Trump decried crime in America, then gutted funding for gun violence preventionNew Foto - Trump decried crime in America, then gutted funding for gun violence prevention

Violent crime wasalready trending downfrom a covid-era spike when President Donald Trump presenteda picture of unbridled crimein America on the campaign trail in 2024. Now his administration has eliminated about$500 millionin grants to organizations that buttress public safety, including many working to prevent gun violence. In Oakland, California, a hospital-based program to prevent retaliatory gun violence lost a $2 million grant just as the traditionallyturbulent summer monthsapproach. Another $2 million award was pulled from a Detroit program that offerssocial services and job skillsto young people in violent neighborhoods. And in St. Louis, a clinic treating the physical and emotional injuries of gunshot victims also lost a $2 million award. They are among 373 grants that the U.S. Department of Justice abruptly terminated in April. The largest share of the nixed awards were designated forcommunity-based violence intervention— programs that range from conflict mediation and de-escalation to hospital-based initiatives that seek to prevent retaliation from people who experience violent injuries. Gun violence is among America'smost deadly public health crises, medical experts say. Among programs whose grants were terminated were those for protecting children, victims' assistance, hate-crime prevention, and law enforcement and prosecution, according toan analysisby the Council on Criminal Justice, a nonpartisan think tank. The grants totaled $820 million when awarded, but some of that money has been spent. "Not only are these funds being pulled away from worthy investments that will save lives," saidThomas Abt, founding director of the Violence Reduction Center at the University of Maryland, "but the way that this was done — by pulling authorized funding without warning — is going to create a lasting legacy of mistrust." The Justice Department "is focused on prosecuting criminals, getting illegal drugs off the streets, and protecting all Americans from violent crime," according to a statement provided by agency spokesperson Natalie Baldassarre. "Discretionary funds that are not aligned with the administration's priorities are subject to review and reallocation, including funding for clinics that engage in race-based selectivity." The Council on Criminal Justiceanalysis of the terminated grantsfound that descriptions of 31% of them included references to "diversity," "equity," "race," "racial," "racism," or "gender." Baldassarre's statement said the department is committed to working with organizations "to hear any appeal, and to restore funding as appropriate." Indeed, it restored seven of the terminated grants for victims' services afterReuters reported on the cutsin April. But the cuts have already promptedlayoffs and reductionsat other organizations around the country. Five groupsfiled a lawsuiton May 21 to restore the grants in their entirety. Joseph Griffin, executive director of the Oakland nonprofit Youth Alive, which pioneered hospital-based violence intervention in the 1990s, said his organization had spent only about $60,000 of its $2 million grant before it was axed. The grant was primarily to support the intervention program and was awarded for a three-year period but lasted just seven months. The money would have helped pay to intervene with about 30 survivors of gun violence toprevent retaliatory violence. He's trying to find a way to continue the work, without overtaxing his team. "We will not abandon a survivor of violence at the hospital bedside in the same way that the federal government is abandoning our field," he said. The cuts are also hitting St. Louis, often dogged by being labeled one of the mostdangerous citiesin America. The city created anOffice of Violence Preventionwithmoney availableunder former President Joe Biden, and various groups received Justice Department grants, too. Locals say the efforts have helped: The 33% drop in the city's homicide rate from 2019 to 2024 was thesecond-largest decreaseamong 29 major cities examined by the Council on Criminal Justice. "I don't think there's any doubt that there's some positive impact from the work that's happening," said University of Missouri-St. Louis criminologistChris Sullivan, who received a grant from the Justice Department to assess the work of the city's new Office of Violence Prevention. That research grant remains in place. But the Justice Departmentslashed two other grantsin St. Louis, including $2 million