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Entertainment

Unforgotten’s Sunny Khan star pays sweet tribute to Nicola Walker | TV&Radio | Showbiz & TV

Sanjeev Bhaskar, who plays Sunny Khan in the ITV flagship drama Unforgotten, revealed his feelings about the departure of his on-screen crime solving colleague Nicola Walker (DCI Cassie Stuart). Although the actor is excited for the new series and the new addition to the cast, I have conceded there will be a loss to the popular show.

Unforgotten series five will return to ITV screens later in the year, potentially even in 2023.

For four series, fans have loved the bond between DI Sunny Khan (Sanjeev Bhaskar) and DCI Cassie Stuart (Nicola Walker).

But, after the fatal car crash last series, the detective duo came to a tragic end.

The next series will include a fresh face, and former EastEnders star Sanjeev discussed his feelings on his colleague’s departure.

Read More: The Sandman creators explain Constantine gender-swap

Discussing the future of the crime drama, he told the Metro: “Obviously I miss Nicola in terms of working with her.”

But the stars are still in touch, with Sanjeev explaining their close friendship off screen.

He added: “But, I’ve seen her three times over the last couple of months anyway, we’re still really, really close.”

After working together for four series, the pair clearly struck up a strong bond, as their characters solved murders around London.

Sanjeev has previously discussed his reaction to the news of Nicola’s departure.

Speaking to the Radio Times, he revealed the moment he was told of the TV bombshell.

“It was a shock,” the popular actor recalled.

He continued: “When I first heard, I had a very similar reaction to when I then read it in the script, and then a similar reaction again when we filmed it, which is I felt slightly sick.

The star added: “I mean, it’s a huge thing to do and so it made sense dramatically, but yeah, it’s very upsetting actually.”

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Sports

Washington Open 2022, results, semi-finals, Nick Kyrgios def. Mikael Ymer, final, time, tennis news

Wimbledon runner-up Nick Kyrgios, seeking his first title in three years, advanced to the men’s final at the ATP and WTA Washington Open with a tight victory over Sweden’s Mikael Ymer.

Australia’s 63rd-ranked Kyrgios edged 115th-ranked Ymer 7-6 (7/4), 6-3 and will play for the crown Sunday against the later winner between top seed Andrey Rublev and Japan’s 96th-ranked Yoshihito Nishioka.

Kyrgios, who won the most recent of his six ATP titles at Washington in 2019, has a 2-1 career mark against Rublev and a 3-0 record against Nishioka.

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Nick Kyrgios celebrates victory.  (Photo by Patrick Smith/Getty Images)
Nick Kyrgios celebrates victory. (Photo by Patrick Smith/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

“I didn’t get to sleep until 4.50am, I just had so much adrenaline after (the Tiafoe win),” Kyrgios said.

“I got some treatment and my body was just so sore after last night. It was an epic battle.

“I didn’t really do much today but I felt like my energy was a little flat early on today and it’s understandable, I’m only human.

“My adrenaline for the final is going to be right there and I’m super excited for it. I’ve got doubles tonight, work on my returns a little bit. I returned pretty poorly tonight I’m not going to lie, so hopefully I can turn it up a little tonight.”

Kyrgios then backed it up to book a spot in the final doubles shortly after alongside American Jack Sock, making it two victories in the space of around five hours.

Estonia’s Kaia Kanepi, trying to end a nine-year WTA title drought at age 37, and 60th-ranked Liudmila Samsonova will meet in the women’s final at the US Open tuneup.

World number 37 Kanepi eliminated Australia’s Daria Saville 6-3, 6-1 in 73 minutes while Samsonova routed China’s Wang Xiyu 6-1, 6-1 in 67 minutes.

Kyrgios won the last three points in the first-set tiebreaker, Ymer sending a forehand long to end an intense rally before Kyrgios added a service winner and overhead smash.

Ymer, who lost his only ATP final last August in Winston-Salem, botched a forehand volley in the third game of the second set to miss a chance to grab a break point.

Kyrgios earned the first break points of the match in the eighth game and took advantage on his third chance with a passing forehand winner to break for a 5-3 edge, then held to claim the match after 94 minutes on his 10th ace.

The Aussie fired 28 winners with only 15 unforced errors and dropped only four points on his second serve.

