James Walkinshaw wins Democratic contest to likely replace US Rep. Connolly in northern VirginiaNew Foto - James Walkinshaw wins Democratic contest to likely replace US Rep. Connolly in northern Virginia

FAIRFAX, Va. (AP) — Democrats and Republicans chose candidates in northern Virginia on Saturday who will vie to replace the late U.S. Rep. Gerry Connolly, a Democrat who served the congressional district in the Washington suburbs for 16 years. Democrats chose James Walkinshaw, who currently serves on the Fairfax County Board of Supervisors — which oversees the local budget and policies. Republicans picked Stewart Whitson, an Army veteran and former FBI agent. The candidates will compete in a special election on Sept. 9 to represent Virginia's 11th Congressional District, which is home to more than 700,000 people and includes Fairfax, Reston and Vienna. Political observers have said that the district's Democratic primary likely will determine Connolly's successor in what has become a reliably Democratic district. Connolly, who most recently held a prominent position as the ranking member of the House Oversight Committee, died last month after battling esophageal cancer. The 75-year-old's death left House Republicans with a 220-212 majority in Congress. The so-called "firehouse primaries" for the special election were run by the political parties, not local governments or the Virginia Department of Elections, according to Fairfax County's website. Walkinshaw, who previously served as Connolly's chief of staff for more than a decade, was viewed as the frontrunner leading up to the Democratic primary. He had received Connolly's endorsement before the congressman passed away. Walkinshaw bested 9 other candidates for the Democratic nomination. "I'm honored and humbled to have earned the Democratic nomination for the district I've spent my career serving," Walkinshaw said in a written statement posted to X on Saturday. "This victory was powered by neighbors, volunteers and supporters who believe in protecting our democracy, defending our freedoms, and delivering for working families." The Republican nominee, meanwhile, said in a statement that it was "time to fight" to flip the seat. "WithPresident Trumpback in office he's taking bold and aggressive action to get the country back on track," Whitson said. "But he needs strong allies in Congress who will help him fix the economy, protect our families, and restore common sense."

James Walkinshaw wins Democratic contest to likely replace US Rep. Connolly in northern Virginia

James Walkinshaw wins Democratic contest to likely replace US Rep. Connolly in northern Virginia FAIRFAX, Va. (AP) — Democrats and Republica...
The inside story of Andrew Cuomo's campaign collapseNew Foto - The inside story of Andrew Cuomo's campaign collapse