for Power4STL. The nonprofit operates the Bullet Related Injury Clinic, dubbed the BRIC, which provides free treatment for physical and mental injuries caused by bullets. The BRIC had about $1.3 million left on its grant when the award was terminated in April. LJ Punch, a former trauma surgeon who founded the clinic in 2020, said it was intended to fund a mobile clinic, expand mental health services, evaluate the clinic's programs, and pay for a patient advisory board. The BRIC won't abandon those initiatives, Punch said, but will likely need to move slower. Keisha Blanchard joined the BRIC's advisory board after her experience as a patient at the clinic following a January 2024 gun injury. Someone fired a bullet into her back from the rear window of a Chevy Impala while Blanchard was out for a lunchtime stroll with a friend from her neighborhood walking group. The shooting was random, Blanchard said, but people always assume she did something to provoke it. "It's so much shame that comes behind that," she said. The 42-year-old said the shooting and her initial medical treatment left her feeling angry and unseen. Her family wasn't allowed to be with her at the hospital since the police didn't know who shot her or why. When she asked about taking the bullet out, she was told that thecommon medical practiceis to leave it in. "We're not in the business of removing bullets," she recalled being told. At a follow-up appointment, she said, she watched her primary care doctor google what to do for a gunshot wound. "Nobody cares what's going to happen to me after this," Blanchard recalled thinking. Before she was referred to the BRIC, she said, she was treated as though she should be happy just to be alive. But a part of her died in the shooting, she said. Her joyful, carefree attitude gave way to hypervigilance. She stopped taking walks. She uprooted herself, moving to a neighborhood 20 miles away. The bullet stayed lodged inside her, forcing her to carry a constant reminder of the violence that shattered her sense of safety, until Punch removed it from her back in November. Blanchard said the removal made her feel "reborn." It's a familiar experience among shooting survivors, according to Punch. "People talk about the distress about having bullets still inside their bodies, and how every waking conscious moment brings them back to the fact that that's still inside," Punch said. "But they're told repeatedly inside conventional care settings that there's nothing that needs to be done." The Justice Department grant to the BRIC had been an acknowledgment, Punch said, that healing has a role in public safety by quelling retaliatory violence. "The unhealed trauma in the body of someone who's gotten the message that they are not safe can rapidly turn into an act of violence when that person is threatened again," Punch said. Community gun violence, even in large cities, is concentrated amongrelatively small groups of peoplewho are often both victims and perpetrators, according to researchers. Violence reduction initiatives are frequently tailored to those networks. Jennifer Lorentz heads the Diversion Unit in the office of the St. Louis Circuit Attorney, the city's chief prosecutor. The unit offers mostly young, nonviolent offenders an opportunity to avoid prosecution by completing a program to address the issues that initially led to their arrest. About 80% of the participants have experienced gun violence and are referred to the BRIC, Lorentz said, calling the clinic critical to her program's success. "We're getting them these resources, and we're changing the trajectory of their lives," Lorentz said. "Helping people is part of public safety." Punch said the BRIC staffers were encouraged during the Justice Department application process to emphasize their reach into St. Louis' Black community, which is disproportionately affected by gun violence. He suspects that emphasis is why its grant was terminated. Punch likened the grant terminations to only partially treating tuberculosis, which allows the highly infectious disease to become resistant to medicine. "If you partially extend a helping hand to somebody, and then you rip it away right when they start to trust you, you assure they will never trust you again," he said. "If your intention is to prevent violence, you don't do that." KFF Health Newsis a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs atKFF— the independent source for health policy research, polling, and journalism. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Trump decried crime in America, then gutted funding for gun violence prevention

