Categories
Sports

Wallabies captain Michael Hooper leaves tour, Australia vs Argentina, team news

Wallabies captain Michael Hooper has withdrawn from Sunday’s (AEST) Rugby Championship opener against Argentina and is heading home to Australia.

The 121-Test veteran pulled out of the Test after the team was announced on Friday morning, citing a “mindset” issue.

“While this decision did not come easily I know it is the right one for me and the team at this point in time,” Hooper said in a statement.

“My whole career I’ve looked to put the team first and I don’t feel I am able to fulfill my responsibilities at the moment in my current mindset.”

Hooper will be accompanied home by his NSW teammate Dave Porecki, who suffered a head knock earlier in the week.

Fraser McReight, who has long been viewed as Hooper’s heir apparent, has been called up from outside the matchday 23 and will wear the No.7 jersey against Michael Cheika’s coached Los Pumas. It will be his third Test but first start.

James Slipper, who captained the side in Hooper’s absence (injury) last November against Wales, will once again lead the Wallabies.

Michael Hooper has withdrawn from the Wallabies' camp because of a “mindset” issue.  Photo: Getty Images
Michael Hooper has withdrawn from the Wallabies’ camp because of a “mindset” issue. Photo: Getty ImagesSource: Getty Images

Wallabies coach Dave Rennie said “nothing that was evident” to the group that Hooper was struggling with any mental health concerns until the long-serving captain approached the team doctor Sharron Flahive on Thursday (local time).

“How I have trained and how I have contributed around, around the team, around leadership, was excellent,” Rennie said.

“But clearly he’s been struggling a bit and masking that pretty well.

“That came to a head last night and he was brave enough to call Sharron and have a chat with her, which then involved (manager) Chris Webb and myself to get an understanding of where he’s at.

“The concern is all around his wellbeing. It was an easy decision to let him go home, and he’ll get plenty of support around.”

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TEAM NEWS: Wallabies make seven changes for Cheika Test as Rennie ends Petaia experiment before it started

Dave Rennie has applauded Michael Hooper’s “courage” in looking after his mental health. Photo: Getty ImagesSource: Getty Images

Rennie applauded Hooper for his “courage” in addressing the team on Friday (local time) and putting his wellbeing first.

“I think he’s felt he’s been able to suppress things over the past handful of weeks and so we certainly weren’t aware of anything,” Rennie said.

“He’s such a professional. He was able to get on and do his job from him, and he addressed the team today, which took an enormous amount of courage, to let them know that he’s not OK.

“He felt it was best for himself and for the team that he heads home.

“It’s not uncommon in life, is it? It’s a cross section of society and often men will say bugger all and suffer in silence. As I said before, it took a lot of courage for him to address the group so a huge amount of respect from everyone and a respect that we want to get him home and get as much support around him as we can.”

No timeframe will be put on the 30-year-old’s return.

Hooper isn’t the first professional athlete to take time away from their respective careers, with Lance Franklin missing the latter stages of the 2015 AFL season. Glenn Maxwell also spent two months away from cricket in 2019.

The Wallabies will face Michael Cheika’s Argentina on Sunday. Photo: AFPSource: AFP

Hooper made his debut in 2012 and first captained the Wallabies in 2014, after Stephen Moore suffered a season-ending injury against France.

Three successive coaches have made Hooper captain, with Ewen McKenzie turning to the northern beaches flanker in 2014. Michael Cheika then entrusted Hooper with the captaincy as Stephen Moore came to the end of his career in 2017.

Rennie opted to keep Hooper as captain when he took over in 2020.

Hooper has since gone on to break George Gregan’s (59) record as the Wallabies’ most-capped captain, having led the side 68 times.

MORE RUGBY NEWS

ARROGANCE AND CONTEMPT: How All Blacks Went From Kings To Punching Bag

EXCLUSIVE: Wallabies’ worst fears realized in crushing Kerevi update after Comm Games injury

Fraser McReight (C) will wear the No.7 jersey in the absence of Michael Hooper. Photo: AFPSource: AFP

His absence allows McReight a long-awaited opportunity in the No.7 jersey.

