President Joe Biden so often talks about “inflection points'”.
He has repeatedly framed his own presidency through a series of global inflection points – era-defining moments in which he has tried to cast himself as the sober voice of calm leadership.
His life story too has been defined by a series of personal and tragic inflection points which have shaped his political journey: the death of his first wife and baby daughter in a car crash in 1972, the death of his elder son Beau from cancer in 2015.
President Biden has always allowed his personal experience to influence his journey.
It was Beau who had encouraged him to run for president in 2015. He chose not to – Beau was the future for the Bidens.
The younger Biden had a promising political future ahead of him. Or so they had thought.
Beau’s death changed everything professionally and personally for the family.
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Image: Joe Biden with son Beau in 2008. File pic: AP
Professionally, Joe Biden was drawn back to politics to stand against Donald Trump in 2020.
It was a decision he made to fulfil his late son’s wish and to finish a journey Beau could not.
Personally too for the Bidens, Beau’s death was profoundly consequential.
It compounded Hunter’s struggles with addiction and it precipitated a relationship between Beau’s widow and Hunter.
It’s possible to draw a line from Beau’s passing to the conviction of his brother this week in Delaware.
As one family friend told the Washington Post in February: “Everything would have been 180 degrees different if Beau had lived – there’s no question. I don’t think Hunter’s life goes off the rails…”
The unnamed family friend told the newspaper: “If Beau wasn’t president of the United States now, he’d be on his way to it. And Joe Biden would never have been president. He would be happily retired.”
Controversy and scandal
The question is what this latest in a series of sliding door moments means for President Biden. What will he do now?
The Biden family has rallied around Hunter at the trial.
The president released an unusual and deeply personal statement of support at the start and the First Lady, Hunter’s stepmother, has been present almost every day.
Image: First Lady Jill Biden arriving at court to support her stepson on 10 June. Pic: Reuters
The family’s anguish and pain has been clear and compounded no doubt by the politics – the controversy and scandal of a member of the first family on trial.
Remember, the Republicans have sought blood at every stage. Hunter has been their target for years. This conviction will supercharge their rhetoric.
The 81-year-old president chose to run for president again. It has put him under huge scrutiny and immense personal and professional pressure.
In the midst of a gruelling election campaign, Biden is lagging in the polls against Donald Trump, a deeply controversial convicted criminal.
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Biden freezes during holiday celebrations
He is managing multiple acutely dangerous global crises and he is maintaining a globe-trotting schedule that would challenge someone half his age.
His age and agility – both physically and mentally – are a constant focus and consistently a worry.
Since his State of the Union speech in March, at which he exceeded performance expectations, he has noticeably aged.
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He is the presumptive Democratic Party nominee for president but this status is only confirmed at the party’s convention in August.
There has been no suggestion from the president or his campaign team that he is having second thoughts.
But in a life journey directed by so many personal moments of anguish, the president’s reaction to this latest twist in his family story could be an inflection point of its own.
Vladimir Putin has described Donald Trump’s sanctions against two major oil firms as an “unfriendly act”.
However, the Russian president has insisted the tightened restrictions won’t affect the nation’s economy, a claim widely contradicted by most analysts.
In a major policy shift, Mr Trump imposed sanctions against Rosneft and Lukoil – Russia’s biggest oil companies – on Wednesday.
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Will US sanctions on Russian oil hurt the Kremlin?
The White House said this was because of “Russia’s lack of serious commitment to a peace process to end the war in Ukraine”.
Putin has now warned the move could disrupt the global oil markets, and lead to higher prices for consumers worldwide.
A meeting between the two leaders had been proposed in Budapest, but Mr Trump said he had decided to cancel the talks because “it didn’t feel right to me”.
Speaking from the Oval Office, he had told reporters: “I have good conversations. And then, they don’t go anywhere. They just don’t go anywhere.”
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Giving a speech in Moscow yesterday, Putin said “dialogue is always better than war” – but warned that Russia will never bow to pressure from abroad.