Trump decried crime in America, then gutted funding for gun violence prevention Violent crime wasalready trending downfrom a covid-era spike...
Ex-Homeland Security official Taylor fights back against Trump's 'unprecedented' investigation orderNew Foto - Ex-Homeland Security official Taylor fights back against Trump's 'unprecedented' investigation order

WASHINGTON (AP) — A former Homeland Security official during PresidentDonald Trump's first administration who authoredan anonymous op-edsharply critical of the president is calling on independent government watchdogs to investigate after Trump ordered the department to look into his government service. Miles Taylor, once chief of staff at the Department of Homeland Security, warned in an interview with The Associated Press of the far-reaching implications ofTrump's April 9 memorandum, "Addressing Risks Associated with an Egregious Leaker and Disseminator of Falsehoods," when it comes to suppressing criticism of the president. That memo accused Taylor of concocting stories to sell his book and directed the secretary of Homeland Security and other government agencies to look into Taylor and strip him of any security clearances. Taylor senta lettervia email to inspectors general at the departments of Justice and Homeland Security on Tuesday. Coming on the same April day that Trump also ordered an investigation into Chris Krebs, a former top cybersecurity official,the dual memorandaillustrated how Trump has sought to use the powers of the presidency against his adversaries. Speaking to the AP, Taylor said the order targeting him sets a "scary precedent" and that's why he decided to call on the inspectors general to investigate. "I didn't commit any crime, and that's what's extraordinary about this. I can't think of any case where someone knows they're being investigated but has absolutely no idea what crime they allegedly committed. And it's because I didn't," Taylor said. He called it a "really, really, really scary precedent to have set is that the president of the United States can now sign an order investigating any private citizen he wants, any critic, any foe, anyone." Trump has targeted adversaries since he took office Since taking office again in January, Trump hasstripped security clearancesfrom a number of his opponents. But Trump's order for an investigation into Taylor, as well as Krebs, marked an escalation of hiscampaign of retributionin his second term. Trump fired Krebs, who directed the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, in November 2020 after Krebs disputedthe Republican president's unsubstantiated claims of voting fraudand vouched forthe integrity of the 2020 election, which Trump lost to Democrat Joe Biden. Taylor left the first Trump administration in 2019. In the anonymous New York Times op-ed published in 2018, he described himself as part ofa secret "resistance"to counter Trump's "misguided impulses." The op-ed's publication touched offa leak investigationin Trump's first White House. Taylor later published a book by the same name as the op-ed and then another book under his own name called "Blowback," which warned about Trump's return to office. After signing the memorandum April 9, Trump said Taylor was likely "guilty of treason." The letter by Taylor's lawyer to the inspectors general calls Trump's actions "unprecedented in American history." "The Memorandum does not identify any specific wrongdoing. Rather, it flagrantly targets Mr. Taylor for one reason alone: He dared to speak out to criticize the President," the letter reads. Taylor's lawyer,Abbe Lowell, said the request to the inspectors general was an attempt to "get the administration to do the right thing." Lowell said that depending on the outcome of their complaint, they'll explore other options including a possible lawsuit. Lowell, a veteran Washington lawyer, announced earlier this year that he was opening his own legal practice and would represent targets of Trump's retribution. Violation of First Amendment rights alleged In the letter, Lowell calls on the inspectors general to do their jobs of "addressing and preventing abuses of power." The letter says Trump's April 9 memo appears to violate Taylor's First Amendment rights by going after Taylor for his criticism of the president, calling it a "textbook definition of political retribution and vindictive prosecution." And, according to the letter, Trump's memo also appears to violate Taylor's Fifth Amendment due process rights. The letter highlights Taylor's "honorable and exemplary" work service including receiving the Distinguished Service Medal upon leaving the department, and it details the toll that the April 9 memorandum has taken on Taylor's personal life. His family has been threatened and harassed, and former colleagues lost their government jobs because of their connection with him, according to the letter. Taylor told the AP that since the order, there's been an "implosion in our lives." He said he started a fund to pay for legal fees, has had to step away from work and his wife has gone back to work to help pay the family's bills. Their home's location was published on the internet in a doxxing. Taylor said that by filing these complaints with the inspectors general, he's anticipating that the pressure on him and his family will increase. He said they spent the last few weeks debating what to do after the April 9 memorandum and decided to fight back. "The alternative is staying silent, cowering and capitulating and sending the message that, yes, there's no consequences for this president and this administration in abusing their powers in ways that my legal team believes and a lot of legal scholars tell me is unconstitutional and illegal," Taylor said.

Ex-Homeland Security official Taylor fights back against Trump's 'unprecedented' investigation order

Ex-Homeland Security official Taylor fights back against Trump's 'unprecedented' investigation order WASHINGTON (AP) — A former ...
Chase Stegall, Son of Former NFL Star Milton Stegall, Dies 'Unexpectedly' at 20New Foto - Chase Stegall, Son of Former NFL Star Milton Stegall, Dies 'Unexpectedly' at 20

