Democratic challenger defeats Pittsburgh mayor in a primary after a clash over the party's futureNew Foto - Democratic challenger defeats Pittsburgh mayor in a primary after a clash over the party's future

Allegheny County Controller Corey O'Connor defeated Pittsburgh Mayor Ed Gainey in the city's hotly contested Democratic mayoral primary, The Associated Press projected Tuesday, after a race that garnered national attention as a notable proxy fight between progressives and center-left Democrats. With more than 96% of the vote in, O'Connor led Gainey 53%-47% in the nominating contest. "Thank you, Pittsburgh,"O'Connor said on X. "We built this campaign with and for the people of this city, neighborhood by neighborhood. I'm proud to be your Democratic nominee for Mayor. I'm ready to get to work, and I'm grateful to have you with me as we take the next steps forward, together." Tuesday's election wasone of the first major Democratic primariessince the 2024 election in which the party's progressive and center-left wings faced off. And the mayoral race followed an election cycle in which Democratic governance of cities took center stage in Republican campaign messaging. In a statement, Gainey said that while the defeat "isn't what we hoped for, our people-powered movement in Pittsburgh is stronger than it's ever been before thanks to every person who was part of this campaign to build a city for all." "And that means Corey O'Connor must be ready to carry forward the transformational progress the people of this city demand and that he promised in his campaign," Gainey added. "The progress my administration delivered on affordable housing, policing, and community investments set a new bar that Corey will be expected to build upon." "From the bottom of my heart — thank you, Pittsburgh," his statement continued. "Let's keep fighting for each other." Gainey and his allies painted O'Connor, the county controller and the son of a former mayor, as beholden to President Donald Trump and monied real estate interests, pointing to campaign donations from Trump backers and developers. The mayor, who was first elected in 2021, also pointed to drops in violent crime, local job growth and the city's improved credit ratings to counter O'Connor, who portrayed Gainey as an unproductive mayor who's failed at managing city finances, its police department, and on general quality-of-life fronts O'Connor launched his campaign late last year, emerging as a favorite early on and raising more money than Gainey, though polling showed the race tightening as Election Day neared. Last month, both campaigns touted internal polling showing them with an advantage in the tough-to-model local race: Gainey's campaign survey showed him up 7 points, while O'Connor's showed him up by 4, though that was considerably closer than other polls his campaign touted earlier in the cycle that showed the challenger up double-digits. Gainey, the city's first Black mayor, won a contested primary in 2021, knocking off incumbent Mayor Bill Peduto in a three-way primary with a plurality of the vote. His win was part of a county-wide progressive advance, preceding wins by Rep. Summer Lee, D-Pa., and Allegheny County Executive Sara Innamorato, among other candidates on the left who have won major offices in the area in recent years. The Pittsburgh mayoral race elevated housing policy to the forefront of the local discussion. Gainey has sought to enact inclusionary zoning policies throughout Pittsburgh that require new developments to set aside at least 10% of units for affordable housing. Those policies currently apply to only a few neighborhoods, and O'Connor came out against making inclusionary zoning citywide policy. Meanwhile, a key point of contention in the race focused on just how many affordable units have been or are being built in the city since the start of Gainey's term as mayor.

Democratic challenger defeats Pittsburgh mayor in a primary after a clash over the party's future

Democratic challenger defeats Pittsburgh mayor in a primary after a clash over the party's future Allegheny County Controller Corey O...
Justice Department opens investigation into former New York Gov. Andrew CuomoNew Foto - Justice Department opens investigation into former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo

The Justice Department has opened an investigation into Andrew Cuomo, former New York governor and a top candidate forNew York City mayor, following a referral from congressional Republicans who accused Cuomo of lying during an investigation of his administration's Covid-19 response, a person briefed on the matter said. The nascent inquiry follows anearlier request to the Biden administrationthat didn't result in an investigation. It also comes after Justice officials ended aseparate corruption prosecution of Eric Adams, the current New York mayor who is one of Cuomo's rivals for the job. That move prompted upheaval in the Manhattan US Attorney's Office after prosecutors refused to drop the case as ordered. Adams has vowed to assist the Trump administration's immigration efforts. The Justice Department declined to comment on the Cuomo investigation, reported earlier byThe New York Times. Rich Azzopardi, a spokesperson for the Democratic former governor, said that they had not been informed of the federal investigation and defended Cuomo's testimony to Congress. "We have never been informed of any such matter, so why would someone leak it now? The answer is obvious: This is lawfare and election interference plain and simple—something President Trump and his top Department of Justice officials say they are against," Azzopardi said in a statement. "Governor Cuomo testified truthfully to the best of his recollection about events from four years earlier, and he offered to address any follow-up questions from the Subcommittee — but from the beginning this was all transparently political." A Justice official defended the timing of the moves on Adams and Cuomo, saying "This Department of Justice has ended the weaponization of government and will continue to follow the facts in every case in order restore one tier of justice for all America." The investigation comes as Cuomo is attempting a political comeback after heresignedas governor in 2021 amid a sexual misconduct scandal. Cuomo has denied the allegations that he sexually harassed 11 women, which were outlined in a report by New York attorney general Letitia James,who is also under investigationby the Trump administration. House Oversight Chairman James Comer in April referred Cuomo to the Department of Justice for potential prosecution over his testimony to Congress after a similar referral from a GOP-led panel investigating the Covid-19 pandemic last year did not result in an investigation. At issue is Cuomo's truthfulness regarding his role in the writing and review of a state health department report from June 2020 thatunderestimated the nursing home death countby nearly half. A2021 investigationby James, a Democrat, found that the New York State Department of Health undercounted Covid-19 deaths among residents of nursing homes by approximately 50%, essentially by leaving out deaths of residents who had been transferred to hospitals. A2022 auditby State Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli concluded that Cuomo's health department failed to report roughly 4,100 deaths between April 2020 and February 2021. CNN's KFile has also found thatCuomo downplayedlags in nursing home patient and death data and defended his administration from allegations of wrongdoing, according to a review of his daily press conferences from spring 2020 in which nursing homes were mentioned. Cuomo has consistently pushed back on allegations on wrongdoing – with his legal team filing its own referral letter in October, requesting the Department of Justice investigate an alleged abuse of power by the House Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Pandemic. Azzopardi, the Cuomo spokesperson, told CNN at the time that the GOP-led committee was engaged in a "pre-election Maga exercise and affirmatively chose to act unethically in order to help their masters score cheap political points." This story has been updated with additional details. CNN's Mark Morales, Jake Tapper and Piper Hudspeth Blackburn contributed to this report. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Justice Department opens investigation into former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo

Justice Department opens investigation into former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo The Justice Department has opened an investigation into Andrew...
Ohtani mixes in breaking pitches for 1st time as he rehabs from elbow surgeryNew Foto - Ohtani mixes in breaking pitches for 1st time as he rehabs from elbow surgery

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Los Angeles Dodgers two-way superstarShohei Ohtanimixed in breaking pitches for the first time in a throwing session Tuesday. The right-hander had been limited to fastball and splitters previously as he works to return to pitching this season following elbow surgery. Manager Dave Roberts confirmed Ohtani is getting closer to facing live hitting for the first time since he underwent his second Tommy John procedure in September 2023. "It is progressing," Roberts said. "I'm not sure when he's going to take that slider from the flat ground to the bullpen, but that is progress." Ohtani's return to the mound has been expected to come near the All-Star break in July. "I really wish I had an answer (on when it will be)," Roberts said. "I'm just waiting for the green light from people that are sort of managing Shohei's rehab." At the plate, Ohtani is batting .312 and entered Tuesday's action leading the majors with 17 home runs. ___ AP MLB:https://apnews.com/hub/MLB

Ohtani mixes in breaking pitches for 1st time as he rehabs from elbow surgery

Ohtani mixes in breaking pitches for 1st time as he rehabs from elbow surgery LOS ANGELES (AP) — Los Angeles Dodgers two-way superstarShohei...
Panthers ease to road win over Hurricanes in Game 1New Foto - Panthers ease to road win over Hurricanes in Game 1

The Florida Panthers didn't have time to prepare for Game 1 of the Eastern Conference finals, so they just rode their momentum instead. The Panthers received goals from five different players and Sergei Bobrovsky made 31 saves in a 5-2, series-opening victory over the Carolina Hurricanes on Tuesday in Raleigh, N.C. Carter Verhaeghe had a goal and an assist for the Panthers, who were coming off a 6-1 road win against the Toronto Maple Leafs in Game 7 of their second-round series on Sunday. Florida's Aaron Ekblad, A.J. Greer, Sam Bennett and Eetu Luostarinen also scored, and Evan Rodrigues and Tomas Nosek each had two assists. "There wasn't much time off here from Game 7," Greer said. "We came in with a mindset and a willingness to compete. We know our game, we know what to do and we got right to it." Florida has won five of its past six games overall. "We're such a deep team and every line has an identity, and we try to play to it every night," Verhaeghe said. "Every night it seems like a different line is stepping up and scoring big goals and making plays, and that's our mentality." Sebastian Aho and Jackson Blake scored, Seth Jarvis had two assists and Frederik Andersen made 15 saves for the Hurricanes, who came in 5-0 at home in the playoffs. Carolina finished its five-game series win over the Washington Capitals last Thursday. Game 2 of the best-of-seven series is scheduled for Thursday in Raleigh. "I didn't hate our game tonight," Carolina coach Rod Brind'Amour said. "It's going to be hard. It's going to go back and forth. I think we had our opportunities early in the game, too. We got a couple good opportunities and didn't capitalize and then it went a different direction." After killing an early power play, the Panthers capitalized on their first man advantage when Verhaeghe lifted a backhand over Andersen's right shoulder for a 1-0 lead at 8:30 of the first period. Florida extended its lead to 2-0 at 12:29 of the first after Carolina forward Jordan Staal lost possession of the puck in his own end. Rodrigues recovered and fed Ekblad, who fired in a wrist shot from the left circle. Carolina scored with 16 seconds left in the first period to cut the deficit to 2-1. Panthers forward Matthew Tkachuk missed on his one-handed clearing attempt, allowing Jarvis to take possession and feed Aho cutting to the net. The pass was slightly behind Aho, but he used his skate to redirect the puck between Bobrovsky's pads. "They got some really good high-end scorers, so when you get your opportunities, it may not be many ... you've got to find a way to put it by them," Brind'Amour said. The Panthers re-established the two-goal cushion at 3:33 of the second period. Greer was left alone coming down the left wing on a three-on-three rush, and he scored off a backhand feed from Niko Mikkola to make it 3-1. Greer has scored in two straight games after earlier being a healthy scratch in the Panthers' first three playoff games. "There's an identity on that fourth line," Greer said. "Whether you're in or you're or not, you know how to play and you know that you're going to get a call and you have to be ready. It was a big moment in my career to get that first playoff game under my belt, and I just want to come in and help the team as much as possible." Bennett hit the net with a wrist shot through traffic on a power play to extend the lead to 4-1 at 6:08 of the third. Luostarinen made it 5-1 with a one-timer off a backhand feed from below the goal line by Nosek at 14:55. Carolina answered with a power-play goal by Blake to cut it to 5-2 at 16:19. --Field Level Media

