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Cornwall space centre to assist NASA’s first manned moon mission in more than 50 years

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It will be the first time humans have returned to the moon since 1972

Goonhilly Earth Station in Cornwall

Goonhilly Earth Station in Cornwall(Image: Goonhilly Earth Station)

A Cornish space centre is to provide communications support to the world’s first manned moon mission in more than half a century. Goonhilly, a ground station near Helston, will play a role in NASA’s historic Artemis II voyage by passively tracking the Orion spacecraft as it journeys around the moon and back to earth.

Staff at the satellite company believe tracking the spacecraft will demonstrate the UK – and Cornwall’s – capability to support deep-space missions from British soil.

The mission will mark the first time humans have returned to the moon since 1972, with Apollo 17. It will also include the first woman and black astronaut to travel beyond low earth orbit.

Matthew Cosby, CTO of Goonhilly Earth Station, said: “Artemis II marks a significant milestone in humanity’s return to the moon, and we’re proud that the capabilities developed here in Cornwall are contributing to that mission.

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“From our site, we will support tracking of the Orion spacecraft, showcasing our readiness for future crewed Artemis missions. At the same time, we are positioning the UK to play a key role in NASA’s longer‑term Moon‑to‑Mars exploration strategy.”

In 2022, Goonhilly provided critical communication and tracking support for NASA’s Artemis I. Using its 32-metre GHY-6 antenna and expert teams, the facility tracked the mission’s uncrewed Orion spacecraft and communicated with six of the CubeSats launched on the mission.

For Artemis II, tracking will focus on the crewed Orion spacecraft as it journeys beyond low earth orbit, flying around the moon, and returning to earth.

Goonhilly is one of a limited number of organisations worldwide with the infrastructure required to support deep-space communications. The site was involved in broadcasting the Apollo 11 Moon landing in 1969 as well as supporting modern missions to the moon and Mars.

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UK space minister Liz Lloyd said: “Goonhilly’s rich heritage in space communication continues to inspire. It’s fantastic to see Cornwall once again at the heart of a truly historic moment in human spaceflight. This partnership with NASA shows what British expertise and innovation can achieve on the world stage, while creating opportunities for skilled jobs and growth right here in the UK.”

Elsewhere, Goonhilly is working with the UK Space Agency and NASA to explore downlink solutions for near-real time space weather measurement enabled by NASA’s Interstellar Mapping and Acceleration Probe (IMAP).

This new heliophysics observatory is designed to study particle acceleration and the boundary to interstellar space, and at the same time provides solar wind and space weather observations.

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Germany’s Henkel in $1.4 billion deal to acquire hair care brand Olaplex

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Germany’s Henkel in $1.4 billion deal to acquire hair care brand Olaplex

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Citizens downgrades Terns Pharmaceuticals stock on Merck deal

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Citizens downgrades Terns Pharmaceuticals stock on Merck deal

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At Close of Business podcast March 26 2026

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At Close of Business podcast March 26 2026

Ella Loneragan and Claire Tyrrell discuss what property developers are doing to make their properties greener.

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Burlington Stores: The Next Leg Of Upside Is From Earnings Growth (NYSE:BURL)

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Burlington Stores: The Next Leg Of Upside Is From Earnings Growth (NYSE:BURL)

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I’m a fundamental, valuation-driven investor with a strong focus on identifying businesses that have the potential to scale over time and unlock massive terminal value. My investment approach centers around understanding the core economics of a business—its competitive moat, unit economics, reinvestment runway, and management quality—and how those factors translate into long-term free cash flow generation and shareholder value creation. I focus on fundamental research, and I tend to focus on sectors with strong secular tailwinds. Professionally, I am a self-educated investor that started this journey 10 years ago. Currently, I am managing my own funds, seeded from friends and family. My motivation for writing on Seeking Alpha is to share investment insights, and also at the same garner feedback from fellow investors in this site. My aim is to help readers focus on what truly drives long-term equity value. I believe good analysis should be both analytical and accessible, and I hope my work adds value to readers looking for high-quality, long-term investment opportunities.

Analyst’s Disclosure: I/we have no stock, option or similar derivative position in any of the companies mentioned, and no plans to initiate any such positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Seeking Alpha’s Disclosure: Past performance is no guarantee of future results. No recommendation or advice is being given as to whether any investment is suitable for a particular investor. Any views or opinions expressed above may not reflect those of Seeking Alpha as a whole. Seeking Alpha is not a licensed securities dealer, broker or US investment adviser or investment bank. Our analysts are third party authors that include both professional investors and individual investors who may not be licensed or certified by any institute or regulatory body.