Another conference call. This was what strategy looked like on Andrew Cuomo's mayoral campaign: A small circle of aides and advisers listening to longtime aide Melissa DeRosa, who denied working on his campaign in public but whom all involved knew was running things, as she pressed them about early voting numbers showingthe Zohran Mamdanisurge was real. Some felt scolded. They all felt frustrated. A few raised the same point they had been pleading for weeks and months:We need to get him out more. "He's doing a lot," DeRosa said. "He's doing as much as he can." The call less than two weeks before primary day, described to CNN by three of the people who participated, was one of many moments of a campaign that soared in its first few weeks, agonizingly ground down everyone involved, then finished with a spectacular flop. Cuomo ended up conceding to a person he had long dismissed as an upstart who talked a lot, someone as young as his daughters with a fraction of his government experience. Mamdani's historic expansion of the electorate, his tapping into the hunger for a leftward lurch and fresh voice, defied almost every poll and expert's expectation. A month before the June 24 election, one veteran progressive operative told CNN that Mamdani's decisive army of volunteers was composed of naifs "who thought they could door-knock their way to the revolution." But all but a few involved with the Cuomo campaign acknowledge, at least privately, how much they did wrong. The former governor came off constantly clueless about intricacies of the city and its politics. And despite what DeRosa said, he would call a few short appearances a full schedule and avoided interviews or unscripted interactions with voters, leaving him vulnerable to Mamdani's go-everywhere, talk-to-everyone strategy. CNN spoke to a dozen Cuomo aides and advisers, along with another dozen operatives and officials working in and around the race. Many were granted anonymity to discuss internal meetings and private conversations. They privately single out mistakes that should have been visible at the time and point fingers over who got what wrong how. "You are not going to turn Andrew Cuomo into the new Andrew Cuomo. Andrew Cuomo is Andrew Cuomo. He's exactly the person he always was," one adviser told CNN. "He was not going to build alliances. Not clear he could anyway. He wasn't all of a sudden going to be warm and friendly. And his operation wasn't all of a sudden going to be warm and friendly." Cuomo launched his campaign in March with huge advantages. He faced a splintered primary field and a short race to June 24. He could run on his experience with President Donald Trump, arguing in a Trumpian way thathe alone could deal with the pressurethat the second-term Republican and fellow Queens native was already exerting on New York. Operating within a city campaign finance system with spending caps, DeRosa wasn't the only longtime Cuomo aide pitching in expertise for free. Chris Coffey, who had managed Andrew Yang's 2021 mayoral campaign, had his firm pay for early polls while helping bring in key Orthodox Jewish support and landing Mike Bloomberg's endorsement, which the billionaire former mayor followed with over $8 million to the super PAC Fix the City. Fix the City would ultimately spend at least $22 million just through early June but was still blamed by the Cuomo campaign for not going more negative on Mamdani, who believed that would have elevated Mamdani. (Cuomo was convinced going after Mamdani more himself would have reinforced the sense of him as a bully.) Lording power over politicians and the press was the Cuomo way when he was governor. His close aides thought they could go right back to yelling and cursing and making demands of endorsers and reporters alike, who tended to respond by treating Cuomo as a menace and Mamdani as a fascination. One adviser regretfully compared how New Yorkers pick their mayor to testing, smelling, squeezing fruit at the store. "You have to be able to touch it," the adviser said. "It's not going to happen from behind a glass box." But Cuomo didn't want to do many events because he thought he'd be interrupted by protesters and hounded by reporters. He avoided interviews because he thought he'd just get asked about the scandals that chased him from the governor's office. He regularly canceled plans for both at the last minute. When Cuomo released a housing plan determined to have been written partly by AI, or when his campaign's mistakes led to problems with matching funds from the city campaign finance board, the coverage was vicious. He would not apologize for Covid-19 nursing home deaths or the accusations that he harassed women while governor. The people who didn't like him, Cuomo would tell people, were a "lost cause." Nothing he was going to say or do would matter. He certainly wasn't going to apologize or offer a "sorry you feel that way." Some blame themselves for not confronting him to do more to make amends. DeRosa, who most people involved thought was best positioned to reach Cuomo, does not. In fact, she told CNN, before asking to speak off the record, "I didn't really work on the campaign." Told about this response, several other aides said it encapsulated what they had gotten used to. Though DeRosa was not paid, everyone else who worked on the campaign told CNN she was calling shots on every major decision, the main conduit for