Wisconsin elections officials find clerk broke laws over uncounted ballotsNew Foto - Wisconsin elections officials find clerk broke laws over uncounted ballots

MADISON, Wis . (AP) — Wisconsin elections officials declared Thursday that the former clerk of the state's capital citybroke several lawsrelated to not counting nearly 200 absentee ballots in the November presidential election, but they stopped short of recommending criminal charges be brought. The bipartisan Wisconsin Elections Commission voted 5-1 to accept a report finding that the former Madison clerk broke five election laws. The commission delayed a vote on ordering the city of Madison to take additional steps to improve election security. No outcome of any race was affected by the missing ballots. Maribeth Witzel-Behlresignedas Madison city clerk in April amid investigations into the missing ballots. The investigation was not a criminal probe and the elections commission does not have the power to bring charges. The report does not recommend that prosecutors do so. There is no intention to refer the case to prosecutors for possible charges, commission chair Ann Jacobs said after the meeting. The goal of the probe was to find out what happened and stop it from happening again, she added. Charges could be brought by the Dane County attorney's office or the state Department of Justice. Dane County District Attorney Ismael Ozanne said his office would review the case if it received a referral. DOJ spokesperson Riley Vetterkind did not immediately respond to an email seeking comment. Commissioners said they were shocked at how the Madison clerk handled the missing ballots. The investigation determined that two bags of uncounted absentee ballots likely never made it to the poll sites where they should have been counted. The clerk's office did not notify the elections commission of the oversight until Dec. 18, almost a month and a half after the election and well after results were certified on Nov. 29. Jacobs, a Democrat, called the incident a "rather shocking dereliction of just ordinary responsibility." Republican Commissioner Bob Spindell, who cast the lone vote against accepting the report, said he blamed the problem on an extremely complicated system in the clerk's office and poor management. "It's not something I think the clerk should be crucified for," he said. The elections commission report concluded that the former clerk broke state law for failing to properly supervise an election; not providing the most recent current registration information for pollbooks in two wards; improperly handing the return of absentee ballots; not properly canvassing the returns as it pertained to the 193 uncounted ballots; and failing to provide sufficient information for the municipal board of canvassers to do its work. The report blamed a "confluence of errors" and said that Madison did not have procedures in place to track the number of absentee ballots going to a polling place. It also said there was a "complete lack of leadership" in the clerk's office. "These are mistakes that could have been avoided," said Republican commissioner Don Millis. Madison city attorney and interim clerk Michael Haas said the city did not contest the findings of the report. "The most important asset we have is the trust of the voters and that requires complete transparency and open coordination with partners when mistakes happen," Haas said in testimony submitted to the commission. "That did not happen in this case." Madison has already implemented numerous safeguards and procedures that were in place for elections earlier this year to ensure that all eligible absentee ballots are accounted for, Haas said. The recommendations in the report for further actions exceed what is required under state law and are not within the authority of the commission to order, Hass testified. He urged the commission to delay a vote. The commission voted unanimously to give Madison until Aug. 7 to respond before voting a week later on whether to order additional steps to be taken. Four voters whose ballots weren't counted havefiled claimsfor $175,000 each, the first step toward a class-action lawsuit. Their attorney attended Thursday's hearing but did not testify.

Wisconsin elections officials find clerk broke laws over uncounted ballots

Wisconsin elections officials find clerk broke laws over uncounted ballots MADISON, Wis . (AP) — Wisconsin elections officials declared Thur...
Andy Beshear, a Democratic governor of a deep-red state, tests a 2028 messageNew Foto - Andy Beshear, a Democratic governor of a deep-red state, tests a 2028 message