Chase Stegall/Instagram College soccer player Chase Stegall, the son of former NFL star Milton Stegall, has died "unexpectedly" at age 20, DePaul University, Chicago confirmed "He will forever be a Blue Demon," the team posted as part of a tribute on Instagram The athlete was found in his residence hall on the school's Lincoln Park campus, a post on theDePauliawebsite confirmed College soccer player Chase Stegall, the son of former NFL star Milton Stegall, has died at 20. The DePaul University, Chicago men's soccer team member "passed away unexpectedly" on the morning of Monday, June 2 at his residence hall on the school's Lincoln Park campus, a post on theDePauliawebsiteconfirmed. DePaul President Rob Manuel announced the tragic news in an email to faculty, staff and students, the post stated. "Chase was known for his warmth, strength of character, and vibrant presence — qualities that touched the lives of many both on and off the field," Manuel said, per theDePaulia. "His loss is deeply felt by his teammates, coaches, classmates, faculty, staff, and all who knew him. We extend our heartfelt prayers and deepest sympathies to Chase's family, friends, and loved ones," he added. The DePaul Blue Demons paid tribute to the athlete in anInstagrampost, writing in the caption, "We are devastated to share the passing of our brother, Chase Stegall. Our heartfelt condolences are with his family, friends and everyone who knew him and loved him." "He will forever be a Blue Demon," the message added. DePaul vice president and director of athletics, DeWayne Peevy, and head coach, Mark Plotkin, said in a joint statement, "We are heartbroken by the unexpected loss of Chase Stegall, a cherished member of our community, dedicated teammate and kind-hearted friend," per the soccer team's Instagram post. "Our thoughts and prayers are with Chase's family, friends, teammates and all who loved him. In the coming days, we will support Chase's family and teammates through this devastating time. His loss will be deeply felt across our entire Athletics and university family and his memory will forever be a part of DePaul University," they said. Stegall was a sophomore midfielder from Atlanta, Ga., per theDePaulia. He played in 16 of DePaul's 17 games this past season, the site stated. Read the original article onPeople

Chase Stegall, Son of Former NFL Star Milton Stegall, Dies 'Unexpectedly' at 20

Chase Stegall, Son of Former NFL Star Milton Stegall, Dies 'Unexpectedly' at 20 Chase Stegall/Instagram College soccer player Chase ...
Marta back for Brazil after retirement and starts as captain in win over JapanNew Foto - Marta back for Brazil after retirement and starts as captain in win over Japan

SAO PAULO (AP) — Marta was given the captain's armband by Brazil for her first start for her country since last year's Paris Olympics in a 2-1 win over Japan in a friendly match in Sao Paulo on Monday. The six-time world player of the year returned to Brazil's squad for a doubleheader against Japan and was a second-half substitute in a 3-1 victory last Friday. Three days later, the 39-year-old Marta started — and was made captain for — the match at Estádio Cicero de Souza Marques and played 73 minutes before being substituted for Jhonson, who scored the winning goal six minutes later. Marta, one of the best players in the history of women's soccer, announced last year that she would step down from the national team following the Olympics. The Brazilians went on to win the silver medal after losing in the final to the U.S. 1-0. She carried on playing at club level for Orlando Pride, which won the National Women's Soccer League last season. The Pride has re-signed Marta through 2026. Brazil is preparing for the defense of its title in the Copa America Femenina, which opens in July in Ecuador. ___ AP soccer:https://apnews.com/hub/soccer

Marta back for Brazil after retirement and starts as captain in win over Japan

Marta back for Brazil after retirement and starts as captain in win over Japan SAO PAULO (AP) — Marta was given the captain's armband by...
Trump leans on GOP senators as they gear up to make changes to his domestic policy billNew Foto - Trump leans on GOP senators as they gear up to make changes to his domestic policy bill