The Reds open side flanker has had to be patient behind Hooper. While he took no place during the 2-1 series loss to England, McReight was one of his side’s stronger performers during Australia A’s three unofficial Tests in the Pacific Nations Cup.

If you or anyone you know needs immediate support, contact Lifeline on 13 11 14 or via lifeline.org.au. In an emergency, call 000.

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Categories
Australia

Senators David Pocock, Jacqui Lambie won’t “rubber stamp” climate emissions target bill without amendments

“It wraps up every bit of emissions reduction in a neat package, but that ends up hiding all the details,” she said.

The proposed “carbon impact assessment” could examine the impact of the $8 billion annual diesel fuel rebate given to mining companies on the government’s 43 per cent emissions reduction target. Emissions reduction projects funded by government agencies such as the Clean Energy Finance Corporation may also be scrutinized.

Ministers already have to provide a financial impact assessment when proposing new spending measures. That assessment is included in the explanatory memorandum for legislation, along with statements about the human rights and regulatory implications of new laws.

Lambie said the proposals for reporting progress on cutting emissions did not “force federal politicians to show their hand—show us which policies are working and which are pulling in the wrong direction.”

“I agree with Senator Pocock that a target isn’t worth the paper it’s written on unless there’s some integrity to it.

“In my mind, if the federal government wants to pass a target into law, but it doesn’t want to tell us what it’s doing to get there, then we should worry about their commitment to the target in the first place.”

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Pocock also flagged concern about two Australian carbon credit unit methods established in the final days of the previous parliament which, he believes, will create questionable credits and which are currently being reviewed.

The government needs the backing of the Greens plus one further senator to pass any legislation the Coalition opposes, such as the climate bill.

Pocock, a progressive ACT senator, and Lambie and Tyrrell, from Tasmania, are the most likely of the six crossbench senators to back the bill as they have already said they back the target.

Their warning their support can’t be taken for granted comes a day after the Greens confirmed they would vote for the climate bill in both houses of parliament, and as Labor hailed an end to the “climate wars”.

The Greens backed the bill through the lower house even though party leader Adam Bandt condemned the target as “weak” and vowed to switch focus to fighting against new coal and gas projects.

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Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said on Friday the harder work of outlining plans to cut emissions and then doing it could now happen.

“You have to have an economy-wide transition here. It will take effort. It’s not easy, but we can do it. And while doing it, we can create economic activity – create jobs, particularly in our regions,” he told ABC Melbourne.

Cut through the noise of federal politics with news, views and expert analysis from Jacqueline Maley. Subscribers can sign up to our weekly Inside Politics newsletter here.

Categories
US

What’s in the (now Sinema approved) bill aimed at lowering costs for Americans

It’s a deal set that is set to use hundreds of billion dollars over the coming decade to reshape the fight against climate change, how Obamacare works, the price of prescription drugs, and the US tax code’s treatment of big corporations.

Sens. Chuck Schumer (D-NY) and Joe Manchin (D-WV) surprised the world on July 27 when they released their sweeping bill known as the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA). Then on August 4, Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (D-AZ) propelled the deal closer to the finish line when she announced she would support the bill after of course making a few tweaks.

The so-called IRA — which still has plenty of hurdles to overcome before it becomes law — is a far cry from some early Democratic ambitions but nonetheless marks a potentially giant win for Biden and Democrats just a few months before November’s midterm elections.

The rapid turnaround on the bill has left Democrats celebrating and Republicans shell-shocked. On August 4, Biden said in a statement that Sinema’s support was “another critical step toward reducing inflation and the cost of living for America’s families.”

Republicans are expected to line up en masse against the proposal but it can pass with only the votes of all 50 Democratic senators because of the rule of reconciliation.

The bill has gained the support of figures like former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers, who notably predicted the Biden administration’s post-pandemic stimulus efforts would stoke inflation. He reportedly helped shape this deal and said in a recent Yahoo Finance interview, “I think that the total effects of this bill could very likely be positive.”

Here’s what the IRA will do:

About $390 billion for climate change and energy efforts

The centerpiece of the bill is a giant allocation toward climate change and energy efforts. Schumer has noted repeatedly that this bill “will be the largest action on climate change ever passed by the Congress.”

