All that Jazz: 'Electric' Chisholm Jr. talks new approach for YankeesNew Foto - All that Jazz: 'Electric' Chisholm Jr. talks new approach for Yankees

NEW YORK – Arriving at a less-is-more revelation, Jazz Chisholm Jr. believes he's found that next-level key to personal success. That means an easier swing, a steadier running gait, a calmer approach in the field. "If I stay fundamentally sound at 70%, I'm a pretty good baseball player,'' said Chisholm, whose second straight three-hit night boosted the Yankees to a 9-6 victory Friday night. Chisholm's three-run homer and RBI single contributed to an early seven-run lead against the rivalBoston Red Soxand starter Walker Buehler, knocked out after two innings. Of course, the last time Buehler was on the Stadium mound, he closed out the World Series clincher in Game 5 for the Los Angeles Dodgers. This time, the Yanks jumped Buehler for five first-inning runs – including Chisholm's three-run homer on an 0-2 changeup to straightaway center field and a two-run shot by Anthony Volpe. Volpe left the game shortly after being plunked on the left elbow, forcing home a second inning run; X-rays and a CT scan were negative, and Volpe feels he'll be available Saturday. Meanwhile, Chisholm is batting .500 (8-for-16) with two homers, six RBI and three stolen bases in four games since coming off the injured list due to a strained oblique. "Electric is the only way to describe Jazz,'' said Yankees rookie starter Will Warren, who rebounded from a rough start last Saturday at Dodger Stadium by being more aggressive in the strike zone. As Chisholm reasons, "you can be electric while being in control at the same time,'' though "it's super challenging for me. The only thing I knew was how to go fast. "Basically, I was Ricky Bobby. That's all I knew.'' Chisholm's new approach had its first light-bulb moment on April 29, the day he was injured at Baltimore – doubling to right despite three small tears to his oblique. Before his brief minor league rehab assignment began last week, Chisholm convened with the club's hitting coaches and reviewed video of his minor league days. "The swing looked so effortless,'' and a plan was hatched to dial back in some respect – inspiring more contact, less swing and miss. "(At) 70%, you're one of the best out there,'' said Chisholm, quoting a conversation with assistant hitting coach Pat Roessler. "At 100 percent, I might be dog crap. I was hitting .171 at 100 percent.'' "It's really just about slowing everything down and taking a nice easy swing,'' said Judge. "And that's what I felt like I saw tonight, even the homer to center field.'' Chisholm drove an 0-2 Buehler curveball an estimated 417 feet over the center field wall, a ball that just kept carrying in the warm, humid air. "I'm looking forward to seeing more of that,'' Judge said of the at-bat that produced Chisholm's ninth homer of the year, in his 34th game. In his third time up, Chisholm rifled a single to center off a 1-0 changeup. "Earlier I the season, I was pulling off that and hitting it foul or rolling over because I was trying to hit a home run,'' said Chisholm. "I feel like a baseball player again.'' Maybe the 70-percent stuff sends a mixed message, so Chisholm emphasized, "you can't be lackadaisical," but "if I stay fundamentally sound at 70%, I'm a pretty good baseball player. "I really heard that all my life," Chisholm said. "I need to tone down the way I play." This article originally appeared on NorthJersey.com:Yankees' Jazz Chisholm on new approach for New York

All that Jazz: 'Electric' Chisholm Jr. talks new approach for Yankees

All that Jazz: 'Electric' Chisholm Jr. talks new approach for Yankees NEW YORK – Arriving at a less-is-more revelation, Jazz Chishol...
Florida Panthers down Edmonton Oilers in double overtime to even up Stanley Cup FinalNew Foto - Florida Panthers down Edmonton Oilers in double overtime to even up Stanley Cup Final

