Connect with us

News

Rene Haas: ‘Arm has the most ubiquitous computer architecture on the planet’

Published

on

Rene Haas: ‘Arm has the most ubiquitous computer architecture on the planet’

Rene Haas is chief executive of Arm, the chip designer behind the processors in 99 per cent of all smartphones. After being bought by SoftBank in 2016, the UK-headquartered company became last year’s biggest initial public offering, in a deal valuing it at $54.5bn on Nasdaq. Since then, Arm’s market capitalisation has nearly tripled to around $140bn, as it has been caught in the updraft of investor excitement about artificial intelligence. 

Based in Silicon Valley, Haas has worked in the industry for almost 40 years, including seven years at AI chipmaker Nvidia before joining Arm in 2013. Since becoming chief executive in 2022, he has pushed Arm to diversify further from its mobile phone roots into PCs, automotive and industrial components and, increasingly, servers — all underpinned by the same promise of power efficiency that has kept its technology at the heart of the iPhone. 

Arm does not manufacture its own processors — though a recent report suggested that may soon change — instead licensing a growing array of designs to the biggest names in the tech industry, including Microsoft, Nvidia, Apple, Google, Samsung, Amazon, and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company. 

After Apple switched its Mac processors from Intel to its own Arm-based versions in 2020, Microsoft this year unveiled a series of Arm-powered Windows PCs, hailing a new era of the “AI PC”. 

In this conversation with FT global technology correspondent Tim Bradshaw, Haas discusses the growing importance of software to chipmakers and how AI is changing the devices we use.

Advertisement

Tim Bradshaw: Microsoft has been making a big push with Arm-based Windows PCs in the past few weeks but this isn’t the first time Microsoft tried to make that switch. What’s different now compared with the failed efforts of the past, such as 2012’s Windows RT? 

Rene Haas: I worked on the very first Windows on Arm PCs back in 2012. And a lot has changed since that time. One of the things that’s probably the biggest difference now is that virtually the entire application ecosystem is native to Arm — meaning that, not only is the performance going to be fantastic, but try to find an application that’s not going to run. If you go back 12 years when Windows on Arm kicked off, it was a completely different world in terms of local apps versus cloud, and Windows on Arm didn’t support a lot of popular applications [such as Apple’s iTunes and Google’s Chrome web browser]. That was a killer blow.

Tech Exchange

The FT’s top reporters and commentators hold conversations with the world’s most thought-provoking technology leaders, innovators and academics, to discuss the future of the digital world and the role of Big Tech companies in shaping it. The dialogues are in-depth and detailed, focusing on the way technology groups, consumers and authorities will interact to solve global problems and provide new services. Read them all here

Fast forward to 2024, there’s no issue with application ecosystems. And what’s been proven on the Windows on Arm platforms as an extension of the other ecosystem, MacOS, is the experience is phenomenal, when we look at the battery life and the performance that the Macs have . . . It’s going to be a very different game this time. 

TB: And now with the extra sales pitch of ‘AI everywhere’. Where do you think we’re up to in finding the right applications for these new AI tools? 

Advertisement

RH: Talking about AI PCs, I think it’s very early. I think you have Copilot [Microsoft’s brand for products enhanced by AI assistants recently extended to its latest AI PCs] that has now been introduced. So the feature set that has been talked about, I think it’s going to start to take advantage of the underlying hardware.

We know there’s going to be some other [Windows AI PC] systems coming out in the upcoming years. So, while the first-generation systems are going to be interesting, the second generation systems are going to be even more [so]. And folks who bought the first ones are probably going to be a little bit green with envy when they see what the second ones look like. 

TB: Buying version one of any new product is just part of the risk/reward of being an early adopter. Are you an early adopter? What tech are you playing with right now?  

It’s early for AI PCs: Microsoft’s Copilot+ on display at the company’s campus in Redmond © Chona Kasinger/Bloomberg

RH: Whether it’s game consoles, whether it’s phones . . . I’m a very much an early adopter. I probably have every mobile phone in existence. I’m a big foldable phone guy. I think they’re great. Because they are small enough when folded to act like a mobile phone. But when you expand it out, you can look at spreadsheets, you can watch videos. It’s like a mini tablet.

