Live updates: Trump says US is ‘reinstating’ blockade on Iran in Strait of Hormuz

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Trump says interim agreement between U.S. and Iran is 'over'
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US military says its latest wave of strikes targeting Iran is over, insisting Tehran does not control Strait of Hormuz.
Here’s what we’re following:
- U.S. President Donald Trump said Monday that Iranian ships will no longer be able to travel through the Strait of Hormuz and America would charge a 20% toll on eligible cargo, escalating tensions after weekend of attacks by both nations to assert control of the critical waterway.
- The U.S. launched several waves of heavy strikes on Iran into Monday morning, hitting some 140 targets, over an Iranian attack on a container ship in the Strait of Hormuz. Iran retaliated by targeting countries across the Middle East.
- While Trump last week repeated that the ceasefire was “over,” mediators, including Pakistan, Qatar and Egypt, have continued efforts to reach a final agreement to end the war. The U.S. and Iran are nearly halfway through the 60-day interim deal period intended, so far unsuccessfully, to establish talks for a permanent end to the war.
- Trump also said Monday he’s recommended Lindsey Graham’s sister be named as his temporary replacement in the U.S. Senate. Graham, one of Trump’s closest allies in Congress and an advocate for U.S. military aggression in Iran, died Saturday at 71 after a tear in his aorta.
JUST IN: Ukraine and nine other countries announce a coalition to protect Europe from ballistic missiles
Trump says all but Iran will have ‘fair and open’ use of strait — after paying US a 20% toll
A fifth of the world’s oil and gas passed through the strait without paying any fees before Iran asserted control over it after the start of the war.
Iran says it has the right to manage traffic through the strait and potentially charge fees in accordance with an interim peace deal reached last month. The U.S. and others dispute that, citing international law on freedom of navigation, and the American military has tried to establish an alternative route outside of Iranian control.
The European Union’s top diplomat, Kaja Kallas, called for the strait to be open, as it was before the war. “Freedom of navigation has to be respected,” she said.
Trump says Gov. McMaster should appoint Graham’s sister to finish his term
Trump says he’s recommended that Lindsey Graham’s sister be named as his temporary replacement in the U.S. Senate.
Trump posted on social media Monday that Gov. Henry McMaster should appoint Darline Graham Nordone to fulfill the rest of Graham’s term, which expires in January.
Graham died over the weekend at age 71, and McMaster is expected to announce his pick later Monday afternoon.
After their parents died at a young age, Graham was left to raise his sister, whom he later adopted. The pair were very close, and Graham’s sister was by his side as he filed reelection paperwork earlier this year.
JUST IN: Trump says South Carolina governor should appoint Lindsey Graham’s sister to finish his term that ends in January
The Democratic Party’s direction also is at stake in Michigan and Wisconsin
Following the downfall of Graham Platner in Maine, progressives view the Upper Midwest Senate races as their last chance to shape the Democrats’ Senate caucus and prove their theory of the case in the midterm elections.
In Michigan, Rep. Haley Stevens is running against progressive Abdul El-Sayed for the state’s Democratic Senate nomination in a race Democrats must win to hold the seat held by Sen. Gary Peters, who is retiring and has endorsed Stevens.
In Wisconsin, democratic socialist state Rep. Francesca Hong has surged in the state’s Democratic gubernatorial primary against more conventional Democratic lawmakers, including former Lt. Gov. Mandela Barnes and current Lt. Gov. Sara Rodriguez.
Michigan voters choose nominees on Aug. 4. The primaries in Minnesota and Wisconsin are Aug. 11.
What happened to Minnesota nice?
In Minnesota, the two leading Senate candidates have clashed over electability, their ties to corporate interests and willingness to fight Trump’s administration.
Lt. Gov. Peggy Flanagan, backed by progressive Sens. Bernie Sanders of Vermont and Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, says her opponent, Rep. Angie Craig, is backed by “secretive dark money groups.”
“The very folks who are standing in the way of the things that people need to be able to afford their lives, who are Democrats, are funded by these corporate special interests,” Flanagan told The Associated Press.
Craig counters that Flanagan has raised campaign funds from major companies, and that if she becomes the Democratic nominee, Republicans would focus on her ties to an ongoing fraud inquiry into the state’s Medicaid programs. “To stop Donald Trump, we’ve got to win elections,” Craig told the AP.
The next big races between moderates and progressives are in pivotal Midwestern states
Progressives hope to prove economic populism resonates beyond deep blue enclaves. Democratic Party leaders worry progressive candidates could damage their brand and imperil their chances of retaking either chamber of Congress.
August primaries in Michigan, Wisconsin and Minnesota will be another gauge of Democratic voters’ frustration with the establishment. The Upper Midwest is a battleground for progressives and moderates. The outcomes could impact Democrats’ chances in the upcoming midterms and shape their party’s future direction.
Trump says US will charge ships for safe passage through strait
The U.S. president said on social media that Iranian ships will no longer be able to travel through the Strait of Hormuz and America would charge a 20% toll on eligible cargo, as the conflict with Iran has started to intensify after peace talks failed to deliver meaningful progress.