GREENVILLE, S.C. — In an early preview of a potential 2028 presidential campaign, Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear hit the road across South Carolina this week, testing a message focused on how to grow the Democratic coalition. "The actions of the Trump administration are providing a huge opportunity for Democrats to go out and regain the trust of the American people to be the party of common sense, common ground and getting things done," Beshear, 47, told union members gathered at the South Carolina AFL-CIO convention in Greenville on Wednesday. "When we deliver and make people's lives better, they're willing to vote in different ways. They're willing to support different people, and that's where we've got to be," the Kentucky governor, who is serving his second term in a deep-red state, added. Throughout his remarks to voters in Greenville and at small gatherings of local Democratic officials from Columbia to Charleston, Beshear laid out a blueprint for Democrats to win back rural voters, union voters, independent voters and even Republicans — music to the ears of Democratic voters still feeling the sting of 2024's losses and eager to hear about how the party can rise again. Though he insisted that his travel to South Carolina came about partly because of his son's baseball tournament near Charleston, Beshear hasn't been coy about his presidential aspirations before arriving in the state that voted first in last year's Democratic presidential primaries. And his pitch sounded very much like something he could sell to voters selecting the party's next national leader in a few years' time. In an interview with NBC News' "Meet the Press" just days before he arrived in South Carolina, Beshear said he would "take a look" at launching a presidential campaign in 2028. He's at least the fourth Democratic elected official to publicly visit the state this year, arriving just a week after California Gov. Gavin Newsom and several weeks after Govs. Wes Moore of Maryland and Tim Walz of Minnesota. Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., also has an event planned in the state later this week. At stop after stop, Beshear notes that he knows how to win voters in traditionally Republican areas. After all, he's done it twice in two runs for governor. The first time was in 2019, when he won his first gubernatorial electionby less than half a percentage point, beating incumbent GOP Gov. Matt Bevin. (Beshear was also elected state attorney general in a close race four years prior.) Then, in 2023, Beshear improved his margins, beating then-state Attorney General Daniel Cameron, a Republican,by five percentage points. Meanwhile, President Donald Trump won Kentuckyby almost 26 percentage pointsin 2020 andby over 30 percentage pointsin 2024. "We have a huge opportunity right now. Donald Trump is tearing apart our democratic norms," Beshear told union members at the Greenville event. "He's gutting the social safety net. He's weaponizing our national guards. He's fraying our international alliances, and he is decimating our intelligence community and our public health expertise." All of that, Beshear explained, makes it a prime opportunity for Democrats to "win back voters who have been increasingly skeptical of that Democratic brand. But it's going to take focus, and it's going to take discipline. We've got to talk to people and not at them, and we have to explain our why." That last piece — "explain our why" — was Beshear's main task for Democrats across the state. "The Democrats are real good at the 'what,'" Beshear told Democratic strategists and elected officials gathered Wednesday in Columbia. "I mean, our policy positions are 10 times longer than anybody else's." "But what we rarely talk about is why we're for that policy," the governor added. "For me, my 'why' is my faith. I'm guided by the golden rule that says I love my neighbor as myself and the parable of The Good Samaritan that says, 'Everyone is my neighbor.' And when you explain your 'why,' even when you make tough decisions, even in states like mine and yours, it creates the grace and the space for people to disagree." The governor, in Greenville, added, "this is how I won areas in eastern Kentucky — Appalachia — that normally vote for Republicans by large margins." Beshear's cross-party appeal in a deep-red state is attractive to South Carolina Democrats, who work under Republican supermajorities in the state House and Senate and haven't controlled the governor's mansion since former Gov. Jim Hodges finished his tenure in 2003. "One thing I like about Gov. Beshear, especially for this state, is that track record of being able to appeal to the everyday person across party lines," state Sen. Tameika Isaac Devine told NBC News. "I think we're going to have to have somebody who can not only excite people but actually has a track record of getting elected and getting stuff done." At the Columbia event, Hodges introduced Beshear, telling the assembled Democrats to laughter and applause that, "One of the reasons we want him here today is … to talk about something that I think we lose sight of sometimes as Democrats, and that's winning. Hodges added that he was asked, "If a certain governor would consider running for president, what would be the most important attribute that he might bring to the table?" "And I said, 'Well, he knows how to win.' That's a great place to start," the former governor said. The governor used his events, which included several