Tag: U.S

  • Marco Rubio arrives in Israel on first trip to Middle East as U.S. secretary of state

    Marco Rubio arrives in Israel on first trip to Middle East as U.S. secretary of state

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    U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio arrived in Israel late on Saturday on his first trip to the Middle East, after a widely condemned proposal by President Donald Trump to displace Palestinians in Gaza.

    Trump first floated the suggestion that Egypt and Jordan should take in Palestinians from Gaza on January 25, a proposal they strongly opposed.

    TRUMP’S GAZA RELOCATION PROPOSAL SPARKS HEATED DEBATE AMONG PALESTINIANS: ‘NO LIFE LEFT HERE’

    In a shock announcement on February 4, after meeting Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Washington, Trump proposed resettling Gaza’s 2.2 million Palestinians and the U.S. taking control and ownership of the demolished seaside enclave, redeveloping it into the “Riviera of the Middle East.”

    On February 10, he said Palestinians would not have the right of return to Gaza under his plan, contradicting his own officials who had suggested Gazans would only be relocated temporarily.

    Israel’s Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar welcomes U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio as he arrives in Israel, on the first leg of his Middle East trip, in Tel Aviv, Israel, February 15, 2025.  (REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein/Pool)

    The U.S. president’s comments echoed long-standing Palestinian fears of being permanently driven from their homes and were labeled as a proposal of ethnic cleansing by some critics.

    U.S. ally Israel’s military assault on Gaza, now paused by a fragile ceasefire, has killed more than 47,000 Palestinians in the last 16 months, the Gaza health ministry says, and provoked accusations of genocide and war crimes that Israel denies.

    The assault internally displaced nearly all of Gaza’s population and caused a hunger crisis.

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    The latest bloodshed in the decades-old Israeli-Palestinian conflict was triggered on October 7, 2023, when Palestinian Hamas militants attacked Israel, killing 1,200 and taking some 250 hostages, Israeli tallies show.

    Rubio will discuss Gaza and the aftermath of the Hamas attack on Israel during the trip, and will pursue Trump’s approach of trying to disrupt the status quo in the region, a State Department official said last week.

  • Civil rights officials probe four U.S. medical schools over antisemitism

    Civil rights officials probe four U.S. medical schools over antisemitism

    The Office of Civil Rights within the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) announced investigations into four medical schools over alleged antisemitic incidents during their 2024 commencement ceremonies. 

    While HHS did not identify the schools subjected to these investigations, the Wall Street Journal reported that Harvard, Columbia, Brown and Johns Hopkins medical schools were the targets. The investigations will come after a school year riddled with what critics have described as antisemitic incidents after Hamas’s Oct. 7, 2023 attack on Israel. 

    “After October 7, we saw Jew-hatred explode not just on college campuses and city streets, but in the medical profession. This has caused a lot of concern that anti-Jewish bias in medicine endangers the lives of Jewish patients – and these concerns have not been conclusively addressed to date,” said Gerard Filitti, senior counsel at The Lawfare Project, which provides pro bono legal services to protect the civil rights of the Jewish community. “The investigations announced by HHS are a crucial first step towards addressing these concerns.”

    ISRAELI HARVARD STUDENT SPEAKS OUT ON ANTISEMITISM BEHIND LATEST SETTLEMENT

    Protesters demonstrate near Columbia University on Feb. 2, 2024 in New York City. (Alexi J. Rosenfeld/Getty Images)

    Harvard’s 2024 commencement ceremony was ridiculed over the school’s decision to tap media CEO Maria Ressa as the school’s commencement speaker following a year of incidents that included an assault against an Israeli student by pro-Palestinian protesters, scores of alleged antisemitic displays and chants, including some that praised Hamas, and numerous civil rights allegations from Jewish students. In addition, Harvard was accused by its own students of turning a blind eye to antisemitism.  

    Ressa, not long after Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack, penned an op-ed comparing Israel to Nazi Germany, and during her commencement address complained that she had been attacked over her pro-Palestinain advocacy “by power and money because they want power and money,” which people construed as promoting antisemitic stereotypes. Ressa was also accused of praising pro-Hamas demonstrations happening on campus during her address.

    JEWISH COMMUNITY RESPONDS TO TRUMP EXECUTIVE ORDER VOWING TO DEPORT PRO-HAMAS ACTIVISTS WITH STUDENT VISAS

    The commencement ceremony was allegedly so bad that a campus Rabbi Hirschy Zarchi felt compelled to confront Ressa during the event and subsequently walked offstage. According to media reports, Zarchi later described the ceremony as a “really vile program.”