TB: It seems like we’re in another moment where people are experimenting with different form factors for consumer electronics, with folding phones and AI glasses. Have you tried any of those new AI wearables?

RH: I have tried some of them. I do like the Meta Ray Ban augmented reality glasses. They’re stylish. The video quality is good. They are good sunglasses and they don’t feel bulky or weird. Me, personally, I don’t like something heavy on my head. So that’s why I like the Ray Bans and they have Arm inside, which is also what I like. 

Advertisement

TB: Do you see that becoming a big product category? Because we’ve been here before with Google Glass which — to say the least — was not successful.

RH: I think augmented reality is still emerging in terms of the capabilities of that field. I think there’s a huge opportunity with holograms, with display technology. That is an area that is probably early days still in terms of being figured out. I think it’s a generational thing . . . I think a generation has to grow up being comfortable with wearing things for an extended amount of time. [So] it’s more of a niche item right now. 

TB: All of these products, whether AI PCs or smart glasses, are part of a broader trend for moving from AI services that run in the cloud — like the ChatGPT app, which needs an internet connection to work — to systems that run on the “edge” [industry jargon essentially meaning people’s or companies’ own devices, like phones or factory equipment]. There’s much more competition here than in AI chips, where Nvidia totally dominates right now. Do you see the edge becoming a bigger opportunity for chipmakers than the cloud? 

RH: We are still in very early days in terms of AI workloads running everywhere. So to your point of, ‘what is an edge device?’ maybe the user would describe that as ‘not the cloud’. So what has to happen is the [AI] models . . . need to evolve. I think the models need to get a little bit smaller, a little bit more efficient to run in these other areas.

Where is Arm going to play? They’re all going to run through Arm because, first off, you have to have a CPU [central processing unit], which is table stakes and for any of these end devices, and the installed base is all Arm anyway. So the software ecosystem is going to look to optimise around Arm. 

Advertisement

We’re showing some information at Computex [the trade event in Taiwan this week] around compute libraries that will essentially make it very, very easy to run these AI workloads on Arm CPUs. Developers, in the past, did not have access to the Arm CPU when they wanted to run an AI application. Arm will now be making these libraries available to developers. So they can write the application and it takes advantage of the hardware. It could run three times faster, four times faster, at the same power.

Rene Haas in New York the day Arm’s share started trading on Nasdaq in September last year © Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images

TB: These libraries are part of the broader package of Arm products that you describe as the ‘compute subsystem’. This is a core part of Arm’s strategy now, to go beyond designing one single chip for customers to build on. Can you explain more about that — and why you’re doing it?

RH: What really makes Arm unique is we have the most ubiquitous computer architecture on the planet. Our CPUs are in 30bn devices per year, almost 300bn in total. What we are finding is that the chips are becoming increasingly more difficult to build and it takes longer to build them . . . as you get to smaller transistors.

So how can Arm help? Let’s say, in a server, you might have 128 ARM CPUs. And with those 128 ARM CPUs, you have all of the [networking systems] that connect them together. You have a memory mapping system, you have a mesh network . . . Previously, the end customer would have to put all that stuff together and then build their chip. With compute subsystems, we put all that together for them.

We are in mobile phones, we are in PCs, we’re in automotive applications, we are in complex AI training, and we are in general-purpose server[s]. All of those are Arm CPUs [and] areas that we are going to do compute subsystems. So, over time, it’s going to be a very, very large part of our business. 

TB: One of your big new customer wins on the data centre side recently was Microsoft which is doing a new Arm-based CPU for its cloud called Cobalt. You’ve now got Amazon, Google, Microsoft — the three biggest cloud computing providers — all running Arm CPUs as part of their cloud platforms. When did that work start from your side to see that come to fruition? 

Advertisement

30bnNumber of devices built every year with an Arm central processing unit

RH: We have been working on this for over 10 years. It’s been a tremendous amount of work [in which] two things had to come together. The CPUs had to get performant enough against the competition. They had to be very efficient. They had to be very high speed. And we had to have all the components around it. And then . . . the software ecosystem had to have everything required that you could just run the servers. So Linux distributions, like Red Hat and SuSE. We were working in parallel to have all the pieces of the software together.

