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Macron’s diplomatic efforts bring Trump closer to European views


PARIS — It may be one of Emmanuel Macron’s last major foreign policy triumphs as France’s leader: luring U.S. President Donald Trump to a historic night in Versailles, where he signed an initial deal to end the Iran war.

But that wasn’t the only memorable moment Macron had this week at a G7 summit where the experience and networks he has built over nearly 10 years as president bore fruit.

Perhaps the most remarkable feat was getting Trump to more forcefully back Ukraine in its war with Russia — a win for European leaders and for Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy following his diplomatic disaster at the White House in March 2025.

“Bravo,” Macron said after Trump signed the Iran war agreement. The signing came as a surprise to most of the officials and other guests at the Versailles Palace dinner, and they responded with a round of applause.

Macron had said the dinner was intended as a celebration of French-American friendship. The unannounced signing ceremony transformed it into a symbolic finale to Macron’s weeklong effort to get Trump more aligned with Europe — perhaps his last big achievements before the end of his term next spring.

Macron had presented Versailles as an “instrument of influence” and suggested the invitation could help keep Trump engaged through the end of the G7 summit held in Evian. Trump left last year’s gathering in Canada before it had concluded.

The Palace of Versailles, which Trump praised as “not gold leaf,” has been a venue for French leaders to honor visiting guests for more than three centuries.

After the signing, Macron praised the Iran agreement as one that “allows for putting an end to the conflict, that allows peace, that allows the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz” and will likely result in lower oil prices.

Macron, who was not involved in the Iran war negotiations, cannot claim success for Trump deciding to sign the deal. But he secured the historic location, helping to put Europe back into the frame of a war that the U.S. and Israel jointly launched without consulting Western allies.

French Economy Minister Roland Lescure, who attended the dinner, described the signing as largely improvised.

Trump said in his remarks that he was going to sign the agreement, Lescure said. Asked whether Macron knew in advance, Lescure said he believed Trump had informed the French president shortly beforehand.

“But for us, ministers in the French government, it was a surprise,” he told French radio RTL.

Trump arrived in France facing pressure at home over Iran, including criticism from some allies about his handling of the conflict and the emerging agreement. Sen. Lindsey Graham, one of Trump’s closest allies and a longtime Iran hawk, had expressed skepticism.

As negotiations with Iran advanced, Trump sought backing from leaders at the G7 meeting, according to a European diplomat briefed on the talks who spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to discuss the matter publicly. The G7 includes the U.S., France, the U.K., Italy, Germany, Canada and Japan.

“We certainly gave him some reassurance on the Middle East,” the European diplomat said. “And President Trump, for his part, delivered for us on Ukraine.”

The G7 statement on geopolitical issues referred to a “breakthrough” in the Middle East and mentioned Trump by name three times, praising what it called his “strong leadership.”

Trump has had friction with Macron, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz and Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni over failing to consult them before the decision to go to war. He has pushed back on the four members of NATO for their lack of support for the U.S. in the conflict.

Macron, whose bumpy relations with Trump started with an awkwardly long handshake nearly a decade ago, prepared for the G7 summit for months via frequent phone calls focusing on both Iran and Ukraine.

Trump met on the sidelines of the summit with Zelenskyy, who showed Trump photos of the damage caused by Russian bombing of the Dormition Cathedral in Kyiv.

Macron has at times expressed caution about Trump’s shifting positions, particularly regarding Russia and President Vladimir Putin. But European officials argued that this week’s written commitments represented a more durable position because the language had been approved by Trump himself.

“America is with us on Ukraine. That is very important,” Macron said after Trump joined a three-way phone call with Zelenskyy from Versailles.

G7 leaders agreed in a joint statement to increase deliveries of air-defense systems and long-range weapons for Ukraine. They also pledged to increase pressure on Russia through stronger sanctions, including measures targeting the country’s oil and gas sectors.