President Donald Trumpspoke with several GOP senators on Monday, including ones who have raised concerns about his domestic policy bill, as the chamber gears up to make changes to the legislation and congressional leaders aim to put the package on Trump's desk by July 4. In a sign of the challenges ahead for GOP leaders, a number of Republican senators have raised concerns about theHouse-passed package, demanding changes that could be tough for Speaker Mike Johnson's narrow majority to swallow when it moves back over to the House. The president met with Senate Majority Leader John Thune at the White House on Monday, who said they "covered a lot of ground. A lot about the big, beautiful bill." A White House official confirmed Thune and Trump met. Several of the senators who have been most vocal about their concerns — Sen. Josh Hawley of Missouri, Sen. Ron Johnson of Wisconsin and Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky — said that they discussed the package with the president. Paul told CNN that he "had a lengthy discussion" with Trump this week and told the President that he can't back the bill if an increase to the debt ceiling remains in the package. "It's just not a conservative thing to do, and I've told him I can't support the bill if they are together. If they were to separate out and take the debt ceiling off that, I very much could consider the rest of the bill," said Paul, who noted that Trump "did most of the talking" on their call. Johnson said he "got a real nice call from the President this morning, had a nice conversation, very respectful," as the Wisconsin Republican continues to press the President for further assurances that Congress will commit to more stringent spending cuts than what were included in the House bill. Johnson opened the door, however, to being flexible in how the White House could assuage his concerns and said he was open to getting assurances for future cuts to be made outside of just the framework of Trump's "big, beautiful bill." Asked if he would be open to passing something that looked like the House bill but with a "promise" for other spending changes in the future, Johnson said, "I want to help the president succeed in this thing so I've got a pretty open mind. My requirement has always been a commitment to a reasonable pre-pandemic level of spending and a process to achieve and maintain it." Trump addressed Senate Republicans in a Truth Social post on Monday, writing, "With the Senate coming back to Washington today, I call on all of my Republican friends in the Senate and House to work as fast as they can to get this Bill to MY DESK before the Fourth of JULY. Thank you for your attention to this matter!" Hawley, who has expressed deep concerns withpotential changes to Medicaid,postedon X that he also spoke with the president about the bill. "Just had a great talk with President Trump about the Big, Beautiful Bill. He said again, NO MEDICAID BENEFIT CUTS," wrote Hawley. He told reporters later that he is very concerned about the impact of the tax on providers because it could cause already struggling rural hospitals in his state and around the county to close, something that would be akin to a cut in benefits if Medicaid recipients can't access health care. "I'm also worried about this sick tax, you know, where now charging people to go to the doctor, pay before they can see a doctor. You know, they're on Medicaid because they can't afford to buy private health insurance. So, if they could afford to be paying out of pocket, they wouldn't be on Medicaid. So I don't know why we would tax them and penalize them," said Hawley. Hawley said in his phone call with Trump, the president asked him what he thought the prospects for the bill are in the Senate. "I said, 'good if we don't cut Medicaid, if we do no Medicaid benefit cuts. And he said, I'm 100% supportive of that'," he said. "He specifically said, 'waste, fraud and abuse, fine and work requirements, fine…but no benefit cuts'. And I said, 'we are singing from the same handbook." The various changes that GOP senators would like to see to the sweeping domestic policy bill make clear that the process of passing the "big, beautiful bill" is far from the finish line. "The world hasn't changed since we've been on recess," Sen. Thom Tillis told reporters on Monday evening. "There's work to do there." The North Carolina Republican, who's up for reelection in 2026, noted that about 620,000 recipients have enrolled in Medicaid since his state expanded the program. It's been a concern among some lawmakers that work requirements implemented in the House's bill could particularly impact coverage in Medicaid expansion states. "We've got to work on getting that right, giving the state legislatures and others a chance to react to it, make a recommendation or make a change, and that's all the implementation stuff that we're beginning to talk about now that we're in possession of the bill," Tillis said. Maine Sen. Susan Collins, who will also have to defend her seat next year, finds the House-drafted work requirements "acceptable," but voiced other concerns with a provision related to provider taxes that could impact how states receive federal dollars. "I'm very concerned about not only low-income families, but our rural hospitals," she said. Sen. Shelley Moore Capito told CNN that she did roundtables with constituents in West Virginia over the recess and "there's a lot of concern" about Medicaid at home. "We haven't had a chance to digest how it's going to impact our hospitals," she said. Sen. Jerry Moran of Kansas said he was also worried about "harming hospitals that we just spent COVID money to save," adding that he'll be "lobbying to try to get something that's acceptable to me" on Medicaid in the bill. Another red line floated by some Senate Republicans is the roll back of Biden-era clean energy tax credits, which could begin with several consumer credits as soon as the end of this year. Tillis said he's looking at the issue "through the lens of a businessperson," explaining, "it's easy, you know, from a political standpoint, to cancel programs that are out there. We need to be smart about where capital has been deployed and to minimize the impact on the message that we send businesses that every two or four years we have massive changes in our priorities for energy transition." He said lawmakers should "show some respect" to businesses that have employed capital on clean energy initiatives, adding "I think we can get there" before walking into a meeting of the Senate Finance Committee. On the clean energy tax credit phaseout timeline, Moran said, "I think there's a lot of Senate sentiment that it's too rapid." Still, he wouldn't say if he'd vote against the existing bill, noting that he would lose "leverage," adding that the whole package has "lots of things that I care about." Sen. Markwayne Mullin, who has been playing a key role in talks with his former House colleagues, said he thinks there are "two big issues" that the Senate can't touch, which were central in House GOP leadership's down-to-the-wire negotiations with holdouts. "We have a structure, a great structure, the House sent over. We don't have to tear down that structure. We may have to put some more decorations in some of the rooms and maybe repaint some of the walls, but it's got a good structure to it," he said. The Oklahoma Republican said the Senate should not go below the about $1.6 trillion in spending cuts promised to conservative hardliners or change the state and local tax deduction provisions carefully negotiated with House Republicans from high tax states. "As long as we leave those two things there, and then we put our fingerprints on the rest of it, I think we're in good shape," he said. Sen. John Cornyn, an ally of GOP leadership, said he thinks they'll try to have the bill on Trump's desk by July 4, "which means things are going to have to move at a much faster schedule." He noted that with the debt ceiling limit closing in, the House may have to just accept what passes the Senate, telling reporters, "I've been around here long enough to see the Senate jam the House and the House jam the Senate." CNN's David Wright and Kristen Holmes contributed. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Trump leans on GOP senators as they gear up to make changes to his domestic policy bill

