Trump latest: Trump signs executive order to withdraw US from UN Human Rights Council – and says Iran is too close to having nuclear weapon – Sky News

Donald Trump has signed an executive order withdrawing from the United Nations’ Human Rights Council. Shortly afterward, he issued a memorandum on Iran, saying Tehran was “too close” to a nuclear weapon. Listen to the latest Trump 100 podcast as you scroll.
Tuesday 4 February 2025 20:10, UK
Donald Trump says Palestinians have “no alternative” but to leave Gaza, but that he doesn’t necessarily support Israelis settling in the enclave.
The US president also repeated previous suggestions that he would like to see Jordan and Egypt take Palestinians from Gaza.
For context: Hundreds of thousands of Palestinians have been returning to their homes following a ceasefire agreement between Hamas and Israel.
Many of their homes have been destroyed by months of fighting. 
Trump has previously described Gaza as a “demolition site”, saying the US should “clean out that whole thing”.
More from the White House – and Donald Trump has signed a memorandum on Iran. 
The president said he was “torn” when choosing whether to sign it or not, but said Tehran was “too close” to having a nuclear weapon. 
Trump said he would hold talks with his counterpart in Tehran, but warned he’s left “instructions” that if Iran assassinated him, the US foe “would be obliterated”.
At the end of last year, officials charged a man over an alleged Iranian plot to kill Trump before the presidential election.
Donald Trump has just signed an executive order withdrawing the US from the UN Human Right Council and continue the halt of funding for the UN’s relief agency for Gaza.
The actions reinstate policies in place during the president’s first administration.
They come on the day that Trump is due to meet with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
For context: The US has long accused the UN council of bias against Israel.
The Joe Biden administration previously paused funding to the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) after reports its staff were involved in the 7 October attacks.
By Sam Coates, deputy political editor
Britain could do a slimmed-down trade deal with the United States within months, the last politician to oversee negotiations with Donald Trump’s administration over a UK-US agreement has told Sky News.
Last night, Sky News revealed that leading members of Trump’s administration believe a trade deal with the UK could be sealed in a matter of months. 
Britain was negotiating a full Free Trade Agreement with Donald Trump during his first presidency, but this was junked by his successor President Biden. 
The negotiations were overseen by then-Tory trade secretary, Anne Marie-Trevelyan, who today told Sky News that a deal could even be struck with the US even before the EU-UK Trade and Cooperation Agreement is concluded. 
Trevelyan said that about half the work on a deal had already been concluded under the Boris Johnson administration. 
“I was the trade secretary just at the end of the first Trump administration, and we had already, been moving discussions, probably about halfway there in terms of the trade negotiations,” Trevelyan said.
She added that the US can work faster than the EU on trade negotiations, and that might be concluded first. 
“I think the challenge with anything with the EU is you’re dealing with, you know, multiple countries who all have to agree,” Trevelyan added. 
“The challenge with any trade deal, which is why TCA took a long time to negotiate to the level that we got, is that everyone’s pulling a little bit differently.”
American shoppers are likely to see prices rise across Shein, Temu and Amazon Haul, analysts and industry experts have warned.
It comes as Donald Trump shut a trade loophole that has been used to ship low-value packages duty-free from China.
Both fast-fashion retailer Shein and online store Temu have grown rapidly in the US, thanks to the “de minimis” exemption which enables them to keep prices low.
“For companies like Temu and Shein this is obviously a very big deal because de minimis was one of the levers they used to be able to offer these low prices as well as ensure speed of products entering the country,” Juozas Kaziukenas, Marketplace Pulse’s chief executive said.
By Ed Conway, Economics and Data Editor
What if Britain has, almost entirely by accident, navigated itself into about the best possible position it could be in, as Donald Trump embarks on a trade war with nearly all his economic partners?
I realise this might, at first, sound a little odd. After all, when the world is facing economically-destructive measures (blanket tariffs are invariably value-destructive, in the short run at least) it’s hard to see much in the way of victories. Moreover, when it comes to Donald Trump, no one, including his own cabinet and staff, can quite predict what will happen next. Consider the roller-coaster over tariffs in the past few days alone.
Even so, the fact remains that of all the countries and regions in the world, Britain seems much less likely than most to face the kind of peremptory tariffs the president is so keen on.
Read the full story here.
More than 20,000 US employees, roughly 1% of the government workforce, have signed up for an offer to quit their jobs and continue receiving their salaries until the end of September.
An official has told Bloomberg that those numbers are increasing every day, with the Trump administration expecting a spike in resignations.
Donald Trump and Elon Musk hope the offer could cull as much as 10% of the federal workforce ahead a deadline on Thursday, Bloomberg reports, but that target could be difficult to meet.
Unions have called on members to be sceptical of the offers, which they said were not guaranteed.
Bill Gates has said Elon Musk “doesn’t appreciate” the work that the US Agency for International Development (USAID) does.
Yesterday, we brought you updates as Musk announced Trump has agreed to shut down USAID.
He said he had the “full support of the president” and added that the agency is “beyond repair”.
But Gates told our US partner network NBC News he doesn’t agree.
The White House is preparing an executive order to eliminate the Department of Education, two sources have told our US partner network NBC News.
Donald Trump cannot unilaterally abolish a federal agency without the approval of Congress.
The proposed order follows years of campaign promises from Trump to abolish the federal education department.
Trump has previously said the American society pours more than $1tn a year into public education systems and added that, instead of being at the top of the list, “we are literally right smack at the bottom”.
Read the full story here.
The US military will fly migrants to Guantanamo Bay today for the first time, officials have told Reuters, with nearly a dozen on board.
It comes after Donald Trump signed an executive order last week to open a migrant detention centre on the island of Cuba, potentially housing tens of thousands at the naval base.
Speaking before making the act official, Trump said thousands who cannot be deported to their home countries will be held at the complex.
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