San Diego FC spoils Son Heung-min's LAFC home debut with a 2-1 victoryNew Foto - San Diego FC spoils Son Heung-min's LAFC home debut with a 2-1 victory

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Hirving Lozano and Anders Dreyer scored, and San Diego FC spoiled the home debut of Los Angeles FC forward Son Heung-min with a 2-1 victory Sunday night. After Dreyer got the tiebreaking goal in the 66th minute, Western Conference-leading San Diego held on against a barrage of LAFC chances to extend its unbeaten streak to six matches in MLS play. Denis Bouanga scored in the first half for LAFC, but the French star and Son both failed to convert golden scoring chances in the final minutes of expansion San Diego's first trip 120 miles north to BMO Stadium. CJ Dos Santos made three saves for the visitors, including a diving stop on Son in second-half injury time. Son was given a hero's welcome in his first match in Los Angeles, taking the field nearly four weeks afterLAFC announced the landmark signingof the South Korean star following his decade at Tottenham. Son played his first three matches on the road for LAFC, scoring a goal and immediately energizing the offense while his new club went unbeaten. The sellout crowd serenaded Son from the moment he stepped on the field for warmups in Los Angeles, which has the world's largest Korean population outside Korea. With thousands of fans wearing his jerseys for club and country, Son repeatedly waved to those cheering him on, and he exhorted the crowd into a frenzy right before kickoff. Bouanga put LAFC ahead in the 15th minute with a beautiful chip volley into San Diego's net off an excellent pass from teenager David Martínez. Bouanga's goal was his 15th of the season, all in his last 19 matches. But Lozano answered in the 33rd minute with a strike from the middle of the box for his ninth MLS goal. The Mexican national team star celebrated by taunting the famously raucous North End supporters' section. Dreyer put San Diego ahead with a individual effort by the Danish star, slipping behind LAFC's back line to collect Jeppe Tverskov's pass and juking two defenders before firing a left-footed shot for his 14th goal. LAFC controlled play for long stretches, but couldn't even it. Son hit a screamer toward the far top corner in the 45th minute, but Dos Santos made a superb leaping save. Hugo Lloris' long pass put Son in a one-on-one break in the 74th minute, but he couldn't get a shot off. Son then hit the post in the 78th minute with a shot from the top of the box. Bouanga got alone on the keeper in the 82nd minute, but waited too long to take a shot. Son's hard shot in the 92nd minute was saved by a diving Dos Santos. ___ AP soccer:https://apnews.com/soccer

San Diego FC spoils Son Heung-min's LAFC home debut with a 2-1 victory

San Diego FC spoils Son Heung-min's LAFC home debut with a 2-1 victory LOS ANGELES (AP) — Hirving Lozano and Anders Dreyer scored, and S...
Jessica Pegula, Barbora Krejcikova advance to U.S. Open quarterfinalsNew Foto - Jessica Pegula, Barbora Krejcikova advance to U.S. Open quarterfinals

Fourth-seeded Jessica Pegula is making another deep run at the U.S. Open and she claimed her spot in the quarterfinals Sunday with an easy 6-1, 6-2 victory over fellow American Ann Li in New York. Pegula converted 6 of 9 break points and needed just 54 minutes to subdue Li, who committed 19 unforced errors while playing in Arthur Ashe Stadium for the first time. Pegula next will face two-time Grand Slam winner Barbora Krejcikova of the Czech Republic. Krejcikova staved off eight match points while rallying to a 1-6, 7-6 (13), 6-3 victory over upstart Taylor Townsend. Krejcikova held a 43-37 edge in winners while needing three hours and four minutes to finish off Townsend, who was vying to reach the quarterfinals of a Grand Slam event for the first time. Townsend dominated the first set and had a chance to close the deal in straight sets. She was leading 6-3 in a second-set tiebreaker before letting three straight match points get away. The two women traded big hits and missed shots throughout the 25-minute tiebreaker before Krejcikova finished off the 98-minute set with a slam. Seven of Townsend's squandered match points came in the second-set tiebreaker. Krejcikova broke Townsend's service to make it 4-2 and 5-3 in the third set before finishing off a scintillating victory that disappointed the pro-American crowd at Louis Armstrong Stadium. "I'm totally enjoying this crowd. Even though it's not for me, it's fine," Krejcikova said in her on-court interview. "I love the atmosphere. I love when they're cheering. They're making the match huge. It's for the Americans. It's not for me. "I wish we had a tournament in Czech Republic and there were a lot of fans rooting for me. Maybe in a different life. Not now. I'm just enjoying. I'm having fun on court. I'm so happy I can be here. It's a huge privilege that I can play in front of such a nice crowd on Armstrong." Krejcikova's impressive showing snuffed out the dreams of the 29-year-old Townsend, a No. 1 doubles player who is enjoying the top singles run of her career. "It just stings because I literally gave everything," Townsend said. "She came up with some really, really great tennis in moments where she was down, and I thought I had it." Townsend lost in the first round of the other three majors this year before winning her first three matches at the Billie Jean King Center. She swept No. 5 seed Mirra Andreeva of Russia on Friday, two days after beating No. 25 Jelena Ostapenko of Latvia in straight sets and being on the receiving end of some disparaging comments about her lack of sportsmanship. Pegula, a 2024 finalist, is more used to being on the big stage in New York. "I've obviously kind of earned that right over the years," the 31-year-old Pegula said of playing in Ashe. "When I was younger, I never hit on Ashe, I never played on Ashe. I was always on another court, Court 17 or maybe Grandstand if I was lucky. That's definitely changed. "Specifically here being an American, I have played a lot there now. Maybe against someone that hasn't gotten a lot of reps on that court, I think it is a little bit like a home-court advantage." This marks the third time Pegula has advanced to at least the quarterfinals of the U.S. Open. She lost to Aryna Sabalenka of Belarus in last season's title match and also reached the quarters in 2022. Pegula has won just one of three matchups against Krejcikova. Pegula's victory came in the 2023 Australian Open round of 16. On Sunday, Pegula outclassed the 25-year-old Li and was highly effective at the net by winning 12 of 15 points. "It's a part of my game I can use as a weapon," Pegula said. "We've definitely worked on that a lot. They're really happy when I can finish a point with an overhead or a volley at the net." Pegula won the first three games of the match while sailing through the first set. It was more of the same in the second as she won four of the first five games before finishing off the match. Later Sunday, top seed Aryna Sabalenka of Belarus cruised past Spain's Cristina Bucsa 6-1, 6-4, posting more winners (26-9) and never having to save a break point. She advanced to the quarterfinals without dropping a set and will remain the top-ranked player after the tournament. The Czech Republic's Marketa Vondrousova knocked off ninth-seeded Elena Rybakina of Russia 6-4, 5-7, 6-2 in one hour, 51 minutes. Vondrousova, the 2023 Wimbledon winner, had the edge in aces (13-5) and won 5 of 7 break-point opportunities, to 3 of 6 for Rybakina, the 2022 Wimbledon champion who had more winners (40-29) and unforced errors (38-15). --Field Level Media

Jessica Pegula, Barbora Krejcikova advance to U.S. Open quarterfinals

Jessica Pegula, Barbora Krejcikova advance to U.S. Open quarterfinals Fourth-seeded Jessica Pegula is making another deep run at the U.S. Op...
China's Xi seeks expanded role for Shanghai Cooperation Organization with development bankNew Foto - China's Xi seeks expanded role for Shanghai Cooperation Organization with development bank

TIANJIN, China (AP) — Chinese President Xi Jinping said China would accelerate the building of a SCO development bank at the annual summit of theShanghai Cooperation Organizationin Tianjin on Monday, as he seeks to expand the organization's influence and scope. "Currently, as the global situation becomes more complex and turbulent, member states are facing more arduous safety and development responsibilities," Xi said in opening remarks to the forum. Xi pledged $1.4 billion in loans in the next three years for members of the SCO, not specifically designated for this new bank. Xi, Russian President Vladimir Putin, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and leaders of a few dozen nations are meeting as part of the SCO. The group, originally seen as a foil to U.S. influence in Central Asia, has grown in size and influence over the years, but remains largely a security forum. With the addition of the bank and an emphasis on providing loans, Xi is attempting to expand the scope of the organization. China on message "He wants to provide an alternate world order, because the US led-world order is very much in decline. This is the main narrative," said Alfred Wu, a professor at the National University of Singapore's Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy. Xi also said states should "oppose the Cold War mentality, bloc-based confrontation and bullying, and safeguard the international system with the United Nations at its core" while "advocating for an equal and orderly multipolar world, an inclusive economic globalization, and promote the building of a more just and reasonable global governance system." Xi's messaging did not stray far from China's past comments, as opposition to a Cold War mentality is a reference to the U.S.' opposition of China, as well as its withdrawal of funding from some U.N. agencies. But at this moment in time, its consistency is the message, Wu said. Founded in 2001, the SCO's membership now includes Russia, Belarus, China, India, Iran, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Pakistan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan. Afghanistan and Mongolia are observer states, and 14 other countries, mostly from Southeast Asia and the Middle East, serve as "dialogue partners." The summit comes days ahead of a planned military parade that Beijing will host, and the country is taking the opportunity to invite its allies and neighbors. Focus on conflict On Sunday, Xi met with Modi where theyvowed to resolve their differencesabout the border dispute, which had led to a freeze in relations in 2020. The disputes revolve around three points in their vast border in India's northern Ladakh and Arunachal Pradesh regions as well as near Bhutan. Putin, who arrived Sunday in China, will also attend a major military parade in Beijing on Wednesday for the 80th anniversary of Japan's World War II surrender. North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, who is not attending the SCO summit, will be present for the military parade, along with Myanmar's junta chief Min Au Hlaing. Putin spoke to Xi on Sunday, ahead of the bilateral talks the two were scheduled to hold Tuesday, where he updated him about the Russia-U.S. talks on the Ukraine war in Alaska last month. "I would like to note that the understandings reached at the recent high-level Russian-American summit in Alaska are also, I hope, moving in this direction, opening the way to peace in Ukraine," Putin said. Development has been a large part of the messaging in recent days. Putin said Russia and China were jointly "against discriminatory sanctions" that hurt the socioeconomic development of the world at large in a written interview released by the Chinese official news agency Xinhua on Saturday. He said Russia, alongside its Chinese partners, supports the reform of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank. "It is essential to end the use of finance as an instrument of neo-colonialism, which runs counter to the interests of the Global Majority," he said. Security is still key While China is eager for the SCO to take a growing role on the global stage, it remains to be seen how effective the organization will be. Its focus in the past has always been on propping up the security initiatives of its member states, including China which said the SCO was effective in combating what it refers to as the three forces: terrorism, separatism and extremism. Those threats are what Beijing cited after it swept more than 1 million Uyghurs, Kazakhs and members of other largely Muslim minorities into camps, prisons, and other detention facilities in 2018. "Their anti-terrorism exercises are more about countering threats to authoritarian regimes rather than countering terrorism in its own right," said Derek Grossman, a professor of international relations at the University of Southern California. "There's competing organizations," said Grossman. "If anything, BRICS might have much more luck in competing against the West because there are major economies involved." Even if the SCO summit's reach and influence is ultimately limited, one thing is clear, he said: "China is on a diplomatic uptick and the U.S. is self destructing." ____ AP researcher Shihuan Chen in Beijing and AP writer Kanis Leung in Hong Kong contributed to this report.