the candidate's micromanaging, a key part of Cuomo's triumphs and failures for more than two decades, and a public figure in her own right who had once called Cuomo "the Tom Brady of New York politics." Multiple union leaders came away from conversations with Cuomo feeling like they had to endorse or he'd exact revenge in contract negotiations when he was inevitably mayor. State legislators, whose support Cuomo racked up mostly to be able to tout that he'd turned around the very people who'd called on him to resign, were rarely followed up with and largely waved off. In the final weeks, they were calling with warnings that Cuomo's campaign was invisible and that Mamdani's people seemed everywhere. "He was surrounded by a lot of people who were probably protecting him," said state Assemblymember Rodneyse Bichotte Hermelyn, who also runs the powerful Brooklyn Democratic Party and was given the honorary title of senior political adviser to the campaign. "My definition of ground game was very different from theirs." Bichotte Hermelyn said most of the conversations she had with Cuomo as she prepared to endorse him two weeks after he launched his campaign were listening to him talk about how he would beat incumbent Mayor Eric Adams in the fall. But already back then, she sent a message to Mamdani, her colleague in the Assembly, telling him he was doing phenomenally. By May 28, just under a month before the election, the race had changed. Mamdani had started to catch progressive interest and small-dollar contributions from his sunny message and videos promising a rent freeze, city-operated grocery stores and tax increases for millionaires. He had become Cuomo's chief rival, a three-term state assemblyman half Cuomo's age and a democratic socialist in the vein of Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, a longtime Cuomo foil. Cuomo held a rally at a union hall in midtown Manhattan to try to out-progressive the progressives by announcing his support for a $20 minimum wage, a way of reminding people that he had raised the minimum wage as governor. Some aides felt the walls closing in on them, even as public polls still had Cuomo well ahead. But still most were sticking with the strung-out stick-to-itiveness that had them repeating what they were hearing directly from him or DeRosa:the polls! the polls! the polls!is how more than one campaign aide described his validation for not changing anything. A few old friends and allies whom Cuomo would call for his famously marathon monologues tried to break through. Beating Mamdani's positions and issues was going to take positions and issues of his own, they said, not just drum-beating that he was the only competent manager around. He'd been secretary of housing and urban development – maybe talk about housing? He's passed gay marriage and strict gun control laws before almost anyone else — those might be worth mentioning more. His pinnacle of success and celebrity was being a hero of Covid-19 before investigations into the nursing home deaths, so much that there were whispers he might swap in for Joe Biden as the 2020 presidential nominee — what about some events with pandemic survivors or business owners he helped? Cuomo hemmed, hawed, made no changes. He hammered on public safety and a city in crisis, even as Mamdani's affordability talk was clearly catching on. He wouldn't stop sneering at the left. And he stayed on antisemitism, the issue he had identified as his own ever since the proud Italian had started his "Never Again, NOW!" group last year, collecting checks and never doing much of substance to combat hatred for Jews or build up the support for Israel he said was so important. Some of his own aides suspected then that his focus on Mamdani's criticism of Israel wasn't working and perhaps backfiring. "So much energy was expended around it — and for what?" said one campaign aide. "We got lost on that on an issue that, while important for a lot of people, if they can't afford their rent, they're going to go with the guy talking about their rent." The person playing Mamdani in Cuomo's debate prep sessions was another member of the inner circle: Rita Glavin, the attorney who has worked to undermine the accusations of the women who had come out against Cuomo while governor. Cuomo was less concerned with Glavin's acted-out responses than ideas he had, like holding up three fingers to show the three bills Mamdani had passed since getting elected to the Assembly in 2020: It means he didn't even do his job, Cuomo would say. A government guy, the lack of work product offended him. Don't do it, aides told him. Voters don't care. In the debate, Cuomo didn't do the fingers, but he did mock the three bills. Then later in the same debate, he did it again. Then he had the point put in the script of one of his last ads. His aides tried over and over to get Cuomo to say Mamdani's name correctly. Was it a mental block or passive-aggressive disrespect that made it come out "Mandani" or "Mandamni" every time? No luck. Looking back, Cuomo is proud that he didn't snap more given all the attempts to needle him. But when City Comptroller Brad Lander in their second debate asked him to answer a man whose father died in a nursing home during the pandemic, Cuomo responded defensively, mentioning that Lander was born in St. Louis and ticking through facts that he said exonerated him. No sympathy, even when saying