Categories
Entertainment

Hugh Jackman announces death of beloved French Bulldog Dali

Hugh Jackman’s beloved dog Dali has passed away.

On Sunday morning, the X Men shared actor emotional tribute to his French Bulldog Dali and revealed he died at the ripe old age of 11.

“It’s a very sad day for our family,” Jackman wrote. “He would’ve been 12 next month… which I’m told is a long life for this breed.”

READMORE: Freeze Frame: Why the ‘More Demi Moore’ cover was never meant to be seen by the public

Hugh Jackman and dog Dali
Hugh Jackman announced his 11-year-old dog Dali has passed away. (instagram)

READMORE: Nicola Peltz Beckham shares cryptic post amid feud rumors

“I always, always called him the ROCKSTAR. Because he was! He marched to the beat of his own drum, was beloved by the whole world, and boy did he have a good life.”

“We will miss him but know he’s howling in heaven, ruling the roost and enjoying the all you can eat buffet,” said the actor. “RIP Dali Rockstar Jackman. We love you!”

The touching obituary was accompanied by some adorable photos of Dali and Jackman cuddling up together.

READMORE: Khloe Kardashian and Tristan Thompson welcome baby boy via surrogate

Dali has been a big part of the Jackman family’s lives since his adoption in 2010.

The Greatest Showman actor often shared photos of them going on beach trips or walking on the mean streets of Manhattan.

Dali is survived by Jackman’s other dog, a poodle-terrier mix named Allegra.

For a daily dose of 9Honey, subscribe to our newsletter here.

Rita prays

Celebrities and their pets: Photos

Categories
Sports

Calf twinge forces Patrick Dangerfield out but the Geelong Cats get cream against St Kilda

Jeremy Cameron kicked the next goal immediately after half-time and the Saints were never a chance from that point on as their hearts sank and their supporters checked how Richmond were going as they hoped to cling to the eighth rung on the ladder.

St Kilda's Jack Steele tackles Mark O'Connor.

St Kilda’s Jack Steele tackles Mark O’Connor.Credit:Getty Images

Max Holmes was outstanding on the wing as Geelong rediscovered their ball movement, while their defense led by the precocious Sam De Koning – who defeated Max King – kept the Saints goalless for the third quarter. Jake Kolodjashnij was excellent in his 150th game, with Jack Henry playing forward while Rhys Stanley stamped himself as the No. 1 ruckman.

The run of eight unanswered goals ended when Higgins kicked a goal midway through the final quarter with the margin out to 58 points at that point. St Kilda’s disappointing performance was exacerbated by an ankle injury to veteran Dan Hannebery, who may have played the final game of his career.

The biggest headache for the Cats will be at selection with Dangerfield, Selwood, Gary Rohan and Mark Blicavs all on the sidelines, with Blicavs managed while Rohan was in the concussion protocols.

loading

Brandan Parfitt, in just his second game back from a hand injury, found form in the third quarter as the Cats look to get their best players playing at their best in September.

St Kilda are once again in a fight to finish in the finals, with Richmond taking their place in the top eight, the Saints battling Brisbane on Friday night while Richmond play Hawthorn.

GEELONG 6.4 8.5 12.7 17.8 (110)
ST KILDA 3.0 7.1 7.4 10.5 (65)

GOALS
Gelong: Smith 3, Hawkins 3, Cameron 2, Stengle 2, Guthrie, Henry, Duncan, Close, Holmes, Menegola, Tuohy.
St Kilda: Higgins 2, Membrey 2, King, Butler, Wood, Sinclair, Steele, Long.
BEST
Gelong: Holmes, Bews, Smith, DeKoning, Kolodjashnij, Close, Stanley.
St Kilda: Wilkie, Higgins, Steele, Crouch.
umpires Stevic, Broadbent, Heffernan.
VENUE GMHBA Stadium.

Categories
Australia

Two men killed after their ute runs off the road into a tree in late-night tragedy

Two people have died in a horror late-night crash in regional Victoria.

The crash took place in Berrybank, west of Melbourne, about 11pm on Friday.

Police say a ute ran off the road near the Hamilton Highway and Berrybank-Wallinduc Road intersection and crashed into a tree.