China's Xi seeks expanded role for Shanghai Cooperation Organization with development bank

China's Xi seeks expanded role for Shanghai Cooperation Organization with development bank TIANJIN, China (AP) — Chinese President Xi Ji...
Around 500 killed in Afghanistan earthquake, state-run broadcaster saysNew Foto - Around 500 killed in Afghanistan earthquake, state-run broadcaster says

KABUL (Reuters) -Around 500 people have been killed and 1000 more injured in an earthquake that struck eastern Afghanistan on Monday, the country's state-run broadcaster Radio Television Afghanistan (RTA) reported. Taliban-led health authorities in Kabul, however, said they were still confirming the official toll figure as they worked to reach remote areas. (Reporting by Charlotte Greenfield, writing by Sakshi Dayal; editing by Sudipto Ganguly)

Around 500 killed in Afghanistan earthquake, state-run broadcaster says

Around 500 killed in Afghanistan earthquake, state-run broadcaster says KABUL (Reuters) -Around 500 people have been killed and 1000 more in...
Liverpool reportedly reaches deal to sign Alexander Isak from Newcastle for record-breaking $176 million feeNew Foto - Liverpool reportedly reaches deal to sign Alexander Isak from Newcastle for record-breaking $176 million fee

Alexander Isak is headed to Liverpool. The club reached a £130 million deal ($176 million) to sign the Newcastle star on Sunday night, according toThe Athletic's David Ornstein. That deal would break the Premier League transfer record set earlier this summer when Liverpool signed Florian Wirtz from Bayer Leverkusen for $153 million. Sunday's deal took place just in time before Monday's transfer deadline. Isak made it clear that he wanteded out of Newcastle. He has not played in any of the club's first three Premier League games this season. Isak posted earlier this month that his relationship with Newcastle "can't continue," though Newcastle appeared to reject his requests to leave at every step. Isak missed the team's trip to Asia and didn't play in a preseason friendly, either. The striker has been training with Real Sociedad, his former club, since July and has been away from Newcastle. [Join or create a Yahoo Fantasy Football league for the 2025 NFL season] Liverpool intially sent Newcastle a £110 million offer for Isak, which Newcastle rejected. Now, having raised the price, Liverpool secured their latest record-breaking addition. Isak has spent the past three seasons with Newcastle, which marked his first stint in the Premier League in his career. He had a career-high 23 goals and six assists in 34 matches last season. He's previously spent time with Real Sociedad in La Liga and Dortmund in the Bundesliga. Liverpool, fresh off its Premier League title last season, opened the year with three straight wins, including a 3-2 victory over Newcastle on Monday. The franchise has spent more than £250 million this offseason, bringing in other big names like Hugo Ekitike, Wirtz, Milos Kerkez, Jeremie Frimpong and Giovanni Leoni. It's unclear when Isak will make his debut with the club. Liverpool will be back in action Sept. 14 on the road against Burnley.

Liverpool reportedly reaches deal to sign Alexander Isak from Newcastle for record-breaking $176 million fee

Liverpool reportedly reaches deal to sign Alexander Isak from Newcastle for record-breaking $176 million fee Alexander Isak is headed to Liv...
Jarren Duran hits inside-the-park homer for Red Sox against Pirates at Fenway ParkNew Foto - Jarren Duran hits inside-the-park homer for Red Sox against Pirates at Fenway Park

BOSTON (AP) — Jarren Duran was running to third base when he realized he needed to pick up the pace again and head for home. Duran's inside-the-park homerSunday, a three-run shot, gave Boston the lead in the fifth inning and helped the Red Sox avert a three-game sweep witha 5-2 victoryover the Pittsburgh Pirates at Fenway Park. With Carlos Narváez on third and Alex Bregman on first, Duran lined the first pitch from starter Mitch Keller into the right-center gap. The ball got past right fielder Alexander Canario, who tried to cut it off, and rolled into the Fenway triangle. Then it caromed off the side wall of Boston's bullpen and briefly got past center fielder Oneil Cruz near the 420-foot sign in right-center. As the crowd roared,the speedy Duran raced around thirdand easily beat a wide relay throw to the plate standing up. "When I was starting to round second, I was like, OK, I've got to make sure I get to three," he said. "I thought I was going to be standing up (at third). I found myself kind of lay back a little bit, then (third base coach Kyle Hudson) came back to me waving and I was like, I've got to get going again." It was the second inside-the-park homer by the Red Sox at Fenway Park this season.Wilyer Abreu hit one on June 30and became the sixth player in major league history with a grand slam and an inside-the-park homer in the same game. "I was just happy I didn't have to slide after all," Duran said. "I was like, this is going to be more of a fall than a slide." Duran's inside-the-park shot was the first of his career. "Everybody's doing the same thing in the dugout," Boston manager Alex Cora said, comparing his players and coaches to the cheering crowd. "We become fans," he explained. "Everybody's loud, everybody's sending him." ___ AP MLB:https://apnews.com/hub/mlb

Jarren Duran hits inside-the-park homer for Red Sox against Pirates at Fenway Park

Jarren Duran hits inside-the-park homer for Red Sox against Pirates at Fenway Park BOSTON (AP) — Jarren Duran was running to third base when...
1.2M immigrants are gone from the US labor force under Trump, preliminary data showsNew Foto - 1.2M immigrants are gone from the US labor force under Trump, preliminary data shows

It's tomato season and Lidia is harvesting on farms in California's Central Valley. She is also anxious. Attention fromU.S. Immigration Control and Enforcementcould upend her life more than 23 years after she illegally crossed the U.S.-Mexico border as a teenager. "The worry is they'll pull you over when you're driving and ask for your papers," said Lidia, who spoke to The Associated Press on condition that only her first name be used because of her fears of deportation. "We need to work. We need to feed our families and pay our rent." As parades and other events celebrating the contributions of workers in the U.S. are held Monday for theLabor Day holiday, experts sayPresident Donald Trump's stepped-up immigration policies are impactingthe nation's labor force. More than 1.2 millionimmigrantsdisappeared from the labor force from January through the end of July, according topreliminary Census Bureau data analyzed by the Pew Research Center. That includes people who are in the country illegally as well as legal residents. Immigrants make up almost 20% of the U.S. workforce and that data shows 45% of workers in farming, fishing and forestry are immigrants, according to Pew senior researcher Stephanie Kramer. About 30% of all construction workers are immigrants and 24% of service workers are immigrants, she added. The loss in immigrant workers comes as the nation is seeing the first decline in the overall immigrant population after the number of people in the U.S. illegally reached an all-time high of 14 million in 2023. "It's unclear how much of the decline we've seen since January is due to voluntary departures to pursue other opportunities or avoid deportation, removals, underreporting or other technical issues," Kramer said. "However, we don't believe that the preliminary numbers indicating net-negative migration are so far off that the decline isn't real." Trumpcampaigned on a promiseto deport millions of immigrants working in the U.S. illegally. He has said he is focusing deportation efforts on "dangerous criminals," butmost people detained by ICEhave no criminal convictions. At the same time, the number of illegal border crossings has plunged under his policies. Pia Orrenius, a labor economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, said immigrants normally contribute at least 50% of job growth in the U.S. "The influx across the border from what we can tell is essentially stopped, and that's where we were getting millions and millions of migrants over the last four years," she said. "That has had a huge impact on the ability to create jobs." 'Crops did go to waste' Just across the border from Mexico in McAllen, Texas, corn and cotton fields are about ready for harvesting. Elizabeth Rodriguez worries there won't be enough workers available for the gins and other machinery once the fields are cleared. Immigration enforcement actions at farms, businesses and construction sites brought everything to a standstill, said Rodriguez, director of farmworker advocacy for the National Farmworker Ministry. "In May, during the peak of our watermelon and cantaloupe season, it delayed it. A lot of crops did go to waste," she said. In Ventura County, California, northwest of Los Angeles, Lisa Tate manages her family business that grows citrus fruits, avocados and coffee on eight ranches and 800 acres (323 hectares). Most of the men and women who work their farms are contractor-provided day laborers. There were days earlier this year when crews would be smaller. Tate is hesitant to place that blame on immigration policies. But the fear ofICE raidsspread quickly. Dozens of area farmworkers were arrestedlate this spring. "People were being taken out of laundromats, off the side of the road," Tate said. Lidia, the farmworker who spoke to the AP through an interpreter, said her biggest fear is being sent back to Mexico. Now 36, she is married with three school-age children who were born here. "I don't know if I'll be able to bring my kids," said Lidia. "I'm also very concerned I'd have to start from zero. My whole life has been in the United States." From construction to health care Construction sites in and around McAllen also "are completely dead," Rodriguez said. "We have a large labor force that is undocumented," she said. "We've seen ICE particularly targeting construction sites and attempting to target mechanic and repair shops." The number of construction jobs are down in about half of U.S. metropolitan areas, according to an Associated General Contractors of America analysis of government employment data. The largest loss of 7,200 jobs was in the Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario, California, area. The Los Angeles-Long Beach-Glendale area lost 6,200 jobs. "Construction employment has stalled or retreated in many areas for a variety of reasons," said Ken Simonson, the association's chief economist. "But contractors report they would hire more people if only they could find more qualified and willing workers and tougher immigration enforcement wasn't disrupting labor supplies." Kramer, with Pew, also warns about the potential impact on health care. She says immigrants make up about 43% of home health care aides. The Service Employees International Union represents about 2 million workers in health care, the public sector and property services. An estimated half of long-term care workers who are members of SEIU 2015 in California are immigrants, said Arnulfo De La Cruz, the local's president. "What's going to happen when millions of Americans can no longer find a home care provider?" De La Cruz said. "What happens when immigrants aren't in the field to pick our crops? Who's going to staff our hospitals and nursing homes?"

