MLB All-Star Game has slight drop in viewers despite having its first swing-offNew Foto - MLB All-Star Game has slight drop in viewers despite having its first swing-off

NEW YORK (AP) — Baseball's All-Star Game — which featured the contest's first swing-off to determine the winner — averaged 7,185,000 viewers Tuesday night on Fox, according to Nielsen. It was Fox's most-watched telecast since the Super Bowl and the network's best audience for a Tuesday night since last year's Game 4 of the World Series. However, it was a 3.5% decrease from the 2024 game and the second-lowest for the Midsummer Classic. Kyle Schwarber's three home runs gave theNational League a 4-3 victory in the swing-offafter the American League rallied to tie it at 6-6 in the ninth inning after trailing by six runs in the seventh. The audience for the game in Atlanta peaked at 8.1 million viewers from 9:15-9:30 p.m. EDT. Major League Baseball and the players' association made the change in 2022amid concerns about running out of pitchers because hardly anyone throws more than an inning in the game anymore, The game was decided by having three batters from each league take three swings each off coaches in what was baseball's equivalent of soccer's penalty-kicks shootout. Baseball continues to have the best ratings for an event featuring All-Stars. The NHL did not have an All-Star Game this year, while the NBA's averaged 4.7 million on TNT. The NFL's Pro Bowl games, a series of skills competitions and flag football, also averaged 4.7 million on ABC. Monday night's Home Run Derby averaged 5.73 million on ESPN, a 5% increase over last year. ___ AP MLB:https://apnews.com/hub/mlb

MLB All-Star Game has slight drop in viewers despite having its first swing-off

MLB All-Star Game has slight drop in viewers despite having its first swing-off NEW YORK (AP) — Baseball's All-Star Game — which feature...
Dabo Swinney hilariously mixes up LSU coach Brian Kelly for country singer on vacationNew Foto - Dabo Swinney hilariously mixes up LSU coach Brian Kelly for country singer on vacation

One would think that after meeting head-to-head four times,Clemson footballcoachDabo Swinneywould knowLSU footballcoachBrian Kellyrather well. That, however, is now in question after a vacation that Swinney took this offseason. And for that, when the two veteran coaches meet up pregame at the 50-yard line in Week 1 of the 2025college footballseason, they will have an all-time laugh. In a media availability on July 15, the 18th-year Tigers head coach shared a story of ahilarious mix-up with the head coachof his Week 1 opponent with a country music artist that has the same name while on vacation with his wife, Kathleen, his brother and sister-in-law in Grayton Beach, Florida. "My sister-in-law, she's saying, 'Hey, Brian Kelly has a place. His wife has a gift shop right on the corner there in Grayton Beach.' I'm like, 'Oh really? That's pretty cool.' I had no idea," Swinney said July 15 during a media availability. "... Me and Kath walk into the store and Kath buys something because she's trying to support Mrs. Kelly or whatever we're doing." Dabo Swinney got the wrong Brian Kelly.In a hysterical clip, Swinney mistook Brian Kelly, LSU's head coach, for Brian Kelley, who is best known for his work with Florida Georgia Line.This clip is seriously a must watch.Swinney and Kelly will have a laugh in August.pic.twitter.com/V6WVERuKyd — Grayson Mann (@gray_mann21)July 15, 2025 REQUIRED READING:Dabo Swinney has Clemson football primed to soar in transfer portal era The Swinneys would then continue walking around the store and headed outside to a backyard concert stage, where the two-time national championship coach took photos around/on the stage that had a sign of "Brian Kelley performing today" and sent them to the LSU coach. That was until his brother's friend broke the news to Swinney's wife on the side that it wasn'ttheBrian Kelly that Dabo Swinney went 3-1 against while Kelly was at Notre Dame. "... So now Kath goes, 'Babe! Brian Kelley's a singer for Florida Georgia Line. And I went, 'What?! I've been firing all these pictures off to Brian Kelly.' He's over there probably going, 'What the hell?! This is an idiot. What's this dude doing?'" So, how did the actual Brian Kelly respond to Swinney's texts? Perhaps exactly like you'd expect he would. "He sends me a text and is like, 'Yeah, you just can't get away from Brian Kelly,' or something like that," Swinney said. "And I'm sure he was like, 'I have no idea what the context of this is,' but anyway, then I realize that it wasn't him and I'm like, 'Oh my god. We'll have a laugh over that.'" Swinney and Kelly are set to meet up in Week 1 on Saturday, Aug. 30 whenClemsonwelcomes in LSU to Memorial Stadium for a 7:30 p.m. ET kickoff in "Death Valley." The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fast.Download for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Dabo Swinney shares hilarious story on mix-up with LSU's Brian Kelly

