Canada has walked back on its digital services tax “in anticipation” of a mutually beneficial comprehensive trade arrangement with the United States, Ottawa announced Sunday night, just one day before the first tax payments were due.
The move comes after U.S. President Donald Trump announced over the weekend that he will be “terminating ALL discussions on Trade with Canada” in response to Ottawa’s decision to impose a digital services tax on American tech firms.
“Today’s announcement will support a resumption of negotiations toward the July 21, 2025, timeline set out at this month’s G7 Leaders’ Summit in Kananaskis,” Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney said in the statement.
The first payments from Canada’s digital services tax, which was enacted last year and applies retroactively to 2022, were initially set to be collected Monday. The tax would have applied to both domestic and foreign tech companies, including U.S. giants such as Amazon, Google and Meta with a 3% levy.
This decision from Ottawa was an about-turn from Canadian officials earlier this month, who said they would not pause the digital services tax, despite strong opposition from the U.S.
Canada’s Minister of Finance and National Revenue Francois-Philippe Champagne added, “Rescinding the digital services tax will allow the negotiations of a new economic and security relationship with the United States to make vital progress and reinforce our work to create jobs and build prosperity for all Canadians.”
However, the statement from Canada’s finance ministry also said that Carney “has been clear that Canada will take as long as necessary, but no longer, to achieve that deal.”
The digital services tax was first introduced in 2020 to address a taxation gap where many large tech companies were earning significant revenues from Canadians, but were not taxed.
Ottawa also said that the tax was enacted while it worked with international partners — including the U.S.— on a multilateral agreement that would replace national digital services taxes.
Shortly after Trump said that the U.S. was “terminating ALL discussions on Trade with Canada,” Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told CNBC’s Morgan Brennan that U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer would be investigating the tax to “determine the amount of harm to the U.S. companies and the U.S. economy in general.”
“Canada has this digital services tax. And several other countries do too. We disagree, and we think that they discriminate against U.S. companies,” Bessent said on CNBC’s “Closing Bell: Overtime.”
“Several countries within the European Union have digital service taxes. None of them have done those retroactively,” Bessent added.
U.S. goods trade with Canada totaled roughly $762 billion last year, according to the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative.
“It hurts a little bit. Like certain companies … I really feel like they did care for a long time, especially with stuff like their trans health care, stuff like that. And now that they’re kind of pulling back on that DEI, it hurts. It feels like a betrayal,” they said.
Companies rolling back
According to a survey from Gravity Research, 39% of corporations are scaling back external Pride Month engagements this year. That’s a double-digit increase from last year, when only 9% of corporations were changing their Pride plans.
An NBC News report also found that the organizers of several of the country’s premier Pride celebrations lost an estimated $200,000 to $350,000 apiece in funding from corporate sponsors this year.
“We went out and we surveyed a group of corporate executives, 49 executives, to be specific, in the run-up to Pride Month,” Gravity Research President Luke Hartig said.
“Sixty-five percent of our respondents said that they feared backlash in some way to their Pride engagement. And when we asked them specifically what stakeholders are driving your adjustments to Pride, overwhelmingly, the biggest drivers of those adjustments were the Trump administration and conservative activists and consumers,” Hartig told NBC News.
Additionally, Gravity Research found that no companies surveyed in 2025 reported an increase in Pride investments.
Hartig said many of these large corporations are continuing internal DEI efforts but have lowered their public visibility for supporting identity-based months, like February’s Black History Month and June’s Pride, due to fear of backlash.
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Multiple firefighters have been shot in an apparent ambush while responding to a fire in Coeur D’Alene, Idaho. NBC News’ Maya Eaglin has the latest on this developing story. June 30, 2025
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Life Flight Network, an air transportation firm specializing in emergency medical flights, said it sent three helicopters to the area of the shooting but has not taken anyone to medical facilities.
“Life Flight Network has sent three helicopters to the area at the request of local law enforcement,” spokesperson Natalie Hannah said by email.
The aircraft are based in Spokane, Washington; Coeur d’Alene, Idaho; and Sandpoint, Idaho, she said.
“No patients have been transported yet but our teams remain at the ready to respond at the request of incident command,” Hannah said.
It’s possible it may be too dangerous to land and transport potential patients. Gunfire continues, according to Norris, the sheriff.
Gov. Brad Little condemns Canfield Mountain shooting
Idaho Gov. Brad Little condemned today’s shooting on Canfield Mountain, which he called a “heinous direct assault on our brave firefighters.”
He said on X that he and his wife are heartbroken and called on the people of Idaho to pray for the victims and their families.
He also asked those nearby to clear the area so law enforcement and firefighters can continue to do their work.
