Top Stories
Christian Horner sacked as Red Bull F1 team principal and CEO
Christian Horner has been sacked as CEO and team principal of Red Bull Racing, the team announced Wednesday.
“We would like to thank Christian Horner for his exceptional work over the last 20 years,” Oliver Mintzlaff, Red Bull CEO of corporate projects and investments, said in a news release. “With his tireless commitment, experience, expertise and innovative thinking, he has been instrumental in establishing Red Bull Racing as one of the most successful and attractive teams in Formula 1. Thank you for everything, Christian, and you will forever remain an important part of our team history.”
The bombshell move comes at a tumultuous time for the Formula One team as it struggles to create a competitive car, sitting fourth in the constructors’ standings largely thanks to Max Verstappen’s performances this season.
“Red Bull has released Christian Horner from his operational duties with effect from today (Wednesday, 9 July 2025) and has appointed Laurent Mekies as CEO of Red Bull Racing,” a spokesperson from Red Bull said in the release.
From my first race win, to four world championships, we have shared incredible successes. Winning memorable races and breaking countless records. Thank you for everything, Christian! pic.twitter.com/au4XjMqhlH
— Max Verstappen (@Max33Verstappen) July 9, 2025
Mekies, who was the team principal of Racing Bulls, will immediately replace Horner as CEO, with racing director Alan Permane taking over as the team boss at the sister team.
“The last year and a half has been an absolute privilege to lead the team with Peter (Bayer, CEO of Racing Bulls). It has been an amazing adventure to contribute to the birth of Racing Bulls together with all our talented people,” Mekies said in a statement.
“The spirit of the whole team is incredible, and I strongly believe that this is just the beginning. Alan is the perfect man to take over now and continue our path. He knows the team inside out and has always been an important pillar of our early successes.”
Mekies is replacing Horner at Red Bull (Rudy Carezzevoli/Getty Images)
Horner has led Red Bull since it joined the grid in 2005 and oversaw its successful eras, including Sebastian Vettel’s run of world championships in the 2010s and Verstappen’s four titles since 2021.
Under his leadership, the team secured 124 victories, 107 pole positions, 287 podium finishes, eight drivers’ world championships and six constructors’ titles (the last one being the dominant 2023 season). But this year, McLaren has dominated and neither the team nor Verstappen appear likely to battle for a title.
F1 Team Principals
Team | Principal | In role since | Constructors’ Championships |
---|---|---|---|
Mercedes |
Toto Wolff |
2013 |
8 |
McLaren |
Andrea Stella |
2022 |
1 |
Ferrari |
Fred Vasseur |
2023 |
0 |
Williams |
James Vowles |
2023 |
0 |
Haas |
Ayao Komatsu |
2024 |
0 |
Aston Martin |
Andy Cowell |
2025 |
0 |
Kick Sauber |
Jonathan Wheatley |
2025 |
0 |
Alpine |
Flavio Briatore |
2025 |
0 |
Red Bull |
Laurent Mekies |
2025 |
0 |
Racing Bulls |
Alan Permane |
2025 |
0 |
Horner already denied reports earlier this season about Ferrari reaching out to him to replace current team principal Fred Vasseur.
“It’s always flattering to be associated with other teams. But my commitment, 100 percent, is with Red Bull,” he said during the Spanish GP weekend, when asked about the matter. “It always has been and certainly will be for the long term.
“There’s a bunch of speculation — always in this business — people coming here, going there, whatever. I think people in the team know exactly what the situation is.”
The news comes at a time when rumors are also swirling about Verstappen’s racing future.
In recent weeks, the topic about whether the Dutchman would leave Red Bull for Mercedes before the end of his contract in 2028 has continued to arise. During the British Grand Prix weekend, George Russell, who is out of a contract at the end of this season, said: “The likelihood I’m not at Mercedes next year, I think, is exceptionally low.”
The last 18 months at Red Bull have been turbulent. Multiple senior figures have left the team in that span, such as Jonathan Wheatley to become Sauber’s team principal and Adrian Newey to Aston Martin. There’s been a downturn in performance as the team struggles with its car, so much so that Verstappen has wrestled with it — and been vocal about the issues. He’s only won two races this season, and then there’s the case of the underperforming second Red Bull seat, which has already seen one driver swap this year (from Liam Lawson to Yuki Tsunoda).