Another game, another overtime needed to proclaim a winner. This time around it was the Florida Panthers defeating the Edmonton Oilers 5-4 in double overtime to win Game 2 of the Stanley Cup Final and even the series at 1-1 on Friday at the Rogers Place. Just over eight minutes into the second extra period, Panthers center Brad Marchand scored on a breakaway, beating Oilers goalie Stuart Skinner to help Florida escape with the victory. However, it was an unlikely hero that got Edmonton through to overtime to begin with. The 40-year-old Corey Perry scored to knot things up with 17.8 seconds left in the third period, the latest tying goal in Cup Final history. The previous record was held by Tod Sloan in Game 5 of the 1951 Final. For the first time since 2014 and the sixth time in NHL history, the series is the first to feature overtime in each of its first two games. The 37-year-old Marchand was asked about his mother after the game, who was in attendance at the game. Despite joking that his mother was the type of hockey mom that you "need to put a muzzle on," he also added that he couldn't have enjoyed the career he's had without her. "She gets pretty amped up at the games," Marchand told reporters. "They've always been so supportive. Like all of our parents, I don't think there's a player in this league that can say that their parents are not the main reason why they are here. The sacrifices they all make. And when you go on a journey as a team and you get to the finals, you're going on a run, it's not just for you, it's for everybody that helped you get here and all your loved ones that are enjoying the moments whether they are here or not. "It's special to have them in the building but hopefully we have a lot of great memories in the future as well." With the Oilers coming off a Game 1 overtime win and the fans still feeling bliss, Friday's game got off to a blistering start. Panthers forward Sam Bennett got the scoring started two minutes into the game, netting his postseason-leading 13th goal and NHL record 12th on the road to quiet the raucous Oilers fan inside and outside the arena. But Edmonton's Evander Kane and Evan Bouchard responded with two goals to propel the Oilers to the lead about halfway through the opening period. A minute later, Florida defenseman Seth Jones beat Skinner and found open net to tie things up, before Oilers star Leon Draisaitl scored on the power play to give Edmonton a 3-2 lead at the end of a frenetic first period. Second period was all Panthers, with Dmitry Kulikov tying the game yet again and Marchand snatching the lead after a shorthanded goal. It remained 4-3 until Perry's goal late in the final period in regulation. Florida goalie Sergei Bobrovsky was sharp as he always is, stopping 42 of the 46 shots he faced. The series now shifts to Sunrise, Florida on Monday for Game 3. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Florida Panthers down Edmonton Oilers in double overtime to even up Stanley Cup Final

Florida Panthers down Edmonton Oilers in double overtime to even up Stanley Cup Final Another game, another overtime needed to proclaim a wi...
Trump, Musk feud painful to watch: CPAC chairmanNew Foto - Trump, Musk feud painful to watch: CPAC chairman

(NewsNation) — A White House official said President Trump and Elon Musk have not spoken and have no plans to speak since theirpublic feudstarted. Trump is now planning tosell the Teslahe bought in March to support Musk, whose business was suffering backlash from his White House affiliation. The feud between the two stems from Musk's criticism of the "big, beautiful bill," which he called it a"disgusting abomination"that will only add to the country's deficit. During his time in the White House, Musk headed the Department of Government Efficiency, which was supposed to cut wasteful spending in the federal government. Matt Schlapp, the chairman of the Conservative Political Action Committee, told NewsNation's Connell McShane that the feud between Trump and Musk was "painful" because conservatives have built a coalition and have worked hard to pull people together to support the Republican Party. "It was kind of problematic for all of us to see that split," Schlapp said. He added that he was not surprised by the split between the two, because he believes Musk didn't really fit into the political world and did not understand the importance of getting the budget bill passed. 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.

Trump, Musk feud painful to watch: CPAC chairman

Trump, Musk feud painful to watch: CPAC chairman (NewsNation) — A White House official said President Trump and Elon Musk have not spoken an...
How Kilmar Abrego Garcia's case became a political flashpointNew Foto - How Kilmar Abrego Garcia's case became a political flashpoint

