Donald Trump attended Game 3 of the NBA Finals at Madison Square Garden, becoming the first sitting US president at an NBA championship game; New York fans gave him a loud hostile reception with sustained boos and jeers after navigating airport-style security.
Israel and Iran appeared to step back from further military exchanges Monday after trading missile fire for the first time since the US-brokered April ceasefire; both sides warned of retaliation if attacked again, while Netanyahu publicly acknowledged the pause.
US District Judge Leo Sorokin invalidated Trump's $100,000 annual fee on new H-1B visa applications, ruling the administration had exceeded its authority and imposed an unlawful tax — a major blow to a flagship skilled-immigration restriction.
Sam Bankman-Fried, serving a 25-year sentence for the FTX fraud, officially filed a clemency petition with the White House on Monday seeking a presidential pardon from Trump — even after the president had previously told him not to count on one.
IAEA Director General Rafael Grossi told South Korean officials in Vienna that Seoul's nuclear-powered submarine programme should raise no proliferation concerns, provided a solid safeguards arrangement is concluded with the agency.
Chinese President Xi Jinping arrived in North Korea for a two-day state visit greeted by Kim Jong Un and his wife at the airport; ahead of the talks Xi urged Pyongyang to join Beijing in rejecting 'any scheme aimed at reviving militarism', a thinly-veiled swipe at Japan.
Israel launched new airstrikes on Iran after Iranian missile fire, defying Trump's direct public plea to Netanyahu 'not to respond'; the exchange threatens to drag the Middle East deeper into regional war as Trump's 'I call all the shots' line is publicly tested.
Korean President Lee Jae Myung held his fourth press conference at Cheong Wa Dae on Monday marking one year in office, vowing 'absolute competitiveness' in advanced tech, reaffirming the Korean Peninsula denuclearisation goal, and flagging real-estate tax reform for July.
Two Virginia residents filed a federal lawsuit Saturday seeking to halt the UFC fight card scheduled for the White House South Lawn on Trump's 80th birthday June 14, calling the event 'deeply corrupt' and arguing the proper approvals were not sought.
Trump abruptly ended a wide-ranging NBC interview with Kristen Welker after she pressed him on his unfounded claim that the California gubernatorial primary was 'rigged', telling her 'I've had enough'.
Trump publicly defended the anti-weaponization fund his administration formally abandoned Friday in a court filing, calling it a 'great idea' and refusing to rule out paying Capitol rioters who attacked police — language that contradicts Acting AG Blanche's wind-down commitment.
Trump ruled out releasing frozen Iranian assets ahead of a peace deal, telling NBC 'no' when asked whether the funds could be released to build trust; Tehran has indicated unfreezing would be a key trust-building step toward a lasting agreement.
OPEC+ ministers agreed Sunday to raise July oil output quotas by a total of 188,000 barrels per day; analysts say the increase is too small to push back against war-elevated prices in the Middle East.
Taipei said its coast guard deployed vessels to 'respond appropriately' after Chinese state media announced a 'law enforcement operation' east of Taiwan, which Beijing framed as a response to Japan-Philippines talks over the same waters.
Kim Yo Jong reaffirmed North Korea's nuclear ambitions as 'absolutely nonnegotiable' on the eve of Xi Jinping's June 8 Pyongyang visit; analysts read the trip as Beijing closing its China-Russia-DPRK strategic triangle amid significant military developments.
South Korea's potential growth is projected to drop below 1.5% in 2027 for the first time, the OECD says, even as the same body recorded Korea's actual Q1 2026 growth as second-highest among OECD members on the back of a semiconductor surge.
US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, marking the D-Day anniversary at Normandy, urged European allies to counter a 'present-day invasion' — a framing read as a migration reference — and renewed the administration's demand that Europeans do more for their own defence.
Trump issued a pardon to former Republican Rep. Stephen Buyer of Indiana, who served nearly two years in prison after being convicted of using nonpublic information to make stock trades after leaving Congress.
UK PM Keir Starmer publicly told the US to stop interfering in British democracy after Vice President JD Vance and other US officials cited the murder of British teenager Henry Nowak as proof of a 'civilisational decline' from mass migration.