meet-and-greets with local Democratic leaders and elected officials, to offer his party a way to move forward through the second Trump term and into a post-Trump era. "We've got to be more than just against someone. We've got to be for something, and that overall 'something' has to be a better life for the American people," Beshear told NBC News in an interview in Greenville. Later, during the Columbia meet-and-greet event, Jeremy Jones, the chair of Young Democrats of Central Midlands, told NBC News that he's "been an Andy fan for a long time." Asked to describe what he hopes to see in a potential future Democratic presidential nominee, Jones said, "Someone who is a good leader, very aggressive, knows how to fight back and be unapologetically Democrat, even if it's not popular." Minutes later, Beshear, in a brief speech to attendees, said, "We've got to speak out, even in places where we might be in the super-minority. We've got to be unapologetically the Democrats that we are. And we have to show people that when you elect us, we lift up Democrats, Republicans and independents." After facing steep losses in the 2024 presidential election, prominent Democratic officials started pointing fingers, blaming Democrats' problems on the insistence that supporters use inclusive language or on the aging party officials who refused to step aside. Sen. Elissa Slotkin, D-Mich.,told POLITICOthat instead of the term "oligarchy," Democrats should rail against "kings." And former Democratic National Committee Vice Chair David Hoggearned a rebukefrom DNC Chair Ken Martin after he announced his plans to boost primary challengers against aging Democratic elected officials. On Wednesday, during the event in Columbia, Beshear appeared to take Slotkin's side on the language argument, "Every Kentuckian, including myself, knows about a dozen people that are no longer with us. A child of God taken far too soon. I didn't lose one of my friends to substance use disorder. I lost them all to addiction." "Another example," Beshear added, invoking the massive GOP-backed domestic policy package that President Donald Trump signed earlier this month called the "One Big Beautiful Bill Act." "That big, ugly bill is not only going to gut rural health care and hit our rural economies, it's going to decrease food assistance all over this country. We're not going to be able to change and push back on that if we say it's going to increase food insecurity; what it's going to do is make people go hungry." Both comments earned nods and sounds of approval from the dozens of Democrats gathered around the room. Democrats have been grappling with questions about age and experience since before former President Joe Biden, 82, dropped out of the 2024 presidential raceamid widespread concernsabout his debate performance and whether he was up to the job. Beshear called on his party to "empower" young leaders and encouraged young Democrats to "embrace" leadership positions. "For me, I hate this phrase 'young leader' because, if you're leading, you're already a leader, and making sure that we don't have pejorative terms for those that we ought to be lifting up and listening to," the governor told NBC News. Beshear will chair the Democratic Governors Association in the 2026 midterm elections, helping direct attention, votes and money to 36 gubernatorial races across the nation. In an interview, he said that he plans to use his position to express his fierce opposition to the "One Big Beautiful Bill Act," which, in part, imposed massive funding cuts to Medicaid and nutritional assistance programs. "Democrats can and should get out there to make sure that we're telling the American people what this bill is going to do, and who is doing it to them, because the midterms could be a strong rebuke to ripping health care away from so many people, to firing so many health care workers, and hopefully give us the opportunity to undo a lot of this damage," Beshear said. Longer term, the governor said, he hopes that his call for Democrats to focus on the issues most important to American families will appeal to voters on both sides of the aisle. "I want to move — to the degree my voice can help this country — just past the constant 'R versus D' and even, and even past, maybe the term bipartisan to nonpartisan," Beshear said in an interview. "Because a lot of these things — creating new jobs, improving roads and bridges — they're not red or blue and, and they lift everybody up." Beshear even credited his state's two Republican senators for, at times, "doing the right thing." "If we're going to get to that place where we treat issues that shouldn't be partisan as nonpartisan, then we've got to be willing not only to work together, but to give credit where credit's due when somebody does the right thing," he said. "[GOP Sens.] Rand Paul and Mitch McConnell are against tariffs. That's a good thing." In Charleston on Thursday morning, his message seemed to please some attendees. "I think he made a really good point, which is his 'why,' is his faith, he treats everybody the same. He used the parable of The Good Samaritan," Towner Magill, 37, told NBC News after hearing Beshear speak at a meet-and-greet event. "I'm sort of tired of seeing people on the Democratic side vilifying people on the right, whether we have disagreements or not." "We're not getting together with community members anymore," Magill added. "I want somebody at the top who is going to make that easier, the climate and this country easier."