“We are reinstating the THE IRANIAN BLOCKADE, so named because it is only stopping Iran’s ships or customers from entering or leaving,” Trump said online. “All other countries will have fair and open use of the Strait.”
The president said the U.S. would also charge a 20% toll on cargo shipped through the strait “for any and all costs necessary to do the job of providing safety and security to this very volatile section of the World.”
JUST IN: Trump says US is ‘reinstating’ a blockade on Iran in the Strait of Hormuz and will charge ships for safe passage
How will a special primary work?
South Carolina law requires a one-week filing period beginning July 21, for a special primary to be held on Aug. 11. A runoff if necessary would be held on Aug. 25, leaving the nominee just over two months to campaign for the general election on Nov. 3.
All of this is problematic according to federal law, which requires military and overseas ballots to go out 45 days before any federal election. For the general election primary, that would have been June 27. Federal Election Commission officials didn’t immediately return a message seeking clarity.
Does Graham’s death provide more of an opening for Democrats?
No Democrat has won a Senate seat in South Carolina in decades, and Republicans in recent history typically take statewide seats by double digits. When he last ran in 2020, Graham defeated his Democratic opponent, Jaime Harrison, by a 10 percentage point margin. But Republicans are carefully surveying the landscape after margins have tightened in other races.
Charleston pediatrician Annie Andrews won the Democratic nomination last month and has raised more than $8 million, with just under $3 million cash on hand at the end of May, according to federal filings. Graham had taken in $6 million, with just over $4 million on hand.
In a statement Sunday, Andrews called on South Carolinians to join her “in setting partisanship aside and offering gratitude” to Graham for his service.
Who could replace Graham?
- Lt. Gov. Pamela Evette had McMaster’s endorsement before losing the GOP governor’s primary runoff to Wilson. A person with knowledge of Evette’s thinking but not authorized to discuss it publicly said she’s getting encouragement from across the state and feels she would have good chances in the special primary.
- Rep. Nancy Mace. A person with knowledge of Mace’s thinking but not authorized to speak about it publicly said she was considering the race. Mace is not running for reelection to the House.
- Rep. Ralph Norman, among House’s most conservative, is said to be in the mix.
- Joe Wilson, a rumored replacement, said he assured Trump on Sunday that “my goal is to remain in the House to keep his two-vote majority for the American people!!!”
- Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, lived in South Carolina and has fielded calls about replacing Graham but isn’t interested in the role and enjoys working for the president, according to a person who insisted on anonymity to describe private conversations.
Here’s how Graham’s death is scrambling South Carolina politics
Graham’s death on Saturday as he was running for a fifth term begins a tumultuous new chapter in South Carolina politics. As the conservative state’s senior senator and an influential Trump ally, Graham was presumed to be on a glide path toward reelection.
Now, Gov. Henry McMaster must choose a temporary replacement to serve until January while the state also prepares a special primary so voters can choose a new Republican nominee for November’s general election. That appointed temporary caretaker could be a top contender in the special primary.
The rare open Senate seat has ignited a scramble among South Carolina’s most ambitious conservatives, who just finished a sprawling and bruising contest to succeed McMaster. State Attorney General Alan Wilson won the nomination. Also-rans including Lt. Gov. Pamela Evette, Rep. Nancy Mace and Ralph Norman are all now eyeing Graham’s seat following his death over the weekend.
Top Iran adviser says Iran won’t retreat from controlling the strait
Mohammed Mokhber, an adviser to Iran’s supreme leader Mojtaba Khamenei, says Tehran will fight for the Strait of Hormuz.
“We defend it so that in the future, for the passage of our ships, we are not forced to pay tribute to the enemy!” he wrote on X. “Retreating from this vital matter has no place in the mind of any friend of Iran.”
Trump says ‘we’re taking over the Strait’ of Hormuz
That’s what Trump said Monday on Fox News Channel’s “Fox and Friends.”
Both the U.S. and Iran asserted Monday that they controlled the Strait of Hormuz after a weekend of attacks stretching across the wider Middle East, further threatening any diplomacy to end the war.
Trump also said that “everything was agreed to” in an 11-hour meeting Sunday, but Iranian negotiators called back later “and they say, ‘we had to make a couple of changes.” He didn’t specify details.
The latest exchange was sparked by an Iranian attack on a container ship on Sunday in the strait, a critical waterway for international oil and gas over which Iran has asserted control since the United States and Israel started the war on Feb. 28.
Graham’s death a setback for Senate Republicans and Ukraine
Congress is returning after a summer break, with the Senate convening following the death of Sen. Lindsey Graham. His death after a tear in his aorta Saturday leaves Republicans with just 51 members, with Mitch McConnell still recovering and South Carolina’s governor needing to appoint Graham’s interim successor.
This makes Trump’s already contentious congressional agenda even more uncertain. It also leaves Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy without a key ally who had Trump’s ear: Graham was a strong supporter of Ukraine, pressing the president to be firmer on Russia President Vladimir Putin. Now Zelenskyy and Kyiv are reeling from his death.