Kilmar Abrego Garcia's case started quietly, boiling down to a clerical error that moved him up on a list to land on a deportation flight destined to El Salvador in March. And then a court filing from the Trump Justice Department acknowledging the mistake brought it to the national forefront – culminating in a fraught legal battle and heated political debate. On Friday, the Trump administration announced that Abrego Garcia, a Salvadoran national who had resided in Maryland until he wasmistakenly deportedto his home country, landed in the United States, and was facing criminal charges. It was an extraordinary development in a case that's come to define the president's hardline immigration policies and a striking about-face from the Trump administration, which had maintained he would not return to the US. At the start of the legal battle, nearly three months ago, both sides agreed that Abrego Garcia's deportation to El Salvador – and subsequent imprisonment in the country'snotorious mega-prison– was a mistake. In 2019, an immigration judge granted Abrego Garcia withholding of removal, meaning he couldn't be removed to El Salvador over fear of persecution. A senior Immigration and Customs Enforcement officialcalled his removal an "administrative error"in a March court declaration, appearing to mark the first time the administration had conceded an error over the controversial flights to El Salvador that resulted in the detention of hundreds of migrants in the CECOT prison. But then, Trump administration officials publicly abandoned that position and called Abrego Garcia "a terrorist," because they allege he is a member of MS-13, which the US has designated as a terrorist organization. His attorneys and family maintain that he was not a member of MS-13 and have argued that he is stillentitled to due process. Here's how Abrego Garcia's case played out over the last few months. Abrego Garcia, who came to the United States illegally in 2012, first had an encounter with immigration authorities in 2019 after an arrest. At the time, the government similarly argued that Abrego Garcia was a gang member while he made the case that he feared a possible return to El Salvador. The immigration judge presiding over the case sided with Abrego Garcia and ruled that he may not be deported back to El Salvador. Years later, on March 12, 2025, Immigration and Customs Enforcement pulled over Abrego Garcia and arrested him, which came as the Trump administration continued its aggressive crackdown on immigration. Abrego Garcia was then mistakenly put on a deportation flight three days later and sent to CECOT. It took the Trump administration weeks toconcede that it mistakenly deportedthe Maryland father to El Salvador "because of an administrative error." But while doing acknowledging the mistake, the administration said in court filings on March 31 that it could not return him because he was in Salvadoran custody. Later that week, Judge Paula Xinis of the US District Court in Maryland ordered the Trump administration to return Abrego Garcia to the US, kicking off a monthslong legal battle in which the Trump administration has argued that courts cannot intervene in the foreign policy decision-making of the United States. In her April 4 order, Xinis gave a deadline of April 7 to bring back Abrego Garcia but theSupreme Court paused the deadline. Days later, the Supreme Court ruled that the Trump administration must "facilitate" Abrego Garcia's return but stopped short of requiring the government to return him. In recent weeks, Xinis has accused the Trump administration ofrepeated stonewallingand intentional noncompliance with its obligation to produce information related to how it has been facilitating Abrego Garcia's return. President Donald Trump, in an interview with ABC News in April,acknowledged that he could secure Abrego Garcia's return, contradicting previous remarks made by him and his his top aides who said the US did not have the ability to return Abrego Garcia because he was in the custody of a foreign government. When asked by ABC's Terry Moran why he can't just pick up the phone and secure Abrego Garcia's return, Trump said: "And if he were the gentleman that you say he is, I would do that. But he is not." The president went on to accuse Abrego Garcia of being a MS-13 member, pointing tohis tattoos, which