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    McDonald’s announces plans to hire 375,000 workers with Trump Labor secretary

    McDonald’s plans to hire up to 375,000 workers across its company-owned and franchised U.S. restaurants this summer.
    U.S. Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer was present at the announcement as the fast-food chain cozies up to the Trump administration.
    McDonald’s is one of the country’s largest private employers.

    The logo of McDonald’s (MCD) is seen in Los Angeles, California.
    Lucy Nicholson | Reuters

    McDonald’s on Monday announced plans to hire up to 375,000 workers this summer at a news conference that included U.S. Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer.
    While McDonald’s has long been one of President Donald Trump’s culinary favorites, the company has been cozying up to his administration during his second term. The company likely hopes to stay in Trump’s good graces and avoid obstacles to its business, like Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s “Make America Healthy Again” agenda or unfavorable regulation by the Department of Labor.

    For example, McDonald’s donated $1 million to Trump’s second presidential inauguration, marking its first contribution to an inaugural fund in more than a decade.
    Additionally, representatives from McDonald’s, Wendy’s, Yum Brands and other fast-food companies reportedly met with Chavez-DeRemer ahead of Trump’s inauguration to discuss key industry topics, like pro-union legislation that she sponsored and the joint employer rule, which defines the relationship between franchisor and franchisees.
    During Monday’s event, McDonald’s and Chavez-DeRemer celebrated the 10-year anniversary of the company’s “Archways to Opportunity” program, which provides tuition assistance and helps employees achieve education goals, like earning a high school degree.
    McDonald’s and the broader restaurant industry typically embark on hiring sprees to meet higher demand during the summer. Monday’s announcement set McDonald’s biggest hiring target in years. In 2020, as it was reopening its dining rooms, the chain said it was looking to hire just 260,000 restaurant employees.
    Through its company-owned and franchised restaurants, McDonald’s is one of the nation’s largest private employers. McDonald’s claims that 1 in 8 Americans have worked in one of its restaurants at some point.

    Ahead of the 2024 presidential election, Trump regularly mocked Vice President Kamala Harris’ claim to have been a McDonald’s alum; McDonald’s tried to stay out of the fight, saying in a statement that it wasn’t a political brand and didn’t have all of its employment records dating back to the 1980s.
    The latest hiring push comes as McDonald’s opens more U.S. restaurants. The company is aiming to add 900 new domestic locations by 2027.

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    FAA launches Newark airport task force with Verizon, L3Harris executives

    The Trump administration announced an emergency task force of executives from Verizon, L3Harris and the FAA to address ongoing communication issues at Newark airport.
    The announcement follows three incidents in the past two weeks where air traffic controllers tasked with guiding planes in and out of Newark lost their main telecommunication lines.
    The outages sparked hundreds of flight delays and disrupted travel for thousands of people.

    U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy speaks to reporters during a news conference on Newark Liberty International Airport at the Department of Transportation Headquarters on May 12, 2025 in Washington, DC.
    Anna Moneymaker | Getty Images

    The Trump administration on Monday announced the creation of an emergency task force comprised of executive experts from Verizon, L3Harris and the Federal Aviation Administration to address ongoing telecommunications issues at Newark Liberty International Airport.
    Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said the goal is to add three new telecommunications connections between New York and Philadelphia to ensure communications redundancy, so that if one line goes down, the others will stand up.

    While he did not provide an exact timeline for completion, Duffy said he spoke to Verizon CEO Hans Vestberg on Sunday and Verizon is working “as fast as possible.” 
    The announcement follows three incidents in the past two weeks where air traffic controllers tasked with guiding planes in and out of Newark lost their main telecommunication lines. The first two events, on April 28 and May 9, involved 90-second outages in which controllers lost the ability to see and talk to planes. 
    The outages sparked hundreds of flight delays and disrupted travel for thousands of people. Some air traffic controllers have taken time off to recover from the stress of the outages, according to the FAA.
    When the main telecommunications line went down for a third time on Sunday, the backup line functioned properly and controllers did not lose all communications, since the FAA had implemented a software patch, Duffy said during a briefing with reporters. Still, air traffic controllers were concerned and issued a ground stop at the New York-area hub for 45 minutes, according to Duffy.
    During the briefing, FAA Acting Administrator Chris Rocheleau said the new task force is comprised of the “right technical experts” with the goal to “keep focus on this every single day and to be transparent about the progress that we’re making.” 