Panthers ease to road win over Hurricanes in Game 1

Panthers ease to road win over Hurricanes in Game 1 The Florida Panthers didn't have time to prepare for Game 1 of the Eastern Conferenc...
US states mount court challenge to Trump's tariffsNew Foto - US states mount court challenge to Trump's tariffs

By Dietrich Knauth NEW YORK (Reuters) -Twelve U.S. states will ask a federal court on Wednesday to halt President Donald Trump's "Liberation Day" tariffs, arguing that he overstepped his authority by declaring a national emergency to impose across-the-board taxes on imports from nations that sell more to the U.S. than they buy. A three-judge panel of the Manhattan-based Court of International Trade will hear arguments in a lawsuit brought by the Democratic attorneys general of New York, Illinois, Oregon, and nine other states. They say the Republican president has sought a "blank check" to regulate trade "at his whim." The states claim the president badly misinterpreted a law called the International Emergency Economic Powers Act to justify the tariffs. The law is meant to address "unusual and extraordinary" threats to the U.S. Trump has said the U.S.'s decades-long history of importing more than it exports is a national emergency that has harmed U.S. manufacturers. But the states argue the U.S. trade deficit is not an "emergency" and that IEEPA does not authorize tariffs at all. The same three-judge panel heard arguments last week in a similar case brought by five small businesses, and it is expected to issue a decision in the coming weeks. Oregon Attorney General Dan Rayfield said that the tariffs were raising prices for Oregon families and small businesses, and they will cost the average family an extra $3,800 a year. "President Trump imposed his tariffs without Congress, public input, or restraint – and claims the courts can't review his decisions," Rayfield said. "This is a misuse of emergency powers." The Justice Department has said the states' lawsuit should be dismissed because the states have only alleged "speculative economic losses" instead of concrete harms from the tariffs. It has also argued that only Congress, not U.S. states or the courts, can challenge a national emergency declared by the president under IEEPA. A DOJ spokesperson said the department "will continue to vigorously defend President Trump's agenda to confront unfair trade practices in court." After imposing tariffs on China, Mexico and Canada in February, Trump imposed a 10% across-the-board tariff on all imports in April, with higher rates for countries with which the U.S. has the largest trade deficits, particularly China. Many of those country-specific tariffs were paused a week later, and the Trump administration temporarily reduced the steepest tariffs on China this month while working on a longer-term trade deal. Trump's on-again-off-again tariffs have shocked U.S. markets. He has framed them as a way to restore U.S. manufacturing capability. The states' lawsuit is one of at least seven court challenges to Trump's tariff policies. California has filed a separate challenge in federal court in San Francisco, and other lawsuits have been filed by businesses, legal advocacy groups and members of the Blackfeet Nation. Decisions from the court, which hears disputes involving international trade and customs laws, can be appealed to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit in Washington, D.C., and ultimately the U.S. Supreme Court. (Reporting by Dietrich Knauth, Editing by Alexia Garamfalvi and David Gregorio)

US states mount court challenge to Trump's tariffs

US states mount court challenge to Trump's tariffs By Dietrich Knauth NEW YORK (Reuters) -Twelve U.S. states will ask a federal court on...
An adviser to Ukrainian ex-President Viktor Yanukovych has been shot dead in SpainNew Foto - An adviser to Ukrainian ex-President Viktor Yanukovych has been shot dead in Spain

MADRID (AP) — Spanish authorities said that an adviser to former Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych was shot dead outside a school in Madrid on Wednesday. Spain's Interior Ministry identified the victim as Andrii Portnov. Authorities said that he was shot at 9:15 a.m. local time (0715 GMT). Portnov is a former Ukrainian politician closely tied to Yanukovych, having served as deputy head of the presidential office from 2010 to 2014. During Yanukovych's presidency, Portnov was widely viewed as a pro-Russia political figure and was involved in drafting legislation aimed at persecuting participants of the 2014 revolution in Ukraine.

An adviser to Ukrainian ex-President Viktor Yanukovych has been shot dead in Spain

An adviser to Ukrainian ex-President Viktor Yanukovych has been shot dead in Spain MADRID (AP) — Spanish authorities said that an adviser to...
Man United and Tottenham clash in all-English Europa League final looking to salvage seasonNew Foto - Man United and Tottenham clash in all-English Europa League final looking to salvage season

BILBAO, Spain (AP) — Manchester United and Tottenham will meet in anall-English final in the Europa Leaguelater on Wednesday, with both clubs hoping to end a dismal season on a high note. The trophy will offer some relief for the winner, while the loser is likely to face a fresh wave of criticism. United is unbeaten in the Europa League this season but is down in 16th place in the Premier League, one spot ahead of Tottenham. Tottenham was beaten in the 2019 Champions League final by Liverpool, and has not lifted a trophy since the 2008 English League Cup. United picked up its last silverware in the 2024 FA Cup. There was fan trouble overnight in the Basque Country city of Bilbao, where more than 50,000 English fans were expected, many of them without tickets. Supporters from both clubs confronted each other on the streets and in bars, with some throwing trash bins, bottles and other objects at each other. There were also Spanish media reports of confrontations in nearby towns and cities, where many of the fans were staying to avoid overpriced accommodation in Bilbao. There were no reports of serious injuries in the confrontations. Tottenham has won all three matches it has played against United this season. It is unbeaten in six straight games against its final rival, with the last five under manager Ange Postecoglou. United and Tottenham have met in just one previous final — the 2009 League Cup when Alex Ferguson's Red Devils won 4-1 on penalties after a 0-0 draw. Son Heung-min will have a chance toend his title drought, and crown 10 years of service for Tottenham. ___ AP soccer:https://apnews.com/hub/soccer

Man United and Tottenham clash in all-English Europa League final looking to salvage season

Man United and Tottenham clash in all-English Europa League final looking to salvage season BILBAO, Spain (AP) — Manchester United and Totte...
Braves get reinforcements in ace Strider, MVP Acuña after riding out ugly 0-7 startNew Foto - Braves get reinforcements in ace Strider, MVP Acuña after riding out ugly 0-7 start

WASHINGTON —Spencer Striderclimbed the mound in a major league game for the first time in 29 days, and just the second time in 13 months, and no, he was not wearing a cape. There was no 10-gallon hat to signify a new sheriff in town, just a sleeveless dude on a chilly night aiming to fortify anAtlanta Bravesroster that's grown accustomed to not waiting around. On this Tuesday night, Strider - a 20-game winner and 281-strikeout man just two seasons ago – was not particularly good. A month-long layoff after a right hamstring strain that followed a yearlong absence due to asecond elbow reconstruction surgerywill do that to a guy. MLB POWER RANKINGSRed Sox get pummeled as Devers powers up Yet it was not a particularly dire development that Strider had little command for his pitches early on, nor that his fastball averaged 95 mph, a half-tick slower than a month ago and 3 mph less than peak Strider of old. No, Strider is not expected to be a savior. Nor is 2023 MVPRonald Acuña Jr., who is expected back this weekend following a 12-month absence due to an ACL tear in his right knee. See, the Braves are getting used to a by-any-means necessary ethos, which saved them from a slump-laden and injury-plagued 2024 season that ended with their seventh consecutive playoff berth, clinched on the final day of the season. For their latest trick? How about starting the season 0-7, losing their key offseason acquisition to aPED suspensionfour games into the season and holding casting calls for both corner outfield spots as if they're running a middle school play? Yet the Braves continued workshopping solutions until they found a combination that works. If there's a Braves Way that can define this period of sustained success, perhaps it's the ability to take a punch – and find a way to counter. "Being in organizations that expect to win, the biggest thing is even if your big guys are either not performing well or are hurt, no one feels sorry for themselves," says Alex Verdugo, the former Yankee, Red Sox and Dodgersigned off the unemployment lineat the end of March to eventually solve their left field conundrum. "It's having that next guy up, man. Having that mindset of constantly battling, whether it's good at-bats, productive at-bats, getting guys over, the smaller things. "As you do that, bigger results come from that and that's what we're seeing." Right now, the 24-24 Braves are a .500 team, but that doesn't look too bad after seeing 0-7 and 5-13 next to their name in the standings. It is Atlanta, and so starting pitching has kept them above water even without Strider, with a National League-best 2.70 ERA led by burgeoning ace Spencer Schwellenbach. But after two years of strange underperformance and unfortunate circumstance, the Braves remain irrepressible. "They don't let anything get 'em down, I know that," says manager Brian Snitker. "They don't sit around and do the 'Woe is me' type thing. They just keep working and preparing and organizationally we did a good job in the depth. "They seem to come together. I look at it as an opportunity for someone to do something really good. Fortunately, over the last few years, we've had guys do just that." Even if it takes a minute. Acuña's loss could have spoiled each of the past two seasons. The Braves mixed and matched as best they could last year and won 89 games; this offseason, not wanting to rush Acuña's return, they signed journeyman Bryan De La Cruz to hold things down. And then Jurickson Profar got popped with an 80-game ban for a fertility drug. De La Cruz and left fielder Jarred Kelenic did not rise to the occasion, to say the least. They needed just 39 combined games to produce negative-1 wins above replacement, and a quartet of left fielders before Verdugo joined the club combined for a .200/.268/.231 slash line. Right field was almost as grim, with Kelenic's .167/.231/.300 putridity earning the veteran a trip with De La Cruz to the minor leagues after just 23 games. Stuart Fairchild, old friend Eddie Rosario, hey, everyone come on down. Yet Verdugo, with no spring training under his belt, made his debut April 18, batting leadoff with the club mired at 5-13, and for whatever reason, it was go time. Atlanta won eight of 10 as Verdugo started 23 of the next 28 games; Eli White, a 31-year-old who'd received just 59 plate appearances the previous two seasons, settled into right and has produced a .783 OPS with 11 extra-base hits. Whatever it takes. "Dugie has come in and fit in very nicely," says All-Star third baseman Austin Riley. "You always talk about a lineup with depth and being able to flip a lineup and get it to your middle of the order guys – and they're doing that. Batting in the two hole, I feel like Eli's on base a lot, Nick Allen's on base a lot, Dugie's on base a lot." Says Snitker: "Alex didn't have spring training and he comes here, and it kind of coincided with us getting off the mat a little bit. When you get veteran guys like that, it helps. And you need that." Before April 18, Verdugo's last game was Game 5 of the World Series, where he started in left field for the Yankees. But they turned the job over to rookie Jasson Dominguez, and everyone else decided they didn't need his services. But Profar's suspension changed all that. And Verdugo appreciated a shot with yet another perennial power. "This is a good organization and a team that just won it in '21," says Verdugo, 29. "They're not too far out from being world champions, and I still feel like they hold themselves to a certain standard. A lot of guys here have contracts and have some stability, and it's still cool to see them preparing and focusing on the things they should be to give themselves the best opportunity to win. "All the big organizations I've been on, including this team, that's what they do - they find a way to win that day." The Braves should want for very little very soon. Acuña is hitting 420-foot home runs on his rehab assignment and should be back in time for the Braves' return to Truist Field this weekend against San Diego. Strider beat him to it, though giving up four runs in 5 ⅓ innings – including a home run and two hit batters – was far from a glorious return for the notorious perfectionist. "I take no joy," he says Tuesday night, "in not giving us a chance." Still, he returns to a club well within the NL East race, with the rival Mets and Philliesconfronting issuesoftheir own. There's still plenty to play for as the weather warms up and Strider presumably adds some more fuzz to his fastball. "I think they were forced to acknowledge where they were, and obviously they weren't happy with it and credit to them for remaining confident and seeking out solutions and trying to get better," says Strider. "And you know, it takes time. It's not like one day everything just magically got better for everybody. So that came from deliberate work. "That's an amazing testament to those guys and what they were able to do and where they put themselves now." With an MVP return just around the corner. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Spencer Strider, Ronald Acuña Jr. returns have Braves in NL East race

