USA & Canada Intelligence Brief July 10: The Commission

USA & Canada Intelligence Brief July 10: The Commission
July 10, 2026

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USA & Canada Intelligence Brief July 10: The Commission

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Rio Times · USA & Canada Intelligence Brief July 10

USA & Canada Intelligence Brief July 10 — Key Facts

Election body purged President Trump removed all three remaining members of the Election Assistance Commission, the agency that helps run US elections, less than four months before the midterms

Houston shooting Over a thousand people marched after an immigration officer fatally shot a man driving to work, and Mexico says it will file criminal complaints

Housing bill Trump let the biggest bipartisan housing law in 30 years take effect without his signature, in protest over a stalled voter-ID bill

Birthday fair ends Trump’s 16-day National Mall fair wrapped up Friday after thin crowds and a power outage that melted the ice cream

Bridge silence Canada’s Prime Minister Mark Carney has said little about the stalled Gordie Howe bridge or the frozen trade relationship with Washington

World Cup record France became the first team into the semifinals, and the tournament has already broken the World Cup attendance record set in 1994

USA & Canada Intelligence Brief July 10 — now in an interactive edition

Read the full US & Canada Intelligence Dossier online →

USA & Canada Intelligence Brief July 10 — Americans woke up this Friday to unsettling news about who oversees their elections, even as a home-soil World Cup keeps stadiums packed and spirits high.

USA & Canada Intelligence Brief July 10. (Photo internet reproduction)RTAsk Rio TimesMarkets, currencies and the economy

Canadians, meanwhile, are watching their leader stay silent on a stalled bridge to the US, while Alberta’s push to separate keeps simmering in the background.

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USA – Election Watchdog Purged

All three seats emptied at once

President Trump ousted the three remaining members of the Election Assistance Commission, the small federal body that helps states run fair elections, with under four months to go before the midterms.

Democratic commissioners Thomas Hicks and Benjamin Hovland were let go by email, while Republican commissioner Christy McCormick was asked to step down too.

Alarm on Capitol Hill

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer called the move a brazen attempt to seize control of the country’s elections before a single vote is cast.

With no commissioners left in place, questions are already swirling over who will oversee ballot security ahead of November.

USA – Deadly ICE Shooting Sparks Outrage

Houston streets fill with protest

More than a thousand people marched through Houston chanting for immigration officers to leave the city, after one of them fatally shot a man on his way to work.

Congresswoman Sylvia Garcia called for independent investigations, body cameras, clear identification and an end to what she called paramilitary-style enforcement.

Mexico takes the fight to US courts

Mexico’s government says it will file criminal complaints in the United States over the case, with Foreign Minister Roberto Velasco noting seventeen Mexican nationals have died in immigration custody or at agents’ hands.

The victim’s son is demanding a full independent probe into his father’s killing, a case that has now crossed the border into diplomacy.

A brazen attempt to seize control of our elections before a single vote is cast.

USA – Housing Law Passes Without Trump’s Name

A protest by omission

Trump chose to let a bipartisan housing bill become law without his signature, missing the midnight deadline on purpose, over frustration with a stalled voter-ID bill in the Senate.

He posted that he refused to put his name on the housing law because the Senate could not pass what he calls the SAVE America Act.

Democrats claim a win anyway

Senator Tammy Duckworth called it the biggest bipartisan housing bill in thirty years, noting it is becoming law without any help from Trump.

The law, known as the 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act, takes effect regardless of the missing signature.

USA – Birthday Fair Wraps Up Quietly

Sixteen days on the National Mall

Trump’s Great American State Fair, billed as the country’s greatest birthday party, closed on Friday after sixteen days on the National Mall in Washington.

Organisers struggled to book performers, and a power outage even melted the ice cream meant for visitors.

Trump defends the spectacle

Despite the thin crowds, Trump defended the event on social media, asking whether former presidents Obama or Biden could have pulled it off.

