Jun 21, 2026 Breaking News: Iran's Foreign Minister drops a major bombshell regarding the Strait of Hormuz, putting the US and Israel on notice. Watch live coverage of this developing national security crisis on Times Now. As tensions escalate in the Persian Gulf, President Donald Trump and the White House are closely monitoring the threat to global oil supply lines and international shipping lanes. Get the latest analysis on US military readiness, Israel's strategic response, and the broader implications for Middle East stability. We bring you real-time updates, expert geopolitical insights, and reactions from global leaders on this high-stakes maritime standoff.
Jun 21, 2026 MeidasTouch presents On Sunday with Jack Cocchiarella — a new Sunday show from the largest independent news outlet in the world. On today’s episode, Jack is joined by Jennifer Welch, Senator Mark Warner, and David Pakman to discuss everything from Donald Trump’s collapsing peace deal to his attacks on independent media.
A major geopolitical storm is unfolding as tensions escalate in the Middle East following new developments involving the US, Israel, and Iran.
Reports suggest a deepening rift after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu reportedly defied elements of a US–Iran understanding, while Iran has allegedly frozen ongoing peace talks with Washington.
This comes amid growing instability in the region, raising fears of a wider conflict involving multiple global powers.
The situation remains fluid, with conflicting claims emerging from all sides.
Is the US losing control over its Middle East strategy? Is the Iran peace process collapsing under pressure from Israel?
President Trump sits down with Axios’ Marc Caputo for a wide-ranging conversation about power, war and America’s role in the world.
In this episode of The Axios Show, Trump discusses what he has learned about wielding power, why he says there are “no limits” to presidential power, and how he views the leaders shaping global politics, including China’s Xi Jinping and India’s Narendra Modi.
The conversation centers on Iran, where Trump defends the military campaign, the deal that followed and his decision to stop short of further escalation. He also discusses the Strait of Hormuz, Israel and Benjamin Netanyahu, Cuba, Venezuela, artificial intelligence, Anthropic, China’s AI race and how he thinks about maintaining power in the final stretch of his presidency.
This episode has been edited for brevity.
Prime Minister Mark Carney addresses the House of Commons earlier this year. The House rose for summer break on Thursday. (Spencer Colby/The Canadian Press)
Members
of Parliament wrapped the spring sitting of Parliament on Thursday and
will not return to their seats in the House of Commons until the fall.
Government
House leader Steven MacKinnon hailed the sitting as an achievement,
celebrating 21 government bills passing the House of Commons in the 14
weeks it sat so far this year.
"The legislation covers a range of
subjects, but two themes are obviously prominent: the economy and
protecting Canadians from crime," MacKinnon said in the foyer of the
House of Commons.
"We have focused on these things because they are what matters to Canadians."
Some of those 21 bills were passed earlier in the sitting, while others were pushed through on Thursday by unanimous consent.
Not
all of them are yet law. Some still require consideration by the
Senate, and others are simply awaiting royal assent by Gov. Gen. Louise
Arbour.
WATCH | Liberals now the 'law and order' party, MacKinnon says:
Liberals now the 'law and order' party in Canada: House leader MacKinnon
June 18|
Duration 1:35
Government
House leader Steven MacKinnon says the passage of Bill C-22 in the
House comes at the end of a spring sitting that delivered a 'very real
set of criminal justice reforms.' The justice bills have been met by a
'wall of conspiracy theory and frankly paranoia' from Conservative MPs,
MacKinnon said. Bill C-22, which gives police and spies more power to
obtain digital information, now heads to the Senate.
These are some of the bills that were part of the end-of-sitting business on Thursday:
Bill C-11. This legislation enshrines in law
that all sexual offences involving military members must be handled
exclusively by civilian courts and police, rather than the military.
The bill has now received royal assent.
MacKinnon said the
amendment added by the Senate requiring the law to be reviewed in three
years was agreed to in order to end a back and forth with the Senate and
get the legislation passed.
Bill C-22. The Liberal government's lawful access legislation
amends the Criminal Code giving police more powers to gather a person's
private digital information during an investigation. It was also passed
at third reading.