Nick Kyrgios returns a shot. Patrick Smith/Getty Images/AFPSource: AFP

Rublev seeks his 12th career crown and fourth title of the season after Marseille, Dubai and Belgrade, hoping to match Spaniards Rafael Nadal and Carlos Alcaraz for the most ATP trophies this year.

Nishioka, in his first ATP semi-final since 2020 at Delray Beach, won his only ATP title in 2018 at Shenzhen.

Nishioka and Rublev split two prior meetings, Nishioka winning at Sydney in 2019 and Rublev at last year’s ATP Cup.

Kanepi seeks her fifth career WTA title but her first since the 2013 Brussels Open. She won her only WTA hardcourt title at Brisbane in 2012.

Into her first WTA final since a 2021 Australian Open tuneup at Melbourne, Kanepi dominated Saville’s first WTA semi-final since 2018 at Acapulco.

“I played my best match,” Kanepi said. “Everything was very smooth for me. I hit a lot of lines.”

Kyrgios wins hearts with gift for fan | 00:37

Kanepi reached her first Grand Slam quarter-final since 2017 at this year’s Australian Open and credited that for a confidence boost crucial to her success this year.

“It was amazing,” she said. “I never thought I would make quarters in Australia. I thought it’s not just my place. But I played really well, and then I continued playing well. I didn’t actually put any pressure on myself to achieve something special.”

Samsonova, 23, won her only meeting with Kanepi in last year’s first round at Wimbledon. Samsonova is into her first WTA hardcourt final, having won her only prior tour final at last year’s German Open.

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Categories
Australia

Labor selects former journalist Katelin McInerney to challenge Gareth Ward in Kiama at 2023 NSW election

The New South Wales Labor party has announced its first candidate ahead of the 2023 election to take on the embattled high-profile Kiama MP Gareth Ward.

Former journalist, unionist and life-long Kiama resident Katelin McInerney is hoping to unseat Mr Ward, who was suspended from parliament after he was accused of historic indecent and sexual assault offences.

The former government minister, who denies the charges has refused to resign in the wake of his suspension and recently defended his right to stay on as MP.

His matter returns to court later this month.

On Saturday, Ms McInerney said she would not ignore Mr Ward’s absence from Macquarie Street during her eight-month campaign.

“As a resident here, I can’t ignore the fact that we do not have a voice on the floor of parliament,” she said.

“We have an MP who is not allowed to take our concerns and to represent our interests in the room where it happens.

“We deserve a real voice in parliament and a local member who is able to not just be a member of parliament but a member in the parliament of NSW,” Ms McInerney said.

A young couple with a child
Katelin McInerney says she and partner Brian want a better future for their two-year-old son William. (Supplied: Katelin McInerney)

‘A tough seat to win’

She said she was “deeply concerned” about her two-year-old son William’s future and it was a driving influence behind her decision to stand.

“Because of that I will work tirelessly to move the needle on the things that matter most to the people that work here.

“Fixing our hospitals, fixing our schools, reducing the congestion on our roads, ensuring that development in this beautiful region is not only sustainable but that it reflects our community,” Ms McInerney said.

Labor leader Chris Minns said Mr Ward’s strong hold over the seat was the reason the party had named his candidate eight months out from the election.

“That’s recognition of the fact that it will be a tough seat to win,” he said.

“Katelin knows that, we all know that. We will fight for every vote.”

Mr Ward won the seat from Labor’s Matt Brown in 2011, who controversially resigned from his role as Police Minister after allegedly hosting a wild post-budget election party in his parliamentary office.

Members expelled, resign

Just days before Ms McInerney’s selection was announced, the New South Wales Branch of the Labor Party announced it had expelled Mr Brown from the party.

A spokesperson said he was due to his decision to run against an endorsed party candidate at the Kiama local government elections in December.

Mr Brown declined to comment.

A man sits near a playground in his yellow campaign hat and t-shirt with posters.
Kiama Councilor Matt Brown. (ABC Illawarra: Ainslie Drewitt Smith)

His expulsion came a fortnight after party stalwart, former Shellharbour Mayor Marianne Saliba had her 35-year membership revoked, on the same grounds.

In the days prior to her expulsion, she was accused of reversing over the foot of a rival candidate, and stepson of sitting Shellharbour MP Anna Watson.

