World Cup, Donald Trump and Seattle
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Trump expressed concerns about Seattle's safety for 2026 World Cup matches, hinting that FIFA might need to reassess the city as a host due to potential security issues.
United States President Donald Trump may have no legal backing behind his threats of taking the FIFA World Cup away from various cities, but he has the blessing of his FIFA counterpart Gianni Infantino. The 2026 World Cup is less than year away and excitement for the tournament is building across the globe.
Drone attacks are a new wrinkle in 21st-century warfare and terrorist attacks that require defensive preparations ahead of the 2026 FIFA World Cup.
Seattle’s Lumen Field stadium will change names for the 2026 men’s World Cup this summer. Here’s what it’ll be called and why the rebrand is happening.
The 2026 FIFA World Cup is from June 11 to July 19, 2026. Sixteen host cities across North America, including Atlanta, Dallas, Houston, Seattle, Los Angeles, Philadelphia, San Francisco, Boston, Kansas City,
In an extraordinary news conference, Trump warned host cities including Seattle and Los Angeles may lose their games over "safety" concerns.
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World Cup task force targeting potential drone threats
( NewsNation) — President Donald Trump is expected to meet with the White House World Cup Task Force on Monday amid preparations to protect the event from potentially dangerous drones.
A record 48 teams will compete in the 2026 World Cup to be co-hosted by the United States, Mexico and Canada. Of those, 43 will get their places through continental qualifying tournaments and