When you combine the software being ready with world-class products and power efficiency, you now have a compelling advantage in terms of the chip. Now, what makes it even more compelling is, by building a custom chip, you can essentially build a custom blade, a custom rack, and a custom server that’s very unique to what Microsoft is running with Azure or what Google is running in Google Cloud or AWS.

TB: Power efficiency is a big part of Arm’s pitch over traditional server chipmakers like Intel and AMD. Microsoft said recently that it’s investing so fast in AI data centres that it’s looking like it might miss some of its climate targets. That must be a problem all the Big Tech companies are facing right now?

RH: Oh, yes, it’s massive. Two things are going to accelerate Arm’s adoption in the cloud. One is just broadly, this power efficiency issue. And secondly, the fact that, on AI, we can greatly reduce power by this customisation. Just look at Nvidia. Nvidia built a chip called Grace Hopper and then they built a chip called Grace Blackwell. They are essentially replacing the Intel or AMD CPU with an Arm CPU, which is called Grace.

Advertisement

TB: One Big Tech company that hasn’t announced an Arm-based chip in its data centres yet is Meta, Facebook’s owner. Its new chip for AI inference [the kind needed to deliver AI services rather than create them], called MTIA, is using an open-source alternative to Arm’s architecture called RISC-V . . . Are they using Arm in other ways or have they decided to go down a different path? 

RH: This MTIA chip is an accelerator. And that accelerator has to connect to a CPU. So it can connect to an ARM CPU, or it can connect to an Intel CPU. RISC-V is not interesting from a CPU standpoint, because it’s not running any key software . . . I’ll leave it to Meta to say whether they’re going to connect to Intel or Arm.

TB: The analysts I speak to see big potential growth for RISC-V in areas like automotive, where Arm is also hoping to grow. Do you worry that RISC-V is starting to nibble at the edges? 

RH: Where I don’t see it nibbling anywhere is running key software applications. I think there’s a misunderstanding commonly between the RISC-V architecture as it applies to being a chip and when it’s really running [key] software. Because it’s all about the software. 

And, again, back to what makes Arm very unique: every mass popular application you can think of has been ported to and optimised for Arm. It takes a long, long time not only to get the software written, but ported and optimised. There’s no software anywhere for RISC-V in these places. None.

Advertisement

TB: So, if not competition from RISC-V, what does keep you up at night?  

RH: The things that I worry about are the stuff that’s inside my control. We have massive opportunity with all these compute subsystems. We have massive opportunity with growth in AI. We have massive opportunity to reduce power to go solve this issue relative to data centres. It’s just making sure that we can execute on the strategies we have, because we are at a magical time in our industry relative to the growth potential. 

TB: How much does being a public company keep you awake at night?

RH: Generally speaking, it doesn’t change how I think about running the company because I don’t really think about the company from quarter to quarter. I think about the company from year to year. Most of my discussions that I have with our internal teams or engineers are about 2027, 2028.

TB: Unfortunately, Wall Street does tend to look at things quarter by quarter. You’ve had a lot of stock-price volatility around your quarterly earnings reports. That’s not uncommon for a newly-listed company but do you think investors really understand the Arm business? 

Advertisement

RH: What I would say about the volatility is we’ve had three quarters of being a public company and each quarter was bigger than the last one. And each quarter that we talked about going forward was larger . . . we basically indicated that we see 20 per cent growth year on year and we see that continue for the next few years.

We achieved $3bn in revenue over this past year. It took us 20 years to get to $1bn. It took us, I think, another 10 to get to $2bn. It took us two years to get to $3bn. And we’re looking to get to $4bn in one year. So the trajectory is in the right place. 

We have incredible visibility in terms of our business, [not only because] we get reports from our customers, but because our market share is so high.

TB: Some investors worry about visibility in two parts of your business in particular. One of them is Apple, one of your biggest customers but which is famously not very open with its partners. The other is Arm China. You warned in your IPO prospectus of past problems obtaining “accurate information” from Arm China. What insight do you really have? 

RH: We have great insight with Apple. They’re a phenomenal partner for us. They have signed a long-term [contract] extension. They’re very committed to Arm.

