Good Morning Australia!! - No charges against Hillary because she didn't break the damned law - A leader emerges in the UK - Mandela's family cries foul of a South African campaign ad - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

The director of the FBI James Comey says he will not recommend criminal charges against US Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton for the "careless" handling of emails from a private server while she was Secretary of State.  Ms. Clinton had repeatedly admitting to what amounts to misusing a piece of office equipment.  And while Mr. Comey - who was appointed by right-wing Republican president George W. Bush - was critical of a perceived lackadaisical attitude towards cyber-security, he repeatedly stressed that there was no evidence of a crime nor evidence that secrets had been either leaked or hacked. 

The Department of Justice will ultimately decide whether to press charges, but Attorney General Loretta Lynch has already said she would follow the FBI's recommendation.  Last month, the Republican-led House Select Committee on Benghazi announced that its two-year, $7 Million investigation into the attack on the US diplomatic compound in Libya found that Clinton did nothing wrong.  They join the lengthy list of conservative paranoid delusions about the Clintons that all turned out to be complete and total bullshyte.

Meanwhile, the corporate media is focusing on the email story, instead of Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump's inappropriate and anti-Semitic use of a Star of David in an anti-Clinton tweet that originated on a white supremacy website.  Trump tried to delete the tweet and resend it with a circle over the internationally-recognized symbol of Judaism, and then his campaign claimed the six-pointed star sheriff's badge.  Guess what?  When Hitler and the nazis were putting that star on six million people in Europe during the 1930s and '40s, they weren't being appointed sheriffs.  This would be the 75th time the corporate media has allowed Trump to get away with retweeting racist and anti-Semitic imagery from nazis.

Moving along from Stupidland..

UK Home Minister Theresa May has won the first round of balloting to become the next Tory leader and UK prime minister.  Rivals Steven Crabb and Liam Fox both dropped out, signalling loses for both crustaceans and quadrupedal mammals.  Ms. May won 165 votes in the party meeting; Energy Minister Andrea Leason was a distant second with 66 votes, and knife-wielding back-stabber Michael Gove has no friggin' prayer.  May has attracted support from many Brexiteers who want to see someone who campaigned to leave the EU in charge of the deeply divided country.

Meanwhile, the Pound Sterling fell below US$1.31, hitting yet another 31-year low.  So, good luck with that.

Lawmakers in Ireland are criticizing Taoiseach Enda Kenny to hurry up and establish an all-island forum on how to deal with the looming Brexit.  Labour leader Brendan Howlin said the snail's pace approach had "damaged" the authority of his office and "more importantly the interests of Ireland".  Mr. Kenny publicly floated the idea of a forum over the weekend, only to have it humiliatingly rejected by Northern Ireland First Minister Arlene Foster - a pro-Brexiteer who is now facing a leadership crisis of her own because the vast majority of Northern Ireland voters wanted to remain in the European Union. 

Moving along from Shootyourselfinthefootland..

A French parliamentary report recommends overhauling the country's intelligence services because of last year's terror attacks in Paris.  The report says that different agencies knew of the attackers, but failed to share key information that could have led to them preventing the attacks.  This should be remedied, it says, with a single body like the US National Counter-Terrorism Center coordinating efforts.

Turkey has charged 17 more suspects in last month's attack at Istanbul Airport, bringing the number of suspects in the plot to 30.  Foreigners account for eleven of that group.  The organizer is believed to be a Chechen fighter named Akhmed Chatayev, but his whereabouts are currently unknown.

Saudi King Salman is threatening to deal with extremists with an "iron hand" following string of bombings including one outside the tomb of the Islamic Prophet Muhammad in the holy city of Medina that killed four guards.  The country's highest religious authority has denounced the attack, as well as one on a Shiite mosque in the east and one near a US diplomatic center in Jeddah as violating "everything that is sacred". 

The family of the late South African president Nelson Mandela is criticizing an opposition party for using his voice in a campaign ad.  In it, a young woman hears Nelson call for justice, peace, work and bread - and thus she votes for the Democratic Alliance (DA).  Nelson Mandela was famously a member of the African National Congress (ANC).  Grandson Mandla Mandela - also of the ANC - accused the DA of seeking to "preserve white privilege" and demanded the ad be withdrawn.  The DA responded that only it can deliver the post-racial South Africa that the elder Mandela envisioned, and the father of the modern country belongs to all of its citizens - not just the ANC.

The leader of Colombia's Marxist FARC rebels has ordered the group to stop collecting a "tax" from farmers, cattle ranchers, and big business -often referred to as "extortion" by its critics - and will continue to pay members out of its savings until a final peace deal is reached with the Colombian government.  That is expected on 20 July, formally ending five decades of civil war and likely bringing the FARC in from the jungles so that it can participate in the Democratic process as a regular party.