Google’s Future Awaits Ruling in Landmark Antitrust Case

谷歌的未来悬于具有里程碑意义的反垄断案件裁决之上

WSJ What’s News

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2025-05-30

14 分钟
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A.M. Edition for May 30. Lawyers for the Justice Department and Google prepare to make closing arguments today as a judge weighs how to improve competition in online search. Plus, top U.S. officials say trade negotiations with foreign capitals remain on course, despite a court ruling that President Trump’s sweeping global tariffs were illegal. And WSJ reporter Feliz Solomon explains the situation in Gaza as a new aid distribution system backed by Israel goes into effect. Luke Vargas hosts.  Sign up for the WSJ’s free What’s News newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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  • The Trump administration says nothing's changed in its trade talks after a court setback for the president's tariffs.

  • Plus,

  • Google and the Justice Department ready closing arguments in a landmark antitrust case.

  • And we'll get the latest on aid distribution efforts in Gaza as a new ceasefire push falters.

  • Israel and the United States came up with this new system as a way to reintroduce aid after months with no food,

  • no fuel, no medicine.

  • We're going to be looking firstly to see whether they can scale this up rapidly,

  • because right now they're only providing a small amount of aid for a large population that is very,

  • very desperate.

  • It's Friday, May 30th.

  • I'm Luke Vargas for The Wall Street Journal, and here is the AM edition of What's News,

  • the top headlines and business stories moving your world today.

  • Top U.S. officials say that trade negotiations with foreign capitals remain on course,

  • despite a ruling by a federal court that found that President Trump's sweeping global tariffs were illegal.

  • That ruling is on hold after the administration argued in a filing that it,

  • quote,

  • jeopardizes ongoing negotiations with dozens of countries by severely constraining the president's leverage.

  • That appeared to contradict National Economic Council Director Kevin Hassett,

  • who insisted that negotiations will continue unabated and that three deals were close to being completed,

  • as well as comments by senior counselor for trade and manufacturing Peter Navarro that,