South Korean special-counsel investigators questioned former president Yoon Suk Yeol on Saturday over messages he intended to send to the US to justify his failed martial-law imposition; Yoon faces power-abuse and obstruction-of-rights charges while in custody.
Trump told the Wall Street Journal he wants acting DNI Bill Pulte to shrink the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, calling the office 'too big' and saying he hopes Pulte will be 'less shackled' than his predecessor.
Former HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra advanced to the November ballot in California's gubernatorial primary; the DOJ sent a federal prosecutor to observe ballot processing after Trump claimed 'rigging' in the still-uncalled top-two race.
A federal judge vacated a series of Trump immigration-processing halts enacted after a deadly attack on National Guard members, ruling the policies put immigrants in 'indeterminate legal limbo' and were motivated by 'anti-immigrant sentiment'.
Senate Republicans approved $70 billion to fund ICE, Border Patrol and other immigration enforcement through the end of Trump's term, after dropping the $1bn ballroom-security line item that had threatened the package; the House vote is expected next week.
South Korean police cleared a 35-hour protest blockade at a Songpa polling station to seize remaining ballot boxes; National Election Commission chair Rho Tae-ak resigned, the PPP floor leader Song Eon-seog also stepped down, and both parties called for parliamentary and special-counsel probes.
China and North Korea jointly announced Xi will travel to Pyongyang for a two-day visit starting June 8 — his first overseas trip of the year and first North Korea visit since 2019 — after meetings this year with the US and Russian leaders.
Trump's former national security adviser turned critic is expected to plead guilty in the classified-documents prosecution opened against him after a memoir critical of Trump's first term.
Trump used wartime presidential authority under the Defense Production Act to direct about $700m to coal output, with $425m of that going to 13 existing coal plants; environmental critics accused him of 'putting polluters first'.
The House passed a war-powers resolution forcing Trump to seek congressional approval to continue the Iran war or withdraw troops, with a small Republican group voting with Democrats; Trump called the largely symbolic vote 'unpatriotic'.
Beijing told four New Zealand lawmakers on their return from a May trip to Taiwan they were barred from entering China for a year, the first such ban imposed on New Zealand politicians; Taipei's foreign ministry slammed the move.
Demonstrators say a Jared Kushner-linked megaproject on Albania's protected coastline threatens flamingos and endangered habitats; EU concerns over the project align with the local protest movement.
Trump told a wartime-leader interview he had used 'crazy' for Netanyahu and cursed at him over a threatened Beirut bombing, while insisting the relationship is solid; Netanyahu laughed off the rift in Jerusalem.
Senate Republican Mitch McConnell pointed to statutory eligibility requirements for the Director of National Intelligence role in a public statement widely read as questioning Trump's acting-DNI pick Bill Pulte.
Senate Republicans removed the $1bn White House ballroom security provision from the revised budget reconciliation bill on Wednesday, after concerns the spending could jeopardise the $70bn immigration-enforcement funding the package is built around.
Zach Lahn defeated Trump-endorsed Rep. Randy Feenstra in Iowa's GOP gubernatorial primary, the president's first major statewide primary loss of the 2026 midterm cycle and a crack in the coalition in a deep-red state.
Public Security barred Tiananmen Mothers from their Wan'an cemetery vigil for the first time in 37 years; Taiwan's MAC called on Beijing to face the historical record and Wuer Kaixi told Tokyo to drop appeasement.
USTR's Section 301 proposal would impose 10-12.5% tariffs on 60 trading partners including the EU, UK, Canada, Australia and Taiwan, framed around forced-labour findings and designed to rebuild Trump's tariff stack after February's Supreme Court strike-down.
Iran suspended the US ceasefire talks over Israel's Lebanon strikes and a senior military official said Tehran 'won't surrender'; Rubio told Congress Iran has agreed to negotiate nuclear-program elements it had previously refused to discuss.
Angry phone call between Trump and Netanyahu reportedly stopped a planned Israeli ground push to Beirut and came after Tehran suspended US talks over Israel's Lebanon strikes.
Trump appointed Federal Housing Finance Agency director and longtime ally Bill Pulte as acting DNI days after Tulsi Gabbard's departure from the role, placing a non-traditional figure atop the intelligence community mid-war.
