Fox News revealed that US President Joe Biden used a pseudonym in 2014 in his correspondence with his son Hunter, during which they discussed the appointment of a senior White House official.
According to Fox News , its report was based on text messages obtained from the missing Hunter Biden's computer.
The newspaper explained that Hunter Biden sent an email on June 23, 2014 to Robin Weir from his company email and asked him to discuss with him one of the positions in the White House that belonged to John McGrail, who two months later joined the White House team as deputy advisor to Joe Biden.
The newspaper added, quoting the management of the “South East” legal institution, that the US National Archives and Records Administration NARA recognized the existence of 5.4 thousand messages confirming Biden’s use of pseudonyms in e-mail correspondence, during which he discussed state affairs for personal purposes, during his tenure as Vice President. at that time.
The foundation stated that “NARA and other sources confirmed that Biden used a group of pseudonyms, including “Robin Weir, Robert L. Peters, and GRP Weir,” noting that these names were used to send emails containing “government information and discussions about state affairs with his son.” Hunter and others.
The newspaper pointed out that Hunter Biden received more than $5.5 million, including from the Ukrainian company Burisma for two years, as a reward for his contributions to tax evasion and active alcohol and drug use, after his agreements with the US Attorney General’s Office.
It should be noted that as part of the Republican investigation, it was found that Joe Biden's family received millions of dollars in foreign financing during his years as Vice President of the United States, and to date, a committee led by Comer has identified more than $20 million of these payments to the Biden family and their business partners.
Brazil : Unemployment rate is at its lowest level since 2014
The Brazilian Statistics Institute announced that the unemployment rate in the country continued to decline and reached 7.9% between May and July, the lowest level during this period of the year in nine years.
The institute estimated the number of unemployed people in Latin America's largest economy at about 8.5 million during the period from May to July, 1.36 million fewer than a year ago.
This is the fourth consecutive decline in this rate, which is calculated on a quarterly basis, which amounted to 8% during the period between April and June, as such a decline has never been recorded during the period from May to July since 2014, when it reached 7%.
The decline amounted to 1.2 points compared to the same period last year, when it reached 9.1%.
While this improvement is due to the increase in unstable jobs, as 39.1% of the working population is active in the informal sector, or 38.1 million people, compared to 38.9% three months ago.
The government of leftist President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, who began his third term in January, hopes to create 2 million jobs by the end of the year.
It is worth noting that Lula, who ruled Brazil from 2003 to 2010, re-launched, three weeks ago, a huge program of major projects under the title "New Growth Acceleration Pact" with 1,700 billion Brazilian reals of public and private investment (approximately 317 billion euros).