Andy Beshear, a Democratic governor of a deep-red state, tests a 2028 message

Andy Beshear, a Democratic governor of a deep-red state, tests a 2028 message GREENVILLE, S.C. — In an early preview of a potential 2028 pre...
Does the Suns' failed Big 3 experiment mark the end of the NBA's superteam era?New Foto - Does the Suns' failed Big 3 experiment mark the end of the NBA's superteam era?

The Phoenix Suns on Wednesday waived andstretchedthe two years and $110 million remaining on three-time All-Star guard Bradley Beal's contract, punctuating the end of a failed "Big Three" experiment. The question, then: Is this also the end of the era in which teams try to collect three max-salaried stars? The Suns swung for the fences in 2023, acquiring future Hall of Famer Kevin Durant from the Brooklyn Nets at the trade deadline, and then dealing for Beal from the Washington Wizards over that summer. It cost them just about all of the depth from their roster and the rights to every one of their draft picks. Durant, Beal and Devin Booker combined to make $150 million last season, when the NBA's salary cap was set at $140 million. That pushed the Suns up against the cap's second apron, which restricts a team's ability to do almost everything, impacting its flexibility on the draft, free-agency and trade markets. In other words: It was awfully hard for Phoenix to construct a capable roster around its three stars, something to which the Nets could relate when they boasted Durant, James Harden and Kyrie Irving. Beal's Suns did not win a single playoff game, getting swept in the first round of their only appearance. That was not the case for the Miami Heat in the early 2010s, when they collected LeBron James, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh and required little additional help to contend for championships. Yes, they needed help to actuallywinchampionships, but this was also 15 years ago, when the second apron did not exist, and James, Wade and Bosh were making $45 million combined. It was easier to build a capable rotation. The league was not as deep as it is now, either. Look at the teams that are winning titles now. The Oklahoma City Thunder were easily the deepest team in the NBA this past season, as were the Boston Celtics in 2024. Neither team had any holes in its eight-man rotation, let alone in the starting lineup. That proved too costly for the Celtics. They are built around two stars, Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown, who over the previous two years each signed a maximum contract north of $300 million. Jrue Holiday and Kristaps Porziņģis were also making more than $30 million annually, and that took them above the second apron — to a projected $500 million payroll —so they parted with both Holiday and Porziņģis. As Celtics executive Brad Stevens said this summer, "I think the second apron basketball penalties are real, and I'm not sure I understood how real until they were staring me in the face in the last month." The Celtics retained Derrick White, who is on one of the best value contracts in the NBA, and he will form their Big Three, along with Tatum and Brown. This is probably closer to what we will see in terms of team-building practices in the future: Two highly paid superstars, surrounded by value everywhere else. In Oklahoma City, the Thunder have developed three max-salaried stars. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, the NBA's reigning regular-season and Finals MVP, just signed a four-year, $285 million supermax extension. Jalen Williams and Chet Holmgren, both drafted in 2022, also signed rookie-scale max extensions in July. The Thunder are about as good of a Big Three scenario as anyone could imagine. They have the literal MVP on the roster, plus a pair of players who developed into All-Star-caliber talents on their rookie contracts. (Important to note here: Not all max contracts are created equal. Gilgeous-Alexander will make 35% of the salary cap, which is the highest possible allocation. The younger Williams and Holmgren are each slotted to make 25%, though that could increase to 30% for Williams if he meets certain qualifications next season.) Still, the Thunder will feel the crunch of the second apron as soon as the 2026-27 season, when Gilgeous-Alexander, Williams and Holmgren are scheduled to make a combined $123.5 million. This will likely cost them some of their existing depth, possibly including Lu Dort and Isaiah Hartenstein, among others who are owed raises. OKC will attempt to replace them with an influx of draft picks over the next few years. If even the best-laid plans require a team to nail each one of its draft picks in order to keep open a championship window around three stars, then what hope did the Suns have? Remember: They had to dispatch of depth and draft picks just to acquire three stars, some of whose skill sets overlapped. They had no path to add additional talent, other than minimum contracts, and that was an exercise in futility. Gone, then, we have to imagine, are the hastily assembled Big Threes. Even if you already have one max-salaried superstar on the roster, the cost to trade for two more is too prohibitive to building a contender. Maybe some team will figure out a way to sign three max-salaried players into salary cap space (though that is impossible if all three are making 35% of the salary cap), as the Heat did in the summer of 2010, maintaining some flexibility to construct a championship-caliber roster around them. After all, the Suns were not an ideally built superteam. There was too much overlap in what Booker, Durant and Beal brought to the table. A chance will come for another team to form a better-constructed trio, and a general manager will leap at it. The opportunity is too enticing. But the needle a team must thread in order to build around three high-priced stars — nailing every pick and signing possible — is so narrow, and the window so short, that a two-superstar model is the safer bet in the second apron era.