Newey and Horner were at Red Bull together for 19 years (Jim Watson/AFP via Getty Images)
Red Bull GmbH, the F1 team’s parent company, confirmed in early February 2024 that an independent investigation into allegations of controlling and inappropriate behavior against Horner by a female employee had been launched and “an external specialist barrister” would handle the matter.
Horner was questioned by a King’s Counsel (KC) on Feb. 9, and the season launch took place several days later. On Feb. 28, Red Bull GmbH announced the investigation was completed, and the grievance was dismissed.
In early March 2024, the employee was suspended, and this was related to the findings from the independent investigation, a person briefed on the matter told The Athletic. That same month, she filed an appeal.
Last August, Red Bull confirmed that the employee’s appeal was “not upheld.” Horner has denied the allegations.
The shock dismissal
Analysis by Madeline Coleman
There’s been a lot of smoke surrounding Red Bull this season, though it looked as if Verstappen was the one in question rather than Horner. Despite what had transpired over the last two years, on and off track, the 51-year-old had support from Thai majority shareholder Thai Chalerm Yoovidhya.
The news of Horner’s dismissal comes as a shock considering F1 is only halfway through the season, but Red Bull’s performance has been poor this year, as it struggles to address the issues with the car. Horner’s last race was at the British Grand Prix, where Verstappen secured pole position after key set-up changes to make the car lower in downforce. But the Dutchman struggled in the wet conditions and finished fifth, 56.781 seconds off winner Lando Norris.
The speculation and scrutiny around the drivers’ situation also does not help matters. Beyond Verstappen’s situation and ongoing questions from the media around his future, he is the only driver performing. Liam Lawson and Yuki Tsunoda struggled with the car, and the Japanese driver finished last (among those who didn’t DNF or DNS) for the second consecutive race weekend.
“The tire is just melting lap by lap, corner by corner,” Tsunoda said after the Austrian GP. “Whatever I do, it’s melting every lap, and I’m feeling less grip lap by lap. In that situation, it’s really hard to maintain the pace.”
(Top photo: Erwin Scheriau/APA/AFP via Getty Images)
Top Stories
Texas flooding death toll climbs to 119 as search for more people continues | Texas floods 2025
The number of people who have died from the flooding in Texas continues to rise, with at least 119 dead throughout the state, officials said on Wednesday morning.
Search crews continue to look for people, as residents and news organizations question the government’s alarm and warning systems.
In Kerr county, the area that was worst affected by last Friday’s flood, officials said on Wednesday morning that 95 people had died. The other 24 people who have died are from surrounding areas. The Kerr county sheriff said 59 adults and 36 children had died, with 27 bodies still unidentified.
People are slowly returning to their properties to survey the damage from the devastating flash flood, as local officials continue with rescue, recovery and cleanup efforts.
There are 161 people believed to be missing in Kerr county due to the flash floods, making up the majority of the 173 missing in the entire state. Camp Mystic, the all-girls Christian camp that was gravely affected by the flood, still has five campers and one counselor missing.
As cleanup efforts continue, more and more people are scrutinizing the government’s alert system to warn people before the flood. Journalistic investigations have revealed that first responders asked that a mass-alert system in Kerr county be triggered on Friday morning. The alert system sends text messages and “delivers pre-recorded emergency telephone messages” to some people in the area.
Dispatchers delayed a 4.22am request from volunteer firefighters for an alert to be sent, saying they needed special authorization, according to reporting from Texas Public Radio (TPR) based on emergency radio transmissions they reviewed. Some residents received flood warnings within an hour. Others told TPR they did not receive an alert until 10am – nearly six hours after first responders’ request. A separate story from KSAT confirms TPR’s reporting.
There are inconsistencies regarding local officials’ response. In his first press conference on 4 July after the flood, the Kerr county judge said the area did not have an emergency alert system.
“I believe those questions need to be answered, to the families of the missed loved ones, to the public, you know, to the people who put me in this office. And I want that answer and we’re going to get that answer,” the Kerr county sheriff, Larry Leitha, said.
after newsletter promotion
“We’re not running, we’re not going to hide. That’s going to be checked into at a later time.”
There are no outdoor weather sirens to blast alerts in some communities in the area. Since 2015, Kerr county officials have applied for grants for a flood warning system, the New York Times reported. For years, officials have also warned the series of summer camps in the area of incoming floods by word-of-mouth. A Change.org petition was launched after the flood for an early warning siren system and has more than 35,000 signatures.
