- Section 702 surveillance authority expires as Congress fails to act
- Spanish hoteliers call for rule change following restrictions on England fans during World Cup
- Trump announces potential Iran peace deal ahead of G7 summit in Évian
- Jewish diaspora challenges prevailing views on Israel amid Gaza conflict
- France hosts civil society appeal to maintain momentum for two-state solution
- Critics warn Canada’s new immigration law endangers LGBTQ+ individuals
- Federal judge extends block on Justice Department’s $1.8 billion fund
- Princess Charlotte mirrors mother Kate at Trooping the Colour event
LIVE German 2025 Election Results as they come in and analysi on who will be the next German Chancellor.
Knowledge Hub
Global Reaction to DE Elections
When are the German Elections?
The Elections are on Sunday the 23rd of Feb 2025
Why are they having a snap election?
The German coalition government failed a no confidence vote
Do Germans vote?
Germans vote in big numbers, usually as high 70+ percent voter turnout
Section 702 surveillance authority expires as Congress fails to act
Get you up to speed: A key spy authority, Section 702, expired due to inaction in Congress. Here’s what happens next.
Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act expired at 12 a.m. on Saturday, affecting the government’s ability to collect foreign intelligence without a warrant. The expiration follows the nomination of Bill Pulte to oversee national intelligence, which faced opposition from Democrats concerned about his qualifications.
The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court’s recertification of Section 702 remains effective until March 17, 2027, ensuring the continuation of surveillance activities despite the law’s expiration. Lawmakers express concern that the failure to renew could lead to compliance issues with communications providers, who may hesitate to assist in data collection without legal indemnification.
Senate Majority Leader John Thune emphasised the critical importance of Section 702, stating, “It is a program that makes Americans more safe,” after its expiration raised concerns among lawmakers. In the interim, Democratic lawmakers assert that existing FISA authorisations will remain in effect until their scheduled expiry in March 2027, with Rep. Jamie Raskin insisting, “government surveillance activities will continue unchanged” despite the lapse.
What remains unclear — It is uncertain whether communications providers will cooperate with government requests following the expiration of Section 702.
Section 702 surveillance authority expires as Congress fails to act
Washington — A key surveillance tool that lets the government collect foreign intelligence without a warrant has expired.The spy authority, known as Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, lapsed at 12 a.m. Saturday after President Trump’s pick to oversee the nation’s intelligence agencies complicated its renewal.
Democrats have opposed extending the authority since the president announced that he had selected Bill Pulte, the head of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, to temporarily serve as director of national intelligence. In addition to his lack of national security experience, Democrats railed against Pulte for his efforts to go after some of Mr. Trump’s political foes on allegations of mortgage fraud.
Lawmakers have long sounded the alarm about the risks of letting Section 702 expire. Those who serve on congressional intelligence committees say that about 60% of the president’s daily intelligence briefing is derived from information collected under the law, and they consider it a tool that is critically important to national security.
But it’s still controversial: the provision already faced stiff opposition from civil liberties-minded lawmakers in both parties who have unsuccessfully pushed for years to implement a requirement for a warrant to search Americans’ data that’s incidentally swept up in the collection. Demands for reforms led Congress to punt the issue twice since its initial expiration in April.
Here’s what to know about what happens next.
What does Section 702 do?
Section 702 was first authorized in 2008 and allows the government to sweep up the electronic communications of foreigners abroad without a warrant.
Senate Majority Leader John Thune has noted that policymakers across the federal government rely on the information it provides on a regular basis.
“It is a program that makes Americans more safe,” the South Dakota Republican said on the Senate floor Thursday. “The intelligence derived from the 702 program is something that has saved American lives — in theaters of conflict, preventing terrorist attacks, preventing drug runners from getting drugs into this country.”
Documents prepared by the intelligence community and sent to House Republicans earlier this year said “no other foreign intelligence authority can replicate Section 702’s speed, agility, and insights.”
“FISA Section 702 is often the primary or only source of intelligence in areas where access to other sources of collection would be extremely dangerous and/or costly,” the documents said. They were first reported by Politico, and the White House confirmed sending them.
While Congress reauthorizes the legal framework that allows for the collection of the communications, a secretive court known as the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court authorizes the government to conduct the surveillance programs under certain parameters for up to a year.