Advertisement

Arm China, that’s our joint venture in China. They are essentially a distributor for us. So we have very good visibility in terms of how we work with partners there. With China, the issue that we’ve faced in terms of export control are no different from other [chip] companies. But, in general, I would say, with Arm China, things are going quite well. 

Apple’s latest iPad Air uses the Arm-based M2 chip © Bloomberg

TB: How has being a public company changed your relationship with SoftBank and its chief executive, Masayoshi Son? They’re still a 90 per cent shareholder but you’re more out on your own now. How does that dynamic change? 

RH: I think it’s changed in the sense that, as a public company, we now have a board that has independent directors that represent shareholders. So all the things that we have to do from a governance standpoint, that’s a little bit different. I’d say we are certainly more independent in terms of how we think about the company, how we talk about the company. But SoftBank’s our largest shareholder, so obviously they have a big say in terms of things at the boardroom table. 

With Masa, I would say the relationship is no different. We talk all the time. He’s a brilliant guy. I think he gets a little bit of a bad rap in the press. He’s a guy who started the company 40 years ago and is still running it. There’s a pretty small group of people who have done that kind of thing, and the company is still broadly successful. 

TB: How does Arm fit in with SoftBank’s broader strategic goals around AI? 

RH: Clearly, Masa is very bullish on all things AI and — given that it’s pretty hard to talk about an AI application that doesn’t bump into Arm — we’re at the centre of many of those things. For example, SoftBank made an investment into a UK company called Wayve, which is doing some amazing work in LLMs [large language models, the complex AI systems that sit behind applications such as ChatGPT] for full self-driving cars. It’s running on Arm. So there is an area where if Wayve does well, Arm does well.

Advertisement

TB: Does that mean you’re going to move into making your own AI chips, as Nikkei reported recently?

RH: I can’t give you anything on that one. I can’t comment.

TB: Silicon Valley in general, and the chip industry in particular, is full of ‘frenemies’. Nvidia’s biggest customers are all making their own AI chips, for example. Where do you think you can, and can’t, compete with your customers? 

RH: I tend to think more about where can we add value and where is the industry going? Back to compute subsystems. When we kicked the idea off, this was a bit controversial because, by doing a full subsystem implementation, some customers might say, ‘Hey, that’s the kind of work I do. Arm, I don’t need to have your finished solution.’ Fast forward, we solve a lot of problems in terms of engineering overhead. We solve a lot of problems relative to time to market. We solve a lot of problems relative to broadening out Arm’s platforms.

So that’s an example of something that might be a frenemy kind of thing where people might look at it and say, ‘That’s my domain’. But I would say it’s worked out far better than we thought. Even the early customers who pushed back at it are adopting it. 

Advertisement

TB: Another example of a frenemy for Arm is Intel. At the same time as competing for a lot of Intel’s PC and server business, you’re actually getting closer to them on the foundry side. You were recently on stage at an Intel event — which some people who have been watching this industry for 30 years might have seen as a ‘hell freezing over’ kind of moment. What is the nature of that relationship exactly? 

RH: Yeah, that’s a great example of the world moving around. Intel, 10 years ago, probably saw it was very beneficial to see Arm as not a healthy competitor. Fast forward, Intel has a burgeoning business that is trying to grow around Intel Foundry. What does Intel Foundry need? They need volume. Well, who drives the most volume in terms of CPUs? It’s Arm. So they obviously see the size of that opportunity . . . They’ve taken a lot of money from the US government on the Chips Act and they need to put that money to work. I think working with Arm is going to be the fastest way they can do that. 

TB: We’ve talked a lot about AI in the abstract. What are the particular applications of AI that you’re most excited about personally? 

RH: A really simple AI application that I use is to remove people from photographs. I’ll take pictures of my kids, my grandkids, my friends, and someone will photobomb. And you can just clean that stuff up. With [Google Photos] Magic Eraser, you can do that. Crazy simple, but that’s AI. 

But the areas that I personally find far more interesting are drug research and medical. A very simple example: You’re ill, you go to the pharmacy, they prescribe some medicine to you, and you look at the medicine and the side effects are as generic as it can be. That seems like something that, if the doctor knew my DNA genome sequence and would be able to map out exactly which drugs will give me what kind of reaction, knowing exactly my background and profile, that would be compelling. I was meeting this morning with somebody who’s in this industry and was asking that question. With AI, that’s probably three to four years away.

