
U. of I.'s new chancellor on Trump's moves
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Good Tuesday morning, Illinois. It feels like the calm before the storm.
TOP TALKER
PLAYBOOK Q&A: Charles Isbell Jr., who was approved Monday as the next chancellor of the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and vice president of the University of Illinois System, comes into the position at a critical time for higher education.
The Trump administration has zeroed in on American universities, threatening to cut federal funding and prevent international students from enrolling.
While concerning, Isbell, who has been the provost at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, says the tensions should not come as a surprise. 'We were increasingly seeing less and less support from politicians and from the government and even from industry over the last decade or so. So, this is an acceleration of where we were headed,' Isbell said in an interview with POLITICO after his approval by the U. of I. Board of Trustees. 'This is not a thing that just started in January. This is a thing that has been going back over the decades.'
The solution, he said, is to better communicate and listen to what the community at large wants from higher institutions.
'Maybe they're right,' he says of higher-ed critics. 'Maybe we aren't providing the things that they need or the things that they want. We have to listen and have that conversation with them.'
Our interview has been edited for length and clarity.
Are you approaching your position at U. of I. differently than you might have a year ago, before the Trump administration made universities such a focal point?
'We are at a critical time, but I do think it's worth stepping back a little bit and realizing that higher ed has been in a crisis of one form or another for quite a long time. At least since 2015, we were losing the support and faith of the public. We were increasingly seeing less and less support from politicians and from the government and even from industry over the last decade or so. It's a bit urgent now, more urgent than it was perhaps a year ago, but it was something that we as an industry have always needed to think about.
'We have to communicate what it is that we do with people. We have to not start at the point of, 'Well, let's just tell them what's right, and then they'll give us money and leave us alone.' No, you have to start from the place that maybe we aren't talking to them the way that we should. Maybe they're right. Maybe we aren't providing the things that they need or the things that they want. We have to listen and have that conversation.'
What message do you give to returning or prospective international students and their families?
'We value them. We appreciate what it is that they bring, not just to the country, but what they bring to the campus, and that we will support them when they are here. That is the key message.'
U. of I. would face a financial hit if the international student population dropped, given they pay full tuition. How else could it hurt the university?
'International students are a significant part of the population of the university, both the undergraduate level and the graduate level. They are a part of this community. They bring ideas, they bring experiences, they contribute to the diversity of the university. If we lose that, we lose the diversity of the student body, we lose the diversity of our faculty and our staff, and that's clearly not good. That is clearly suboptimal for everyone.'
Do you expect to work with other universities to talk to the Trump administration about some of these concerns?
'We will continue to work with other universities. Illinois has been a part of those conversations before I got here. We will continue to be a part of those conversations.'
STEM has been a priority for you. Do you worry about its future given reverberations from Washington?
'Everyone across higher ed is concerned about potential changes that will be happening over the next year through the budget. If you think about all the great things that exist now — whether technology, all kinds of things that the United States has been in the forefront of — it has come in partnership with basic research that wasn't just looking out six months, but looking out six years and six decades. We cannot afford to lose that.
'The lesson is to know that we have not always told our story, we have not always understood how fragile the ecosystem is, and that we shouldn't ever make that mistake again.'
What was your take on the hearings with the university presidents?
'I cringed. I think at the moment, it was a surprise for everyone there. They thought they were having one conversation and they were having a different conversation, perhaps the conversation we should have been having all along, and certainly the conversation we're going to have to continue to have.'
RELATED
SIU med school dean urges resistance to Trump executive orders, by Daniel Nuccio for The College Fix
THE BUZZ
BIG MOVE: Mayor Johnson loses his chief operating officer, John Roberson, to Obama Foundation — not the CTA: Roberson is joining the Obama Foundation as executive VP for the Obama Presidential Center, which is under construction in Jackson Park. Roberson is 'the most seasoned and savvy member of Mayor Brandon Johnson's administration. … Obama Foundation CEO Valerie Jarrett knows Roberson well, having served with him in the administration of former Mayor Richard M. Daley,' writes the Sun-Times' Fran Spielman.
Roberson had been considered to head the Chicago Transit Authority, but that potential appointment drew criticism from transportation advocates.
His exit from city government leaves Johnson's administration without any old-school City Hall bureaucrats among his top advisers, by the Tribune's Alice Yin, A.D. Quig and Jake Sheridan.