Rescue and recovery efforts are continuing. The Kerr county sheriff’s department is working on rescue and recovery efforts, the sheriff said, adding that it was an “all hands on deck” situation.
During Wednesday’s press conference, local officials asked people to be careful and give search crews space during their efforts. “We are using very heavy equipment” to search and clear up fallen trees and debris, a sheriff official said.
On Sunday, the Trump administration declared the flooding a “major disaster” and deployed federal resources to assist the state.
Quick Guide
Contact us about this story
Show
The best public interest journalism relies on first-hand accounts from people in the know.
If you have something to share on this subject you can contact us confidentially using the following methods.
Secure Messaging in the Guardian app
The Guardian app has a tool to send tips about stories. Messages are end to end encrypted and concealed within the routine activity that every Guardian mobile app performs. This prevents an observer from knowing that you are communicating with us at all, let alone what is being said.
If you don’t already have the Guardian app, download it (iOS/Android) and go to the menu. Select ‘Secure Messaging’.
SecureDrop, instant messengers, email, telephone and post
See our guide at theguardian.com/tips for alternative methods and the pros and cons of each.
Top Stories
Trump’s push to claw back funding ignites a fight that threatens a government shutdown
WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump’s push for Republicans to bypass Democrats and claw back $9.4 billion in approved spending has ignited a new fight in Congress that could upend the normally bipartisan government funding process.
Ahead of a Sept. 30 deadline to prevent a shutdown, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., is laying down a marker by warning that Democrats won’t sign off on an agreement if the GOP follows through with Trump’s request.
“If Republicans cave to Donald Trump and gut these investments agreed to by both parties, that would be an affront — a huge affront — to the bipartisan appropriations process,” Schumer said. “It is absurd to expect Democrats to play along with funding the government if Republicans are just going to renege on a bipartisan agreement by concocting rescissions packages behind closed doors that can pass with only their votes, not the customary 60 votes required in the appropriation process.”
Schumer’s warning represents a bold gambit that heightens tensions ahead of another government funding showdown — just months after a group of Senate Democrats backed down from a previous showdown and drew heavy backlash from their base.
The dynamics are the product of a quirk in Senate rules. Funding the government is subject to the filibuster, requiring 60 votes, but a separate —and rarely used — process allows for canceling some approved spending with a simple majority vote.
The rescissions package would slash $8.3 billion in foreign aid and $1.1 billion from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, which funds PBS and NPR. It flows from efforts by Elon Musk’s erstwhile Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE, to find savings.
It passed by House last month by a vote of 214-212. It’s unclear if the Senate, where Republicans control 53 seats, has enough votes to pass it. Some GOP senators want to make changes, which would send it back to the House.
Democrats staunchly oppose the rescissions package, which was crafted without their input. Republicans can pass the $9.4 billion in cuts on party lines, but if that leads to Democrats refusing to sign off on a new government funding deal, it could trigger a shutdown at the end of September.
Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., said Wednesday he will bring up the rescission package “next week” and that it will be subject to an open amendment process.
Thune said he was “disappointed” to see Schumer “implicitly threaten to shut down the government.”
“But I’m hopeful that that is not the position of the Democrat Party, the Democrat conference here in the Senate, and that we can work together in the coming weeks to pass bipartisan appropriations bills,” the majority leader said.
Congress has a deadline of July 18 to send the rescissions package to Trump’s desk, or let it dissolve.
Even some Republicans worry that canceling spending on party lines would harm the traditional appropriations process.
“And the reason for that is because, if you do appropriations in the Senate, you have 60 votes to support it. If you do rescissions, you can take it back with 50, which then makes it tougher to get a bipartisan agreement on an appropriations package,” Sen. Mike Rounds, R-S.D., who sits on the Appropriations Committee, told NBC News. “We are aware of the sensitivities of using a rescissions package versus the appropriations process.”
Beyond that, Rounds said the measure must be revised to protect rural broadcast stations who could lose critical funding.
“We have to have a fix, for sure, on those rural radio stations. Basically 90% or more of their resources are taken away by the rescissions package,” he said. “OMB has agreed to work with us, and now we’re in that process of finding the appropriate path forward where they do not lose their funding.”
And Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, the Appropriations Committee chair, said she opposes some parts of the measure.