Macron also used the summit to raise Lebanon’s future with Trump. France has longstanding historical ties to Lebanon and has sought to keep support for Lebanese sovereignty high on the international agenda. During discussions in Evian, Trump repeatedly expressed sympathy for Lebanon while criticizing Israel and describing tensions with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

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AP reporters Angela Charlton and Thomas Adamson in Paris contributed to the story



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Peru’s president announces that Pope Leo will visit in early November


LIMA, Peru — LIMA, Peru (AP) — Peruvian President José María Balcázar announced Thursday that Pope Leo XIV will visit Peru in the first half of November.

Balcázar said after meeting with the pontiff at the Vatican that Leo will travel to Puno, Iquitos, Cusco, Pucallpa, Piura and Chiclayo, where the Pope carried out his pastoral work for nearly a decade. The Chicago-born pope previously lived in Trujillo, on the northwestern coast, and became a Peruvian citizen in 2015.

The president told local radio station RPP that details of the itinerary will be released later due to “religious policy and security reasons.”

The Vatican has not confirmed any upcoming trip, but a visit to Peru with possible stops in other South American countries is widely rumored. Leo himself has expressed his desire to make such a trip.

“Argentina and Uruguay are awaiting the Pope’s visit. I believe Peru would also welcome me with open arms, and if I go to Peru, I would also visit many neighboring countries, but the plan is not yet finalized,” the pontiff told the press in December upon his return from Lebanon.

Chiclayo, 14 kilometers (9 miles) from the Pacific Ocean, is a city with more than 800,000 inhabitants and plays a vital role as a commercial hub on Peru’s northern coast. However, it also faces social problems, and around 20% of its population lives in poverty.

Leo lived there for almost a decade before he left for Rome in 2023 when then-Pope Francis asked him to assume the presidency of the Pontifical Commission for Latin America.

The residents of Chiclayo celebrated with excitement when, in his first words as pontiff, Leo XIV addressed the cheering crowds in St. Peter’s Square in Spanish: “My beloved diocese of Chiclayo, in Peru, where a faithful people have accompanied their bishop and shared their faith.”

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AP journalist Nicole Winfield contributed to this report from the Vatican.



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Wellness trends just ‘narcissism masquerading as health’: Jesse Eisenberg


It’s safe to say most people would like to live as long as possible — but Jesse Eisenberg’s not buying the whole longevity moment.

“To me, a lot of these things, when I read them, just seem like narcissism masquerading as health,” the “Social Network” star said at the second annual Men’s Health Lab on Tuesday.

“It’s this feeling that ‘I should live forever‘… To me, it’s just insane,” he added, taking shots at a few trends in particular — and the people who are obsessed with them.


Jesse Eisenberg speaks on stage at the 2nd Annual Men’s Health Lab.
Jesse Eisenberg spoke on stage at the Men’s Health Lab in New York. Getty Images for Hearst Magazines

Longevity products and services have taken hold of the wellness industry, with Forbes estimates the longevity-focused market will reach $610 billion this year. As opposed to feeling or looking good today, the shift has been to focus on looking and feeling good over a lifetime.

Folks like Bryan Johnson exemplify an extreme approach to this. A self-proclaimed “biohacker,” he believes with disciple and the right habits, he can cheat death.

It’s not just getting enough sleep and eating whole foods. He’s spent millions on medical interventions and testing to help him stay young, and said he wants to achieve immorality by 2039.

He even named his book and Netflix documentary “Don’t Die.”

Though Eisenberg doesn’t call him out by name, he’s unimpressed with the whole idea.

“How could you see that people are starving in other places and decide that you need to go in a cold thing, and then a hot thing, so that your whatever is something different,” Eisenberg said. “To me, I read this stuff with just absolute mystification.”

That “cold and hot thing” is probably contrast therapy, frequently done today by alternating between saunas and cold plunging. Celebs like Hailey Bieber and Harry Styles, plus athletes like Naomi Osaka and Steph Curry, reportedly do it regularly.

Research does point to the practice having some benefits for stress regulation, recovery and resilience — and sauna, in particular, has been linked to better brain function, sleep and immunity.


