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White House says oil deal with Saudi Arabia unlikely during Biden visit

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White House national security advisor Jake Sullivan has lowered expectations that President Biden will leave Saudi Arabia with a deal to increase oil production, saying such an agreement could take weeks.

Speaking Friday with reporters aboard Air Force One as Mr. Biden headed to the Saudi kingdom, Mr. Sullivan conceded that an immediate oil deal is unlikely.

“I don’t think you should expect a particular announcement here bilaterally because we believe any further action taken to ensure there is sufficient energy to protect the health of the global economy will be done in the context of OPEC+,” Mr. Sullivan said.

Mr. Sullivan said the progress from Mr. Biden’s meeting with the Saudi rulers “will be measured over the course of weeks.”

“That is our plan going in, that is our plan on this plane, that will be our plan coming out,” he said of the meeting.

While in Saudi Arabia, Mr. Biden is holding a bilateral meeting with Saudi King Salman and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, who is the kingdom’s de facto ruler. He will press the Saudi leaders to pump new crude supplies into the world oil market to help curb soaring prices that sent gas prices north of $5 a gallon in the U.S.

However, it is unclear whether Saudi Arabia can increase production quickly enough to curb rising gas prices, despite holding the world’s largest oil reserves.

Although Mr. Biden has insisted the meeting with Saudi leaders is about enhancing security and stability in the Middle East, Mr. Sullivan acknowledged the president will push to ramp up oil production.

“We will discuss energy security at this meeting,” Mr. Sullivan said. “The president discusses it when he’s in Europe, when he’s in Asia and he certainly will be discussing it here in the Middle East and here in Saudi Arabia.”

OPEC+ last month announced that members of the oil cartel agreed to a larger-than-expected hike in production. The cartel agreed to produce 648,000 barrels a day in July and August, rather than the 400,000 barrels a day that members initially planned to produce.

But they have also failed to meet that quota this month, raising questions about whether OPEC+ has the oil capacity to meet demand.

White House mum on whether Biden will raise Khashoggi killing at Saudi summit

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The White House won’t say whether President Biden will raise the killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi in his upcoming meeting with Saudi leaders on Friday.

Mr. Biden is traveling from Israel to Saudi Arabia for a meeting Friday that will include Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, who was implicated in the killing of Khashoggi, who was a U.S.-based dissident journalist and critic of the kingdom’s rulers.

Mr. Biden has faced pressure to take a tough stance with Saudi leaders over human rights. He made a campaign promise to render the kingdom a “pariah” state over Mr. Khashoggi’s killing.

White House aides now will not say whether the president will raise the issue directly.

“He doesn’t describe the details of what he is going to raise in meetings particularly before he’s had them,” National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan told reporters aboard Air Force One en route to Saudi Arabia.

Mr. Biden was pressed on the matter Thursday in a joint press conference with Israeli Prime Minister Yair Lapid and stopped short of committing to hold the Crown Prince’s feet to the fire.

“My views on Khashoggi have been absolutely, positively clear,” Mr. Biden said. “I have never been quiet about talking about human rights.”

Mr. Sullivan referred to Mr. Biden’s statement again on Friday.

“He always raises issues of human rights, and this will be no different,” Mr. Sullivan said. “What he will stand behind and send a very clear message on, and did yesterday, is the proposition that fundamental human rights are going to be on the agenda. He is going to raise them.”

He said that while the president intends to be straightforward in his meeting with Saudi leaders, he will not preview his specific remarks to the press.

“The president believes very strongly that his ability to be effective as a leader, and his ability to engage effectively diplomatically, depends on his ability to be able to have direct diplomacy without playing out all of these issues in the press,” Mr. Sullivan said.

Canada resuming mandatory random COVID testing for international travelers

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The Canadian government is resuming its random COVID-19 testing program for international travelers starting Tuesday. The random tests had been suspended last month at the urging of airport authorities on account of long delays.

Foreign flyers arriving in Calgary, Montreal, Toronto and Vancouver will once again be subject to random testing if they are fully vaccinated. Visitors considered not fully vaccinated receive a COVID-19 test automatically. People selected for the program must take a COVID-19 test within one day of their arrival in Canada.