Braves get reinforcements in ace Strider, MVP Acuña after riding out ugly 0-7 start

Braves get reinforcements in ace Strider, MVP Acuña after riding out ugly 0-7 start WASHINGTON —Spencer Striderclimbed the mound in a major ...
Burkina Faso's military leaders turn to 'Africa's Che Guevara' to rally struggling countryNew Foto - Burkina Faso's military leaders turn to 'Africa's Che Guevara' to rally struggling country

OUAGADOUGOU, Burkina Faso (AP) — The military rulers ofBurkina Fasohave turned to a man once known as "Africa's Che Guevara" as a way to rally a countrystruggling to defeat extremistsand turning away from former Western allies. Hundreds of young people gathered over the weekend in the capital, Ouagadougou, for the opening of a mausoleum for legendary leader Thomas Sankara. "I'm the driver of the revolution!" one young man exclaimed with delight, sitting behind the wheel of the jeep that Sankara used during his presidency decades ago. A charismatic Marxist leader who seized global attention by defiantly declaring his country could rely on itself, Sankara came to power in 1983 at the age of 33 after he andformer ally Blaise Compaoreled a leftist coup that overthrew a moderate military faction. But in 1987, Compaore turned on his former friend in a coup that killed Sankara in the capital — and later became president himself. An anti-imperialist legacy Nearly four decades after his death, Sankara is being celebrated in Burkina Faso, a nation of 23 million people once known for its bustling arts scene and vibrant intellectual life — including Sankara's anti-imperialist and pan-African legacy. "When I stepped inside the mausoleum, I felt the revolution," said Timoté, a 22-year-old who said he came because of what he heard about Sankara at home and at school. Sankara's mausoleum, designed by Pritzker Architecture Prize-winning architect Francis Kéré, has been the project of current militaryleader Capt. Ibrahim Traore. Since taking power during a coup in 2022, Traore has presented himself as thenew Sankara. He has named one of the main streets after the revolutionary leader, elevated him to the rank of Hero of the Nation and revived revolutionary slogans such as "Fatherland or death, we will win!" in most of his speeches. The mission of the mausoleum is "to keep the flame of the revolution alive and to remind the world of Capt. Thomas Sankara's fight to break the chains of slavery and imperialist domination," Burkina Faso Prime Minister Jean Emmanuel Ouédraogo said as he read Traore's statement. An unstable Burkina Faso Despite promising to fight the security crisis that pushed it to stage a coup, Burkina Faso's military leaders have struggled to deal withthe worsening crisis. According to conservative estimates, more than 60% of the country is now outside of government control, more than 2 million people have lost their homes and almost 6.5 million need humanitarian aid to survive. Human rights groups say the military leadership has installed a system of de facto censorship, crushing critics, while many have been killed byjihadi groupsorgovernment forces. As people flocked to Ouagadougou to celebrate Sankara, life elsewhere in the country reflects a different reality. "We can go out for a bit in the city center, but with caution," said one student from Dori, the capital of the northern region, echoing concerns about restrictions on free speech and movement. The student spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of being arrested. Security concerns have permeated every aspect of life in Ouagadougou. Even the price of beer has skyrocketed as more places become inaccessible to traders. "There are two Burkina Fasos," said a teacher from the east, speaking on condition of condition of anonymity for safety reasons. "One where the streets are deserted at night, and another that comes alive to enjoy the cool evening air."

Burkina Faso's military leaders turn to 'Africa's Che Guevara' to rally struggling country

Burkina Faso's military leaders turn to 'Africa's Che Guevara' to rally struggling country OUAGADOUGOU, Burkina Faso (AP) — ...
Iran executes man responsible for Azerbaijan embassy attackNew Foto - Iran executes man responsible for Azerbaijan embassy attack

DUBAI (Reuters) -A man charged over a fatal shooting at Azerbaijan's embassy in the Iranian capital, Tehran, was executed on Wednesday, Iran's judiciary news outlet Mizan said. The shooting, which took place in January 2023 and led to the killing of the Azeri embassy security chief, brought relations between Tehran and Baku to a new low, with the latter branding the shooting as an "act of terrorism". Judicial authorities ruled the attack was for "personal reasons," Mizan reported. "I thought my wife was at Azerbaijan's embassy in Tehran and was not willing to meet with me. I decided to go there with a Kalashnikov rifle," the defendant said during his trial, according to Mizan. The two neighbouring countries have had tense relations, with Baku accusing Tehran of discriminating against its large ethnic Azeri minority and Iran voicing concerns regarding Azerbaijan's ties with its arch-rival Israel, as well as potential border changes following a military conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan. Iran's President Masoud Pezeshkian travelled to Baku last month, where he said Tehran hoped to resolve all issues jointly and to strengthen bilateral relations. (Reporting by Dubai Newsroom; Editing by Sharon Singleton)

Iran executes man responsible for Azerbaijan embassy attack

Iran executes man responsible for Azerbaijan embassy attack DUBAI (Reuters) -A man charged over a fatal shooting at Azerbaijan's embassy...
Timberwolves vs. Thunder: OKC's secret sauce in Game 1 rout? Forcing Minnesota into a trap of its own makingNew Foto - Timberwolves vs. Thunder: OKC's secret sauce in Game 1 rout? Forcing Minnesota into a trap of its own making

OKLAHOMA CITY — It's almost cruel how the Oklahoma City Thunder lull teams into a false confidence before recalibrating the game, turning it on its head and delivering blow after knockout blow. The Thunder, as precocious as they are, seduce you into believing the game is played on your terms. And before you know it, you're a ball of frustration — realizing that summer vacation is approaching with every loss. That seduction was evident Tuesday in Game 1 of the Western Conference finals, as it very much felt like the Minnesota Timberwolves had a good feel for their opponent, even though the two hadn't seen each other since February. It felt like the Thunder were going to have trouble getting secondary scoring outside of Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, that he would struggle against Minnesota's aggressive perimeter defense, and, finally, they'd have no answer for the red-hot Julius Randle. All of those things held true for a half before reality was established and reinforced inthe Thunder's resounding 114-88 win at Paycom Center. Their second half was masterful, picture-perfect execution as they outscored the Timberwolves 70-40. The Timberwolves were on high alert about their turnovers and how the Thunder thrive in the open floor — it was practically drilled into their heads the last few days in preparation for this series. The topic of Gilgeous-Alexander getting to the line, initiating contact and sometimes being tricky with what the officials see was also top of mind for the Timberwolves. And yet, they fell right into all of it because that's what the Thunder make you do. That's how the Thunder amassed 68 wins without a superteam, and with arguably their second-best player missing considerable time with injury when Chet Holmgren went down with a hip injury early in the season. So when the Timberwolves led by four at the half, largely on the back of Randle going nuclear from 3-point range (5 of 6 as part of 20 total points), it was easy to surmise the Thunder were still wearing the scent of the Denver Nuggets, and it would cost them in the series opener. Gilgeous-Alexander was 2 for 13 in the first half, too, the perfect opening for Minnesota to steal Game 1. Spoiler alert: It did not. "I thought it was great mental toughness," Thunder coach Mark Daigneault said. "To play that poorly offensively and to not get knocked out was huge. We lost the rounds but didn't get knocked out. We were going from playing one opponent that plays very different stylistically on both ends of the floor to an opponent that is way more free flowing on offense and way more physical and pressure oriented on defense." Perhaps they Thunder were truly staggered or maybe they played rope-a-dope in suffocating the Timberwolves offense in the second half. If the Timberwolves weren't turning the ball over or getting swiped on the weak side whenever they turned their heads, they were launching way too many 3-pointers off mistimed passes and long arms flying in their faces. Over 60 percent of the Timberwolves' shot attempts came from 3, a whopping 51 heaves that led to their demise. That slight lead was quickly overturned two minutes into the second half, when the Timberwolves found themselves giving up the equivalent of pick-sixes — turnovers immediately leading to scores on the other end — and their premier defenders encountered foul trouble. The Timberwolves were almost spooked, flinching and looking for defenders who weren't there. Launching that many 3s, in a sense, at least gives you a shot at getting hot even if the odds are small. Dribbling the ball into all those long arms and limbs, though? It feels like something negative is inevitable, and it seemed like it played into their minds. "I had no clue what they were thinking," Gilgeous-Alexander said. "We just try to play to our identity. We try to play to our plan defensively and it gave us life early in the game." Randle kept his turnovers down in his tour de force against the Golden State Warriors but he had five while Anthony Edwards had four. Each took just 13 shots, and the Timberwolves shot a ghastly 34.9% from the field and 29.4% from 3. Timberwolves subs Naz Reid and Nickeil Alexander-Walker shot 44 and 46% from the 3-point line, respectively, in the Warriors series. They, combined with Donte DiVincenzo, shot 5 for 28 (17.8%) from deep in Game 1. "Our defense was a huge catalyst. The turnovers are never ... that's not what we talk about," Daigneault said. "We talked about being aggressive in our help. That tends to yield turnovers when we really have that going, but it also yields tough shots, and so that's what we're trying to do." Edwards didn't put his stamp on the game the way he was expected to, perhaps adjusting to the calvary of defenders who take turns taking their medicine while attempting to give Edwards a little of his own. Gilgeous-Alexander is expected to be announced as the league's Most Valuable Player sometime soon, and he sent each Timberwolves defender headed to the bench in foul trouble and frustration. Jaden McDaniels, his primary defender, picked up his fourth foul in the third, and the game turned when he exited, and then he fouled out in 23 minutes. Edwards drew a technical foul for tossing the ball at Gilgeous-Alexander while the Thunder star was on the floor early in the first half, knowing his free-throw attempts were keeping the Thunder close when their offense hadn't got going. Even the one victory Minnesota had turned out the other way. Alexander-Walker was called for a foul on his cousin when Gilgeous-Alexander hit the floor in the third quarter. Alexander-Walker was furious, calling for a review from the bench. The officials determined there was no contact on Gilgeous-Alexander, but Oklahoma City kept possession due to Gilgeous-Alexander still having the ball when going to the floor. What ensued was Kenrich Williams hitting a jumper with the shot clock running down, thus negating the entire enterprise. Gilgeous-Alexander didn't have a legendary night, shooting just 10 for 27, but he kept attacking and kept drawing fouls on the way to 31 points, 9 assists and 14 free-throw attempts. The Thunder were able to put the Timberwolves away with their best player having a "C" night, but he and Jalen Williams made critical plays in the third to help the Thunder pull away while Holmgren was literally everywhere on defense. "At the end of the day, it's basketball," Gilgeous-Alexander said. "They throw you a problem and you solve it." The Thunder threw the Timberwolves a huge problem in return, and Minnesota will have two days to concoct a reply.