Bryan Johnson running on a treadmill with a mask and chest straps for a healthy living experiment.
Bryan Johnson goes to extreme lengths to track his health and fitness. Bryan Johnson/Blueprint

Eisenberg also said he also doesn’t “do anything like” the VO2 max workouts touted by Johnson and fitness fans. These workouts seek to increase the maximum amount of oxygen the body uses during exercise, and the VO2 max number is associated with heart health and lung capacity.

“How is it useful? Explain to me how what you’re doing helps the world or helps anything besides your own vanity and your own longevity,” Eisenberg said.

“And if you had a good answer, I would say fantastic. But my sense is that 99% of the people doing that stuff do not have a good answer.”

It’s no surprise that he’s concerned about helping others. Last year, Eisenberg donated blood and got “bitten by the donation bug.” He ended up donating a kidney to a stranger at NYU Langone Health last year.

The problem, Eisenberg said this week, is that optimizing one’s health is seen as a moral good.

“We’ve conflated it with some ethical way of living, which I think is just a total mistake, and kind of just takes us further and further into a kind of selfishness as a culture. And, so, I don’t like that stuff,” he said.

“I understand if it’s, like, a hobby, and it’s fun for you — then it’s fine. It’s like playing a board game, or whatever. But to conflate it with some kind of ethical way of living just seems to me so misguided and incorrect.”

Eisenberg has also been candid about having obsessive-compulsive disorder and generalized anxiety disorder. Becoming a parent in 2017, he said, helped him focus on the tangible in the world.

“Like, oh, this is a real thing. This person needs to eat, and to be dressed,” he said. “Suddenly, all these fantastical fears that would keep me up at night are now related to a real thing, and that’s much healthier.”



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Daveigh Chase got ‘thinner’ every time Skid Row outreach worker saw her



“Lilo & Stitch” star Daveigh Chase grew thinner and thinner throughout her final months struggling with addiction in Skid Row, an outreach worker revealed to The Post.

Kevin Call, who dubs himself the “Mayor of Skid Row,” says he knew Chase — in a much different state than when she was Disney royalty.

“We do outreach, and she used to come through the line,” he told The Post. “But as I see her picture now, and I see what she looked like then…it was a big difference.

Kevin Call, who dubs himself the “Mayor of Skid Row,” says he knew Chase — in a much different state than when she was Disney royalty. Instagram/whitewallstuntz
“Lilo & Stitch” star Daveigh Chase grew thinner and thinner throughout her final months struggling with addiction in Skid Row, an outreach worker told The Post. Instagram/@skidrowmayor

“That is what [the] disease of addiction do to a lot of celebrities, a lot of people that end up in this situation here at Skid Row.”

Chase died in a hospital on Tuesday from complications of bacterial meningitis and a blood infection.

Call said he watched as Chase looked thinner and thinner every time he saw her.

“Well, she was getting more thin every time I seen her, she was getting thinner, and that let me know that she had a disease that was unarrested, and she needed help,” he said. “And she couldn’t get the help fast enough before the disease took her life.”

Call said he watched as Chase looked thinner and thinner every time he saw her. Getty Images
Chase died in a hospital on Tuesday from complications of bacterial meningitis and a blood infection. ZUMAPRESS.com

A video taken in Skid Row months before her death showed a severely thin Chase sprawled on the floor of a tent. Friends of Chase told The Post that she was severely underweight at the time of her death.

Call said disease can even take celebrities to dark places on Skid Row.

“People that were well known, and all of a sudden, they turn back, the disease doesn’t care,” he said. “So many start off on a good note, but end up bad, and especially when they have to die in Skid Row.”

Her manager, John Ryan, tried to save her from the infamous addiction-ridden zone, but couldn’t find her in time.

Ryan and Chase’s stepsister had planned to get the actress into a rehab facility in Costa Rica owned by a friend he knew after nursing her back to health in Los Angeles.

Chase’s alleged boyfriend set up a GoFundMe in her name, which her family says is illegitimate. They suspect him of trying to benefit from her name. GoFundMe
Call said that the family could at least find solace in no longer worrying about her horrifying condition. GoFundMe

“We were so close to finding her,” he told The Post. “Daveigh was the sweetest and brightest light in Hollywood. I can’t believe this is real. Her legacy and work will live on forever.”