Fire continues burning on Canfield Mountain as priority remains victims and shooter
Smoke rises after multiple firefighters were attacked when responding to a fire in the Canfield Mountain area outside Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, June 29, 2025. Young Kwak / REUTERS
The shooting started after firefighters responded to Canfield Mountain for reports of a fire.
Because officials are using so many of their resources on shooting victims and to try to neutralize the shooter or shooters, the fire cannot be put out, Norris said.
Meanwhile, a heat advisory will be in effect for the area starting tomorrow at 9 a.m. Temperatures could be as high as 104 degrees.
FBI is helping with the response
Sheriff Robert Norris said he’s receiving help from federal and local agencies.
FBI spokeswoman Sandra Barker said the bureau has agents assigned to the situation. “I can confirm we’re assisting,” she said by email.
At least one agent from the U.S. Marshals Service was also observed at the scene, carrying a long gun.
Law enforcement looks for ‘clear shot’ amid ‘sniper fire’
Law enforcement was taking fire on Canfield Mountain this afternoon, hoping for an opening to take down the shooter or shooters, Kootenai County Sheriff Robert Norris said.
“This is a very, very fresh situation,” he said. “We are actively taking sniper fire as we speak.”
He said whoever’s shooting is using “high-powered” long guns, and he indicated there’s no easy solution for law enforcement. In addition, he said, it’s not clear whether they’re facing one shooter or more.
“I’m hoping that someone has a clear shot and is able to neutralize the threat,” Norris said at a news conference.
Active shooters still firing as officials work to clear Canfield Mountain
Norris said civilians are still coming off of the mountain as officials try to clear it.
Sheriff’s officers are taking active sniper fire, Norris said. The shots are coming from multiple locations. No officers have been hit.
He said the situation is both active and “very, very fresh.”
Officials are “prepared to neutralize the suspect who is currently actively shooting,” Norris said.
2 dead after shooter opened fire in northern Idaho
A shooter killed two people in northern Idaho this afternoon as fire personnel responded to a blaze that broke out on Canfield Mountain, authorities said.
Officials got initial calls about the fire at 1:21 p.m., Kootenai County Sheriff Robert Norris said. By 2 p.m., it was reported that those firefighters were being shot at.
Norris said he believes both people who were killed were fire personnel. The number of injuries is unknown.
Canfield Mountain is in Cour d’Alene, which is in northwestern Idaho, about 30 miles from Spokane, Washington.
The Republican-led Senate late Saturday advanced a sweeping domestic policy package for President Donald Trump’s agenda after a dramatic hourslong vote, moving it one step closer to passage.
The vote was 51-49, with two Republicans — Sens. Thom Tillis of North Carolina and Rand Paul of Kentucky — joining all Democrats in opposition.
Following the vote, Trump attacked Tillis for opposing the sweeping domestic policy bill, threatening to meet with potential Republican primary challengers.
On Sunday, Tillis announced that he would not run for re-election, opening up seat in a battleground state that already was expected to be one of the most hotly contested races of the 2026 midterms.
There will now be up to 20 hours of debate before a process in which senators can offer unlimited amendments. And Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., forced a reading of the entire bill on the floor of the chamber, which will add hours to the process.
Elon Musk resumed attacks on the bill, calling it “utterly insane and destructive.” The Tesla CEO’s criticisms previously led to a high-profile spat with the president.
Protesters in Los Angeles are shifting their tactics as ICE detentions spread fear
An abandoned ice cream cart has become a symbol of resistance to residents of a west Los Angeles neighborhood who oppose President Donald Trump’s aggressive immigration policies.
The cart belonged to a beloved ice cream vendor, Ambrocio “Enrique” Lozano, who was arrested by federal agents last week while walking his usual route through Culver City.
A photo of Lozano’s lone ice cream cart spread quickly across social media, triggering a tidal wave of responses from immigration advocates, residents and lawmakers. A crowdfunding campaign for Lozano and his family topped $57,000 after the photo drew national attention.
A lone ice cream cart in Culver City, Calif.Courtesy Kimberly Noriega
The response to Lozano’s arrest highlights a new strategy emerging after large-scale protests overtook downtown Los Angeles earlier this month. Instead of focusing on marches outside federal buildings, residents of sprawling L.A. County are zeroing in on their own blocks and neighborhoods to show their opposition to Trump’s mass deportation efforts.
In other immigration news, Trump said during a Fox News interview that he is working to develop a temporary pass for immigrants who work in certain industries, marking the latest shift in the administration’s approach to immigration enforcement for farmworkers.