The mixed reviews leave the fair as a symbol of ambition meeting logistics, right in the heart of the capital.

Canada – Silence Over the Stalled Bridge

A four billion dollar sore point

Prime Minister Mark Carney has stayed quiet on the state of trade relations with the United States and on the Gordie Howe Bridge, a crossing Canada paid roughly four billion Canadian dollars to build.

The bridge, meant to link Windsor and Detroit, has become a symbol of the strained relationship between the two countries.

Washington wants a cut

The Trump government has delayed the bridge’s opening indefinitely, and US trade representative Jamieson Greer said there will be a separate negotiation specifically about the bridge.

That suggests American officials want a share of the toll revenue before letting the crossing fully open, deepening Canadian frustration.

USA & Canada – World Cup Fever Peaks

France leads the way to the semifinals

France became the first team through to the last four of the World Cup, beating Morocco 2-0 in Boston thanks to goals from Kylian Mbappe and Ousmane Dembele.

The United States is hosting seventy-eight matches in all, including every quarterfinal, semifinal and the final itself at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey.

Record crowds fill American stadiums

Total attendance so far has already broken the World Cup record that stood since 1994, with more than 3.6 million spectators at matches across the tournament.

Semifinals are set for Dallas on July 14th and Atlanta on July 15th, building toward the final on July 19th.

Canada – Alberta’s Separation Fight Heats Up

Calgary’s mayor pushes back

Calgary Mayor Jeromy Farkas says he wants the ability to openly campaign against Alberta separating from Canada, pointing to a poll showing seventy percent of citizens oppose it.

He noted that the Bank of Montreal partly left Montreal decades ago because of prolonged debates over separation, a warning he does not want repeated in Alberta.

New rules for the campaign trail

Elections Alberta issued a fresh bulletin this week clarifying what counts as campaign advertising ahead of the referendum vote.

The province’s ten-question referendum, including the separation question, is set for October 19th, keeping the debate firmly in the public eye.

USA – SK Hynix’s Blockbuster Debut

A record-setting listing

Shares of South Korean memory chipmaker SK Hynix jumped to $174.80, up seventeen percent from its offering price, in one of the largest public share offerings by a foreign company on US markets.

The listing raised more than 26 billion dollars, underlining just how much investor appetite there is for companies tied to artificial intelligence chips.

A lift for the wider chip market

The company’s American depositary receipts, a way for US investors to hold shares of a foreign firm, opened fourteen percent above their offering price on debut.

The strong reception adds to a broader rally in chip-related stocks that has been building for weeks.

The Bigger Picture

Friday leaves Americans caught between unease and excitement: an election watchdog dismantled and a fatal immigration shooting have people worried, even as record stock prices and a home-soil World Cup keep spirits high.

Canadians, for their part, feel a quieter kind of frustration, watching their government stay silent on a stalled bridge to the US while Alberta’s separation debate refuses to fade, though Stampede season offers a welcome distraction.

Across the border, the story is really about trust, in institutions, in neighbours and in leaders, being tested at the same time as the region tries to enjoy its summer.

USA & Canada Intelligence Brief July 10: What We Are Watching

  • Today – World Cup quarterfinals wrap up in Miami and Kansas City.
  • Today – Calgary Stampede rides into its final day.
  • This week – World Cup semifinal kicks off in Dallas on July 14th.
  • This week – Second semifinal set for Atlanta on July 15th.
  • This week – The new housing law takes effect after passing without Trump’s signature.
  • This week – Quebec’s engineers’ strike continues to disrupt summer roadwork.
  • This week – Congress is expected to face further questions over the Election Assistance Commission purge.
  • This week – Alberta’s new referendum advertising rules take hold ahead of the October vote.

Go Deeper

The full USA & Canada Intelligence Dossier — the interactive risk dashboard, the six people who matter and the downloadable PDF — is updated daily by the Rio Times Intelligence Desk.

The USA & Canada Intelligence Brief July 10 returns tomorrow morning.

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