Chase’s alleged boyfriend set up a GoFundMe in her name, which her family says is illegitimate. They suspect him of trying to benefit from her name.

She also starred in “The Ring” as horror villain Samara Morgan, and played her final roles in two films in 2016: thriller American Romance and the psychological horror film Jack Goes Home.

Call said that the family could at least find solace in no longer worrying about her horrifying condition.

“I hate to see what happened to her, but hopefully her family will have closure, knowing that they don’t have to no longer worry about her or her condition,” he said.


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Alicia Keys closes Knicks parade with ‘Empire State of Mind’ in black leather outfit



Alicia Keys closed the Knicks parade at City Hall on Thursday with a performance of “Empire State of Mind.” Getty Images

Let’s hear it for New York.

Alicia Keys wore a rhinestone-studded black leather Pelle Pelle jacket, matching leather pants and an eye-popping diamond “K” chain to close the Knicks parade at City Hall on Thursday, paying tribute to her hometown team and its historic championship.

The Manhattan-born Grammy winner, 45, performed “New York State of Mind” and her and Jay-Z’s 2009 anthem “Empire State of Mind” for the crowd, as exclusively reported by Page Six earlier this week.

She wore a blinged-out black leather Pelle Pelle jacket with leather pants and a diamond “K” chain. Getty Images
Keys also performed “New York State of Mind” for the crowd at the City Hall ceremony. Stephen Yang for NY Post
Diamond hoop earrings complemented her slicked-back twisted double ponytail. REUTERS

She wore her hair slicked back in a twisted double ponytail, showing off shoulder-grazing diamond hoop earrings.

It was the second Knicks-themed outfit Keys has pulled out this week. At the closing night of the Tribeca Festival on Saturday — which doubled as an impromptu victory party after the team clinched the title — she took the stage in a blue version of the same Pelle Pelle leather jacket.

The brand’s For The City of Knicks jacket, created in partnership with Allan Houston’s FISLL social-impact brand, is currently available in a limited-edition women’s cropped version for $1,675. The piece is heavily embellished with orange patches, a bedazzled “New York” across the front and the Knicks logo stitched on the back.

Keys — who grew up in Hell’s Kitchen, blocks from Madison Square Garden — had to miss the team’s Game 5 clincher in San Antonio for the premiere of her documentary “Girl From Hell’s Kitchen.”

But the lifelong Knicks fan wasted no time celebrating afterward, sharing videos of fans singing “Empire State of Mind” on the streets and writing on Instagram, “It’s a New York moment!!!!!! The @nyknicks are officially world champions.”

At the Tribeca Festival closing night on Saturday, Keys sported a blue version of the same Pelle Pelle jacket. REUTERS
The cropped For The City of Knicks jacket was created with Allan Houston’s FISLL brand and retails for $1,675. REUTERS
Keys grew up in Hell’s Kitchen, blocks from Madison Square Garden, and is a lifelong Knicks fan. Getty Images

On Wednesday, she and forward OG Anunoby posted a FaceTime call on Instagram teasing today’s performance.

“This is my city, and the city’s on fire,” she told him. “There’s so much love in the city. We’re proud of you.”

The ticker-tape procession traveled from Battery Park through the Canyon of Heroes to City Hall, where Mayor Zohran Mamdani presented Finals MVP Jalen Brunson and the rest of the team with the keys to the city.

The Knicks defeated the San Antonio Spurs in five games for their first NBA championship in 53 years.





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Americans still optimistic about the American dream at 250


More than three-quarters of Americans say they still believe the American Dream is worth striving for ahead of the 250th anniversary, but many Democrats are starting to give up, according to a new survey.

In total, 78% of those surveyed believe it is important to strive for the American Dream — the same figure as in 2024, according to the Gallup American Dream Study, whose results were published Thursday.

More than two-thirds (69%) of those surveyed believe they will personally achieve the American Dream, a slight drop of 3 percentage points since 2024.