Advertisement

Another interesting example is drug research. How long does it take to develop a new drug? Ten years. That can be cut in half, it can be cut by two-thirds by using AI. That to me is incredibly exciting.

TB: Some AI boosters argue the technology will soon replace all human labour. Do you think your grandchildren will have to work? 

RH: I hope so. I hope so. What a life if they don’t. 

This transcript has been edited for brevity and clarity

Advertisement

News

Bus riders to Montgomery retrace old steps while fighting a new fight

Published

on

Bus riders to Montgomery retrace old steps while fighting a new fight

A man sings a spirtual song during a voting rally, Saturday, May 16, 2026, in Montgomery, Ala.

Mike Stewart/AP


hide caption

toggle caption

Advertisement

Mike Stewart/AP

MONTGOMERY, Ala.— In 1965, Black Americans peacefully demonstrated for voting rights and were beaten by Alabama state troopers before returning two weeks later to complete their march under federal protection. Keith Odom was a toddler then.

Now 62 years old, the union man and grandfather of three retraced some of their final steps. On Saturday, he came from Aiken, South Carolina, to Atlanta, where he joined several dozen other activists on two buses to Montgomery, Alabama. A few hours later, he stepped off his bus and onto Dexter Avenue, where the original march concluded.

“The history here — being a part of it, seeing it, feeling it,” said Odom, who is Black.

Advertisement

His voice trailed off as he saw the Alabama Capitol and a stage that sat roughly where the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. concluded the original march.

Odom lamented that he and his fellow bus riders were not simply commemorating that seminal day in the Civil Rights Movement. Instead they came to renew the fight. The 1965 effort helped push Congress to send the Voting Rights Act to Democratic President Lyndon B. Johnson to sign, securing and expanding political power for Black and other nonwhite voters for more than a half-century.

Saturday’s “All Roads Lead to the South” rally was the first mass organizing response after a U.S. Supreme Court ruling that severely diminished that landmark law. Striking down a majority Black congressional district in Louisiana, the justices concluded in a 6-3 ruling that considering race when drawing political lines is in itself discriminatory. That spurred multiple states, including Alabama, to redraw U.S. House districts in ways that make it harder for Black voters, who lean overwhelmingly Democratic, to elect lawmakers of their choice.

“I’m not trying to live a life that’s going backwards,” Odom said. “I want to go forward, for my grandchildren to be able to go forward.”

Keith Odom, a forklift driver from Aiken, S.C., looks out from his bus seat as he arrives in Montgomery, Ala., for a voting rights rally Saturday, May 16, 2026.

Keith Odom, a forklift driver from Aiken, S.C., looks out from his bus seat as he arrives in Montgomery, Ala., for a voting rights rally Saturday, May 16, 2026.

Bill Barrow/AP

Advertisement


hide caption

toggle caption

Bill Barrow/AP

Advertisement

An old political battle is new again

The passenger rosters and the scene when riders arrived in Montgomery sounded the echoes and rhymes of past and present.

“I talked to my grandmother before I came, and she was so excited,” said Justice Washington, a Kennesaw State University student named because her mother and grandmother had faith in the American system. “My grandmother told me she did her part, and now it’s time for me to do mine.”

No one on the Atlanta buses had reached voting age when the Voting Rights Act became law. The youngest attendee was born as Democrat Barack Obama was elected the first Black president in 2008.

Kobe Chernushin is 18, white and just graduated high school in Atlanta’s northern suburbs. He is an organizer with the Georgia Youth Justice Coalition and spent the day filming Khayla Doby, a 29-year-old executive for the organization, doing standups for the group’s followers on social media.

“I believe in the power of showing up,” he said.

Advertisement

The buses launched from the congressional district in Georgia once represented by John Lewis, bloodied on the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Alabama, when he was 25. Lewis died in 2020, but some on the buses Saturday celebrated that a proposed federal election overhaul is named for him. If some Democrats get their way, the bill would override the U.S. Supreme Court, reinvigorate the Voting Rights Act and outlaw the kind of gerrymandering competition that Republican President Donald Trump has instigated.

