Golf legend Annika Sorenstam speaks glowingly of Caitlin Clark after teaming up at pro-amNew Foto - Golf legend Annika Sorenstam speaks glowingly of Caitlin Clark after teaming up at pro-am

Caitlin Clarkspent part of her offseason on the golf course, teaming up with Nelly Korda and Annika Sorenstam in a pro-am at Pelican Golf Club in November. TheIndiana Feverstar played the front nine with Korda and the back nine with Sorenstam. Clark had joked after the team was eliminated from the playoffs that she would take up golfing – and likely did not expect to hit the course with a legend like Sorenstam. Click Here For More Sports Coverage On Foxnews.com In a recent interview with Fox News Digital, Sorenstam recalled playing with Clark on the golf course and said she was a "bigger fan" after meeting the young basketball player. "It's great, obviously, I'm a big fan, and bigger fan after meeting her and spending some time, great athlete very focused, understands when you have a task to do it," she said. "Obviously she has a little golf background, so she is familiar with the sport and understands it to have the culture and have the tradition a little bit. "No, it is great to bring new people to the sport, get excited and for us to walk around and share stories. To be anything from, I was in college, I was a professional, how to do this or that, working out, there is a lot of things we have in common. It is always fun to listen to other successful athletes or people to pick their brands. Just felt like she was very mature and down to earth in a way." Read On The Fox News App Golf Legend Annika Sorenstam Talks Charitable Efforts Ahead Of American Century Celebrity Tournament Clarksaid at a leadership summitconnected with the pro-am in November that she tries to practice as much as she can. "I've tried to take as much time as I can to practice, but there is only so much hope. You just cross your fingers, pray," she said at the time. "No, I've practiced a little bit and I just had the quote about becoming a professional golfer. Everybody thought I was serious. I was not serious. I love it. I love being outside and making it competitive with my friends. "It's challenging and getting to come here and be around the best and have a good time is what I'm looking forward to." Sorenstam is getting ready to participate in the American Century Championship, which takes place at Edgewood Tahoe Golf Club next month. The festivities start on July 9 and run through July 13. The Associated Press contributed to this report. Follow Fox News Digital'ssports coverage on X,and subscribe tothe Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter. Original article source:Golf legend Annika Sorenstam speaks glowingly of Caitlin Clark after teaming up at pro-am

Golf legend Annika Sorenstam speaks glowingly of Caitlin Clark after teaming up at pro-am

Golf legend Annika Sorenstam speaks glowingly of Caitlin Clark after teaming up at pro-am Caitlin Clarkspent part of her offseason on the go...
Dallas Stars re-sign Matt Duchene to a 4-year, $18 million contractNew Foto - Dallas Stars re-sign Matt Duchene to a 4-year, $18 million contract

FRISCO, Texas (AP) — The Dallas Stars have re-signed forward Matt Duchene to a four-year contract worth $18 million. General manager Jim Nill announced the deal Thursday. Duchene will count $4.5 million against the salary cap through the 2028-29 season. "We are thrilled to have Matt back with our organization," Nill said in a statement. "As our team's leading scorer last season, he helped to solidify our forward group while also providing invaluable leadership off the ice and in the community. The fit with Matt and our team has been seamless from the start, and we're looking forward to continuing to pursue our shared goal of bringing a championship to Dallas." Duchene was a point-a-game scorer — exactly 82 in 82 — in his second season with Dallas. He had just one goal and five assists in 16 playoff games as the Stars reached the Western Conference final before losing to Edmonton. Now 34, Duchene is going into his 17th season in the NHL. He previously played for Colorado, Columbus, Ottawa and Nashville since making his debut in 2009. ___ AP NHL:https://apnews.com/hub/nhl

Dallas Stars re-sign Matt Duchene to a 4-year, $18 million contract

Dallas Stars re-sign Matt Duchene to a 4-year, $18 million contract FRISCO, Texas (AP) — The Dallas Stars have re-signed forward Matt Duchen...
Tulsi Gabbard sidelined in Trump administration discussions on Israel and IranNew Foto - Tulsi Gabbard sidelined in Trump administration discussions on Israel and Iran