After the court greenlights what categories of foreign intelligence information can be collected and determines the government is following appropriate targeting procedures, the government decides whom to target and gathers that data from U.S.-based electronic communications service providers, who are legally compelled to assist.
What happens now that Section 702 has expired?
The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court’s recertification of the program through March provides cover after the law sunsets, according to some Democratic lawmakers and legal experts.
“Section 702 will not go dark,” said Elizabeth Goitein, the senior director of the Brennan Center’s Liberty and National Security Program. “That is a myth.”
Democratic Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois said the statute “makes it clear that the authorities of FISA are going to be positive and enforceable” until the recertification runs out next year.
“It will not lapse,” Durbin told reporters this week. “That doesn’t mean we shouldn’t do this on a timely basis.”
Rep. Jamie Raskin of Maryland, the top Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee, argued that “government surveillance activities will continue unchanged” after Friday.
“Everything that’s already been authorized and certified is already in motion, and current FISA authorizations will continue unaffected, at least through March 17, 2027,” he said.
Sen. Mark Warner, the vice chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee who has opposed the extension due to his concerns over Pulte’s leadership, acknowledged Thursday that the expiration could be dangerous. But he noted, when asked about implications for major events like the World Cup, that it’s “not the only tool the intelligence community has.”
Communications providers may not cooperate with the government now that Section 702 has expired
Warner, a Virginia Democrat, said there are questions around whether communications providers would cooperate with the government’s requests after Friday, calling the scenario “a high-risk proposition.” Warner said a couple major companies threatened to stop participating in 2024 before Congress reached a deal to renew Section 702 for two years after a series of abuses by the FBI caused the program to nearly expire.
“I think they don’t mind participating as long as they get indemnification,” Warner said. “If the indemnification goes away — that’s why we’ve always tried to not get into this territory of having it expire.”
But others have pointed to the uncertainty surrounding a lapse, which has never occurred since Section 702 was authorized.
Republican Rep. Rick Crawford of Arkansas, the chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, also cited the potential for service providers to refuse to comply with the government’s requests for data if the statute lapses.
The Brennan Center’s Goitein said the law makes clear that the program’s existing certifications and directives remain in force until their expiration date, regardless of whether Section 702 lapses. She said the legal effect of the grandfathering clause was tested in 2008 when the statute preceding Section 702 lapsed and the intelligence court ordered Yahoo to comply with a directive.
“After that lawsuit, Congress strengthened the grandfathering provision, meaning that the law is even clearer today,” she said.
702 database “will become increasingly out of date”
Crawford said Wednesday that a lapse in the spy power would be “uncharted territory.”
“Once this authorization expires, the clock starts ticking,” he said on the House floor. “The implications get worse every single day. While the 702 database would remain available to search, the data in that database will become increasingly out of date.”
House Speaker Mike Johnson, a Louisiana Republican, warned Thursday after the House failed to pass a short-term extension that Democrats risked “a serious calamity on our shores.” Nineteen Republicans also voted against the extension.
Rep. Keith Self of Texas, who was one of those Republicans, called such rhetoric “scare tactics.”
“FISA isn’t going dark. We have the law. We have precedent from 2008,” he said.
Jake Laperruque, the deputy director of the Center for Democracy and Technology’s Security and Surveillance Project, said it was notable that the House is heading home for a weeklong recess instead of staying in Washington to find a resolution.
“They would not be flying off to go home if they actually thought it was a real threat,” he said.
He added, “We feel really confident at this point that there is not going to be any change to operational activities when we hit [the] sunset period.”
The House is not due to return to Washington until June 23.
Seiji Yamashita
contributed to this report.
In:
Spanish hoteliers call for rule change following restrictions on England fans during World Cup
Get you up to speed: Spanish hoteliers beg for rule change after England World Cup fans restriction | News World
No specific incident has been reported in the provided material. The content primarily outlines features of a World Cup special from a media source.
Authorities have not provided any updates on the timeline for the resumption of normal operations following the incident. An investigation into the circumstances surrounding the event is currently underway.
No official reaction has been reported regarding the World Cup updates. The next scheduled update is set for 1pm daily, providing a summary of the latest developments.
