President Trump has ripped “totally FALSE” rumors that he is targeting Harvard University because he was rejected by the Ivy League school.
“Michael Wolff, a Third Rate Reporter, who is laughed at even by the scoundrels of the Fake News, recently stated that the only reason Im ‘beating up’ on Harvard, is because I applied there, and didnt get in,” Trump raged in a Truth Social post about the author late Monday.
“That story is totally FALSE, I never applied to Harvard,” he maintained. 5 President Trump speaks during a news conference with Elon Musk in the Oval Office of the White House, Friday, May 30, 2025, in Washington. AP 5 Author Michael Wolff discussing his book “All or Nothing: How Trump Recaptured America” at The 92nd Street Y on Friday, March 14, 2025, in New York. CJ Rivera/Invision/AP
“I graduated from the Wharton School of Finance at the University of Pennsylvania.”
Trump last weekpulled another $100 million from Harvard— adding to more than $3 billion in grant and contract terminations since he took office.
He has accused the elite school of refusing to crack down on antisemitism on campus and endalleged race discrimination in its admission and hiring processes.
HoweverWolff, who penned Fire & Fury about Trump’s first administration, had claimed on The Daily Beast Podcast last week that the prez held a “grudge” against the elite school because he’d been rejected.
He needs an enemy, Wolff claimed of the president. Thats what makes the show great. The Trump show. He picks fantastic enemies, actually. And Harvard, for all it represents, fits right into the Trump show.”
After being asked if he thought Trump’s hatred of Harvard was odd given those close to him are all Ivy League educated, Wolff said: “Its important not to lend too much calculation and planning to anything he does.”
But the other thing is that, by the way, he didnt get into Harvard,” the author continued. 5 Trump tore into author Michael Wolff, who has written several books about the president, after he recently suggested the White House’s crackdown on Harvard was a personal vendetta.
“So one of the Trump things is always holding a grudge against the Ivy Leagues.
Trump, for his part, accused Wolff of going after him because of plummeting book sales.
“He is upset because his book about me was a total ‘BOMB.’ Nobody wanted it, because his reporting and reputation is so bad!” Trump wrote on Truth Social. 5 Wolff, who penned “Fire & Fury” about Trump’s first administration, had claimed on The Daily Beast Podcast last week that the prez held a “grudge” against the elite school because he’d been rejected. Getty Images
It comes soon after first lady Melania Trump shot down a viral conspiracy theory that her son Barron, too, applied to Harvard and was rejected.
Barron did not apply to Harvard, and any assertion that he, or that anyone on his behalf, applied is completely false, the first ladys spokesman said. 5 Demonstrators with signs stand around the John Harvard Statue in Harvard Yard following a rally against President Donald Trump’s attacks on Harvard University at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts on April 17, 2025. AFP via Getty Images
The 19-year-olds admissions status had been the subject of furious speculation on social media amid his fathers repeated attacks and cancellation of grants and other federal funds on the Ivy League institution.
Barron completed his freshman year at New York University last month.
The US government has shut down for the first time in almost seven years after last-ditch Senate votes on funding plans fell short.
Hundreds of thousands of federal workers deemed not essential for protecting people or property – such as law enforcement personnel – could be furloughed or laid off after the shutdown began at midnight (5am UK time).
Critical services, including social security payments and the postal service, will keep operating but may suffer from worker shortages, while national parks and museums could be among the sectors that close completely.
It comes after rival Democrats and Republicans refused to budge in their stand-off over healthcare spending.
A Democrat-led proposal to keep the government funded went down by 53 votes to 47 in the Senate, before the Republicans’ one notched up 55 in favour – five short of the threshold needed to avert a shutdown.
Unlike legislation, a simple majority isn’t enough to pass a government funding bill.
Following the votes in Washington DC on Tuesday night, the White House’s budget office confirmed the shutdown would happen and said affected agencies “should now execute their plans”.
It blamed the Democrats, describing their position as “untenable”. The opposition party wants to reverse cuts to the government’s health insurance programme, Medicaid, which were passed earlier this summer.
Senate majority leader John Thune, a Republican, accused the Democrats of taking federal workers “hostage”.
His Democrat counterpart, Senate minority leader Chuck Schumer, said the Republicans’ funding package “does absolutely nothing to solve the biggest health care crisis in America”.
Image: Republican senators blamed the Democrats for not keeping the government open. Pic: Reuters
Trump threatens layoffs
President Donald Trump was defiant ahead of the votes, and warned he could make “irreversible” cuts “that are bad” for the Democrats if the shutdown went ahead.
He threatened to cut “vast numbers of people out” and “programmes that they (the Democrats) like”.
“We’ll be laying off a lot of people,” he told reporters in the Oval Office on Tuesday.
Image: Donald Trump spoke in the Oval Office ahead of the shutdown. Pic: Reuters
The last shutdown was in Mr Trump’s first term, from December 2018 to January 2019, when he demanded money for his US-Mexico border wall. At 35 days, it was the longest on record.