Dabo Swinney hilariously mixes up LSU coach Brian Kelly for country singer on vacation

Dabo Swinney hilariously mixes up LSU coach Brian Kelly for country singer on vacation One would think that after meeting head-to-head four ...
US Health Secretary Kennedy fires two top leaders in latest department shakeupNew Foto - US Health Secretary Kennedy fires two top leaders in latest department shakeup

(Reuters) - U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has fired two top leaders at the department, chief of staff Heather Flick Melanson and deputy chief of staff for policy Hannah Anderson, a spokesperson said on Wednesday. Matt Buckham, who currently serves as Kennedy's White House liaison at the HHS, will serve as acting chief of staff effective immediately, the spokesperson said. In his current role, Buckham oversees the recruitment and onboarding of political appointees across HHS. Since taking over as health secretary, Kennedy has proposed overhauling the department by reorganizing several HHS agencies and substantially cutting their workforces. This month, a federal judge blocked the proposal to implement the restructuring. HHS oversees the work of health agencies, including the Food and Drug Administration, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the National Institutes of Health, whose chief operating officer, Eric Schnabel, was fired on Monday. The Washington Post was first to report Schnabel's firing, which Reuters has confirmed. Kennedy, who for decades has sown doubt about the safety of vaccines contrary to evidence and research by scientists, in June fired all 17 members of an independent panel of experts that advises the CDC on vaccine policy, and replaced them with seven new hand-picked members. The firings on Wednesday were first reported by CNN. Kennedy has not decided on permanent replacements to fill these roles, according to the CNN report. Melanson and Anderson were ousted after only a few months on their jobs, and it was unclear whether there was a single event that prompted the firings, the report said. An HHS spokesperson declined to provide any additional details about the staff reorganization. Anderson previously worked as a health policy adviser for the Senate Health Committee. She did not immediately respond to a request for comment on LinkedIn. Flick Melanson, who held senior positions at the HHS during U.S. President Donald Trump's first term, could not immediately be reached for comment. Schnabel, a retired Army veteran who joined the NIH in March 2025, most recently worked at a fitness and wellness company, according to his LinkedIn profile. An NIH staff member with direct knowledge of his departure confirmed Schnabel had left the agency. The Washington Post linked his departure to a probe of a contract that would have benefited his wife, Trish Schnabel, a licensed therapist who sometimes goes by her maiden name, Trish Duffy. The NIH source told Reuters Schnabel's wife was intended to serve as an autism consultant as part of a broader $3.3-million contract with Argo Chasing LLC, an advisory firm based in Shreveport, Louisiana, focused on project management services. According to a review of the non-competitive contract, issued on July 3 through the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, the grant was for "project coordination and subject matter expert support for high-level strategic research security, counterintelligence, autism and execution service." Eric and Trish Schnabel did not respond to requests for comment. An HHS spokesperson declined to comment. (Reporting by Harshita Meenaktshi, Bhanvi Satija and Sneha S K in Bengaluru; Julie Steenhuysen in Chicago, Michael Erman in New York and Chad Terhune in Los Angeles; Editing by Andrew Heavens, Shinjini Ganguli and Rod Nickel)

US Health Secretary Kennedy fires two top leaders in latest department shakeup

US Health Secretary Kennedy fires two top leaders in latest department shakeup (Reuters) - U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F...
Trump signs bill making tough sentences for fentanyl trafficking permanentNew Foto - Trump signs bill making tough sentences for fentanyl trafficking permanent