Watch the latest News on Channel 7 or stream for free on 7plus >>

Two men were in the car at the time and died at the scene.

Their ages were not disclosed immediately by police.

File: Two men have died after their car left the road and hit a tree in regional Victoria. Credit: AAP

“The exact circumstances surrounding the collision are yet to be determined and the investigation remains ongoing,” police said in a statement.

“Anyone who witnessed the crash, with information or dashcam footage is urged to contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000 or submit a confidential report online at www.crimestoppersvic.com.au.”

The fatalities bring Victoria’s road toll to 143 this year, compared to 128 at the same time last year.

Man charged with murder over QLD mass shooting.

Man charged with murder over QLD mass shooting.

.

Categories
US

Democrats’ big climate, health care and tax package clears major Senate hurdle

WASHINGTON — The Senate voted Saturday to advance a sweeping climate and economic bill with the support of all 50 Democrats, bringing long-stalled elements of President Joe Biden’s agenda one step closer to reality.

The procedural vote on the filibuster-proof package was 51-50, with all Republicans opposing the motion to begin debate and Vice President Kamala Harris casting the tie-breaking vote. If that support holds, it is enough to pass the bill through the Senate and send it to the House in the coming days.

The legislation, called the Inflation Reduction Act, includes major spending to combat climate change and extend health care coverage, paid for with savings on prescription drugs and taxes on corporations. It puts hundreds of billions of dollars toward deficit reduction.

“This is one of the most comprehensive and impactful bills Congress has seen in decades,” Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, DN.Y., said on the floor before the vote.

“It’s going to mean a lot for the families and the people of our country,” Harris told NBC News as she arrived to break the 50-50 tie.

The procedural vote, during a rare weekend session, kicks off several hours of debate, followed by a “vote-a-rama” — a process in which senators can offer virtually unlimited amendments that require a simple majority of votes to adopt.

The legislation isn’t subject to the filibuster — it is being pursued through a special process called reconciliation, which allows Democrats to pass it on their own. But the process includes limits; policies included in the bill must be related to spending and taxes and the legislation has to comply with a strict set of budget rules. It’s the same process Democrats used to pass the American Rescue Plan in 2021 and Republicans used to pass the Trump tax cuts of 2017.

Before Saturday’s vote, the Senate parliamentarian ruled that key Democratic provisions on clean energy and allowing Medicare to negotiate prescription drug prices passed muster and could be included in the inflation package, Democratic leaders said.

“While there was one unfortunate ruling in that the inflation rebate is more limited in scope,” Schumer said, “the overall program remains intact and we are one step closer to finally taking on Big Pharma and lowering Rx drug prices for millions of Americans. ”

The Democrats-only package, which includes several pieces of Biden’s Build Back Better agenda, was long thought to be dead after Sen. Joe Manchin, DW.Va., rejected a larger bill in December. He cut a deal last week with Schumer, pleasantly surprising many of his Democratic colleagues from him, and has since been on a media blitz to sell it.

“It’s a red, white and blue bill,” Manchin said recently on MSNBC, calling it “one of the greatest pieces of legislation” and “the bill that we need to fight inflation, to have more energy.”

On Thursday, Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, D-Ariz., following a week of silence, signed off on the bill after securing some changes to it.

Sinema forced Democrats to remove a provision that would have limited the carried interest tax break, which enables wealthy hedge fund and investment managers to pay a lower tax rate.

“We had no choice,” Schumer told reporters.

Instead, it was replaced by a new 1% excise tax on stock buybacks that is expected to bring in $74 billion — five times as much as the carried interest provision, Schumer said. Sinema also secured $4 billion in funding for drought prevention in Arizona and other western states.

Before her changes, the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office found that the bill would reduce the deficit by about $100 billion over a decade, with additional potential for $200 billion in revenue as a result of beefing up IRS resources for enforcement.

Senate Minority Whip John Thune, RS.D., promised “hard votes for the Democrats” in the vote-a-rama process.

“The question is, at the end, are those amendments going to be amendments actually that might change the bill? Could make it better. Might make it harder to pass in the House, who knows? Thune said Friday.