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Devon flapjack maker to open permanent shop in Bath

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The bakery chain makes flapjacks in a wide range of flavours – from mini egg rocky road to clotted cream fudge

Flapjackery is opening a permanent shop in Bath

Flapjackery is opening a permanent shop in Bath(Image: Flapjackery)

A Devon-based flapjack business is opening a permanent shop in Bath. Flapjackery’s new store on Pulteney Bridge follows a successful period trading as a pop-up in the city.

Co-founder Ms Myott said the Bath branch would benefit from its “prominent setting” and proximity to Bath Rugby, attracting regular matchday footfall.

She said: “Pulteney Bridge brings together a wide mix of customers from across the UK and overseas. Many are new to flapjacks, so we take the time to introduce them properly. It is always encouraging to see people return shortly afterwards to take more home with them.”

Shop manager Janine Pickett, who has worked for the company for three years, added: “It’s so exciting for us to be here permanently. The shop looks fantastic and I can’t wait to welcome everyone in.

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“We have a really loyal local following here. People walk past and pop in to say hello, and the neighbouring shopkeepers are always coming in too. There’s a lovely community feel on the bridge.”

Flapjackery was founded a decade ago by Ms Myott and Sally Jenkin and already has branches in Tavistock, Falmouth, Dartmouth, Minehead, Wells, Plymouth, St Ives, Lymington, Fowey and Sidmouth.

The bakery makes a range of flapjacks – from the traditional to salted caramel brownie, apple and blackcurrant and clotted cream fudge.

Flapjackery’s new Bath branch opens on Saturday, March 28, at 9am.

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Baltimore/Washington International Airport TSA Wait Times Stabilize Near Normal Levels

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Baltimore/Washington International Airport

Travelers at Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport (BWI) are experiencing relatively normal TSA checkpoint wait times averaging 10 to 30 minutes as of late March 2026, a marked improvement from chaotic scenes over the weekend when some lines stretched up to two or three hours amid staffing shortages caused by the partial government shutdown.

Baltimore/Washington International Airport
Baltimore/Washington International Airport

The airport, a major hub for Southwest Airlines serving the Baltimore-Washington region, issued repeated advisories urging passengers to arrive at least three hours before scheduled departures after unusually long security lines developed on Sunday, March 22 and 23. On that Sunday, high TSA officer call-out rates — reported at 38.1% at BWI compared to a national average around 11-12% — forced closures of checkpoints and led to significant backups, with some passengers waiting over an hour even in CLEAR lanes.

By Monday and into mid-week, conditions eased as remaining TSA staff maintained operations at open checkpoints. Airport officials reported that while checkpoints A and B were temporarily closed on March 25, wait times at the remaining checkpoints (primarily C and D/E) stayed “close to normal,” though subject to rapid change. Real-time trackers and third-party sources showed average general security waits fluctuating between 15 and 30 minutes during peak periods, with some hourly estimates reaching 32-40 minutes in the early afternoon.

BWI does not use a private screening partnership like some airports, leaving it fully reliant on federal TSA officers. The shutdown, now stretching into its fifth week or more, has left roughly 50,000 TSA employees working without pay, prompting call-outs, resignations and morale challenges nationwide. More than 400 TSA agents have reportedly quit since the funding lapse began, exacerbating staffing pressures during the busy spring break travel period.

Airport spokesperson statements and Maryland Gov. Wes Moore emphasized that lines were moving through open checkpoints and that no Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents were deployed at BWI, despite national discussions about potential federal support at airports. Moore stated the situation was being closely monitored, with emphasis on keeping operations functional without additional federal personnel inside the terminal.

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For travelers, expedited options remain the best defense against delays. TSA PreCheck lanes, when open, typically clear in 5 minutes or less. CLEAR biometric verification is available and has helped some passengers bypass longer general lines, though availability can vary with staffing. BWI’s website and digital signage inside the terminal provide updates, though real-time wait time displays were temporarily unavailable or inconsistent on some days due to the funding issues affecting federal systems.

The airport’s main terminal features multiple security checkpoints serving its concourses, with Southwest dominating operations alongside other carriers. Peak congestion often occurs during morning and afternoon flight banks, particularly in the 5-8 a.m. and 4-7 p.m. windows when many domestic departures cluster. Third-party data from sources like OnAirParking and Takeoff Timer indicated average waits around 20-30 minutes under normal conditions, with potential spikes to 30-40 minutes during busy periods even before the shutdown intensified pressures.