Mr Thune has expressed hope the latest shutdown will come to a much quicker conclusion, telling reporters: “We can reopen tomorrow – all it takes is a handful of Democrats to join Republicans to pass the clean, nonpartisan funding bill that’s in front of us.”
Before this week, the government had shut down 15 times since 1981. Most only last a few days.
The Senate will hold further votes on the Republican and Democrat stopgap funding bills on Wednesday. The former would fund the government through to 21 November.
Analysis: This shutdown is a huge deal – and it’s hard to predict when it might end
This is a huge deal.
This shutdown happened because the Senate is deadlocked on two competing funding bills, one proposed by Republicans and one by Democrats.
Neither got the requisite amount of votes.
But this is not just about the politicians – real people will feel the impact of this shutdown.
National parks like the Grand Canyon, like Yosemite, will go unstaffed – some might close indefinitely.
Flights could get cancelled. The National Mall in DC, the iconic stretch between the Capitol – where these politicians work – and the Lincoln Memorial, could be chained up.
Trump has threatened mass layoffs of federal workers, who he says “will be Democrats”. It’s a scary time for them.
Trump is trying to spin this to his political advantage. He claims, falsely, that Democrats are trying to fund free healthcare for “illegal aliens”.
Democrats are pushing to improve government help on affordable healthcare, but this would not extend to undocumented immigrants.
Republicans say Democrats have sacrificed the interests of the American people to have a public showdown with the president.
It would be folly to predict how long this stand-off will last.
What happens now?
Immigration enforcement, air-traffic control, military operations, social security and law enforcement are among the services that will not be brought to a halt.
However, should employees miss out on payslips as a result of a prolonged shutdown, they could be impacted by staffing shortages. For example, delays at airports.
Cultural institutions deemed non-essential, like national parks and museums, will be more directly impacted from the very beginning, with large cuts to the workforce.
The popular Smithsonian, for example, has said it only has enough funding to stay open for a week.
Broadway actors are preparing to exit the stage in a strike that would shutter more than 30 productions ahead of its peak season.
Actors’ Equity, a union representing 900 performers and stage managers in New York’s iconic theatre scene, said a walkout was on the cards due to a dispute over healthcare.
It’s negotiating with the Broadway League, a trade body representing theatre owners, producers, and operators. A previous three-year contract expired earlier this week.
The union wants the league to increase its contribution to its healthcare fund, which is expected to fall into a deficit before next May. The rate of contributions has remained unchanged for more than a decade.
Actors’ Equity president Brooke Shields said: “Asking our employers to care for our bodies, and to pay their fair share toward our health insurance is not only reasonable and necessary, it’s an investment they should want to make toward the long-term success of their businesses.”
She added: “There are no Broadway shows without healthy Broadway actors and stage managers. And there are no healthy actors and stage managers without safe workplaces and stable health insurance.”
The Broadway League said it was “continuing good-faith negotiations” to “reach a fair agreement” that works for “shows, casts, crews, and the millions of people from around the world who come to experience Broadway.”
Actors’ Equity has not carried out a major strike since 1968, when a three-day dispute shut down 19 shows. An intervention from the New York City mayor helped both sides come to a deal.
All GP surgeries in England are required to offer online appointment bookings from today.
Practices must keep their websites and app services available from at least 8am to 6.30pm, Monday through Friday, for non-urgent appointments, medication queries and admin requests.
Many surgeries are already offering online bookings and consultations, but services are typically less effective in working-class areas.
The Department of Health and Social Care says there is a lack of consistency, as some surgeries that offer online services are choosing to switch the function off during busier periods.
The British Medical Association (BMA) has argued safeguards have not been put in place, nor have extra staff been brought in to manage what it anticipates will be a “barrage of online requests.”
The BMA has said GPs are considering a range of actions after voting to enter a dispute with the government over the plan.
Health Secretary Wes Streeting has urged the BMA to embrace the plan, saying the union’s resistance is “a real disservice to so many GPs” who have already introduced the service.
Image: Health Secretary Wes Streeting says booking a GP appointment should be as easy as booking a takeaway. Pic: PA
‘As easy as booking a takeaway’
The minister said the government will help practices that need assistance to implement the plan, “but we’ve got to modernise”.
Mr Streeting told the Labour Party conference: “Many GPs already offer this service because they’ve changed with the times.
“Why shouldn’t be booking a GP appointment be as easy as booking a delivery, a taxi, or a takeaway? And our policy comes alongside a billion pounds of extra funding for general practice and 2,000 extra GPs.
“Yet the BMA threatens to oppose it in 2025. Well, I’ll give you this warning; if we give in to the forces of conservatism, they will turn the NHS into a museum of 20th century healthcare.”
Sir Keir Starmer has revealed plans to establish a nationwide “online hospital” by 2027, enabling patients to receive treatment and care from home.
The government said the initiative could provide up to 8.5 million additional NHS appointments within its first three years.
Available via the NHS app, it will allow patients to schedule in-person procedures at local hospitals, surgical hubs or diagnostic centres, reducing delays.