However, the study found that less than half (46%) of respondents believe everyone has the opportunity to achieve the American Dream, down from 51% in 2024.


A father carrying his daughter on his shoulders as she holds up an American flag to attach it to their house.
More than three-quarters of Americans still believe the American dream is worth striving for. Gorodenkoff – stock.adobe.com

A total of 60% of Democrats and 57% of Republicans said the dream was “unfinished,” while Reps, Dems, and Independents alike all called government reform the number one priorty to ensure future generations can achieve the American Dream.

A third of Democrats (33%) said the American Dream had failed, while 31% of Republicans said it has succeeded.

Just 11% of Republicans and about one-quarter of Republicans believe the American Dream had failed.

Immigrants were far more bullish about the American dream, with adults born outside the US more likely than their American-born counterparts to be optimistic about their future.

More than three quarters (77%) of those born abroad versus 66% of US-born respondents said people can get ahead by working hard.

An almost-identical split of foreign-born vs US-born respondents (75% to 66%) felt they could achieve a better life than their parents’ generation.


The Statue of Liberty on Liberty Island, with a line of visitors on the island's perimeter.
Immigrants were more bullish about the future of the American Dream. kmiragaya – stock.adobe.com

When asked what came to mind when they think of the American Dream, responses highlighted a shift in recent years from the importance of pure material wealth to foundational stability and rights.

“Life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness” topped the survey as the most important concept of the American Dream, according to the study, created by the Milken Center for Advancing the American Dream.

More than half (51%) of foreign-born respondents felt optimistic about the future of the American Dream, 9 percentage points more than their counterparts born in the US.

The study also found that those born outside the US overwhelmingly view the American Dream as an “opportunity,” with 72% stating that as the term that most came to mind.

For native-born Americans, the American Dream was mostly viewed through the lens of seeking stability, with 53% stating that as their priority.

Despite high political polarization in the US, Americans across the political spectrum found something they could agree on, with similar figures saying that the American Dream is “unfinished.”



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Obama’s Presidential Center opening ceremony has star-studded turnout with Tom Hanks, Oprah, Christina Aguilera and more



The stars aligned to celebrate the opening ceremony of former President Barack Obama’s Presidential Center.

Michelle Obama, Tom Hanks, Christina Aguilera, Jennifer Hudson, Stevie Wonder, Tyler Perry, Bruce Springsteen and Oprah Winfrey were among the A-listers in attendance at the event in Chicago on Thursday.

Aguilera, along with Springsteen, Wonder and John Legend, performed at the high-profile event, with former President Bill Clinton, his wife, Hilary Clinton and Valerie Jarrett watching from the audience.

Several celebrities came together to celebrate the opening ceremony of former President Barack Obama’s Presidential Center in Chicago. (Seen above: Barack Obama, Michelle Obama and Bill Clinton). VICTOR HILITSKI/EPA/Shutterstock
Christina Aguilera (seen above) was one of the performers. Getty Images
Tom Hanks was in attendance. Getty Images
Oprah Winfrey also made an appearance. Getty Images

Pearl Jam singer and guitarist Eddie Vedder, rapper Common, Marc Anthony and Jennifer Hudson also brought the crowd to their feet with special performances.

Former Presidents Joe Biden and George W. Bush, along with former Vice President Kamala Harris appeared in good spirits while sitting with fellow attendees.

Karlie Kloss, who is married to Joshua Kushner, beamed while standing alongside New York Times bestselling author Derek Blasberg.

John Legend performed. REUTERS
Common also entertained the audience. Getty Images
Tyler Perry was among the selected guests. REUTERS
Derek Blasberg and Karlie Kloss were all smiles. REUTERS

Additionally, Michelle and Barack’s daughters, Sasha and Malia, also joined the festivities and appeared at the main stage with their famous parents.

The family of four watched the ceremony from behind bulletproof glass.

Despite several former presidents attending the ceremony, President Donald Trump was notably not present.