If you are John Roberson, Playbook would like to hear from you! Email: skapos@politico.com
WHERE'S JB
No official public events
WHERE's BRANDON
No official public events
Where's Toni
No official public events
Have a tip, suggestion, birthday, new job or a (gasp!) complaint? Email skapos@politico.com
BUSINESS OF POLITICS
— FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: Congresswoman Robin Kelly has been endorsed in her bid for the U.S. Senate by Congresswoman Lucy McBath, a Georgia Democrat and a native of Joliet. The two lawmakers have led efforts to support gun-safety measures and to oppose the gun lobby.
THE STATEWIDES
— Illinois joins lawsuit against U.S. over triggers that can make semiautomatic rifles fire faster: 'Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul said he would continue to enforce the ban on the devices through Illinois law that prohibits owning them and other devices — such as bump stocks — that can make semiautomatic rifles fire faster,' by the Sun-Times' Violet Miller.
— Gov. Pritzker prepping for House committee showdown with help from top Biden attorney Dana Remus, by the Sun-Times' Tina Sfondeles
— Judge denies Michael Madigan's motion for new trial, setting stage for high-stakes sentencing Friday, by the Tribune's Jason Meisner
— Terminally ill Lombard woman continues push for medical 'aid in dying' bill, by the Daily Herald's Alicia Fabbre
CHICAGO
— Not your grandparents' City Council: Chicago aldermen less aligned with 5th floor: 'The shift follows the demise of Chicago's infamous machine politics. It also tracks with the ascension of the aldermanic Progressive Caucus and the 'Common Sense Caucus' formed in part to oppose it, both shifting groups that bring more ideological force into debates,' by the Tribune's Jake Sheridan.
— Did Chicago cops help ICE during mass arrests? City leaders call for investigation: 'Ald. Andre Vasquez wants to investigate whether police violated the Welcoming City ordinance during an ICE operation last week. Chicago police officials said officers were on the scene to preserve public safety and did not violate the ordinance,' by the Block Club's Francia Garcia Hernandez.
— Some denounce Trump travel ban, but it's business as usual at O'Hare, by the Sun-Times' Elvia Malagón and WBEZ's Michael Puente
— Chicago cracks down on nearly 200 illegal trash pickups in first months of enforcement effort, by WTTW's Nick Blumberg
TAKING NAMES
— State Sens. Lakesia Collins and Laura Fine and state Reps. Mary Beth Canty, Terra Costa Howard and Suzanne Ness will be honored today with the Champion of Youth Award by the Illinois Collaboration on Youth during its annual member meeting in Naperville. The award is recognizing their efforts to help make liability insurance more accessible for child welfare and youth service providers. Advocate James McIntyre will also be recognized.
Reader Digest
We asked what warrants the National Guard being brought in?
Lucas Hawley: 'When the said state cannot or will not control mob acts of violence and destruction on private or public property.'
Jim Lyons: 'Jan. 6, 2021.'
Timothy Thomas: 'As U.S. law states, when it's necessary to repel invasion, suppress a rebellion or if the president is unable with the regular forces to execute the laws of the United States.'
Steve Weiss: 'Blocking freeways, burning vehicles and assaulting police officers (LAPD et al.) is a reasonable motive for bringing in the Guard.'
NEXT QUESTION: When did politics dictate how your purchase decisions?
KEEPING UP WITH THE DELEGATION
— Sens. Tammy Duckworth and Dick Durbin led 12 of their Illinois delegation members in criticizing the Trump administration's cancellation of the Digital Equity Act Competitive Grants Program, which would have provided more than $23.7 million to Illinois organizations across the state to equip households with the tools needed to use high-speed internet, according to Duckworth's team. Their letter is here.