If enacted, it will spread money all around the green economy, from $9 billion toward a program to retrofit homes to $20 billion to manufacture more electric vehicles. Automakers like GM (GM), Tesla (TSLA), and Toyota (TM) are expected to benefit from the money as well as the expansion of a $7,500 EV tax credit included in the deal.

Approximately $385 billion in total will fund clean manufacturing, agriculture efforts, and other sectors.

Advocates for the package say it will reduce US carbon emissions by roughly 40% by 2030. The news has climate activists, who had largely given up on the chances of action from Washington DC this year, ecstatic. As one example, Evergreen Action Executive Director Jamal Raad said in a statement that the bill could “mitigate the worst impacts of climate change, reduce energy costs for working families, and save countless lives.”

The bill also has provisions that would impact the energy industry more widely, including new rules around federal land sales that may lead to oil drilling and a fund to permanently extend the Black Lung Disability Trust Fund. That will help many former coal miners in Manchin’s home state of West Virginia. In total, the bill has many provisions that even the oil industry has gotten behind.

Late in the process, according to multiple news reports, Sinema secured an additional $5 billion in the bill to combat droughts around the country. The provision will be welcomed in her home state of Arizona and others in the Southwest that are suffering a drought that, by one measure, is the worst in 12 centuries.

WASHINGTON, DC - NOVEMBER 16: Sen.  Joe Manchin, DW.Va., and Sen.  Kyrsten Sinema, D-Ariz., depart after a Democratic policy luncheon on Capitol Hill on Tuesday, Nov. 16, 2021 in Washington, DC.  (Photo by Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post via Getty Images)

Sens. Joe Manchin (D-WV). and Kyrsten Sinema (D-AZ) on Capitol Hill in Nov. 2021. (Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post via Getty Images)

Changes to the health care system

The bill also makes significant changes to the health care system. One key provision will allow Medicare to negotiate for prescription drug prices. Current law prohibits Medicare from intervening in the talks between drug makers and health plan sponsors. The new rules would allow the government to weigh in to push down prices and save consumers — and the government — billions.

The bill would also add an inflation cap on drug prices to stabilize monthly costs and cap out-of-pocket drug expenses through new rules on rebates. All told, budget experts expect the combined changes will bring $320 billion into the US Treasury in the coming decade.

The IRA also extends subsidies for health insurance costs that began in the 2010 Affordable Care Act for an additional three years. That provision comes with a price tag of about $64 billion. The subsidies had previously been extended in the American Rescue Plan and are currently set to expire this fall. If the bill doesn’t pass, millions of Americans could see price increases in the fall.

Over $300 billion for the deficit

A cherry on top for advocates of the package is that the bill will reduce the deficit by over $300 billion over the coming decade through a series of “pay fors” (more on that below).

Manchin made deficit reduction a must-have portion of the bill to earn his support and noted “it is past time for America to begin paying down our $30 trillion national debt” in announcing his support for the deal.

Questions have been raised about the current inflation-fighting powers of the bill, most notably in the Penn Wharton Budget Model. Their first estimate of the bill and found little inflation impact. It “would very slightly increase inflation until 2024 and decrease inflation thereafter,” it stated.

During his conversation with Yahoo Finance, Summers cited deficit reduction as the key reason he expects the bill will reduce inflation and push back hard on the Wharton analysis, saying it “takes no account of lower prescription drug prices [and] takes no account of increased energy supply” but, even then, he noted “the Wharton analysis acknowledges that this legislation is doing great things for the environment, great things for health access, great things for fairness, without contributing to inflation.”

Other estimates have found slightly higher inflation impacts, leading to partisan sniping on the issue and whether the bill is misnamed.

New taxes to pay for it

To pay for it all, in addition to health care savings, the bill makes three changes to the tax code.

There is a new minimum corporate tax that would apply to corporations that have made over $1 billion in book profits in recent years. That idea was initially projected to raise $313 billion, but a change from Sinema around rules about depreciation that manufacturers had loudly complained about is expected to lower the returns by about $40 billion.