Eddie Vedder put on a show-stopping performance. Getty Images
Jennifer Hudson also attended and sang. VICTOR HILITSKI/EPA/Shutterstock
Former President Bill Clinton was seen with his wife, Hilary Clinton. AP Photo/Alex Brandon
Michelle Obama posed with former President George W. Bush. Pablo Martinez Monsivais/UPI/Shutterstock

Attendance was limited at the invite-only event. However, thousands gathered at the nearby Midway Plaisance city park for a watch party.

The Obama Center is a 19-acre campus located in the historic Jackson Park on the state’s south side.

The expansive campus features a museum of democracy, a library, a Women’s Garden to honor female leaders in the state, a mini lake with a path known as the Wetland Walk, and an NBA regulation-size court.

Malia Obama and Sasha Obama (seen above with their parents) supported their father at the star-studded event. Getty Images
Valerie Jarrett spoke at the dedication ceremony. REUTERS
Joe Biden and Jill Biden sat with former presidents. Getty Images

Additional immersive experiences at the site include the Eleanor Roosevelt Fruit and Vegetable Garden, where guests can learn how to grow their own food, a playground, and a massive 58,000 square foot lawn for picnics and lounging.

There is also a performing arts building known as The Forum, where performances will be hosted at the Elie Wiesel Auditorium, and the creative community can gather at the Hadiya Pendleton Atrium.

The highly anticipated $850 million campus will open on Friday, Juneteenth, after being in the works for more than a decade.



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German soccer star Thomas Muller marvels at ‘massive’ crowd during Knicks parade


Welcome to New York.

German soccer star Thomas Müller tried to get through Manhattan on Thursday on a bike, but he was held up by traffic due to the Knicks ticker-tape parade.

“I wanted to go to my training session today, to the soccer field, took the bike, but I don’t know why, but I struggled a little bit,” Muller said in an Instagram Story on Thursday, panning the camera to a large group of fans.

“The Knicks are too strong this year, even the parade, it’s massive.”

The Knicks held their ticker-tape parade at 10 a.m. Thursday, with thousands of fans lining the streets of the Canyon of Heroes and 10,000 police officers on hand to maintain order, according to the department.

The parade featured everything from “f–k Wemby” chants to Mikal Bridges’ dog making an appearance.

Muller is not with the German national team for the 2026 World Cup after he retired from international soccer in 2024, but he’s in the city for World Cup-related events and appearances.


Fans cheer at the New York Knicks Championship ticker tape parade.
Fans cheer during the New York Knicks Championship ticker tape parade and victory rally celebrating winning the 2026 NBA Finals. Getty Images

He joined the Vancouver Whitecaps in 2025 as a free agent after spending 25 years with Bundesliga giant Bayern Munich.

The soccer legend collected 10 goals in 16 World Cup games for Germany, winning the tournament in 2014 and the Golden Boot and the Best Young Player in 2010.


A man in a baseball cap taking a selfie with a crowd of people and buildings in the background.
Toronto Whitecaps and German soccer star
Thomas Muller marvels at size of Knicks parade. @esmuellert_/Instagram

Germany will visit New York for a match against Ecuador on June 25 at MetLife Stadium.

It’s unclear where they will be staying, but it’s safe to say they will not have to worry about another Knicks parade.

Germany has the best result in the tournament so far with a 7-1 win against Curacao in their World Cup opener and will play Ivory Coast in their next match.



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How the new housing bill could make it easier to get a mortgage



The landmark housing bill winding its way through Congress could change the banking system and make it easier for small banks to return to mortgage lending.

The House and Senate announced a compromise for the 21st Century Road to Housing Act this week, just days before the average rate on 30-year fixed home loans decreased to 6.47%, according to Freddie Mac.

The lawmakers have settled on 45 provisions across 381 pages with major implications for housing. This comes after months of wrangling for a bill that ultimately ends up with all sides meeting in the middle.

Rep. French Hill (R-Arkansas), chair of the House Financial Services Committee, said a late compromise on the bill involved settling on some bank deregulation provisions favored by the House.

“I appreciate the Senate including a three-year sunset on the [Community Development Block Grant Disaster Recovery] program and adopting key House priorities including nine community banking bills and the House’s language limiting institutional investors from outcompeting American families in the housing market,” he said.