the words that he was sorry the man's father had died. Aides watching were too resigned to be apoplectic. Mamdani's response telling Cuomo how to say his name was already going viral. The next day, Cuomo was working through more of his phone calls. "What are people saying on Twitter?" he asked one of the people on the other end. New York's ranked-choice voting system in the primary lets voters list up to five candidates, prioritizing alliances between campaigns. Mamdani and Lander pushed their bases to rank the other candidate on their ballots. Cuomo didn't bother. He was enraged by the way Lander had made such a focus of torching him, making himself what the former governor would call a "kamikaze pilot" against him. And Cuomo was wary that if Mamdani collapsed, his support could rush to Lander. Cuomo had been in the race for under two weeks when Shontell Smith, his political director, called the team of her friend and fellow mayoral candidate, state Sen. Zellnor Myrie, and suggested both a non-aggression pact and a cross-endorsement deal. Myrie said no. In the second debate, longshot candidate Whitney Tilson said he would rank Cuomo No. 2. Cuomo did not return the offer. How, he figured, would he credibly say Mamdani didn't have the experience to be mayor while lining up with Tilson, who had spent no time in government? Two days after the first debate, state Sen. Jessica Ramos suddenly dropped out and backed Cuomo. Ramos, who had called for him to resign as governor and labeled him a "corrupt bully" earlier in the campaign, ripped Mamdani during the debate as inexperienced beyond his flashy videos. Cuomo didn't say much nice about Ramos at their joint event. He didn't bring her on the trail with him or deploy her as a surrogate. When he went to vote on Tuesday, he didn't bother putting her on a ranked-choice ballot. He announced he had voted only for his own name and no others. She dropped out, Cuomo thought, so why would he say any of his supporters should rank her? "This is such ingratitude," Ramos told a friend after seeing that. "This is so classless." Cuomo's team tried once more in the final days to make a cross-endorsement deal with Scott Stringer, the former comptroller with an Upper West Side base. Stringer didn't take the deal and ended up getting just over 1% in the first round. Cuomo and his closest allies were combative to the end. When asked by CNN on Tuesday morning what Cuomo's schedule was for primary day beyond a brief appearance to vote, communications director Rich Azzopardi said he didn't know and that Cuomo was "in his car." As bad as things had gone, Cuomo largely hit or exceeded the Election Day numbers he thought were enough and probably would have been four years ago. He was running 6 points ahead of Eric Adams four years ago in the first round of ranked-choice voting. He dominated on the Upper East and West sides of Manhattan and working-class neighborhoods across the outer boroughs. Through 8 p.m. on primary night, Cuomo himself was feeling like it might work. Their model was proving out. Then the returns started arriving at 9 p.m. Mamdani hadn't just eaten into their base, as some aides and advisers had been warning to little avail, but now the model was useless. One top campaign source argued Mamdani changed how majority-Black districts would vote by turning out so many "White gentrifiers." "Had we run a perfect campaign, I'm not sure the outcome would have been different," Coffey, the volunteer top operative, told CNN. "There are always things you wish could do differently, but Andrew, Melissa and the senior leadership team (me included) helped bring on board most big unions, biggest group of electeds, every business group, top-notch donors and supporters like Mike Bloomberg, mended fences with and turned out Hasidic Jews, helped every editorial board to be for us or against our opposition. We came up short. You have to respect Zohran's team and movement." Cuomo has been making aides and advisers apoplectic (not to mention opposing candidates laugh) as he continues to say he did everything right, or at least that there was nothing he could have done differently. Several who served in senior positions on the campaign said to CNN that they didn't see any viable path for Cuomo without approaching the race totally differently. One adviser suggested the staff needs to change or be replaced but it was ultimately on Cuomo being willing to change himself. "If he's not, then he shouldn't run," the adviser said. But a few aides and advisers are urging him on. Asked whether the financial support exists to reload the pro-Cuomo super PAC in the fall, a person familiar with the group's operations said bluntly, "The answer's yes." His opponents would be Mamdani, who still elicits deep concerns from establishment and moderate Democrats; Adams, a former Democrat who is widely unpopular and had his corruption case dropped by Trump's Department of Justice; and Curtis Sliwa, a Republican seen as a marginal candidate. There will be no ranked-choice voting in November. Whoever wins a plurality will be mayor. Cuomo has been saying this race wasn't about his own redemption. Few believed that. Either way, redemption didn't happen when the primary votes came in. "It hasn't happened yet," a top campaign source corrected in an interview. "There's still a general election." For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