Timberwolves vs. Thunder: OKC's secret sauce in Game 1 rout? Forcing Minnesota into a trap of its own making

Timberwolves vs. Thunder: OKC's secret sauce in Game 1 rout? Forcing Minnesota into a trap of its own making OKLAHOMA CITY — It's al...
Formula 1: How to watch the Monaco Grand Prix on TV and what to knowNew Foto - Formula 1: How to watch the Monaco Grand Prix on TV and what to know

MONACO (AP) — Here's a guide that tells you what you need to know about Sunday's Monaco Grand Prix. It's the eighth round of the 2025Formula 1season. How to watch the Monaco Grand Prix on TV — In the U.S., on ESPN. —Other countries are listed here. What is the Monaco Grand Prix schedule? — Friday: First and second practice sessions. — Saturday: Third practice and qualifying. — Sunday: Monaco Grand Prix, 78 laps of the 3.34-kilometer (2.07-mile) Monaco circuit. Starts at 3 p.m. local time (9 a.m. ET / 1300 GMT). Where is the Monaco Grand Prix taking place? Tight, twisty and not really suited to modern F1 cars, Monaco is a throwback to the series origins in the 1950s. With old-school glamor and a harbor filled with luxury yachts, Monaco is known as "the jewel in the crown" of F1, but it's by far the slowest circuit of the year. Overtaking is so difficult that Saturday's qualifying session is arguably more important than the race. With barriers close to the track, even the smallest mistake can mean a crash. What happened in the last race? Max Verstappen gave his title defense a big boost by beating McLaren drivers Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri to win the Emilia-Romagna Grand Prix. Verstappen overtook Piastri around the outside at the start in a daring move and controlled the rest of the race with strong pace and smart strategy. Norris overtook Piastri for second place late in the race to cut his teammate's standings lead. What do I need to know about F1 so far? Get caught up: —Red Bull driver Max Verstappen wins F1's Emilia-Romagna Grand Prix to end Piastri's streak —Lewis Hamilton celebrates a fourth place which highlights Ferrari's tough season in F1 —FIA confirms 2 pit stops for the Monaco Grand Prix to liven up dull racing Key stats at Monaco 15 — McLaren is by far the most successful team ever in Monaco with 15 wins. But the last of those was 17 years ago, when a young Lewis Hamilton took the victory. 2 — A rule change means drivers will need to make at least two pit stops for tires this year. 93 — Charles Leclerc's victory last year was the first time in 93 years that a driver from Monaco won the Monaco Grand Prix. Louis Chiron won in 1931, 19 years before the F1 world championship was founded. What they're saying "Last year (at Monaco) was very difficult for us. I don't expect it to be a lot easier this time around because there's a lot of low-speed (corners)." — Max Verstappen "It's a circuit I enjoy. Last year (with second place) was a really good weekend for me, so hopefully we can go one better this year." — Oscar Piastri ___ AP auto racing:https://apnews.com/hub/auto-racing

Formula 1: How to watch the Monaco Grand Prix on TV and what to know

Formula 1: How to watch the Monaco Grand Prix on TV and what to know MONACO (AP) — Here's a guide that tells you what you need to know a...
Trump's 'Golden Dome' missile defense plan was inspired by Israel's multitiered defensesNew Foto - Trump's 'Golden Dome' missile defense plan was inspired by Israel's multitiered defenses

JERUSALEM (AP) — U.S. PresidentDonald Trump'splan for a "Golden Dome"to protect the United States from long-range missiles was at least partly inspired by Israel's multitiered missile defenses. Trump announced the $175 billion concept in the Oval Office on Tuesday, saying it would put U.S. weapons in space for the first time and be would be "fully operational" by the end of his term in early 2029, though a U.S. official familiar with the program said it could take longer. Israel's multilayered defenses, often collectively referred to as the "Iron Dome," have played a key role in defending it from rocket and missile fire from Iran and allied militant groups inthe conflict unleashed by Hamas' Oct. 7, 2023, attack. The sophisticated system, developed over decades with considerable U.S. support, is capable of detecting incoming fire and deploying only if the projectile is headed toward a population center or sensitive military or civilian infrastructure. Israeli leaders say the system isn't 100% guaranteed, but credit it with preventing serious damage and countless casualties. Here's a closer look at Israel's multilayered air-defense system: The Arrow This system developed with the U.S. is designed to intercept long-range missiles. The Arrow, which operates outside the atmosphere, has been used to intercept long-range missiles launched byIran-backed Houthi rebels in Yemenand by Iran itself duringtwo direct exchanges of firelast year. David's Sling Also developed with the U.S., David's Sling is meant to intercept medium-range missiles, such as those possessed by Lebanon's Hezbollah militant group. It was deployed on multiple occasions throughout the war with Hezbollah, whichended with a ceasefirelast year. Iron Dome This system, developed by Israel with U.S. backing, specializes in shooting down short-range rockets. Ithas intercepted thousands of rocketssince it was activated early last decade — including volleys launched by Hamas and Hezbollah. Israel says it has a success rate of over 90%. Iron Beam Israel is developing a new system to intercept incoming threats with laser technology. Israel has said this system will be a game changer because it would be much cheaper to operate than existing systems. According to Israeli media reports, the cost of a single Iron Dome interception is about $50,000, while the other systems can run more than $2 million per missile. Iron Beam interceptions, by contrast,would cost a few dollars apiece, according to Israeli officials — but the system is not yet operational. ___ Follow AP's war coverage athttps://apnews.com/hub/israel-hamas-war

Trump's 'Golden Dome' missile defense plan was inspired by Israel's multitiered defenses

Trump's 'Golden Dome' missile defense plan was inspired by Israel's multitiered defenses JERUSALEM (AP) — U.S. PresidentDona...
Farm minister in Japan, where rice prices are soaring, resigns amid outrage after he said he gets rice for freeNew Foto - Farm minister in Japan, where rice prices are soaring, resigns amid outrage after he said he gets rice for free

Japan's farm minister Taku Eto stepped down on Wednesday,domestic media reported, following public outrage over his comments on getting free rice. Eto said Sunday that he has never had to buy rice as he received ample amounts of the grain as gifts from supporters — a comment that struck a nerve with locals struggling with rocketing prices of the beloved staple. Trade tariffs bite: Japan's exports to the U.S. shrink for the first time this year Chinese firms look for alternatives to the U.S. market as trade war worries dwarf deal hopes Why Walmart decided to say it would raise prices — and risk Trump's fury Japan has been grappling with soaring rice prices for months as inclement weather and the country's long-held policy to protect local farmers' interests crimps supplies. Taku's resignation comes at a time when Prime MinisterShigeru Ishiba's government has been grappling with low approval ratings ahead of a pivotal Upper House election this summer and ongoing tariff negotiations with the U.S. NHK World reported that former Environment Minister Koizumi Shinjirowill succeed Eto. Ishiba's cabinet approval rating has dropped to anall-time low of 27.4%, as voters grow increasingly discontent with the administration's failure to address soaring rice prices and rejection of consumption tax cuts in response to rising inflation, according to a Kyodo News poll released Sunday. While Japan's agriculture ministry has been trying to curb soaring prices by releasinggovernment stockpiles, the move has had little effect in reining in prices. Rice prices in around 1,000 supermarketsnationwide reportedly climbed to an all-time high in the week ending May 11. Prices for a 5-kilogram bag of rice rose 54 yen week-on-week to 4,268 yen ($29.63). "Following Japan's rice shortage and subsequent high prices in summer 2024, prices have continued to soar, despite the arrival of the new domestic crop and record imports," the U.S. Department of Agriculturesaid in a March report. The spike in rice prices reflects the lingering effects of poor harvests last year, with domestic rice consumption being overwhelmingly supported by local production rather than imports, said HSBC's chief Asia economist Frederic Neumann. Straining the supply side issue is the fact that rice in Japan is produced mostly by elderly people running small farms, so they're not very efficient, said Sayuri Shirai, a professor of economics under Keio University's faculty of policy management, who added that the number of farmers is also dropping with the aging population. "Japanese like Japanese rice. They don't really like foreign rice," she said. Japan's rice economy remains fairly isolated from the world market, withstiff duties on imported riceaimed at protecting its rice farmers. To make matters worse, demand for Japanese rice has skyrocketed on the back ofhigh tourist footfall, the professor noted. The sharp increase in rice prices is also partly attributable to panic-driven hoarding by both households and businesses, said Takuji Okubo, chief economist of the Japan Risk Forum. While someretailers announced plans to import rice, unfamiliarity with imported rice among both consumers and businesses makes it unlikely that such imports will meaningfully alleviate the supply-demand imbalance, he told CNBC. Japan's inflationrose 3.6% year on year in March. Although the figure was lower than the 3.7% seen in February, it still marked three straight years that the headline inflation figure has remained above the Bank of Japan's 2% target. "That is very high compared to the U.S. or Europe," said Shirai, who added that Japan's inflation picture has more to do with cost pressures that are mostly derived from food prices. "That is why a lot of consumers are very angry," Shirai said. Additionally, the cheap yen also makes food imports expensive, she noted. Japanimports about 60% of its food supply, according to food sourcing and data hub Tridge. The country has afood self-sufficiency rate of 38%, compared withthe government's target of 45% by fiscal 2030.