WASHINGTON — National Intelligence Director Tulsi Gabbard, an outspoken critic of past U.S. military interventions abroad, appears to have fallen out of favor with President Donald Trump as he weighs military action against Iran, according to multiple senior administration officials with knowledge of the matter. Gabbard allies insist that, while there is some White House tension, some of the public blowback is overstated, and none interviewed by NBC News expect her to leave the administration as a result of the president's Iran policy, even if that includes direct U.S. involvement. Gabbard's politically perilous position burst into the open this week when Trump brushed her back over her testimony to Congress in March. At that time, she said the U.S. intelligence community did not believe Iran was building a nuclear weapon — a comment at odds with Trump's recent public statement about the threat posed by Iran's potential nuclear program. "I don't care what she said. I think they were very close to having one," Trumptold reportersTuesday on Air Force One. A person with knowledge of the matter said the U.S. intelligence community's view has not changed since Gabbard's testimony in March. But the idea that a president would openly refute his director of national intelligence immediately spurred questions about whether she is now iced out of decision-making on the issue. It alsoreflects a riftthat is playing out publicly in Trump's MAGA coalition, with some supporters advocating standing by Israel in whatever military action it takes against Iran and others saying intervention would go against the "America First" philosophy. Trump's criticism of U.S. involvement in past conflicts — and his campaign promise to be a "peacemaker" in his second term — brought in unusual bedfellows, such as Gabbard, who had been a Democratic congresswoman. Multiple senior administration officials said Gabbard has been sidelined in internal administration discussions about the conflict between Israel and Iran. Even two of her allies who spoke to NBC News acknowledged that her standing took a hitwhen she posted a videoon June 10 after a trip to Hiroshima, Japan. The video, which featured the simulated destruction of American cities and Gabbard warning about the dangers of nuclear war, annoyed the White House team, the officials said. Gabbard did not attend a meeting of top officials June 8 at Camp David, the presidential retreat in Maryland, to discuss tensions between Israel and Iran, which raised fresh questions about her status in the administration. A White House official told NBC News that Gabbard was not present only because she had to take part in scheduled training as a member of the National Guard. Gabbard's past positions on Iran, coupled with her recent comments and Trump's responses to them, have forced top administration officials into a difficult position. Gabbard has seemingly been at odds with the administration line, but not to the point where they feel the need to abandon her. "Tulsi is a veteran, a patriot, a loyal supporter of Pres Trump and a critical part of the coalition he built in 2024," Vice President JD Vance said in a statement Tuesday. "She's an essential member of our nat sec team, & we're grateful for her tireless work to keep America safe from foreign threats." Other Republicans, though, have taken shots at her recent Iran comments. "She obviously needs to change her meds," Sen. John Kennedy, R-La.,told Jewish Insiderlast week. Gabbard has long used her public platform to oppose U.S. military action against Iran and has been working behind the scenes to try to find a diplomatic solution, two of the administration officials said. In one case, Gabbard sought to enlist the help of European allies who have communication channels with Tehran, an official said. That stands, at times, in direct conflict with Trump's public comments about the now open fight between Israel and Iran, a fight he himself has acknowledged might now require U.S. intervention. "I may do it. I may not do it. I mean, nobody knows what I'm going to do," Trump told reporters Wednesday. Gabbard allies who spoke to NBC News acknowledge that the video was not received well by White House officials but said reported rifts between her and Trump on the issue have been overstated. "I have heard that also," a Gabbard ally said of the tension spurred by the Hiroshima video. "But I don't think it reached the level of the president himself. I am told the matter has been 'resolved.'" The Gabbard ally downplayed any idea that she would resign over the public Trump rebuke or whether the United States got directly involved in the Iran-Israel conflict. "The online claim that she will resign if the president decides to take direct action in Iran are false," the person said. The video, however, did circulate widely among White House aides, and it left many wondering why she was taking such a public position as tensions escalate and Trump appears ready to get further involved. "I think she is generally in OK standing," a Republican operative familiar with administration thinking said. "In situations like this, folks with more traditional Republican and neocon views are going to use the opportunity to minimize her influence." Asked about the recent video on Hiroshima, Gabbard's deputy chief of staff, Alexa Henning, said: "Acknowledging the past is critical to inform the future. President Trump has repeatedly stated in the past that he recognizes the immeasurable suffering, and annihilation can be caused by nuclear war, which is why he has been unequivocal that we all need to do everything possible to work towards peace." As a Democratic congresswoman, presidential candidate and supporter of Trump's 2024 campaign, Gabbard portrayed herself as a fierce opponent of what she sees as America's misguided military interventions overseas, including the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and U.S. assistance for rebels in Libya and Syria. In last year's electoral campaign, Gabbard accused the Biden administration of bringing the United States "closer to the brink of nuclear war than we ever have been before." During Trump's first term in office, Gabbard strongly criticized his handling of Iran and his decision to pull the United States out of a 2015 nuclear agreement that imposed limits on Tehran's nuclear work in return for an easing of sanctions. If Trump decides to order military strikes on Iran amid talk by Israel that military pressure might cause the Tehran regime to collapse, Gabbard would find herself in an awkward political position. She has vowed to ensure America no longer engages in "regime change" wars. Gabbard's being warmly welcomed into Trump's MAGA political base during the last presidential election was seen at the time as an injection of ideological diversity. A Trump administration official acknowledged that the heterodox views that made her a welcome addition to the MAGA movement now mark her as an outsider in an administration appearing to coalesce around a policy antithetical to those views. "If you adopt a Chihuahua, you should not be surprised that you have a Chihuahua," the person said.