Asked directly whether billionaires should have a right to exist, Mamdani, who identifies himself as a Democratic socialist, told NBC News’ “Meet the Press,” “I don’t think that we should have billionaires because, frankly, it is so much money in a moment of such inequality, and ultimately, what we need more of is equality across our city and across our state and across our country.”
“And I look forward to working with everyone, including billionaires, to make a city that is fair for all of them,” he added.
His remarks come as some wealthy people in New York City soured on Mamdani in the days after it became clear that he would be the presumptive nominee.
“That’s a decision the House makes. That’s not a decision the Senate makes. But it is clear that this is illegal,” Murphy said when asked whether he agreed with Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s comments that Trump’s strikes were grounds for impeachment.
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Hanoi, the capital of Vietnam, topped global air pollution charts over the winter.Spike Johnson for NBC News
Blocky apartment towers dissolve into gray fog in the Vietnamese capital, as barges carrying sand inch down the Red River toward makeshift jetties. At street level, the city blurs as if it’s covered in film. The air stings your eyes and smells of chemicals, like chlorine but not quite. When the sun does punch through, it hangs like a red beach ball against the silver sky.
Hanoi disappears under layers of construction dust, exhaust fumes and road grit, pollution sources that regularly push the city to the top of global air quality rankings.Spike Johnson
In January, the average air quality index in the city of almost 9 million people was breaching the “hazardous” threshold of 300, shrouding its skyline in fog and prompting warnings from health officials.
The fog hanging over Hanoi isn’t just pollution, but a byproduct of growth that has lifted Vietnam’s economy while fueling its environmental struggles.
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The Glastonbury Festival condemned chants of “death to the IDF” after English punk duo Bob Vylan led chants criticizing Israel during their performance.
Former Minnesota House Speaker Melissa Hortman was laid to rest alongside her husband on Saturday, weeks after she was killed in what’s been called a politically motivated assassination.
The Democratic Republic of Congo and Rwanda signed a U.S.-mediated peace deal aimed at ending decades of bloody conflict while helping the U.S. gain access to critical minerals in the region.
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — President Donald Trump is expected to be at the formal opening Tuesday of acontroversial immigration detention center in the Florida Everglades that state leaders have dubbed “Alligator Alcatraz.”
The Palm Beach Post reported Sunday that Federal Aviation Administration data indicated that Trump would be in South Florida for the opening. Two White House officials and a Florida official familiar with the travel confirmed to NBC News that Trump is “likely” to be there.
The facility is on a little-used airstrip in Miami-Dade County that Gov. Ron DeSantis’ administration seized using emergency powers to build a housing facility for undocumented migrants. DeSantis issued an emergency order focused on immigration in early 2023, and he has since then extended it multiple times. The measure gives him significant authority to take actions such as seizing land. Some local political leaders in Miami-Dade County opposed DeSantis’ taking the land for the Everglades-based detention center.
The facility, which was set up quickly — in roughly one week — by the DeSantis administration, was the brainchild of state Attorney General James Uthmeier, who is DeSantis’ former chief of staff and one of his top political advisers.
Environmental groups sued to block the plan Friday, arguing it could have devastating effects on the Everglades.
“The site is more than 96% wetlands, surrounded by Big Cypress National Preserve, and is habitat for the endangered Florida panther and other iconic species,” Eve Samples, executive director of Friends of the Florida Everglades, which is among the groups suing, said in a statement. “This scheme is not only cruel, it threatens the Everglades ecosystem that state and federal taxpayers have spent billions to protect.”
“Alligator Alcatraz” has been hyped as the highest-profile example of Florida’s push to be the state that most aggressively tries to align with Trump’s immigration agenda.
The facility is estimated to cost $450 million annually, and it has been approved by the Department of Homeland Security, which has said it is likely to reimburse the state for at least some costs associated with operation.
The facility has received significant national attention, resulting in a media and political boon for Uthmeier and DeSantis, who on Friday gave a tour of the facility to Fox News.
Beyond the significant national media attention, political fundraising is up for both Uthmeier and the Republican Party of Florida, which has started selling branded merchandise off the idea, NBC News reported Saturday.
The constant rumbling of passing dump trucks drowns out the once familiar chirping of birds at the family home of Mae’anna Osceola-Hart in Everglades National Park.
“It’s all-day, all-night truck noise,” says the 21-year-old photographer who describes herself as part Miccosukee and part Seminole, two Florida tribes at the heart of the debate over the detention center known as “Alligator Alcatraz.”
The homes of Miccosukee and Seminole people, as well as their ceremonial sites, surround the detention center on three sides.
Osceola-Hart’s great-grandfather Wild Bill Osceola fought against the development of an airport at the same site where the ICE facility’s construction is now underway.