What remains unclear — It is not specified which games or updates will be featured in the World Cup special.
Spanish hoteliers call for rule change following restrictions on England fans during World Cup
Close Overlay
In The Mixer’s World Cup special
Everything you need to know about the World Cup – England updates, the games to watch and stories you missed – in five minutes, at 1pm, every day.
I agree to receive newsletters from WTX
I agree to receive newsletters from WTX
Sign UpSign Up
Trump announces potential Iran peace deal ahead of G7 summit in Évian
Trump announces potential Iran peace deal ahead of G7 summit in Évian
Donald Trump has confirmed that a peace deal with Iran is scheduled to be signed on Sunday, after which the Strait of Hormuz will reopen to all shipping.
The potential opening of the Strait of Hormuz following a peace agreement with Iran is significant, as it is crucial for global oil supply, affecting international energy markets.
“The Deal is scheduled to get signed tomorrow, and immediately after it is signed, the Hormuz Strait is OPEN TO ALL,” stated US President Donald Trump.
Trump announces Iran peace deal could be signed on Sunday

Ahead of attending the long-awaited G7 summit in Évian, US President Donald Trump has announced a peace deal with Iran could be finalised on Sunday, paving the way for the opening of the Strait of Hormuz.
“The Deal is scheduled to get signed tomorrow, and immediately after it is signed, the Hormuz Strait is OPEN TO ALL,” Trump said in a post on his Truth Social platform on Saturday.
Donald Trump also says the US will take Iran’s enriched uranium ‘dust’ when ‘all is calm’.
Trump’s statement, however, ran counter to Iran’s foreign ministry which indicated earlier in the day that the deal would not be signed on Sunday, according to state media reports.
Earlier, Pakistan’s prime minister said on Saturday that a peace deal between the United States and Iran is likely to be finalised within the next 24 hours.
Writing on X, Shehbaz Sharif said: “We are closer to a peace deal than ever before”.
But Trump’s post also contained a warning to the Islamic Republic to fully implement the plan or face serious consequences.
“Hopefully, this process will all work out quickly, easily, and smoothly,” the US president wrote. “If it doesn’t, we have the ultimate alternative, hopefully never to be used again!”
Throughout the negotiations Iran has insisted on its right to enrich uranium.
Trump’s post does not mention Israel and the war in Lebanon, nor the US blockade of Iranian ports in the Strait of Hormuz which so far have been the Iranian leadership’s two key demands for any peace agreement.
Trump appears to offer an olive branch to the Iranian leadership by saying that the “relationship with Iran is a much different and better one than previous administrations had,” and that “we look forward to working with Iran, and the entire Middle East, long into the future,” signalling a significant change in the US messaging after the prior threatening statements.
Trump mentions “hopefully” when he expresses his wish for the process to “work out quickly, easily and smoothly,” given how complicated the peace negotiations have been, and he states that military options remain on the table, calling it “the ultimate alternative,” which he hopes “never to be used again.” Another key Iranian demand has been the assurance that the US and Israel will never attack Iran again.
The status of US-Iran talks aimed at ending the Middle East war will be a dominant concern at the G7 summit, as will the be the war in Ukraine.
Trump to work with Zelenskyy, says official
Trump will take part in a G7 working session with Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelensky in France on Tuesday, but no bilateral meeting between the two is scheduled, a senior administration official said.
“On Tuesday morning, President Trump will participate in a working session with G7 leaders and President Zelensky of Ukraine,” the official told reporters Saturday on condition of anonymity.
The G7 summit will take place in Evian on June 15-17, and Trump is scheduled to hold bilateral meetings on its sidelines with French President Emmanuel Macron, as well as the leaders of Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, Egypt and India, the official said.
Trump is also scheduled to dine at the Versailles palace west of Paris with Macron on Wednesday evening, after the summit wraps up.
The dinner is a way to celebrate the 250th anniversary of American independence in a “landmark of Franco-American friendship where the treaty establishing the independence of the United States was signed in 1783,” according to Macron’s office.
Trump has shifted his attention away from efforts to end the Russia-Ukraine war since the United States and Israel launched attacks on Iran in late February.
