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50 migrants a week could be sent back to France in pilot of ‘one in, one out’ deal
A commitment to tackle the smuggling gangspublished at 05:24 British Summer Time
Damian Grammaticas
Political correspondent
At this summit, the UK and France are promising that they will make progress on “new and innovative solutions, including a new deterrent” to “break the business model” of the gangs smuggling people across the Channel.
The deal that’s been under discussion envisages the UK returning migrants to France. For each individual taken back, France would transfer one asylum seeker to the UK, probably someone with a family connection or genuine reason to seek sanctuary here.
What’s not known are the potential numbers involved and whether final details could be agreed this week.
When it comes to defence, the UK and France will sign a declaration saying that their independent nuclear deterrents could, in future, be co-ordinated, if an adversary was threatening either country, and there were no extreme threats they would not confront together.
There will also be joint development of new missiles and air defences, and support for Ukraine.
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Wimbledon women’s semifinals: Live updates, highlights as Aryna Sabalenka, Iga Świątek seek a trip to the final
The last four competitors in the women’s singles tournament at Wimbledon are set as the semifinalists take the court on Thursday. With spots in the championship match on the line, Aryna Sabalenka, Amanda Anisimova, Iga Świątek and Belinda Bencic will take the prestigious Center Court.
All four competitors will try to claim their first Wimbledon title after 2024 winner Barbora Krejčíková fell to Emma Navarro in the third round this year. No. 1 Sabalenka and No. 13 Anisimova will take the court first as the Belarusian looks to notch her 21st career singles title and her first since the Madrid Open in May. An upset for Anisimova means a step toward her fourth career singles title and first at a Grand Slam tournament.
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No. 8 Świątek has been dominant so far in this tournament, winning 10 of 11 sets decisively in search of her 22nd WTA singles title and a sixth major to add to her four French Open titles, plus one US Open win. Switzerland’s unseeded Bencic has scraped her way to the semis in a tournament that has been marred by upsets. Apart from her first-round win over Alycia Parksa, Bencic has navigated a tightly-contested route to the semis, with two of her matches seeing a third set. She upset No. 7 Mirra Andreeva to advance to Thursday, and currently has a WTA ranking of 34.
How to watch the Wimbledon women’s singles semifinals
Date: Thursday, July 10
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Aryna Sabalenka-Amanda Anisimova start time: 8:30 a.m. ET
Belinda Bencic-Iga Świątek time: 9:40 a.m. ET
Location: Center Court | All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club, Wimbledon, London
TV channel: ESPN | ESPN+ | Disney+
Follow along with Yahoo Sports for live updates, highlights and more from the Wimbledon women’s singles semifinals:
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‘Superman’ Just Set A Rotten Tomatoes Audience Score Record
Superman
This article was published on 7/9 and republished on 7/10.
While critic reviews came pouring in yesterday for Superman, now it’s the audience’s turn, the one who will actually determine if the movie is a success or not (and with an estimated $200 million opening weekend, indications are that it will be).
Those audience scores have gone live and as of right now, Superman has set a new audience score record for live-action Superman films and is just under the critic record right now.
Superman currently has an 85% critic score and a sky-high 95% audience score on Rotten Tomatoes. That 95% is above second place, Zack Snyder’s Justice League cut, which has a 92% and an army of Snyder superfans who were certainly going to score it high. Whether you want to consider Justice League a “Superman movie” is up for debate. That’s sort of like considering four Avengers movies “Thor movies” or “Iron Man movies,” and I’m not sure it counts, though it may be the case the audience score dips below that in the future.
I would be surprised if it went down to third place, the original Superman: The Movie starring Christopher Reeve. That’s the film that is currently beating out Superman by a single percent, as overnight Superman dropped from an 86% to an 85% with a few more reviews in. Here’s the overall list, sorted by audience score.