    L3Harris is an FAA contractor, and Verizon supports the telecommunication lines that run into the Philadelphia facility where controllers oversee planes at Newark, according to Duffy.
    The task force’s creation comes less than a week after the Department of Transportation announced a new plan to spend tens of billions of dollars to modernize the U.S. air traffic control system. Duffy said he is waiting on Congress to approve the plan.
    Duffy also plans to convene a “delay reduction” meeting on Wednesday with all of the airlines that fly out of Newark airport.
    “The goal is to have a manageable number of flights land in Newark,” Duffy said. “Families shouldn’t have to wait four or five hours for a flight that never takes off.”
    — CNBC’s Leslie Josephs contributed to this report. More

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    GM hires ex-Tesla, Aurora exec as chief product officer

    GM has hired Sterling Anderson, a former Tesla executive and co-founder of autonomous vehicle company Aurora Innovation, as its chief product officer.
    In the newly created position, Anderson will oversee the “end-to-end product lifecycle for both gas- and electric-powered vehicles.”
    Anderson, who worked at Tesla for two years before forming Aurora in 2017, will start with the Detroit automaker on June 2.

    The 2026 Cadillac Vistiq EV.

    DETROIT — General Motors has hired Sterling Anderson, a former Tesla executive and co-founder of autonomous vehicle company Aurora Innovation, as its chief product officer.
    In the newly created position, Anderson will oversee the “end-to-end product lifecycle for both gas- and electric-powered vehicles, including hardware, software, services, and user experience,” GM said Monday.

    Anderson, who worked at Tesla for two years before forming Aurora in 2017, will start with the Detroit automaker on June 2. He will report to GM President Mark Reuss, who has been the automaker’s longtime product head, or resident “car guy.”
    Anderson is the latest ex-Tesla executive to join GM, which continues to roll out new technologies and electric vehicles despite slower-than-expected adoption across the industry. GM previously brought on former Tesla executives Kurt Kelty to lead batteries; Jens Peter “JP” Clausen, who recently left the automaker after leading manufacturing for roughly a year; and Jon McNeill as a member of the company’s board.
    GM is attempting to balance its rollout of electric vehicles with gas-powered models at the same time it is advancing technologies such as its Super Cruise advanced driver-assistance system to better compete against Tesla — the U.S. EV and software leader — as well as emerging auto startups from China.
    “Sterling brings decades of leadership in automotive engineering and transformative software innovation to his new role and is the right leader to help GM continue leading now and into the future,” Reuss said in a release.
    GM CEO and Chair Mary Barra added: “Sterling will help accelerate the pace of progress — he shares our passion and vision for beautifully designed, high-performing, and technology-forward vehicles.”

    Anderson was most recently chief product officer at Aurora, which he co-founded with CEO Chris Urmson and others. Aurora disclosed he would be leaving the company, effective June 1, in a regulatory filing last week. His departure follows the company recently launching a commercial self-driving truck service in Texas.
    At Tesla, Anderson led teams for the Model X SUV and Tesla’s controversial “Autopilot” advanced driver-assistance system.

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    NBC taps Michael Jordan as NBA contributor

    Michael Jordan will join NBC’s NBA broadcasts as a special contributor.
    NBC is trying to tap into the nostalgia of Jordan-era basketball.
    The NBA returns to NBC this fall.

    Michael Jordan, NBA Hall of Famer and co-owner of 23XI Racing, walks the grid prior to the NASCAR Cup Series Straight Talk Wireless 400 at Homestead-Miami Speedway in Homestead, Florida, on Oct. 27, 2024.
    James Gilbert | Getty Images Sport | Getty Images

    NBC is adding Michael Jordan to its National Basketball Association coverage.
    The network announced on Monday at its Upfront presentation that Jordan will join the network as a special contributor to NBA broadcasts.

    “I am so excited to see the NBA back on NBC,” Jordan said in a video alongside the announcement. “The NBA on NBC was a meaningful part of my career, and I’m excited about being a special contributor to the project. I’m looking forward to seeing you all when the NBA on NBC launches this October.”
    It is unclear what Jordan’s exact role will be. A person familiar with the matter told CNBC the basketball legend will not be a “regular” in the lineup but will appear throughout the season.
    In July, NBC inked an 11-year deal with the NBA to broadcast games across NBC Sports and Peacock starting this fall.
    Jordan’s agreement with NBC marks his first partnership with a major broadcaster since his retirement from the court in 2003.
    The 14-time NBA All-Star has since focused on his business career, first as owner of the Charlotte Hornets and later as a NASCAR owner of 23XI Racing.