The Canadian Tourism Roundtable denounced the decision, writing, “As our industry works with government, agencies and partners to combat wait times and delays, this announcement marks a step backward,” according to Canadian public broadcaster CBC News.

The Canadian Conservative Party joined in the criticism, saying in a statement, “More vindictive COVID theatre directed by [Prime Minister] Justin Trudeau will only serve to further discourage international travellers,” as reported by CBC News.

In advance of the move, the Canadian government has heeded some advice from airport authorities. Examinations have been moved off-site, and travelers can pre-book virtual self-swab appointments before entering Canada.

For its part, the government is gung-ho about bringing back the tests. In a press release, Canadian Transport Minister Omar Alghabra noted that this “marks an important step in our progress to streamline testing processes outside our airports while preventing the further spread of COVID-19,” CBC News reported.

For more information, visit The Washington Times COVID-19 resource page.

Biden announces $100M in U.S. aid for Palestinian hospitals, restoring aid cut under Trump

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President Biden on Friday announced $100 million in U.S. assistance for East Jerusalem hospitals that treat Palestinians, as his administration moves to restore much of the aid for Palestinians that former President Trump had ended.

Speaking at August Victoria Hospital in East Jerusalem, Mr. Biden said that Palestinians and Israelis “deserve equal measure of freedom, security, prosperity, and dignity,” adding that “access to health care when you need it is essential to living a life of dignity for all of us.”

“The U.S. will continue to work with Palestinian leadership and the government of Israel and all our international partners to ensure that East Jerusalem’s hospital network remains sustainable and available, and is able to provide high-quality health care the Palestinian people deserve,” Mr. Biden said.

“These hospitals are the backbone of the Palestinian health care system,” he said.

The August Victoria Hospital provides advanced medical care, including treatment for cancer patients and pediatric kidney dialysis to Palestinians in the occupied West Bank and Gaza.

It is operated by the Lutheran World Federation and was in severe debt at the end of 2021, according to a letter the hospital sent to U.S. lawmakers in May. Much of that debt is because the Palestinian Authority has struggled financially.


SEE ALSO: In West Bank, Biden embraces ‘two states for two peoples’


The aid must still be approved by the U.S. Congress and will be paid out over several years, the White House said. It is on top of an extra $201 million the United Nations provides to Palestinian refugees.

In 2018, Mr. Trump slashed $25 million in aid that the U.S. was providing to hospitals that were treating Palestinians. It was part of his decision to suspend much of the overall aid the U.S. doled out to Palestine. 

Witnesses testify at trial for Griner’s character

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KHIMKI, Russia — Brittney Griner’s drug possession trial resumed Thursday with the head of the Russian club she plays for in the offseason and a teammate from that squad testifying in support of her character and what the WNBA star has meant for women’s basketball in the country.

Griner, who pleaded guilty last week, did not testify as expected at the third day of the trial. She has been detained in Russia since February, and the U.S. government is under pressure at home to do more to secure her freedom. Her guilty plea could be an effort to expedite the court proceedings so any negotiations about a prisoner exchange could move forward.

Griner was arrested at the Russian capital’s Sheremetyevo Airport when customs officials said they found vape canisters with cannabis oil in her luggage. She acknowledged in court that she possessed the canisters, but said she had no criminal intent and said their presence in her luggage was due to hasty packing. She is facing up to 10 years in prison.

In Russia’s judicial system, admitting guilt doesn’t automatically end a trial

Most journalists were denied access to Thursday’s session, but the director of UMMC Ekaterinburg, for which she plays during the WNBA offseason, told reporters afterward that he testified as a character witness.

“Our task today was to tell the court about her characteristics as an athlete, as a person — tell about how she played a big role in the success of the Ekaterinburg club and Russian women’s basketball as a whole,” club director Maxim Rybakov.

“Today is the first day when we have seen our basketball player since February. Thank God, she feels well, looks good,” Rybakov said outside the courthouse in the Moscow suburb of Khimki, where the airport is located.

Player Evgenia Belyakova said she testified that “Brittney has always been a very good teammate, so my role here is just to be with her, to support her.”