    Pro-Palestinian protesters gather at Harvard University

    Former Harvard University President Larry Summers claimed that the school has not been “swift” enough in combating the antisemitism spreading throughout campus. (JOSEPH PREZIOSO / Contributor)

    Harvard Medical School spokesperson Ekaterina Pesheva said in a statement to Fox News Digital that the school “condemns antisemitism and remains committed to combating all forms of discrimination and harassment.” Pesheva added that Harvard would “continue to advance our efforts to ensure that all community members feel they belong” and said the school is currently reviewing HHS’s civil rights request and will cooperate to address the agency’s questions regarding the 2024 commencement ceremony. 

    Columbia, Johns Hopkins and Brown similarly faced a slew of complaints over alleged antisemitism on their campuses and the universities’ failure to address them. The environment at these schools was so hostile, reportedly, that some Jewish students who were admitted to these Ivy League schools decided to go somewhere else. A rabbi at Columbia went so far as to tell Jewish students to leave campus for their safety.

    President Donald Trump has moved quickly to challenge antisemitism in the U.S., with news of the investigations coming the same day the Trump administration’s Department of Justice announced the formation of a multi-agency task force to combat antisemitism. News of the probe also came after Trump signed an executive order several days after taking office seeking to combat antisemitism, particularly on college campuses. 

    “HHS has been so quick to implement President Trump’s Executive Order is tacit recognition of the failure on the part of these universities to address antisemitism, despite several lawsuits and congressional investigations,” Filitti said. “The Biden Administration, for all its rhetoric, failed to do nearly as much as President Trump has in only one week to address Jew-hatred, and we now have a President clearly willing to use the power of the executive branch to take concrete action to stamp out antisemitism and protect the civil rights of Jewish Americans – and all Americans.”

    PATRIOTS OWNER ROBERT KRAFT LAUNCHING ‘NO REASON TO HATE’ SUPER BOWL AD, COMBATING ANTISEMITISM

    kestenbaum before Congress

    Witnesses from various universities testify during a House Judiciary Subcommittee on the Constitution and Limited Government hearing on antisemitism on college campuses at the Rayburn House Office Building on May 15, 2024 in Washington, D.C. (Kent Nishimura/Getty Images)

    In addition to facing potential consequences over the school’s failure to address antisemitism on their campuses, Trump has also threatened to withhold millions of federal dollars in research grants if they do not comply with new orders quashing diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) initiatives. 

    “Antisemitism has no place in American society, least of all in medical schools,” said Dr. Stanley Goldfarb, chairman of the nonprofit Do No Harm, which seeks to root out identity politics in medical education. “Medical schools, especially those who push a DEI agenda have become hotbeds of antisemitism, the department of Health and Human Services is right to raise concerns about blatantly antisemitic protests.”

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    On Monday, the Department of Education also launched a slew of additional civil rights investigations into Columbia, Northwestern, the University of California – Berkeley, the University of Minnesota and Portland State universities. 

    Fox News Digital reached out to Harvard, Columbia, Brown and Johns Hopkins for comment but did not receive a response in time for publication.

  • Panama eliminates charge fees for U.S. government vessels

    Panama eliminates charge fees for U.S. government vessels

    The U.S. State Department on Wednesday announced a new deal with the government of Panama that will eliminate charge fees for U.S. government vessels.

    “The government of Panama has agreed to no longer charge fees for U.S. government vessels to transit the Panama Canal,” the State Department wrote in an X post Wednesday night.

    The new agreement will save the U.S. government millions of dollars a year, officials noted.

    U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, right, waves after being welcomed by Panama’s Foreign Minister Javier Martinez-Acha, left, upon his arrival at the presidential palace in Panama City, on Sunday, Feb. 2. Panama is Rubio’s first trip abroad as Secretary of State. (AP/Mark Schiefelbein)

    CHINA’S INFLUENCE ON PANAMA CANAL POSES ‘ACUTE RISKS TO US NATIONAL SECURITY,’ SEN CRUZ WARNS

    Panama President José Raúl Mulino promised on Sunday to end a key development deal with China after meeting with Secretary of State Marco Rubio. 

    During his visit, former Florida Senator Rubio wrote in a post on X that “the United States cannot, and will not, allow the Chinese Communist Party to continue with its effective and growing control over the Panama Canal area.” 

    President Donald Trump, who has openly criticized the six-figure premiums imposed on U.S. ships traveling through, has suggested repurchasing the canal.