WASHINGTON –President Donald Trumpsigned a law that extends tougher prison sentences for fentanyl trafficking, surrounded by relatives of people who died from overdoses and lawmakers who approved the bill. "Today we strike a righteous blow to the drug dealers, narcotic traffickers and criminal cartels," Trump said. "We take a historic step toward justice for every family touched by the fentanyl scourge." The law places fentanyl on the Drug Enforcement Administration's list of most serious drugs with no accepted medical use and a high potential for abuse. The list includes drugs such as heroin, cocaine and LSD. Fentanyl has been temporarily assigned to the Schedule 1 category since 2018. The law makes the designation permanent. The law also makes permanent mandatory minimum penalties of five years in prison for trafficking 10 grams of fentanyl and 10 years for 100 grams. "It doesn't sound like much, but it's a big deal," Trump said. TheDepartment of Homeland Securityseized 27,000 pounds of fentanyl and arrested 3,600 criminal suspects in 2024. More than 105,000 people nationwide died of drug overdoses in 2023, including nearly 73,000 from synthetic opioids such as fentanyl,according to the National Institute on Drug Abuse. The crackdown on fentanyl distribution is also at the heart of current U.S. trade disputes with China, Mexico and Canada. Trump imposed tariffs on those countries, citing the threat of cross-border fentanyl trafficking. "We are delivering another defeat for the savage drug smugglers and criminals and the cartels," Trump said. Parents of several people who died after overdosing on fentanyl spoke at the event. Anne Fundner, whose 15-year-old son Westondied of an accidental fentanyl overdose in 2022, previously spoke at theRepublican National Convention in Milwaukeelast year. "It is a lifeline for families across America for keeping our families safe," Fundner said of the legislation. "This is what we voted for, Mr. President." Gregory Swan, whose 24-year-oldsonDrew died of fentanyl poisoning,started a group known as Fentanyl Fathers, in which parents tell their story to high schools across America. "His passing ruined, I thought, my life," Swan said. "There's despair and there's hopelessness. But we've been able to find some repose in going out and advocating." This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Trump signs bill to keep tough sentences for fentanyl traffickers

Trump signs bill making tough sentences for fentanyl trafficking permanent

Trump signs bill making tough sentences for fentanyl trafficking permanent WASHINGTON –President Donald Trumpsigned a law that extends tough...
Kalen DeBoer, Crimson Tide count on continuity in 2025New Foto - Kalen DeBoer, Crimson Tide count on continuity in 2025

Kalen DeBoer begins his second season at Alabama with a tone-setting theme common from the end of the 2024 season until the Crimson Tide kick off fall camp in two weeks: Let's get physical. "When it comes to just overall as a program, physicality is the name of the game when it comes to playing football. You wear pads for a reason, right? Physicality comes through the work to build your body, but that also comes through toughness mentally as well," DeBoer said Wednesday morning in Atlanta, the site of SEC Media Days. "I love, again, the work that we're focused on right now is the main thing, keeping it that. I love the mindset. Doesn't guarantee anything but gives you a great chance." Talent gives the Crimson Tide a great chance, too. And while Alabama subtracted three prominent underclassmen to the draft -- quarterback Jalen Milroe (Seattle Seahawks), guard Tyler Booker (Dallas Cowboys) and linebacker Jihaad Campbell (Philadelphia Eagles) -- and several seniors from DeBoer's first season on the job in Tuscaloosa, he has a few players ready to pick up the hammer as tone-setters this season. "The offensive line is where it really starts," DeBoer said. "Really six guys that are strongly in the rotation with a lot of others that are up-and-coming, developing quickly, that I can see competing for spots as the season goes along as well." The featured talent on the line is Kadyn Proctor, an offensive tackle who can block out the sun, who is also on pace to earn his degree in December. NFL draft experts view Proctor as a likely first-round talent in the 2026 draft if he opts to leave. DeBoer said he loves everything about the 6-foot-7, 360-pounder. "You look at the guy and he's massive. Man, just does everything on a high level when it comes to his training," said DeBoer. Replacing Milroe is a clear focus in fall camp. DeBoer said Ty Simpson "would be the guy that would take the first snaps and be our starter" if Alabama was lining up to play a game right now. But he kept the door open for Austin Mack, a 6-6, 235-pound redshirt freshman who followed DeBoer from Washington, and true freshman Keelon Russell to shift the depth chart in the next six weeks before Alabama begins the season at Florida State. DeBoer -- who also brought in his former offensive coordinator with the Huskies, Ryan Grubb -- said Mack and Russell are capable of "big jumps" in fall camp because of the high repetition count. "But they have the tools. Ty throws a catchable ball. He's smart. He's been in college football now going into year four," DeBoer said. "He's seen the ups and downs. He's got great relationships with the team. He's a leader that way. He's really owned things on another level." There might be even more talent and tenacity on DeBoer's defense in 2025. Two fifth-year starters, linebacker Deontae Lawson and defensive tackle Tim Keenan, are geared up to boost the targeting takeaway total from 2024 when Alabama ranked fifth in the nation with 2.1 takeaways per game. DeBoer expects to take the field with a total of 17 seniors on the roster -- up from eight last season -- but underscored their importance in maintaining continuity after a year of mass introductions in 2024. He presented Lawson, returning from a season-ending knee injury in November, as the case in point. "Probably thought a year ago at this time he'd be wearing an NFL jersey. Circumstances as they may be, just coming back from an injury, seeing him attack it, seeing him and his mindset ... understanding the circumstances he can't control and what he can," DeBoer said. "Man, it's just amazing seeing him take over not just the defense but be a leader on our football team. "I walked into a meeting looking for a coach actually. I walked in. It was (Lawson) holding a meeting with the linebackers. Listened for about 30 seconds. I knew that meeting was in a good position. Coaching it like a coach. When you have guys on the field that are like him -- understand the depth, the details -- you know you're headed in the right direction and have a chance." --Field Level Media