1.2M immigrants are gone from the US labor force under Trump, preliminary data shows

1.2M immigrants are gone from the US labor force under Trump, preliminary data shows It's tomato season and Lidia is harvesting on farms...
Asian shares are mixed as reports show improved factory outlook for ChinaNew Foto - Asian shares are mixed as reports show improved factory outlook for China

BANGKOK (AP) — Shares were mixed in Asia on Monday, with markets in China gaining after surveys showed a slight improvement in Chinese factory data, suggesting manufacturing is holding up despite higher U.S. tariffs. Investors were awaiting further developments after the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuitruled FridaythatTrumpwent too far when he declared national emergencies to justify imposing sweepingimport taxeson almost every country on earth. Hong Kong's Hang Seng jumped 2% to 25,573.58, while the Shanghai Composite index added 0.3% to 3,869.96. A government survey showedChina's factory activityimproved marginally in August, with a measure known as the purchasing managers index rising to 49.4 from 49.3 in July. The survey is on a scale of 0 to 100 where 50 marks the cutoff for expansion. That survey and another, private sector one that showed the general PMI at 49.9 last month, up from 49.4 in July, still show manufacturing contracting. But both suggest resilience despite U.S. President Donald Trump's higher tariffs. China and the U.S. are still negotiating over a broad trade agreement that will influence how much import duty companies and consumers will pay on goods shipped to the U.S. "The PMIs suggest that China's economy accelerated last month, thanks to faster growth across manufacturing and services. But we don't see much upside over the rest of the year," Zichun Huang of Capital Economics said in a commentary. Japan's Nikkei 225 index fell 2% to 41,849.82, while the Kospi in South Korea shed 0.8% to 3,161.31. Shares also fell in Australia, with the S&P/ASX 200 losing 0.7% to 8,913.10. Taiwan's benchmark lost 1.1% while New Zealand's gained 0.5%. U.S. markets will be closed on Monday for the Labor Day holiday. On Friday, Wall Street closed out another winning month though benchmarks ended below their latest all-time highs. The S&P 500 fell 0.6% a day after climbing to a record high, ending the week at 6,460.26. The benchmark index ended August with a 1.9% gain, its fourth straight month of gains. It's now up 9.8% so far this year. The Dow Jones Industrial Average also came off its own record high, slipping 0.2% to 45,544.88. The Nasdaq composite closed 1.2% lower at 21,455.55. Losses in technology weighed on the market, offsetting gains in health care and other sectors. Dell Technologies slid 8.9% for the biggest decline among S&P 500 stocks a day after the company reported second-quarter revenue that exceeded analysts' expectations, but noted that margin pressures and weakness in PC revenue. Among other tech companies that ended the day in the red: Tech giantNvidiafell 3.3%, Broadcom dropped 3.6% and Oracle slid 5.9%. Mixed economic data gave traders an excuse to sell and pocket some profits following the market's milestone-setting week. The Commerce Department said prices rose 2.6% in July compared with a year earlier,as measured by the personal consumption expenditures index. That's the same annual increase as in June and in line with what economists expected. Still, excluding the volatile food and energy categories, prices rose 2.9% last month from a year earlier, up from 2.8% in June and the highest since February. The most recent government data suggests hiring hasslowed sharplysince this spring, raising alarm over the direction of the broader economy. Meanwhile, the latest reading in a survey of U.S. consumers by the University of Michigan showed sentiment soured in August, hitting its lowest level since May due to concerns about prices and the economy. Not all stocks lost ground. Petco Health & Wellness and Autodesk bucked the broader market slide after reporting better-than-expected quarterly results. Petco jumped 23.5% and Autodesk climbed 9.1%. In other dealings early Monday, U.S. benchmark crude oil shed 23 cents to $63.78 per barrel. Brent crude, the international standard, fell 28 cents to $67.20 per barrel. The U.S. dollar slipped to 146.93 Japanese yen from 147.00 yen. The euro rose to $1.1770 from $1.1682.

Asian shares are mixed as reports show improved factory outlook for China

Asian shares are mixed as reports show improved factory outlook for China BANGKOK (AP) — Shares were mixed in Asia on Monday, with markets i...
Aaron Judge ties Yogi Berra for fifth on the Yankees' career homers listNew Foto - Aaron Judge ties Yogi Berra for fifth on the Yankees' career homers list

CHICAGO (AP) — When Aaron Judge returned to the dugout after his first-inning homer, Yankees manager Aaron Boone yelled "Yogi!" in the direction of his star slugger. Yogi indeed. Judge moved into a tie with Hall of Fame catcher Yogi Berra for fifth in franchise history when he hit his 358th career homer duringSunday's 3-2 lossto the Chicago White Sox. "Not getting (the win) kind of stings," Judge said, "but you know, get a chance to tie one of the greatest if not the greatest Yankee in homers is, it's pretty special. The way Yogi played the game, what he meant to these pinstripes, you knew how much it meant being a New York Yankee to him. I feel the same way. "I'm honored to wear this jersey, so it's pretty cool to be on that list with him." Judge drove an 0-2 cutter from Martín Pérez deep to center for a one-out solo shot. Judge's 43rd homer of the season had a 112.6 mph exit velocity and traveled 426 feet. He made a bid for another homer in the third, but his drive went off the wall in center for a double. He also singled in the fifth and popped out for the final out of the seventh. Batting with a runner aboard with one out in the ninth, he flied to center. "Just missed the last one," Boone said. "I thought he made the right move on the pitch. Looked like he got a hanger there that I thought he put a great swing on. He got under it a little bit and hit it straight up in the air. So those things happen." The 33-year-old Judge also connected for a solo homer inNew York's 11-inning victoryat Chicago on Saturday night. The two-time AL MVP and seven-time All-Star batted .241 (20 for 83) with six homers, 12 RBIs and a .417 on-base percentage in 24 games in August. Next up for Judge and the Yankees is four consecutive series against playoff contenders, beginning with the opener of a three-game set at Houston on Tuesday night. "That's what we want," said Judge, who signeda $360 million, nine-year contractwith New York in December 2022. "It's coming down to the wire. We want to play the best teams and especially getting down the stretch here into the postseason, this is what it's all about." Hall of Famers Babe Ruth (659 homers), Mickey Mantle (536), Lou Gehrig (493) and Joe DiMaggio (361) are on top of the Yankees' career homers list. Judge's drive produced the first change in the franchise's top five since Mantle hit his 203rd career homer on Aug. 7, 1957, snapping a tie with Bill Dickey. Judge was selected by New York in the first round of the 2013 amateur draft and made his debut with the Yankees in 2016. Berra was 90 when he died in 2015. "Didn't get to see him too much. He was definitely around over at big league camp," Judge said. "But he was a special individual. A lot of the veteran guys talk highly of him. It was probably some of their favorite memories, you know, coming to spring training was having a chance to talk with him during camp, just hear some of his stories." Judge was activated from the 10-day injured list on Aug. 5 after being sidelined by a flexor strain in his right elbow. He has been serving as the team's designated hitter, buthe could return to the outfieldat some point this season. ___ AP MLB:https://apnews.com/hub/mlb

Aaron Judge ties Yogi Berra for fifth on the Yankees' career homers list

Aaron Judge ties Yogi Berra for fifth on the Yankees' career homers list CHICAGO (AP) — When Aaron Judge returned to the dugout after hi...
Tennis star Kamil Majchrzak meets young fan who had hat snatched from him in viral US Open videoNew Foto - Tennis star Kamil Majchrzak meets young fan who had hat snatched from him in viral US Open video

Polish tennis star Kamil Majchrzak has met the young fan who had a hat snatched from him in a viral video clip after one of Majchrzak's matches at theUS Open. Majchrzak gave the boy aUS Open-branded bag of gifts, including another cap, and posed for photos alongside him, posting the encounter to his Instagram stories on Saturday. "Today after warm up, I had a nice meeting," he wrote. "Do you recognize (cap emoji)?" "Hello world, together with Brock, we wish you a great day," he wrote in another story. The two first encountered each other when Majchrzak was signing souvenirs for the crowd, after Majchrzak's second round win against Karen Khachanov on Thursday. The Pole took off his cap and appeared to pass it to the boy who was clutching a giant tennis ball with both hands. As the boy reached out to take the cap, a man standing next to him snatched it away and gave it to a woman who put it in her handbag despite the boy's visible protestations. The boy and the man appeared not to know each other. The clip subsequently went viral on social media, with one X post alone gathering 10 million views. Social media users identified the man as a Polish CEO, whose company was review-bombed with hundreds of one-star reviews on Trustpilot, all referencing the incident. CNN has not been able to independently verify the man's identity and has reached out to the company for comment. After seeing the incident, Majchrzak launched a search for the boy, posting on his Instagram story, per Sky News, "Hey guys, could you help me find the kid from my match." He later posted, according to Sky News, "I am impressed by the power of the Internet. We got it! All good now." After defeating No. 9 seed Khachanov, Majchrzak was forced to retire during his third round match against Leandro Riedi due to a torn intercostal muscle. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Tennis star Kamil Majchrzak meets young fan who had hat snatched from him in viral US Open video

Tennis star Kamil Majchrzak meets young fan who had hat snatched from him in viral US Open video Polish tennis star Kamil Majchrzak has met ...
Judge blocks deportation of Guatemalan migrant children as flights were ready to takeNew Foto - Judge blocks deportation of Guatemalan migrant children as flights were ready to take