— Durbin spoke on the Senate floor Monday to criticize the budget legislation known as the One Big Beautiful Bill Act. Durbin called it 'a big, beautiful betrayal.' Here's the video
THE NATIONAL TAKE
— RFK Jr. to fire all members of the CDC's vaccine advisory committee, by POLITICO's Sophie Gardner and Lauren Gardner
— ActBlue says GOP investigation might be a partisan violation of the Constitution, by POLITICO's Jessica Piper
— Gavin Newsom: Trump is 'unhinged,' speaking like an 'authoritarian,' by POLITICO's Melanie Mason and Christopher Cadelago
— 'A self-fulfilling prophecy': How the clash in LA could explode, by POLITICO's Katy Murphy and staff
TRANSITIONS
— Adam Collins is now chief communications officer at Reddit, the social media and news aggregation website. He was chief communications and corporate affairs officer at Molson Coors Beverage Company. Politicos know him for his work leading various political communications operations. He was communications director for Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel, communications director for the Chicago Police Department and press secretary for Wisconsin Gov. Jim Doyle, among others.
— Chelsea Blink is now legislative director for Rep. Lauren Underwood. She was director of farm animal legislation at the ASPCA.
— David Shapiro has been named executive director of the MacArthur Justice Center, a civil rights law firm with offices in Chicago, New Orleans, St. Louis, Oxford and D.C. He starts Aug. 1. He's currently executive director of the Chicago Lawyer's Committee.
EVENTS
— Thursday: 'The Calumet River and Its Toxic Islands' is the subject of a tour. Details here
— Friday: 'The State of the Media' is the subject of a panel at the Rainbow Push 'People's Conference.' Details here
— June 17: Ald. Nicole Lee will be feted at a fundraiser. Details here
— July 10: The 47th Ward Democrats are having a fundraiser by the river. Details here
TRIVIA
MONDAY's ANSWER: Congrats to Jim Nowlan for correctly answering that the late former state Rep. Webber Borchers took on the Chief Illiniwek role when he was a University of Illinois student.
TODAY's QUESTION: Who were the two Illinoisans who served as personal secretaries to President Abraham Lincoln? Email skapos@politico.com
HAPPY BIRTHDAY
Former first kid Sasha Obama, Circuit Court Judge Dominique Ross, former state Sen. Jim Oberweis, former Chicago Public Schools CEO Paul Vallas, Bowman Consulting's Brian McPartlin, political consultant Eli Brottman, Cook County Commission on Human Rights Chair Sufyan Sohel, AJ Capital Partners HR Manager Marissa Schanbacher, HUD nominee Ben DeMarzo and Sun-Times columnist Neil Steinberg
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New York Post
28 minutes ago
- New York Post
Miranda Devine: Trump's ‘spectacular' Iran strike could carve his place in history as most courageous leader since Ronald Reagan
What an impressive sight it was Sunday, when the futuristic B-2 stealth bombers sliced through the powder-blue Missouri sky on their triumphant return to home base in the American heartland after dropping their Massive Ordnance Penetrator bombs on Iran's underground nuclear sites. The strikes were 'a spectacular military success,' President Trump told the world Saturday night, after emerging from the Situation Room. 'Iran's key nuclear enrichment facilities have been completely and totally obliterated. Iran, the bully of the Middle East, must now make peace,' he said. Advertisement While Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Dan 'Razing' Caine said Sunday it was 'way too early' to know the full extent of damage at Iran's Fordow uranium-enrichment complex, satellite images show several large holes and a layer of gray-blue ash where all 14 massive 'bunker buster' bombs, each weighing 30,000 pounds, hit their target Saturday night in Operation Midnight Hammer. The strikes were also a spectacular political calculation by the president who ran on no new wars, and managed to keep a poker face all week as he was given advice by all and sundry. 'Unconventional' He made the right decision, and it appears to have been executed flawlessly. A limited strike, in and out. Iran's nuclear capability has been eliminated or at least severely degraded. No regime change. If the nuclear threat from Iran is indeed neutralized, leading to the extension of the Abraham Accords and peace in the Middle East, Trump will have achieved what countless predecessors failed to do. Advertisement If he pulls it off, without embroiling us in a larger war, he will have carved his role in history as the most courageous and consequential leader since Ronald Reagan. The man who rose from the stage in Butler, blood pouring down his face, raised his fist in the air and said, 'Fight, Fight Fight,' is exactly who you want as commander in chief at a time like this, especially as it's not his first rodeo. Photographs released by the White House show a serious-faced Trump inside the Situation Room Saturday night, wearing his trademark suit and red tie, not cosplaying a flyboy as his more casually-attired predecessors liked to do. His only bow to informality was a red MAGA hat with '45-47' on the side, representing his bifurcated presidential terms and the relentless grit it took to come back from the political dead. Advertisement So much for 'TACO Don.' He outfoxed everyone. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, just after emerging from the Situation Room last week where he watched the president deal with the complexities of the Iran-Israel war, likened Trump to Winston Churchill. 'He has a strategy and it's not a conventional strategy, but what conventional person has ever done great things?' said Bessent, in an interview for my new podcast Pod Force One. 