Leader John Thune has promptly swatted down a Democratic offer to reopen the US government and extend expiring healthcare subsidies for a year, calling it a “nonstarter” as the partisan impasse over the shutdown continued into its 38th day.

Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer made the offer to reopen the government on Friday as Republicans have refused to negotiate on their demands to extend healthcare subsidies. It was a much narrower version of a broad proposal Democrats laid out a month ago to make the health tax credits permanent and reverse Medicaid cuts that Republicans enacted earlier this year.

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Schumer offered Republicans simultaneous votes to end the government shutdown and extend the expiring healthcare subsidies, along with a bipartisan committee to address Republican demands for changes to the Affordable Care Act.

“All Republicans have to do is say yes,” Schumer said.

But Republicans quickly said no, and Thune reiterated that they would not trade offers on healthcare until the government is reopened. “That’s what we’re going to negotiate once the government opens up,” Thune said after Schumer made his proposal on the floor.

Thune said he thinks the offer is an indication that Democrats are “feeling the heat”.

“I guess you could characterise that as progress,” he said. “But I just don’t think it gets anywhere close to what we need to do here.”

It was unclear what might happen next. Thune has suggested a weekend Senate session was possible. US President Donald Trump called on the Senate to stay in town “until they have a Deal to end the Democrat Shutdown”.

Despite the impasse, lawmakers in both parties were feeling increased urgency to alleviate the growing crisis at airports, pay government workers and restore delayed food aid to millions of people. Thune pleaded with Democrats as he opened the Senate on Friday to “end these weeks of misery”.

Moderates continue to negotiate

As leaders of the two parties disagreed, a small group of Democrats led by New Hampshire Senator Jeanne Shaheen continued to negotiate among themselves and with rank-and-file Republicans on a deal that would end the shutdown.

The group has been discussing for weeks a vote for a group of bills that would pay for parts of government – food aid, veterans programmes and the legislative branch, among other things – and extend funding for everything else until December or January. The three annual spending bills that would likely be included are the product of bipartisan negotiations that have continued through the shutdown.

But the contours of that agreement would only come with the promise of a future healthcare vote, rather than a guarantee that Affordable Care Act subsidies are extended by the end of the year. Many Democrats have said that this is unacceptable.

Still, Republican leaders only need five additional votes to fund the government, and the group involved in the talks has ranged from 10 to 12 Democratic senators.

Republicans eye new package of bills

Trump urged Republicans at a White House breakfast on Wednesday to end the shutdown quickly and scrap the legislative filibuster, which requires 60 Senate votes for most legislation, so that they bypass Democrats altogether and fund the government.

“I am totally in favour of terminating the filibuster, and we would be back to work within 10 minutes after that vote took place,” Trump said on Friday.

Republicans have emphatically rejected Trump’s call, and Thune has instead been eyeing a bipartisan package that mirrors the proposal the moderate Democrats have been sketching out. But it is unclear what Thune, who has refused to negotiate, would promise on healthcare.

The package would replace the House-passed legislation that the Democrats have now rejected 14 times. That bill would only extend government funding until November 21, a date that is rapidly approaching after six weeks of inaction.

A choice for Democrats

A test vote on new legislation could come in the next few days if Thune decides to move forward.

Then Democrats would have a crucial choice to make: Do they keep fighting for a meaningful deal on extending the subsidies that expire in January, while prolonging the pain of the shutdown? Or do they vote to reopen the government and hope for the best as Republicans promise an eventual healthcare vote, but not a guaranteed outcome?

After a caucus meeting on Thursday, most Democrats suggested they would continue to hold out for Trump and Republican leaders to agree to negotiations.

“That’s what leaders do,” said Senator Ben Ray Lujan, Democrat from New Mexico. “You have the gavel, you have the majority, you have to bring people together.”

Hawaii Democrat Senator Brian Schatz said Democrats are “obviously not unanimous”, but “without something on healthcare, the vote is very unlikely to succeed”.

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Democrats are facing pressure from unions eager for the shutdown to end and from allied groups that want them to hold firm. Many Democrats have argued that the wins for Democrats on Election Day show voters want them to continue the fight until Republicans yield and agree to extend the health tax credits.