Farm minister in Japan, where rice prices are soaring, resigns amid outrage after he said he gets rice for free

Farm minister in Japan, where rice prices are soaring, resigns amid outrage after he said he gets rice for free Japan's farm minister Ta...
Omar Marmoush scores stunning goal as Kevin De Bruyne says goodbye to Man CityNew Foto - Omar Marmoush scores stunning goal as Kevin De Bruyne says goodbye to Man City

MANCHESTER, England (AP) — Omar Marmoush's stunning long-range strike upstagedKevin De Bruyneon the Manchester City great's Etihad farewell. Marmoush let fly from around 30 yards (meters) to put City ahead in its 3-1 win against Bournemouth in the Premier League on Tuesday. The victory moved Pep Guardiola's team up to third in the standings and left Champions League qualification in its own hands heading into the last round of the season. De Bruyne was making his final home appearance for City before leaving the club as a free agent at the end of the season. After a trophy-laden 10 years, the Belgium international was greeted with a huge banner declaring him "King Kev" and given a standing ovation when he was substituted off in the second half. But it was Marmoush's goal after 14 minutes that lit up the match as his dipping shot clipped the post before crashing into the top corner. It was the type of goal that De Bruyne would have been proud of in a career that has seen him score numerous spectacular strikes of his own. De Bruyne missed a glorious chance to cap his farewell with a goal when missing an open net from close range — shooting against the bar. Bernardo Silva doubled City's lead in the 38th and substitute Nico Gonzalez added a third in the 89th. Deniel Jebbison pulled one back for Bournemouth in added time in a game that saw both teams reduced to 10 men. The win saw City bounce back from itsFA Cup final loss to Crystal Palaceon Saturday. It also means City needs a point in its final game against Fulham on Sunday to all but guarantee Champions League soccer next season, given its superior goal difference to top-five rivals Chelsea and Aston Villa. The loss ended Bournemouth's slim hopes of qualifying for Europe. De Bruyne tribute City unveiled a mosaic of De Bruyne at the club's academy and named a road on its campus after him. The 33-year-old De Bruyne was part of a period of unprecedented success for City, which saw it win 16 major trophies including six Premier League titles and the Champions League. He waved to the crowd and City fans serenaded him as he left the field in the second half before embracing Guardiola on the touchline. He is the latest City great to have a mural made in his honor, joining Yaya Toure, Joe Hart, David Silva, Vincent Kompany, Sergio Aguero, Fernandinho and Ilkay Gundogan. Rodri returns Rodri returnedto action eight months after having surgery on an ACL injury that ruled him out for the majority of the season. The Ballon d'Or winner came on as a second-half substitute to make his first appearance since beinginjured against Arsenalon Sept. 22. His return means he is likely to be available for the Club World Cup in the United States in June and July. Palace party There was no hangover for Crystal Palace after Saturday's FA Cup victory over City. Eddie Nketiah scored twice in a 4-2 win against Wolves. Just days after Palace's win at Wembley secured its first major trophy, the team kept the party going in front of its home fans at Selhurst Park. Wolves went ahead through Emmanuel Agbadou, but two goals from Nketiah in the space of five minutes in the first half put the home side in front. Eberechi Eze — who scored the winning goal in the final — was on target again late on. ___ James Robson is athttps://twitter.com/jamesalanrobson ___ AP soccer:https://apnews.com/hub/soccer

Omar Marmoush scores stunning goal as Kevin De Bruyne says goodbye to Man City

Omar Marmoush scores stunning goal as Kevin De Bruyne says goodbye to Man City MANCHESTER, England (AP) — Omar Marmoush's stunning long-...
Kurt Busch, Ray Hendrick and Harry Gant voted into NASCAR Hall of Fame Class of 2026New Foto - Kurt Busch, Ray Hendrick and Harry Gant voted into NASCAR Hall of Fame Class of 2026

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — Given his resume, Kurt Busch knew it was a matter of when, not if, he would be selected into the NASCAR Hall of Fame. Still, getting voted in on the first ballot on Tuesday was a huge relief for Busch, who let out an emotional sigh of relief after hearing his named called at the NASCAR Hall of Fame. "I'm very grateful and thankful that it happened this first time," Busch said. "You want to have that answer as fast as you can." Ray Hendrick and Harry Gant were also voted into the NASCAR Hall of Fame on Tuesday, while executive Humpy Wheeler was named the Landmark Award winner for his contribution to the sport. A ceremony will be held to officially induct the Class of 2026 into the Hall of Fame in March. The 46-year-old Busch held off Jimmie Johnson to win the 2004 Cup Series championship and went on to win 34 Cup races, including at least one victory in 19 of his 21 full-time seasons on the premier circuit before he retired in 2023. His journey to NASCAR stardom began in 2000 with a Truck Series rookie season that foreshadowed greatness. His big breakthrough came in 2004, when he became the first driver to win the title under NASCAR's "playoff" system – a feat that proved both his excellence and adaptability. The consistent Busch finished in the top 10 in the Cup Series standings 10 times. "Things happened fast for me in this sport and I don't know how or why," Busch said. "There was no template, there wasn't the ladder that these days you see the kids that have a system where it is going to be this or that. For me it was being in the right place at the right time and the universe smiled down on me." Hendrick, who died in 1990 at age 61, was the original "Mr. Modified." He is one of the winningest drivers of all time, with than 700 modified and late model sportsman wins between 1950-88. His success started in his home state of Virginia, where his No. 11 was well know. He won five track championships at South Boston Speedway — four modified and one late model sportsman. He was known as a driver that was willing to race "anywhere and everywhere," and did just that. He filled his schedule with modified and late model sportsman races across the East coast. Hendrick was known best for his wins on short tracks, but also produced victories at Talladega, Charlotte and Dover. Despite never winning a Modified Division championship, Hendrick finished in the top 10 in the standings nine times from 1960-69. The 85-year-old Gant, known as the "Bandit" for his long-time sponsorship with Skoal Bandits, won 18 Cup Series races, including the Southern 500 in 1984 and 1991. In the five seasons from 1981 through 1985, he finished in the top five in points four times, including a runner-up championship finish to Terry Labonte in 1984. He also won 21 Xfinity Series races. Members of the NASCAR Hall of Fame Voting Panel met Tuesday in an in-person closed session at the Charlotte Convention Center to debate and vote on the 15 nominees for the induction class of 2026 and the five nominees for the Landmark Award. The 49-person voting panel included representatives from NASCAR, the Hall of Fame, track owners from major facilities and historic short tracks, media members, manufacturer representatives, competitors (drivers, owners, crew chiefs), recognized industry leaders, a nationwide fan vote conducted through NASCAR.com and the reigning NASCAR Cup Series champion (Joey Logano). Busch and Gant both received 61% of the "modern era" ballot votes. Jeff Burton finished third, followed by Harry Hyde and Randy Dorton. Hendrick received 31% of the "pioneer" ballot votes. Bob Welborn finished second. Gant raced into his 50s, and still holds premier series records for oldest driver to win a race (52 years old) and a pole (54). He drove the first race car with a telemetry system installed in it at Talladega in 1985 and relayed the data to CBS during its coverage of the event. This was the Gant's seventh time on the ballot. He did not attend the announcement ceremony on Tuesday and was not available for comment. All three were among NASCAR's 75 Greatest Drivers and one of NASCAR Modified's All-Time Top 10 Drivers. Wheeler became synonymous with promotion and innovation. He spent 33 years as the president and general manager of Charlotte Motor Speedway and played a pivotal role in transforming the venue into a world-class facility. Wheeler added a new dynamic to the sport, a visionary whose leadership and creativity helped shape today's fan experience with the introduction of dramatic prerace ceremonies and the development of night racing at superspeedways. He was known for his innovative promotions and stunts. ___ AP auto racing:https://apnews.com/hub/auto-racing

Kurt Busch, Ray Hendrick and Harry Gant voted into NASCAR Hall of Fame Class of 2026

Kurt Busch, Ray Hendrick and Harry Gant voted into NASCAR Hall of Fame Class of 2026 CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — Given his resume, Kurt Busch kne...
Trump's approval rating ticks lower, economic concerns weigh, Reuters/Ipsos poll findsNew Foto - Trump's approval rating ticks lower, economic concerns weigh, Reuters/Ipsos poll finds

By Jason Lange WASHINGTON (Reuters) -President Donald Trump's approval rating ticked slightly lower this week to 42%, matching the lowest level of his new term as Americans kept a dour view of his handling of the U.S. economy, according to a new Reuters/Ipsos poll. The results of the three-day poll, which concluded on Sunday, showed a marginal dip from a week earlier when a Reuters/Ipsos survey showed 44% of Americans approved of the job Trump was doing as president. The poll has a margin of error of 3 percentage points. While low by historical standards, Trump's popularity remains higher than it was for much of his first term as president and is also stronger than what his Democrat predecessor Joe Biden had during the second half of his 2021-2025 term. Trump's high point remains his 47% rating in the hours after his return to the White House in January. His approval has shown little movement in recent weeks. Just 39% of respondents in the poll said Trump was doing a good job managing the U.S. economy, unchanged from a week earlier. Trump won the 2024 presidential election on a promise to bring about a golden age for the U.S. economy, but his aggressive measures to reshape global commerce - including levying heavy tariffs on major trading partners - have increased the risks of recession, economists say. Inflation rates in the United States soared under Biden but have been trending lower for several years. Some 33% of respondents in the latest Reuters/Ipsos poll gave Trump a thumbs up on how he was managing the cost of living, up from 31% a week earlier. Many economists, however, expect inflation will heat back up as tariffs put pressure on the profits of importers. Trump on Saturday urged Walmart, the world's largest retailer, to "eat the tariffs" instead of blaming them for the retailer's increased prices. He has urged the country's independent central bank, the Federal Reserve, to lower interest rates, but central bankers have also expressed worry over the prospects of higher inflation. The Reuters/Ipsos poll, carried out online and nationwide, surveyed 1,024 U.S. adults May 16-18. (Reporting by Jason Lange; Editing by Scott Malone and Deepa Babington)