The inside story of Andrew Cuomo’s campaign collapse

The inside story of Andrew Cuomo's campaign collapse Another conference call. This was what strategy looked like on Andrew Cuomo's m...
Jim Harbaugh added to lawsuit against former Michigan co-offensive coordinator Matt WeissNew Foto - Jim Harbaugh added to lawsuit against former Michigan co-offensive coordinator Matt Weiss

The legal furor over the allegations against former Michigan co-offensive coordinator Matt Weiss have officially reached Jim Harbaugh. The former Michigan head coach and current Los Angeles Chargers head coach was added as a defendant to a class-action lawsuit filed by 11 anonymous students against Weiss, who is accused of hacking the email, social media and cloud storage accounts of thousands of female athletes and downloading intimate photos and videos, perThe Athletic. The complaint reportedly was refiled Friday in federal court in Michigan and claims that Harbaugh knew Weiss had been accessing the plaintiffs' private information when allowing him to coach in the Fiesta Bowl on Dec. 31, 2022. Weiss' alleged crimes were reportedly flagged to school police in the days before that game. Michigan athletic director Warde Manuel and former university president Santa Ono were also reportedly added to the complaint. FromThe Athletic: "Naming head coach Jim Harbaugh and athletic director Warde Manuel in this complaint reflects our belief that leadership at the highest levels either knew of these threats or deliberately ignored them, prioritizing athletic prestige and profit over the safety and dignity of students," attorney Parker Stinar said in an emailed statement. "By placing athletic success and financial interests above accountability, transparency, and student welfare, the University failed in its basic duty of care." Weiss wasplaced on administrative leave two weeks after the Fiesta Bowl,which Michigan lost, andfired days after that. He was formally charged with a crime in March earlier this year, on 14 counts of unauthorized access to computers and 10 counts of aggravated identity theft. He faces a maximum of five years in prison for each unauthorized access charge and two years for each identity theft charge. That adds up to as many as 90 years in prison. Weiss pleaded not guilty and is awaiting trial in November. The Justice Department claims Weiss used personal data downloaded from a student-athlete database to obtain access to the social media, email and/or cloud storage accounts of more than 2,000 athletes and more than 1,300 additional students or graduates. From there, he allegedly downloaded intimate photos and videos that were never meant to see the light of day. In addition to the criminal charges, Weissis facing a barrage of lawsuits, such as this one. Harbaugh left Michigan for the Chargers last year, under a different cloud of allegations from the NCAA. After the charges were filed, he described the allegations "shocking" and called it a "disturbing situation." He said he felt "really bad" for not just the alleged victims, but also Weiss' wife and children. From 2011 to 2022, Weiss worked for either Harbaugh or his brother John, the head coach of the Baltimore Ravens. After playing at Vanderbilt as a punter, Weiss joined the Ravens as an assistant and held a number of jobs, including cornerbacks and running backs coach. It was in 2015, during his time with the Ravens, that his hacking allegedly started. Weiss jumped from Baltimore to Michigan in 2021 to become the Wolverines' quarterbacks coach and was promoted to co-offensive coordinator after one season.

Jim Harbaugh added to lawsuit against former Michigan co-offensive coordinator Matt Weiss

Jim Harbaugh added to lawsuit against former Michigan co-offensive coordinator Matt Weiss The legal furor over the allegations against forme...
Austria to stay on Formula 1 calendar through 2041 after contract extensionNew Foto - Austria to stay on Formula 1 calendar through 2041 after contract extension

