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15.04.2025

15.04.2025 โ€” Day Harvard Lost $2 Billion While Vance Extended Trade Olive Branch

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This page is an archive of main headlines from the UK for 15.04.2025.

It displays 102 headlines from many sources chronologically, as they appeared throughout the day, accompanied by AI overviews that were written in real time.

15.04.2025 โ‡ข Day Harvard Lost $2 Billion While Vance Extended Trade Olive Branch
โŒจTrump froze $2 billion in Harvard funding after the university rejected his demands, later threatening its tax-exempt status. Obama and Yale faculty voiced support for Harvard's stance.

JD Vance dominated morning coverage by suggesting a "good chance" of a US-UK trade deal citing "cultural affinity" between nations - a notable development in the ongoing trade tensions following China's harsh response to Trump's tariffs, describing Americans as "peasants wailing in front of 5,000 years of Chinese civilization."

The Sudan crisis received significant attention as BBC revealed they had smuggled phones into el-Fasher to document "hunger and fear" in what's described as "the world's largest humanitarian crisis after two years of civil war."

By evening, focus shifted to Prince William and George attending Aston Villa's Champions League match against PSG, which ended in disappointment for the royals as Villa lost by one goal.
15.04.2025
00:55
01:55
01:55
The Guardian

Chinaโ€™s Xi Jinping is in Vietnam to figure out how to โ€˜screwโ€™ the US, says Trump

01:55
04:47
06:06
The Guardian

Sudan in โ€˜worldโ€™s largest humanitarian crisisโ€™ after two years of civil war

06:06

06:07โ‡ขTrump Freezes Harvard Funding Over Antisemitism Demands

โŒจThe newspapers report on a range of issues, from international crises to celebrity news. Trump has frozen $2bn in Harvard funding after the university rejected White House demands aimed at fighting antisemitism (BBC). Sudan's civil war has created "the world's largest humanitarian crisis" after two years of conflict (Guardian). Domestic discussions include questioning whether the NHS is losing appeal among Britain's youth (Spectator) and climate debates with Bjorn Lomborg claiming billions would die without fossil fuels (Spiked). Celebrity stories include Aimee Lou Wood's reaction to an SNL skit about her teeth (Daily Mail) and Helen Flanagan selling her home after "losing all her money" (Mirror).
07:07
07:33
08:08
08:08
09:00
09:08
09:34
09:34

09:36โ‡ขVance Signals Potential UK-US Trade Deal

โŒจThe newspapers report on US-UK relations, with JD Vance suggesting a "good chance" of a UK-US trade deal citing "cultural affinity" between the nations (HuffPost UK, Independent, Times). Domestic politics features prominently with polls showing Reform UK potentially threatening Labour's "Red Wall" constituencies, as Nigel Farage targets these traditionally Labour areas (Daily Mail, Spectator). The Sudan crisis receives attention with BBC smuggling phones to reveal conditions in el-Fasher, amid what's previously been described as "the world's largest humanitarian crisis" (BBC, Guardian). A parliamentary report claiming no "two-tier policing" during the Southport riots faces criticism as "absurd" (Breitbart London).
11:01
12:20
12:55
12:55

12:56โ‡ขVance Touts "Great" US-UK Trade Deal Prospects

โŒจThe newspapers report extensively on US-UK relations, with multiple headlines suggesting a potential trade deal between the two countries. Vice President JD Vance has stated there's a "good chance" of a "great" trade agreement, citing cultural ties and describing the US as "fundamentally an Anglo country" (Breitbart London, Independent, Spectator, Times, HuffPost UK). In other news, Trump has frozen $2 billion in Harvard funding after the university rejected White House demands aimed at fighting antisemitism (BBC). Domestic political coverage includes concerns that Keir Starmer's policies may be driving Scotland toward independence (Novara Media), while Post Office scandal victims are being advised to sue the government (Sky News).
13:03
13:29
The Guardian

Obama and Yale faculty back Harvard as Trump cuts $2bn, alleging antisemitism

13:29
14:04
14:47
15:04
15:04
The Guardian

Trump threatens Harvardโ€™s tax-exempt status after university refuses to cave to demands

15:04
16:05
16:22
16:22
16:31
16:39

16:41โ‡ขTrump Freezes Harvard Funding Over Tax-Exempt Status

โŒจThe newspapers report on multiple international tensions. Trump threatens Harvard's tax-exempt status after the university refused to comply with White House demands, freezing $2bn in funding (BBC, Guardian). A diplomatic row between China and the US intensifies following JD Vance's comments, with Beijing issuing an "extraordinary trade war broadside" about "5,000 years of Chinese civilisation" (Daily Mail). The Sudan crisis continues with warring sides showing disinterest in peace talks despite a London conference addressing "the worst humanitarian crisis on record" (Channel 4). Domestic politics features Reform UK's Nigel Farage struggling to explain how to fund his party's policies (HuffPost UK).
17:05
17:05
17:05
17:14
17:57
18:06
The Guardian

Attorney general dodges question on Trump proposal to jail US citizens in El Salvador

18:06
18:14
19:06
20:16

20:17โ‡ขTrump Tariffs Threaten UK Medicine Industry

โŒจThe newspapers report extensively on Trump's tariffs impacting both Chinese businesses and potentially the British medicine industry. Chinese exporters face levies of up to 145%, causing stock to pile up in warehouses (BBC News), while UK officials are racing to secure exemptions for the medicine sector (The Times). Political coverage highlights growing public dissatisfaction, with 70% believing "Britain is broken" as Nigel Farage's Reform UK party gains support (Breitbart London), though they're criticized as "a pound shop Trump" by the National Education Union (Morning Star). In lighter news, Prince William and son George were spotted watching their football team Villa struggle against PSG in a Champions League match (Daily Mail, The Sun).
23:08