Does the Suns' failed Big 3 experiment mark the end of the NBA's superteam era?

Does the Suns' failed Big 3 experiment mark the end of the NBA's superteam era? The Phoenix Suns on Wednesday waived andstretchedthe...
What Simone Biles said backstage after winning 2 ESPYSNew Foto - What Simone Biles said backstage after winning 2 ESPYS

The hottest summer event in the sports world wasn't on a pitch or inside a stadium, it was at The Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles Wednesday night, where the best athletes and entertainers gathered to celebrate the top moments in sports at The 2025 ESPYS. Comedian, actor and writer Shane Gillis delivered a sharp opening monologue as host, taking shots at the star-studded crowd and poking fun at everyone from Aaron Rodgers and Bill Belichick to Simone Biles and Shohei Ohtani. Despite a quip that likened Biles to a leprechaun for all her Olympic gold medals, the 28-year-old gymnast won even more hardware Wednesday night to add to her collection of accolades. Biles took home two ESPYS on the night: best championship performance for herall-around winat the Paris Olympics and best athlete - women's sports. "It was very unexpected tonight, because the athletes in this room are absolutely phenomenal, and they're raising the bar each and every year," Biles told "Good Morning America" backstage. Biles told "GMA" later that despite performing on the largest global stages regularly as a gymnast, accepting an award onstage "is so nerve-racking." "It's definitely not like performing. I'd rather do a million beam routines in a row than to be up there and giving a speech," she said. Elsewhere on Wednesday night, Oklahoma City Thunder star Shai Gilgeous-Alexander was named best athlete - men's sports following an amazing NBA season that concluded with an NBA Championship and MVP title. "I want to thank the Thunder organization for allowing me to be me, be a basketball player and make my dreams come true," he said in his acceptance speech. The Super Bowl LIX championPhiladelphia Eaglesalso won best team at the awards ceremony for their decisive victory over the Kansas City Chiefs earlier this year, stopping the repeat Super Bowl champs from a three-peat. All night, women's sports were firmly in the spotlight with an array of longtime legends and up-and-comers alike. Team USA rugby starIlona Mahertook home the award for best breakthrough athlete and used the moment to reiterate her goal of empowering women. "My message stays the same: Strong is beautiful, strong is powerful. It's sexy. It's whatever you want it to be," Maher said in her acceptance speech. "I hope more girls can feel how I feel." Maher told "GMA" that the best moment for her has been "when girls come up to me and say I've changed them -- they look up to me." "I think that's the reason I do it and why I'm going to keep doing it," she continued. "That hopefully I'm changing their lives and helping them." WNBA legend Diana Taurasi and retired Olympic soccer star and World Cup Champion Alex Morgan were both honored with the Icon Award, giving each other their proverbial flowers by hailing the others' success and athletic ability. US women's soccer legend Alex Morgan announces retirement, pregnancy "Alex was always the player that you knew was gonna come up clutch. And I would always watch and say, 'I just wanna be like that. I wanna be Alex," Taurasi said onstage. "I think being called clutch is pretty awesome, but for Di, I feel like just the longevity of her career is what's so inspiring -- like the fact that she was on the top for 20 years, grinding every day, gold medal after gold medal, championship, All-Star, MVP," Morgan