Trump's approval rating ticks lower, economic concerns weigh, Reuters/Ipsos poll finds

Trump's approval rating ticks lower, economic concerns weigh, Reuters/Ipsos poll finds By Jason Lange WASHINGTON (Reuters) -President Do...
Kennedy said a 'team' is in Milwaukee to help with lead contamination. The city says that's not trueNew Foto - Kennedy said a 'team' is in Milwaukee to help with lead contamination. The city says that's not true

US Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. told a Senate subcommittee on Tuesday that the federal government has "a team in Milwaukee" helping the city address a lead crisis in its schools. The city says that that's not true and that it's still not receiving requested aid from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's childhood lead poisoning experts to deal with the ongoing contamination. During a Senate Appropriations subcommittee hearing to review the president's HHS budget request for 2026, Kennedy fielded questions about programs and staff already slashed from federal health agencies. CNN reported in April that the CDC had denied the city's request for help with lead exposures in Milwaukee Public Schools' aging buildings after the agency's lead experts were swept up in widespread cuts at US health agencies. Kennedy and HHS have said that the government plans to continue the work of lead poisoning prevention and surveillance at the new Administration for a Healthy America, rather than the CDC. The CDC's experts have not been rehired. "None have been rehired from our lead program or our division," Dr. Erik Svendsen, who was director of the Division of Environmental Health Science and Practice, which oversaw the childhood lead program, told CNN on Tuesday. In response to questions Tuesday from Sen. Jack Reed, D-Rhode Island, about the demise of the CDC's childhood lead poisoning prevention program, Kennedy said, "We are continuing to fund the program, and in Milwaukee, we have a team in Milwaukee, and we're giving laboratory support to that, to the analytics in Milwaukee, and we're working with the health department in Milwaukee." Caroline Reinwald, a spokesperson for the City of Milwaukee Health Department, said Kennedy's statement "is inaccurate." "The City of Milwaukee Health Department is not receiving any federal epidemiological or analytical support related to the MPS lead hazard crisis. Our formal Epi Aid request was denied by the CDC," she wrote in an email from CNN. Reinwald said the department did recently get help from a lab technician from the CDC's Laboratory Leadership Service, who was there from May 5 to May 16 to help calibrate a new instrument in the city's laboratory. "This support was requested independently of the MPS crisis and was part of a separate, pre-existing need to expand our lab's long-term capacity for lead testing," Reinwald said. Beyond the contamination in schools, the city has ongoing programs to test for and remediate lead in its aging homes. Earlier this month, CNN Chief Medical Correspondent Dr. Sanjay Gupta asked the city's health commissioner, Dr. Michael Totoraitis, if the agency had enough resources to accomplish what it needed to do. "We have enough of a team right now," Totoraitis said. "I think the long-term investigation into the potential chronic exposures of students at the districts is a part that we were really looking to the CDC to help us with, and unfortunately, HHS had laid off that entire team for childhood blood exposure. "These are the best and brightest minds in these areas around lead poisoning, and now they're gone." Andrew Nixon, director of communications for HHS, says the CDC is helping the Milwaukee health agency's lab. At the health department's request, he said in a statement Tuesday, "CDC is assisting with validating new lab instrumentation used for environmental lead testing. Staff from [the Milwaukee lab] are focused on the lead response and other routine testing while CDC will assist with testing validation, laboratory quality management, and regulatory requirement documentation to onboard the new laboratory instrument." The city says that the CDC lab technician has left and is not expected to return. As of now, it doesn't anticipate any further help from the CDC. "MHD is proud of the team currently serving Milwaukee families, managing its regular caseload while also responding to the lead crisis in MPS schools. While we would have welcomed federal support, we continue to move forward without it," Reinwald said in a statement. At the end of Tuesday's hearing, Wisconsin Sen. Tammy Baldwin, a Democrat, made a statement to "correct the record." "There are no staff on the ground deployed to Milwaukee to address the lead exposure of children in schools, and there are no staff left in that office at CDC, because they have all been fired," Baldwin told Kennedy. "I look forward to working with you to reestablish that. It sounds like you have a commitment to that, but we need staff in order to make it function." For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Kennedy said a ‘team’ is in Milwaukee to help with lead contamination. The city says that’s not true

Kennedy said a 'team' is in Milwaukee to help with lead contamination. The city says that's not true US Health and Human Service...
Jordon Hudson reportedly demanded content approval, partial ownership of UNC 'Hard Knocks' before NFL Films killed projectNew Foto - Jordon Hudson reportedly demanded content approval, partial ownership of UNC 'Hard Knocks' before NFL Films killed project

An offseason version of "Hard Knocks"was supposed to cover Bill Belichick as he embarked on his first season as head coach of UNC. We now know why that project fell apart. Shortly before NFL Films and HBO were set to announce the docuseries, Belichick's girlfriend, Jordon Hudson, demanded both content approval and partial ownership of the show, according toKatherine Rosman of The New York Times. Rather than hand control of the long-running show to the 24-year-old Hudson,who has made no shortage of headlines this offseason at Belichick's side, NFL Films reportedly opted to pull the plug. Producers reportedly learned after the fact Hudson was in negotiations with another production company, EverWonder, to make a similar series. Perits website, EverWonder has been involved in a number of sports projects, most notably the production of Netflix's Jake Paul vs. Mike Tyson fight. Ithad previously been reportedHudson played an instrumental role in killing the Tar Heel edition of "Hard Knocks," with one of the show's executive producers alluding to her demands to be heavily involved in the production of the series: "The conversation took a turn we were not comfortable with." Not even NFL head coaches or general managers are granted final cut of "Hard Knocks" seasons covering their teams, as the show is ultimately controlled by the league itself. Belichick's inclusion would have been new ground for the series, but Hudson apparently wanted control over what would have been a very loud message about how his foray into college football is going. That desire for control has turned into an unavoidable narrative over the past few months,most notably when Hudson stepped in to nix a CBS interview question about how she and Belichick met. Questions about her involvement in the UNC program have become loud enoughthe Tar Heels felt the need to release a statement confirming she is not a school employee, but she is welcome at their facilities. And given the Times reported Hudson has told at least one person that she and Belichick are engaged, she may be in this for the long haul. The other area the Times reported Hudson's involvement in Belichick's professional life is a number of trademark applications in his name. Literally. Because the trademarks for the coach's well-known catchphrases, such as "No Days Off" and "Do Your Job," are all held by his old New England Patriots team, Hudson has reportedly attempted to pull a Taylor Swift and applied for trademarks reading "No Days Off (Bill's Version)," and "Do Your Job (Bill's Version)." We'll see how that one works out.

Jordon Hudson reportedly demanded content approval, partial ownership of UNC 'Hard Knocks' before NFL Films killed project

Jordon Hudson reportedly demanded content approval, partial ownership of UNC 'Hard Knocks' before NFL Films killed project An offsea...
Angel Reese responds to WNBA hate speech investigation: 'No place' for racismNew Foto - Angel Reese responds to WNBA hate speech investigation: 'No place' for racism

Chicago SkyAll-StarAngel Reesesays "there's no place in this league" for racism and discrimination after hateful comments directed her wayduring the Sky's season openeragainst theIndiana Feverled to a league-wide investigation. "It's tough … and obviously in the moment it's hard to hear,"Reese told reporterson Tuesday when asked how the comments affected her play on Saturday. But Reese credited her "support system" with aiding her: "I've gone through so many different things in the past couple of years of my life, but I think … being part of an organization that really supports me and loves me is something that I couldn't imagine not being part of." FollowingChicago's 93-58 loss to Indianaat Gainbridge Fieldhouse on Saturday, theWNBA launched an investigation into fan conduct, saying, "The WNBA strongly condemns racism, hate and discrimination … We are aware of the allegations and are looking into the matter." Both theSkyandFeverorganizations welcomed the investigation and pledged to cooperate. The WNBA didn't specify the allegations, but a person with knowledge of the situationtold IndyStar, part of the USA TODAY Network, that the league is looking into racist comments directed at Reese by fan(s) in the crowd. The league has not issued a timeline for the investigation and will not make an announcement about findings until it is complete. WNBA INVESTIGATESalleged hateful comments made toward Angel Reese during Fever vs. Sky Angel Reese took 3 questions about the WNBA opening an investigation into reported hate speech directed at her during the Sky-Fever game Saturday. After that a Sky media rep quickly responded "next question" when reporters asked follow ups.#Skypic.twitter.com/qsREFpJCXk — Josh Frydman (@Josh_Frydman)May 20, 2025 ANGEL REESEcalls out lack of action against racism WNBA players have faced Reese applauded the league and the Sky for taking quick action, pointing to the WNBA's recently-launched "No Space for Hate" initiative that aims to combat hate and promote respect across the league afterracism, discriminatory comments and bullyingreached a boiling point in the league during the 2024 season. "I think the WNBA and our team and our organization has done a great job supporting me. I've had communication from everyone, from so many people across this league," Reese said. "Going through this process, obviously if it could happen to me, it could happen to anyone. I think they've done a great job supporting us in this." Reese added: "The (WNBA) understands that this is the priority … I believe every player in this league deserves to be treated with respect and want to come to work and just have fun, and have a great environment to work at." The "No Space for Hate" initiative features a task force of league and team representatives that focuses on "enhanced technological features to detect hateful comments online; increased emphasis on team, arena, and league security measures; reinforcing mental health resources; and alignment of core against hate," the WNBA announced last week. Reese and Indiana Fever rookie Caitlin Clark have frequently been pitted against each other dating back to their collegiate days at LSU and Iowa, respectively. The popularity surrounding Reese and Clark has translated to increased viewership and support for the league, but it hasn't always been support in good faith. In September, Reese was vocal about lack of action by the league and media against racism against players, including her. "The media has benefited from my pain & me being villainized to create a narrative,"she wrote on Xat the time. "They allowed this. This was beneficial to them... Y'all a little late to the party and could have tried to put out this fire way before it started." "I sometimes share my experiences of things that have happened to me but I've also allowed this to happen to me for way too long and now other players in this league are dealing with & experiencing the same things,"Reese wrote at the time. "This isn't OK at all. Anything beyond criticism about playing the game we love is wrong. I'm sorry to all the players that have/continue to experience the same things I have." Contributing: Christine Brennan This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Angel Reese on WNBA investigation into hate speech: 'There's no place'