Some Democrats are worried about Republicans proposing poison pill amendments on contentious issues such as immigration and crime that could win a majority of votes in the Senate — picking off some moderates and vulnerable senators facing re-election this fall — but alienate other Democrats and disrupt the fragile deal.

“I certainly cannot support it, if extraneous provisions get adopted, particularly pejorative immigration provisions that have nothing to do with the health, welfare and security of the American people,” Sen. Bob Menendez, DN.J., said this week on MSNBC.

On Saturday, a handful of Senate Democrats took to Twitter and urged their colleagues to hold the line and vote down amendments that could jeopardize the package.

“I’ll vote NO on all amendments, even those I agree with,” tweeted Sen. Tina Smith, D-Minn. “This bill makes historic progress on climate action and lowering prescription drug costs. It has 50 votes, and we need to stick together to keep it that way.”

Sen. Cory Booker, DN.J., agreed with that strategy. “There are a number of us who have already tweeted that we’re going to be voting no on amendments that we like and we don’t like,” he told reporters Saturday.

“There is such a moral urgency … to get a bill across the line that’s going to deal with the existential threat of climate change. I think that’s motivating and I’m seeing even more unity than normal.”

Sen. Lindsey Graham, RS.C., said Friday the amendment process would be unpleasant. “What will vote-a-rama be like? It’ll be like hell,” he said.

Categories
Sports

Commonwealth Games 2022 medal tally: Kurtis Marschall’s pole vault win and Alexandra Kiroi-Bogatyreva rhythmic gymnastics gold

The ninth day of the Commonwealth Games in Birmingham has ended with another nine gold medals for Australia, strengthening the nation’s lead in the overall tally.

Two Australians made it to the final in the table tennis women’s singles classes 6-10, ensuring two medals for the nation.

Qian Yang won gold and Li Na Lei took home the silver medal.

Australia also won gold in athletics, lawn bowls, diving and gymnastics.

You can check out how the latest batch of medals were won in our Commonwealth Games blog, or have a look at the medal winners and the top 10 medal standings by country below:

Day nine medal results:

Gold:

  • Alexandra Kiroi-Bogatyreva, gymnastics, rhythmic gymnastics
  • Jemima Montag, athletics, 10,000 meter race walking
  • Oliver Hoare, athletics, 1,500 meter run
  • Maddison Keeney and Anabelle Luce Smith, diving, 3-meter synchronized springboard
  • Ellen Ryan and Kristina Krstic, lawn bowls, pairs
  • Aaron Wilson, lawn bowls, singles
  • Melissa Wu and Charli Petrov, diving, 10-meter synchronized platform
  • Kurtis Marshall, athletics, pole vault
  • Qian Yang, table tennis, singles classes 6-10

Silver:

  • Eleanor Patterson, athletics, high jump
  • Li Na Lei, table tennis, singles classes 6-10

Bronze:

  • Tina Rahmi, boxing, featherweight
  • Edgardo Coumi, boxing, heavyweight
  • Caitlin Anne Parker, boxing, middleweight

Birmingham 2022 medal standings:

POSITION

TEAM

G

yes

B.

TOTAL

1

Australia

59

46

fifty

155

two

England

fifty

52

46

148

3

Canada

22

29

33

84

4

new zealand

17

12

fifteen

44

5

India

13

eleven

16

40

6

Nigeria

9

8

13

35

7

Scotland

8

9

24

41

8

south africa

7

8

eleven

26

9

Malaysian

6

5

4

fifteen

10

Jamaica

6

4

two

12

posted

.

Categories
Australia

Man charged with murder after alleged hit-and-run in Mount Isa, north-west Queensland

A 52-year-old Mount Isa man has been charged with murder after an alleged hit-and-run killed a teenager in the north-west Queensland community of Mount Isa during the early hours of this morning.

Emergency services were called to the corner of Delacour Drive and Dent Street in Pioneer sometime after midnight to treat a female victim for critical head injuries.

Police confirmed that she succumbed to her injuries and died at the scene.

The man will appear at Mount Isa Magistrates Court on Monday, August 8.