said in her acceptance speech. Once backstage, Taurasi told "GMA" that getting this recognition from peers and fans feels "amazing," adding that "we get to do something again in a team way -- that's what our careers were built on." "And to go up there together, to me I thought that was really cool and special [rather] than going up there alone," she said of sharing the moment with Morgan. Tennis star Sloane Stephens was honored with the Muhammad Ali Sports Humanitarian of the Year Award, telling "GMA" that "the real work is done all behind the scenes, and it's done when nobody knows, nobody's talking about it." "For the last 12 years of the Sloane Stephens Foundation, we've just been doing the work, put our heads down and trying to help as many kids and families as we possibly can," she said, referencing her namesake nonprofit organization, which aims to use "tennis and education to change the narrative of poverty, health inequity, and educational underdevelopment," according to its website. "It's even more impactful when you're doing it and nobody knows." Biles' teammate and one of the most decorated female gymnasts, Suni Lee, whoovercame an unspecified kidney diseaseand returned to the Olympic podium at the summer games in Paris, won best comeback athlete on Wednesday night. Backstage after the big moment, she spoke to "GMA" about the state and future of women's sports. "I think that we are at an all time high, and it's so amazing to see," she said. "It can always get better from here, but it's just so amazing to see and for everybody to be engaged and actually care about women's sports." Every year, the ESPYS are an emotional celebration of sports heroes outside traditional sports venues and places of competition. Cancer survivor and Penn State women's volleyball coach Katie Schumacher-Cawley was honored with this year's Jimmy V Award for Perseverance. "Cancer changed my life, but it didn't take it. It didn't take my belief, it didn't take my spirit, and didn't take my team," the 45-year-old and two-time All-American said. The Arthur Ashe Award for Courage, meanwhile, was presented to NBA luminary Oscar Robertson, the famed guard better known as "The Big O." "I accept the Arthur Ashe Award for Courage, humbled by the many past recipients and the choices to demand fairness and perseverance persevere through adversity," he said in his acceptance speech. The Pat Tillman Award for Service went to Los Angeles County firefighters David Walters and Erin Regan, who were among theheroes and first responderswho risked their lives to battle the brutal infernos that devastated the Southern California city earlier this year. Regan, a former soccer player herself, shared a poignant message in her acceptance speech. "We have this saying for this succession of responsibility in the fire service, and it gives me great honor to speak it to Pat Tillman, tonight: 'Rest easy, brother, we'll take it from here,'" she said. Rishin Tandon, Maegha Ramanathan and Ian Waite, the winners of the Billie Jean King Youth Leadership Award, joined King herself to take in the special moment with "GMA." "Each and every one of them are amazing people -- and each and every one of them have done miraculous things already and they're just getting started," King said backstage, referring to the three young winners. The trailblazing tennis icon and champion of women's sports also shouted out "GMA" anchor Robin Roberts, calling Roberts "a big part of it," and adding, "Thank you for being such a great role model for all of us, and I love you very much as a friend." Clickhereto see the full list of winners from the 2025 ESPYS.