“We miss her very much, we miss her energy,” Belyakova added. “I was very happy to see her, and I hope this trial will be over soon and with a positive outcome.”

Also in court were Elizabeth Rood, charge d’affaires of the U.S. Embassy in Moscow, and other consular officials, and they were able to speak to Griner, who told them she appreciated their presence, the U.S. State Department said.

The trial’s next session is set for Friday.

Griner is one of the most prominent female athletes in the U.S., a standout for the Phoenix Mercury and a two-time Olympic gold medalist.

U.S. President Joe Biden and Secretary of State Antony Blinken have said they were doing all they could to win her release, as well as that of other Americans the U.S. considers “wrongly detained” by Russia, including former Marine Paul Whelan.

Washington may have little leverage with Moscow, though, because of strong animosity over its military operation in Ukraine.

Russian media have speculated that Griner could be swapped for Russian arms trader Viktor Bout, nicknamed “the Merchant of Death,” who is serving a 25-year sentence in the U.S. after being convicted of conspiracy to kill U.S. citizens and providing aid to a terrorist organization.

Russia has agitated for Bout’s release for years. But the wide discrepancy in the seriousness of their cases could make such a trade unpalatable to Washington. Others have suggested that Griner could be traded along with Whelan, who is serving 16 years in Russia on an espionage conviction that the U.S. has described as a setup.

The State Department’s designation of Griner as wrongfully detained moves her case under the supervision of its special presidential envoy for hostage affairs, effectively the government’s chief hostage negotiator. The classification has irritated Russia.

Asked about the possibility of Griner being swapped for a Russian jailed in the U.S., Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov, the senior Russian diplomat, has noted that until her trial is over “there are no formal or procedural reasons to talk about any further steps.”

Ryabkov warned that U.S. criticism, including the description of Griner as wrongfully detained and dismissive comments about the Russian judicial system, “makes it difficult to engage in detailed discussion of any possible exchanges.”

Griner’s detention has been authorized through Dec. 20, suggesting the trial could last months. Griner’s lawyers, however, said they expect it to conclude around the beginning of August.

Copyright © 2022 The Washington Times, LLC.

LOVERRO: Greatest players list omissions just latest of Commanders’ embarrassments

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You can certainly apply one of Loverro’s rules when it comes to the business of the Washington Commanders:

“When things look bad from the outside, they are usually much worse on the inside.”

In fact, it may be the team motto when it comes to this organization, which can’t even get a list of its own players right.

The latest Commanders embarrassment (they really should publish one of those 365-day-a-year calendars — one blunder a day) is the rollout of their 90 Greatest franchise players list as part of their celebration of the 90th year of the team, going back to 1932 in Boston.

They did this 10 years ago for the 80 Greatest Redskins. Now they want to add 10 more to reach 90. If Dan Snyder owns the team for much longer, they may have to start subtracting players, or simply take the word “Greatest” out of the promotion.

The list had several misspellings, biographical errors, photo errors for some already on the list and others under consideration — and conspicuously left off at least one name that was a no-brainer. Trent Williams was the greatest player on this team for the 10 seasons he was in Washington — a seven-time Pro Bowler who was acknowledged as one of the best offensive tackles in the game. 

Just not good enough to be one of the 10 latest and greatest players for this franchise.

Maybe the next time they embark on a historical promotion, they might want to consult Snyder’s favorite book — “Hail Victory: An Oral History of the Washington Redskins.”

About a year after my book was published in 2006, I got an email from Snyder’s henchman, Karl Swanson, with the title of the book in the header. I thought for sure I was getting sued for something because, well, it was Dan Snyder.

It turns out that Snyder read the book, liked it, and wanted to send me about a dozen copies to autograph, which I did.

If those in charge today had read their boss’ favorite book, they might have managed to accomplish this latest promotion without it blowing up in their face — and maybe actually exhibit a little soul instead of a lack of heart. Soul? My contribution to the 90 greatest players list — Otis Wonsley.

Wonsley played for Washington from 1981 to 1985. He is one of the most valuable special teams player in franchise history. He was the one that led the way for John Riggins to make that historic Super Bowl XVII run that was voted the greatest moment in franchise history.