“I’m here because of the same forces that pulled on John Lewis when he was a student,” said Darrin Owens, 27. He has worked for former Vice President Kamala Harris and now trains Democratic candidates.

“Political activism is personal,” Owens said, explaining that he attended Saturday as a citizen, not a political professional. “Sometimes those lines are blurred, and as a Black person in America, a Black person living in a Southern state, I’m committed to action that stops what I consider to be un-American, this possibility that the person who represents me is someone who is not from my community and does not understand me or my community.”

When he arrived, Owens saw no federal authorities on Montgomery’s streets. A wounded, recovering Lewis did during the second march in 1965.

This time many of the Alabama troopers and local officers who walked the area were Black.

Advertisement

The buses and sandwich lunches had been arranged by Fair Fight Action, a legacy of the political network built by Georgia Democrat Stacey Abrams, who became a national figure in her unsuccessful runs in 2018 and 2022 to become the first Black woman elected governor in U.S. history. No Black woman has yet achieved that feat.

Bee Nguyen, left, talks to Carole Burton, center, and Tondalaire Ashford at a voting rights rally Saturday, May 16, 2026, in Montgomery, Ala.

Bee Nguyen, left, talks to Carole Burton, center, and Tondalaire Ashford at a voting rights rally Saturday, May 16, 2026, in Montgomery, Ala.

Bill Barrow/AP


hide caption

toggle caption

Advertisement

Bill Barrow/AP

Different generations share their stories

At different points, Montgomery has branded itself as the cradle of the Confederacy and the cradle of the modern Civil Rights Movement.

“It feels like our country is stuck in this pattern of making progress, then there’s a huge backlash, and then people have to go through the same battle again just to get to where we were,” said Phi Nguyen, the 41-year-old daughter of Vietnamese refugees. She is now a civil rights lawyer in Atlanta.

She stood across from the church where a young King led the Montgomery Bus Boycott in 1955 and not far from where Jefferson Davis took the oath of office in 1861 as the slavery-defending Confederate president.

Advertisement

Nguyen and her sister Bee, a 44-year-old who served in the Georgia General Assembly and ran for statewide office, met two other women as they walked. Carole Burton and Tondalaire Ashford are 72-year-old Montgomery residents who have been friends since they were in a segregated junior high school and then newly desegregated Sidney Lanier High School.

“I don’t call it ‘integration,’” Ashford said, pointing at her dark skin. “It was never real integration, and it’s not like we can ever just blend in.”

Burton described them as being “in the second wave” of Black students. “It wasn’t easy,” she said. “And we had to support each other.”

They remember their parents not being able to vote in the era of poll taxes, literacy tests and other racist restrictions that the Voting Rights Act eventually outlawed. But they smiled as they swapped family histories with the Nguyens.

Burton said immigrants, descendants of enslaved persons and Native Americans have different but overlapping paths. “We just want to be treated like people with the same rights and opportunities the country has promised us,” she said. “They’ve never fully lived up to it.”

Advertisement
Aaron McGuire sings a spirtual song during a voting rally, Saturday, May 16, 2026, in Montgomery, Ala.

Aaron McGuire sings a spirtual song during a voting rally, Saturday, May 16, 2026, in Montgomery, Ala.

Mike Stewart/AP


hide caption

toggle caption

Mike Stewart/AP

Advertisement

Conflicting legacies are at stake

To Odom, who had begun his journey Saturday in South Carolina, the current U.S. Supreme Court reinforced that history by refusing to see some race-conscious election policy as a way to ensure fair representation, not simply the “technical right to vote.”

He recalls decades of his life being represented by Strom Thurmond, a segregationist Democratic governor who became a “Dixiecrat” presidential candidate and U.S. senator — by now as a Republican — into the 21st century. Odom said he fears his state losing U.S. Rep. Jim Clyburn, a senior member of the Congressional Black Caucus, through redistricting.

“They want to take away that legacy when we’re still living with Strom’s?” Odom said.

Odom said he is also worried that the young people who participated Saturday are not a vanguard but outliers.