    Ships enter Panama Canal

    Two cargo ships enter the Miraflores Locks of the Panama Canal in Panama City on Jan. 22. (Martin Bernetti/AFP via Getty Images)

    ‘TAKING IT BACK’: INTERNAL HOUSE GOP MEMO OUTLINES CASE FOR TRUMP TO Y PANAMA CANAL

    It was built over decades by the U.S., but was later handed over to Panama during the Carter administration.

    A newly introduced bill called the “Panama Canal Repurchase Act” would give Trump and Rubio the authority to negotiate with Panama to repurchase the canal.

    Carter at Panama announcement

    FILE – President Jimmy Carter speaks next to his wife Rosalynn upon arrival to Panama City to sign the Panama Canal Treaty, June 16, 1978.  (AP Photo)

    HOUSE REPUBLICANS INTRODUCE BILL TO REPURCHASE PANAMA CANAL AFTER TRUMP RAISES CONCERNS OF CHINESE CONTROL

    More than 70 percent of all vessels traveling through the canal are inbound or outbound to U.S. ports, according to the State Department. It is also a key transit point for U.S. Coast Guard and Department of Defense vessels. 

    Ships would need to travel 8,000 additional miles around South America to avoid using the pathway.

    Marco Rubio

    TOPSHOT – US Secretary of State Marco Rubio boards a plane en route to El Salvador at Panama Pacifico International Airport in Panama City on February 3, 2025. Rubio is in Panama on a two-day official visit.  (MARK SCHIEFELBEIN/Pool AP/AFP via Getty Images)

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    Fox News Digital requested comment from the State Department, but did not immediately receive a response as of Wednesday night.

    Fox News Digital’s Danielle Wallace and Stepheny Price contributed to this report.

  • Senate confirms Pam Bondi as U.S. attorney general

    Senate confirms Pam Bondi as U.S. attorney general

    Members of the Senate voted late Tuesday to confirm Pam Bondi, attorney general nominee of President Donald Trump, voting 54-46 to install the longtime prosecutor and former Florida attorney general to head up the U.S. Department of Justice. 

    Bondi’s confirmation comes as both the Justice Department and FBI have been under scrutiny by Democrats in Congress, who have raised concerns over Trump’s recent decision to pardon or commute the sentences of 1,600 criminal dependents in the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol riots and to oust more than 15 inspectors general and special counsel investigators. 

    To date, there are no known plans to conduct sweeping removals or take punitive action against the agents involved in the Jan. 6 investigations.

    But U.S. Deputy Attorney General Emil Bove sparked fresh concerns last week after he directed the acting FBI director to identify all current and former bureau employees assigned to the Jan. 6 cases for internal review. 

    FBI AGENTS GROUP TELLS CONGRESS TO TAKE URGENT ACTION TO PROTECT AGAINST POLITICIZATION 

    Pam Bondi, President-elect Donald Trump’s choice to lead the Justice Department as attorney general, appears before the Senate Judiciary Committee for her confirmation hearing on Jan. 15, 2025. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)

    The effort prompted FBI agents to file two separate lawsuits on Tuesday seeking emergency injunctive relief in federal court, arguing in the lawsuits that any effort by DOJ or FBI to review or discriminate against agents involved in the Jan. 6 probe would be both “unlawful and retaliatory” and a violation of civil service protections.

    Bondi has repeatedly said she will not use her position to advance any political agenda, a refrain she returned to many times during her hours-long confirmation hearing. 

    “Politics has to be taken out of this system,” Bondi told the Senate Judiciary Committee last month. 

     TRUMP AG NOMINEE PAM BONDI ADVANCES TO FINAL SENATE VOTE

    Pam Bondi speaks at a press conference

    Former Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi speaks during a press conference while on a break from former President Donald Trump’s hush money trial outside Manhattan Criminal Court on May 21, 2024, in New York City. (Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)

    Bondi’s nomination earned praise both from Republicans and some Democrats in the chamber for her composure and her ability to deftly navigate thorny and politically tricky topics and lines of questioning from some would-be detractors. 

    She was widely expected to see a glide path to confirmation after the hearing, and her nomination had earned the praise of more than 110 former senior Justice Department officials, including former attorneys general, and dozens of Democrat and Republican state attorneys general, who praised her experience and work across party and state lines.

    Those backers described Bondi in interviews and letters previewed exclusively to Fox News Digital as an experienced and motivated prosecutor whose record has proved to be more consensus-builder than bridge-burner.