He was also one of Joe Gibbs’ favorite players. “People will ask me, ‘Who are the players you remember the most, what’s the one or two players?’” Gibbs said in an interview for my book. “I can’t do that because when they me who were the great players, I start off with Otis Wonsley, Greg Williams, Pete Cronin, and they’ll go, ‘Who?’ Those are the special teams guys that I remember, probably more so than the stars.”

Special teams have often been the soul of this franchise, from the George Allen years to Gibbs.

Wonsley is not on the list for consideration. 

They did add Williams, after being roasted by the team’s focus group (it’s a stretch to call them a fan base anymore) along with Robert Griffin III, to the amended list, and no matter how they spin it, Williams was likely initially left off because of the bitter fight he had with the team over his contract and accusing them of mishandling his cancer diagnosis.

The Commanders did not respond to a request for comment. 

The only other explanation would be a remarkable level of incompetence. I’m willing to entertain that, based on the series of miscues that have emerged from this organization — the shameful Sean Taylor tribute last season, the new name rollout fiasco, the Jack Del Rio Twitter catastrophe among them — that this could possibly be a simple case of ineptitude.

That doesn’t make it any better.

This franchise can’t afford to make these kind of public mistakes. Anything that comes out of that building should be checked, double-checked and then reviewed again — out of fear of failure, if for no other reason.

There should an announcement in that building every morning, like they did in school, about somehow getting through the day without embarrassing the organization. They should have one of those boards upon entering the building that they used to have at factories — how many days without an accident. Except for the Commanders, it would say how many days without a public shaming — not counting the owner, of course, who is beyond control.

The rest of it, though, falls at the feet of team president Jason Wright, whose only accomplishment still appears to be he is not Bruce Allen.

The inability to control something as simple as a list of your own players speaks to what likely happens on the inside. If you can’t get the small things right, how can you possibly do the big things — like changing the culture of an organization?

Hear Thom Loverro on The Kevin Sheehan Show podcast.

Abortion access coordinated across Illinois-Wisconsin line

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CHICAGO (AP) — Planned Parenthood of Illinois is combining forces with its Wisconsin counterpart to help patients travel to get abortions following the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade, leaders at the reproductive health centers announced Thursday.

Abortion remains legal in Illinois, but doctors in Wisconsin halted the procedure while courts determine whether the state’s 1849 law banning most abortions stands.

Illinois centers have seen a tenfold increase in patients since the U.S. Supreme Court stripped away women’s constitutional protections for abortion on June 24, Planned Parenthood of Illinois president and CEO Jennifer Welch said.

“Illinois is now an oasis for care as millions of patients are stranded in a vast abortion desert,” Welch said.

A big change for Planned Parenthood is an enhanced patient navigation team that will organize transit to Illinois for abortions.

“Transportation is the number one need that we see at this point,” said Tanya Atkinson, Planned Parenthood of Wisconsin president and CEO. “Whether people need transportation support for a drive, or for a bus ticket or a train ticket, whatever it is really, we work to make that available to them.”

In 2020, Planned Parenthood opened a new clinic in Waukegan, Illinois, just south of the Wisconsin border.

“We expected that Wisconsin would cease access to abortion care as soon as Roe fell,” Welch said.

The organizations in Illinois and Wisconsin have always worked together, but the new partnership is unique in its scale and intensity, Welch said. Wisconsin medical professionals also are getting licensed in Illinois in record numbers so they can provide care for the rising tide of patients traveling to the southern neighbor.

“Providers didn’t have to get cross-licensed in such high numbers before,” she said.

Dr. Allison Linton is a Wisconsin provider who became licensed in Illinois and will commute to deliver abortion care to patients.

“It’s terrifying for them to figure out how to access the health care that they need,” she said.

Illinois Right to Life condemned the Planned Parenthood partnership, calling for more “life-affirming options to women facing unplanned pregnancies.”

“It’s no surprise that Planned Parenthood of Wisconsin and Illinois are partnering to bring more women to Illinois so the abortion giant can profit from the deaths of their children,” the organization said in a statement.

Copyright © 2022 The Washington Times, LLC.