Angel Reese responds to WNBA hate speech investigation: 'No place' for racism

Angel Reese responds to WNBA hate speech investigation: 'No place' for racism Chicago SkyAll-StarAngel Reesesays "there's n...
'I've done enough': Elon Musk says he's going to spend 'a lot less' money on politicsNew Foto - 'I've done enough': Elon Musk says he's going to spend 'a lot less' money on politics

WASHINGTON –Elon Musk, the richest man in the world and Republican mega-donor whohelped bankroll President Donald Trump's 2024 campaign, said he intends to substantially cut back his political spending in future elections as he shifts his attention to his business empire. "I think in terms of political spending, I'm going to do a lot less in the future," Musk, CEO of Tesla and SpaceX, said on May 20 at the Bloomberg News at the Qatar Economic Forum. "I think I've done enough." Musk recently scaled back his workleading the Trump administration's Department of Government Efficiency, aimed at slashing federal spending. His reduced White House role ‒he's described as devoting a day or twoa week to DOGE ‒ followed massive profit losses for Tesla, his electric car company, after Musk became an increasingly polarizing figure as Trump's top sidekick. More:Elon Musk talks Lincoln Bedroom stays, late-night ice cream as he steps back from DOGE Musk was asked during an interview at the Bloomberg forum whether his decision to spend less on politics was prompted by public blowback. Musk responded, "Well, if I see a need to do political spending in the future, I will do it. I don't currently see a reason." Musk pumped nearly $290 million into the 2024 election to help Trump and other Republican candidates, making him the largest donor, by far, of the election cycle. More:Elon Musk takes a backseat as Donald Trump reaches 100 days in office More recently, Musk spent $20 million to help the Republican-backed candidate in a state Supreme Court race in Wisconsin. It turned intoan embarrassing setback after Susan Crawford, who was backed byDemocrats,won by about 10 percentage points. Her win came after Musk declared the outcome could decide "the future of America and Western civilization." Musk also said he's committed to staying on as Tesla's CEO for another five years, saying at the forum that maintaining "reasonable control" of Tesla was the most important factor for him. Despite his less visible role with DOGE, Musk tagged along during Trump's three-country swing to the Middle East last week. During a stop in Saudi Arabia, Musk announced his company SpaceXstruck a deal to bring its Starlink internet servicesto the country for aviation and maritime shipping. Contributing: Reuters. Reach Joey Garrison on X @joeygarrison. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Elon Musk says he plans to spend 'a lot less' money on politics

'I've done enough': Elon Musk says he's going to spend 'a lot less' money on politics

'I've done enough': Elon Musk says he's going to spend 'a lot less' money on politics WASHINGTON –Elon Musk, the ric...
Hegseth orders new review of Afghanistan withdrawal and suicide bombing at Kabul airportNew Foto - Hegseth orders new review of Afghanistan withdrawal and suicide bombing at Kabul airport

WASHINGTON (AP) — Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has ordered another review of the U.S. military's chaotic withdrawal from Afghanistan in 2021, and of the suicide bombing at the Kabul airport that killed American troops and Afghans. President Donald Trumpand Hegseth have repeatedly blasted the Biden administration for the withdrawal, which Hegseth said Tuesday was "disastrous and embarrassing." He said the new review will interview witnesses, analyze the decision-making and "get the truth." There have already beenmultiple reviewsof the withdrawal by the Pentagon, U.S. Central Command, the State Department and Congress, which have involved hundreds of interviews and studies of videos, photographs and other footage and data. It's unclear what specific new information the new review is seeking. The Abbey Gate bombing during the final days of theAfghanistan withdrawalkilled 13 U.S. service members and 170 Afghans, and wounded scores more. It triggered widespread debate and congressional criticism, fueled by searing photographs of desperate Afghans trying to crowd into the airport to get out of Kabul, with some clinging to U.S. military aircraft as they were taking off. A detailedU.S. military reviewwas ordered in 2023 to expand the number of people interviewed, after a Marine injured in the blast said snipers believed they saw the possible bomber but couldn't get approval to take him out. Thefindings, released in 2024, refutedthose assertions and concluded that the bombing was not preventable. A congressional review was highly critical of the withdrawal, saying the Biden administration did not adequately prepare for it or for all the contingencies and put personnel in danger. Others, however, have faulted the State Department for not moving quickly enough to decide on an evacuation, resulting in a rush to get out as the Taliban took control of the country. Critics have also blamed Trump for making a deal with the Taliban in 2020 when he was president to remove U.S. troops from Afghanistan, which decreased the number of forces on the ground as the pullout went on. Both Trump and then-President Joe Biden wanted an end to the war and U.S. troops out of Afghanistan. The new review will be led by Sean Parnell, the assistant to the secretary of defense for public affairs. He will convene a panel that will provide updates "at appropriate times," but there is no time frame or deadline for any report, which is very unusual.

Hegseth orders new review of Afghanistan withdrawal and suicide bombing at Kabul airport

Hegseth orders new review of Afghanistan withdrawal and suicide bombing at Kabul airport WASHINGTON (AP) — Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth ha...
Friend Charged with Giving Alcohol to Underage Pittsburgh Pirates Fan Before 21-Foot Fall from Outfield WallNew Foto - Friend Charged with Giving Alcohol to Underage Pittsburgh Pirates Fan Before 21-Foot Fall from Outfield Wall

Joe Sargent/Getty A 21-year-old man has been charged with providing alcohol to the underage Pirates fan who fell on the field on April 30 Authorities say security footage shows the man purchasing two tall cans of beer Kavan Markwood, the fan who fell, sustained injuries to his skull, brain, spine, both sides of his ribs and his lungs A 21-year-old has been charged with supplying alcohol to theunderage Pirates fanwhofell onto the fieldat PNC Park last month. According to court documents obtained and reviewed by PEOPLE, Ethan Kirkwood is being charged with two misdemeanor counts of furnishing liquor to a minor just beforeKavan Markwood's fallover the top of a 21-foot outfield wallon April 30. Authorities also claim security video shows Kirkwood purchasing two 24-ounce cans of beer around the start of the Pirates game, according toABCandCBS, and additional footage shows both Kirkwood and Markwood holding the beers during the game. Kirkwood is also apparently seen on surveillance video returning to the bar at PNC Park to purchase two more beers before Markwood's fall onto the field. GoFundMe As he was being questioned by authorities about the incident, Kirkwood admitted to purchasing alcohol for Markwood before the fall, the complaint alleges, according to ABC and CBS. Kirkwood will return to court for a preliminary hearing in the case on June 23. Markwood's fall occurred in the seventh inning of the Pirates win over the Chicago Cubs on April 30.In videos of the incident, Markwood appeared to lean over the railing while cheering for the Pirates after they hit a double and proceeded to fall 21 feet down onto the field. Allegheny General Hospital Chief Medical Officer Dr. Al Philp gave an update on Markwood's condition on May 7, confirming the baseball fan sustained injuries to his skull, brain, spine, both sides of his ribs and his lungs, according toCBS Pittsburgh. Although Philp noted that it will take time for Markwood to heal, he said he has "progressed really, really well." Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from juicy celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. "He's at a point now where he's off the breathing machine, he's out of the intensive care unit, and he's preparing to move to the next step, which will be physical therapy rehab. Seeing him recover so quickly has really been gratifying, frankly, ahead of schedule from what we would have anticipated given the real severity of his injuries," Philp continued. Markwood gave his first interviewto thePittsburgh Tribune-Reviewon May 7, where he said he felt "alright," but also like he had "broken everything." He told the news outlet that he "can't really sleep" and has a "lot of back pain." Read the original article onPeople

Friend Charged with Giving Alcohol to Underage Pittsburgh Pirates Fan Before 21-Foot Fall from Outfield Wall

Friend Charged with Giving Alcohol to Underage Pittsburgh Pirates Fan Before 21-Foot Fall from Outfield Wall Joe Sargent/Getty A 21-year-old...
Did the San Francisco 49ers make a mistake in signing Brock Purdy to $265 million contract extension?New Foto - Did the San Francisco 49ers make a mistake in signing Brock Purdy to $265 million contract extension?

(This article was written with the assistance of Castmagic, an AI tool, and reviewed by our editorial team to ensure accuracy. Please reach out to us if you notice any mistakes.) Did the San Francisco 49ers make a mistake in signing Brock Purdy to a massivefive-year, $265 million contract extension, with $181 million guaranteed? That's the question Frank Schwab and Charles Robinson debated onthe latest edition of the "Inside Coverage" podcast. Schwab criticized the extension. He acknowledges that Purdy has earned his contract and that it's a feel-good sports story. However, he doesn't believe the 49ers can win a Super Bowl with Purdy now making $53 million a year. He argues that the team's previous Super Bowl window was due in large part to having a quarterback on a rookie contract — which allowed them to spend more on elite talent around Purdy. "I don't think they could put the pieces around him to replicate what they've done the past few years," Schwab contends. "I think this is the one team that should have leveraged the rookie deal with quarterbacks because I think Kyle Shanahan could find the next Brock Purdy." Schwab is emphatic that head coach Kyle Shanahan "is the cheat code" who is capable of finding and developing another quarterback, and the 49ers lost a big advantage by moving Purdy to a top-tier contract. "They would have won a Super Bowl with Jimmy Garoppolo had the defense done its job on a third-and-long against Patrick Mahomes," Schwab argues. He believes that paying Purdy, who he believes is a mid-tier quarterback, such big money is detrimental and that the team should always be looking for the next cheap rookie contract to build around. Robinson disagrees. He points out that the contract doesnotreset the quarterback market and is actually the seventh-highest QB deal in the league, sitting alongside the likes of Detroit Lions QB Jared Goff. Robinson notes that there are limited alternatives — either teams extend the quarterbacks they know, or they gamble with total uncertainty and risk losing their window with the veterans on their roster. He argues that unless the 49ers want to completely reboot and tank, paying Purdy at his current rate is a reasonable and necessary move. "If you can tell me what a better alternative was, because it wasn't in the draft this year," Robinson presses. "They're not going to have a pick high enough, really, to get an elite player next year." Robinson emphasizes that it's the kind of deal you sign if you have a good, but not necessarily elite, quarterback. From Robinson's perspective, the 49ers made a practical decision consistent with the market for quarterbacks of Purdy's caliber and their current situation as a contending team. He stresses that unless there is a clear, better alternative, extending Purdy at this value was the only realistic path. To hear more NFL discussions, tune intoInside CoverageonApple,SpotifyorYouTube.

