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NEW YORK (AP) — A federal appeals court on Wednesday overturned a self-styled right-wing propagandist’s conviction for spreading falsehoods on social media in an effort to suppress Democratic turnout in the 2016 presidential election.

The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Manhattan ordered a lower court to enter a judgment of acquittal for Douglass Mackey, finding that trial evidence failed to prove the government’s claim that the Florida man conspired with others to influence the election.

Mackey, 36, was convicted in March 2023 in federal court in Brooklyn on a charge of conspiracy against rights after posting false memes that said supporters of Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton could vote for her by text message or social media post.

He was sentenced to seven months in federal prison.

“HALLELUJAH!” Mackey wrote on X after the 2nd Circuit’s decision was posted Wednesday. In follow up messages, he thanked God, his family, wife, lawyers and supporters, and threatened legal action over his conviction.

One of Mackey’s lawyers on his appeal was Yaakov Roth, who is now principal deputy assistant U.S. attorney general in charge of the Justice Department’s Civil Division.

The federal prosecutors’ office in Brooklyn that brought the case declined to comment.

In charging Mackey, prosecutors alleged that he conspired with others between September and November of 2016 to post memes, such as a photo of a woman standing in front of an “African Americans for Hillary” sign. “Avoid the Line. Vote from Home,” the tweet said. “Text ‘Hillary’ to 59925.”

About 5,000 people followed the meme’s instructions, according to trial testimony. Nearly all of them received an automated response indicating that the social media posts were not associated with the Clinton campaign, and there was “no evidence at trial that Mackey’s tweets tricked anyone into failing properly to vote,” the 2nd Circuit found.

Mackey, who had 58,000 followers at the time, posted under the alias Ricky Vaughn, the name of Charlie Sheen’s character in the movie “Major League.”

In overturning Mackey’s conviction, a three-judge 2nd Circuit panel wrote, “the mere fact” that he “posted the memes, even assuming that he did so with the intent to injure other citizens in the exercise of their right to vote, is not enough, standing alone, to prove a violation” of the conspiracy law.

“The government was obligated to show that Mackey knowingly entered into an agreement with other people to pursue that objective,” Chief Judge Debra Ann Livingston and Judges Reena Raggi and Beth Robinson wrote. “This the government failed to do.”

Livingston and Raggi were appointed by President George W. Bush, a Republican. Robinson was appointed by President Joe Biden, a Democrat.

At Mackey’s sentencing, the trial judge, Ann M. Donnelly, said that he had been “one of the leading members” of a conspiracy that was “nothing short of an assault on our democracy.”

The 2nd Circuit disagreed, ruling that the prosecution’s primary evidence of a conspiracy was flimsy at best.

At Mackey’s trial, prosecutors showed messages exchanged in private Twitter groups that they said proved an intent to interfere with people exercising their right to vote. However, the three-judge panel ruled that prosecutors “failed to offer sufficient evidence that Mackey even viewed — let alone participated in — any of these exchanges.”

“In the absence of such evidence, the government’s remaining circumstantial evidence cannot alone establish Mackey’s knowing agreement,” the judges wrote.

Michael R. Sisak, The Associated Press


OTTAWA — The federal Conservatives raised a record amount of money in 2024 and ramped up their spending in a major way ahead of the federal election, according to records filed with Elections Canada.

The Tories brought in $42 million in donations and another $5 million in membership fees last year.

They also spent just shy of $50 million, with a large chunk of that going to advertising, research and polling.

By late December, the Conservatives appeared poised to form the next government as their sustained attacks on then-prime minister Justin Trudeau, then-NDP leader Jagmeet Singh and the federal carbon price seemed to resonate with many Canadians.

Conservative strategist Fred DeLorey says that while he’s not concerned by the amount the party spent, he hopes the party is taking a hard look at how it spent that money.

The Conservatives are the only party to file an annual financial statements with Elections Canada so far; all the other parties filed for an extension.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 9, 2025.

Sarah Ritchie, The Canadian Press


OTTAWA — An expert in extremism says recent arrests linked to an alleged plot to create an anti-government militia show the Canadian Armed Forces needs to do a better job of vetting at the recruitment stage.

University of Alberta political science professor Andy Knight says the fact that two of the four men charged Tuesday in relation to an alleged anti-government plot are active members of the military shows the Canadian Armed Forces isn’t doing enough to screen out extremists.