Earlier, his long-term ally Dmitry Medvedev had described Mr Trump as a “talkative peacemaker” who had now “fully embarked on the warpath against Russia”.
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Why did Trump sanction Russian oil?
Oil prices have witnessed a sizeable jump since the sanctions were announced, with Brent crude rising by 5% – the biggest daily percentage gains since the middle of June.
In other developments, Lithuania has claimed that two Russian military aircraft briefly entered its airspace yesterday.
A Su-30 fighter and Il-78 refuelling tanker were in the NATO member’s territory for 18 seconds, and Spanish jets were scrambled in response to the incident.
Russia’s defence ministry denied this – and said its planes did not violate the borders of any other country during a “training flight” in the Kaliningrad region.
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Zelenskyy tells Sky News ‘ceasefire is still possible’
Volodymyr Zelenskyy attended a European Council summit in Brussels to discuss the war in Ukraine – and said the meeting had delivered “good results”.
He said Ukraine had secured political support for frozen Russian assets and “their maximum use” to defend against Russian aggression, adding the EU would “work out all the necessary details”.
Mr Zelenskyy thanked the bloc for approving its 19th sanctions package against Russia earlier today, and work was already beginning on a 20th.
European leaders are going to arrive in London later today for a “critical” meeting of the “Coalition of the Willing” – with the goal of discussing “how they can pile pressure on Putin as he continues to kill innocent civilians with indiscriminate attacks across Ukraine”.
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How will the Russian oil sanctions affect petrol costs?
Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer said: “The only person involved in this conflict who does not want to stop the war is President Putin, and his depraved strikes on young children in a nursery this week make that crystal clear.
“Time and again we offer Putin the chance to end his needless invasion, to stop the killing and recall his troops, but he repeatedly rejects those proposals and any chance of peace.
“From the battlefield to the global markets, as Putin continues to commit atrocities in Ukraine we must ratchet up the pressure on Russia and build on President Trump’s decisive action.”
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The entire East Wing of the White House will be demolished “within days” – much more bulldozing than initially expected for Donald Trump’s new ballroom construction project.
Two Trump administration officials told Sky News’ US partner NBC that the demolition is a significant expansion of the initial plans announced this summer.
“It won’t interfere with the current building,” Mr Trump had said on 31 July. “It’ll be near it, but not touching it, and pays total respect to the existing building, which I’m the biggest fan of.”
Image: Rubble is piled higher and higher as demolition continues on the East Wing. Pic: AP
But a White House official told NBC News the “entirety” of the East Wing would eventually be “modernised and rebuilt”.
“The scope and the size of the ballroom project have always been subject to vary as the process develops,” the official added.
The East Wing was built at the beginning of the last century and was last modified in 1942.
Image: Trump shows off an artist’s impressions of his new ballroom. Pic:AP
Construction on the ballroom – which is expected to hold up to 900 people when finished – began this week.
The National Trust for Historic Preservation, a non-profit agency created by Congress to help preserve historic buildings, warned administration officials in a letter on Tuesday that the planned ballroom “will overwhelm the White House itself”.
“We respectfully urge the administration and the National Park Service (stewards of the White House) to pause demolition until plans for the proposed ballroom go through the legally required public review processes,” Carol Quillen, the trust’s chief executive, said in a statement.
Image: Windows of the complex could be seen being torn down. Pic: Reuters
‘Fake news’
The White House called the uproar “manufactured outrage” by “unhinged leftists and their fake news allies” in a statement.
Last week, Mr Trump said the total price would be about $250m (£187m), which would be paid for by himself and private donors will pay for. However, on Wednesday, he said the ballroom’s price is “about $300m (£225m)”.
The 90,000 sq ft ballroom will dwarf the White House itself – and would be able to accommodate almost five times more guests than the East Room, the largest current space in the mansion.
Mr Trump says the ballroom won’t cost US taxpayers at all. Instead, “donors” would pay for it.
Comcast, the parent company of Sky News, was included on a list of top donors released last week – but it is unclear how much it or others have contributed.