Several local branch members who supported Ms Saliba’s tilt at the recent fresh election in Shellharbour Ward A, have since resigned from the party concerned over her treatment.

sticking to the rules

Mr Minns has played down the exits and infighting plaguing the local branches and said it was not akin to the “scandals” impacting the Perrottet government.

“We’ve got long established principles in relation to the suspension and disciplinary matters in relation to people who run against endorsed candidates.

“It’s been that way inside the Labor party for 130 years. Nothing has changed about our internal rules of management of candidate selection.”

Voters in NSW will go to the polls on March 25, 2023.

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Categories
US

Fourth Muslim man murdered in New Mexico in ‘targeted killings’

Houses reach the edge of the desert on the outskirts of Albuquerque, New Mexico, US, July 5, 2018. REUTERS/Brian Snyder

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Aug 6 (Reuters) – Police in New Mexico and federal agencies were probing the murders of four Muslim men to determine if the killings, the latest of which happened on Friday evening, were linked while the state’s governor described them as “targeted killings.”

Albuquerque Police Chief Harold Medina told reporters on Saturday that a “young man who is part of the Muslim community was murdered.”

The victim’s name and the circumstances of the murder were not disclosed. In the previous three cases, the victims were ambushed and shot without warning, police said.

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Medina said the killing was possibly linked to the previous three murders.

Police in New Mexico had said earlier that the other three Muslim men murdered in the state’s largest city in the past nine months appeared to have been targeted for their religion and race. read more

“The targeted killings of Muslim residents of Albuquerque is deeply angering and wholly intolerable,” New Mexico Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham tweeted late on Saturday. She also said she was deploying extra state police officers to Albuquerque to assist in the investigation.

Two of those murdered men were members of the same mosque, who were shot dead in Albuquerque in late July and early August. Police said there was a “strong possibility” their deaths were connected to the November killing of an Afghan immigrant.

Muhammad Afzaal Hussain, 27, a planning director for the city of Espanola who came to the United States from Pakistan, was shot dead on Monday outside his Albuquerque apartment complex while Aftab Hussein, 41, was found dead of gunshot wounds on July 26 near the Albuquerque’s international district.

Those deaths are likely linked to the shooting of 62-year-old Mohammad Ahmadi in a parking lot by a halal supermarket and cafe on Nov. 7 last year, police said.

New Mexico State Police, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and the US Marshals Service are among several agencies involved in probing the murders.

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Reporting by Kanishka Singh in Washington; Editing by Lisa Shumaker

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Categories
Business

2023 Toyota Prado Matte Black edition revealed overseas, Australian launch unlikely

A blacked-out variant of the popular LandCruiser Prado has been launched in Japan and Europe – but Toyota Australia has not announced plans to bring it to local showrooms.


Toyota Prado customers in Japan and Europe can now order a Matte Black edition – although it is unlikely to come to Australia.

As the name suggests, the limited edition Toyota Prado comes with a matte black grille, fog light surrounds, headlight garnish, mirror caps, roof rails and special badging.

Despite the Prado’s popularity in Australia – where it is the top-selling four-wheel-drive in its class, with more than twice as many sales as its nearest off-road rival the Isuzu MU-X – Toyota Australia says the Matte Black edition is not in its future plans.



“Toyota Australia is continually studying the market for new opportunities to offer exciting new products to Australian customers,” said a spokesperson for Toyota Australia.

“At this stage, however, we have no announcements to make on any updates to Toyota (LandCruiser) Prado.”

Drive understands the Matte Black editions are not a priority for Toyota Australia given the limited interest in its sole matte option sold locally – the Toyota Supra – and the extra customer care required to maintain the special paint finish.



In addition to the exterior bodywork changes, matte black paint has also been applied to the Prado’s 18-inch wheels, which are the 12-spoke design previously fitted to the 2021 LandCruiser Prado VX and Kakadu variants.

Black leather upholstery and wood-grain trim are standard for the limited edition Toyota Prado’s interior.

While the Toyota Prado in Australia is today only available with a 2.8-litre turbo-diesel engine (after the V6 petrol was discontinued in late 2017), Japanese and European customers also have the option of a 2.7-litre turbo-petrol engine.