Superman
- Superman (2025) – 85% critic, 95% audience
- Justice League (Snyder, 2021) – 71% critic, 92% audience
- Superman: The Movie (1978) – 86% critic, 86% audience
- Superman II (1980) – 88% critic, 76% audience
- Man of Steel (2013) – 57% critic, 75% audience
- Justice League (Whedon, 2017) – 39% critic, 67% audience
- Batman V Superman (2016) – 28% critic, 63% audience
- Superman Returns (2005) – 72% critic, 60% audience
- Superman III (1983) – 31% critic, 23% audience
- Superman IV: The Quest for Peace (1987) – 14% critic, 16% audience
Superman has been a notoriously hard nut to crack, with a rival like Batman or even Wonder Woman generally getting more praise for their films. Even the original stretch of Superman movies ended with two terrible ones, Superman III and Superman IV, despite still starring the excellent Reeve.
As it stands, it’s possible that Superman could regain the critic score record or lose the audience score record as more reviews come in for each. Some critics may not have been invited to early screenings, so more will be coming in. And this is still very early for audiences, given that these are excited initial viewers. But we’ll see. Either way, so far, so good. Very good, in fact.
Update (7/10): Well, good news and bad news 24 hours later here. The critic score for Superman has fallen 1% down to an 84%. That doesn’t change its place among Superman movies, but it knocks it below The Batman and moves it further down James Gunn’s catalog.
The good news is that the audience score for Superman actually went up a percent and is now a 96%. That’s with more than double the ratings we saw yesterday, though yes, the film is not hitting its ultra-wide release until tonight. But it’s still significant that as more reviews rolled in, it’s actually still increasing.
Box office estimates continue to hover around $200 million for its opening weekend, and James Gunn’s statement that the movie didn’t need to hit $700 million to be a success seems like it won’t matter. My question is if it could hit a billion over the long run if word-of-mouth spreads. It’s overall budget was $200 million, so it’s going to hit that instantly, but it needs to also get past marketing and distribution. And there has been a ton of marketing for this movie.
Superman is going to be a big hit, that much is clear already. If audience scores stay anywhere near here, that’s a massive win for the DCU and Gunn, and a killer start to this new era for DC. Now, we will head toward Supergirl, where we will no doubt see a guest appearance from Superman at the very least. It’s not a Gunn production, but he’s been raving about it, so we’ll see how it goes.
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Pick up my sci-fi novels the Herokiller series and The Earthborn Trilogy
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Dow, S&P 500 Futures Fall; Nasdaq Set to Open Up; Trump Tariff Fears; Nvidia, Broadcom, Kellogg, Delta, More Movers
U.S. stock futures were mostly pointing to losses at the market open on Thursday, as President Donald Trump’s latest tariff announcements threatened to pour cold water on the previous day’s Nvidia-led rally.
Dow Jones Industrial Average futures were down 35 points, or 0.1%. S&P 500 futures were falling less than 0.1% and Nasdaq 100 futures were edging up less than 0.1%.
Trump announced in a letter late Wednesday that the U.S. will charge a 50% tariff on Brazilian goods starting Aug. 1. It is the highest level announced so far among the raft of letters sent to various national governments, with the White House citing legal action against Brazil’s former President Jair Bolsonaro and U.S. tech firms as justification.
The potential pullback also comes after the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite hit a record closing high on Wednesday. That was powered by chip maker Nvidia, which became the first company in history to reach a market value of $4 trillion, beating rivals Apple and Microsoft.
“For everything else that’s happening right now, from tariffs to fiscal fears, AI is the great hope for US exceptionalism to return. The rally also got a further boost as lower bond yields meant that fears eased about the fiscal situation,” wrote Deutsche Bank analyst Jim Reid in a research note.
The Treasury sold $39 billion of 10-year notes Wednesday afternoon with investors accepting a yield of 4.362%. That led to a rally in bonds, despite the minutes from the Federal Open Market Committee’s June meeting suggesting officials were divided over when to start cutting interest rates.
The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note stood at 4.345% early on Thursday, broadly flat from the previous day.
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