An intersection in a remote town cordoned off with police tape.
Police have taped off areas at the scene.(ABC North West Qld: Emily Dobson)

Police are working to formally identify the victim and are speaking to several families in the community.

“I can assure the community that we are taking this matter very seriously and investigating this intensively,” Detective Inspector Dave Barron said.

“Our sympathy goes out to the family and the community who are feeling… grief at this time.”

Investigations are ongoing, and police are urging anyone with information to contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000 or report online.

This is the second alleged hit-and-run to have occurred in Mount Isa over the space of two days.

Two pedestrians were hospitalized in stable conditions after being struck by a stolen vehicle during the early hours of Friday, August 5.

.

Categories
US

Democrats’ big climate, health care and tax package clears major Senate hurdle

WASHINGTON — The Senate voted Saturday to advance a sweeping climate and economic bill with the support of all 50 Democrats, bringing long-stalled elements of President Joe Biden’s agenda one step closer to reality.

The procedural vote on the filibuster-proof package was 51-50, with all Republicans opposing the motion to begin debate and Vice President Kamala Harris casting the tie-breaking vote. If that support holds, it is enough to pass the bill through the Senate and send it to the House in the coming days.

The legislation, called the Inflation Reduction Act, includes major spending to combat climate change and extend health care coverage, paid for with savings on prescription drugs and taxes on corporations. It puts hundreds of billions of dollars toward deficit reduction.

“This is one of the most comprehensive and impactful bills Congress has seen in decades,” Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, DN.Y., said on the floor before the vote.

“It’s going to mean a lot for the families and the people of our country,” Harris told NBC News as she arrived to break the 50-50 tie.

The procedural vote, during a rare weekend session, kicks off several hours of debate, followed by a “vote-a-rama” — a process in which senators can offer virtually unlimited amendments that require a simple majority of votes to adopt.

The legislation isn’t subject to the filibuster — it is being pursued through a special process called reconciliation, which allows Democrats to pass it on their own. But the process includes limits; policies included in the bill must be related to spending and taxes and the legislation has to comply with a strict set of budget rules. It’s the same process Democrats used to pass the American Rescue Plan in 2021 and Republicans used to pass the Trump tax cuts of 2017.

Before Saturday’s vote, the Senate parliamentarian ruled that key Democratic provisions on clean energy and allowing Medicare to negotiate prescription drug prices passed muster and could be included in the inflation package, Democratic leaders said.

“While there was one unfortunate ruling in that the inflation rebate is more limited in scope,” Schumer said, “the overall program remains intact and we are one step closer to finally taking on Big Pharma and lowering Rx drug prices for millions of Americans. ”

The Democrats-only package, which includes several pieces of Biden’s Build Back Better agenda, was long thought to be dead after Sen. Joe Manchin, DW.Va., rejected a larger bill in December. He cut a deal last week with Schumer, pleasantly surprising many of his Democratic colleagues from him, and has since been on a media blitz to sell it.

“It’s a red, white and blue bill,” Manchin said recently on MSNBC, calling it “one of the greatest pieces of legislation” and “the bill that we need to fight inflation, to have more energy.”

On Thursday, Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, D-Ariz., following a week of silence, signed off on the bill after securing some changes to it.

Sinema forced Democrats to remove a provision that would have limited the carried interest tax break, which enables wealthy hedge fund and investment managers to pay a lower tax rate.

“We had no choice,” Schumer told reporters.

Instead, it was replaced by a new 1% excise tax on stock buybacks that is expected to bring in $74 billion — five times as much as the carried interest provision, Schumer said. Sinema also secured $4 billion in funding for drought prevention in Arizona and other western states.

Before her changes, the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office found that the bill would reduce the deficit by about $100 billion over a decade, with additional potential for $200 billion in revenue as a result of beefing up IRS resources for enforcement.

Senate Minority Whip John Thune, RS.D., promised “hard votes for the Democrats” in the vote-a-rama process.

“The question is, at the end, are those amendments going to be amendments actually that might change the bill? Could make it better. Might make it harder to pass in the House, who knows? Thune said Friday.

Some Democrats are worried about Republicans proposing poison pill amendments on contentious issues such as immigration and crime that could win a majority of votes in the Senate — picking off some moderates and vulnerable senators facing re-election this fall — but alienate other Democrats and disrupt the fragile deal.