    NBC Sports President Rick Cordella told CNBC Sport last month that NBC was looking to bring back a blend of that ’90s nostalgia to NBA viewers.
    The network has also once again tapped into the music of John Tesh, composer of “Roundball Rock,” a popular anthem that gained notoriety with NBC basketball in the ’90s.
    Cordella also said NBC will bring back player introductions to the broadcast in an effort to show off the atmosphere.
    Jamal Crawford, Reggie Miller, Carmelo Anthony, Mike Tirico and Noah Eagle will also be part of NBC’s NBA broadcast this fall, as well as the use of an artificial intelligence-generated voice of the late Jim Fagan.
    Disclosure: NBCUniversal is the parent company of NBC and CNBC.
    — CNBC’s Alex Sherman contributed to this report. More

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    Trump to sign order to cut some U.S. drug prices to match those abroad

    President Donald Trump will revive a controversial policy that aims to slash drug costs by tying the amount the government pays for some medicines to lower prices abroad, White House officials said.
    The order is a blow to the pharmaceutical industry, which is already bracing for Trump’s planned tariffs on prescription drugs.
    It is Trump’s latest effort to try to rein in U.S. prescription drug prices, which are two to three times higher on average than those in other developed nations.

    US President Donald Trump participates in a celebration of military mothers in the East Room of the White House in Washington, DC, on May 8, 2025.
    Jim Watson | AFP | Getty Images

    President Donald Trump on Monday will revive a controversial policy that aims to slash drug costs by tying the amount the government pays for some medicines to lower prices abroad, White House officials said.
    Trump will sign an executive order including several different actions to renew that effort, known as the “most favored nation” policy.

    “For too long, foreign nations have been able to free ride off of the American people, and American patients forced to pay for too much for prescription drugs,” one official told reporters on Monday.
    “The president is dead serious about lowering drug prices,” they said.
    Shares of U.S. drugmakers dropped in premarket trading Monday ahead of the official announcement. Eli Lilly fell more than 5%, while Pfizer, Merck and Johnson & Johnson dropped more than 2%.
    But White House officials did not disclose which medications the order will apply to. They said Monday’s announcement will be broader than a similar policy that Trump tried to push during his first term, which only applied to Medicare Part B drugs.
    It’s unclear how effective the policy will be at lowering costs for patients. In a social media post on Monday, Trump claimed drug prices will be cut by “59%, PLUS!”

    The order directs the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative and the Department of Commerce to crack down on “unreasonable and discriminatory policies” in foreign countries that “suppress” drug prices abroad, the officials said. It also directs the Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services to encourage “most favored nation prices.”
    Within 30 days, the secretary will also have to set clear targets for price reductions across all markets in the U.S., according to the officials. That will open up a round of negotiations between HHS and the pharmaceutical industry, officials said, not providing exact details on the nature of those talks.
    If “adequate progress” is not made towards those price targets, HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. will impose the most favored nation pricing on drugs through rulemaking.
    The order also directs the Food and Drug Administration to consider expanding imports from other developed nations beyond Canada. Trump signed a separate executive order in April directing the Food and Drug Administration to improve the process by which states can apply to import lower-cost drugs from Canada, among other actions intended to lower drug prices.
    It also directs the Department of Justice and Federal Trade Commission to aggressively enforce “anti-competitive actions” that keep prices high in the U.S.
    The Department of Commerce will also consider export restrictions that “fuel and enable that low pricing abroad.” 
    It is Trump’s latest effort to try to rein in U.S. prescription drug prices, which are two to three times higher on average than those in other developed nations – and up to 10 times more than in certain countries, according to the Rand Corporation, a public policy think tank.
    The order is a blow to the pharmaceutical industry, which is already bracing for Trump’s planned tariffs on prescription drugs. Drugmakers have argued that the “most favored nation” policy would hurt their profits and ultimately, their ability to research and develop new medicines.
    But the policy could help patients by lowering prescription medication costs, which is an issue top of mind for many Americans. More than three in four adults in the U.S. say the cost of medications is unaffordable, according to a KFF poll from 2022.
    The industry also lobbied against similar Trump plans during his first term. He tried to push the policy through in the final months of that term, but a federal judge halted the effort following a lawsuit from the pharmaceutical industry. The Biden administration then rescinded that policy.
    White House officials initially pressed congressional Republicans to include a “most favored nation” provision in the major reconciliation bill they plan to pass in the coming months, but the policy would have specifically targeted Medicaid drug costs, Politico reported earlier this month. Several GOP members opposed that measure.