experts say are not by themselves proof he's a gang member. And just days later, the White House and El Salvador's President Nayib Bukelemade clear during an Oval Office meetingthat Abrego Garcia would not be returned to the US. Democratic lawmakers have been critical of how the Trump administration handled the Abrego Garcia case and continued to call for him to be brought back. One Democratic senator, Chris Van Hollen of Maryland, flew down to El Salvador to meet with his constituent. After initially not being allowed to meet him,Van Hollen had a sit downwith Abrego Garcia on April 17 and in a press conference a day later, the senator said Abrego Garciatold him he was traumatized. "He said he was not afraid of the other prisoners in his immediate cell but that he was traumatized by being at CECOT and fearful of many of the prisoners in other cell blocks who called out to him and taunted him in various ways," Van Hollen said. Van Hollen added that Abrego Garcia was moved a week earlier from the maximum-security prison to another detention center where "conditions are better." The Trump administration slammed the senator's visit, claiming Democrats and the media painted an overly rosy picture of Abrego Garcia. Meanwhile, the administration continued toportray him as a violent and dangerous criminal, releasing previously unshared documents stemming from two interactions Abrego Garcia had with law enforcement and the courts system: a 2019 arrest that didn't lead to charges or a conviction, but did result in his detention by immigration officials, and a 2021 protective order his wife filed against him alleging domestic violence, which she later decided against pursuing further after she said the couple had resolved their issues. Sources told CNN in late April that Secretary of State MarcoRubio had been in touch with Bukeleabout the detention of Abrego Garcia. A US official told CNN the Trump administration was working closely with El Salvador and asked for Abrego Garcia's return but insisted that Bukele had made clear that he was not returning him to the US. In early May, Tennessee statelaw enforcement released a videoof a November 2022 traffic stop involving Abrego Garcia – an incident that US officials argue supports their claims that Abrego Garcia was a member of MS-13 and involved in human trafficking. The video showed Abrego Garcia being stopped for speeding. When asked about other passengers in the car, Abrego Garcia tells the trooper he and the others are workers returning from a construction project in St. Louis, Missouri. When the trooper asked for his documents, Abrego Garcia explains in the video that his driver's license was expired and that he is waiting for immigration documents to renew it. He tells the officer the vehicle, which had a Texas license plate, belonged to his boss. The trooper then searches the car with a police canine. They do not appear to find anything suspicious, according to the video. Abrego Garcia was not detained during the stop and no charges were filed. Nearly three months after he was deported, Abrego Garcia on Friday returned to the US to face federal criminal charges. Abrego Garcia has beenindicted on two criminal countsin the Middle District of Tennessee: conspiracy to unlawfully transport illegal aliens for financial gain and unlawful transportation of illegal aliens for financial gain. Trump administration officials pointed to the charges as justifying their effort to remove Abrego Garcia from the United States. Meanwhile, Simon Sandoval-Moshenberg, an attorney for Abrego Garcia, accused the Trump administration of "playing games" with the legal system and said his client should appear in immigration court, not criminal court. "The government disappeared Kilmar to a foreign prison in violation of a court order. Now, after months of delay and secrecy, they're bringing him back, not to correct their error but to prosecute him. This shows that they were playing games with the court all along," Sandoval-Moshenberg said in a statement to CNN. "Due process means the chance to defend yourself before you're punished, not after. This is an abuse of power, not justice." Abrego Garcia will be in custody for at least a week, followed by an arraignment and detention hearing, the Associated Press reported. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