“I certainly cannot support it, if extraneous provisions get adopted, particularly pejorative immigration provisions that have nothing to do with the health, welfare and security of the American people,” Sen. Bob Menendez, DN.J., said this week on MSNBC.

On Saturday, a handful of Senate Democrats took to Twitter and urged their colleagues to hold the line and vote down amendments that could jeopardize the package.

“I’ll vote NO on all amendments, even those I agree with,” tweeted Sen. Tina Smith, D-Minn. “This bill makes historic progress on climate action and lowering prescription drug costs. It has 50 votes, and we need to stick together to keep it that way.”

Sen. Cory Booker, DN.J., agreed with that strategy. “There are a number of us who have already tweeted that we’re going to be voting no on amendments that we like and we don’t like,” he told reporters Saturday.

“There is such a moral urgency … to get a bill across the line that’s going to deal with the existential threat of climate change. I think that’s motivating and I’m seeing even more unity than normal.”

Sen. Lindsey Graham, RS.C., said Friday the amendment process would be unpleasant. “What will vote-a-rama be like? It’ll be like hell,” he said.

Categories
Sports

Ricky Stuart Jaeman Salmon spray, Salmon seeking legal action, Stuart not backing down, Canberra Raiders, Penrith Panthers, news

Raiders coach Ricky Stuart is reportedly “not backing down” from his controversial comments labeling Panthers playmaker Jaeman Salmon and “weak gutted dog.”

Stuart’s stunning spray came after Salmon lashed out with his boot, kicking Tom Starling in the 60th minute.

“I have had history with that kid (Salmon). I know that kid very well,” Stuart said in the post-match press conference.

Stream every game of every round of the 2022 NRL Telstra Premiership Season Live & Ad-Break Free During Play on Kayo. New to Kayo? Start your free trial now >

“He was a weak gutted dog as a kid and he hasn’t changed now. He is a weak gutted dog person now.”

According to Channel 9’s Danny Weidler, Stuart will not be “backing down from his comments”.

While the NRL’s course of action currently remains unclear, the competition could fully explore the sensational post-match interview remarks.

Meanwhile, according to the SMH, Salmon will seek legal advice, potentially considering defamation charges.

Salmon was reportedly keen to speak to the media after he learned of the comments, but the Panthers advised the 23-year-old to remain quiet.

NRL supremo Phil Gould revealed there is history between the pair, explaining Stuart is “going to have a very good reason”.

Sims distract after Tracey KO | 00:37

MORE NRL NEWS

‘WEAK GUTTED DOG’: Ricky’s stunning spray aimed at Panthers star over low blow

‘OPTICS DON’T LOOK GREAT’: Stuart under fire over ‘very personal’ outburst

BIG HITS: Brave Edwards leads Panthers to victory as Raiders’ finals hopes fade

GONE: Dragons shock call to sack NRL great as coaching clean out continues

“When Ricky said he’s known this kid for a while, he has,” Gould said on Nine’s NRL coverage.

“Certainly Ricky on reflection saying he’s not apologizing and he’s standing for what he said is rather extraordinary because I’ve never heard a coach say anything like that at a press conference.

“Ricky’s going to have to have very good reason and I don’t know how he substantiates that … I think Jaeman Salmon would have action against him for remarks like that.”

Gould also explained that Salmon’s kick on Starling could have happened to any player at any time.

“That can happen to anyone at any time,” Gould said.

Starless Panthers pump Raiders | 01:52

“That’s not an uncommon occurrence. His foot was caught between his legs as they’re getting up and he was trying to get his foot out of there.

Stuart has a history of copping fine’s for post-match interview comments and has racked up over $120,000 in monetary penalties over his 21-year coaching career.

The 55-year-old was handed a $20,000 fine in 2015 for walking out on a press conference and refusing to speak to the media.

A year earlier in 2014, he was slapped with a $10,000 fine for slamming referees as “s**t” and “laughable” in a loss to the Panthers.

Get all the latest NRL news, highlights and analysis delivered straight to your inbox with Fox Sports Sportmail. Sign up now!!