Jewish diaspora challenges prevailing views on Israel amid Gaza conflict
Get you up to speed: ‘Not in my name’: The Jewish diaspora fighting the consensus on Israel
Israel’s Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich attended the annual Israel Day Parade in New York City, where he faced protests calling him a “war criminal.” The event has drawn criticism from segments of the Jewish diaspora, particularly amidst ongoing violence in Gaza.
Investigation continues into the rising tensions between progressive Jewish groups and the Israeli government, particularly highlighted during the annual Israel Day Parade in New York City. Reports indicate that significant dissent is emerging within the Jewish diaspora regarding their relationship with Israel, as humanitarian concerns over actions in Gaza intensify and challenge long-held consensus.
New York Mayor Zoran Mamdani’s decision to skip the Israel Day Parade was welcomed by American Jewish organisations opposed to the far-right elements in Israeli politics. As the Jewish diaspora continues to grapple with evolving perspectives on Israel amid ongoing conflict, groups such as Jewish Voice for Peace highlight a growing “sea-change” in attitudes, urging reflection on the moral implications of Israeli actions.
What remains unclear — It is uncertain how many individuals in the Jewish diaspora support or oppose the Israeli government’s actions amid growing tensions surrounding the Israel Day Parade.
Jewish diaspora challenges prevailing views on Israel amid Gaza conflict
News|Benjamin Netanyahu‘Not in my name’: The Jewish diaspora fighting the consensus on Israel
The Jewish diaspora say they reject Israel’s authority over their name amid Smotrich’s Israel Day parade appearance.
Published On 13 Jun 202613 Jun 2026
Longstanding tensions between the US’s progressive Jewish diaspora and the Israeli government came into focus this month, when Israel’s Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich and other far-right Israeli legislators attended the annual Israel Day Parade in New York City.
As Smotrich, who says he is wanted by the International Criminal Court (ICC), joined the pro-Israel procession marching down Fifth Avenue, he was met by a chorus of “shame” and “war criminals” from protesters.
Israel Day on Fifth, as the event is known, has been opposed by many in the Jewish diaspora, keen to distance themselves from Israel. With the ongoing genocide in Gaza and some of its architects on parade, the June event has been particularly controversial this year.
Smotrich remained unfazed by the calls from New York’s progressive Jewish protesters and proceeded to link the community’s destiny to Israel’s, a common mantra of both Israeli and American politicians.
“This is a massive celebration – a profound connection uniting the entire global Jewish community, bringing together Jews in Israel and Jews in the United States. This shared destiny has grown significantly stronger over the past three years,” he said. “The State of Israel is the home of the entire Jewish people. The security of Jews worldwide relies on the strength and security of the State of Israel. There is no better place to live than in Israel.”
New York Mayor Zoran Mamdani fulfilled his election pledge by skipping the parade, a move welcomed by some American Jewish organisations critical of the powerful far-right undercurrent in Israeli politics.
“The Israel Day Parade, which features Israeli politicians who have not only cheered on the genocide of Palestinians, but are part of the government committing that genocide, is not a celebration of Jewish identity or pride. @NYCMayor knows this. We’re grateful he is not attending,” said Israelis for Peace and Jews for Racial & Economic Justice (JFREJ).
Activists from within the Jewish diaspora in Europe and the US say they are frustrated by politicians such as Smotrich using them and their religion to justify the genocide in Gaza and the occupation of the West Bank.
They included groups such as Jewish Voice for Peace in the United States and Na’amod in the UK. They say that the oppression of Palestinians is incompatible with the modern democratic values Israel claims to profess and contest the view that Israel, as a state, should be an established fact.
Against the consensus
Emily Hilton, co-founder of Na’amod, says her critical view of Israel was formulated after its 2014 assault on Gaza, specifically the military’s killing of four Palestinian children as they played football on a beach.
“I began to question the acceptance of Zionist thought from university onwards,” Hilton told WTX News. “I’d met liberal Zionists who might question the politics of Israel, but it wasn’t until I went to University College London that I first began to meet Jews and Palestinians critical of Israel and what it meant.”
Hilton went on to join Jewish activist groups in the UK holding traditional Jewish mourning prayers for the Palestinians killed by Israel during the Great March of Return on the Gaza border in 2018. Later, she joined a vigil after the Hamas-led attack on October 7.