Launched in 2009, the current generation ‘150 Series’ Toyota Prado was given its most recent facelift in late 2017.

There is now speculation about when an all-new Toyota Prado might arrive in Australia.

Industry observers believe a new generation model is due within the next couple of years, given the current Toyota Prado platform has been around since 2009.



A June 2021 report by Drive suggested the upcoming next-generation LandCruiser Prado could be revealed in 2023, with power coming from aa hybrid 2.5-liter petrol or 2.5-liter diesel engine.

However this timing and these engine details are unsubstantiated speculation. Toyota Australia has not indicated when a formal announcement is due.

Jordan Mulach

Jordan Mulach is Canberra/Ngunnawal born, currently residing in Brisbane/Turrbal. Joining the Drive team in 2022, Jordan has previously worked for Auto Action, MotorsportM8, The Supercars Collective and TouringCarTimes, WhichCar, Wheels, Motor and Street Machine. Jordan is a self-described iRacing addict and can be found on weekends either behind the wheel of his Octavia RS or swearing at his ZH Fairlane.

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Technology

‘MultiVersus’ hit detection system to get “big overhaul”

MultiVersus will be getting a “big overhaul” of its hit detection system, the game’s director has confirmed in a series of tweets.

Tony Huynh tweeted about a new update that had been added to the game which fixed bugs affecting Tom & Jerry, Jake and some of their specific moves. A follower replied and asked whether Finn would be getting a nerf in the future as the character had moves that were too powerful and broke through opponents’ attacks too easily.

Huynh replied that they were planning to look at Finn “in sections” because there is going to be a “big overhaul” of the game’s hitbox and hurtbox systems. The hitbox is an invisible box that shows the range of space an attack can cover, whilst the hurtbox sits on top of a character and determines where they can take damage.

Due to not wanting “too many moving parts”, Huynh confirmed that MultiVersus would be overhauling the system slowly, presumably in order to not make things worse before making them better. It remains to be seen exactly what is getting reworked, but it could mean hits are easier or harder to land on opponents depending on which way Player First Games chooses to tweak its systems.

The open beta for MultiVersus was launched at the end of July with the first season expected August 9, but this has now been pushed back indefinitely and a new date is yet to be confirmed.

In other news, Marvel’s Guardians Of The Galaxy almost had a human-sized Rocket Raccoon, with the height taking revisions before being finalized.

Categories
Entertainment

Melanie C and partner Joe Marshall reportedly split up

Spice Girl Melanie “Sporty Spice” Chisolm has reportedly split from her partner of seven years, Joe Marshall.

The fiercely private music star has kept her relationship with music exec Marshall, who has also served as her manager, largely under wraps – few photos of them together have been published.

But it’s understood the couple had for some years lived together in North London, co-parenting Melanie’s teenage daughter Scarlett, 13, alongside Marshall’s two children from a previous relationship.

Scarlett is Chisolm’s daughter from her previous longtime relationship, with ex-partner Thomas Starr. The pair split in 2012 after a decade together.

The Sun quotes a source as saying that Mel – who tours regularly as a solo artist and has her first memoir out next month – found it too hard to juggle the relationship with her career commitments.

“Mel has an incredibly busy career between her book deal, DJ-ing and other plans,” The Sun’s source said.

“The little free time she does have is devoted to her daughter Scarlett, and that doesn’t leave much time for a relationship.”

The source said that the split was “amicable” and that Mel is “not afraid to be single if she thinks it’s for the best”.

Melanie C is undoubtedly the most private of the five Spice Girls when it comes to her love life, largely keeping her personal life under wraps since a string of romances with high-profile musicians in the late 90s and early noughties.

Mel briefly dated Robbie Williams, had a relationship with Red Hot Chili Peppers frontman Anthony Kiedis that inspired a song on their album Californicationand also had an on-again, off-again relationship with former Five boy band star Jason ‘J’ Brown.

Meanwhile, Melanie’s Spice Girls bandmate Mel B makes her return to Australian TV tonight as a judge on the season premiere of The Masked Singer. Speaking to news.com.au ahead of the new season, Mel B opened up about her life as a Spice Girl – and whether the group’s long-rumored first Australian tour might ever hit our shores.