BWI officials continue to recommend two hours for domestic flights and three hours for international departures as a baseline, with the current advisory leaning toward the longer window to account for variability. Passengers are encouraged to use the MyTSA app for general guidance and the official BWI site for checkpoint-specific alerts, though some travelers reported discrepancies between posted times and actual experiences during peak disruption days.

The situation at BWI mirrors challenges at other East Coast hubs but has not reached the extreme multi-hour delays seen at some larger airports. Travelers shared mixed feedback: some praised dedicated TSA staff still showing up despite unpaid work, while others expressed frustration over closed lanes and the need for extra buffer time. Local media captured scenes of lines snaking through terminals on Sunday, prompting comparisons to post-9/11 security measures.

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Beyond security, BWI continues normal operations in other areas, including baggage claim and ground transportation. The airport serves millions of passengers annually as a convenient alternative to Reagan National (DCA) and Dulles (IAD), with strong low-cost carrier presence.

As the shutdown persists without immediate resolution, uncertainty lingers. Airport leaders and TSA supervisors are working to maintain service levels, but sustained high call-out rates or further resignations could reverse recent stabilization. No major flight cancellations directly attributed to security delays were widely reported at BWI in recent days, though individual passengers have missed connections due to longer-than-expected processing.

Tips for minimizing delays include enrolling in TSA PreCheck or CLEAR if frequent travel is planned, packing efficiently to comply with the 3-1-1 liquids rule, and monitoring the BWI website or app before heading to the airport. Removing laptops, large electronics and outer layers early in line can also speed individual processing.

The partial government shutdown has spotlighted the critical role of frontline TSA workers and the vulnerabilities in federal funding for essential travel infrastructure. At BWI, a combination of proactive advisories, remaining staff dedication and strategic checkpoint management has helped prevent total gridlock, but the message to travelers remains clear: plan extra time and stay flexible.

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For the latest information, passengers should check bwiairport.com directly, as wait time displays can be temporarily unavailable. With spring travel continuing and the funding impasse unresolved, BWI’s security experience serves as a real-time case study in resilience amid fiscal uncertainty — one where dedicated officers continue screening passengers while the broader system strains under pressure.

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Treasury Yields Jump After Weak 2-Year Note Auction

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Treasury Yields Jump After Weak 2-Year Note Auction

Treasury yields have jumped after a $69 billion auction of 2-year notes met with very weak demand from investors.

Treasury yields, which rise when bond prices fall, have climbed sharply in recent weeks, with investors worried that higher energy prices spurred by the Iran war will lift inflation and make it harder for the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates.

Short-term Treasurys like the 2-year note are especially vulnerable to shifts in near-term interest-rate expectations, and have come under particular pressure in recent days.

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Ascendion’s Human-First Approach to Exceptional Candidate Experiences

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Ascendion's Human-First Approach to Exceptional Candidate Experiences

Never have the stakes been higher for organizations when it comes to attracting and recruiting top talent. As enterprises accelerate AI adoption, organizations are competing for highly specialized, niche capabilities that can unlock real business value and are increasingly relying on people to provide a key competitive advantage. Up to 90% of organizations will face IT talent shortages by 2026, with projected $5.5 trillion in losses from skills gaps.

At the same time, the on-demand, consumer centric economy is raising job seekers’ expectations. These highly qualified candidates aren’t just looking to work for financially successful organizations. They are demanding purpose-driven work, access to leaders, diverse teams, knowledge ecosystems, and stimulating environments. They go beyond simply seeking roles and are looking for employers that treat them as partners from the first interaction, with clear visibility into how their skills will be used, how they will grow, and how they will be valued.

Against this backdrop, recruiting practices are increasingly scrutinized, as striking the right balance between securing niche talent and meeting the candidates’ rising expectations is critical. Organizations that succeed will be those that rethink not just how they hire, but how they position talent as a long-term strategic advantage.

Shaped by strategic clarity, Ascendion has taken a different route; emerging as an engineering powerhouse at the intersection of technology and talent. This wasn’t a reaction to market volatility, but a forward-looking alignment to the digital explosion that prioritizes client continuity, tailored services, and seamless transitions. The result is a recruiting model that scales globally without losing human touch, treating hiring as the beginning of a long-term partnership rather than a transactional exchange.

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Strengthening and Building a Wider Talent Pipeline

Talent acquisition is not linear anymore. Companies tap into multiple channels like university partnerships, online networks, referral ecosystems, digital platforms, etc., creating a talent discovery environment that is both dynamic and competitive.