A federal judge on Sunday blocked the Trump administration from sending any unaccompanied migrant child toGuatemalaunless they have a deportation order, just hours after lawyers alerted her of what they described as a hurried government effort to deport hundreds of children. U.S. District Court Judge Sparkle Sooknanan issued her order as the deportation effort was fully underway, with planes with migrant children on board ready to take off from Texas. Earlier Sunday, in the overnight hours, Sooknanan issued a temporary restraining order barring officials from sending a group of 10migrant childrenbetween the ages of 10 and 17 to Guatemala, granting a request from attorneys who alleged the effort would skirt legal protections Congress established for these minors. She also scheduled a hearing in the afternoon to weigh the case's next steps. But Sooknanan abruptly moved up the hearing earlier on Sunday, saying she had been alerted that some migrant children were already in the process of being deported. As that hearing got underway, Sooknanan announced she had just issued a broader temporary restraining order blocking any deportations of unaccompanied children from Guatemala and in U.S. custody who did not have a deportation order. She instructed Drew Ensign, the Justice Department lawyer representing the Trump administration, to quickly inform officials they had to halt their deportation plans. Ensign acknowledged deportation planes had been prepared to take off on Sunday, but said they were all "on the ground" and still on U.S. soil. He said he believed one plane had taken off earlier but had come back. At the request of Sooknanan, Ensign said he confirmed that the children on the planes would be deplaned and returned to the custody of the Department of Health and Human Services, which is responsible for caring for migrant minors who enter the U.S. without authorization and without their parents or legal guardians. The Justice Department said 76 unaccompanied children were slated to be sent to Guatemala on Sunday before the effort was blocked. Of those, 16 had been returned to HHS custody as of Sunday evening and the rest were expected to be in HHS care by 10:30 p.m. HHS houses unaccompanied children in shelters or foster homes until they turn 18 or until they can be placed with a suitable sponsor in the U.S., who are often family members. Sooknanan conceded her temporary restraining order, which is set to last 14 days, is "extraordinary" but justified it on the grounds that the government had decided to "execute a plan to remove these children" in the "wee hours" of a holiday weekend. In their lawsuit, lawyers for the group of Guatemalan children said the Trump administration had launched an effort to deport more than 600 migrant minors to Guatemala without allowing them to request humanitarian protection, even though U.S. law protects them from speedy deportations. They alleged the children could face abuse, neglect or persecution if returned to Guatemala. Ensign, the Justice Department attorney, said the Trump administration was not trying to formally deport the Guatemalan children under U.S. immigration law, but instead repatriate them to Guatemala so they could reunite with relatives there. He said the Guatemalan government and the children's relatives had requested the reunifications. But lawyers for the children disputed the government's claims, citing one case in which they say a child's parents did not request any repatriation. They also said a law known as the Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act says unaccompanied migrant children who are not from Mexico must be allowed to see an immigration judge and apply for legal protections before any deportation effort.  Some of the children facing return to Guatemala still have pending immigration cases, the attorneys said. Ensign said the government's legal position is that it can "repatriate" these children, based on authority given to HHS to reunite "unaccompanied alien children with a parent abroad in appropriate cases." Representatives for the Department of Homeland Security did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the deportation plans. President Trump on Sunday night said on social media that the judge should recuse herself from the case. Neha Desai, an attorney at the California-based National Center for Youth Law who works with migrant minors, said the U.S. government was attempting to deport children with "already filed claims for legal relief based on the abuse and persecution that they experienced in their home country." "This is both unlawful and profoundly inhumane," Desai added. Most of the unaccompanied children who cross the U.S. southern border without legal permission hail from Central America and tend to be teenagers. Once in the U.S., many file applications for asylum or other immigration benefits to try to stay in the country legally, such as a visa for abused, abandoned or neglected youth. As part of its larger crackdown on illegal immigration, the Trump administration has sought to make drastic changes to how the U.S. processes unaccompanied children. It has made it harder for some relatives, including those in the country illegally, to sponsor unaccompanied children out of government custody and offered some teenagers the option to voluntary return to their native countries. The Trump administration has also directed agents from Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and other agencies to conduct "welfare checks" on children released from HHS custody, a move it has said is in response to disputed claims that the Biden administration "lost" hundreds of thousands of migrant minors. There are currently roughly 2,000 migrant children in HHS care. "Portrait of a person who's not there": Documenting the bedrooms of school shooting victims The Long Island home renovation that uncovered a hidden story Passage: In memoriam

Judge blocks deportation of Guatemalan migrant children as flights were ready to take

Judge blocks deportation of Guatemalan migrant children as flights were ready to take A federal judge on Sunday blocked the Trump administra...
Robert Mueller diagnosed with Parkinson's disease, report saysNew Foto - Robert Mueller diagnosed with Parkinson's disease, report says

Robert Mueller, who served as a special counsel to determine if the Russian government interfered to help then-presidential candidateDonald Trumpin 2016, was diagnosed with Parkinson's disease four years ago, theNew York Times reportedon Aug. 31. The Times, citing a Mueller family statement, reported that he was diagnosed with Parkinson's in the summer of 2021. "He retired from the practice of law at the end of that year," the statement said, according to the Times. "He taught at his law school alma mater during the fall of both 2021 and 2022, and he retired at the end of 2022. His family asks that his privacy be respected." This is a developing story. Follow@USATODAYfor additional updates. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Robert Mueller diagnosed with Parkinson's disease in 2021: Report

Robert Mueller diagnosed with Parkinson's disease, report says

Robert Mueller diagnosed with Parkinson's disease, report says Robert Mueller, who served as a special counsel to determine if the Russi...
DaRon Bland contract: Cowboys extend CB on four-year dealNew Foto - DaRon Bland contract: Cowboys extend CB on four-year deal

TheDallas Cowboyshave agreed to terms on a contract extension for a key, All-Pro defensive player. Obviously, it's notMicah Parsons. Instead, cornerbackDaRon Blandgets his deal, according tomultiplereportsSunday: a four-year, $92 million extension with $50 million in guaranteed money. Bland earned his first Pro Bowl and first-team All-Pro nods in 2023 after leading the NFL with nine interceptions, including five that he returned for a touchdown. It was an excellent follow-up to something of a breakout rookie year with his five interceptions in 2022. The All-Pro corner missed the first 10 games of the 2024 season while recovering from a stress fracture he suffered during training camp. Bland did not record an interception in his seven appearances after his return. 1989: Cowboys trade Herschel Walker to Vikings for picks haul Now, after an offseason that already included an extension for tight end Jake Ferguson and, notably,not one for Parsons, theCowboyshave locked up their former fifth-rounder four days before the start of the season. Here's what to know about Bland's extension: MICAH PARSONS TRADE:Cowboys deal 4x Pro Bowler to Packers in blockbuster Length:Four years Value:$92 million ($50 million guaranteed) Average annual value (AAV):$23 million Bland's four-year, $92 million extension includes $50 million in guaranteed money, the 12th-most money in guarantees at the position and notably ahead of fellow Cowboys corner Trevon Diggs' $42.3 million in guarantees. The deal's $23 million average annual value (AAV) is the sixth-highest of all cornerbacks, just behind Broncos cornerback – and reigning Defensive Player of the Year – Patrick Surtain II. The Cowboys' decision to extend Bland instead of Parsons will be even more notable given its timing. Dallas traded Parsons to Green Bay on Thursday and extended Bland three days later. The value of each player is obviously different, a statement backed up by the fact that the AAV on Parsons' new deal with the Packers is more than twice that of Bland's. Still, Cowboys owner/general manager Jerry Jones has certainly put more of a microscope on how Bland performs after receiving his new extension, given its timing. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:DaRon Bland contract details after Cowboys grant CB four-year deal

DaRon Bland contract: Cowboys extend CB on four-year deal

DaRon Bland contract: Cowboys extend CB on four-year deal TheDallas Cowboyshave agreed to terms on a contract extension for a key, All-Pro d...
Guardians' Emmanuel Clase, Luis Ortiz remain on leave amid probeNew Foto - Guardians' Emmanuel Clase, Luis Ortiz remain on leave amid probe

Major League Baseball and its players association extended the non-disciplinary paid leave of Cleveland Guardians right-handers Emmanuel Clase and Luis Ortiz "until further notice" amid an ongoing sports betting investigation. Ortiz and Clase were placed on leave July 3 and July 28, respectively. The leave had been set to expire on Sunday prior to the extension. "We have been informed of the extension and will continue to fully cooperate with the investigation," the Guardians said in a statement. The regular season ends Sept. 28. Clase, 27, is 5-3 with a 3.23 ERA and 24 saves in 48 appearances this season. He led the American League in saves and made the All-Star team in each of the three previous campaigns and had a career-high 47 saves in 2024. Clase is 21-26 with 182 saves and a 1.88 ERA in 366 career games (one start) with the Texas Rangers (2019) and the Guardians. According to reports, Ortiz's investigation focuses on in-game prop bets involving two pitches that garnered higher activity than usual. One was tossed in a June 15 game against the Seattle Mariners, and another on June 27 versus the St. Louis Cardinals. Ortiz, 26, is 4-9 with a 4.36 ERA in 16 starts this season. The native of the Dominican Republic was acquired from the Pittsburgh Pirates as part of a three-team trade that included the Toronto Blue Jays on Dec. 10. --Field Level Media

Guardians' Emmanuel Clase, Luis Ortiz remain on leave amid probe

Guardians' Emmanuel Clase, Luis Ortiz remain on leave amid probe Major League Baseball and its players association extended the non-disc...
Judge blocks Guatemalan minors' deportation after questioning government's argumentNew Foto - Judge blocks Guatemalan minors' deportation after questioning government's argument