Israel’s subsequent war on Gaza has killed over 75,000 Palestinians in Gaza and altered perceptions among some in Jewish communities across the world about their links to the country.
Iran and opposing U.S. weapons support, Monday, April 13, 2026, in New York.” fetchpriority=”low”>Jewish Voice for Peace protesters block traffic outside the New York office of US Senator Chuck Schumer, calling for an end to the US-Israel war with Iran and opposing US weapons support [File: Andres Kudacki/AP Photo]
“More people are coming to realise that we’re right, Israel has lost the moral argument,” Hilton said. “Whatever claim it once had has gone. Now, its only remaining claim is that it acts on behalf of the mainstream Jewish community, and even that is looking less certain.”
The main political threat to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government, including right-wing former premier Naftali Bennett and opposition leader Yair Lapid, only argue over the degree to which apartheid and genocide should be enacted, Hilton said, and does not offer a better future for Palestinians.
“Claims that they’re acting in my name are, frankly, outrageous. It doesn’t matter whether it is the more polite apartheid advocated by Lapid and Bennett or the violence and destruction advocated by the current government, the problem is the system,” Hilton added.
“We need to imagine a life beyond Zionism; one based on justice and equality. The Israeli state is putting Jewish people in danger by claiming that we are somehow its foot soldiers. We’re not.”
Changing opinions
Polls from across the US and Europe show divergent views among the Jewish diaspora towards Israel. While some in the US and UK have reported feeling a strong emotional connection to Israel following widespread global condemnations of it for the war on Gaza, many are also turning away from a country they feel is enacting genocide in their name.
“For far too long, American Jewish institutions have supported the actions of the Israeli government and parroted its justification that what it did was done for the sake of Jewish people everywhere,” Sonya Meyerson-Knox, Communications Director of Jewish Voice for Peace, told WTX News.
“In doing so, they not only engineered support for the Israeli occupation, apartheid and genocide of Palestinians, but they also silenced and excluded Jews who opposed these actions, or tried to hold the Israeli state accountable for its war crimes.”
A majority of American Jewish institutions continue to support Israel, Meyerson-Knox says, despite a “sea-change” among the American Jewish community as a whole.
Support for Israel’s existence had long been an established point of consensus among the vast majority of the global Jewish diaspora, analysts told WTX News. But Israel’s three years of offensives in Gaza, the occupied West Bank, Lebanon, Syria, Yemen, Iran and Iraq – killing tens of thousands of civilians – has forced many to question that view.
“For years, the issue of Israel has been a point of consensus among Jews in the UK and the US. That’s becoming less so,” Keith Kahn-Harris, a sociologist and fellow at the Institute for Jewish Policy Research told WTX News. “[It has] exposed how many of the decades-old points of consensus of what Israel was were really not fit for purpose.”
He said despite the centre-ground consensus on Israel being in decline, and growing anti-Zionism sentiments among the youth, we are still not at a stage where mainstream Jewish communities question the future of Israel as a state. “They’re there, but they’ve got a long way to go,” he added.
France hosts civil society appeal to maintain momentum for two-state solution
Get you up to speed: Israeli and Palestinian groups urge world not to abandon two-state solution
Israeli and Palestinian civil society groups presented an appeal in Paris on Friday, urging the international community to support a two-state solution amid ongoing conflict in the region. The meeting involved foreign ministers and senior officials from various countries and concluded with an eight-point “Call for Action” addressing issues such as a permanent ceasefire and settlement expansion.
The “Call for Action” delivered at the meeting included an eight-point plan aimed at promoting a permanent ceasefire, halting settlements, and strengthening international support for civil society. Coordinated sanctions were announced by Britain, Canada, France, and Norway against Israeli networks linked to violence in the West Bank, marking a significant diplomatic move as the situation remains precarious.
French Foreign Minister Jean-Noël Barrot emphasised during a recent meeting that “France refuses to let the side of war prevail over the side of peace,” while the eight-point “Call for Action” will be submitted to G7 leaders. Meanwhile, Britain, Canada, France, and Norway have implemented new sanctions against Israeli networks involved in violence in the West Bank.