    How Trump’s order could affect patients, companies

    The industry’s largest trade group, PhRMA, estimated that Trump’s Medicaid proposal could cost drugmakers as much as $1 trillion over a decade. 
    Some health policy experts have said a “most favored nation” drug policy may not be effective at lowering medication costs.
    For example, USC experts said the policy “can’t undo the basic economics of the global drug marketplace,” where 70% of pharmaceutical profits worldwide come from the U.S.
    “Facing a choice between deep cuts in their U.S. pricing or the loss of weakly profitable overseas markets, we can expect many firms to pull out from overseas markets at their earliest opportunity,” experts said in a report in April. 
    That will leave Americans paying the same amount for medications, drugmakers with lower profits and future generations of patients with less innovation, they said.
    “In sum, everyone loses,” the experts said.
    Other experts have said another legal fight with the pharmaceutical industry could prevent the policy from taking effect.
    But even if the drug industry pushes back on Trump’s executive order, his administration still has another tool to push down drug prices: Medicare drug price negotiations.
    It’s a key provision of the Inflation Reduction Act that gives Medicare the power to negotiate certain prescription drug prices with manufacturers for the first time in history.
    Trump last month proposed a change to that policy that drugmakers have long sought. Lawmakers on both sides of the aisle could be receptive to the idea, which proposes changing rules that differentiate between small-molecule drugs and biologic medicines.
    Trump last week said he plans to announce tariffs on medicines imported into the U.S. within the next two weeks. Those planned levies aim to boost domestic drug manufacturing. 
    Drugmakers, including Eli Lilly and Pfizer, are pushing back on those potential duties. Some companies have questioned whether the tariffs are necessary, given that several of them have already announced new U.S. manufacturing and research and development investments since Trump took office. 
    Still, Trump last week doubled down on efforts to reshore drug manufacturing. He signed an executive order that streamlines the path for drugmakers to build new production sites.
    Caplan noted that even if the drug industry pushes back on the executive order, the administration still has another tool at its disposal: Medicare drug pricing negotiations. More

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    Fox streaming service to be called Fox One, launch before NFL season

    Fox will launch its upcoming direct-to-consumer streaming service, to be called Fox One, ahead of the NFL season.
    The streaming service will include all of Fox’s content across news, sports and entertainment.
    The company announced last quarter it would offer its own streaming app after efforts were dropped to launch Venu, a joint venture sports streamer.

    Marquee at the main entrance to the FOX News Headquarters at NewsCorp Building in Manhattan. 
    Erik Mcgregor | Lightrocket | Getty Images

    Fox Corp. will launch its direct-to-consumer streaming service, to be called Fox One, ahead of the National Football League season later this year.
    Fox CEO Lachlan Murdoch unveiled the name and timing of the company’s upcoming streamer during a quarterly earnings call Monday.

    While Murdoch didn’t give specifics on pricing, he said during Monday’s call it would be in line with so-called wholesale pricing, meaning it would be similar to what pay-TV distributors pay to offer its channels. Cable TV subscribers will get access to the service at no additional cost, Murdoch said.
    “Pricing will be healthy and not a discounted price,” said Murdoch.
    “It would be a failure of us if we attract more connected subscribers…we do not want to lose a traditional cable subscriber to Fox One,” said Murdoch. He added the company is doing everything “humanly possible” to avoid more subscribers fleeing the cable bundle.
    Fox will also explore partnerships with other distributors and services to offer Fox One.
    The media company, known for the cable TV channel Fox News and its sports offering on broadcast and cable, had been on the sidelines of streaming compared with its peers. While the company has the Fox Nation streaming app and free, ad-supported service, Tubi, it has yet to offer all of its content in a direct-to-consumer offering.

    Murdoch alerted investors in February of the company’s plans to offer the streaming service by the end of this year.
    The decision came shortly after Fox, alongside Warner Bros. Discovery and Disney, abandoned efforts to launch Venu, a joint venture sports streaming app. Fox was the only one out of its partners without a subscription streaming app already in the market.
    Warner Bros. Discovery offers its live sports content on streamer Max.
    Disney’s ESPN has its ESPN+ app and is developing a new flagship streaming app that will reflect the content on its cable TV network. The company will unveil further details on the app this week. CNBC reported last week that ESPN plans to name the app simply ESPN. More

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    The myths of corporate innovation

    If innovation has an iconography, it involves a genius, a breakthrough and a dash of serendipity. Alexander Fleming notices mould growing on a plate of bacteria and discovers penicillin. John Snow produces a map of the victims of a cholera outbreak in 19th-century London and traces the outbreak to a single water pump. A German chemist called August Kekulé falls asleep, dreams about snakes eating their tails and realises upon waking that the benzene molecule has the shape of a circle. More

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    Donald Trump is throttling America’s oil industry

    “IF I’M NOT president, you’re fucked.” So Donald Trump reportedly told a roomful of oil bosses gathered at Mar-a-Lago after his re-election. During the campaign Mr Trump sought to position himself as the American oil industry’s only hope against the supposedly hydrocarbon-hating Democrats—brushing aside the fact that domestic oil production rose sharply during Joe Biden’s time in office. Since his arrival in the White House, he has set about rolling back environmental regulations and expedited permitting in an effort to get America’s oilmen to “drill, baby, drill”. More