He says extremism within the forces needs to be “explored and stamped out as soon as possible” so it doesn’t fester and spread.

Knight conducted research for the Department of National Defence that uncovered racist and extremist beliefs among some military members.

RCMP announced charges against four men Tuesday over an alleged plot to forcibly take possession of land in the Quebec City area.

The cache of weapons seized by police during the investigation is the largest ever uncovered in a domestic terrorism case.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 9, 2025.

Kyle Duggan, The Canadian Press


CBC host Travis Dhanraj announced his resignation Monday.

Despite journalist Travis Dhanraj’s very public resignation from CBC, the national broadcaster says that he is an employee.

He is “still an employee although he is currently on leave,” said CBC’s head of public affairs Chuck Thompson to National Post via email on Wednesday morning.

Dhanraj’s lawyer Kathryn Marshall told National Post that “CBC is refusing to accept his resignation.”

“This refusal is indicative of their abusive work culture. However, to be clear, Travis has resigned, albeit involuntarily. We intend to commence a human rights lawsuit,” she said in an emailed statement.

In a letter to CBC leadership on Monday, Dhanraj said he felt that he had to step down because CBC made it impossible for him to continue his work with integrity. He called out the broadcaster for its “performative diversity, tokenism, a system designed to elevate certain voices and diminish others.”

He said he was denied access to “key newsmakers,” and described an atmosphere where barriers were in place for some, while others were empowered. “When I questioned these imbalances, I was met with silence, resistance, and eventually, retaliation. I was fighting for balance and accused of being on a ‘crusade,’” he wrote.

CBC has denied Dhanraj’s allegations.

The broadcaster “categorically rejects” the claims, CBC spokesperson Kerry Kelly said

in an emailed statement to National Post

on Monday. In February, CBC

confirmed to publication Broadcast Dialogue

that Dhanraj was “on a leave,” as

speculation swirled online

after the time slot of the television show he hosted, Canada Tonight, was replaced with another show.

On Monday, Dhanraj shared a note with his followers on social media.

“The dream that turned into a nightmare,” he wrote.

He said his resignation was not just about him. It was about CBC being “a public institution” that is “supposed to serve” Canadians.

“It’s about voices being sidelined, hard truths avoided, and the public being left in the dark about what’s really happening inside their national broadcaster,” he wrote. “I have no doubt there will be efforts to discredit me — to paint me as bitter or disgruntled. That’s what happens when you challenge power.”

Dhanraj’s journalism career spans 20 years.

He was a reporter for CBC News in Edmonton and Toronto before continuing on to CP24, Global News and CTV News. In 2021, he returned to CBC as a senior parliamentary reporter. He eventually ended up as the host for CBC’s Marketplace and Canada Tonight.

Our website is the place for the latest breaking news, exclusive scoops, longreads and provocative commentary. Please bookmark nationalpost.com and sign up for our daily newsletter, Posted, here.


OTTAWA — Ottawa is expecting national defence to find places to cut its day-to-day spending even as the department’s overall budget balloons in the coming years.

Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne sent letters to ministers on Monday asking them to find savings of 7.5 per cent in their budgets starting in fiscal 2026.

The ask rises to 10 per cent the following year and 15 per cent in cuts in 2028.

Champagne’s spokesperson Audrey Milette says the Department of National Defence will also have to find savings from its day-to-day costs.

She says the policy speaks to Prime Minister Mark Carney’s pledge to balance the operating side of Ottawa’s budget in the coming years even as he commits to rapidly increase defence spending to meet NATO targets.

The union representing public service workers warned Tuesday of widespread job losses and reduced services if Ottawa’s planned cuts materialize.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 7, 2025.

Craig Lord, The Canadian Press


FREDERICTON — At least three out of the four Atlantic provinces have released data revealing their measles vaccination rates in children are below the 95 per cent threshold recommended by scientists to prevent the disease from spreading.

In Nova Scotia, the provincial government told The Canadian Press that about 23 per cent of children were not fully vaccinated for measles in 2024. Brooke Armstrong, Health Department spokeswoman, said 93.4 per cent of two-year-olds had at least one dose of vaccine and 78.6 per cent of two-year-olds had both required shots.

Prince Edward Island and New Brunswick say about 10 per cent of children are not fully vaccinated for the disease. Autumn Tremere from Prince Edward Island’s Health Department said between 91 per cent and 94 per cent of children in Grade 1 had received two doses.

