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    Primary scores, ICE protest charges and UFC plot arrests

     
    TODAY’S ELECTIONS story

    Georgia GOP voters rebuff Trump’s governor pick

    What happened
    Voters in Georgia, Alabama and Oklahoma yesterday picked nominees for governor and Congress. All three Senate candidates endorsed by President Donald Trump won their Republican primaries. But his pick for Georgia governor, Lt. Gov. Burt Jones (pictured above), lost to billionaire Rick Jackson, and Trump’s gubernatorial choice in Oklahoma placed a close second and will advance to a runoff.

    In Washington, D.C., city council member Robert White Jr. won the Democratic primary to succeed retiring 18-term Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton (D). Democratic socialist Janeese Lewis George had a large lead in the open mayoral race.

    Who said what
    Jones’ loss was a “major upset” for Trump, Politico said, and proved that “an endless stream of cash” can “overcome the power” of his endorsement. Jackson, a health care tycoon, “personally supplied most of the $100 million-plus that his campaign has spent to persuade Republican primary voters to overlook Trump’s advice,” The Associated Press said. 

    Trump-backed Rep. Mike Collins defeated former football coach Derek Dooley in the GOP runoff to face Sen. Jon Ossoff (D) in a pivotal Senate race. Ossoff had “worked quietly for months to undermine” the more moderate Dooley, The New York Times said. In deep-red Oklahoma, Rep. Kevin Hern won the GOP primary to fill the Senate seat vacated by Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin. Rep. Barry Moore won Alabama’s Republican runoff to replace Sen. Tommy Tuberville (R).

    What next?
    Trump, “who loves to boast of the win-loss record of his endorsed candidates,” is considering endorsing both Republicans in South Carolina’s June 23 gubernatorial runoff, The Washington Post said.

     
     
    TODAY’S IMMIGRATION story

    Prosecutors charge 15 over Minneapolis ICE protests

    What happened
    Federal prosecutors in Minnesota yesterday announced charges against 15 people for “conspiracy to impede or injure federal officers” and “violently oppose immigration law enforcement” during ICE’s Operation Metro Surge earlier this year. U.S. Attorney Daniel Rosen said the defendants were part of two groups aligned with antifa, a loose collective of anti-fascist activists targeted under an executive order President Donald Trump signed last year.

    Who said what
    The 15 people are accused of “coordinating Signal chats and rapid-response networks to track federal immigration officers,” said MPR News, but Rosen “turned aside specific questions connected to the alleged conspiracy.” They “quite deliberately got together and planned violence, used violence,” he told reporters. “Whether or not they actually at the end of the day caused bodily harm is not the measure” of a “serious federal crime.” 

    The charges come at a “fraught moment for Minnesota federal prosecutors, who have had trouble sustaining many criminal cases” they filed against anti-ICE protesters, The New York Times said. At least a third have been dismissed “for a variety of reasons,” said The Minnesota Star Tribune.

    What next?
    The indictment is “pretty thin,” University of Richmond law professor Carl Tobias said to The Washington Post. “The evidence will prove it all out,” Rosen told reporters.

     
     
    TODAY’S CRIME Story

    FBI says it thwarted attack on White House UFC event

    What happened
    Federal law enforcement officials yesterday said they disrupted a plot to attack Sunday’s UFC cage match at the White House with explosive-laden drones and “snipers,” after an alleged plotter’s mother called local police last week. FBI Director Kash Patel disclosed on social media that “multiple” arrests had been made in a “multi-state operation.” Hours later, the Justice Department said five suspects had been arrested in Ohio, Nebraska, Missouri and California. 

    Who said what
    The mother of the Ohio suspect, 19-year-old Tycen Proper, told police that her son had been communicating online with “ex-military and Christian-based” people who “expressed ultra-religious and antigovernment sentiments,” according to an FBI affidavit. Proper allegedly said the attack on the UFC fight was meant to “jumpstart” a revolution. The charging documents “outlined a plot ambitious in scope” but “left less clear that the conspirators had the means to carry it out,” The New York Times said. 