    “It is all too rare for senior Justice Department officials – much less Attorneys General – to have such a wealth of experience in the day-to-day work of keeping our communities safe,” former Justice Department officials wrote in a letter urging her confirmation.

    Bondi’s former colleagues in Florida also told Fox News Digital they expect her to bring the same playbook she used in Florida to Washington – this time, with an eye to cracking down on drug trafficking, illicit fentanyl use and the cartels responsible for smuggling the drugs across the border.

    Democrat Dave Aronberg, who challenged Bondi in her bid for Florida attorney general, told Fox News Digital in an interview that he was stunned when Bondi called him up after winning the race and asked him to be her drug czar.

    ‘UNLIKELY COALITION’: A CRIMINAL JUSTICE REFORM ADVOCATE SEES OPPORTUNITIES IN A SECOND TRUMP TERM

    US-POLITICS-CONSERVATIVES

    Former Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi speaks during the annual Conservative Political Action Conference meeting on Feb. 23, 2024, in National Harbor, Md. (MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images)

    He also praised Bondi for staring down political challenges before noting that when she took office in Florida, Bondi “received a lot of pushback” from members of the Republican Party” for certain actions, including appointing a Democrat to a top office. 

    “But she stood up to them, and she did what she thought was right, regardless of political pressure,” Aaronberg told Fox News Digital on the eve of her confirmation vote. “So that’s what gives me hope here, is that she’ll right the ship and refocus the Department of Justice on policy not politics.” 

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    In floor remarks Monday evening, Senate Judiciary Committee Chair Chuck Grassley praised Bondi’s prosecutorial experience and her time as a public servant, noting that she made history as the first female attorney general in Florida. 

    Bondi “fought against pill mills, eliminated the backlog of rape test kits and stood for law and order,” Grassley told lawmakers shortly before the Senate cloture vote, noting that Bondi “was easily reelected to a second term” as state attorney general “because she did such a great job.”

  • U.S. immigration website stops accepting applicants for Biden program in Trump crackdown

    U.S. immigration website stops accepting applicants for Biden program in Trump crackdown

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    The U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services website is no longer accepting forms needed to sponsor migrants as part of the Biden administration’s defunct parole program for Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans and Venezuelans (CHNV).

    The 2023 program, which allowed certain migrants to apply for U.S. entry and stay for up to two years, was shut down on President Donald Trump’s first day in office.

    As of August 2024, nearly 530,000 people were granted parole through the program, according to U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP).

    A group of over 100 migrants attempting to enter the US illegally rush a border wall Thursday, March 21, 2024. In the process the migrants knock down Texas National Guardsmen before they are halted  by the border wall. (James Breeden for New York Post / Mega)

    TRUMP DHS REPEALS KEY MAYORKAS MEMO LIMITING ICE AGENTS, ORDERS PAROLE REVIEW

    Requirements included having a U.S.-based supporter, passing security vetting, and meeting other criteria. 

    The “Online Request to be a Supporter and Declaration of Financial Support” form, an avenue to meet one of the main requirements, was bumped from the website, as of Wednesday night.

    The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) recently removed expedited removal restrictions and allowed Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to review migrants’ parole status – which may include changing it.

    Form

    After President Donald Trump ended of one of the Biden administration’s migrant programs, the website disabled a key form.

    TRUMP’S ICE NABS CHILD SEX OFFENDERS AMONG 530+ ILLEGAL IMMIGRANTS CAUGHT IN SINGLE DAY

    A memo obtained by Fox News Digital noted parole is a “positive exercise of enforcement discretion to which no alien is entitled” and that it should “not be regarded as an admission of the alien,” according to previous reporting.

    While the Biden administration claimed the program would expand legal pathways to citizenship and decrease illegal border crossings, Republicans contended it was an abuse of limited parole power.

    ICE HQ

    An exterior view of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency headquarters is seen July 6, 2018, in Washington, DC. U.S.  (Alex Wong/Getty Images)

    Prior to Trump’s reelection, the program was temporarily paused amid fraud claims. 

    An internal review was ordered, leading to the DHS adding enhanced vetting measures for U.S.-based supporters in August 2024.

    ICE and CBP officials have been tasked with compiling a list of instructions, policies and procedures related to parole, reviewing them, and creating a plan to phase out any that are not in accord with the statute.

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    Fox News Digital’s Adam Shaw contributed to this story.