According to Gio Lara, Associate Director, Talent Acquisitions, Philippines, “Ascendion supports sourcing with its proprietary AI-enabled talent platform METal™ which has access to over 4 million candidate profiles. The platform offers AI-assisted sourcing and shortlisting capabilities; helps in rediscovering previously engaged candidates and gives a unified pipeline visibility across regions.”

He further adds, “Given that Ascendion’s talent acquisition teams operate across North America, LATAM, APAC, and India, this centralized platform aligns the geographically distributed recruiters on candidate status, evaluation criteria, and past engagement history.”

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With its multi-channel reach and shared data repository, Ascendion has tackled two key factors in talent acquisition: speed and precision and is redefining its competitive advantage in global tech hirings.

Structured Workflows with Defined Milestones

At Ascendion this starts with reimagining the Career Lattice, redesigning transparent growth journeys for an AI-augmented world. This framework blends deep technical expertise, fosters holistic well-being, and opens new channels for growth and professional development. And this transcends directly into how the organization approaches talent acquisition, candidate experience, and onboarding.

Ascendion’s recruiting model is built around complete process visibility. As Gio confirms, “The candidates are provided structured communication at each stage right from initial outreach to interview feedback and onboarding timelines.”

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Rather than relying on decentralized recruiter workflows, Ascendion has adopted a centralized talent intelligence platform that focuses on three critical aspects of talent acquisition; skills, potential, and career trajectory. Powered by deep learning models and agentic AI workflows, the platform autonomously handles complex tasks, streamlining sourcing, screening, talent insights, and analytics into one integrated system.

The objective is straightforward: reduce ambiguity.

Proactive Clarity with Standardized Communication

Ambiguity is a common side effect in complex hiring environments considering multiple roles, stakeholders, and geographies. At Ascendion communication during the entire talent acquisition cycle is treated as a structured system rather than a series of informal exchanges.

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“We set a clear expectation of the project alignment and are precise in defining the role scope. After each interview stage we share detailed next steps with the candidate. Our documentation and verification process guidelines are clear and leave no room for errors. We also follow a structured onboarding timeline once the offer is extended.” Gio explains. He further adds, “With these communication checkpoints, Ascendion ensures consistency across talent acquisition and regions. And the result is clear alignment between hiring team, stakeholders, and candidates”.

Disciplined communication extends beyond simple courtesy in high-stakes, high-volume technical recruitment, when it is treated as a process of control that supports professionalism, efficiency, and trust.

Beyond the Offer Letter

High and early attrition (within the first six months) is a common challenge across the technology sector. At Ascendion employee onboarding is a structured extension of recruitment and not an administrative afterthought.

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“For us professionalism is a cornerstone of candidate experience, one that extends beyond the offer letter. All new hires participate in structured orientation sessions; they are paired with mentors to accelerate integration into existing process and have immediate access to learning resources.” Gio explains.

In its first year of inception, Ascendion introduced a symbolic tree plantation initiative, in which it celebrated every new hire by planting a fruit-bearing tree through the Ascendion Afforestation Project. The initiative symbolized shared growth; as the tree flourishes, so does the new employee’s career; a quiet yet meaningful reminder that talent acquisition is about long-term growth rather than short-term staffing.

Supporting Emotional Resilience and Strategic Advancement

 Beyond hiring workflows, workforce strategies balance career progression, upskilling and personal development reinforces employee retention, organizational growth, and continuity.

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Ascendion has successfully established a talent ecosystem that supports employee growth and well-being. Org-wide programs provide continuous upskilling in cutting-edge AI and engineering practices through global communities of practice- Circles, hands-on innovation events, pet projects, mentorship, and collaborative learning environments. Complementing this technical development, dedicated behavioral training initiatives that cultivate essential “heart skills” such as empathy, authentic communication, emotional regulation, deep listening, gratitude, and reflective decision-making; thereby fostering a culture of openness, mutual respect, and psychological safety.

Other leadership initiatives create defined pathways for professional advancement. Continuous upskilling is supported through digital learning platforms and technical academies like Ascendion Learning Lab, ensuring employees remain aligned with evolving industry demands. Complementing these are diversity, wellness, and recognition programs that prioritize inclusion, resilience, and achievement across regions. Corporate social responsibility initiatives integrate purpose and community service into employee experience.

Talent acquisition today is defined by scarcity, scrutiny, and rising expectations; recruitment can no longer be transactional. Ascendion’s structured, technology-enabled, and people-centered model demonstrates that scale and personalization are a strategic advantage.

