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Happy Tuesday! On Sunday, Gukesh Dommaraju, a 19-year-old chess grandmaster, upset fellow chess grandmaster Magnus Carlsen, the International Chess Federation’s No. 1 ranked chess player since 2011. The five-time World Chess Champion pounded his fist on the table as he lost, but still collected himself to give Dommaraju a congratulatory pat on the back. 

Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories

  • Axios reported Monday that the U.S. presented Iran a nuclear deal proposal Saturday that allows the Islamic Republic to enrich a certain amount of low-level uranium in the country while also requiring the country to “dismantle critical infrastructure for conversion and processing of uranium,” not build any further uranium enrichment facilities, and halt research and development for centrifuges used to enrich uranium. However, an unnamed Iranian diplomat told Reuters on Monday that Iran plans to reject the proposal as a “non-starter,” stating, “The U.S. stance on enrichment on Iranian soil remains unchanged, and there is no clear explanation regarding the lifting of sanctions.” U.S. special envoy to the Middle East Steve Witkoff—who issued the proposal to Tehran on Saturday—and Secretary of State Marco Rubio have both previously publicly stated that the U.S. would oppose any deal that allows Iran to continue uranium enrichment. 
  • China’s Commerce Ministry on Monday accused the U.S. of violating a May 12 trade agreement in which both countries agreed to lower tariff rates on each other’s imports. A ministry spokesperson cited a ban preventing chip design software from being sold to China, the U.S.’s newly issued AI chip export control guidelines, and a plan to rescind visas for Chinese students, which Rubio announced last week. President Donald Trump had accused China of violating the same deal on Friday, without citing specific transgressions, and, later that day, announced he would double the tariff on U.S. imports of steel and aluminum from 25 to 50 percent. 
  • The BBC reported Monday that Austin Tice—a U.S. Marine turned American journalist who went missing in 2012 while reporting in Syria—had been imprisoned by the regime of now-deposed Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad, per former Syrian officials and classified Syrian intelligence documents the outlet reviewed. The BBC was investigating Tice’s disappearance for a podcast series and came across a classified file labeled “Austin Tice,” which confirmed he was detained in Damascus in 2012 and where, per a Syrian official who confirmed Tice’s detainment, he was held until at least February 2013.  Last month, Qatari-funded news outlet Al Jazeera reported that a search team had found Tice’s body in Syria’s Aleppo region, but a spokesperson for Tice’s family said that report was “erroneous,” and U.S. government officials said as recently as December 2024 that they believe Tice to be alive.   
  • The 45-year-old man suspected of attacking peaceful pro-Israeli protesters in Boulder, Colorado, this weekend with a “makeshift flamethrower” was charged with a federal hate crime “involving actual or perceived race, religion, or national origin,” along with state charges, including 16 counts of attempted first-degree murder. Local police said Monday that none of the 12 victims injured in the attack has died, though two currently remain in critical condition. Federal court records show that the suspect told investigators that “he wanted to kill all Zionist people,” planned the attack one-year in advance, and “specifically targeted” the pro-Israeli group supporting the immediate release of hostages held in Gaza. Meanwhile, Homeland Security Department Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin tweeted Monday morning that the suspect, who was born in Egypt, entered the U.S. in August 2022 and illegally overstayed his B-2 visa. 
  • Russian and Ukrainian negotiators met for a second round of talks in Istanbul, Turkey, on Monday, agreeing to exchange severely wounded prisoners of war, detainees younger than 25 years old, and the bodies of 6,000 deceased soldiers each. Peace talks, however, failed to progress: Ukrainian officials said Russia refused to accept an “unconditional ceasefire,” while Russian-state media reported that Russian diplomats told Ukraine a peace deal could not be achieved unless Ukraine agreed to cede large amounts of territory and limit its military capabilities. Ukraine also shared with Russia a list containing the names of Ukrainian children abducted by Russian forces, which Russian delegation head Vladimir Medinsky refuted as propaganda, calling the list “a show.”
  • Polish voters on Sunday elected Karol Nawrocki, an independent nationalist candidate backed by the country’s populist, right-of-center Law and Justice Party, as Poland’s next president. Nawrocki, who campaigned opposing EU immigration policies and Ukraine’s entrance into NATO, defeated Warsaw Mayor Rafał Trzaskowski—a self-described centrist supported by the anti-populist Civic Platform Party—within a 2-point margin: 50.89 percent to 49.11 percent. As president, Naworcki will have the power to veto legislation from the Civic Platform’s parliamentary majority, tempering the agenda of Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk, who co-founded Civic Platform. Naworcki will be sworn into office on August 6, replacing incumbent, term-limited, President Andrzej Duda, also supported by Law and Justice. 
  • The Supreme Court declined Monday to hear two separate cases challenging the constitutionality of gun-control laws passed by Maryland and Rhode Island. One case challenged a Maryland law enacted in 2013 banning certain semiautomatic rifles, including the AR-15 and AK-47. The other challenged a Rhode Island law passed in 2022 banning large-capacity ammunition magazines, which the statute defined as devices capable of holding 10 rounds of ammunition that are fed “into a semi-automatic firearm.” Neither case earned the support of at least four justices necessary to add a case to the court’s docket.

Musk’s DOGE Legacy: Nominal Savings, Lots of Uncertainty

Tesla CEO Elon Musk speaks alongside President Donald Trump to reporters in the Oval Office of the White House on May 30, 2025. (Photo by Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)

Elon Musk came to Washington, D.C., promising to slash $2 trillion in government waste, fraud, and abuse. On Friday, Musk exited sporting a black eye he claimed was from his 5-year-old son and fending off questions about a New York Times story detailing his alleged drug abuse. When asked about the reporting, Musk deflected in a sarcastic reference to the Times’ reporting on Russian election interference. “That New York Times?” Musk asked. “Let’s move on.” 

Musk is likely ready to move on from more than just questions about his alleged drug habit. Aside from family issues and a 71 percent drop in Tesla’s net income, Musk—as his temporary status as a “special government employee” expires—is walking away from the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) without reaching even a fraction of his initial cost-cutting goals. DOGE’s failure is more than a tale of Musk’s overambition, however: Its sledgehammer approach to federal bureaucracy has left agencies in chaos, setting the stage for possible consequences long after he has gone. 



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