A federal judge on Sunday blocked the Trump administration from deporting potentially hundreds of unaccompanied Guatemalan children from the United States to Guatemala. A judge had temporarily blocked the administration from removing the minors and set an emergency hearing for 3 p.m. Sunday, but U.S. District Judge Sparkle Sooknanan moved the hearing to 12:30 p.m. after the court was notified the Guatemalan children were "in the process of being removed from the U.S." "The Court ORDERS that the Defendants cease any ongoing efforts to transfer, repatriate, remove, or otherwise facilitate the transport of any Plaintiff or member of the putative class from the United States," Sookananan wrote. "The putative class includes all Guatemalan unaccompanied minors in Department of Health and Human Services Office of Refugee Resettlement custody as of 1:02 AM on August 31, 2025, the time of the filing of the Complaint, who are not subject to an executable final order of removal," the order says. MORE: Trump administration directing ICE to track down unaccompanied minors: Source All of the children had been deplaned and were in the process of returning to the custody of the Office of Refugee Resettlement Sunday evening, Deputy Assistant Attorney General Drew Ensign said. The government will notify the court when the transfer of all of the children is confirmed, he said. Attorney Efrén Olivares had asked the judge to keep the hearing going until all of the children were deplaned, saying there have been several instances where "allegations of confusion and misunderstanding have resulted in irreparable harm." The hearing on Sunday is reminiscent of an incident in March when several Venezuelan migrants were deported to the CECOT prison in El Salvador under the Alien Enemies Act, despite a judge issuing a temporary restraining order barring the removals. This time, however, Ensign said that the flight he believed might have departed had returned and that he expects the children to deplane because of the judge's order. Sooknanan expressed skepticism during the hearing over the legality of the administration's attempt to repatriate the children. She said she received notice of the complaint at 2 a.m. Sunday and that she personally tried to reach the U.S. attorney's office, leaving a voice message at 3:43 a.m. saying that she wanted to hear from the government before she issued her temporary restraining order "We are here on a holiday weekend where I have the government attempting to remove unaccompanied minors from the country in the wee hours of the morning on a holiday weekend, which is surprising, but here we are," she said. Ensign argued that the Trump administration was removing the children in accordance with the law and at the request of the Guatemalan government and the legal guardians of the children. "The government of Guatemala has requested the return of these children and all of these children have their parents or guardians in Guatemala who are requesting their return, and United States government is trying to facilitate the return of these children to their parents or guardians from whom they have been separated," Ensign said. Olivares strongly disagreed with that argument. "Some of the children do not have either parent, some of the children have fear of returning to Guatemala so have not requested to return, do not want to return," he said. The National Immigration Law Center believes more than 600 Guatemalan children could be at risk of being returned to their home country. Sooknanan appeared to question the validity of the government's argument. "I have conflicting narratives from both sides here on whether what is happening here is an attempt to reunite these children with their parents or just return these children to Guatemala where they face harm," she said. Sooknanan read declarations from some of the children submitted in court filings, including one from one child who said their parents had received a "strange phone call" notifying them that the U.S. government was trying to deport them to Guatemala along with other minors. "Every one of these 10 declarants who are named plaintiffs speak about being afraid of going back to Guatemala," she said, adding that some of the children had faced abuse and neglect from some of their family members. In earlier court filings, attorneys accuse the Trump administration of attempting to repatriate more than 600 unaccompanied Guatemalan minors in coordination with the Guatemalan government in violation of laws that prevent such moves without giving them the opportunity to challenge the removals. Unaccompanied minors are migrants under the age of 18 who have come to the country without a legal guardian and do not have legal status. The children in question in the lawsuit are all reportedly in the custody of the Office of Refugee Resettlement. In a statement, the NationalImmigrationLaw Center, which filed the lawsuit, said the Trump administration is denying the Guatemalan children from being able to present their case before an immigration judge. "It is a dark and dangerous moment for this country when our government chooses to target orphaned 10-year-olds and denies them their most basic legal right to present their case before an immigration judge," said Olivares, vice president of litigation at the NILC. "The Constitution and federal laws provide robust protections to unaccompanied minors specifically because of the unique risks they face. We are determined to use every legal tool at our disposal to force the administration to respect the law and not send any child to danger." In another court filing, NILC said that after it attempted to inform the government that it had filed a motion for a temporary restraining order, it learned shelters in South Texas had been "notified to prepare Guatemalan children in their custody for discharge." "Upon information and belief, ICE agents and their contractors have started attempting to pick up Guatemalan unaccompanied children from shelters in South Texas to transport them to the airport for potential removal from the United States as soon as the early morning of Sunday, August 31, 2025," NILC said in the filing. The lawsuit was filed on Sunday after legal service providers received notices from the Office of Refugee Resettlement that children in their program have been identified for reunification. In the notice, the agency said that court proceedings for children identified by the agency "may be dismissed." "ORR Care Providers must take proactive measures to ensure UAC are prepared for discharge within 2 hours of receiving this notification," the notice said. In one of the notices submitted in court filings, ORR has informed certain attorneys for unaccompanied minors that the "Government of Guatemala has requested the return of certain unaccompanied alien children in general custody" to be reunited "with suitable family members." In the statement, NILC said that because most Guatemalan children in U.S. custody are indigenous and many speak languages other than English or Spanish, they are more vulnerable to "being misled by officials looking to deport them." One of the children represented in the case is a 10-year-old indigenous girl who speaks a rare language. "Her mother is deceased and she suffered abuse and neglect from other caregivers," the complaint says.

Judge blocks Guatemalan minors' deportation after questioning government's argument

Judge blocks Guatemalan minors' deportation after questioning government's argument A federal judge on Sunday blocked the Trump admi...
Illinois Gov. Pritzker says sending troops to Chicago would be an "invasion"

Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker told CBS News the Trump administration has not communicated with his state on areported planto send military forces to Chicago, calling the idea an "invasion" and arguing President Trump has "other aims" aside from cracking down on crime. Asked about a possible military deployment to America's third-largest city, which was recently reported byThe Washington Post, Pritzker told CBS News: "It's clear that, in secret, they're planning this — well, it's an invasion with U.S. troops, if they, in fact, do that." Mr. Trump has deployed National Guard forces and federal agents to the streets of two other major cities — Los Angeles and Washington, D.C. — in recent months, part of what the president casts as a crackdown against illegal immigration, violent crime and civil unrest. Last week, the president said his administration could take similar steps in Chicago. Mr. Trump called the city a "mess" and lashed out against Mayor Brandon Johnson, saying, "We'll straighten that one out probably next." Mr. Trump is planning major immigration enforcement operations in Chicago that could start as soon as next week, echoing a similar operation in Los Angeles, sources toldCBS News. And The Washington Posthas reportedthat the Pentagon is drawing up plans to potentially send thousands of National Guard members to the Midwest's largest metro area as early as September — though those plans haven't been publicly confirmed. Pritzker told CBS News that, if Mr. Trump sends the Guard to Chicago, voters "should understand that he has other aims, other than fighting crime." The governor argued that the president's gambit may be part of a plan to "stop the elections in 2026 or, frankly, take control of those elections." He also called the idea "an attack on the American people." "Now, he may disagree with a state that didn't vote for him. But, should he be sending troops in? No," Pritzker said in an interview with CBS News in Chicago. White House spokeswoman Abigail Jackson rejected Pritzker's accusations and blasted the city's violent crime rate. "It's amazing the lengths this slob will go to in order to deflect from the terrible crime crisis that has been plaguing Chicago for years," Jackson said in a statement to CBS News. "Chicago's residents would be much safer if Pritzker actually did his job and addressed his crime problem instead of trying to be a Resistance Lib hero." In aTruth Social postSaturday evening, Mr. Trump called Pritzker a "weak and pathetic Governor" who "just said that he doesn't need help in preventing CRIME. He is CRAZY!!! He better straighten it out, FAST, or we're coming!" On Friday, Pritzker, asked whether he was suggesting that the president is an authoritarian, pointed to Germany's history. He noted that he built a Holocaust museum and knows "what the history was of a constitutional republic being overturned, after an election, in 53 days." Pritzker added that he's "very, very concerned.""We could talk about lots of authoritarian regimes in the world, but that just happens to be the one that I know," Pritzker said. "And I can tell you that- that the playbook is the same: It's thwart the media, it's create mayhem that requires military interdiction. These are things that happen throughout history, and Donald Trump is just following that playbook."The Illinois governor said that he plans to "do everything I can to stop him from taking away people's rights and from using the military to invade states," referencing Mr. Trump. He added that it's "very important for us all to stand up." The Guard deployments in Los Angeles and D.C. have drawn stiff pushback from elected officials who argue local police are better able to handle crime, and warn the presence of federal agents and military personnel could inflame tensions. Future military deployments could also draw legal challenges. While Mr. Trump controls the D.C. National Guard outright, the governors of the 50 states typically control their own Guard forces except in certain circumstances. The Trump administration deployed thousands of California National Guard members to Los Angeles over Gov. Gavin Newsom's objections in June, arguing they were necessary to protect federal immigration agents and facilities from tense protests in the city. The state of California sued the administration, calling the deployment illegal. An appeals court found that Mr. Trump likely did have the legal authority to call up the state's National Guard,under a lawthat lets the president call Guard forces into federal service during a "rebellion" or if he isn't able to "execute the laws of the United States." A lower court isstill reviewingwhether military forces in Los Angeles were inappropriately used for law enforcement purposes. "Portrait of a person who's not there": Documenting the bedrooms of school shooting victims The Long Island home renovation that uncovered a hidden story Passage: In memoriam

Illinois Gov. Pritzker says sending troops to Chicago would be an "invasion"

Illinois Gov. Pritzker says sending troops to Chicago would be an "invasion" Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker told CBS News the Trump adm...
Cowboys legend Michael Irvin blasts Jerry Jones over Micah Parsons tradeNew Foto - Cowboys legend Michael Irvin blasts Jerry Jones over Micah Parsons trade