A vote on the healthcare subsidies “has got to mean something”, said Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders, an independent who caucuses with the Democrats. “That means a commitment by the speaker of the House, that he will support the legislation, that the president will sign.”

UN warns Gaza aid still too slow as Israel restricts supplies despite truce

Despite some progress in delivering food to Palestinians in the besieged Gaza Strip, the enclave – ravaged by Israeli bombardment and racked by hunger – remains in urgent need of humanitarian assistance, the United Nations has said.

The UN and its partners have been able to get 37,000 metric tonnes of aid, mostly food, into Gaza since the October 10 ceasefire, but much more is needed, UN spokesperson Farhan Haq told reporters on Friday.

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“Despite significant progress on the humanitarian scale-up, people’s urgent needs are still immense, with impediments not being lifted quickly enough since the ceasefire,” Haq said, citing reports from the UN’s humanitarian service, OCHA.

Haq was critical that entry of humanitarian supplies into Gaza continues to be limited to only two crossings – the al-Karara (also known as Kissufim) and Karem Abu Salem (Kerem Shalom) crossings.

There is no direct access to northern Gaza from Israel or to southern Gaza from Egypt, while NGO staff are being denied access, he said.

Earlier this week, the UN said it had distributed food parcels to one million people in Gaza since the ceasefire, but warned it was still in a race to save lives.

The UN’s World Food Programme stressed all crossing points into the Gaza Strip should be opened to flood the famine-hit territory with aid, adding that no reason was given for why the northern crossings with Israel remained closed.

Palestinians across Gaza continue to face shortages of food, water, medicine and other critical supplies as a result of Israeli restrictions.

Many families also lack adequate shelter as their homes and neighbourhoods have been completely destroyed in Israel’s two-year military bombardment.

Chris Gunness, the former spokesperson for UNRWA, the Palestinian refugee agency, said Israel is committing a war crime by blocking aid to Gaza.

Speaking to Al Jazeera, Gunness noted that tens of thousands of Palestinians – mainly children – remain at risk of malnutrition. He also said that if Israel doesn’t meet its obligation “to flood the Gaza Strip with humanitarian aid”, then third-party countries must act.

“Israel has made it clear that it wants to commit a genocide against the Palestinians, it wants to ethnically cleanse them, and it wants to starve them,” he said.

Captive’s body returned

The ceasefire between Israel and Hamas came into effect on October 10, after both sides agreed to a United States-brokered 20-point plan aimed at ending the war. But since it was announced, Israel has repeatedly launched attacks, killing dozens of people, with its forces remaining in more than 50 percent of the territory.

More than 220 Palestinians have been killed since the ceasefire took effect, according to the Ministry of Health in the enclave.

Israel has also been carrying out a wave of demolitions in parts of Gaza under its continued control east of the so-called yellow line, where Israeli forces are stationed.

The latest demolitions on Friday included residential buildings east of Khan Younis in southern Gaza, according to Al Jazeera reporters in the Strip.

Meanwhile, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office confirmed Israel received from the Red Cross the remains of one of the last six captives held by Hamas in Gaza.

The Israeli military later confirmed that a coffin containing the deceased captive’s body had “crossed the border into the State of Israel” after being delivered by the Red Cross.

It said the body was being sent to a forensic facility in Tel Aviv for identification.

At the start of the truce, Hamas’s armed wing, the Qassam Brigades, released all 20 surviving captives. In return, Israel freed hundreds of Palestinian political prisoners, including the bodies of slain Palestinians from Gaza, many showing signs of torture.

Of the 28 deceased Israeli captives that Hamas agreed to hand over under the deal, it has so far returned 22 – 19 Israelis, one Thai, one Nepali and one Tanzanian – excluding the latest body.

The last six deceased captives include five seized on October 7, 2023 – four Israelis and one Thai – as well as the remains of a soldier who died in 2014 during one of Israel’s previous assaults on Gaza.

Israel has accused Hamas of dragging its feet in returning the bodies of deceased captives. The Palestinian group says it continues to press for proper equipment and support to comb through vast mounds of rubble and debris – where some 10,000 Palestinians killed in Israeli bombardments are still buried.