SPIELBERG, Austria (AP) — The Austrian Grand Prix is set to stay on the Formula 1 schedule until 2041 after a long-term extension was announced Sunday for the race at the Red Bull Ring. Austria already had a contract through 2030, agreed two years ago, and the new extension sees it match theMiami Grand Prixas the only F1 events contracted into the 2040s. The Austrian Grand Prix is closely connected with Red Bull's presence in F1. The Red Bull company's co-founder, Dietrich Mateschitz, who died in 2022, funded the renovations that allowed it to return to the calendar in 2014 after an 11-year absence, and rebranded it as the Red Bull Ring. "I am delighted that Formula 1 will remain at the Red Bull Ring for many years to come," his son Mark Mateschitz said in a statement Sunday. "I am proud to continue my father's legacy and to preserve the rich history of motor racing in (the region of) Styria and at the Red Bull Ring – with and, above all, for the people of the region. Austria's close ties to Formula 1 are an excellent foundation for our long-term partnership. Working together, we intend to continue this success story for many years to come." It continues a trend by F1 of planning for decades to come with unusually long deals for certain circuits. The Canadian Grand Prix wasextended to 2035earlier this month, while Miami got its extension through 2041 last month. Other Grands Prix with more than a decade to run on their contracts are Bahrain, which agreed a deal in 2022 that is valid through 2036, and the Australian Grand Prix in Melbourne has an agreement through 2037. ___ AP auto racing:https://apnews.com/hub/auto-racing

Austria to stay on Formula 1 calendar through 2041 after contract extension

Austria to stay on Formula 1 calendar through 2041 after contract extension SPIELBERG, Austria (AP) — The Austrian Grand Prix is set to stay...
Trump slams Israel's prosecutors over Netanyahu corruption trialNew Foto - Trump slams Israel's prosecutors over Netanyahu corruption trial

By Ryan Patrick Jones and Mike Stone (Reuters) -U.S. President Donald Trump on Saturday lashed out at prosecutors in Israel over the corruption trial that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has faced, saying Washington, having given billions of dollars worth of aid to Israel, was not going to "stand for this". Netanyahu was indicted in 2019 in Israel on charges of bribery, fraud and breach of trust - all of which he denies. The trial began in 2020 and involves three criminal cases. On Friday, the court rejected a request by Netanyahu's lawyers to delay his testimony for the next two weeks because of diplomatic and security matters following the 12-day conflict between Israel and Iran this month. He is due to take the stand on Monday for cross-examination. "It is INSANITY doing what the out-of-control prosecutors are doing to Bibi Netanyahu," Trump said in a Truth Social post, asserting that the judicial process was going to interfere with Netanyahu's ability to conduct talks with Palestinian militant group Hamas, and Iran. A spokesperson for the Israeli prosecution declined to comment on Trump's post. Netanyahu on X retweeted Trump's post and added: "Thank you again, @realDonaldTrump. Together, we will make the Middle East Great Again!" Trump's second post over the course of a few days defending Netanyahu and calling for the cancellation of the trial went a step further to tie Israel's legal action to U.S. aid. "The United States of America spends Billions of Dollar [sic] a year, far more than on any other Nation, protecting and supporting Israel. We are not going to stand for this," Trump said. Netanyahu "right now" was in the process of negotiating a deal with Hamas, Trump said, without giving further details. On Friday, the Republican president told reporters that he believed a ceasefire was close. Hamas has said it is willing to free remaining hostages in Gaza under any deal to end the war, while Israel says it can only end it if Hamas is disarmed and dismantled. Hamas refuses to lay down its arms. Interest in resolving the Gaza conflict has heightened in the wake of the U.S. and Israeli bombings of Iran's nuclear facilities. (Reporting by Ryan Patrick Jones and Mike Stone; Additional reporting by Maayan Lubell in Jerusalem; Editing by Humeyra Pamuk, Sandra Maler, Chizu Nomiyama and Kim Coghill)

Trump slams Israel's prosecutors over Netanyahu corruption trial

Trump slams Israel's prosecutors over Netanyahu corruption trial By Ryan Patrick Jones and Mike Stone (Reuters) -U.S. President Donald ...
Louisiana hospitals press Johnson over megabill Medicaid cut proposalsNew Foto - Louisiana hospitals press Johnson over megabill Medicaid cut proposals