'Does anybody think that Winston Churchill was conventional? '[Trump is] also so flexible in terms of the way he looks at things,' Bessent said. 'We've just spent basically the past 24 hours in the Situation Room over the Iran-Israel conflict, and I can tell you that the American people should know, and the American troops should know, that Donald Trump is doing an incredible job looking after their interests in what could turn, without someone like him, could turn into a widespread conflict that US soldiers and interests could get sucked into.' New team Advertisement In one fell swoop, Trump also restored the prestige of the US military, which had plummeted under Joe Biden. Most welcome was the upgrade from Gen. Mark 'Thoroughly Modern' Milley of 'white rage' fame, whom Biden had to give a preemptive pardon on his way out the door, presumably for his Trump-deranged outbursts to the Chinese. In Milley's place we now have 'Razing Caine,' once a daring F-16 pilot, and as cool and contained a general as you could find. 'This mission demonstrates the unmatched reach, coordination, and capability of the United States military,' he told reporters in a Sunday news conference alongside Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, another veteran whose rapport with 'war fighters' has helped revive recruitment to record levels. 'In just a matter of weeks, this went from strategic planning to global execution,' said Caine. 'As the president clearly said last night, no other military in the world could have done this.' Every week, Post columnist Miranda Devine sits down for exclusive and candid conversations with the most influential disruptors in Washington. Subscribe here! What a contrast to the previous administration. Under Biden, our military was humiliated. Preposterous wokery and weak leadership led to a breakdown in discipline embodied in online displays of perverts in uniform dolled up in kinky dog masks and bondage gear. Advertisement Under Biden, incompetence was the order of the day, from the disastrous withdrawal from Afghanistan, leaving behind $7 billion of equipment, to the failure to bring our astronauts home from the International Space Station, to the $230 million Gaza pier debacle which resulted in the death of one young soldier and dozens of troops injured while delivering minimal aid. The morale and reputation of our armed forces was severely depleted, making a mockery of Biden's frequent refrain' God bless our troops.' Under Biden, Obama's benighted Iran deal that Trump axed in his first term was reanimated. Trump 1.0 left Iran on its knees, unable to fund its proxies to attack Israel. Biden, in his wisdom, empowered and enriched Iran, reappointing Robert Malley, Antony Blinken's childhood friend from their prestigious Parisienne école, as Iran envoy. Malley was then suspended without pay pending an FBI investigation into an Iranian influence ring and his 'mishandling' of classified information. Naturally, the Ivy League came to his rescue, giving him gigs at Yale and Princeton. That is Biden's legacy. Advertisement But instead of thanking Trump for saving the world from a nuclear Iran, Democrats are pretending that he did something unconstitutional, and are whining because he didn't inform Democrat leaders in Congress before the top-secret operation. They only have themselves to blame for proving to be so unreliable with secrets in the past. Hello, Schifty Schiff. Dems were fine with Obama bombing Libya, Syria and Pakistan an estimated 13,000 times, killing thousands of people, without asking Congress for permission. Remember then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton cackling over Libyan leader Moammar Khadafy's gruesome end when he was sodomized and brutalized to death on camera as she watched lasciviously from afar: 'We came, we saw, he died,' she said. Strong stance Advertisement Democrats should sit this one out. Despite their threats to impeach him, Trump has seized the moral authority and no doubt his already buoyant approval ratings will soar. That's the political dividend of strong leadership. What GOP senator could refuse to pass Trump's beloved Big Beautiful Bill now? And as with everything Trump does, the visuals were impeccable. The icing on the cake was his brand new 100-foot flagpole out the front of the White House, with Old Glory waving languidly in the night breeze as the B-2s worked their magic half a world away. Advertisement You're paying for radical Zoh New York, we have a problem. How could a candidate as toxic and radical as Zohran Mamdani be so close to victory in Tuesday's Democratic mayoral primary? An antisemitic socialist who is running to defund the police and raise more taxes for illegal migrants should be a political impossibility, yet he has surged to second place behind Andrew Cuomo in the polls. Attorney Denise Cohen, who writes a substack as 'Rational New Yorker,' has figured out this dangerous man 'could attain the highest office in NYC using public money that most of us didn't approve through a slush fund that we unwittingly paid for.' Mamdani has the highest social media engagement of all mayoral candidates with almost 6 million likes on TikTok, and has created the false appearance of a vibrant grassroots campaign with tens of thousands of small dollar donors, she writes. But he didn't amass a $8.4 million war chest from grassroots donations. Eighty percent of it came from taxpayers thanks to a New York campaign finance law in which the New York City Campaign Finance Board matches small donations by $8 for every $1 raised. If Mamdani wins, you and I probably paid for his campaign.


