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South Africa women's team step up to chase Springbok success
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Indonesian islanders taking Swiss cement giant to court over climate
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Trump health misinformation swirls despite denial
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Williams will keep playing after US Open doubles exit
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Kim, Putin at Xi's side for massive China military parade
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European heavyweights belatedly begin World Cup qualifying
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Cardi B cleared of assault in California case
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Kim and Putin join Xi for massive China military parade
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US House committee releases batch of 'Epstein files'
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'Almost perfect' Alcaraz rolls into US Open semi-finals
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Not my bag: Trump blames AI for viral video
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Sabalenka into US Open semis after Vondrousova walkover
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Paramount to make live-action 'Call of Duty' movie
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Google not required to sell Chrome in antitrust victory
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Economists back Fed Governor Cook as Trump attempts ouster
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Brazil court shrugs off US 'threats' as it mulls Bolsonaro fate
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Trump says 11 dead in US strike on drug-carrying boat from Venezuela
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US limits TSMC chipmaking tool shipments to China
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Google not required to sell Chrome, judge rules
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Kim and Putin join China's Xi for massive military parade in Beijing
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Trump says US forces 'shot' drug-carrying boat that had left Venezuela
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At least 25 killed in Pakistan attacks, including 14 at political rally
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Trump says to ask Supreme Court for 'expedited ruling' in tariff appeal
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Ravens visit Bills as hungry NFL rivals meet in opener
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Not dead. Trump dismisses health rumors as 'fake news'
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'We're going in,' Trump says of sending troops to Chicago
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Alcaraz, Pegula ease into US Open semi-finals
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Chaos hits NFL Cowboys as season opener with Eagles looms
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Galatasaray sign Gundogan from Man City on free transfer
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Galatasary sign Gundogan from Man City on free transfer
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Afghanistan roar back to beat Pakistan in tri-series
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Alcaraz dominates Lehecka to reach US Open semi-finals
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Trump announces US Space Command move to Alabama
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Trump dismisses health rumors as 'fake news'
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Scrap nukes, director Bigelow urges in new thriller at Venice
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Pegula 'surprised' by US Open semi-final return
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'Nobody wants to watch that' says Brook as South Africa hammer England
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Ex-NFL coach Belichick suffers blowout loss in college debut
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Landslide wipes out Sudan village, killing hundreds
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Steelers turn to 41-year-old Rodgers in search of NFL success
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Aussie IndyCar racer Power splits with Penske after 17 years
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Nestle CEO switch a chance to reset: experts
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Anthropic valued at $183 bn in new funding round
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Brazil court shuns US 'threats' as it mulls Bolsonaro fate
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Two held as Argentina hunts for Nazi-looted painting
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Anisimova eyes Swiatek US Open revenge after Wimbledon nightmare
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Rubio cites Poland role in Cuba as he hails dissident
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South Africa thrash England in 1st ODI
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Once king of the seas, a giant iceberg is finally breaking up
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Injured Olympic 200m champion Thomas out of Worlds

Trump says to ask Supreme Court for 'expedited ruling' in tariff appeal
US President Donald Trump said Tuesday that he plans to seek a swift ruling from the Supreme Court as his administration pushes to overturn a court decision that found many of his tariffs illegal.
"We're going to be going to the Supreme Court, we think tomorrow, because we need an early decision," Trump told reporters.
He added that he would ask for an "expedited ruling," warning that "if you took away tariffs, we could end up being a third-world country."
The US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, in a 7-4 ruling on Friday, had affirmed a lower court's finding that Trump exceeded his authority in tapping emergency economic powers to impose wide-ranging duties.
But the judges allowed these levies to stay in place through mid-October, giving Trump time to take the fight to the Supreme Court.
On Tuesday, Trump claimed that the stock market was "down because of that."
"The stock market needs the tariffs. They want the tariffs," he said.
Wall Street's major indexes retreated Tuesday as uncertainty surrounding the fate of Trump's duties dragged on.
Since returning to the presidency, Trump has invoked the International Emergency Economic Powers Act to impose "reciprocal" tariffs on almost all US trading partners, with a 10-percent baseline level and higher rates for dozens of economies including the European Union and Japan.
He tapped similar powers to slap separate tariffs on Mexico, Canada and China over what Trump said was the flow of deadly drugs into the United States.
Friday's ruling did not however impact sector-specific tariffs like those on steel, aluminum and autos, which were rolled out under different authorities.
The decision still marks a blow to the president, who has wielded tariffs as a broad economic policy tool.
It could also cast doubt over deals Trump has struck with key trading partners like the EU, raising the question of what would happen to the billions of dollars collected by the United States since the tariffs were put in place -- if the conservative-majority Supreme Court does not back him.
Several legal challenges have been filed against the tariffs Trump invoked citing emergencies.
If these tariffs are ultimately ruled illegal, companies could potentially seek reimbursements.
D.Sawyer--AMWN