MacKinnon said the Senate will take up its study of the bill as soon as Parliament returns Sept. 21.
"We
sent a very, very clear message that Canada's representatives are
behind giving [law enforcement] what is the last lawful access regime
[to be enacted] in the G7," he said.
Bill S-227.
This legislation designates April as Arab Heritage Month, noting the
first people of Arab origin to arrive in Canada did so in 1882. The
bill, which originated in the Senate, has now received royal assent.
Ahmed
Hussen, the former immigration minister, rose in the House and thanked
all MPs for passing the legislation. "This is a really important bill
for the community and for Canada," he said.
Bill C-30. The spring economic update
outlined a number of new policies including boosting support for
training in the skilled trades and banning crypto ATMs, among other
measures. C-30 was adopted at third reading in the House just before 2
p.m. Thursday and has now received royal assent.
Bill C-27.
This final self-government agreement for the Tlegohli Got'ine
Government Inc., in the Northwest Territories, was also passed at third
reading and has been sent to the Senate.
Bill C-29. This legislation sets up the new Financial Crimes Agency
that is being designed to lead investigations into Canada's most
intricate and costly financial crimes, operating under the oversight of a
commissioner.
The unanimous consent motion pushed the bill
through second reading and into committee where it will begin being
studied by MPs when they return in the fall.
The law and order party
Referencing the Liberal government's progress with Bill C-14,
the Bail and Sentencing Reform Act — which received royal assent on
Monday — along with Bill C-22, Bill C-27 and the government's child protection and gender-based violence legislation, Bill C-16 — which has now received royal assent — MacKinnon suggested the Conservatives are no longer the party of law and order.
"We
now have a very real set of criminal justice reforms, bail, hate
speech, victims' rights … and of course, giving us the last lawful
access regime in the G7," the House leader said.
Mackinnon said
that in contrast, the Conservatives have found themselves divided
internally on the Liberals' justice agenda — putting them on the wrong
side of a number of criminal justice matters.
"In summary, it's
been a very busy spring sitting," MacKinnon said. "I would like to thank
all MPs for the hard work they put in and … when we all return in the
fall, we'll, once again, I assure you, have a very busy legislative
agenda."
The Conservatives dismissed MacKinnon's characterization
of the last six months in Parliament insisting that the Liberal
government has not delivered for the Canadians who voted for them.
WATCH | Liberals 'failed' on public safety, Conservative says:
'This government has failed' on public safety, Conservative deputy leader says
June 18|
Duration 1:00
After
government House leader Steven MacKinnon said the Liberals are now the
'law and order' party in Canada on Thursday, Conservative deputy leader
Melissa Lantsman said the government has failed on the issue. 'The more
our government does on these crime files the less Canadians feel safe,'
Lantsman said.
"Canadians are worse off on almost every measure," Conservative deputy leader Melissa Lantsman told reporters.
"Just
look at the facts. We are the only country in the G7, in the G20, in a
recession that the prime minister got us into," she said.
Lantsman
said that youth unemployment in Canada remains high, as does the cost
of housing, groceries and planning for retirement.
She also dismissed MacKinnon's suggestion that the Liberals have properly addressed the law and order file.
"They've
voted against five bills that we've introduced to make our streets
safer," Lantsman said. "I ask Canadians: 'do you feel safer than you did
a year ago?' and that answer is a resounding no."
Peter
Zimonjic is a senior writer for CBC News who reports for digital, radio
and television. He has worked as a reporter and columnist in London,
England, for the Telegraph, Times and Daily Mail, and in Canada for the
Ottawa Citizen, Torstar and Sun Media. He is the author of Into The
Darkness: An Account of 7/7, published by Vintage.
June 18, 2026 June 17, 2026 | The U.S. and Iran confirm they've signed a 14-point agreement to end military operations. The Canadian government is urged to 'indefinitely exclude' people with mental illness from MAID. And Premier Danielle Smith offers millions of Albertans a hundred dollars.
CORRECTION (June 18, 2026): A previous version of this video indicated tour manager Jen Ochej was in Paris, Ontario, during her interview. In fact, she was in Paris, France.