Advertisement

“I was talking to a 20-year-old co-worker about this trip,” he said. “She told me she supported me but didn’t want to do it or work for anybody” running for office. “She wondered what any of them are going to do for her.”

Nonetheless, he said on the way home, “I’m still going to tell her what I saw and what I heard.”

Continue Reading

News

Louisiana Sen. Bill Cassidy loses in Republican primary, does not advance to runoff

Published

on

Louisiana Sen. Bill Cassidy loses in Republican primary, does not advance to runoff

One observer of the current Senate race in Louisiana noted that Sen. Bill Cassidy could lose his reelection bid.

Annie Flanagan for NPR


hide caption

toggle caption

Advertisement

Annie Flanagan for NPR

Sen. Bill Cassidy lost Saturday’s Louisiana Republican primary according to a race call by the Associated Press.

Cassidy, who served two terms in the Senate, was one of seven Republican senators who voted to convict President Trump after the January 6th insurrection at the Capitol. That vote put him at odds with Trump and his MAGA coalition, ultimately leading Trump to push Rep. Julia Letlow to run against Cassidy.

Cassidy’s bid for a third term was viewed as a test of Trump’s grip on the party–and of what voters want from their representatives in Washington. The primary pitted Cassidy, a veteran lawmaker, former physician and chair of the powerful Senate health committee, against Letlow, a political newcomer and a millennial MAGA loyalist.

Advertisement
A detailed view of a hat that reads, Run Julia Run, is seen at a campaign event for Rep. Julia Letlow (R-LA) on May 6, 2026 in Franklinton, Louisiana.

A detailed view of a hat that reads, Run Julia Run, is seen at a campaign event for Rep. Julia Letlow (R-LA) on May 6, 2026 in Franklinton, Louisiana.

Tyler Kaufman/Getty Images


hide caption

toggle caption

Tyler Kaufman/Getty Images

Advertisement

A former college administrator, Letlow won a special election in 2021 for the House seat her late husband, Luke, was set to assume before he died from COVID in 2020.

In Congress, Letlow sponsored a bill to collect oral histories from the pandemic and has focused on education and children. She introduced the “Parents Bill of Rights Act,” which would allow parents to review classroom materials like library books and require schools to notify parents if their child requests different pronouns, locker rooms or sports teams.

She also serves on the powerful appropriations committee and has embraced Trump’s agenda.

Advertisement

Letlow, who came first in Saturday’s primary, will face Louisiana state Treasurer John Fleming in the runoff on June 27. Cassidy came in third.

The election result is a victory for President Trump who has put Republican loyalty to the test on the ballot so far this year in Indiana state senate primaries and in Cassidy’s race.

Another major test of Trump’s influence comes in Kentucky’s primary on Tuesday when Republican Rep. Thomas Massie, who has found himself at odds with the president, faces a challenger endorsed by Trump.

Continue Reading

News

Brass bands in Beijing make way for sticker shock at home as Trump returns to escalating inflation

Published

on

Brass bands in Beijing make way for sticker shock at home as Trump returns to escalating inflation

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump returned from the spectacle of a Chinese state visit to a less than welcoming U.S. economy — with the military band and garden tour in Beijing giving way to pressure over how to fix America’s escalating inflation rate.

Consumer inflation in the United States increased to 3.8% annually in April, higher than what he inherited as the Iran war and the Republican president’s own tariffs have pushed up prices. Inflation is now outpacing wage gains and effectively making workers poorer. The Cleveland Federal Reserve estimates that annual inflation could reach 4.2% in May as the war has kept oil and gasoline prices high.

Trump’s time with Chinese leader Xi Jinping appears unlikely to help the U.S. economy much, despite Trump’s claims of coming trade deals. The trip occurred as many people are voting in primaries leading into the November general election while having to absorb the rising costs of gasoline, groceries, utility bills, jewelry, women’s clothing, airplane tickets and delivery services. Democrats see the moment as a political opportunity.

“He’s returning to a dumpster fire,” said Lindsay Owens, executive director of Groundwork Collaborative, a liberal think tank focused on economic issues. “The president will not have the faith and confidence of the American people — the economy is their top issue and the president is saying, ‘You’re on your own.’”