New Brunswick Health Department spokeswoman Tara Chislett said the 2023-24 school immunization report showed 91.2 per cent of students with proof of immunization were up to date for the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine.

Newfoundland and Labrador did not respond to requests for information on vaccination rates for measles.

Canada has seen 3,703 measles cases this year from Alberta, British Columbia, Manitoba, Northwest Territories, Nova Scotia, Ontario, Prince Edward Island, Quebec and Saskatchewan.

In June, Ontario’s chief medical officer of health said the province’s outbreak began last fall when six babies were born with congenital measles — they were infected in the womb through their unvaccinated mothers — and one infant died.

Janna Shapiro, a post-doctoral fellow in immunology at the University of Toronto, said communities need to vaccinate at least 95 per cent of their population with two doses to stop the disease from spreading, a threshold known as herd immunity.

That threshold is directly related to how contagious a disease is, she said. “Since measles is very highly contagious, we need a very high percentage of the population to be two-dose vaccinated to prevent it from spreading.”

It’s not enough for the provincial average to reach 95 per cent — every community needs to have at least a 95 per cent vaccination rate, Shapiro said.

Ontario, which has seen more than 2,200 cases of measles this year, has pockets where rates are “much lower” than the provincial average, she said. “On a provincial level, vaccination rates are pretty high, but in specific communities, vaccination rates are quite low,” Shapiro said. “And when you have a community where there’s lower vaccination rates, that is enough to allow measles to spread.”

About one in 10 children will develop complications from measles, such as ear infections, pneumonia or diarrhea; about one in 1,000 children will die from a measles infection, she said. Measles temporarily “wipes out” a child’s immune system, leaving them much more susceptible to a host of other infections, Shapiro noted.

Tania Watts, Canada Research Chair in antiviral immunity at the University of Toronto, said a number of factors could explain measles vaccination rates in Atlantic Canada. At the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, she said, many people skipped doctor visits, reducing the opportunity for children to be vaccinated.

A lack of access to family doctors — who are usually the first point of contact to the health system and can help debunk vaccination misinformation — could also be factor, she said. Complacency, meanwhile, could help explain the low rates, as measles was declared eliminated in 1998 in Canada and many families haven’t been exposed to the damage the disease causes.

“I think people don’t always understand the risk of an infection versus a vaccine — where the risk from getting the infection is much, much worse than the tiny, tiny risk of some adverse event in a vaccine,” Watts said.

“Vaccines save lives and they prevent severe complications of diseases.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 9, 2025.

Hina Alam, The Canadian Press


PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) — Former Rhode Island Gov. Edward DiPrete, who served as the state’s chief executive for six years and was later jailed for corruption, has died. He was 91.

Robert Murray, DiPrete’s former chief of staff, co nfirmed that the Republican died Tuesday after celebrating his 91st birthday with family.

DiPrete, a Republican, served as the state’s 70th governor from January 1985 until January 1991.

Less than a decade later, he became the first and only former Rhode Island governor to go to prison, having pleaded guilty to bribery, extortion and racketeering charges stemming from his time as the state’s chief executive.

DiPrete served one year in prison. After his 1999 release, the former governor said he hoped Rhode Islanders would still remember his accomplishments as governor.

“I hope historians 25 years from now will say that was a good period in time from a person who did make some mistakes, no question, and did some things he paid dearly for,” he said.

Political analyst Darrell West said DiPrete presided over years of relative economic strength in the state, but that his guilty plea and imprisonment were the last memory he left with the public.

“He was the first and only governor to go to jail,” West said. “That’s an ignoble thing to be on his record.”

DiPrete served as governor for three two-year terms, winning reelection in 1986 and 1988, but losing to a Democrat in 1990.

A year later, DiPrete was fined $30,000 by the state’s Ethics Commission for improperly influencing the award of a state contract, but the former governor’s legal odyssey was just beginning.

DiPrete and one of his sons, Dennis L. DiPrete, a civil engineer who had never held office, were indicted on March 29, 1994, accused of accepting bribes from architects, engineers, developers and landlords in return for state contracts.

The DiPretes were charged with taking at least $294,000 in bribes while the Republican was governor.