June 18, 2026 At Issue this week: Mark Carney's mixed-bag G7 trip wins big interest in Canadian oil, and another snub from Donald Trump. Analyzing the big challenges facing the Liberals in the fall. And the Conservatives call out Carney for skipping Question Period.
17:14 Carney called out for missing QP
At Issue is Canada's most-watched political panel, hosted by CBC Chief Political Correspondent Rosemary Barton and featuring leading political journalists Chantal Hebert, Andrew Coyne and Althia Raj.
June 18, 2026 Jessiah reacts to JD Vance's shocking Iran press conference in which more insane details about Donald Trump's deal with Iran are revealed.
Watch Deadline: White House full episode – June 17, 2026 on MSNOW Breaking News Today.
Hosted by Nicolle Wallace, Deadline: White House delivers in-depth political analysis, White House updates, breaking developments from Congress, Supreme Court rulings, U.S. national security, global affairs, and Election 2026 coverage.
This episode features exclusive reporting, expert commentary, and real-time coverage of the most important political stories shaping America and the world.
In This Episode:
Breaking White House developments
Biden administration updates
Congress and Senate investigations
Supreme Court legal news
Election 2026 campaign coverage
U.S. economy and policy updates
Global political affairs
Stay informed with trusted journalism from MSNBC.
Trump Finally Puts Bibi in His Place & Neocons Cry Over Peace in Iran. Tucker & Piers Morgan React.
June 17, 2026 The Iran war seems to be ending, along with our uncritical support for Israel, and not a moment too soon. No wonder the neocons are hysterical.
The U.S. and Iran have signed a deal to negotiate an end to the war. It stipulates that Iran can never have a nuclear weapon. Prime Minister Mark Carney tells CNN that makes the war 'worth it.' CBC's Saša Petricic has the details. Plus, Power & Politics hears from former Middle East peace negotiator Aaron David Miller on the implications of the deal.
U.S. President Donald Trump signed the Iran Memorandum of Understanding at the Palace of Versailles on Thursday (June 18), just prior to a dinner hosted by French President Emmanuel Macron. A video shared on social media by the White House deputy chief of staff Dan Scavino shows Trump signing the document with Macron applauding at his side and U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio standing behind him.
A hot microphone caught Prime Minister Mark Carney and U.S. President Donald Trump talking about trade at the G7 leaders' summit in Évian-les-Bains, France. The Power Panel stops by Power & Politics to discuss the two leaders' apparent discussion about Canada's recent Chinese EV agreement, as well as other 'hot mic' moments from the summit on Tuesday.
As G7 leaders milled around the table ahead of a working lunch at their annual summit on Tuesday, cameras caught Prime Minister Mark Carney in a conversation about trade with U.S. President Donald Trump. Carney is seen leaning over the seated president, talking about Canada’s deal with China to allow a limited number of Chinese electric vehicles into the country.
WASHINGTON - U.S. Senator Marco Rubio, a key foreign policy voice and ally of President Donald Trump, issued a stark and direct warning to Iran's leadership, stating that any aggression against American assets or allies in the Middle East will be met with 'swift, devastating, and overwhelming' military force. Speaking from the Senate floor, Rubio addressed Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei directly, cautioning that the Trump administration's patience has run out regarding Tehran's nuclear ambitions, support for proxy militias, and destabilizing activities in the region. The senator's hawkish remarks escalate the already high tensions between Washington and Tehran, signaling a unified and hardline stance from the White House and Capitol Hill that puts the Islamic Republic on final notice.
Jun 15, 2026 U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio addressed the press following the G7 foreign ministers meeting in France on March 27, 2026. Rubio highlighted U.S. objectives in the Middle East, Iran’s destabilizing role, Russia-Ukraine war diplomacy, Cuba policy, and global energy security, emphasizing America’s leadership in international peace, security, and humanitarian efforts.
Trump has now confirmed on social media that a deal between the U.S. and Iran has been reached, with the Strait of Hormuz set to finally re-open; PM Mark Carney's Ireland trip includes visiting his family's ancestral town, meeting distant cousins, and more; Ottawa’s new strategy will change the way food is bought, sold, and distributed in the country; and more.
President Trump on Iran, China and American power | The Axios Show
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