Kalen DeBoer, Crimson Tide count on continuity in 2025

Kalen DeBoer, Crimson Tide count on continuity in 2025 Kalen DeBoer begins his second season at Alabama with a tone-setting theme common fro...
College sports leaders shouldn't get too excited about Trump NIL executive orderNew Foto - College sports leaders shouldn't get too excited about Trump NIL executive order

It's not a great sign forPresident Trump's potential involvement in college sports whenpeople who work in college sports are caught off-guardafter word ofa forthcoming executive order leaks out of the White House. And yet that was the case Wednesday after CBS reported the night before that Trump intended to sign one "establishing national standards for the NCAA's Name, Image and Likeness program" in the coming days. What does that mean exactly? People who are generally informed on the interplay between college sports and the federal government didn't seem to know an executive order was imminent or what exactly would be in it – even folks with a direct line to Trump and who have engaged with about potential federal action that would bail college sports out of its current dysfunction. So now we wait. For something – or maybe nothing. With the Trump Administration, you can never quite tell. What we do know, however, is that the White House has, in fact, been working onsomethingin the form of a likely executive order since Trump met with formerAlabamacoach Nick Saban at the school's graduation ceremony in May. Regardless of what's ultimately in it, however, coaches and administrators should resist the temptation to get excited about the possibility of Trump saving the day for a few simple, but important reasons. An executive order isn't a law. College sports and the NCAA do not operate under the purview of the executive branch of the federal government, thus any executive order compelling them to do anything would be legally questionable at best. And finally, any so-called "fix" for college sports made with the stroke of one man's pen can be undone by the next one who occupies that office. UNWANTED TALK:Nick Saban rumor is last thing Alabama needs Sorry, college sports executives. You're going to have to actually do the work on this one. We know that's not easy, which makes the temptation to rely on Trump more tempting. It's been nearly six years since the NCAA pivoted toward begging Congress for relief from its never-ending string of lawsuits, and so far they've gotten no reward for their effort. Unless, of course, you consider it a reward to be dragged into more committee hearings to answer ridiculous, superficial questions from legislators who know as much about college sports as they do about the Finnish language. Oh sure,there's another bill on the way. And this one apparently has bipartisan support in the House. But then there's the Senate, where the top Democrat on the Senate Commerce Committee, Sen. Maria Cantwell, D-Wash., last week called it "the National Championship of all heists" because it is too favorable to the NCAA's interests. Remember, any bill must get 60 votes due to filibuster rules in the Senate, which means a minimum of seven Democrats will need to sign off on it. That's not going to be easy, especially if it puts hard caps on how much college athletes can earn and eliminates the potential to bargain collectively for their rights in the future. Purely from a political standpoint, I'm not sure why Senate Democrats would cooperate at all here. If a bill finally passes that fixes some issues with the NCAA, they won't get credit – because Trump will take it. And he'll play it to the hilt, which doesn't seem particularly helpful to their electoral goals heading into the midterms next year. That's just how stuff works in Washington, and both parties play that game on issues far more serious and important than the NCAA's ability to regulate the transfer portal. It's part of why the NCAA's "let Congress