In the end, nine of 12 House banking provisions made it into the final bill. Many of these consider the current state of banking, especially as smaller banks have reduced their roles in the market.

Explains Realtor.com® senior economist Joel Berner, small banks are a rarer sight in mortgage lending these days, thanks in part to stringent compliance rules imposed following the Great Recession.

Rep. French Hill, R-Ark., arrives for the House Republican Conference caucus meeting at the Capitol Hill Club in Washington on Wednesday, May 13, 2026. CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images

“They don’t have the armies of compliance officers that large banks do. Similarly, technological capabilities are easier to wield at a larger scale,” Berner said. The infrastructure required to process a loan application in hours is expensive, so larger players tend to dominate the space.

Bill reshapes rules for community banks and credit unions

The Bipartisan Policy Center broke down the House’s intent for community banks, which was initially section 900 of the bill. Dennis Shea, chair of the BPC’s J. Ronald Terwilliger Center for Housing Policy, said the rules could help banks provide more construction lending as well as mortgages.

“[French] Hill has always viewed these bank rules as a housing concern,” Shea told Realtor.com.

Several of the sections deal with how much money banks need to keep as a reserve, and deal with how to define some kinds of money on their balance sheets. They involve “brokered deposits,” or those that are aggregated from investors and distributed to banks.

Construction continues at the Marriner S. Eccles Federal Reserve Board Building on Jan. 12, 2026, in Washington, DC. Getty Images

Other rules allow more smaller banks to go through rigorous examinations from regulators less often. The boards of some well-run credit unions won’t have to meet every month under the new law.

And, the bill aims to promote bank startup activity, especially in rural areas. “De novo” new banks are exceptionally rare since the Great Recession.

The Senate kept out three provisions sought by the House. One would reduce the Federal Reserve banks’ surplus fund cap by $115 million.

The other two involve how the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. deals with failing banks. One involved the “least-cost” rule, and the other creates exceptions to bank concentration limits in the event a bank was in default.

The new rules could help banks provide more construction lending and mortgages. Brian Jackson – stock.adobe.com

Balancing consumer savings against financial safety nets

For much of this year, congressional Republicans and the Trump administration have been building momentum to change and rescind banking rules. Many of those emerged in the wake of the subprime mortgage crisis and were codified in the Dodd-Frank Act and the Basel III accords.

Those changes added a set of new rules that Republicans say have chased smaller banks out of the housing market.

Banks originated about 60% of mortgages and held servicing rights to about 95% of mortgage balances in 2008, according to data from the Financial Stability Oversight Council. By 2023, banks originated just 35% of mortgages and serviced about 45% of balances.

The House plan aims to limit institutional investors from outcompeting American families in the housing market, Rep. Hill said. Gorodenkoff – stock.adobe.com

Says the economist Berner, the market has changed since then.

“Nonbank mortgage lenders have made access to mortgage credit easier for more borrowers,” he said. “They tend to be more technologically advanced than banks, and allowed for all-online experiences sooner. They also extend mortgage credit to borrowers with thinner or weaker credit files than banks do, allowing for more approvals.”

Lawmakers have emphasized that the financial system has changed significantly since the Great Recession, and new guardrails are in place. Berner noted that some of the rules, especially ones that require more security for banks, still safeguard the financial system.

“It’s not just cutting down on paperwork, it’s cutting down the buffers that hedge against massive liquidity crashes in the mortgage market,” Berner said of the proposed reforms. “Those capital requirements help prevent catastrophe when the market takes a sharp turn for the worse.”

“Deregulation creates risk, but it may also allow banks to offer more competitive rates to borrowers if they choose to pass the savings along to their consumers,” Berner said.



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San Diego man snared in alleged terrorism plot raised cash for Hamas



A California man who allegedly posed as a humanitarian while secretly funneling money to Hamas and pocketing donations has been arrested on a slate of federal terrorism and fraud charges.

Federal authorities accused 38-year-old Reda Mazen Rida Sabassi of raising roughly $600,000 through online fundraising campaigns that he claimed would provide aid to civilians in Gaza, but which investigators say were actually intended to support Hamas.