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Categories
Sports

Inner West major to look into stadium safety after Leichhardt Oval grandstand crash

A Sydney Mayor who has lashed out at Dominic Perrottet for alleged rugby stadium “pork barreling” has reacted with shock after a grandstand collapsed at the weekend.

A disturbing video shows the moment a railing at a Leichhardt Oval grandstand collapsed under the weight of fans attending a schoolboy rugby match.

A number of fans went tumbling over the stand like dominoes and face planted onto concrete meters below.

Paramedic crews at the game treated some minor injuries but no one was taken to hospital, NSW Ambulance reported.

Inner West Mayor Darcy Byrne, who has campaigned for funding to upgrade the Leichhardt Oval, issued a media release just days before the collapse, accusing the state government of pork barreling for choosing to spend upwards of $300 million to build Penrith Stadium despite numerous commitments to fund suburban sports grounds.

“Dominic Perrottet is happy to spend $300 million in Stuart Ayres seat, to build a shiny, new Panthers Stadium for the exclusive use of one club,” Mr Byrne said, referring to the outgoing trade minister and MP for Penrith.

“But the Wests Tigers, and all of the other senior and junior, men’s and women’s Rugby League, Soccer and Rugby Union teams who regularly use Leichhardt Oval get nothing.”

The Council had plans to use part of a planned $250m slated for suburban sports grounds to upgrade and expand their grandstands.

“I call on Mr Perrottet to explain why this shocking pork-barrelling continues while most footy fans across Sydney get dudded,” the Labor mayor said.

Leichhardt Oval hosts more than 50 games a year across various rugby codes while Penrith Stadium will host just 11 Penrith Panthers games a year.

Mr Byrne took to his social media following the grandstand collapse to share his shock over the dangerous incident.

“The collapse of grandstand seating at Leichhardt Oval today during a schoolboy rugby match was incredibly dangerous,’ he said.

“The footage is shocking.”

Inner West councilor Philippa Scott jumped into the comment section to direct her anger at the state government.

“I am heartened to know that the spectators were sent home with only minor injuries, however I am incandescently angry at how our inner west infrastructure is treated by the state government,” she said.

We are being smashed by not being a marginal Liberal seat.”

Mayor Byrne said his team are working to make the site safe and will fully investigate the safety risks it raises.

Australia Rugby League boss Peter V’landys this week accused Premier Dominic Perrottet of reneging on his agreement after he redirected funds set aside for sports grounds to flood recovery.

Premier Dominic Perrottet has denied backflipping on his deal to upgrade Brookvale Oval, Leichhardt Oval and Shark Park.

“We won’t give up. We’re going to make sure the fans will get the facilities,” Mr V’Landys told 2GB radio this week.

A tense 24 hours of negotiations on Tuesday night had the ARL boss and the government tussling over whether the grand final would be moved from Sydney to Queensland.

Mr V’landys said in a radio interview at the weekend negotiations were ongoing and that a decision on the grand final would be made on Monday.

“We’re still negotiating with the NSW government, we don’t accept the excuse they’ve given us,” he said.

“The (ARL) commission will meet on Monday to decide the strategy it’s going to use … we don’t want to punish the NSW fans because the government isn’t meeting its commitments.”

Read related topics:sydney

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Categories
Australia

COVID-19 case numbers from around the states and territories

Here’s a quick wrap of each Australian jurisdiction’s latest COVID-19 statistics today — Sunday, August 7.

You can get a more detailed, visual breakdown through the ABC’s Charting the Spread story right here.

This will be updated throughout the day, so if you do not see your state or territory, check back later.

You can jump to the COVID-19 information you want to read by clicking below.

Victory

There have been another three COVID-19 deaths in the state.

There are 660 cases in hospital, with 40 of those in intensive care and 11 requiring ventilation.

There were 5,114 new cases today.

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NSW

The state has recorded 15 more COVID-19 deaths.

There are 2,181 cases in hospital, 57 of those in intensive care.

There were 10,027 new cases announced today.

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Northern Territory

Another 159 COVID cases have been recorded in the territory.

There are 40 people in hospital, three of those are in ICU.

There were no more deaths from the virus.

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queensland

There are 669 people in hospital and 29 in ICU.

There were 2,649 new cases recorded.

The state does not report death numbers over the weekend.

