Vance calls US and Europe ‘real friends’ but says Trump wants self-sufficiency on defense – live

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‘We care about Europe being self-sufficient’, says Vance

Trump would like to see 5% spending on defense in Nato, Vance says.

European countries have “some catching up to do” as it hasn’t kept up with that, Vance says.

We really want and we really care about Europe being self-sufficient.

He says he regrets US foreign policy in the Middle East in 2003: “I frankly wish we had listened to our European friends.”

But on the need for Europe to play a bigger role in continental defense, he says “we are fundamentally right and it’s gratifying to see so many of European friends recognise that”.

I think we’re all aligned on it. It’s just a question of getting there and getting there quickly.

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Key events

Sam Levine

A federal judge in Florida has used a routine court filing to lament the exodus of attorneys from the justice department.

US district judge Donald Middlebrooks of the middle district of Florida made the comments after four justice department attorneys all informed the court they would be withdrawing from the case because they were leaving the department. Usually, judges grant such requests without much fanfare.

But Middlebrooks took the opportunity to call out the lawyers.

“This case was expertly litigated by a team of lawyers from the Civil Rights Division of the United States Department of Justice, specifically the Disability Rights Section. Now it appears that multiple members of that team are ending their tenure with the Department,” wrote Middlebrooks, who was appointed to the federal bench by Bill Clinton. “I will grant the Motions to Withdraw, but I do so with disappointment that capable litigators and dedicated public servants have felt moved to leave their positions with the Department of Justice.”

He went on to “commend” the lawyers for “the extraordinary efforts they took in arguing these important issues and granted their request to withdraw.

More than 250 lawyers have left or are planning to leave the civil rights division, a flood of departures that amounts to about a 70% reduction in personnel. The head of the division, a political appointee, has made it clear in new “mission statements” to each of the sections that their longstanding priorities will shift to more closely align with the president’s priorities.

Former and current employees have said that the reduction in personnel makes it virtually impossible for the division to enforce civil rights laws.

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