Sabassi of San Diego was arrested Wednesday and appeared before a US magistrate judge in federal court, according to the United States Department of Justice.

A California man who allegedly secretly funneling money to Hamas has been arrested on terrorism and fraud charges. NurPhoto via Getty Images

He faces five counts, including conspiracy to provide material support to Hamas, sanctions evasion, wire fraud, money laundering and making false statements. The most serious charges each carry a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison if he is convicted.

“As alleged in the complaint, the defendant exploited the barbaric acts of terror perpetrated on October 7, 2023, to attract donors to his fraudulent ‘humanitarian’ causes,” said Assistant Attorney General for National Security John A. Eisenberg.

“He allegedly raised hundreds of thousands of dollars through this scheme, which he then funneled to Hamas to help finance that group’s terror and violence and to line his own pockets.”

This is not the first time San Diego has been at the center of federal terrorism-related cases in recent weeks. Getty Images
Feds accused Reda Mazen Rida Sabassi of raising roughly $600,000 for Hamas through online fundraising campaigns. AFP via Getty Images

Sabassi publicly supported Hamas online and allegedly created an hourlong propaganda video glorifying the Oct. 7, 2023 attacks in Israel, posting it to social media multiple times, including on the second anniversary of the massacre, according to prosecutors.

Authorities say Sabassi operated a charity called Ikram — The Arab Charity Foundation Inc., which he used alongside crowdfunding websites and social media accounts to solicit donations from supporters around the world.

Investigators allege Sabassi privately joked with a co-conspirator about naming one fundraiser after Hamas’ armed wing, the al-Qassam Brigades, before deciding to use the Ikram charity name instead.

Prosecutors further allege Sabassi worked with Gaza Now, which authorities described as a Hamas fundraising organization, to move money to the group.

Between December 2023 and February 2024, Sabassi allegedly raised approximately $600,000 through online campaigns. Of that amount, prosecutors claim he sent about $116,000 directly to a Hamas member and attempted to convert another $382,000 into cryptocurrency to transfer to Hamas through Gaza Now.

“Hamas promotes attacks against the US and has murdered dozens of Americans through acts of terror,” said Jay Clayton, the US Attorney for the Southern District of New York. “Our arrest of Reda Sabassi demonstrates our whole-of-government commitment to prosecute those who provide financial support to a malign terrorist regime that hates America.”

Prosecutors further allege Sabassi worked with Gaza Now, described as a Hamas fundraising organization. NurPhoto via Getty Images

Federal investigators said Sabassi allegedly used charitable appeals to conceal his true intentions.

“The defendant allegedly claimed to be raising money for charity but was actually funding the terrorist organization Hamas and also lining his own pockets,” said Donald Holstead.

Meanwhile, James C. Barnacle Jr. said Sabassi allegedly “raised hundreds of thousands of dollars to fund the death and tragedy Hamas seeks to carry out.”

According to the complaint, Hamas — formally known as Harakat al-Muqawamah al-Islamiyya — has been designated by the United States as a foreign terrorist organization since 1997. Prosecutors noted the group’s stated goal is the destruction of Israel and cited the Oct. 7 attacks, in which Hamas militants killed more than 1,000 people and abducted more than 200 others.

This is not the first time San Diego has been at the center of federal terrorism-related cases in recent weeks.

Earlier this month, three men, including an ex-Navy sailor, were arrested in an FBI investigation alleging an ISIS-linked plot to target US Special Forces, according to federal court filings.

Authorities said the group discussed acquiring weapons and providing support to the terrorist organization after being monitored through an undercover operation.

In a separate case reported the same month, a California man arrested in connection with the alleged plot told his attorney he was a recent college graduate with no criminal history, while prosecutors said he participated in extremist communications tied to the investigation.

The case against Sabassi is being prosecuted by federal prosecutors in New York with assistance from the Justice Department’s National Security Division and multiple FBI Joint Terrorism Task Forces.

If convicted, Sabassi’s sentence would ultimately be determined by a federal judge.


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