  • U.S. economy steady as Trump takes hold

    U.S. economy steady as Trump takes hold

    The U.S. economy entered 2025 with a steady hand, according to the National Association of Business Economics, a group of the nation’s leading economists, with the chance of a prolonged slowdown falling. 

    “The odds of a recession continue to diminish according to panelists, with the downside risks largely tied to uncertainty over the implementation and timing of policy proposals from the new administration” said NABE President Emily Kolinski Morris, CBE, global chief economist, Ford Motor Company, in the group’s January Business Conditions Survey taken from Dec. 30, 2024, to Jan. 13, 2025.

    President Donald Trump, who took office a week ago, hit the ground running, rolling out a series of pro-business executive orders tied to making the U.S. more open to cryptocurrency, easing energy restrictions and freezing the hiring of federal workers as his DOGE, Department of Government Efficiency arm, assesses areas to cut waste. 

    Ticker Security Last Change Change %
    ORCL ORACLE CORP. 183.73 -2.74 -1.47%
    SFTBY SOFTBANK GROUP CORP. 33.55 +0.15 +0.45%

    Additionally, he announced a $500 billion investment from OpenAI, Softbank and Oracle to expand artificial intelligence in the U.S. He is also threatening tariffs against Canada, Mexico and China.

    Still, inflation remains a headwind. While 65% of NABE’s economists see prices stable over the next three months, 35% expect price increases, an uptick from 28% polled in October.

    The consumer price index last month rose 2.9% annually and 0.4% vs. November. Core CPI, which excludes volatile food and energy, rose 3.2% annually. Inflation is well below its 9.1% peak in July 2022 but still above the Federal Reserve’s preferred 2% goal. 

    INFLATION RISES 2.9% IN DECEMBER, IN LINE WITH EXPECTATIONS

    President Donald Trump makes a speech via video-conference during the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, on Jan. 23, 2025. (Halil Sagirkaya/Anadolu via)

    TRUMP BLASTS BOFA, REIGNITES DEBANKING CONTROVERSY

    Trump, during his remote appearance before the World Economic Forum marking his return to office, blamed the Biden administration for high inflation. 

    Over the past four years, our government racked up $8 trillion in wasteful deficit spending and inflicted nation wrecking energy restrictions, crippling regulations and hidden taxes like never before. The result is the worst inflation crisis in modern history, and sky-high interest rates for our citizens and even throughout the world, food prices and the price of almost every other thing known to mankind went through the roof,” Trump told attendees in Davos, Switzerland. He also took a jab at Fed Chair Jerome Powell. 

    I’ll demand that interest rates drop immediately. And likewise, they should be dropping all over the world. Interest rates should follow us,” he said. 

    Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell

    Fed Chairman Jerome Powell speaks during a press conference at the Federal Reserve on Dec. 18, 2024, in Washington, D.C. (Alex Wong / Getty Images)

    Policymakers are expected to leave rates unchanged at the conclusion of the two-day meeting Wednesday, according to the CME’s FedWatch Tool, which tracks the probability of rate moves. That will keep the Federal Funds Rate between 4.25%-4.50%. 

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    On Thursday, GDP for the fourth quarter is seen rising 3%, in line with the 3.1% reported in the third quarter. 

  • ‘Blatantly unconstitutional’: U.S. judge temporarily blocks Trump’s ban on birthright citizenship

    ‘Blatantly unconstitutional’: U.S. judge temporarily blocks Trump’s ban on birthright citizenship

    A federal judge in Seattle on Thursday temporarily blocked President Donald Trump’s executive order banning birthright citizenship for children of illegal immigrants, describing the action as “blatantly unconstitutional.”

    The decision by U.S. District Judge John Coughenour, a Ronald Reagan appointee, comes in response to four U.S. states — Arizona, Illinois, Oregon and Washington — who sued to block Trump’s executive order, which was signed by Trump shortly after being sworn in as president. 

    Coughenour said Thursday that the executive order banning birthright citizenship “boggles the mind,” and told the court he could not remember in his more than 40 years on the bench seeing a case so “blatantly unconstitutional.”

    TRUMP DHS REPEALS KEY MAYORKAS MEMO LIMITING ICE AGENTS, ORDERS PAROLE REVIEW 

    The 14-day restraining order granted by Coughenour will apply to the entire U.S. 

    The ruling is a blow to the new Trump administration, and comes as 22 U.S. states and immigrants rights groups have sued the Trump administration over the ban on birthright citizenship, arguing in court filings that the executive order is both unconstitutional and “unprecedented.”

    Trump’s ban is slated to come into force Feb. 19, and would impact the hundreds of thousands of children born in the U.S. annually.