The president’s trip to Beijing and his recent comments that indicated a tone-deafness to voters’ concerns about rising prices have suggested his focus is not on the American public and have undermined Republicans who had intended to campaign on last year’s tax cuts as helping families.

Advertisement

Trump described the trip as a victory, saying on social media that Xi “congratulated me on so many tremendous successes,” as the U.S. president has praised their relationship.

Trump told reporters that Boeing would be selling 200 aircraft — and maybe even 750 “if they do a good job” — to the Chinese. He said American farmers would be “very happy” because China would be “buying billions of dollars of soybeans.”

“We had an amazing time,” Trump said as he flew home on Air Force One, and told Fox News’ Bret Baier in an interview that gasoline prices were just some “short-term pain” and would “drop like a rock” once the war ends.

Inflationary pain is not a factor in how Trump handles Iran

Trump departed from the White House for China by saying the negotiations over the Iran war depended on stopping Tehran from developing nuclear weapons. “I don’t think about Americans’ financial situation. I don’t think about anybody. I think about one thing: We cannot let Iran have a nuclear weapon,” Trump said.

That remark prompted blowback because it suggested to some that Trump cared more about challenging Iran than fighting inflation at home. Trump defended his words, telling Fox News: “That’s a perfect statement. I’d make it again.”

Advertisement

The White House has since stressed that Trump is focused on inflation.

Asked later about the president’s words, Vice President JD Vance said there had been a “misrepresentation” of the remarks. White House spokesman Kush Desai said the “administration remains laser-focused on delivering growth and affordability on the homefront” while indicating actions would be taken on grocery prices.

But as Trump appeared alongside Xi, new reports back home showed inflation rising for businesses and interest rates climbing on U.S. government debt.

His comments that Boeing would sell 200 jets to China caused the company’s stock price to fall because investors had expected a larger number. There was little concrete information offered about any trade agreements reached during the summit, including Chinese purchases of U.S. exports such as liquefied natural gas and beef.

“Foreign policy wins can matter politically, but only if voters feel stability and affordability in their daily lives,” said Brittany Martinez, a former Republican congressional aide who is the executive director of Principles First, a center-right advocacy group focused on democracy issues.

Advertisement

“Midterms are almost always a referendum on cost of living and public frustration, and Republicans are not immune from the same inflation and affordability pressures that hurt Democrats in recent cycles,” she added.

Democrats see Trump as vulnerable

Democratic lawmakers are seizing on Trump’s comments before his trip as proof of his indifference to lowering costs. There is potential staying power of his remarks as Americans head into Memorial Day weekend facing rising prices for the hamburgers and hot dogs to be grilled.

“What Americans do not see is any sympathy, any support, or any plan from Trump and congressional Republicans to lower costs – in fact, they see the opposite,” Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer of New York said Thursday.

Vance faulted the Biden administration for the inflation problem even though the inflation rate is now higher than it was when Trump returned to the White House in January 2025 with a specific mandate to fix it.

“The inflation number last month was not great,” Vance said Wednesday, but he then stressed, “We’re not seeing anything like what we saw under the Biden administration.”

Advertisement

Inflation peaked at 9.1% in June 2022 under Biden, a Democrat. By the time Trump took the oath of office, it was a far more modest 3%.

Trump’s inflation challenge could get harder

The data tells a different story as higher inflation is spreading into the cost of servicing the national debt.

Over the past week, the interest rate charged on 10-year U.S. government debt jumped from 4.36% to 4.6%, an increase that implies higher costs for auto loans and mortgages.

“My fear is that the layers of supply shocks that are affecting the U.S. economy will only further feed into inflationary pressures,” said Gregory Daco, chief economist at EY-Parthenon.

Daco noted that last year’s tariff increases were now translating into higher clothing prices. With the Supreme Court ruling against Trump’s ability to impose tariffs by declaring an economic emergency, his administration is preparing a new set of import taxes for this summer.

Advertisement

Daco stressed that there have been a series of supply shocks. First, tariffs cut into the supply of imports. In addition, Trump’s immigration crackdown cut into the supply of foreign-born workers. Now, the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz has cut off the vital waterway used to ship 20% of global oil supplies.

“We’re seeing an erosion of growth,” Daco said.

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Advertisement

Trending