Trump leans on GOP senators as they gear up to make changes to his domestic policy bill President Donald Trumpspoke with several GOP senator...
Andrew Cuomo campaigns for New York's redemption – and his ownNew Foto - Andrew Cuomo campaigns for New York's redemption – and his own

In New York, Andrew Cuomo's comeback after resigning in disgrace could end up taking less than four years – with a scandal-plagued incumbent mayor, a disorganized left wing and a feeling that the city is on the brink paving the way. It's the latest saga in the long-running soap opera of New York politics. On the heels of a presidential resurgence from another brash guy from Queens and a Democratic Party with a loud socialist streak, Cuomo sees himself as the man for the moment as he campaigns to be the next mayor of New York City, even if that required moving into his daughter's apartment to be eligible to run. In public, Cuomo has kept mostly quiet, limiting himself mostly to surprise appearances where he stays a few minutes and disappears before he gets protested or takes any questions from reporters. In private, according to several who know him, he has been brooding aboutthe investigation he is facingfromPresident Donald Trump'sJustice Department, orchestrating efforts to undermine his opponents and stressing over what positions to adopt to be taken more seriously as a progressive himself. He has been leaning on a sense of inevitability to press more potential supporters to get on board and leave others with the impression that he will remember those who don't, delighting in opponents who, struggling for momentum, haven't found an effective way to attack him. With three weeks to go before the Democratic primary, Cuomo's pitch has centered on how well he managed the state government – though not a single statewide official or previous city mayor whose terms overlapped with his would say they agreed with him when asked by CNN. He has not apologized or much addressed the series of sexual misconduct accusations thatforced his resignationor themore than 12,000 deaths in nursing homesas he ran the state's Covid-19 response – yet few voters are saying they care much, or even remember, according to focus groups conducted by opposition campaigns. He never talks about redemption, though he has been chasing that since almost the moment he finished his resignation speech in August 2021. "That's clearly what it is, but he doesn't talk about it that way," said one prominent Democrat who's spoken to Cuomo multiple times about the race but has heard no sense of reflection. "He talks about how the Democratic Party is so screwed up and it's too far to the left, he talks about what a disaster [former Mayor Bill] de Blasio was, what a disaster [current Mayor Eric] Adams is." For years, New York has been tilting toward being a homegrown Dubai: a status playground for the rich steadily pushing out enclaves where the struggling working class tries to scrap by, with Instagram spots for tourists in between. Unlicensed marijuana stores, a surge of migrants that has strained the city's resources and a pervasive sense of rising crime (despite rates that are in reality dropping) have left many New Yorkers feeling the city is spinning out of control. "We have known each other a long time and we have been through a lot together. We talk to each other, we're straight with each other," Cuomo said at his sole rally last week. "New York City is in trouble. You can feel it when you walk around the street. You feel it in the anxiety, in the frustration. You see it in the crime, you see it in the number of homeless mentally ill who are left on the streets. And you feel it in that New York City's just getting more expensive, and it is unaffordable for working men and women." Rep. Greg Meeks, who also serves as the Democratic Party leader in Queens, said that not only does Cuomo seem like the only credible choice in this race, but he hopes his win reverberates among Democrats across the country in looking at what works with voters. "I thought about where the city is, what the city needs, where we take the next step so that we continue to grow and produce jobs and housing and get things done – to me, there's only one person that is running that has done those kinds of things," Meeks said. "No one can deny that as governor he was able to get things done that were innovative and creative, and that's what the city needs to continue to do now as we're moving forward into a more technological and interdependent world. Then finally, someone who can truly stand up to Donald Trump too." Asked about the issues that forced Cuomo out as governor, Meeks argued, "He's not like the president of the United States, who's a convicted felon. He's never been convicted of anything, and he has completely denied all of it." Meeks added that his sense is of a man who is "contrite," though Cuomo has spent far less time expressing any public contrition than he and aides have put into trying to undermine the investigations into him. At the rally, Cuomo announced his support for a $20 minimum wage, boasting about how he had signed a $15 minimum wage as governor and leaving out that he had resisted the efforts to do that for years before backing it. The air conditioning couldn't keep up with the room's tightly packed clumps of members from a variety of unions in color-coded shirts, chanting their locals' names and slogans. John Costa, the international