Tulsi Gabbard sidelined in Trump administration discussions on Israel and Iran

Tulsi Gabbard sidelined in Trump administration discussions on Israel and Iran WASHINGTON — National Intelligence Director Tulsi Gabbard, an...
Trump extends TikTok ban deadline by another 90 daysNew Foto - Trump extends TikTok ban deadline by another 90 days

President Donald Trump has extended the deadline for TikTok's parent company, ByteDance, to sell the short-form video app to an American owner by another 90 days. On Thursday, Trump signed an executive order granting a third extension for the Chinese company to sell its platform so it can continue to operate in the United States. "I've just signed the Executive Order extending the Deadline for the TikTok closing for 90 days (September 17, 2025). Thank you for your attention to this matter!" Trumpsaid on Truth Social. While aboard Air Force One on Wednesday morning, Trump said he believed Chinese President Xi Jinping would be amenable toward a deal selling the wildly popular app. Trump said he believed Xi would have to sign off on a deal if a buyer comes forward. ByteDance is based in Beijing. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said in a statement that the administration wanted to ensure Americans could continue to access TikTok. "As he has said many times, President Trump does not want TikTok to go dark. This extension will last 90 days, which the administration will spend working to ensure this deal is closed so that the American people can continue to use TikTok with the assurance that their data is safe and secure," Leavitt said. TikTok has 170 million users in the U.S. and support for a ban has declined, according toPew Research Center. A law banning TikTok initially passed under the Biden Administration over national security concerns, which led the app tobriefly go offlineahead of Trump's inauguration earlier this year. However, once Trump signaled he planned to keep the app running in the U.S., TikTokresumedfunctioning. TikTok has denied that it posed any security concerns to the United States and said American data is not stored in China. After the TikTok ban passed last year, American users began flocking to Chinese social media appRedNoteclaiming they were indifferent to China accessing their data. Since TikTok was given an extension in the United States, it appears users have returned to the platform and are using RedNote less. Once in office, Trump signed an extension of the deadline to sell the app, giving ByteDance 75 days to find a buyer. That extension ended on April 5. Ahead of the April 5 deadline, some potential TikTok suitors expressed interest in purchasing the app. Amazon made alast-minute bidto buy TikTok. Others who expressed interest included Reddit co-founder Alexis Ohanian, who joined billionaire investor Frank McCourt's bid; artificial intelligence search engine startup Perplexity AI; and Steven Mnuchin, treasury secretary in the first Trump administration. Top Trump officials were confident the app would sell but aftersweeping tariffswere placed on China, no deal was made. Trump then gave the app another 90 days, which was set to expire on Thursday. Under the law, ByteDance must sell TikTok to a U.S.-based buyer. ByteDance previously said it would not sell TikTok and has been quiet on whether it has decided to make a deal. A spokesperson for TikTok did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The position to keep TikTok in the United States is an about face from Trump's first term, during which he signed an executive order banning it. That ban was later overturned by the courts. TheU.S. Supreme Courthas upheld the Biden era law banning the app unless it is sold to an American owner.