The deal will also put aside billions to help the IRS chase down tax dodgers. Experts predict a hefty return on investment: The $80 billion added to the IRS budget is expected to bring in $203 billion in taxes.

WASHINGTON, DC - APRIL 27: The Internal Revenue Service headquarters building appeared to be mostly empty April 27, 2020 in the Federal Triangle section of Washington, DC.  The IRS called about 10,000 volunteer employees back to work Monday at 10 of its mission critical locations to work on taxpayer correspondence, handling tax documents, taking telephone calls and other actions related to the tax filing season.  (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

The Internal Revenue Service headquarters in Washington. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

Finally, the deal would reportedly add a new 1% excise tax on stock buybacks. That provision, another late addition to gain Sinema’s support, will reportedly bring in $73 billion to the US Treasury. Removed from the deal was a plan to lessen the so-called “carried interest loophole,” which wealthy money managers can use to pay lower taxes on their capital gains.

Some figures, including the investor Kevin O’Leary, contend that things like the new minimum corporate tax could make the US less competitive. “That’s not a good move because you want to keep our economy competitive,” he told Yahoo Finance,

But from the perspective of Democrats in Washington, the overall tax effort will “begin to restore fairness to the tax code,” as Biden put it recently.

He and others note that the minimum tax would target the biggest companies in America, including the 55 members of the Fortune 500 that paid no federal income tax in 2020.

Ben Werschkul is a writer and producer for Yahoo Finance in Washington, DC.

Read the latest financial and business news from Yahoo Finance

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Categories
Technology

Does Guilty Gear Strive have cross-play? explained

Guilty Gear Strike players have had a rough time with the multiplayer aspect of the game.

Guilty Gear Strike launched with cross-gen play for players with the same brand of consoles, so anyone with a PlayStation 4 could play with players who owned PlayStation 5s and the same for Xbox. The lack of cross-play is pretty rare since most games released in the past few years have been released with cross-play. But players always suspected that the game would eventually receive an update that added the feature.

Several mixed messages have been sent out by the developer, which may be confusing if you haven’t kept up with them all. There have been a lot of cross-play rumours, especially this year when the developer’s promised date for cross-play nearly passed. Many players have assumed that cross-play will begin soon since it was supposed to be tested in the summer, but there has been no word on exactly when it will begin.

Does Guilty Gear Strike have cross-play?

Nope, Guilty Gear Strike does not have cross-play. The developer has made many promises that it will eventually come and has even started working to implement a beta, but it is currently unavailable to players. There is still cross-gen, which allows players to play with anyone who owns the same console brand as they do.

For those waiting on cross-play for a future Epic Games release, we wouldn’t keep our hopes up. Usually, the Epic Games servers of a game aren’t the same as the Steam servers, and if there is no cross-play for consoles, there is usually no cross-play for PC players.

Will there eventually be cross-play in Guilty Gear Strike?

Image via Arc System Works

The developer of Guilty Gear StrikeArc System Works, tweeted in May that fans would receive more information about the game’s future. Even with no information on cross-play, the company was still sure that it would bring in some new features in the summer, along with the cross-play test. It is still summer and the test hasn’t taken place yet. Arc System Works, however, announced it was working on season two of Guilty Gear Strike at the Arcevo Finals. Season two will be released on Aug. 9, 2022.

So as far as we know, the cross-play feature could come to Guilty Gear Strike very soon as a beta. Unfortunately, beta tests are normally very contained and are only available for certain periods to different players. Eventually, the beta period will end and players most likely won’t be able to access it again until it’s ready.

We wouldn’t expect to be able to play Guilty Gear Strive’s cross-play until 2023 at the earliest due to how long it’s taking to implement a beta.

Categories
Sports

Alpine’s claim to Piastri as Ricciardo faces McLaren exit

Oscar Piastri and Daniel Ricciardo

Daniel Ricciardo is set to be replaced at McLaren for the 2023 Formula 1 season by Oscar Piastri.

Ricciardo has reportedly been asked to make way for his countryman for next season, despite holding a valid contract with the team.

In turn, Piastri will join the Woking squad alongside Lando Norris on a two-plus-one deal.

All this comes despite the stated position from Alpine to the contrary, and radio silence from McLaren.