Los Angeles Times
29 minutes ago
- Los Angeles Times
Trump says he's open to ‘regime change' in Iran, even as his aides insist otherwise
WASHINGTON — President Trump on Sunday called into question the future of Iran's ruling theocracy after a surprise attack on three of the country's nuclear sites, seemingly contradicting his administration's calls to resume negotiations and avoid an escalation in fighting. 'It's not politically correct to use the term, 'Regime Change,' but if the current Iranian Regime is unable to MAKE IRAN GREAT AGAIN, why wouldn't there be a Regime change???' Trump posted on social media. 'MIGA!!!' The post on his social media platform marked a stark reversal from Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth's Sunday morning news conference that detailed the aerial bombing of Iran early Sunday. 'This mission was not and has not been about regime change,' Hegseth said. The administration has made clear it wants Iran to stop any development of nuclear weapons, and Secretary of State Marco Rubio warned on Fox News' 'Sunday Morning Futures' that any retaliation against the U.S. or a rush toward building a nuclear weapon would 'put the regime at risk.' But beyond that, the world is awash in uncertainty at a fragile moment that could decide whether parts of the globe tip into war or find a way to salvage a relative peace. Trump's message to Iran's leadership comes as the U.S. has warned Iran against retaliating for the bombardment targeting the heart of a nuclear program that it spent decades developing. The Trump administration has made a series of intimidating statements even as it has called for a restart of negotiations, making it hard to get a read on whether the U.S. president is simply taunting an adversary or using inflammatory words that could further widen the war between Israel and Iran that began with Israeli attacks on June 13. Until Trump's post Sunday afternoon, the coordinated messaging by his vice president, Pentagon chief, top military advisor and secretary of State suggested a confidence that any fallout would be manageable and that Iran's lack of military capabilities would ultimately force it back to the bargaining table. Hegseth had said that America 'does not seek war' with Iran, while Vice President JD Vance said the strikes had given Tehran the possibility of returning to negotiate with Washington. But the unfolding situation is not entirely under Washington's control, as Tehran has a series of levers to respond to the aerial bombings that could intensify the conflict in the Middle East with possible global repercussions. Iran can block oil being shipped through the Strait of Hormuz, attack U.S. bases in the region, engage in cyberattacks or accelerate its nuclear program — which might seem more of a necessity after the U.S. strikes. All of that raises the question of whether the U.S. bombing will open up a more brutal phase of fighting or revive negotiations out of an abundance of caution. In the U.S., the attack quickly spilled over into domestic politics, with Trump spending part of his Sunday going after his critics in Congress. He used a social media post to lambaste Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.), a stalwart Trump supporter who had objected to the president taking military action without specific congressional approval. 'We had a spectacular military success yesterday, taking the 'bomb' right out of their hands (and they would use it if they could!)' Trump wrote. Boak and Pesoli write for the Associated Press.