Dallas Cowboyslegend Michael Irvin appeared to be extremely unhappy with Jerry Jones over the decision to trade pass rusher Micah Parsons to the Green Bay Packers this week. The deal was announced on Thursday with Dallas receiving two first-round picks and defensive linemanKenny Clarkin the trade. The move ended weeks of drama between Jones and Parsons over contract extension negotiations that never bore fruit. Parsons agreed to a long-term deal with the Packers as soon as the trade was completed. Click Here For More Sports Coverage On Foxnews.com Irvin said he was "in a state of shock" over the deal that sent Parsons to the Packers. "In order for us to be right here, something had to go down that hurt Jerry personally to make this crazy, dumb move. … This is a gamble 'The Gambler' should not have taken in my personal opinion," he said on hisYouTube page. Parsons requested a trade on Aug. 1 when negotiations initially fell through. Jones said a trade wouldn't occur and urged Cowboys fans not to lose sleep over the possibility. Parsons wanted his agent to be a part of the discussions but the sides never made any meaningful progress. Read On The Fox News App Cowboys Announce Death Of Super Bowl Champion, 'Doomsday Defense' Anchor Lee Roy Jordan The star linebacker then made a spectacle of his final preseason outing with the team. He was lying on the training table behind the bench as the game was going on. "This trade was not just thought about today," Jones said Thursday. "This trade has been going on in our mind and our strategies and being talked about, it's been going on all spring. It culminated today, and it came quick. But that's the way things go. It does happen fast when it happens." Parsons welcomed the fresh start inGreen Bayon Friday. "I would say these last four months have probably been the hardest four months of my life," Parsons said. Parsons, when healthy, is arguably the best pass rusher in the NFL. He racked up 52.5 sacks in 63 games with the Cowboys. He was the Defensive Rookie of the Year in 2021. The Associated Press contributed to this report. Follow Fox News Digital'ssports coverage on Xand subscribe tothe Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter. Original article source:Cowboys legend Michael Irvin blasts Jerry Jones over Micah Parsons trade

Cowboys legend Michael Irvin blasts Jerry Jones over Micah Parsons trade

Cowboys legend Michael Irvin blasts Jerry Jones over Micah Parsons trade Dallas Cowboyslegend Michael Irvin appeared to be extremely unhappy...
Alabama coach Kalen DeBoer after loss to Florida State: 'We've got to do a better job'New Foto - Alabama coach Kalen DeBoer after loss to Florida State: 'We've got to do a better job'

"We've got to do a better job,"Alabamacoach Kalen DeBoer said at the beginning ofhis news conferencefollowingthe Crimson Tide's 31-17 losstoFlorida Stateon Saturday. "We've got to do a better job." However, Alabama fans might feel strongly that DeBoer needs to change his focus from the plural to the singular in that sentence.Heneeds to do a better job when the No. 8 team in the country loses to an unranked opponent — though still formidable, despite coming off a 2-10 season. [Join or create a Yahoo Fantasy Football league for the 2025 NFL season] The main point DeBoer tried to emphasize is that Alabama needs to assert itself early and show that it's the better team. "I choose to believe we've got a good football team, but we can't play on our heels," he added,via AL.com. "We're not going to be what we think we can be, what we want to be if that's the case and so that falls on everyone." The Tide took an early 7-0 lead over the Seminoles, scoring on their first possession. However, Florida State answered on its first series, tying the game at 7-7 before scoring the next 17 points to take a 24-7 lead in the third quarter. Of particular concern was Florida State's ability to run the ball and push Alabama around at the line of scrimmage. The Seminoles totaled 236 yards rushing, averaging 5.1 yards per carry. Quarterback Thomas Castellanos rushed for 78 yards on 16 carries, while Micahi Danzy was especially explosive with 56 yards on three attempts. Heart and physicality on display@G27football#NoleFamily|#KeepCLIMBingpic.twitter.com/aWCNRKbOum — FSU Football (@FSUFootball)August 31, 2025 To stand up to a rushing attack, DeBoer emphasized winning individual matchups and working within the defensive scheme to move ballcarriers toward help. "Guys get one on one, in space and you've got to find a way to get them on the ground," he said. "You've got to use your leverage, you've got to find ways to trust your buddies around you that they're in pursuit." The coach also expressed some frustration at the offense not being able to finish drives with points despite moving into Florida State territory seven times. He seemed to imply that the team was satisfied after scoring on its first possession and didn't maintain aggressiveness and execution on subsequent series. "There's got to be some competitive stamina," DeBoer said. "It was a long drive, the first one and it was hard work. You had to execute, you had to make some big plays and you did it. Now you've got to go back out there and you've got to do it again and you've got to stack play after play after play." The offense wasn't helped by star receiverRyan Williams sustaining a concussionon a helmet-to-helmet hit from Florida State's Earl Little Jr. in the fourth quarter. The play was initially flagged for targeting, but that was overturned. Alabama has two more non-conference games versus Louisiana-Monroe and Wisconsin before beginning SEC play against No. 5 Georgia,viewed as a favoriteto win the conference. If the team doesn't show improvement on both sides of the ball, fans won't stand for DeBoer faulting the players' execution much longer. Eventually, the shortcomings will fall squarely on the head coach who already has five losses in his first 14 games.

Alabama coach Kalen DeBoer after loss to Florida State: 'We've got to do a better job'

Alabama coach Kalen DeBoer after loss to Florida State: 'We've got to do a better job' "We've got to do a better job,...
White House redlines and Democratic demands set up shutdown showdownNew Foto - White House redlines and Democratic demands set up shutdown showdown

President Donald Trumpis preparing to effectively dare Democrats to shut down the government in a matter of weeks, taking a hard line against any major concessions ahead of negotiations over a must-pass funding bill. The White House plans to reject any Democratic demands that key health provisions inthe GOP's domestic policy lawbe reversed as part of a budget package, aides said. And it will insist on retaining Trump's authority to claw back funding at will — seeking to cement an extraordinary expansion of executive power that has already roiled lawmakers in both parties. "We're not going to accept any limitations on the president's authorities or attempts to reverse President Trump's policies," a senior White House official told CNN. "The president is not going to be constrained." Trump's opening salvo sets the stage for a high-stakes standoff with congressional Democrats that could push the government into crisis as soon as the end of September. The strategy is aimed at pressuring Democratic leaders, who are balancing efforts to avert a damaging shutdown with demands from their base to mount a stronger fight against Trump. The two parties have yet to formally begin talks ahead of the September 30 funding deadline. Yet Democratic leaders are already telegraphing publicly and privately that they will not accept a status-quo funding deal without major concessions from Trump. They've signaled they want the White House to restore some of the billions of dollars in cuts to Medicaid and rural hospital funding that was passed as part of the president's signature domestic policy law — in addition to accepting checks on his power to override Congress' spending decisions. "There is a sense of no surrender," said California Rep. Ro Khanna, describing the position among many congressional Democrats as they return to Washington this week. "I think people saw how badly it went when there was a capitulation. … We heard the anger of the base." Behind the scenes, top Democrats spent the summer making sure their party — including lawmakers, governors and key groups — would be aligned on how to use the funding deadline as leverage to extract compromises from Republicans, according to multiple people familiar with the discussions. They are eager to avoid a repeat of March, when Senate Democrats caved on a GOP-written funding measure in a decision that fractured the party. (This time around, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer has privately reassured members of his party that he and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries will be closely coordinating, according to two of the people familiar with the discussions.) Top Democrats' resolve to fight Trump only strengthened after his Thursday notification that he's cancelingnearly $5 billion in congressionally approved foreign aidfunding — marking a dramatic escalation of their party's months-long fight with Trump's budget chief, Russ Vought. Jeffries in a statement called Trump a "wannabe king." White House officials have long advocated for clawing back funding, spearheading passage of a$9 billion spending cuts packageearlier this summer that aides have since characterized as a test case for future cancellations. In addition to Thursday's so-called pocket rescission targeting foreign aid, Vought has teased plans for sending yet another rescission request to Congress in the coming months. Even some Republicans have criticized the White House over rescissions, with top Senate appropriator Susan Collins of Maine calling Friday's move "a clear violation of the law." But the White House's latest effort to wrest control of federal spending from Capitol Hill has emboldened Democrats, who say that unlike last spring, they won't back down this time. "We have to have guardrails," Rep. Rosa DeLauro, the top Democrat on the House Appropriations Committee, told CNN on Friday. "This latest move last night demonstrates that they just don't care about following the law. … It is about controlling the power of the purse, directing money where they want to, to whom they want to." Asked what would happen if Republicans reject Democrats' position on both health care and the spending cancellations, the Connecticut congresswoman stressed it's not Democrats' responsibility to reach an agreement. "When you're in charge, you take the lead. You're leading, you have the majority," DeLauro said. Jeffries reiterated that position in a podcast with Democratic activists recorded in late August: "We're not down with an approach where Republicans simply say, my way or the highway." The New York Democrat also added another potential wrinkle to the spending fight, confirming that he would demand Republicans release $1 billion in money for the Washington, DC, government that's been held up by Congress for much of this year, even as Trump has recently deployed the National Guard and federalized the local police to crackdown on what he says is a crime problem in the nation's capital. White House officials preparing for Congress' return have already set red lines against any agreement that they think would curb Trump's power or modify GOP policies already passed into law. "The administration is not going to do that to themselves," the senior White House official said, specifying that the prospect of reversing health cuts in Trump's signature law is a nonstarter. "So we can either have a serious conversation or Democrats can shut the government down." Over the August recess, the White House kept in touch with Republican leaders about its expectations while gauging where various factions of the conference stand on the potential for a stopgap funding measure. Hardline House conservatives have previously opposed such budget deals, which has prompted lingering concern among White House aides that even a handful of defections could weaken the GOP's hand. But this time, some conservative lawmakers have already indicated openness to such a stopgap — and Republicans are counting on the promise of further rescissions to help tamp down any rebellion. House GOP leaders believe they will eventually have enough votes to pass a short-term stopgap through the House, putting the pressure squarely on the Senate. "We've been laying the groundwork for this," one GOP official familiar with the discussions said of keeping the party together. "We're trying to get ahead of it and say, 'This is the Democrat shutdown.'" In early discussions, the White House has left the door open to a year-end compromise on one issue: the looming expiration of enhanced Obamacare subsidies. Health insurance premiums are expected to shoot up this fall if the aid isn't extended, a prospect that's alarmed Democrats and even some Republicans worried about the political fallout of rising health care bills. Democrats, too, have privately focused on the need to extend the subsidies. The issue came up on a private call among House Democrats last week, with Jeffries describing it as a priority, according to two people who listened into the call. Though Trump aides remain skeptical of the subsidies, they've signaled some willingness to revisit it — just not in the initial efforts to keep the government open past September. "It's certainly a discussion worth having," the senior White House official said. "But taking hostages is not the way to facilitate that." Democrats, though, argue the hostage-taking is already underway with Trump insisting he and his administration can simply ignore Congress' funding decisions after the fact. "We're not taking hostages. They're the ones who need to keep the government open," one Democratic aide said. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