As they headed for trial in 1997, Superior Court Judge Dominic Cresto dismissed all charges against the pair after finding the attorney general’s office had disobeyed his order to turn over evidence to defense lawyers, a move that stunned the top state prosecutor.

The state Supreme Court reinstated the charges in January 1998 after the attorney general’s office appealed, ruling that Cresto had no authority to dismiss them.

On Dec. 11, 1998, less than a month before he and his son were scheduled to stand trial, DiPrete pleaded guilty to 18 counts of bribery, extortion and racketeering, admitting he accepted $250,000 in exchange for state contracts.

He was sentenced to serve one year in a work-release program at the state prison. Critics called the sentence too lenient, including then-Gov. Lincoln Almond.

DiPrete said he pleaded guilty to end the stress on his family and because he knew it would keep his son out of jail.

“Sparing my son and my grandchildren the anguish of these proceedings far outweighed any personal desires to put the state to its proof,” the elder DiPrete said in a statement.

A state judge later revoked DiPrete’s $50,777 annual pension in November 1999. He appealed, arguing he deserved compensation for past public service, including work for the city of Cranston. The state Supreme Court disagreed, ruling in 2004 that his conduct as governor meant the state Retirement Board did not have to honor his pension.

DiPrete often touted his “everyman” persona while in office, taking his large family on vacation in a Winnebago motor home and sometimes serving guests supermarket fried chicken from the RV. In 1987, he decided to park the motor home outside the Rhode Island State House during a snowstorm and slept in it to avoid being stuck in the snow.

Kimberlee Kruesi, The Associated Press



HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — U.S. Rep. Dan Meuser will not seek the Republican nomination for governor of Pennsylvania, despite having President Donald Trump’s recent promise of support if he were to run.

Meuser’s decision to run again for his northeastern Pennsylvania seat rather than governor leaves the Republican Party with a shorter bench of candidates to challenge Democratic Gov. Josh Shapiro in the 2026 election.

“My focus needs to remain on doing my job, serving my constituents, and executing the plans to strengthen our country,” Meuser said in a statement released Tuesday night.

At a rally at a U.S. Steel plant near Pittsburgh in late May, Trump singled out Meuser in the crowd, telling him that “if you run, you have my support totally, and you’ll win.”

Shapiro will lead Pennsylvania’s Democratic ticket in 2026, when Republicans also must defend the seats of several members of Congress who won narrow races last year.

Two-term Republican state Treasurer Stacy Garrity has said she is seriously considering running for governor.

Shapiro, the former two-term attorney general of Pennsylvania, is considered a possible contender for the White House in 2028 after he made Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris’ shortlist for vice presidential running mates in last year’s election.

Shapiro has won three statewide races and carries a reputation as a disciplined messenger and powerhouse fundraiser.

Shapiro won his 2022 contest by almost 15 percentage points, an election cycle Republicans would rather forget.

Shapiro, 52, spent more than $70 million in that two-year campaign cycle, smashing Pennsylvania’s campaign finance record. Republicans now regard him as a national figure in the Democratic Party whose fundraising ability will be as strong, or stronger, in his reelection bid.

Garrity, by comparison, spent less than $3 million in her two campaigns for treasurer.

Garrity, 61, a trained accountant, was a longtime executive for a powdered metals supplier in northern Pennsylvania before she ran for treasurer. She was also an Army reservist who retired as a colonel and served in Iraq, where she ran the detention center at Camp Bucca as part of the 800th Military Police Brigade.

___

Follow Marc Levy on X at: https://x.com/timelywriter

Marc Levy, The Associated Press


MADISON, Wis. (AP) — A suburban Milwaukee businessman, former Navy SEAL and political newcomer entered Wisconsin’s race for governor Wednesday, likening himself to President Donald Trump and promising a “Wisconsin First” agenda.

Bill Berrien, 56, becomes the second Republican to announce for the 2026 contest. Democratic Gov. Tony Evers, 73, has not yet said whether he will seek a third term, but indicated this week he will announce his decision this month.

But that didn’t stop Berrien from taking aim at Evers in his campaign launch video, calling the two-term governor a failure who has encouraged illegal immigration and “welcomed boys into our daughters’ sports and locker rooms.”

Berrien joins Washington County Executive Josh Schoemann as the only announced candidates for the race. This is Berrien’s first race for office and it’s the first statewide campaign for both he and Schoemann.