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2nd baby for Khloe Kardashian, Tristan Thompson amid scandal

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LOS ANGELES — Khloe Kardashian and Tristan Thompson have conceived a sibling for their 4-year-old daughter via surrogate, but don’t count on a reunion for mom and dad.

“We can confirm True will have a sibling who was conceived in November. Khloe is incredibly grateful to the extraordinary surrogate for such a beautiful blessing. We’d like to ask for kindness and privacy so that Khloe can focus on her family,” a representative for Kardashian said Thursday in a statement.

The 38-year-old reality star and Good American clothing brand co-founder started dating the Chicago Bulls player in 2016 and they’ve had a rollercoaster relationship ever since. In December, it was revealed that Thompson was having a baby with fitness model Maralee Nichols, who he’d slept with around his 30th birthday in March 2021.

Nichols filed a paternity lawsuit against Thompson last year. The baby, a boy, is now 7 months old. Thompson, 31, is also the father of a 5-year-old son he had with ex Jordan Craig.

Copyright © 2022 The Washington Times, LLC.

Long lines are back at US food banks as inflation hits high

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PHOENIX — Long lines are back at food banks around the U.S. as working Americans overwhelmed by inflation turn to handouts to help feed their families.

With gas prices soaring along with grocery costs, many people are seeking charitable food for the first time, and more are arriving on foot.

Inflation in the U.S. is at a 40-year high and gas prices have been surging since April 2020, with the average cost nationwide briefly hitting $5 a gallon in June. Rapidly rising rents and an end to federal COVID-19 relief have also taken a financial toll.

The food banks, which had started to see some relief as people returned to work after pandemic shutdowns, are struggling to meet the latest need even as federal programs provide less food to distribute, grocery store donations wane and cash gifts don’t go nearly as far.

Tomasina John was among hundreds of families lined up in several lanes of cars that went around the block one recent day outside St. Mary’s Food Bank in Phoenix. John said her family had never visited a food bank before because her husband had easily supported her and their four children with his construction work.

“But it’s really impossible to get by now without some help,” said John, who traveled with a neighbor to share gas costs as they idled under a scorching desert sun. “The prices are way too high.”


PHOTOS: Long lines are back at US food banks as inflation hits high


Jesus Pascual was also in the queue.

“It’s a real struggle,” said Pascual, a janitor who estimated he spends several hundred dollars a month on groceries for him, his wife and their five children aged 11 to 19.

The same scene is repeated across the nation, where food bank workers predict a rough summer keeping ahead of demand.

The surge in food prices comes after state governments ended COVID-19 disaster declarations that temporarily allowed increased benefits under SNAP, the federal food stamp program covering some 40 million Americans .

“It does not look like it’s going to get better overnight,” said Katie Fitzgerald, president and chief operating officer for the national food bank network Feeding America. “Demand is really making the supply challenges complex.”

Charitable food distribution has remained far above amounts given away before the coronavirus pandemic, even though demand tapered off somewhat late last year.

Feeding America officials say second quarter data won’t be ready until August, but they are hearing anecdotally from food banks nationwide that demand is soaring.

The Phoenix food bank’s main distribution center doled out food packages to 4,271 families during the third week in June, a 78% increase over the 2,396 families served during the same week last year, said St. Mary’s spokesman Jerry Brown.

More than 900 families line up at the distribution center every weekday for an emergency government food box stuffed with goods such as canned beans, peanut butter and rice, said Brown. St. Mary’s adds products purchased with cash donations, as well as food provided by local supermarkets like bread, carrots and pork chops for a combined package worth about $75.

Distribution by the Alameda County Community Food Bank in Northern California has ticked up since hitting a pandemic low at the beginning of this year, increasing from 890 households served on the third Friday in January to 1,410 households on the third Friday in June, said marketing director Michael Altfest.

At the Houston Food Bank, the largest food bank in the U.S. where food distribution levels earlier in the pandemic briefly peaked at a staggering 1 million pounds a day, an average of 610,000 pounds is now being given out daily.

That’s up from about 500,000 pounds a day before the pandemic, said spokeswoman Paula Murphy said.

Murphy said cash donations have not eased, but inflation ensures they don’t go as far.

Food bank executives said the sudden surge in demand caught them off guard.

