
Transportation Secretary Duffy filmed a reality show, funded by firms he regulates
Transportation Secretary Duffy stars in 'The Great American Road Trip' reality show.

Sir Keir Starmer faces intense scrutiny following poor local election results in the UK, drawing global media attention. International headlines highlight the crisis and Starmer's consultations regarding his political future.
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It is not often that the fallout from UK local elections make international headlines.
But Sir Keir Starmer's fight for survival after a dismal set of elections last week is receiving coverage across the globe.
And the headlines outside of the UK do not make for any easier reading for the prime minister.
"A serious government crisis in Great Britain!" begins an article in Germany's biggest newspaper, Bild, titled "How long can Starmer hold out?"
It says Starmer "is consulting with confidants about his political future in the face of massive pressure from within his own party".
Spain's El Mundo says "the internal rebellion against Starmer is growing, but no alternative has been presented".
"Starmer is a political castaway, with the sharks circling him," writes London correspondent Pablo Pardo.
"The question is not so much 'if they will succeed.' Rather, it is 'when they will succeed' and 'who will succeed.'"
In France, Le Figaro's UK correspondent writes that Starmer is on "thin ice".
"While the Labour leader refuses to resign, rebellion is growing among Labour MPs, who seem only to be hesitating over a timetable for launching a challenge procedure and internal election," writes Arnaud de La Grange.
UK political turmoil is not receiving much attention in Russian media, but "Starmer's doomsday" is a headline on Rossiyskaya Gazeta.
"Some party members are 'demanding blood' from the prime minister, while others want to give him time, fearing the party will be unable to recover from its failure by the 2029 elections," it says.
In the US, Fox News says "Starmer on the brink", citing Donald Trump's previous swipe at the prime minister: "This is not Winston Churchill that we're dealing with."
CNN says Starmer "fights to save premiership". It points out that Labour has never mounted an official challenge against a sitting prime minister.
"It is not clear if any of Starmer's rivals have the signatures required to mount a challenge, and many of the potential frontrunners are either untested or mired in scandal."
The Indian Express has an opinion piece stating that Starmer and Labour are "hanging on by a thread" and asks "Is Britain entering a new multi-party era?" after Reform UK and the Green Party made huge gains last week.
"Sir Keir's speech standing outside Downing Street after a victory in the last general election feels like light-years ago. He had promised a national renewal, a return of politics to public service, and to begin the work of change," writes Rishabh Bhandari, a London-based political commentator.
"The monumental gap between his vapid rhetoric and reality was dramatically exposed last week," he says.
The story is not receiving huge coverage in Latin America, but Brazil's G1 calls it a "crisis", while Mexico's La Jornada says that the "popularity of the 63-year-old leader has continued to fall, in a context of stagnant economy and rising cost of living, recently aggravated by the war in the Middle East".
The recent local elections in the UK were dismal for Sir Keir Starmer, leading to significant pressure on his leadership.
International media, including Germany's Bild, is reporting on the crisis, questioning how long Starmer can maintain his position amid internal party pressure.
Sir Keir Starmer is consulting with confidants about his political future as he faces mounting pressure from within the Labour Party.

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