president of the Amalgamated Transit Union, led a round of cheers as he talked about Cuomo helping improve both safety and service on the subways. Asked afterward to explain why he was backing Cuomo, Costa told CNN, "I've watched him, I watched his family, his father. I thought he was a great governor. I think he's learned a lot from his father and I thought he was great as a governor. You know, and then things happened and he had to step down for whatever reasons. Now he's back. I think he'll be a great mayor." Cuomo's upward spiral of inevitability – from those either wanting to be with the guy who wins or worried he'll be vindictive against those who weren't with him when he does – also pulled in less enthusiastic union members, like one who asked not to give his name when asked why he was there. "I came because we have dues we have to pay: if we don't come, we get docked $500," he said. "I got no choice." A representative of that union clarified that the policy was not specific to appearing at the Cuomo event, but at political events in general and was an encouragement, not a requirement. Over several weeks, a Cuomo aide offered several different rationales to CNN for why he would not be available for an interview. The candidate has participated in only a handful of interviews since entering the race in March, leaving reporters after the union rally shouting questions at him through the closed window of his Dodge Charger as an aide tried to usher them out of the way while warning they were in danger of being run over. Cuomo smiled but did not engage, then made a right turn on a red light as he pulled away. (A Cuomo spokesperson told CNN the former governor "pulled into the intersection while it was green but there was someone in the crosswalk so he let that person go.") One event he won't be able to outrun is Wednesday's city-mandated primary debate and Cuomo is holed up in prep – his aides worried that in his first competitive debate in 20 years, the risk for a bad moment is high. Cuomo's dominance to date might not have been possible if all the candidates and other city power players who agree that they don't want him as the next mayor could agree what to do to stop him. Instead, they have often added fuel to his argument that the left wing of the party is too much of a mess to run one of the largest and most complex municipal governments in the world. Cuomo isn't the only critic. Queens and Bronx Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, the progressive icon, has been chiding them for failing to mount an organized strategy against him, according to multiple people familiar with the conversations. What she's been getting back is a lot of frustration, and a bunch of complaints that actually she doesn't get how politics works. For all the anti-Cuomo memes and custom t-shirts they've inspired, talks between campaigns about coordinating spending on ads or other tactics broke down without getting anywhere. Aides to several top New York political leaders have been fuming privately that others think it was up to them to stop Cuomo, and most – including Gov. Kathy Hochul, Sens. Chuck Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand, and Brooklyn-based House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries – have all said that they will stay neutral. No candidate was willing to risk a kamikaze mission of going hard negative on Cuomo at the likely expense of becoming too toxic to win. Jumaane Williams, the anti-Cuomo public advocate (effectively, the city council president) popular among many Black voters in the city, last Tuesday held an event in front of City Hall to announce he was jointly endorsing two candidates – city council speaker Adrienne Adams and comptroller Brad Lander. Then on Wednesday, Williams put out a video with another candidate, Zohran Mamdani, endorsing him. Leaders of the Working Families Party, for years a definitive force in galvanizing city politics with deep animosity for Cuomo personally – on top of policy and political disagreements that go back over a decade – have shocked allies by how flat-footed they've been in response to his candidacy. And though on Friday the group announced a recommended ranking order for several of the candidates, with Mamdani endorsed for first, slides obtained by CNN of the polling presentation officials made to candidates show that they acknowledged their endorsement would make little difference for who gets ranked first. With ranked choice voting, "progressives are really trying to figure out what strategies work best in that environment in a way that moderates or the right really haven't had to wrestle with because there's one of them, where there's a slate of progressive candidates," said Tiffany Cabán, a city councilwoman from Queens proudly risen out of the Democratic Socialists of America, in an interview on the steps of City Hall last week. The one concerted effort to stop Cuomo came from Letitia James, who was urged into first running for state attorney general by Cuomo in 2018, and then led the investigations into the nursing home deaths and sexual misconduct allegations. After deciding not to run against Cuomo herself to focus on leading lawsuits against the incoming Trump administration, James joined with state Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins in trying to recruit candidates, sources familiar with the efforts told CNN. Multiple prominent women in New York