fix our mess" strategy has been a complete failure thus far and may never pay off. At the end of the day, there's a lot more upside for Congress to use college sports as a political plaything than to make a law that will only impact a relatively small number of people and isn't an urgent matter of national interest. But a "let Trump fix it" strategy could be worse, particularly right now as institutions are scrambling to implement terms of the House vs. NCAA settlement that allow athletic departments to pay their athletes directly. At the moment, the House settlement and the College Sports Commission – a regulatory body created by the power conferences to enforce the settlement rules – hold the key to how college sports will operate over the next several years. Will the CSC get sued by athletes and booster collectives whose deals get denied because they aren't considered true NIL? Of course, but they already knew that. Unless Congress quickly grants college sports some type of antitrust exemption, the CSC will have to go in front of a judge and show that it follows the law to continue having regulatory power over college athletes' paychecks. That's really the only issue worth talking about right now, regardless of what Trump may write in an executive order. And what can he possibly do anyway? Maybe he can decree that college athletes can't be made employees through some type of National Labor Relations Board policy -- but they already aren't. So unless the NCAA is going to become a federal agency, where the president would have significant legal authority to regulate it, anything in an executive order is mostly going to be performative. And anything that touches actual NCAA business like the transfer portal or limiting how athletes earn money stands on far shakier legal ground than the guardrails that were already installed through the House settlement. Regardless of which direction a president wants to take college sports – any president, for the record – the fundamental problem will not change no matter who's in the office or how many executive orders they write. By refusing to engage in a true collective bargaining effort that mimics the relationship between the NFL/NBA/NHL/MLB and their respective players associations, the college sports industry left itself in a vulnerable position where any attempt to enforce its rules will face legal scrutiny. For better or worse, that's the American Way. And at this point, the focus of college sports should be long-term stability through the appropriate legal and legislative means instead of a flimsy proclamation. Colleges need to be especially careful right now. We've seen how the Trump Administration strongarms schools it has ideological disagreements with: Withholding federal grants, deporting international students, pressuring university presidents to resign. His involvement in college sports issues on behalf of the NCAA's immediate interests is going to inevitably create the appearance of long-term leverage. As frustrated as college sports executives might be with Jeffrey Kessler and other sports attorneys who keep them in court, creating space for tussles with this White House might not be the best tradeoff. Keep all that in mind when Trump issues his mysterious executive order. Because at the end of the day, only the people in charge of college sports can truly save it – no matter how much a president is itching to claim credit for doing so. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Donald Trump NIL executive order shouldn't excited college leaders

College sports leaders shouldn't get too excited about Trump NIL executive order

College sports leaders shouldn't get too excited about Trump NIL executive order It's not a great sign forPresident Trump's pote...
Ghislaine Maxwell's family appeals to Trump amid battle over Epstein filesNew Foto - Ghislaine Maxwell's family appeals to Trump amid battle over Epstein files