Trump extends TikTok ban deadline by another 90 days

Trump extends TikTok ban deadline by another 90 days President Donald Trump has extended the deadline for TikTok's parent company, ByteD...
She won a 100k ultramarathon through the mountains – while breastfeedingNew Foto - She won a 100k ultramarathon through the mountains – while breastfeeding

When Stephanie Case entered a 100-kilometer (around 62 miles) ultrarunning race through the Welsh mountains, winning was far from her mind. Six months postpartum and still breastfeeding her infant daughter Pepper, Case's only real aim was to finish the Ultra-Trail Snowdonia in North Wales' Eryri National Park and make sure her daughter was fed, having received special permission from race organizers to stop at an additional point to do so. In fact, it wasn't until the end of the grueling race that Case – whose three-year hiatus from running meant that she set off in the third wave, far behind the elite runners – was informed that her finish time made her the winner of the women's competition. This, in spite of the fact that she had stopped to feed Pepper three times during the run, which was included in her total race time. "That was a huge shock. I wasn't expecting that. It wasn't even on my radar that that could have happened," Case toldCNN Sports. Pictures of her taking part in the race in May have since gone viral, and the response has been overwhelming, according to the ultra runner. "It wasn't something I kind of strategized or planned ahead of time, but what it tells me is that we really aren't telling enough stories about new moms kind of doing all sorts of things, living full and complete, multi dimensional lives." Case said she thinks the photos show that "life doesn't stop when you become a mom, and it's just another layer to who you are as a person. "We all have mom guilt, but it's important for new moms to know that it's okay to prioritize the things that make them full and complete human beings because that will make them better parents in the long run – because we are multi dimensional. She added to CNN: "Becoming a mom, it's one of the most physical and emotional transformations you can go through in your entire life. And so if there are things that you can hold on to – for me, it's running – that kind of remind you that everything that has changed, there are some things that remain constant, there are some parts of your identity that you haven't lost." Case, who turns 43 this month, started ultrarunning almost 18 years ago when, after finishing her first marathon, she was looking for another challenge. She got pretty good at it too, racing across North America, Europe, Asia, the Middle East, Australia and Africa. But Case, an international human rights lawyer by day, took a three-year hiatus from the sport after suffering several miscarriages as she and her partner tried to have a child. "I got some questions from people around whether it was the running that caused the miscarriage. And of course, there's no medical evidence, there's no science to back that up, but it did plant the seed of doubt in my head, and really changed my relationship with running," she told CNN Sports. "Running, instead of it being a source of stress relief and a source of joy for me, it turned into something quite different," she explained. After Pepper's birth and getting the all clear from her doctor, Case started running again six weeks postpartum. "It felt physically weird, strange. I thought my organs were going to fall out, but at the same time, I felt like a runner again. I felt like me again," she explained. Starting so far back in the Ultra Trail Snowdonia, she said, was "perhaps a blessing in disguise because it really took the pressure off. Starting the third wave kind of solidified to me that I couldn't have any performance goals because I was starting so far back." Although the race already had stopping checkpoints at 20 km and 80 km, Case knew she would need to feed Pepper in between, so she requested and got permission to get assistance at the 50 km checkpoint. "It meant that my partner, John, could only hand me Pepper. He couldn't help me with any of my bottles, with my pack, with anything else I needed to do with food for myself. "I had to manage everything myself and also make sure that Pepper was taken care of. So it was a whole other layer of logistics that I had never experienced before. Pepper is used to kind of feeding mid-training runs, but we've never done it in a race situation," she explained. While Case has received many positive responses to her win, she has also received numerous "misogynistic, paternalistic" comments. "(They were) saying: 'Does she spend any time with her baby? She should be at home. Why didn't she wait?' Comments about my looks or my age, really just trying to criticize anything that they saw me doing," Case said. Other messages, she explained, came from moms "who were quite worried that this image and this story was contributing to this idea of setting this impossibly high standard that women can't reach." "Some moms are exhausted and they're just trying to get through the day," Case said. "And so the idea that they not only have to be mom, but they also have to have a career, and they have to regain their fitness and now running ultra marathons and breastfeed just made them feel really bad about themselves, and I think that that's part of the patriarchal society that we live in, that we're taught to compete with one another. "Everything we do as new moms, it becomes scrutinized and judged, and we just need the space to be able to navigate that journey on our own, to figure out what motherhood looks like for each of us, individually," she added. "For me, it means running 100k and, you know, doing all the things that make me happy and for others, it could be running a 5k or, you know, joining a book club, or, you know, something totally different." Next up for Case is the Hardrock 100, a 100-mile run with 33,197 feet of climb and 33,197 feet of descent in Colorado in July. "It should be about choice. I mean, that's the whole point. Women can do all of this if they want, if they have the support, if XYZ, fall into place. If the stars align, if they choose to go after that, then they should be provided the support and the encouragement and the resources to be able to pursue all the things that they want – but they don't have to." For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