White House redlines and Democratic demands set up shutdown showdown

White House redlines and Democratic demands set up shutdown showdown President Donald Trumpis preparing to effectively dare Democrats to shu...
Fed governor Lisa Cook should release mortgage documents, Democratic lawmaker saysNew Foto - Fed governor Lisa Cook should release mortgage documents, Democratic lawmaker says

WASHINGTON − Federal Reserve governorLisa Cookshould release her mortgage documents as she fightsPresident Donald Trump's attempt to remove her,Democratic Rep. Ro Khannatold NBC. "She should be transparent so that we see that this is just a political football," Khanna, a leading progressive voice from California,said on "Meet the Press with Kristen Welker." Trump announced Aug. 25 that he fired Cookoverallegations of mortgage fraud. She's been accused of saying on mortgage documents that houses in Michigan and Georgia would each be her "primary residence" but has not been charged with a crime. More:Judge grapples with whether Trump was justified in firing Lisa Cook from Fed Khanna said Trump is "following Richard Nixon's playbook to interfere with the Fed and bully the Fed." Trump hascomplained repeatedly about Fed Chairman Jerome Powellnot lowering interest rates fast enough to spur the economy. Khanna said Trump has only himself to blame. The president's sweeping tariffs are putting inflationary pressure on the economy, "leaving the Fed in a no-win situation," he said. Both the tariffs and Cook's termination are in the hands of the courts. More:Most Trump tariffs are illegal, appeals court rules, setting up Supreme Court showdown An appeals court on Aug. 29ruledmost of Trump's global tariffs are illegal, though the court allowed them to stay in place for now to give the administration time to ask theSupreme Courtto weigh in. And a federal judgeis decidingwhether Cook can remain in her job while the courts consider whether her termination was legal. More:Will Trump's showdown with Fed governor Lisa Cook end up at Supreme Court? This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Fed governor Lisa Cook should release mortgage documents, Dem says

Fed governor Lisa Cook should release mortgage documents, Democratic lawmaker says

Fed governor Lisa Cook should release mortgage documents, Democratic lawmaker says WASHINGTON − Federal Reserve governorLisa Cookshould rele...
WR Jonah Winston following in brother's footsteps, commits to Florida StateNew Foto - WR Jonah Winston following in brother's footsteps, commits to Florida State

There's another Winston on the way to Tallahassee. Three-star wide receiver Jonah Winston, brother of Heisman Trophy-winning quarterback Jameis Winston,has committed to play football for Florida Statenext fall. Winston announced his decision moments afterFSU upset No. 8 Alabamaon Saturday, Aug. 30. The 5-foot-9 Winston is a senior at Hoover (Alabama) High School. In his first game of the season, Winston caught seven passes for 79 yards and a touchdown against IMG Academy. He choseFlorida Stateover Arkansas and Maryland, among other schools. He is the 23rd commitment in theSeminoles' 2026 class, and the sixth receiver to announce his intention to play for FSU. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Florida State lands Jonah Winston, Heisman winner Jameis' brother

WR Jonah Winston following in brother's footsteps, commits to Florida State

WR Jonah Winston following in brother's footsteps, commits to Florida State There's another Winston on the way to Tallahassee. Thre...
Oscar Piastri wins Dutch Grand Prix as Lando Norris DNFNew Foto - Oscar Piastri wins Dutch Grand Prix as Lando Norris DNF

Oscar Piastri won the Dutch Grand Prix on Sunday in a race that could impact the finishes of the season-ending Formula One championships. Piastri's McLaren teammate, Lando Norris, was forced out of the race because of mechanical difficulty with seven laps to go. At the time, they were running 1-2 but smoke from Norris' car engine, apparently due to an oil leak, forced him to pull off the course. Norris' troubles brought out the safety car for the third time; the first two came after Ferrari drivers Lewis Hamilton and Charles Leclerc were involved in separate crashes that did not allow them to finish the race at Circuit Zandvoort in the coastal town of Zandvoort, the Netherlands. Piastri, the pole sitter, led all 72 laps despite the constant pressure applied by Norris. And Piastri wasn't overjoyed by seeing his teammate exit the race, which was a turnaround from 2024, when Norris won and Piastri finished fourth, 22 seconds back. "I controlled the race when I needed to and obviously incredibly unfortunate for Lando at the end, but I felt like I was in control of that one and just used the pace when I needed to," he said. "It was a bit of a different race to 12 months ago so very happy with all the work we've done to try and improve around here. Very satisfied to come out on top." With the win, Piastri earned 25 points, which Norris banked zero since he didn't finish. Piastri now has a 34-point lead over Norris in the drivers' championship with nine races left in the season. "I was a bit disappointed, but there's nothing I could really do about it in the end," Norris said after the race. "Frustrating, but it's out of my control, so nothing I could do." McLaren is running away with the team constructors' championship, with the real battle for second place. Despite disappointing individual seasons, the Ferrari team of Hamilton and Leclerc opened the day in second place, ahead of Mercedes. And the contest for second place got closer with Hamilton crashing into the wall as light rain started to fall on Lap 23. His car suffered significant damage to the front end. "It's not a normal sort of thing for me to have, [to] crash out of a race. I can't really say too much more about it," said Hamilton, a seven-time individual champion. Leclerc found trouble at Lap 53 when Kimi Antonelli of Mercedes nipped Leclerc's left rear tire, forcing him out of the race. Antonelli was able to continue. The Ferrari team entered the weekend with a 24-point lead over Mercedes in the team standings. With neither car finishing, the gap dwindled to 12 points. Norris' winning time was 1:38:29.849, with Red Bull's Max Verstappen in second and rookie Isack Hadjar of Racing Bulls making his first F1 podium. George Russell of Mercedes was fourth. Hadjar, a 20-year-old from France, was the beneficiary of Norris' engine trouble as he was able to move up from fourth place. "It feels a bit unreal," Hadjar said "What was most surprising for me was keeping that fourth place for the whole race. "Unfortunately for Lando, we took advantage of his [retirement], but we made no mistakes. The car was on rails the whole weekend, and I'm really happy about myself because I really maximized what I had, made no mistakes and brought home the podium, so I'm so happy for my guys." --Field Level Media

Oscar Piastri wins Dutch Grand Prix as Lando Norris DNF

Oscar Piastri wins Dutch Grand Prix as Lando Norris DNF Oscar Piastri won the Dutch Grand Prix on Sunday in a race that could impact the fin...
Here are the top GOP contenders to succeed Trump for president in 2028New Foto - Here are the top GOP contenders to succeed Trump for president in 2028

President Trump is dominating the political stage for now. But attention will shift soon enough toward the 2028 race. Trump has at times entertained the idea of seeking a third term — a notion encouraged by some of the most combative voices in MAGA World such as Steve Bannon. The near-universal expert view is that such a quest would be flagrantly unconstitutional. Trump would also be 82 by Election Day 2028. Assuming Trump indeed exits the White House for a final time at the end of his second term, the battle to succeed him will be fierce. Tomorrow, The Hill will publish similar rankings for Democrats in 2028. For now, here's where the Republican field stands. Vice President Vance is the most obvious inheritor of Trump's mantle. Part of the reason is simple: He is the much-younger vice president to an incumbent president. But there are more Vance-specific factors as well. The vice president has long ago abandoned the criticisms of Trump that he once leveled. Despite the vigor of those critiques — he mulled to a friend in 2016 whether Trump could end up being "America's Hitler" — he appears to have been forgiven by the MAGA base. Vance is helped in connecting with Trump's working-class supporters by his famously difficult upbringing, as memorialized in his book "Hillbilly Elegy." The vice president also shares Trump's isolationist instincts on foreign policy — a tendency most obviously seen when the duo berated Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in the Oval Office earlier this year. Vance is often combative with the media but he has not made many enemies within the Trump-era GOP. Figures like Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and FBI Director Kash Patel are all much more controversial within the party. There are still question marks over some of Vance's political instincts. During last year's campaign, a 2021 jibe about "childless cat ladies" came back to haunt him. But for now, there's no real doubt that Vance is the Republican front-runner to succeed Trump. Donald Trump Jr.'s lofty position on this list is rooted less in his political skills — which are unproven, at best — than in the plausible possibility he would benefit from his father's hold over the party. The elder Trump has been able to survive numerous furors — two impeachments, Jan. 6 and felony convictions on 34 counts — because he inspires such fervent personal loyalty from his base. The question is whether the father's supporters would transfer their allegiance to his eldest son. The younger Trump for now mostly confines himself to aggressive social media posts, an equally fiery podcast called "Triggered" and tending to his business interests. One doubt around the younger Trump is whether he would bring the same negatives as his father — both men are widely loathed by liberals — without the same positives with the GOP base. Still, a second Trump candidacy would automatically have to be taken seriously. Sen. Tom Cotton's decision to take a pass on the 2024 race for the GOP nomination looks wise in retrospect. Trump would almost certainly have been the victor whomever he ran against — and Cotton's image with the MAGA faithful has not been besmirched by any perceived disloyalty. Cotton, an Army veteran who served in Iraq and Afghanistan, has a sure touch for the kind of political positioning that has a visceral appeal for many Republican voters. One recent example is his insistence that former special counsel Jack Smith should be investigated for — in Cotton's view — improperly seeking to influence the 2024 election by his criminal probes of Trump. Smith, through his lawyers, has emphatically denied this. Cotton is a strong speaker and media performer, with a more hawkish view of foreign affairs than Vance. He would be an immediate top-tier contender if he runs in 2028. The 2016 GOP primary seems a very, very long time ago. But back then, Sen. Ted Cruz was by far Trump's most serious rival for the GOP nomination. The 2016 campaign was also a bitter one, with Trump making bizarre allegations against Cruz's father and wife, and the Texas senator hitting back in kind. Cruz called Trump a "pathological liar" and famously declined to endorse him at that year's Republican National Convention. Cruz has positioned himself in a far more Trump-friendly way since then, and he is one of the best-known Republicans nationwide. There's no doubt about the Texas senator's fervent conservatism, on cultural and economic issues alike. The bigger question is whether he is too distrusted in some MAGA quarters to win. Marco Rubio suffers from some of the same problems as Cruz, though his current position at the heart of the Trump administration could help him. Rubio, like Cruz, ran against Trump in 2016 and threw plenty of verbal barbs the president's way. Trump derided his then-rival as "Lil' Marco." Now, Rubio is a frequent presence on television fiercely defending Trump's foreign policy approach. Yet Rubio is also capable, at least to some degree, of bridging the gap between the "America First" isolationism of the MAGA movement and the more old-style hawkish Republicanism he previously embraced. Still, there is often a sense that Rubio has never quite lived up to his promise. First elected as a senator representing Florida 15 years ago, a2013 Time magazine coverbilled Rubio as "The Republican Savior." Republican voters have never quite agreed. Gov. Ron DeSantis has helped rehabilitate himself with voters loyal to Trump in recent months by his championing of Alligator Alcatraz, the highly controversial immigration detention facility in Florida's Everglades. Trump visited the facility during the summer, but it's actually run by the state of Florida — and thus, ultimately, by DeSantis. A judge has ordered the facility closed amid a case that DeSantis has fiercely contested. The governor also announced earlier this month that his state will open a second facility, which he has christened "Deportation Depot." It's the kind of move that saw DeSantis emerge as Trump's most serious rival in the 2024 nomination process. But in the end, that campaign was very underwhelming — and clearly hurt DeSantis's standing and future ambitions. Sen. Josh Hawley could pull a surprise in the 2028 race, if he were to run. Besides Trump himself, he is the Republican who courts working-class support more ostentatiously than any other. Hawley is a vigorous critic of stock trading by members of Congress, for example, and he made an unlikely alliance with Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) to try to cap interest rates on credit cards. He is also more pro-labor than most Republicans, a stance reflected in moves like him pushing a bill that would have pressed employers not to use delaying tactics when negotiating union contracts. Critics on the left see Hawley's efforts as a pose, especially given his staunch social conservatism. He is also regarded with some suspicion by some members of his own party. But a Hawley bid is one of the more intriguing possibilities for 2028. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene would be the most controversial possible choice by the GOP — a title for which there is stiff competition. The Georgia congresswoman has been an inflammatory figure in American politics since she first won her seat in 2020. She has tangled with numerous Democrats, once getting into a particularly heated contretemps with Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) just off the House floor. But Greene has also mixed it up with fellow Republicans like Rep. Lauren Boebert (Colo.) and MAGA influencers like Laura Loomer. Greene, intriguingly, has been to the fore among the GOP in expressing opposition to Israeli actions in Gaza. In July, she became the first Republican member of Congress to call those deeds a "genocide." The following month, she caused another stir by accusing her own party of having "turned its back on America First, and the workers and just regular Americans." Is she electable nationally? Many people would say no, and it would be a huge gamble on the GOP's part to even consider nominating her. Sen. Tim Scott, a famously affable presence even in an increasingly acrimonious Senate, is well regarded by Trump, and by virtually every faction in today's GOP. He's also the sole Black Republican senator, a status that could perhaps help the GOP make further inroads with Black voters if he were to somehow make it to the nomination. Scott never really got traction as a 2020 candidate, however; and there's no obvious reason to believe he would vault past the people higher up this list in 2028. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. For the latest news, weather, sports, and streaming video, head to The Hill.