In 1968, authorities in Dade County, now known as Miami-Dade County, began building the Big Cypress Jetport on land the Miccosukees used for ceremonial practices. The Dade County Port Authority referred to the project as the “world’s largest airport,” with six runways designed to handle large jets, and officials were quoted as calling the environmental and tribal leaders who opposed it “butterfly chasers.”
The airport became a flashpoint for resistance, but in 1969, a coalition including Osceola-Hart’s great-grandfather, fellow tribesmen and conservationists persuaded Florida Gov. Claude R. Kirk Jr. that the airport would damage the Everglades. He ordered construction be stopped. One runway, approximately 10,000 feet in length, was left behind as a training ground for pilots.
Osceola-Hart is proud of her great-grandfather’s efforts to stop the 1960s development, but she is disappointed the Miccosukees lost land they considered sacred. “We got kicked out of ceremonial grounds,” she says.
Finding a safe place to live has been an ongoing battle for the tribes in Florida. Seminoles retreated into the Everglades after the Seminole wars ended in 1858.
The Miccosukees found refuge in the Everglades after development in Miami and Fort Lauderdale pushed them out of their settlements. Now, many members of the tribes live on the Big Cypress Reservation or in camps of wooden homes along Tamiami Trail (U.S. Highway 41), a road that slices the Everglades east to west and disrupts the natural flow of water from Lake Okeechobee to the park.
Construction of that road ended in 1928, changing life dramatically in the Everglades. Tourists were able to access remote areas of the lush national park. The tribes developed tourist attractions, like casinos, chickee huts and airboat tours through the mangroves. Native species declined.
Leaders of both tribes are constantly advocating for the preservation of the national park’s wildlife and vegetation, but they don’t have authority over how the land is used.
“It’s a long, fraught battle,” says William “Popeye” Osceola, secretary of the Miccosukee Tribe, describing how tribes are constantly fighting for rights over the land they have lived on for more than a century. Before becoming the tribe’s Secretary (an elected position), William was an art teacher at the Miccosukee Indian School, passing on the tribe’s traditions to his students.
“It’s a place where we come for healing, where we come to pray,” says Betty Osceola, a prominent member of the Miccosukee Tribe who is part of the Everglades Advisory Board. Her chickee village is within walking distance of the detention site.
The detention center sits on Miami-Dade County land, but Gov. Ron DeSantis seized it under an emergency order, which does not require county commission approval. Miami-Dade Mayor Daniella Levine Cava cited multiple concerns about the immigrant prison in a letter sent to Tallahassee.
DeSantis has previously said the center “helps fulfill President Trump’s mission” and that it will have “zero impact” on the surrounding Everglades area.
William Osceola tells young members of his tribe to stay engaged to protect their rights. “Some of these fights, they come in different forms, but it’s still the same fight.” he said.
Osceola-Hart agrees. “This is history repeating itself,” she says.
Erika Angulo
Erika Angulo is a senior coordinating producer for NBC News.
The NBA is cooperating with a federal investigation into Detroit Pistons guard Malik Beasley, NBA spokesman Mike Bass said in a statement.
The Pistons also said they are aware of the investigation but that the team did not have any further information.
The details of the probe were not immediately clear.
Beasley, who played last season with the Pistons, is currently a free agent. It is unclear how the investigation will affect his prospects.
Steven A. Haney, Beasley’s attorney, emphasized in a statement that the investigation is not an indictment or a criminal charge and that Beasley has not been charged with any wrongdoing at this time.
Beasley “is afforded the presumption of innocence like anybody else,” Haney said.
Beasley has played on a number of NBA teams in his professional career, including the Milwaukee Bucks, the Los Angeles Lakers, the Utah Jazz, the Minnesota Timberwolves and the Denver Nuggets.
WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump said in an interview on Fox News that the administration is working to develop a temporary pass for immigrants who work in certain industries, which would mark the latest shift in the administration’s approach to immigration enforcement for farmworkers.
“We’re working on it right now. We’re going to work it so that some kind of a temporary pass where people pay taxes, where the farmer can have a little control, as opposed to you walk in and take everybody away,” Trump said in an interview that taped Friday and aired Sunday on Fox News’ “Sunday Morning Futures.”
The president referenced authorities going to farms and taking “away people that have been working there for 15 and 20 years, who are good, who possibly came in incorrectly.”
“What we’re going to do is we’re going to do something for farmers, where we can let the farmer sort of be in charge. The farmer knows. He’s not going to hire a murderer,” Trump said. “When you go into a farm and he’s had somebody working with him for nine years doing this kind of work, which is hard work to do, and a lot of people aren’t going to do it, and you end up destroying a farmer because you took all the people away. It’s a problem.”