She won a 100k ultramarathon through the mountains – while breastfeeding

She won a 100k ultramarathon through the mountains – while breastfeeding When Stephanie Case entered a 100-kilometer (around 62 miles) ultra...
'Bigger than us': In Oklahoma City, the Thunder and their fans form NBA's closest bondNew Foto - 'Bigger than us': In Oklahoma City, the Thunder and their fans form NBA's closest bond

OKLAHOMA CITY — 6501 S. Meridian Ave. is not the type of place where a championship parade would be expected to kick off. Twenty minutes southwest of downtown Oklahoma City, along a little-used road just outside the city's international airport, a chain-link fence separates a parking lot with a few dozen spaces from an airplane hangar and a small runway. Yet should the Thunder win an NBA championship Thursday night in Game 6 of the NBA Finals in Indianapolis, the celebration that ensues across Oklahoma will symbolically, and logistically, start here, where every Thunder road trip ends and the city's embrace of the team begins. The first time Devin Newsom drove to South Meridian to stand at the chain-link fence, it was 2012, when the Thunder, who had relocated from Seattle to Oklahoma City only four years earlier, were in the midst of a breakout playoff run that enthralled their new home. A Thunder employee at the time, Newsom wanted to celebrate a critical playoff win and asked friends who also worked for the team when the plane carrying coaches and players home from Dallas would land. He spread the word, and when the Thunder stepped off their charter jet well after midnight, they did so to cheers. Newsom has been organizing "airport welcomes," as they are called, ever since. "What it really comes down to," Newsom said, "is coming together as a community to support something bigger than us." Now it is not uncommon to see several hundred people waiting at the fence alongside Newsom, who also livestreams the arrivals to Thunder fans living abroad, who watch as players approach the fence to sign autographs and slap hands. On May 27, after a gritty win in Minnesota during the Western Conference finals, several dozen Thunder fans even endured through a thunderstorm and a two-hour delay that pushed back Oklahoma City's arrival until 3 a.m. to welcome their team home. "And it was a weekday," Thunder wing Ajay Mitchell said. "So I was like, man, they're going to wake up and go to work right after that." Thunder guard Cason Wallace, referring to his college team's large, passionate fan base, said: "Coming from Kentucky, we had fans waiting on us. But it wasn't 3 in the morning." Cities have rallied behind their teams since sports began, yet in Oklahoma City, what is atypical is the degree to which that relationship is not one-sided. Fans, city officials and the team itself are intertwined more closely than perhaps any other NBA market. Fans show up for the Thunder in uncommon ways — during late nights at the airport, yes, but also at the ballot box, where a 2023 measure to use public money to help fund a new Thunder arena scheduled to open in 2028 passed with 71% of the vote. The team has returned the embrace. Sam Presti, the team's top basketball executive since 2007, "may be the only GM in America who texts with the mayor," the mayor himself, David Holt, said with a laugh in his office, which is decorated with a framed Thunder jersey. It hangs to the left of the desk where, this week, Holt signed an agreement that will keep the team in Oklahoma City through 2053 and could extend up to 15 additional years. Holt said Presti asked him in 2020 to record a video to explain the city's racial-justice efforts to players amid national protests as the team was entering the delayed NBA playoffs held near Orlando, Florida. And a year earlier, Holt had used Presti's direct line to make a request of his own. One year into his term, he was making plans to become the city's first mayor to walk in its LGBTQ Pride parade. He wanted to ask whether Presti would show support and walk in the parade, too, and Presti agreed. "Where else would that even mean anything?" Holt said. "Like a sports team, who cares? But in this context here, in our unique situation, it was just as important that the Thunder did that as it was that the mayor did that, and for us to do it together kind of communicated everybody is doing this. I say that to say that they're a cultural institution in the city that I think we, if we want something to receive credibility, we will think about including the Thunder in that conversation. Whereas I think in a lot of markets, professional sports teams are just another entertainment option." The Thunder are Oklahoma's only big-league option — the scarcity has taken a region divided by college allegiances and coalesced that fandom behind one franchise. Winning, of course, has only deepened the support; since 2010, the Thunder own the NBA's second-best record, and this trip to the Finals is the team's second in that span. But to Newsom, the team's choices to take part in the community and the circumstances of its arrival have also stoked a loyalty that has kept the region exceptionally possessive of its