Here are the top GOP contenders to succeed Trump for president in 2028

Here are the top GOP contenders to succeed Trump for president in 2028 President Trump is dominating the political stage for now. But attent...
Opinion - Buttigieg has a flip-flop problem that could hurt in 2028New Foto - Opinion - Buttigieg has a flip-flop problem that could hurt in 2028

No one can deny that Pete Buttigieg is a highly skilled and articulate politician. While mayor of South Bend, Indiana's fifth-largest city with a population of 100,000, he became a major contender for the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination, narrowly winning the Iowa caucuses and finishing a strong second in the New Hampshire primary. Buttigieg's swift political rise catapulted him into President Joe Biden's Cabinet, where he served as Transportation secretary for four years. Now, with his sights clearly set on the 2028 presidential nomination, thelatest polling averagesfor the Democratic primary show him in third place, behind former Vice President Kamala Harris and Gov. Gavin Newsom (D-Calif.). But midway through this month, Buttigieg revived what could be a real problem: the perception that he behaves too much like a political windsock, shifting with strong breezes rather than sticking with conviction. Buttigieg, appearing on "Pod Save America," avoided taking a position on whether the U.S. should continue with shipping arms to Israel. Typical of Buttigieg's equivocal rhetoric was hisstatementthat "I think we need to insist that if American taxpayer funding is going to weaponry that is going to Israel, that that is not going to things that shock the conscience." Sharingthree minutes of word-saladfrom one of Buttigieg's non-answers, former Obama administration official Ben Rhodestweeted, "Pete is a smart guy and I admire a lot of what he's done, but I have absolutely no idea what he thinks based on these answers." He repeatedly talked his way around taking an actual position on U.S. arms shipments to Israel, whichHuman Rights Watch,Amnesty Internationalandother human rights groupshave accused of committing genocide in Gaza. When Buttigieg did offer a decipherable answer, it was tone-deaf to such realities. "I think that we, as Israel's strongest ally and friend, you put your arm around your friend when there's something like this going on, and talk about what we're prepared to do together,"he said. Days later, Buttigieg performed aquick swerveto put himself more in line with critics of Israel, stating that he would support an arms embargo on Israel and the recognition of a Palestinian state as part of a two-state solution. The abrupt change underscores that Buttigieg is vulnerable to charges of making U-turns whenever it is expedient. A notable example is how he swiftly and drastically reversed course on Medicare for All during his presidential campaign. In February 2018, eyeing a run for president, hetweeted: "I, Pete Buttigieg, politician, do henceforth and forthwith declare, most affirmatively and indubitably, unto the ages, that I do favor Medicare for All, as I do favor any measure that would help get all Americans covered." Buttigieg began 2019 bydeclaringthat he was "all for" a Medicare for All system. In April, he was stilltalking quite favorablyabout Medicare for All, calling it "very much a compromise position between nationalized medicine and fully private payer and provider … that's the middle ground." But by early autumn, Buttigieg was speciouslydenouncing Medicare for Allas a plan that would kick "150 million Americans off of their insurance in four short years" — lambasting the very same position that he had embraced the year before "affirmatively and indubitably." In a September debate, Buttigiegramped uphis attack on Medicare for All, confronting its major supporter Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) by saying, "I trust the American people to make the right choice for them. Why don't you?" An onlineButtigieg adalso jabbed at Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) for supporting Medicare for All, telling voters, "I trust you to make the right health care decisions for yourself and your family" — slickly implying that Medicare for everyone would not entail such trust. Another ad from Buttigiegwent further, declaring that his own new plan differed from "the Sanders-Elizabeth Warren vision" because "it doesn't dictate it to the American people and risk further polarizing them." Buttigieg started to tout an approach that he called "Medicare for All Who Want It." But Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.), a national co-chair of the Sanders campaign,pointed outthat Buttigieg's plan "won't bring the administrative costs down of private insurers or maximize negotiation with Big Pharma and hospitals." But that aspect of Buttigieg's plan was a selling point rather than a drawback for donors from the health insurance and pharmaceutical industries, who had begun topour sizable donationsinto his campaign war chest. During the first half of 2019, Buttigieg ranked second among the 20 Democratic candidates receiving contributions from those sources. A spokesperson for the group Justice Democrats, Waleed Shahid,charged that Buttigieg's about-facereeked of opportunism. "Buttigieg was for Medicare for All before he was against it," he stated. "What happened this summer that made him abandon Medicare for All? He realized he was never going to beat Warren and Sanders as a progressive." Shahid attributed the sudden shift to a calculation by Buttigieg that "he could raise tons of cash from corporate executives in the pharmaceutical and insurance industry." Many politicians are apt to adjust their policy positions over time for a variety of reasons. But Buttigieg has shown a remarkable knack for giving close observers whiplash as he pivots toward whatever he evidently sees as political advantage. In the Democratic field on the horizon for the 2028 presidential nomination, Buttigieg now seems to personify how ambition can erode values. He is likely to face a primary electorate with little patience for excessive cunning at the expense of clear principles. Norman Solomon is cofounder ofRootsActionand executive director of the Institute for Public Accuracy. His book"War Made Invisible: How America Hides the Human Toll of Its Military Machine"was published in 2023. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. For the latest news, weather, sports, and streaming video, head to The Hill.

Opinion - Buttigieg has a flip-flop problem that could hurt in 2028

Opinion - Buttigieg has a flip-flop problem that could hurt in 2028 No one can deny that Pete Buttigieg is a highly skilled and articulate p...
Medvedev splits with longtime coach after US Open meltdownNew Foto - Medvedev splits with longtime coach after US Open meltdown

NEW YORK (AP) — Daniil Medvedev has split with longtime coach Gilles Cervara after a disappointing year in the Grand Slam tournaments ended with hismeltdown in a first-round loss at the U.S. Open. Medvedev, the 2021 U.S. Open champion, and Cervara both posted messages Sunday on Instagram, thanking each other for a successful partnership that included the Russian reaching No. 1 in the ATP rankings. "I am grateful to you for guiding me through all these years and let's see what life brings us in the future," Medvedev wrote about their "amazing 8-10 years together" in the caption of a photo of them holding their U.S. Open trophies. Medvedev has won 20 titles but has fallen to No. 13 in the rankings and lost in the first round of the last three major tournaments, including twice to Benjamin Bonzi. It was during his loss to Bonzi last week that he had a tirade after the chair umpire allowed Bonzi another first serve after a photographer came onto the court during the match, eventuallygetting fined $42,500bythe U.S. Openfor unsportsmanlike conduct and racket abuse. Cervara wrote that he loved coaching and supporting Medvedev "(even when it was difficult), and finding solutions with you and the team to help you perform." "I will keep in mind your unconventional magic as a player, which is your strength," he added. "It will return, I'm sure." ___ AP tennis:https://apnews.com/hub/tennis

Medvedev splits with longtime coach after US Open meltdown

Medvedev splits with longtime coach after US Open meltdown NEW YORK (AP) — Daniil Medvedev has split with longtime coach Gilles Cervara afte...

 

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