Reached for comment, a spokesperson for the Department of Homeland Security provided the same comment given by the department earlier this month after the White House reversed a plan to limit immigration enforcement activity at certain industry workplaces.
“The President has been incredibly clear. There will be no safe spaces for industries who harbor violent criminals or purposely try to undermine ICE’s efforts,” the statement read.
“Worksite enforcement remains a cornerstone of our efforts to safeguard public safety, national security and economic stability. These operations target illegal employment networks that undermine American workers, destabilize labor markets and expose critical infrastructure to exploitation,” the statement continued.
A White House spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for further details on Trump’s plan and whether DHS’ response conflicted with the temporary pass plan.
The move marks the latest shift in the administration’s handling of immigrant farmworkers. The White House has waffled in recent weeks on whether to exempt certain worksites from Immigration and Customs Enforcement raids.
Trump said in a post to Truth Social on June 12 that farmers and people in the hotel and leisure industries said that the administration’s immigration policy “is taking very good, long time workers away from them, with those jobs being almost impossible to replace.” The president said that “we must protect our Farmers,” adding that “changes are coming.” NBC News previously reported that at around the same time, ICE paused worksite arrests at agriculture, restaurant and hotel industries.
But just days later, the administration reopened arrests of immigrant workers in these industries. Tricia McLaughlin, assistant secretary at DHS, provided the same statement then as the DHS statement on Sunday.
“The President has been incredibly clear. There will be no safe spaces for industries who harbor violent criminals or purposely try to undermine ICE’s efforts,” McLaughlin said after DHS reversed the pause earlier this month.
A White House spokesperson said after the pause reversal that Trump “remains committed to enforcing federal immigration law — anyone present in the United States illegally is at risk of deportation.”
Trump in April previously floated the idea that undocumented people working at farms and hotels could be allowed to leave the country and return legally. NBC News previously reported that an administration official said Trump wanted to improve H-2A and H-2B programs, which allow employers to temporarily hire migrant workers.
Harbaugh, now head coach of the Los Angeles Chargers, led the Wolverines football team from 2015 to 2023. During that time, co-offensive coordinator Matt Weiss was fired for allegedly gaining unauthorized access to other people’s computer accounts.
Head coach Jim Harbaugh of the Los Angeles Chargers at The Bolt in El Segundo, Calif., on June 12.Ric Tapia / Getty Images file
The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of Michigan charged Weiss in March with 14 counts of unauthorized access to computers and 10 counts of aggravated identity theft. According to a federal indictment, he had unauthorized access to a platform with personal identifying information about student-athletes from more than 100 colleges and universities across the country.
He then allegedly used that information to hack into the personal accounts of 3,300 students and alumni with the help of additional internet research. Federal prosecutors allege that he mostly targeted female student-athletes, downloading intimate photos and videos from their private accounts.
Weiss was hired at the University of Michigan in 2021 and terminated in 2023. He has pleaded not guilty to all charges.
The class-action lawsuit, which is separate from the criminal case, targets Weiss, the University of Michigan and the maker of third-party software Weiss is alleged to have used to gain access to personal identifying information of student-athletes. It consolidates a number of civil suits in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan.
Former NFL and University of Michigan assistant football coach Matt Weiss leaves federal court in Detroit on March 24.Paul Sancya / AP file
Harbaugh was named as a party in an amended complaint on Friday, alleging that he neglected responsibilities in his role as Weiss’ supervisor and the head of the football program.
The complaint alleges that Harbaugh “failed and refused to implement basic security measures to Weiss and the football program” that resulted in Weiss being able to gain access to the students’ information.
“Had Harbaugh implemented basic oversight of his staff, Plaintiffs and the class would have been protected against predators such as Weiss,” the complaint said.
The new complaint also alleges that a staff member saw Weiss viewing a student’s private information at Schembechler Hall in December 2022 prior to the school competing in the Fiesta Bowl.
Harbaugh and the university still allowed Weiss to participate in the game, despite a report having been filed to the university prior to the game, the filing said.
A representative for Harbaugh did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Harbaugh said earlier this year after news of the Weiss indictment broke that he was “completely shocked” and “disturbed” by the allegations, according to NBC Sports.
The two worked together prior to their time at the University of Michigan when Harbaugh coached at Stanford University between 2007 and 2010.
Weiss also worked with Harbaugh’s brother, John Harbaugh, during his time on the Baltimore Ravens staff. Weiss spent 12 seasons as an assistant coach for the Ravens where, Harbaugh’s brother served as head coach.