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Trump references bankers with antisemitic slur in Iowa speech to mark megabill’s passage – US politics live | Donald Trump

At Iowa rally, Trump uses antisemitic slur about bankers

During a speech to supporters at the Iowa Fair Grounds, Donald Trump just used an antisemitic slur to refer to bankers who exploit their clients.

Early in his remarks, which are ongoing, Trump railed against estate taxes, which he said sometimes force people who inherit farms to have to borrow money from banks to pay the tax. The tax-and-spending bill passed by the House on Thursday slightly raises the estate tax exemption.

The president then envisioned what he called a brighter future for Americans in which there would be no such tax and so “no going to the banks and borrowing from, in some cases a fine banker, and in some cases shylocks and bad people”.

In 2014, after then vice-president Joe Biden described those who take financial advantage of American service members as “shylocks”, he called the Anti-Defamation League’s national director to apologize for his “a poor choice of words” by making reference to a stereotypical Jewish moneylender in Shakespeare’s Merchant of Venice.

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EPA suspends 144 employees who signed letter of dissent

The Environmental Protection Agency confirmed on Thursday that it has suspended 144 employees who signed a “declaration of dissent” this week in which they said they were “opposing this administration’s policies, including those that undermine the EPA mission of protecting human health and the environment”.

In the declaration made public on Monday, the employees wrote that the agency has been politicized by the Trump administration and protested against the weakening of funding and federal support for climate, environmental and health science.

In a statement Thursday, the EPA said it has a “zero-tolerance policy for career bureaucrats unlawfully undermining, sabotaging and undercutting” the Trump administration’s agenda.

Employees were notified that they had been placed in a “temporary, non-duty, paid status” for the next two weeks, pending an “administrative investigation”, according to a copy of the email obtained by multiple news outlets. “It is important that you understand that this is not a disciplinary action,” the email read.

More than 170 EPA employees put their names to the document, with about 100 more signing anonymously out of fear of retaliation, according to Jeremy Berg, a former editor-in-chief of Science magazine who is not an EPA employee but was among non-EPA scientists or academics to also sign.

Lee Zeldin, the former congressman now leading the agency despite a lack of experience in environmental regulation, accused the scientists of signing a declaration that was “riddled with misinformation”.

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