    Trump’s order seeks to clarify the 14th Amendment, which states: “All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside.”

    It clarifies that those born to illegal immigrant parents, or those who were here legally but on temporary nonimmigrant visas, are not citizens by birthright.

    The U.S. is one of roughly 30 countries where birthright citizenship is applied. 

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    States who have challenged the law have argued that the 14th Amendment does in fact guarantee citizenship to persons born on U.S. soil and naturalized in the U.S. 

     This is a breaking news story, more updates to come.

  • Netflix raises U.S. subscriber prices, attributes success to ‘Squid Game,’ NFL games, Paul-Tyson fight

    Netflix raises U.S. subscriber prices, attributes success to ‘Squid Game,’ NFL games, Paul-Tyson fight

    Netflix subscribers will see a noticeable jump in their monthly subscription fees, as the streaming company revels in new viewership.

    In a letter to shareholders on Tuesday, the company announced it had increased prices across most plans in the U.S., Canada, Portugal and Argentina.

    Standard monthly memberships jumped a dollar, up to $7.99 a month, according to Gregory K. Peters, Netflix co-CEO, president and director.

    Lucas Bahdi and Armando Casamonica fight during Netflix: Jake Paul vs. Mike Tyson at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas, on Nov. 15, 2024. (Sarah Stier/Getty Images for Netflix / Getty Images)

    NETFLIX CO-CEO TED SARANDOS TO MEET WITH TRUMP

    Memberships without ads will increase more than two dollars, up to $17.99 per month, Peters said. Premium subscribers will have to shell out an extra two dollars a month, bringing the monthly fee to $24.99.

    Peters described the company’s new pricing as “highly accessible.”

    “You’ve seen us take up price across a number of markets in EMEA and APAC and LatAm over the last couple of quarters across most plans and including ads, too. And those changes have gone smoothly,” Peters said. “We certainly expect the same for these latest changes. 

    “I think it’s worth noting and reiterating that we believe that our starting price — it’s $7.99 in the U.S., $17.99 in Canada for standard with ads — is an incredible entertainment value and it’s a highly accessible entry point.”

    The new prices are already reflected on the streaming service’s website.

    Netflix logo

    The Netflix logo is seen on a TV remote controller in this illustration taken Jan. 20, 2022. (Reuters/Dado Ruvic / Reuters)

    Netflix saw a whopping 19 million new subscribers in the fourth quarter, contributing to its total 302 million subscribers globally.

    Live events, including the Jake Paul vs. Mike Tyson fight and two NFL games, contributed to the company’s recent success, according to leadership.

    The fight was the most-streamed sporting event of all time, and on Christmas Day, the platform delivered the two most-streamed NFL games in history.

    Ticker Security Last Change Change %
    NFLX NETFLIX INC. 953.99 +84.31 +9.69%

    TECH LEADERS BEZOS, ZUCKERBERG, COOK AND PICHAI LOOK FOR FACE TIME WITH TRUMP

    Ted Sarandos, co-CEO, president and director, noted the underlying economics of full-season big league sports is challenging, but if there was a way to make it work, Netflix would explore it.

    In addition, the company saw success with the second season of its original series, “Squid Game,” which garnered nearly 166 million views.

    Other top performing shows included: “The Diplomat” season 2 with 21.4 million views, “Senna” with 16.2 million views, “The Empress” season 2 with 21 million views, “Outer Banks” season 4 with 36.8 million views, “The Lincoln Lawyer” season 3 with 33.9 million views, and “Virgin River” season 6 with 27.5 million views.

    CEO of Netflix Ted Sarandos and Lee Jung-jae attend Netflix's FYSEE event for "Squid Game"

    Netflix CEO Ted Sarandos, left, and actor Lee Jung-jae attend Netflix’s FYSEE event for “Squid Game” at Raleigh Studios Hollywood in Los Angeles on June 12, 2022. (Charley Gallay/Getty Images for Netflix / Getty Images)

    Leadership noted the company only earns 6 percent of the revenue opportunity in the countries and segments it currently serves. 

    By improving and expanding its offerings, the company hopes to increase the share every year.

    “As we continue to invest in programming and deliver more value for our members, we will occasionally ask our members to pay a little more so that we can re-invest to further improve Netflix,” investors were told in the letter.

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    Revenue in the fourth quarter jumped 16% year-over-year, reaching $10.25 billion, according to company data. A $15 billion stock buyback pushed shares up 13% on Tuesday afternoon.