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Trump says Gorsuch and Barrett ‘sicken’ him after Supreme Court tariff ruling

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Trump says Gorsuch and Barrett 'sicken' him after Supreme Court tariff ruling

President Donald Trump blasted two Supreme Court justices that he appointed as “bad for our country” after they sided with the majority in a ruling that undercut his tariff agenda.

The criticism follows a Supreme Court decision last month that blocked his use of an emergency law to impose sweeping tariffs.

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By a 6–3 vote, the majority concluded that the law cited to justify the import duties “does not authorize the President to impose tariffs.”

Speaking at a National Republican Congressional Committee dinner in Washington, D.C., Trump expressed frustration with Justices Neil Gorsuch and Amy Coney Barrett, though he did not mention them by name.

BLACKROCK CEO SAYS TRUMP ACCOUNTS COULD BE A ‘VERY SIGNIFICANT STEP’ FOR YOUNG AMERICANS

People walk past the US Supreme Court in Washington, DC

The U.S. Supreme Court ruled 6-3 that the International Emergency Economic Powers Act does not authorize the president to impose broad tariffs. (MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images / Getty Images)

“Bad courts in this country are costing us a tremendous amount of money,” Trump said. “The Supreme Court, that’s right, of the United States, cost our country — all they needed was a sentence — our country hundreds of billions of dollars, and they couldn’t care less. They couldn’t care less.”

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Without naming names, Trump then took aim at Gorsuch and Barrett, whom he appointed, and said they “sicken” him.

“Two of the people that voted for that, I appointed and they sicken me,” Trump said. “They sicken me because they’re bad for our country.”

WILL THE FEDERAL RESERVE CUT INTEREST RATES IN 2026?

President Trump speaks during White House press briefing.

President Donald Trump answers questions during a press briefing at the White House in Washington, D.C., on Feb. 20. (Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images / Getty Images)

Trump has previously targeted the court, especially the six members who voted against him.

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The president said he was “ashamed of certain members of the court, absolutely ashamed, for not having the courage to do what’s right for the country.”

During an event hosted earlier this month by Rice University, Chief Justice John Roberts — who delivered the opinion of the court — warned against personal criticism of federal judges, citing an increase in “dangerous” and hostile rhetoric.

COSTCO SUED BY CUSTOMER SEEKING REFUNDS FOR TARIFF PAYMENTS

Justice Amy Coney Barrett at the Nixon Library

U.S. Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett is interviewed by Nixon Foundation board member Hugh Hewitt at the Nixon Presidential Library & Museum in Yorba Linda, CA on September 10, 2025. (Paul Bersebach/MediaNews Group/Orange County Register via Getty Images / Getty Images)

Roberts stressed the difference between criticizing a court order or legal analysis and personally attacking the judge behind it.

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“It’s important that our decisions are subjected to scrutiny, and they are,” Roberts said. 

“The problem is that sometimes the criticism can move from a focus on legal analysis to personalities. And you see from all over, I mean, not just any one political perspective on it, that it’s more directed in a personal way. And that, frankly, can actually be quite dangerous.”

GOLD TRUMP COIN MOVES FORWARD AFTER TREASURY INVOKES RARE AUTHORITY

Neil Gorsuch

Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch speaks at the Nixon Presidential Library and Museum in Yorba Linda, California, on Friday, Aug. 9, 2024. (Paul Bersebach/MediaNews Group/Orange County Register via Getty Images / Getty Images)

The case centered on whether the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) gave the president authority to impose the tariffs or if the move crossed constitutional limits.

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The dispute stems from Trump’s “Liberation Day” tariffs last April, a sweeping package aimed at addressing trade imbalances and reducing reliance on foreign goods.

Tariff revenue has surged in the wake of the policy.

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Duties jumped from $9.6 billion in March to $23.9 billion in May. For fiscal 2025, collections reached $215.2 billion, according to Treasury data, and receipts have continued to climb into fiscal 2026.

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Since the ruling, Trump announced a 10% global tariff under Section 122, “above our normal tariffs already being charged.”

FOX Business’ Amanda Macias, Breanne Deppisch and Bill Mears contributed to this report.

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Shire of Coolgardie approves $22m FIFO camp sale to Westgold

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Shire of Coolgardie approves $22m FIFO camp sale to Westgold

The debt-laden Shire of Coolgardie has confirmed it will go ahead with the sale of its fly-in, fly-out mining camp to Westgold Resources.

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