In his campaign launch video, Berrien walks in front of a tank and footage of Trump is shown after he was shot as Berrien talks about having a “fighting spirit.”

“I’m an outsider and businessman just like President Trump and I’ll shake up Madison like he’s shaking up D.C.,” Berrien said.

Berrien promised to cut taxes as he accused Evers and Democrats of wanting to raise taxes. But just last week, Evers signed a state budget that cuts taxes by $1.5 billion.

Berrien also faulted Evers for opposing mass deportations and vetoing a bill that would have barred transgender people from playing on girls and women sports teams. Berrien pledged to sign that ban. He also promised to increase wages, support police and make Wisconsin “a manufacturing powerhouse.”

Berrien also faulted Evers for proposing to change state law related to the legal rights of children of same-sex couples who are born through in vitro fertilization, sperm donors or surrogates. Evers wanted to replace the words “woman,” “mother” and “wife” with variations or “person who is inseminated” or “inseminated person.”

Republicans removed the wording changes before passing the budget Evers signed into law.

A spokesperson for Evers declined to comment on Berrien’s campaign launch.

Wisconsin Democratic Party Chairman Devin Remiker said Democrats will be ready to defeat “whoever Trump handpicks to do his bidding in the primary and emerges as the nominee.”

Remiker said Democrats were building on their playbook that resulted in wins for a hotly contested state Supreme Court seat in April, the U.S. Senate race last year and the governor’s race in 2022.

Berrien served nine years as a Navy SEAL and has been owner and CEO of Pindel Global Precision and Liberty Precision, manufacturers of precision-machined components in New Berlin, for the past 13 years. He is married and has two children.

Berrien formed a political action committee earlier this year that has raised $1.2 million since April.

Numerous other Republicans are considering a run for governor next year, including U.S. Rep. Tom Tiffany, who represents northern Wisconsin, state Senate President Mary Felzowski and two-time losing U.S. Senate candidate Eric Hovde, a Madison businessman.

Scott Bauer, The Associated Press


After months of promises to overhaul or eliminate the Federal Emergency Management Agency, President Donald Trump is touting a fast and robust federal response to the devastating Texas floods. One former agency leader says it’s “a defining event that can help them realize that a Federal Emergency Management Agency is essential.”

Trump also teased that he’ll declare more tariffs against U.S. trading partners ahead of his latest Aug. 1 deadline for negotiations. The 27-member European Union hopes to seal a trade deal ahead of that date, and meanwhile is preparing retaliatory measures against American products, from beef to Boeing jets.

The Latest:

Russia says threat of US tariffs against BRICS violate free trade principles

Russia’s Foreign Ministry accused the U.S. Wednesday of hinting at potential tariffs against the trade alliance of Brazil, Russia, India and China as a form of political pressure.

Spokesperson Maria Zakharova said unilaterally applying such tariffs would destroy the existing architecture for international economic cooperation. She accused Washington of “hiding” behind principles such as fair competition and national security.

Trump’s threat “grossly violates the rules of the WTO and the principles of free trade, which, until recently, Washington insisted on as a universal truth,” Zakharova told journalists.

Trump teases more letters on trade being sent to US trading partners Wednesday

“We will be releasing a minimum of 7 Countries having to do with trade, tomorrow morning, with an additional number of Countries being released in the afternoon,” the president said Tuesday night in a post on his social platform.

Trump has for several days teased letters listing tariffs that the administration plans to impose on different countries — even as it also continues to negotiate trade deals. So far, Trump’s trade blitz has produced lots of uncertainty but deals with just two countries — the United Kingdom and Vietnam.

▶ Read more about the state of play on Trump’s tariffs

Trump avoids talk of scrapping FEMA after more than 100 killed in Texas flash flood

The president has avoided talking about his plan to scrap the federal disaster response agency after the catastrophic flash flood in Texas that killed more than 100 people, including children attending a girls-only camp.

Asked shortly after the disaster whether he still intended to phase out the Federal Emergency Management Agency, Trump said it wasn’t the right time to talk about it. Nor did he mention such plans during a nearly two-hour meeting with his Cabinet on Tuesday.

Instead Trump opened the meeting by having Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem talk about her visit to Kerrville, Texas, a day after floodwaters swept away riverside campers and homeowners in the wee hours of the Fourth of July holiday.

▶ Read more about Trump, FEMA and the Texas floods

The Associated Press