“For my part, I believe it needs some significant changes,” Collins said, citing the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) as a program she “can’t imagine why we would want to” cut funding from.
Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C., said he’s inclined to support the measure, but he’s reviewing parts of it, including PEPFAR.
“I’m fine with the majority of it,” Tillis said. “We’re just looking at any of the national security impacts, any nexus there that would raise concern.”
Schumer’s threat to block an appropriations deal would require at least 41 of the 47 Democrats to rally against it, a level of unity they failed to achieve in March during a contentious spat over a looming government shutdown.
Sen. Tammy Baldwin, D-Wis., an Appropriations Committee member, said if Trump and the Republican majority “can undermine the appropriations process by rescinding bipartisan funding on a simple majority vote, that presents real challenges to the appropriations process.”
“Moving forward, it’s our job, in the next few days to make sure that Republicans know that this would be a major trust factor in moving forward with our appropriation bills,” she said.
Bobby Kogan, a former Senate Democratic budget aide who is now at the liberal Center For American Progress, said the GOP effort could break the appropriations process as its currently known.
It doesn’t help, he added, that Trump and his party already modified part of government funding with a major increase in spending for the military and immigration enforcement under the party-line megabill the president signed into law last week.
“This all risks a lot more shutdowns. Republicans are looking at breaking appropriations deals on both sides of the ledger: spending more on the things they like and less on the things they don’t like,” Kogan said. “If you can break bipartisan appropriations deals with partisan rescissions packages, that is going to be the end of bipartisan appropriations.”
Top Stories
Trump slaps 50% tariff on Brazil over Bolsonaro trial, trade deficit
U.S. President Donald Trump answers questions during a multilateral lunch with African leaders in the State Dining Room of the White House July 9, 2025 in Washington, DC.
Win McNamee | Getty Images
President Donald Trump said Wednesday the U.S. will slap a 50% tariff on Brazil‘s imports, partly in retaliation for the ongoing prosecution of the country’s former president, Jair Bolsonaro.
Trump said in a letter that the new tariff — a massive jump from the 10% rate the U.S. imposed on Brazil in early April — is also being imposed in response to the “very unfair trade relationship” between the two countries.
The letter to Brazil’s current president, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, followed nearly two dozen others that Trump has recently sent to other world leaders, dictating steep new tariff rates on the goods they sell to the U.S.
But the letter to Lula goes further than the rest, by imposing a new U.S. import tax rate explicitly as a punishment for a country engaging in internal political and legal affairs that Trump dislikes.
The value of Brazil’s currency, the real, fell more than 2% against the U.S. dollar following Trump’s announcement.
Trump has previously sounded off on Brazil over its treatment of Bolsonaro, a vocal ally of the U.S. president who is standing trial over his role in an alleged coup to overturn his 2022 reelection loss.
Trump called the situation “an international disgrace” in the letter, which he shared publicly in a Truth Social post.
Trump also claimed that Brazil’s trade policies have caused “unsustainable Trade Deficits against the United States,” which threaten the U.S. economy and national security.
But the U.S. has a goods trade surplus with Brazil, which totaled $7.4 billion in 2024, according to the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative.
The U.S. is also launching an investigation into potential unfair trade practices by Brazil, Trump wrote in the letter.
He said that probe is based on “Brazil’s continued attacks on the Digital Trade activities of American Companies.”
This is breaking news. Please refresh for updates.
-
Funding & Business1 week ago
Kayak and Expedia race to build AI travel agents that turn social posts into itineraries
-
Jobs & Careers1 week ago
Mumbai-based Perplexity Alternative Has 60k+ Users Without Funding
-
Mergers & Acquisitions1 week ago
Donald Trump suggests US government review subsidies to Elon Musk’s companies
-
Funding & Business1 week ago
Rethinking Venture Capital’s Talent Pipeline
-
Jobs & Careers1 week ago
Why Agentic AI Isn’t Pure Hype (And What Skeptics Aren’t Seeing Yet)
-
Education2 days ago
9 AI Ethics Scenarios (and What School Librarians Would Do)
-
Education3 days ago
Teachers see online learning as critical for workforce readiness in 2025
-
Education3 days ago
Nursery teachers to get £4,500 to work in disadvantaged areas
-
Education5 days ago
How ChatGPT is breaking higher education, explained
-
Jobs & Careers1 week ago
Astrophel Aerospace Raises ₹6.84 Crore to Build Reusable Launch Vehicle