How Kilmar Abrego Garcia’s case became a political flashpoint

How Kilmar Abrego Garcia's case became a political flashpoint Kilmar Abrego Garcia's case started quietly, boiling down to a clerica...
NCAA's House settlement approved, ushering in new era where schools can directly pay athletesNew Foto - NCAA's House settlement approved, ushering in new era where schools can directly pay athletes

College athletics is officially entering a new world. A California judge on Friday night a little bit past 9 p.m. ET granted approval to the NCAA's landmark settlement of three antitrust cases, often referred to as the "House settlement," ushering in an era where schools are permitted to share revenue with athletes within a new enforcement structure led by the SEC, Big Ten, Big 12 and ACC. Claudia Wilken, the 75-year-old presiding judge in California's Northern District, granted approval of an agreement between the named defendants (the NCAA and power conferences) and the plaintiffs (dozens of suing athletes) to settle three consolidated cases, all of them seeking more compensation for athletes. "Despite some compromises, the settlement agreement nevertheless will result in extraordinary relief for members of the settlement classes. If approved, it would permit levels and types of student-athlete compensation that have never been permitted in the history of college sports, while also very generously compensating Division I student-athletes who suffered past harms," Wilken said as part of the 76-page opinion. Unsuccessful in so many legal battles recently — most notably a 9-0 loss in a 2021 Supreme Court decision — the NCAA and its richest, most influential conferences decided last spring to strike a revolutionary agreement by settling these cases instead of risking a court defeat that might cost them as much as $10 billion. The House settlement will pay thousands of former athletes — playing from 2016-2024 — a whopping $2.8 billion in backpay from lost name, image and likeness (NIL) compensation. Even more groundbreaking, the settlement paves the way for schools, for the first time ever, to directly compensate athletes in a system that features an annual cap and a new enforcement entity that is expected to more heavily scrutinize booster-backed payments. While paychecks can begin to be distributed from schools to athletes on July 1 — the official start date of settlement implementation — the new enforcement entity, the College Sports Commission, an LLC operated mostly by the power leagues, immediately takes effect with Wilken's approval of the agreement. "This is new terrain for everyone. ... Opportunities to drive transformative change don't come often to organizations like ours. It's important we make the most of this one,"NCAA president Charlie Baker said in a statement released Friday night. "We have accomplished a lot over the last several months, from new health and wellness and academic requirements to a stronger financial footing. Together, we can use this new beginning to launch college sports into the future, too." It means that any new contract struck between an athlete and a third-party entity, such a business, brand, booster or collective, is now subject to the new Deloitte-run NIL clearinghouse. The clearinghouse, dubbed "NIL Go," is charged with evaluating NIL deals between athletes and third parties to determine their legitimacy. It puts an end, perhaps, to schools hurriedly signing current players and transfers to new contracts before the approval of the settlement in deals that frontload a majority of the compensation. Contracts signed before the settlement approval and paid out before July 1 were not subject to the clearinghouse or cap,leading to a "mad dash" in the basketball and football portal. Power conference leaders are targeting a Major League Baseball executive to manage the College Sports Commission as CEO, multiple sources tell Yahoo Sports. Bryan Seeley, a former assistant U.S. attorney who has served for more than a decade as MLB's vice president of investigations and deputy general counsel, is believed to be the preferred candidate for the CEO role of college sports' new enforcement entity. Despite plenty of hurdles in the settlement's years-long approval process, those who negotiated the deal have long expected it to be approved because of the sheer numbers involved. More than 85,000 athletes have filed claims for the backpay and just 600 have opted out or objected to the agreement — a paltry number that did not faze the judge. Wiken's decision, coming two months after thefinal hearing in Oakland, California, puts an end to what was thought to be one of the last looming hurdles of a deal: roster limits. In a concept authored by the power conferences, thesettlement imposes new limits on sports rosters, many of which had not previously existed. In a recent filing, the NCAA and power leagues agreed to revise settlement language to permit schools to grandfather-in athletes on existing teams or those who have been cut this year, as well as recruits who enrolled on the promise of a roster spot. With its approval, the settlement ushers into college sports a more professionalized framework but one, many believe, that is ripe for more legal scrutiny. Already, attorneys are gearing up for future legal challenges over, at the very least, the new NIL clearinghouse, Title IX and the capped compensation system — much of which can be resolved, legal experts contend, with a collective bargaining and/or employment