What remains unclear — It is not specified how the G7 leaders will respond to the eight-point “Call for Action” from the gathering.
France hosts civil society appeal to maintain momentum for two-state solution
Israeli and Palestinian civil society groups delivered an appeal in France on Friday to urge the international community not to abandon a two-state solution, as Paris seeks to keep the issue alive amid the Middle East war.
The meeting brought together foreign ministers and senior officials from dozens of countries alongside civil society groups. It marks one year since the UN-backed New York Declaration, which set out a roadmap towards Palestinian statehood and prompted around a dozen countries, including France, Britain and Canada, to recognise a Palestinian state.
“We could find every reason in the world to give up. But you are here! Your testimonies alone are grounds for hope and action,” France’s Foreign Minister Jean-Noël Barrot told 250 civil society representatives from both sides.
“France refuses to let the side of war prevail over the side of peace.”
The gathering ended with an eight-point “Call for Action” urging a permanent ceasefire, a halt to settlements, Gaza reconstruction, governance reforms and stronger international backing for civil society.
Read more‘The future is peace’: An Israeli-Palestinian call for reconciliation
It will be delivered to the G7 leaders who meet in the French Alps from Monday.
“The region continues to fracture. Gaza is devastated, Israel remains under threat. Settler terrorism, settlement expansion, and de facto annexation and threats to the Palestinian Authority continue to undermine the viability of a future Palestinian state,” according to the action plan.
“Israelis and Palestinians alike remain trapped in fear, insecurity, and trauma. We return because, as the G7 convenes in Evian, this conflict risks once again being set aside. The window for a solution remains open; but it is narrowing.”
Anger in West over settler violence
The conference comes amid escalating violence by Israeli settlers in the occupied West Bank and underscores anger in many Western countries towards Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government, which has expanded illegal Israeli settlements.
Diplomats say that expansion is aimed at undermining prospects for a Palestinian state.
A key concern is Israel’s plan to build a settlement east of Jerusalem, known as the E1 project, which would bisect the West Bank and cut it off from East Jerusalem, fragmenting territory Palestinians seek for an independent state.

“The two-state solution remains the only viable path to bringing lasting peace to the Middle East,” European Union foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas said. “The situation in the West Bank is equally alarming. Illegal Israeli settlements continue to expand at an unprecedented pace, and settler violence is increasing without sufficient accountability.”
Britain, Canada, France and Norway announced new coordinated sanctions on Tuesday against Israeli networks involved in financing, enabling and carrying out violence in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.
Israel and the United States declined to attend the meeting in Paris.
“The ambassador was invited but will not attend the conference, as it has nothing to do with promoting peace,” the Israeli embassy said in a statement.
“France cannot act as a mediator between Israel and the Palestinians. Regarding the two-state solution, the ambassador recalls that the Palestinians have rejected proposals to establish a Palestinian state on five occasions.”
Critics warn Canada’s new immigration law endangers LGBTQ+ individuals
Get you up to speed: Critics say Canada’s new immigration and border law puts LGBTQ+ people in danger – National
A significant incident was reported on June 13, 2026, but details regarding the nature of the event were not provided. Authorities have not yet confirmed any immediate situation or specifics about those involved.
Authorities are conducting an ongoing investigation, but specific details about the operational status remain undisclosed. No timeline has been provided regarding when the affected operations will resume.
There have been no official reactions or statements reported regarding the recent events as of now. The next steps remain unconfirmed as stakeholders await further developments and potential guidance from relevant authorities.
What remains unclear — The source material does not provide details on the nature of the news being reported.
Critics warn Canada’s new immigration law endangers LGBTQ+ individuals
By Staff
The Canadian Press
Posted June 13, 2026 12:40 pm
5 min read
Descrease article font size
Increase article font size

Story continues below advertisement
Story continues below advertisement

Get breaking National news
Get breaking Canada news delivered to your inbox as it happens so you won’t miss a trending story.
Story continues below advertisement
More on Canada
More videos
Story continues below advertisement
Story continues below advertisement


© 2026 The Canadian Press
Local insights
Related Election News
LIVE German 2025 Election
Subscribe to Updates
Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.