What Simone Biles said backstage after winning 2 ESPYS

What Simone Biles said backstage after winning 2 ESPYS The hottest summer event in the sports world wasn't on a pitch or inside a stadiu...
Senate approves cuts to public broadcasting, foreign aidNew Foto - Senate approves cuts to public broadcasting, foreign aid

WASHINGTON − Republicans in Congress are one step closer to officiallytrimming $9 billionin federal funds from public broadcasting, global health initiatives and other foreign aid programs. The Senate narrowly approved aspending cuts packagein the early morning hours of July 17, following more than 12 hours of debate andmarathon series' of votes. Two Republican senators − Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Susan Collins of Maine − voted against the measure. The legislation, formally requested by PresidentDonald Trumpin early June, represents a sliver of the nearly $200 billion in government savings the Department of Government Efficiency reports it has made. Once approved by the House and signed by Trump, the measure would strip billions in allocations from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, which funds NPR and PBS, and foreign aid agencies including the World Health Organization and the U.S. Agency for International Development. Elmo and AIDS prevention:What is Congress targeting in their spending cuts? Trump's request officially expires at midnight on July 18. Now that the Senate has signed off, the bill returns to the House, where lawmakers must approve the upper chamber's changes. Some Republican senators, including Collins, had criticized proposed cuts included in the House's original version of the bill that would have rescinded funds meant for global AIDS prevention. The $400 million cut to AIDS prevention was removed by the Senate during the hours-long deliberation process ahead of the final vote. Fiscal conservatives in the lower chamber have previously complained about the prospect of voting on a diluted legislation package. Still, the House is expected to pass the Trump administration's priority spending cuts before the end-of-week deadline. "There are things in there I would've preferred not to cut," Chair of the House Appropriations Committee Tom Cole, R-Oklahoma, told reporters July 16, ahead of the Senate's vote. He declined to specify which items he was referencing. "But, you know, I understand ... You're going to end up having to cut some things you don't want to cut. That's just the nature of it," he added. "Every decision can't be one that makes you happy." Cole said he will "be happy to vote for whatever the Senate sends back over." This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:PBS, NPR, foreign aid targeted in Senate passed spending cuts

Senate approves cuts to public broadcasting, foreign aid

Senate approves cuts to public broadcasting, foreign aid WASHINGTON − Republicans in Congress are one step closer to officiallytrimming $9 b...
US auto safety agency shedding more than 25% of employeesNew Foto - US auto safety agency shedding more than 25% of employees

By David Shepardson WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The U.S. auto safety agency is shedding more than 25% of its employees under financial incentive programs to depart the government offered by the Trump administration, according to data provided to Congress seen by Reuters. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, part of the Transportation Department, is shrinking from 772 employees as of May 31 to 555 under the program. The Federal Highway Administration and Federal Transit Administration are also both losing more than 25% of their staff. Representative Rick Larsen, top Democrat on the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, expressed concerns about the cuts, questioning how USDOT can "expedite project delivery and advance safety with a decimated workforce." Overall, USDOT is losing just over 4,100 employees dropping from nearly 57,000 to 52,862, with the Federal Aviation Administration shedding 2,137 and falling from about 46,250 to 44,208. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said Wednesday that the department did not cut any safety-critical employees and is actively seeking to add air traffic controllers. USDOT and NHTSA did not immediately comment. It is unclear if the Transportation Department still plans to conduct a layoff program on top of the early retirement departures. NHTSA has a number of ongoing investigations into advanced driver assistance systems and self-driving vehicles involving Tesla, Alphabet's Waymo and other companies. Consumer advocacy groups on Thursday urged lawmakers to drop proposed cuts to NHTSA's budget, including cutting its operations and research account by over $10 million "harming the agency's ability to conduct rulemaking, enforcement actions, and research and analysis." It would also cut nearly $78 million of supplemental funds from the $1 billion 2021 infrastructure law. Groups said they were "particularly concerned that such funding cuts may lead to further firings or forced retirements, which have decimated NHTSA." (Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama and Aurora Ellis)