.

Categories
Australia

Italian makeover: the Brisbane bottle shops evolving into wine bars | australian lifestyle

Yot’s late Friday afternoon in suburban Brisbane – about the hour when “day drinking” ticks over to the more respectable “knock off” drinks. We’re sitting at a communal table enjoying a glass of wine with strangers while an upbeat playlist meanders through decades and genres. We’re not in a bar, a pub or even a restaurant. Rather, we’re in a store. More specifically, a wine store.

Queensland bottle-os used to be a place you popped into briefly on your way somewhere else. And while the old-school chains may still be the place for a weekend “smash and grab”, increasing numbers of independents in Brisbane have embarked on wine store/bar hybrids more aligned with the Italian wine bar.

Sommelier and winemaker Danilo Duseli took over Ashgrove’s Arcade Wine in a retro arcade four months ago. He comes from the north of Italy, where appetizer hour sees locals gather at enoteche that populate even the smallest towns for a neighborhood catch-up, pre-dinner drink and, always, food of some kind.

“It’s very unusual to drink wine in Italy without a little something to eat,” he says, placing down rounds of bread topped with anchovies and house-made salsa verde.

As we sip our wine, many customers engage Duseli, keen for recommendations or to report back on previous purchases. Some stay a while, grabbing a stool at the table or settling on the couch to enjoy a glass. Besides us, a couple reminisce about their recent trip to wineries in Tuscany.

“My aim is to get to know my customers and to educate them about wine,” Duseli says, and he’s not alone.

A similar ethos exists at Wineism in Albion, Grape Therapy in the CBD, Barbossa in South Brisbane, Baedeker in Fortitude Valley and Honor Avenue Cellars in Graceville.

“Although the opportunity to have a combination wine store/wine bar has been around since the Wine Industry Act was passed in 1994, it’s probably the interest in all things artisanal that has developed over the last few years that has people looking lately at what’s possible. ,” says Matthew Jones, a Queensland liquor licensing specialist.

Arcade Wine's Danilo Duseli assists a customer.
Duseli takes pride in educating customers about wine. Photograph: Rhett Hammerton/The Guardian

The stores are using a “wine merchant license”, which allows a premises to both sell wine to take home and by the glass. The license was created specifically to support the Queensland wine industry, its granting dependent on the venue actively contributing, whether by selling and promoting Queensland wines or, in some cases, making it themselves. Currently, there are around two dozen Queensland businesses using the license.

“It’s certainly the cheapest, and one of the only ways someone can participate in the takeaway liquor market [in Queensland],” Jones says. “The alternative is a hotel license which of course requires you to have an actual hotel.”

Michael Nolan, owner of Wine Experience, added a bar 18 months ago, after 16 years of operating a retail wine store in Rosalie.

“I fell in love with the tiny bars in Spain and the rest of Europe – that really intimate environment – ​​and always wanted to do something like that, but I never wanted a full-time bar,” he says.

Wine Experience’s tiny 12-seater bespoke bar is wheeled out from Wednesday to Sundays at 3pm, with a couple of additional tables for drinker or diners set on the footpath.

“For us the bar was about building a community,” Nolan says. “People come in and we get to know them and build loyalty. It’s definitely created a following – people pop in on the way home from shopping or they stop for an afternoon drink before heading off to a restaurant or movie.”

There are regular wine masterclasses and up to 50 glasses available at any one time, always with a couple of Queensland wines and some that “are a bit esoteric or harder to get hold of”, Nolan says.

“And of course, you can take any wine from the shelf and with a service charge of $30, drink it here. That’s a huge saving compared to the margin you’d have to pay for the same bottle in a restaurant.”

At Albion’s Wineism, owner Ian Trinkle is a former sommelier and so are all his shop staff. Trinkle opened in December last year. A long tiled communal table dominates the shop, used for tastings but also the evening crowd who come to eat and drink.

It’s the one-on-one engagement he values ​​most.

“I’m surprised by how adventurous people are now,” Trinkle says. “People really want the experience and to talk about the wines. I can talk about tannic structures forever but it’s great to be able to uncork a bottle and say, ‘Hey, let’s taste this and sit down and chat a bit’.”