Yahoo
34 minutes ago
- Yahoo
It sounds sick, but Iran hostilities may be good for stocks
It sounds sick, but Iran hostilities may be good for stocks originally appeared on TheStreet. So, President Trump ordered B-2 bombers to drop bunker-busting bombs on three Iranian nuclear facilities late Saturday. He pronounced the result "a spectacular success," with Iran's nuclear enrichment facilities "completely and totally obliterated." There will be lots of media coverage Sunday and beyond on whether the operation worked and whether the United States will be dragged into a third war in the Middle East since 1991. 💵💰💰💵 A question for investors, however, is this: How will stocks react?There are some unknowns. There's been no verification that Iran's nuclear enrichment facilities are, in fact, totally obliterated. It's not clear if Iran will try to cut a deal to stop the Israeli and U.S. bombing or opt somehow to play a long game of defending itself with missile shots at Israel and U.S. military bases in the Middle East. Nonetheless, there's a good chance Wall Street will seize on the attacks as a prime stock-buying opportunity. That's what happened in 2003's Second Gulf War when U.S.-led forces invaded Iraq and toppled the dictatorial regime of Saddam started to tumble in late January 2003 as another war against Iraq became inevitable. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index was down as much as 9% for the year on March 11. But then investors started to believe the invasion would go well, and the S&P 500 started to recover. Indeed, when Baghdad fell on April 9, 2003, the index had recovered all the early losses and was up 8.2% from the March low. And stocks never looked back. The S&P 500 finished up 26.4% in 2023. The gain from the March 2003 low to year-end: 38%. One will be able to see how investors and markets are looking at the conflict starting at 6 p.m. ET Sunday. That's when futures trading in the S&P 500, the Dow Jones industrials and the Nasdaq-100 starts. Gains like 2003 might not happen. Iran was lobbing missiles at the Israeli cities of Tel Aviv and Haifa into Sunday. And, so far, there's no hint that Iran's leadership wants a cease fire. A prolonged fight might be bad for stocks. Iran has missiles and drones to deploy. It could block off Strait of Hormuz, through which 25% of the world's crude oil is shipped. Blocking the strait would send global oil prices sharply higher and cause havoc for the global economy. in fact, oil prices already have reacted. As tensions have grown between Israel and Iran (and now the United States), crude oil has climbed 29.3% to $73.84 per 42-gallon barrel from a May 5 closing low. U.S. gasoline prices have risen, too, about 4% or so, to about $3.20 a gallon, according to companies would profit. In fact, stocks in the S&P 500's Energy Sector are up 9.2% so far in June, the best performance by any of the 11 S&P 500 sectors. Oil-and-gas producer APA Corp. () , the sector leader is up 15.8% over the last month, according to data. Exxon Mobil () has jumped 9.3%; Chevron () is has risen almost 9%. More Experts Analyst makes bold call on stocks, bonds, and gold TheStreet Stocks & Markets Podcast #8: Common Sense Investing With David Miller Veteran fund manager sends dire message on stocks Theoretically, the first-quarter earnings seasons is done, but some of the late stragglers due this week are important. These include: FedEx () , after Tuesday's close. FedEx shares have struggled, but there is hope. The delivery giant is doing business again with () , and its business overall is growing again. But shares are off nearly 20% this year because of tariff worries. Earnings are estimated to rise 8.9% from a year ago to $5.89 a share. Revenue will be off slightly at $21.8 billion. Cruise-line giant Carnival Corp. () , before Tuesday's open. Between August 2024 and Jan. 30, the shares doubled to $28.49 because bookings were beyond terrific. Then, the shares fell 49%, thanks to the Trump tariff plan and the mini-stock panic. Carnival is back to $23.77. The quarterly revenue estimate of $6.2 billion is up 7.3% from a year ago. Earnings of 24 cents a share would be up 118%. Chip maker Micron Technology () shares are up 47% this year, and Wall Street likes — no, loves — the stock, whose chips have carved out a lucrative spot in artificial intelligence. In fact, the shares are already ahead of one analyst's one-year price target. The revenue estimate is $8.8 billion, up nearly 30% from a year ago. Earnings of $1.59 a share would be up 156%. Nike () is having a challenging year. The shares are down 21% this year, third-worst among the Dow Jones industrial stocks. True, it's selling athletic wear and shoes again on but it is extremely vulnerable to the Trump tariff hikes. Barrons says Nike's factories in Vietnam, Indonesia and China manufacture 50%, 27% and 18% of all its footwear. (Yes, that adds up to 95% of production.) The Nike revenue estimate: $10.7 billion, down 15.1% from a year ago. Earnings of 12 cents would be down 88%.It sounds sick, but Iran hostilities may be good for stocks first appeared on TheStreet on Jun 22, 2025 This story was originally reported by TheStreet on Jun 22, 2025, where it first appeared. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data