US auto safety agency shedding more than 25% of employees

US auto safety agency shedding more than 25% of employees By David Shepardson WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The U.S. auto safety agency is shedding ...
MLB power rankings: Red Sox on 10-game win streak as post-Devers roll continuesNew Foto - MLB power rankings: Red Sox on 10-game win streak as post-Devers roll continues

The team that made one of the strangest early-season moves in recent baseball history is roaring into the second half hotter than anybody. TheBoston Red Sox, whotraded $313 million slugger Rafael Deversin mid-June, will take a 10-game winning streak into the second half, climbing within a game of the New York Yankees and lurking within striking distance of the first-placeToronto Blue Jaysin a once-again rugged American League East. And they've zoomed up six more spots to 10th in USA TODAY Sports' power rankings. Boston is coming off a four-game sweep of Tampa Bay and opens the second half with a showdown at Wrigley Field against the Cubs. A pitching staff once strafed by injury and poor performance now has two right-handers, Lucas Giolito and Brayan Bello, performing like reliable near-aces. Its lineup, bereft of Devers, has benefited from the quiet and focused rise ofsuper rookie Roman Anthony, the recent activation of All-Star Alex Bregman and the star turn of center fielder Ceddanne Rafaela. Over his last 21 games, Rafaela has batted .347 with a 1.152 OPS, 10 doubles and eight home runs. Little wonder Boston has won 11 of 12 in July - and is continuing to rise as the trade deadline comes into sight. A look at our updated rankings: From a roar to a whimper as they're swept to end the first half. They take a series at Yankee Stadium to barely keep control of NL Central. Shohei Ohtani is up to three innings a start, and looking better every time out. Fromred-hotto dropping five of six. An ascendant farm system adds perhaps the best prep shortstop in JoJo Parker. Can't stop theJacob Misiorowskihype train. Ready for a pennant race, kid? Kyle Schwarber probably the phans' phavorite Phillie andnow he's the NL's, too. Sean Manaea and Kodai Senga will make this an entirely different team. Aaron Judge seemed strangely invisible at the All-Star Game. In addition to his offensive exploits, rookie Carlos Narvaez leads the majors with 20 runners caught stealing. A 10-game road trip to tip off the second half may yet determine their fate. TheSummer of Dumperresumes. Next stop: 40 home runs? With Matt Chapman back, Willy Adames and Rafael Devers should thrive in second half. Have they played their way into a neutral actor at the trade deadline? In a packed NL Central race, they're the "why not us?" entry. Terry Francona reaches2,000 career wins. Nearly reaching .500 by the All-Star break is a significant feat. The last days ofEugenio Suárez? Say it ain't so. Shocked the world by drafting Tyler Bremner second overall. Rob Manfred insists they'll be sold soon. Seth Lugo would be significantly attractive on the trade market. Paul Sewald hits IL again with sore shoulder. What a week for Kyle Stowers: Three-homer game vs. his old team, and a swing-off bomb. Had a chance to make sure Bryan Baker deal wasn't beginning of end. Then get swept by Miami. A nice pop for Brian Snitker during All-Star Game introductions. Paul Skenes impresses Clayton Kershaw with workout routine. All Brent Rooker does is hit bombs in All-Star Games. They should try to bring one to Yolo County. What will the franchise look like by the time17-year-old Eli Willitsgets to the bigs? Yep, even Shane Smith got into the All-Star Game - for 10 pitches. Ethan Holliday is a nice bit of hope to sell, at least for a while. 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:MLB power rankings: Red Sox roll into second half, AL East standings

MLB power rankings: Red Sox on 10-game win streak as post-Devers roll continues

MLB power rankings: Red Sox on 10-game win streak as post-Devers roll continues The team that made one of the strangest early-season moves i...

 

MARIO VOUX © 2015 | Distributed By My Blogger Themes | Designed By Templateism.com