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Tasmanian

Four more people have died with COVID in the state.

There are 83 patients in hospital with the virus, one of those is in ICU.

There were 527 new cases reported.

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COVID-19 cases peak in Victoria.

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US

Sanders rips Inflation Reduction Act, says it will have ‘minimal impact on inflation’

Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) ripped the Inflation Reduction Act Saturday for doing little to fight inflation and not enough to help Americans struggling to afford health care, child care and housing.

“According to the [Congressional Budget Office] and other economic organizations that have studied this bill, it will have a minimal impact on inflation,” Sanders declared on the Senate floor to open debate on the 755-page bill, which will raise taxes on corporations, fight climate change and reduce some prescription drug costs.

The line of criticism echoed what Senate Republicans have said for days in pointing to a Penn Wharton analysis concluding the bill will have a negligible impact on inflation.

Sanders argued the Democratic bill falls far short of what is needed when Americans are growing increasingly disillusioned with government and a tiny fraction of wealthy individuals and families own a hugely disproportionate share of the nation’s wealth.

He pointed to the lower standard of living many younger people know and expect compared to their parents’ generation, the daunting cost of housing for people starting out in the work world and the stagnation of wages.

“This legislation does not address any of their needs,” Sanders said. “This legislation does not address the reality that we have more income and wealth inequality today than at any time in the last hundred years.”

He complained the bill doesn’t address the fact that CEOs of major corporations make 350 times as much as their workers, or do more to improve a health care system.

“This bill does nothing to address the systemic dysfunctionality of the American health care system,” he charged.

He also noted the bill “as currently written does nothing” to address the nation’s rate of childhood poverty, a pointed reference to Sen. Joe Manchin’s (DW.Va.) opposition to including an extension of the expanded child tax credit — which expired at the end of last year — in the bill.

He said the bill also fails to address the nation’s affordable housing crisis.

“Yup, you guessed it. This bill does nothing to address the major housing crisis that we face or build one unit of safe and affordable housing. Just another issue that we push aside,” he grumbled.

But Sanders’s biggest complaint is legislation doesn’t give Medicare enough authority to negotiate lower prescription drug prices.

He said “the good news” is the bill would allow Medicare to negotiate prescription drug prices with the pharmaceutical industry but the “bad news” is the provision does not go into effect for four years, at which time only 10 drugs will be covered.

“This provision will have no impact on the prices for Americans not on Medicare. Those prices will continue to rise uncontrollably,” he said.

Sanders announced he will offer an amendment that would require Medicare to pay no more for prescription drugs than the Department of Veterans Affairs.

He said that proposal would save Medicare $900 billion over the next decade.

In a floor speech Wednesday, he said he would use that money to lower the Medicare eligibility age to 60 and extend Medicare benefits to cover vision, hearing and dental care.

Sanders told reporters earlier Saturday that he plans to offer three other amendments to the bill related to prescription drugs and Medicare.

One amendment would expand Medicare to provide dental, vision and hearing benefits, another would provide $30 billion to establish a Civilian Conservation Corps to combat climate change, and a fourth would expand the $300 per month Child Tax Credit for the next five years.

His arguments, however, are largely falling flat with Democratic senators who say they won’t vote for any amendments that could jeopardize the support of Manchin and fellow centrist Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.).

A Democratic senator said Schumer has urged colleagues not to offer amendments to the bill that could upset the carefully crafted compromise he reached with Manchin and Sinema after weeks of negotiation.

One Democratic aid said Sanders’s insistence on voting on his amendments would delay final passage of the bill.

But Schumer has limited leverage over Sanders, who as chairman of the Budget Committee, has the official role of managing the floor debate on the bill, which is being moved under special budgetary reconciliation rules to circumvent a GOP filibuster.

Senate Finance Committee Chairman Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), who played a major role in crafting the prescription drug compromise with Sinema, pushed back against Sanders’s criticism.

He hailed it as a major victory because it would set an important precedent of empowering the government to negotiate with the pharmaceutical industry.

“I think there is a reason big PhRMA is fighting this so hard. They know once you put negotiation into law, embedded into law, there will be no turning back. That’s what this all about,” he said, he referring to the pharmaceutical industry’s trade association. “This is a seismic shift between government and this lobby.”

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