model that college executives have so far avoided. The settlement's approval is only the first in what many college leaders describe as a two-step process to usher in stability in the college sports landscape. Step 2 may be even more difficult: lawmakers producing a congressional bill to codify the settlement terms and protect the NCAA and power conferences from legal challenges over enforcement of their rules.Five U.S. senators have been meeting regularly in serious negotiations over legislation, but no agreement has been reached. Here's an explainer of college sports' new world delivered by the settlement's approval: Each school is permitted — not required — to share up to a certain amount of revenue annually with their athletes (the cap). Per the settlement agreement, the cap is calculated by taking 22% of the average of certain power school revenues, most notably ticket sales, television dollars and sponsorships. In Year 1 — July 2025 through June 2026 — the cap amount is projected to be $20.5 million. While each school is charged with determining how to distribute those funds, most power conference programs are planning to distribute 90% to football and men's basketball, as those are, for the most part, the only revenue-generating sports for an athletic department. In Year 1, that's about $13-16 million for a football roster and $2-4 million for men's basketball, with the remaining amount shared with women's basketball, baseball, volleyball and other Olympic sports. While the 22% cap will remain the same through the 10-year settlement agreement, the cap money figure will rise based on built-in escalators (4% increase in Year 2 and Year 3), scheduled recalculations (after each third year) and additional cash flows into athletic departments, such as when conferences enter into new, more lucrative television deals or/and begin receiving new College Football Playoff monies. Ohio State athletic director Ross Bjork told Yahoo Sports this summer that he expects the cap to break $25 million by the time the Year 4 recalculation happens. There are exceptions, though, that can artificially lower the annual cap, most notably up to $2.5 million in additional scholarships that a school offers. A new non-NCAA enforcement entity — an LLC predominantly managed by the power conferences — willoversee and enforce rules related to the revenue-share concept. The company, College Sports Commission, is expected to be headed by a CEO as well as a head investigator for enforcement matters. The entity is charged with assuring that schools remain under the cap and that third-party NIL deals with athletes are not the phony booster-backed deals so prevalent over the last four years. An enforcement staff is expected to be hired to investigate and enforce rules related to cap circumvention, tampering, etc., and are charged with levying stiff penalties. Violators may be subject to multi-game coach suspensions, reductions in a school's rev-share pool as well as reductions in allowed transfers, and significant schools fines. However, the biggestlooming uncertainty of the settlement agreement involves a Deloitte-run NIL clearinghousethat must approve all third-party NIL deals of at least $600 in value. The "NIL Go" clearinghouse is using a fair market value algorithm to create "compensation ranges" for third-party deals. Deloitte is expected to approve or disapprove deals in as little as one day, and athletes can resubmit rejected deals at least once with alterations suggested by the clearinghouse. For example, Deloitte may deem a submitted $100,000 deal between an athlete and third party to actually be valued at $50,000. The player can alter the deal to align with the clearinghouse's suggested figure or the school can cover the difference by accepting a reduction against their revenue-pool cap. Deals rejected for a second time are referred to the CEO and enforcement staff and are then processed through an appeals system via court-overseen arbitration. Arbitration rulings are expected within 45 days, according to the settlement. Athletes who lose arbitration cases and still accept compensation in the rejected deal are deemed ineligible. Starting with the fall basketball and football signing periods, schools began readying for this new era. Some even signed players to revenue-sharing agreements that begin to make payments on July 1 or later, contingent on the settlement's approval. Other players signed contracts with school booster collectives that featured a clause assigning the contract to the school on July 1. For the most part, the contracts grant schools permission to use a player's NIL rights — a reason for the compensation — but these agreements feature language often found in employment contracts, including buyouts, athlete requirements and prohibitions as well as the freedom for schools to reduce the players' compensation based on their academic standing and performance. Already, the agreements are a subject of legal scrutiny. In January, Wisconsin defensive backXavier Lucas left the university to enroll at Miami despite signing a revenue-share contract with UW. In public statements, Wisconsin has suggested it will pursue legal action against Lucas and/or Miami, which, it suggested, tampered with an athlete under contract. Lucas' representatives believe the contract is not enforceable as it was contingent on settlement approval when signed. The situation is a potential landmark case on settlement-contingent revenue-sharing agreements.