Amid an explosive fight on Capitol Hill over whether theTrump administrationshould release records related to Jeffrey Epstein, the family of the disgraced financier's convicted right-hand woman is saying she "did not receive a fair trial." Ghislaine Maxwell, 63, was sentenced to 20 years in prison in 2022 forrecruiting and grooming teenage girlsfor Epstein to sexually abuse, several years after he died in jail awaiting trial on federal sex trafficking charges. She is being held in federal prison in Florida and has filed a petition with the Supreme Court to vacate her 2021 conviction. "Her legal team continues to fight her case in the Courts and will file its reply in short order to the Government's opposition in the US Supreme Court," Maxwell's siblingssaid in a statementreleased Tuesday on a website dedicated to her case. The family's defense of Maxwell comes amid a recent politically charged fight over the release of documents in Epstein's case. Maxwell's attorney, David Oscar Markus, said in the statement that he would be "surprised if President Trump knew his lawyers were asking the Supreme Court to let the government break a deal," referring to a 2007 agreement with federal prosecutors in Florida. "He's the ultimate dealmaker — and I'm sure he'd agree that when the United States gives its word, it should keep it," Markus added. "With all the talk about who's being prosecuted and who isn't, it's especially unfair that Ghislaine Maxwell remains in prison based on a promise the US government made and broke." The family, who said they "profoundly concur" with Markus' statement, added that Maxwell's legal team might file a writ of habeas corpus in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, which — if it were granted — would allow Maxwell to appear before a judge to determine whether her detention is lawful. The Justice Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Maxwell, who pleaded not guilty to all charges, petitioned the Supreme Court in April to scrap her conviction. Her legal team argued that Epstein's non-prosecution and plea agreement with the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of Florida in 2008 protected Maxwell from future prosecution. "Despite the existence of a non-prosecution agreement promising in plain language that the United States would not prosecute any co-conspirator of Jeffrey Epstein, the United States in fact prosecuted Ghislaine Maxwell as a co-conspirator of Jeffrey Epstein," her attorneys wrote in the petition. Lower courts have rejected Maxwell's attorneys' arguments, and on Monday, the Justice Department urged the Supreme Court to follow suit. The Justice Department argued that the non-prosecution agreement in Florida does not protect Maxwell or other co-conspirators from being prosecuted in other jurisdictions around the country. Maxwell was prosecuted on different charges by federal officials in Manhattan. "The NPA's coconspirators clause, which 'also agrees' to forgo certain prosecution of coconspirators, cannot reasonably be construed as reflecting some 'global' scope broader than the Florida-based state and federal charges that Epstein resolved for himself," the brief says. "It would be extremely strange if the NPA left Epstein himself open to federal prosecution in another district — as eventually occurred — while protecting his coconspirators from prosecution anywhere." The Florida agreement was in a different jurisdiction, and it pertained to charges other than those Epstein ultimately faced in New York. As Maxwell continues to fight to appeal her New York conviction, a battle is brewing within the Republican Party over whether the Trump administration should release further information about its case against Epstein. The case ended after he was found dead in a New York City jail cell in 2019. A medical examiner's office ruled he died by suicide. For years, the nature of Epstein's death, his high-profile contacts and the graphic details of his alleged crimes have fueledconspiracy theoriesand demands that the government release all it knows about the case. Trump helped fuel these theories in the past, saying during his most recent presidential campaign that he would have "no problem" looking into an Epstein client list. The Justice Department, however, said last week it would not release anyadditional files "Epstein files." In a two-page memo, Attorney General Pam Bondi disputed the existence of a "client list" of powerful people who participated in Epstein's crimes. The memo said there was no "credible evidence found that Epstein blackmailed prominent individuals." The development prompted outrage among some Republican lawmakers and prominent right-wing media figures, including Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., and former Fox News anchor Tucker Carlson. Part of the outrage stems from Bondi's past comments that shehad a "client list" related to Epstein sitting on her desk. House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., said in aninterview with conservative commentator Benny Johnsonon Tuesday that Bondi should come forward and explain why she declined to do so. Republicans have also been calling for Maxwell to appear and testify before Congress, which Johnson suggested he was in favor of. "I'm for transparency," he said. "It's a very delicate subject, but we should put everything out there and let the people decide." After years of promising to release the files,Trump has recently pushed back against Republican criticismand sought to downplay the significance of the documents. On Wednesday, he called the fanfare around the documents a "scam" and "bulls---." (Trump knew Epstein but later had a falling-out with him. No evidence has surfaced to suggest Trump was involved in Epstein's criminal activity.) "I have had more success in 6 months than perhaps any President in our Country's history, and all these people want to talk about, with strong prodding by the Fake News and the success starved Dems, is the Jeffrey Epstein Hoax," Trump on his social media site, Truth Social. "Let these weaklings continue forward and do the Democrats work, don't even think about talking of our incredible and unprecedented success, because I don't want their support anymore!" he added.

Ghislaine Maxwell's family appeals to Trump amid battle over Epstein files

Ghislaine Maxwell's family appeals to Trump amid battle over Epstein files Amid an explosive fight on Capitol Hill over whether theTrump...

 

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