got calls, including Adams, the city council speaker, who is of no relation to the mayor. All turned them down. But when a combination of events, including the mayor's top aides resigning in protest in February over how the Trump Justice Department pulled back on the charges he was facing, Adams changed her mind and made a late entrance into race. She has struggled to raise money or gain any public traction, and while James has stuck by her, Stewart-Cousins hasn't said anything publicly about the race. An aide to Stewart-Cousins did not respond to a request for comment. "The mayoral race has not gotten a lot of traction," James told CNN in an interview. "We've not broken through all of the executive orders, the tariffs, the chaos, the confusion, and other corruption. So it's difficult in this climate, this 24-hour media circus." Both as a former Cuomo colleague and a lifelong Brooklyn resident, James says she knows the clock is ticking. "Individuals have to think about what's in the best interest of the city, as opposed to what is in their best interest," James said. "And I don't know whether or not there are a sufficient number of individuals who can set aside their ego at this point." From even before heofficially launchedhis campaign, Cuomo was talking privately about Mamdani as the foil he wanted: a proud member of the Democratic Socialists of America who has a record big on marching with causes but light on substantive results, who could embody the caricature of a far-too-left turn in the Democratic Party talking about equity and inclusion while New Yorkers were scared to get on the subway. The 33-year-old assemblyman has become identified enough with the new young left that Ella Emhoff, the stepdaughter of Kamala Harris, endorsed him. But his views are so controversial that the former vice president has had to privately clarify that this does not signal her support, a source told CNN. But Mamdani attributes his rise at least in part to Cuomo. "He's the perfect foil for this campaign because he represents the failed leadership that we've seen not just in City Hall from Eric Adams, but also from Cuomo himself in the governor's mansion in Albany," Mamdani told CNN, standing in front of a Brooklyn brownstone where a fundraiser had been shifted to a no-donation meet-and-greet because he already raised the maximum allowed under the city's system. And at least, Mamdani charged, he would not be compromised by the donors Trump shares with the Cuomo-aligned super PAC that is preparing to come down hard on him in the final weeks of the primary. But as Cuomo has centered much of his campaign on denouncing antisemitism and talking up support of Israel – major issues in a city with such a large Jewish population – he has found an easy target in the Israel divestment-supporting Mamdani, both among Jewish voters and among those who see the far-left's identification with the anti-Israel cause as endemic to what is driving mainstream Democrats away. In the interview, Mamdani blamed Cuomo's attacks, which includedemanding his opponentscondemn the DSA for calling the alleged shooter in the killing of two Israeli Embassy employees in Washington a "political prisoner," as part of the former governor's "long track record of weaponizing very real concerns for his personal and political benefit." When asked to clarify his own position on Israel, a Mamdani aide tried to stop the interview. Pressed multiple times to clarify if he believes Israel has a right to exist as a Jewish state, Mamdani instead repeated a line he's been using that "Israel has a right to exist as a state with equal rights." Candidates in New York can run on the ballot lines of multiple parties, even those they make up. Should he lose the Democratic primary on June 24, Cuomo will still be the nominee of the Fight and Deliver Party. If Cuomo wins, Mamdani – or whoever comes in second – is expected to be the nominee of the Working Families Party. After declining to run again in the Democratic primary, Adams, the incumbent mayor, is planning to run in the fall as the Safe Streets, Affordable City nominee, people familiar with his plans told CNN. Curtis Sliwa, who has made a personality and career of being a lifelong gadfly, is making a repeat run as the Republican candidate. That means the next mayor of New York could win without a clear majority of the vote – in a race with multiple candidates facing significant question marks about their candidacies and in what has the possibility of being the first competitive citywide general election in more than two decades, when ranked choice voting will not be a factor in determining the outcome. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

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AP PHOTOS: Indian Premier League cricket reaches the finalNew Foto - AP PHOTOS: Indian Premier League cricket reaches the final

The 10-week, 73-game Indian Premier League has come to an end. The world's biggest Twenty20 cricket franchise tournament will have a first-time champion on Tuesday from the final between the Punjab Kings and Royal Challengers Bengaluru, who finished the round-robin first and second. The final is at Narendra Modi Stadium, the world's largest cricket venue with capacity for 132,000 people. It is sold out. This is a photo gallery curated by AP photo editors. ___ AP cricket:https://apnews.com/hub/cricket

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