team. New Thunder employees, players included, are required to go eight blocks north of the Thunder's home arena and tour the Oklahoma City National Memorial & Museum. There, they learn about the 1995 bombing that destroyed a federal building and killed 168 people and the rebuilding that followed. "The Thunder would not be in Oklahoma City without the response that took place on April 19, 1995, and without the sacrifices and the efforts that were made to rebuild this city," Prestisaid last fallat a banquet for the memorial. "This is why we ask all of our new players and all of our new staff to go through the museum and memorial to come in contact with the stories about the recovery, the efforts, the optimism and the compassion to connect the dots as to why people are so passionate about Oklahoma City." On the bombing's 25th anniversary, the teamdebuted jerseysdesigned as a nod to the memorial. "You want to know the history," reserve Jaylin Williams said. "When you see how connected we are with the community in basketball, that's how connected the community was when the tragedy happened here." Before 1995, mentioning you were from Oklahoma City to a London cabdriver would have evoked a blank stare, Holt said. After the bombing, the city evoked a different association. "Though we are rightfully proud of our response to that, it's not really something you can build a brand on," Holt said. "We were always looking for something else to be identified with." The city got that opportunity in 2005, after Hurricane Katrina left New Orleans unable to host the NBA's Hornets, and the team temporarily relocated to Oklahoma City. Team employees moved into the Crimson Park Apartments a half-hour south of the city, in Norman, and team operations were run out of a Sheraton hotel a block from the arena in what became a trial run to gauge the city's readiness to support a major-league team. It became real in 2008, when an Oklahoma-based ownership group bought the Seattle SuperSonics and moved the team. The relocation devastatedfans in Washingtonand left new Thunder fans resolving not to squander their opportunity to be elevated to what Holt called "a new tier" of city. "We grew up with the team, because the team was brand new," Newsom said. "We checked all the Seattle SuperSonics stuff at the door. That was way back; that had nothing to do with us. We don't claim any other history, we don't claim their first title, their only title. We don't care about any of that. What we care about is what has happened since the team came to Oklahoma and how we've come together to support an amazing, amazing franchise." That support can be distilled to a number. Of the proposed $900 million price tag to build the team's new arena, $50 million came from the team's owners, but the vast majority will come from taxpayers. A sales tax passed in 2019 will contribute $70 million, and the remaining $700 million and more will be funded by a 1-cent sales tax that will run for six years. Getting voters to commit public money to stadium construction is rare, said J.C. Bradbury, an economist at Kennesaw State University in Georgia and expert on stadium subsidies. Like Bradbury,other economistshave been skeptical of the price tag and economic benefits of a new stadium, but Holt — who can quickly rattle off statistics that there are 18 markets larger than Oklahoma City, the country's 42nd-largest metro area, that do not have NBA teams — said it was critical for the city to become a partner with the team. The shine from being part of the NBA has led Bricktown, a neighborhood just blocks east of the current arena, to fill with restaurants and new hotels. He described his shock at once seeing a Thunder jersey while he was touring the Acropolis in Athens, Greece. "When I grew up here in the '80s and '90s, it felt like growing up in an alternate universe outside of American pop culture," Holt said. "So now to be a place where things happen, a place that people are interested in, a place that people are just flat-out aware of, because, as I often say, like you, you are not very likely to live in, invest in or visit a city you've never heard of. So just the fact that billions of people will pay a passing glance to what happens over the next two weeks in the NBA Finals has a very material benefit for us. ... "As a mayor, I'm selling our city constantly, and I can guarantee you, especially after these Finals, every conversation for the next five years will start with Thunder. And you may think that's superficial, but it absolutely ends up having a real-world positive economic impact in OKC, and we have seen it." Fans and players say that bond is not superficial. When free agent Carmelo Anthony signed with the team in 2017, fans waited at the fence wearing hoodies with their long sleeves cut off, a nod to Anthony's signature sartorial look. And whether the Thunder win or lose Game 6 in Indianapolis, Newsom will still track the tail number of the team's charter flight, send out the estimated arrival time on social media and wait at the fence at South Meridian for the season's final "airport welcome." It is expected to be the biggest yet.