    What next?
    Secret Service officials are “angry” with Patel for having “prematurely posted” news of the arrests, CNN said. The Secret Service led the “ongoing” investigation “from the beginning,” Deputy Director Matthew Quinn said at a news conference. And to “maintain the integrity” of the investigation, “we chose not to leak it.”

     
     

    It’s not all bad

    An experimental treatment has put lupus patients into remission in a British trial. Nine patients who had not responded to previous treatments received genetically modified immune cells primed to wipe out malfunctioning cells and allow healthy ones to regrow. Within a few months, five patients were in remission. Lupus is a chronic disease that causes the immune system to attack healthy tissue. Experts said the new treatment might also help people with rheumatoid arthritis and multiple sclerosis.

     
     
    Under the radar

    Big Tobacco may have ignited ultraprocessed food industry

    If you have ever felt like you couldn’t stop eating your favorite junk food, that’s by design. According to a series of papers published in the American Journal of Public Health, the tobacco industry employed the same tactics it used to sell cigarettes to promote ultraprocessed food.

    In the 1980s, U.S. tobacco giants Philip Morris and R.J. Reynolds “made a major entrance into the food industry,” acquiring brands like Del Monte, Kraft, Nabisco and 7Up, said one of the papers. Investing in food and beverage companies was an attempt to diversity and improve their corporate image.

    Tobacco companies “spent decades amassing research on how to make cigarettes more addictive with chemical additives,” and according to “internal company records,” they “deliberately applied this knowledge to food manufacturing,” said NPR. Adding sugars and artificial flavorings, additives known to be “hyperpalatable,” activated the same part of the brain as cigarettes or other drugs. And along with changing the composition of the products, they made aggressive marketing the norm.

    Big Tobacco eventually “divested from the food system,” but its impact remained, said the papers. Ultraprocessed foods “now account for 70% of packaged foods in the U.S. and 62% of the calories in children’s diets,” said Fast Company. These foods have been linked to obesity, diabetes and cardiovascular disease.

    There have been growing calls to regulate the production and sale of ultraprocessed foods, notably as part of the Make America Healthy Again movement. Last summer, for example, federal agencies “began a joint effort to define ultraprocessed food,” said Bloomberg.

     
     
    On this day

    June 17, 1994

    Football star O.J. Simpson was arrested for the murders of his ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend Ron Goldman. He was found not guilty following a media-sensationalized trial. Mark Fuhrman, the controversial LAPD detective in the case who was later convicted of perjury, died last month.

     
     
    TODAY’S newspaperS

    ‘Taxpayers on the hook’

    “Iran can start selling its oil following deal” as “accord draws doubts from hawks,” The Wall Street Journal says on Wednesday’s front page. “Deal set to open strait but new hurdles arise from months of closure,” The New York Times says. “Lebanon remains sticking point for Iran,” says the Los Angeles Times. “Dispute could sink peace agreement,” the Chicago Tribune says. “Trump’s approval dips before midterms,” says The Minnesota Star Tribune. White House “ballroom price tag pegged at $600M,” with “taxpayers on the hook for half,” The Washington Post says. “Georgia ballot finally set for November elections,” and “Republicans reject 2020 election denier for secretary of state,” The Atlanta Journal-Constitution says. “Scientists have a plan if we discover aliens, UFOs,” says USA Today.

    ► See the newspaper front pages

     
     
    Tall tale

    O Romeow

    A curious cat interrupted a “Romeo and Juliet” ballet performance in Turkey, wandering onstage during the climactic final scene. The dancer playing Romeo, lying dead with Juliet mourning over his body, showed “superhuman composure” by not flinching as the cat scratched and nibbled at his head, said The New York Times. In a “bit of inspirational improvisation,” Juliet dragged Romeo away from the feline interloper, who jumped on a table and watched the rest of the show.

     
     

    Morning Report was written and edited by Nadia Croes, Catherine Garcia, Scott Hocker, Anya Jaremko-Greenwold, Justin Klawans, Rafi Schwartz, Peter Weber and Kari Wilkin, with illustrations by Stephen Kelly and Julia Wytrazek.

    Image credits, from top: Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images; Jerome Gilles / NurPhoto / Getty Images; Cooper Neill / Zuffa LLC; Illustration by Stephen P. Kelly / Getty Images
     

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