NCAA's House settlement approved, ushering in new era where schools can directly pay athletes

NCAA's House settlement approved, ushering in new era where schools can directly pay athletes College athletics is officially entering a...
Volpe homers and then forced from game when hit by pitch as Yankees beat Red Sox 9-6New Foto - Volpe homers and then forced from game when hit by pitch as Yankees beat Red Sox 9-6

NEW YORK (AP) — Anthony Volpe homered in a five-run first inning, thencame out after he was hit by a pitch on the left elbowas the New York Yankees beat the Boston Red Sox 9-6 on Friday night in the AL rivals' first meeting this year. Volpe was hit by an 88.2 mph pitch from Walker Buehler in the second, then was replaced at the start of the fourth. New York manager Aaron Boone said X-rays and a CT scan were negative. Aaron Judge had his ninth game with three or more hits, raising his major league-leading average to .397. Before a sellout crowd of 46,783, Jazz Chisholm Jr. had three hits, including a homer in the first, four RBIs and two stolen bases. Paul Goldschmidt also homered for the Yankees, who led 7-0 after the second and 8-1 following the fifth. Every starter had a hit for New York (39-23), which has won nine of 12 and 15 of 20 to move a season-high 16 games over .500. Boston dropped to 30-35 with its ninth loss in 12 games. The Red Sox made a pair of errors, raising their big league-high total to 57. Rafael Devers hit his 29th home run against the Yankees, a two-run drive in the seventh off Brent Headrick. Marcelo Mayer, a 22-year-old who debuted on May 24, hit his first big league homer, a 410-foot solo drive to right-center in the fifth against Will Warren (4-3). In his first time on the Yankee Stadium mound since the final out of the Los Angeles Dodgers' World Series win last year, Buehler (4-4) gave up seven runs — five earned — and seven hits in two innings while throwing 67 pitches. Devin Williams got three outs for his seventh save in eight chances. Key moment Chisholm put the Yankees ahead 3-0, reaching for a curveball below the strike zone and driving the ball into the netting above Monument Park. Key stat Batters are hitting .326 against Boston in the first inning this season. New York has scored 20 runs in the first, tied for the major league high. Up next Yankees LHP Ryan Yarbrough (3-0) and Red Sox LHP Garrett Crochet (5-4) start Saturday night. ___ AP MLB:https://www.apnews.com/hub/MLB

Volpe homers and then forced from game when hit by pitch as Yankees beat Red Sox 9-6

Volpe homers and then forced from game when hit by pitch as Yankees beat Red Sox 9-6 NEW YORK (AP) — Anthony Volpe homered in a five-run fir...
GOP congresswoman faces bipartisan criticism for deleted post about Sikh guest chaplainNew Foto - GOP congresswoman faces bipartisan criticism for deleted post about Sikh guest chaplain

Republican Rep. Mary Miller is facing bipartisan criticism over a now-deleted social media post in which she called it "deeply troubling" that a Sikh delivered the morning prayer on the US House floor. Giani Surinder Singh – a member of the Gurudwara South Jersey Sikh Society in Vineland, New Jersey – was introduced as the guest chaplain on Friday morning and delivered the House prayer. Miller later posted on X, saying, "it's deeply troubling that a Sikh was allowed to lead prayer" in the House. That post has now been deleted. "This should have never been allowed to happen. America was founded as a Christian nation, and I believe our government should reflect that truth, not drift further from it," the Illinois Republican wrote. The congresswomanhad initially referredto Singh as a "Muslim," in an X post that was also later deleted, according to a screenshot posted by Politico reporter Nicholas Wu. CNN has reached out to Miller's office for comment and to ask why the post was deleted. CNN also reached out to the Gurudwara South Jersey Sikh Society to request comment. The House hashistoricallywelcomed guest chaplains from a variety of different faiths. Miller's post drew pushback from Democrats and Republicans. Posting on X, GOP Rep. David Valadao of California said he's "troubled by my colleague's remarks." "Throughout the country—and in the Central Valley— Sikh-Americans are valued and respected members of our communities, yet they continue to face harassment and discrimination," Valadao said. GOP Rep. Nick LaLota of New Yorkwrote on X,"A Sikh prayer on the House floor—followed by a Christian prayer one week and a Jewish prayer the next—doesn't violate the Constitution, offend my Catholic faith, or throttle my support for Israel. Live and let live." House Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffriesposted on X, "It's deeply troubling that such an ignorant and hateful extremist is serving in the United States Congress. That would be you, Mary." The Congressional Asian Pacific American CaucuscondemnedMiller's comments. "Sikhs and Muslims practice two separate and distinct religions, and conflating the two based on how someone looks is not only ignorant but also racist," the caucus, whose members are all Democrats, said in a statement posted to X. CNN's Annie Grayer contributed to this report. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

GOP congresswoman faces bipartisan criticism for deleted post about Sikh guest chaplain

GOP congresswoman faces bipartisan criticism for deleted post about Sikh guest chaplain Republican Rep. Mary Miller is facing bipartisan cri...

 

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