'Bigger than us': In Oklahoma City, the Thunder and their fans form NBA's closest bond

'Bigger than us': In Oklahoma City, the Thunder and their fans form NBA's closest bond OKLAHOMA CITY — 6501 S. Meridian Ave. is ...
Some Democratic senators regret voting to confirm Kristi Noem as DHS secretaryNew Foto - Some Democratic senators regret voting to confirm Kristi Noem as DHS secretary

WASHINGTON — Five days after President Donald Trump's inauguration, seven Senate Democrats voted to confirm Kristi Noem to lead the Department of Homeland Security. Nearly five months later, most of them are critical of her, with some going as far as to say they regret their votes. "I'm very disappointed. I'm very disappointed in her," Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va., told NBC News this week. "If I were voting on her today, I definitely wouldn't vote for her." Freshman Sen. Andy Kim, D-N.J., also said he would vote differently and oppose her nomination if he could do it again. "She's weaponizing the Department of Homeland Security. She is taking so many actions right now that are making us less safe and going against a lot of the things that she said that she was going to focus on," Kim said Wednesday. "So I have no confidence in her leadership right now." The five other Democrats who voted to confirm Noem were Sens. Elissa Slotkin and Gary Peters, both of Michigan; Maggie Hassan and Jeanne Shaheen, both of New Hampshire; and John Fetterman of Pennsylvania. The vote on Jan. 25 was59-34, with Republicans unanimously voting for Noem. Seven senators, six of whom caucus with the Democrats, missed the vote. At the time, several Democrats were struggling to find their way forward on the issue of immigration enforcement, which is largely run by DHS, following Trump's election victory. Now, the mood has changed in the wake of the administration's aggressive deportation agenda and moves to target green card holders and international students. On top of that, Democrats expressed outrage after Sen. Alex Padilla, D-Calif.,was forcibly removedfrom a DHS news conference last week when he tried to ask Noem a question. Slotkin said she voted for Noem because Michigan has "major equities with the Department of Homeland Security" as a border state that is "about to open up a huge new bridge" to Canada. But while Slotkin stopped short of saying she'd switch her vote, she was critical of Noem's performance. "She has, frankly, not been in much control of policy. I see her more as a bystander, often, to policy — especially what's going on right now," Slotkin said. "And you know, we've been urging our committee to take more accountability on her." Peters, the top Democrat on the Homeland Security Committee, which oversees DHS, said he's "not surprised" by Noem's actions and disagrees with many of them. Asked whether he stands by his vote to confirm her, Peters said, "I'm the ranking member on the committee, and I have to have a working relationship with the secretary, regardless of the positions that they take." "And so far we've, we've been able to have that," he said. Fetterman — who has broken with his party on some issues, including immigration — didn't comment when he was asked whether he stands by his vote for Noem or how he rates her performance. The two New Hampshire senators criticized Noem in statements provided by their offices without saying whether they stand by their votes. "Senator Hassan has serious concerns about some of the Department of Homeland Security's recent actions and continues to press for more answers and oversight — including into Senator Padilla's treatment last week," Hassan spokesperson Sahil Mehrotra said. And Shaheen spokesperson Brendan Duff said: "Senator Shaheen has been disappointed by the Secretary's tenure heading the Department of Homeland Security and remains concerned by her leadership of the agency thus far, including her severe lack of transparency. She intends to continue demanding answers and holding the Department accountable." A DHS spokesperson didn't immediately respond to a request for comment. Sen. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., who voted against Noem, tore into her performance. "It's really hard to imagine someone doing a worse job as the secretary of homeland security," Schiff said in an interview. "The draconian, inconsistent, inflammatory immigration policies; the lawlessness; the rendering of people outside the country to maximum-security prisons; the arrest of U.S. citizens; the constant, bizarre spectacle of her doing dress-up outside of a maximum-security prison; or in her various cosplay. It's embarrassing, and it takes the focus off of what should be the heart of that job, and that is protecting our homeland security."

Some Democratic senators regret voting to confirm Kristi Noem as DHS secretary

Some Democratic senators regret voting to confirm Kristi Noem as DHS secretary WASHINGTON — Five days after President Donald Trump's ina...

 

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