Categories
US

Arizonans oppose billions in IRS funding as Sinema says she will support bill

Arizona residents are expressing their displeasure with the billions of dollars designated for boosting IRS enforcement as part of the massive Democrat-backed social spending and taxation bill agreed to by Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, D-Ariz., late Thursday evening.

Sinema announced she would “move forward” with the bill, officially called the Inflation Reduction Act, after previously signaling changes would have to be made in order for her to agree to support it.

Fox News Digital spoke to a number of residents on the streets of Arizona to get their take on the billions in IRS funding contained within the bill. They expressed displeasure that the federal government would commit such a large amount to “go after the little guy.”

“I don’t like that to tell you the truth, that portion of it,” said resident Willis Daychild, who said that he agreed with the aims of the bill overall. “They’re going to be out there trying to find all the people that have not filed their taxes. Usually the little guy, they’re the one’s getting their hands slapped for their taxes.”

KYRSTEN SINEMA SAYS SHE WILL SUPPORT MANCHIN-SCHUMER SPENDING BILL: HERE IS WHAT ARIZONANS HAD TO SAY

Senator Kyrsten Sinema, D-Ariz., departs from the US Capitol in Washington, DC, on October 28, 2021. <span class="copyright">MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images</span>” data-src=”https://s.yimg.com/ny/api/res/1.2/wGvsfyo1CAx3s6FOaoJ1pQ–/YXBwaWQ9aGlnaGxhbmRlcjt3PTcwNTtoPTM5Nw–/https://s.yimg.com/uu/api/res/1.2/6UaRzreLqWsCZvRAcIfJjQ–~B/aD03MjA7dz0xMjgwO2FwcGlkPXl0YWNoeW9u/https://media.zenfs.com/en/fox_news_text_979/b9b0d69667f382fd1ad22520c2c6804c”/><noscript><img alt=MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images” src=”https://s.yimg.com/ny/api/res/1.2/wGvsfyo1CAx3s6FOaoJ1pQ–/YXBwaWQ9aGlnaGxhbmRlcjt3PTcwNTtoPTM5Nw–/https://s.yimg.com/uu/api/res/1.2/6UaRzreLqWsCZvRAcIfJjQ–~B/aD03MjA7dz0xMjgwO2FwcGlkPXl0YWNoeW9u/https://media.zenfs.com/en/fox_news_text_979/b9b0d69667f382fd1ad22520c2c6804c” class=”caas-img”/>

Senator Kyrsten Sinema, D-Ariz., departs from the US Capitol in Washington, DC, on October 28, 2021. MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images

Resident Gary Kuznia agreed, arguing the IRS would use the money to “go after” less wealthy people rather than the rich.

“No, they’re just going to go after the little guy. They really will. And they’re never going to go after the rich people. Never. Or else they would have done it already because they’re not paying their fair share of taxes right now,” he said.

“Little guys like me — you know, I’m retired, and I hate to see that. I really do. I was an accountant all my life, and I don’t want to see that. And I hope they don’t They’re going to hunt the little guy, people who make less money, and make them pay. Because they have to pay for this bill. How are they going to pay for this bill?” I have added.

Resident Richard Carrillo said he supported the bill, but appeared hesitant about the IRS funding going to increase additional auditing. “I don’t know about the audits, but if it’s going to support and help people then I say yes,” he said.

SENATE AIDES HINT AT MANCHIN DISTRESS OVER SPENDING BILL BACKLASH, DESIRE TO AVOID ‘BUILD BACK BETTER’ MENTION

“No, no, no, not at all. I know taxes kind of make the US go round and round, but at this point there’s a lot of working class people that pay their dues, but I mean, they don’t need to be audited,” said resident Richard Carrillo. “That money can be spent somewhere else. So yeah I think that is a waste of money, giving it to the IRS so that they can give more audits and stuff like that.”

Another resident who wished to remain unnamed argued the money designated for the IRS was “too large” of an amount, and that taxes should be handled at a more local level rather than by the federal government.

The Senate is scheduled to reconvene Saturday to vote to begin debate on the bill, which is expected to pass with the support of every Democrat.