As the "big, beautiful bill" teeters towards passage in the Senate, every major health system in Louisiana sent aletterSaturday to the state's entire congressional delegation, including Speaker Mike Johnson (R), warning that planned cuts to Medicaid would be "historic in their devastation." The letter said that the Senate's version of the bill would cut more than $4 billion in Medicaid funding, with a loss of more than 16,000 jobs. Even the House's version of cuts, the letter stated, would be a more palatable solution. However, the "economic consequences pale in comparison to the harm that will be caused to residents across the state, regardless of insurance status, who will no longer be able to get the care that they need," the letter reads. "Steep cuts will force consolidation of services, staffing reductions and closures, reducing healthcare access to everyone in our communities. Our rural communities will especially feel the impact as many of these hospitals are already in difficult financial situations and are likely to experience a significant reduction of services." The letter was also sent to Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.), whoexpressedconcerns about the cuts to Medicaid in the Senate version of the bill Thursday and said that the House version would be preferable. However, Cassidy has not since spoken out against the bill, a vote for which kicked off in the Senate Saturday night. 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.

Louisiana hospitals press Johnson over megabill Medicaid cut proposals

Louisiana hospitals press Johnson over megabill Medicaid cut proposals As the "big, beautiful bill" teeters towards passage in the...
NBA free agency: Who are the biggest names on the market?New Foto - NBA free agency: Who are the biggest names on the market?

The NBA free agency period has officially started with several notable names available. All teams were able to begin negotiations with free agents who had finished out the season on their respective rosters since June 23. Now, teams will have the opportunity to reach out to all other free agent players as early as Monday afternoon. Several players have already avoided the free agency process and reportedly worked out deals to remain with their current teams. That group includes guard Kyrie Irving (Dallas Mavericks), guard Fred VanVleet (Houston Rockets) and center Naz Reid (Minnesota Timberwolves). Forward John Collins has already exercised his player option to return to theUtah Jazz. Player movement will continue to be reported over the next week, but all free agent contracts will not become official until Sunday, July 6, at 12:01 p.m. ET. Here are some of the biggest names expected to be on the free agent market: NBA power rankings:How all 30 teams stack up after 2025 NBA Draft There was brief chatter about what's next for LeBron James after the season concluded for theLos Angeles Lakers, but there's no expectation that he will retire or put on a different uniform next season. The 41-year-old currently has a $52.6 million player option for the 2025-26 season that he's likely to opt into, according to ESPN's Sham Charania. Much like LeBron, James Harden has a $36.3 million player option that would allow him to return to theLos Angeles Clippersfor the upcoming season. Harden was named to the All-NBA Third Team and was selected for his 11th All-Star game. Turner's season just came to an end after falling short with the Indiana Pacers in Game 7 of the NBA Finals. While Turner is likely to receive interest from several suitors, the Pacers likely have the advantage by having had a few days to negotiate with the big man exclusively in recent days. Julius Randle can return to the Minnesota Timberwolves roster with the $30.9 player option he has available to him. If he decides to return, it would help keep a similar lineup in Minnesota that just played in the Western Conference Finals. Kuminga will have the opportunity to test the market and sign an offer sheet with any team, but it will be up to theGolden State Warriorsto decide to match the terms of any offer he agrees to. Kuminga started 10 of the 47 games he played in for the Warriors in this past season, averaging 15.3 points and 4.6 rebounds in 24.3 minutes per game. He was tendered with a $7.9 million qualifying offer on Saturday, according to ESPN's Ohm Youngmisuk. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:NBA free agency 2025: Biggest names on the market

NBA free agency: Who are the biggest names on the market?

NBA free agency: Who are the biggest names on the market? The NBA free agency period has officially started with several notable names avail...

 

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