Did the San Francisco 49ers make a mistake in signing Brock Purdy to $265 million contract extension?

Did the San Francisco 49ers make a mistake in signing Brock Purdy to $265 million contract extension? (This article was written with the ass...
Van Hollen slams Rubio in contentious exchange over deportations and Abrego GarciaNew Foto - Van Hollen slams Rubio in contentious exchange over deportations and Abrego Garcia

Secretary of State Marco Rubio returned to the Senate Foreign Affairs Committee on Wednesday, appearing before his former colleagues for the first time since his confirmation to defend the president's foreign policy and the administration's budget priorities for the year ahead. Rather than a warm homecoming, Rubio was quickly on defense, with several Senate Democrats pressing the secretary on the State Department's reorganization and spending cuts, as well as Middle East policy and El Salvador detentions. Sen. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md., spent much of his allotted time criticizing Rubio on a number of issues, including his coziness with El Salvador's President Nayib Bukele and the Trump administration's failure to "facilitate" in returning Kilmar Abrego Garcia, a migrant who was erroneously deported to El Salvador, to the United States. Abrego Garcia was living in Maryland at the time he was deported. "In the case of El Salvador, absolutely, absolutely, we deported gang members, gang members -- including the one you had a margarita with. And that guy is a human trafficker, and that guy is a gang banger, and that and the evidence is going to be clear," Rubio asserted, referring to Van Hollenmeeting with Abrego Garciain El Salvador in April. MORE: Van Hollen describes dramatic meeting with Abrego Garcia in El Salvador upon return to US "Mr. Chairman, he can't make unsubstantiated comments like that," Van Hollen protested. "Secretary Rubio should take that testimony to the federal court of the United States because he hasn't done it under oath!" Van Hollen has said neither man drank from the glasses that he said officials put on the table during the meeting that appeared to have liquid inside with salt or sugar rims. "No judge and the judicial branch cannot tell me or the president how to conduct foreign policy," Rubio shot back. "No judge can tell me how I have to outreach to a foreign partner or what I need to say to them, and if I do reach that foreign partner and talk to them, I have under no obligation to share that with the judiciary branch. Diplomacy doesn't work that way." "You're just blowing smoke now," Van Hollen said. Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Jim Risch, R-Idaho, had to intervene in the at-times contentious conversation as Van Hollen compared Rubio's policy on deportations and the El Salvador detentions of migrants to the "shameful era" of McCarthy-era witch hunts and the red scare, saying the administration's "campaign of fear and repression is eating away at foundational values of our democracy." "Back then, it took one voice, attorney Joseph Welch, to cut through the hysteria with a simple question that marked the beginning of the end of that shameful era: 'Have you no sense of decency?'" Van Hollen said as he concluded his line of questioning. "And I would ask you the same, Secretary Rubio. You have shown, with your words and your actions what your answer is. I have to tell you directly and personally that I regret voting for you as secretary of state." Van Hollen slams Rubio in contentious exchange over deportations and Abrego Garciaoriginally appeared onabcnews.go.com

Van Hollen slams Rubio in contentious exchange over deportations and Abrego Garcia

Van Hollen slams Rubio in contentious exchange over deportations and Abrego Garcia Secretary of State Marco Rubio returned to the Senate For...
Trump unveils plans for $175B 'Golden Dome' missile defense shieldNew Foto - Trump unveils plans for $175B 'Golden Dome' missile defense shield

President Donald Trump on Tuesday unveiled plans to begin building a sophisticated newmissile defense shieldthat could intercept threats from space, estimating the endeavor would cost some $175 billion and become operational in three years. The project "Golden Dome," which will be led by Space Force Gen. Michael Guetlein, echoes President Ronald Reagan's failed "Star Wars" program, which was criticized for being overly ambitious and siphoning money away from other national priorities. The White House cited advancements in technology as a reason why some of Reagan's vision was now possible. "This design for the Golden Dome will integrate with our existing defense capabilities and should be fully operational before the end of my term," Trump said in announcing the plan. "So we'll have it done in about three years. Once fully constructed, the Golden Dome will be capable of intercepting missiles even if they are launched from other sides of the world and even if they are launched from space." MORE: Iran launches attack on Israel: What is the Iron Dome? Trump began calling for a U.S. missile defense shield similar toIsrael'sIron Dome a year ago on the campaign trail after watching Israel deflect some 300 missiles and drones amid Iran's attacks that spring. Military officials said at the time that they hadn't expressed a need for such a comprehensive shield to defend the U.S., while critics noted the U.S. wasn't under threat from its neighbors, Canada and Mexico, and is buffered by two oceans. Still, some experts say the idea of improving the nation's ability to fend off aerial threats is long overdue. Tom Karako, a missile defense expert, said the current U.S. system is focused mostly on the ability to shoot down intercontinental ballistic missiles from rogue states like North Korea. But the U.S. needs better protection when it comes to other threats like drones, cruise missiles and hypersonic weapons, he said. "The truth is, we're pretty vulnerable," said Karako, director of the Missile Defense Project and a senior fellow with the Defense and Security Department at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. One question, though, is how much capability the U.S. can develop in just three years, particularly considering Trump's stated goal of developing a network of space-based interceptors. "It's not to say that it can't be done sooner than perhaps some folks think, but three years is going to be pushing it for some of those things," Karako said. Standing beside Trump in the Oval Office was Guetlein, the Pentagon's vice chief of space operations who will lead the project, and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, who said the project was possible now because technology has improved since the Reagan days. "The technology wasn't there. Now it is," Hegseth said of Reagan's "Star Wars" program. "And you're following through to say we will protect the homeland from cruise missiles, ballistic missiles, hypersonic missiles, drones, whether they're conventional or nuclear." On Capitol Hill, early indications were that Republicans would support the effort with Sen. Roger Wicker of Mississippi, chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, promising to include a $25 billion "down payment" in an upcoming spending bill. Democrats, though, have questioned the steep price tag. Sen. Jack Reed, the top Democrat on the committee, noted last week the White House requested some $113 billion in its budget for next year without outlining a clear plan on what the program would achieve and when. "That's essentially a slush fund at this point," said Reed, D-Rhode Island. Trump's talk of building "the greatest dome of them all" seemed to originate on the campaign trail. After watching Israel's successful use of its Iron Dome, Trump's calls for a U.S. version was met with cheers from crowds at his rallies so much that Republicans included the construction of a U.S. missile shield in its party platform ahead of the 2024 elections. In January, Trump signed an executive order calling on Hegseth to make it happen. MORE: A timeline of the intensifying Israel-Hezbollah-Iran conflict "The threat of attack by ballistic, hypersonic, and cruise missiles, and other advanced aerial attacks, remains the most catastrophic threat facing the United States," Trump wrote in the Jan. 27 order. Since then, "the Defense Department has gathered the brightest minds and best technical talent available to review a full range of options that considers current U.S. missile defense technology and cutting-edge innovation to rapidly develop and field a dependable umbrella of protection for our homeland," Sean Parnell, chief Pentagon spokesman and Hegseth's senior adviser, said earlier this week amid reports the Defense Department has been working on the proposal. Still unclear is exactly how comprehensive the system would be. Also in question is whether such an ambitious program might siphon away money from other vital programs. The Air Force, for example, is in the process of replacing 400 of its intercontinental ballistic missiles built in the 1970s with new ones. MORE: Army expects to spend up to $45M for its 250th birthday celebration in DC "Some U.S. technology in space such as space-based sensors and air and missile defense exist today, but all of the systems comprising the Golden Dome architecture will need to be seamlessly integrated," Hegseth said in a statement. "Golden Dome will be fielded in phases, prioritizing defense where the threat is greatest." Trump's plan appears to be on the lower end of congressional cost estimates, but dramatically sooner than thought possible. Earlier this month, the Congressional Budget Office estimated the U.S. would need to spend anywhere from $161 billion to $542 billion over 20 years to develop and launch a network of space-based interceptors. According to the CBO, these cost estimates are lower than they would have been years ago because of a decline in the cost of available launch services. Trump unveils plans for $175B 'Golden Dome' missile defense shieldoriginally appeared onabcnews.go.com

Trump unveils plans for $175B 'Golden Dome' missile defense shield

Trump unveils plans for $175B 'Golden Dome' missile defense shield President Donald Trump on Tuesday unveiled plans to begin buildin...
Man United gets boost ahead of Europa League final against Tottenham as 3 players returnNew Foto - Man United gets boost ahead of Europa League final against Tottenham as 3 players return

BILBAO, Spain (AP) — Manchester United will have a trio of players back from injury for the Europa League final against Tottenham, coach Ruben Amorim said Tuesday, with Diogo Dalot, Leny Yoro and Joshua Zirkzee all available to come off the bench. All three players took part in training on Tuesday and could play at least a few minutes if needed. "Very good for us," Amorim said. "Of course, they are limited in the minutes for the game but they can help us win the game." Matthijs de Ligt will not be available but traveled to Bilbao to support his teammates. Lisandro Martinez is the only other first-team player not available as he remains out with a serious knee injury. The return of Zirkzee was the biggest surprise as he had initially been ruled out for the season because of a hamstring injury he picked up in April. "Me neither," Amorim said when told nobody expected the forward's return. "They recover quite well. They push, of course, and we have to respect the feeling of the player but we push a little bit, as they wanted to be part of the team. That is a very good sign." Dalot was nursing a calf injury since April, and Yoro had been out since earlier this month. United has had a dismal season but is hoping to finish it with a European title. The club is in 16th place in the league standings after 18 defeats, its most in a single campaign since the Premier League began in 1992. It is also certain to register itsworst-ever points totalin that era, as well as its lowest finish. Tottenham injuries Tottenham coach Ange Postecoglou said midfielder Lucas Bergvall has not recovered from an ankle injury in time for the final. He was with the squad in Bilbao but won't play. Midfielder Pape Sarr will be available despite not finishing the league match against Aston Villa on Friday because of a back issue. Tottenham is in 17th place in the Premier League, having lost 21 times — also a club record in the modern era. The Champions League runner-up in 2019, Tottenham is seeking its first trophy since the 2008 English League Cup. ___ AP soccer:https://apnews.com/hub/soccer

Man United gets boost ahead of Europa League final against Tottenham as 3 players return

Man United gets boost ahead of Europa League final against Tottenham as 3 players return BILBAO, Spain (AP) — Manchester United will have a ...

 

GINGER MAG © 2015 | Distributed By My Blogger Themes | Designed By Templateism.com