“Last year, we had expected a decrease in demand for 2022 because the economy had been doing so well,” said Michael Flood, CEO for the Los Angeles Regional Food Bank. “This issue with inflation came on pretty suddenly.”

“A lot of these are people who are working and did OK during the pandemic and maybe even saw their wages go up,” said Flood. “But they have also seen food prices go up beyond their budgets.”

The Los Angeles bank gave away about 30 million pounds of food during the first three months of this year, slightly less than the previous quarter but still far more than the 22 million pounds given away during the first quarter of 2020.

Feeding America’s Fitzgerald is calling on USDA and Congress to find a way to restore hundreds of millions of dollars worth of commodities recently lost with the end of several temporary programs to provide food to people in need. USDA commodities, which generally can represent as much as 30% of the food the banks disperse, accounted for more than 40% of all food distributed in fiscal year 2021 by the Feeding America network.

“There is a critical need for the public sector to purchase more food now,” said Fitzgerald.

During the Trump administration, USDA bought several billions of dollars in pork, apples, dairy, potatoes and other products in a program that gave most of it to food banks. The “Food Purchase & Distribution Program” designed to help American farmers harmed by tariffs and other practices of U.S. trade partners has since ended. There was $1.2 billion authorized for the 2019 fiscal year and another $1.4 billion authorized for fiscal 2020.

Another temporary USDA “Farmers to Families” program that provided emergency relief provided more than 155 million food boxes for families in need across the U.S. during the height of the pandemic before ending May 31, 2021.

For now, there’s enough food, but there might not be in the future, said Michael G. Manning, president and CEO at Greater Baton Rouge Food Bank in Louisiana. He said high fuel costs also make it far more expensive to collect and distribute food.

The USDA’s Coronavirus Food Assistance Program, which included Farmers to Families, was “a boon” for the Alameda County Community Food Bank, providing 5 billion pounds of commodities over a single year, said spokesman Altfest.

“So losing that was a big hit,” he said.

Altfest said as many as 10% of the people now seeking food are first timers, and a growing number are showing up on foot rather than in cars to save gas.

“The food they get from us is helping them save already-stretched budgets for other expenses like gas, rent, diapers and baby formula,” he said.

Meanwhile, food purchases by the bank have jumped from a monthly average of $250,000 before the pandemic to as high as $1.5 million now because of food prices. Rocketing gasoline costs forced the bank to increase its fuel budget by 66%, Altfest said.

Supply chain issues are also a problem, requiring the food bank to become more aggressive with procurement.

“We used to reorder when our inventory dropped to three weeks’ worth, now we reorder up to six weeks out,” said Altfest.

He said the food bank has already ordered and paid for whole chickens, stuffing, cranberries and other holiday feast items it will distribute for Thanksgiving, the busiest time of the year.

At the Mexican American Opportunity Foundation in Montebello east of Los Angeles, workers say they are seeing many families along with older people like Diane Martinez, who lined up one recent morning on foot.

Some of the hundreds of mostly Spanish-speaking recipients had cars parked nearby. They carried cloth bags, cardboard boxes or shoved pushcarts to pick up their food packages from the distribution site the Los Angeles bank serves.

“The prices of food are so high and they’re going up higher every day,” said Martinez, who expressed gratitude for the bags of black beans, ground beef and other groceries. “I’m so glad that they’re able to help us.”

Copyright © 2022 The Washington Times, LLC.

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Clintons interview Kim Kardashian, Steinem on Apple TV+ show

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NEW YORK — Hillary Rodham Clinton and her daughter, Chelsea, will interview the likes of Kim Kardashian, Megan Thee Stallion and Gloria Steinem for a streaming series that debuts in two months.

Apple TV+ said Thursday that “Gutsy” will debut on its service on Sept. 9.

In the eight-part series, the former secretary of state and 2016 Democratic presidential nominee and her daughter also talk to Dr. Jane Goodall, Wanda Sykes, Amy Schumer, Goldie Hawn, Kate Hudson and others, Apple TV+ said.

The series is based on the Clintons’ book, “The Book of Gutsy Women.” The Clintons’ new production company and Apple’s deal to produce the docuseries was announced last year, but now it is revealing the premiere date and list of interview subjects.