The motorsport world has run rampant since Monday, when Fernando Alonso’s decision to join Aston Martin for 2023 was announced.

On Friday, it was revealed that Piastri had signed a deal with McLaren for next year, which had been accepted by the Contract Recognition Board, a facility of the FIA.

The primary function of the CRB is to provide a resolution to driver contract disputes in days rather than weeks, without needing to involve expensive legal proceedings.

It is a body which is included in the Formula 1 Sporting Regulations, and is cited in Schedule 11 of the Concorde Agreement, the commercial contract between teams and the sport’s rights holder (Liberty Media).

The CRB is understood to have deemed McLaren holds a valid contract with Piastri for 2023.

Effectively it means, at least in the eyes of the FIA, Alpine has no legal claim to the Australian.

That isn’t necessarily the end of the affair, though pursuing it further opens a costly legal pandoras box, and draws aspects of the Concorde agreement itself into question.

On Tuesday when he spoke with the media, Szafnauer stated Alpine’s position and opinion on the matter.

His comments pre-date Alpine’s ‘confirmation’ of Piastri, but provide insight into the thinking at Enstone.

“I’m not privy to whatever pre-arrangements I have [Piastri] has with McLaren, if any at all, but I hear the same rumors that you do,” Szafnauer began.

“But what I do know is that he does have contractual obligations to us, and we do to him.

“We’ve been honoring those obligations all year, and those obligations last through ’23 and possibly in ’24 if some options are taken up.

“Our obligations to him this year was to be a reserve driver, to also put him in last year’s car for a significant amount of time – we’re well over half that program of 5000 kilometers, which isn’t insignificant, in last year’s car in preparation for a race seat next year – also Free Practice 1s, some simulator work.

“We’ve been performing those obligations on both sides,” he added.

“So he’s been performing, we’ve been performing, so therefore we do have a legal contract with him in the future for ’23 and, if an option is taken up, for ’24.

“I don’t know what he’s done with McLaren, like I said, I’m not privy to that.”

It’s thought Piastri signed a deal with McLaren over the Hungarian Grand Prix weekend, and was lodged with the CRB on July 30, prior to Alonso’s departure from Alpine.

Szafnauer said he only learned of the Spaniard’s defection through the media on Monday.

He then spoke with the media on Tuesday morning, having spent the previous afternoon fielding calls from prospective drivers.

It leaves precious little time to have got to the bottom of Piastri’s contract situation to understand exactly what rights Alpine has over him.

Nonetheless, Szafnauer is adamant that his team has a valid claim over the Melburnian, and believes it is Alpine which is entitled to decide where he drives in 2023.

“So the contractual terms, you know that those details we don’t like to disclose, but it was on the team’s side to say, not on the driver side,” he said.

He went on to explain the process of contractually converting Piastri from the team’s reserve driver to a full-time racer.

“There are some considerations of going from a reserve driver contract with options, to become a racing driver, to that racing driver contract,” he stated.

“But we’re absolutely in the position to take him.

“It’s just when you switch to racing driver; a racing driver these days signs, some of them, four different contracts.

“There’s commercial agreements, testing agreements, racing agreements, link agreements, there’s all that kind of stuff. And those are for all sorts of different considerations.

“When you move from reserve driver to racing driver, all that stuff has to happen too.

“But yes, we do have the right to take him.”

Szafnauer’s stance appears at odds with developments of the week as they’re understood to have transpired.

On the other side of the ledger, it’s suggested McLaren advised Ricciardo over the course of the Hungarian Grand Prix that he would be replaced by Piastri next season.

Should that indeed be the case, a settlement would need to be reached given the 33-year-old has a deal for 2023.

It’s understood the option to continue into next season sits on Ricciardo’s side, and would therefore need his cooperation.

Another possibility, should he not agree to step away, is Piastri taking on the reserve driver role at McLaren next year, then stepping into a race drive in 2024.

That is thought to be unlikely, with Ricciardo expected to reach a settlement and move on, freeing the pathway for his compatriot.

With few high caliber drivers and competitive seats on the market, the logical extension is therefore a return to Alpine.

It’s a move Szafnauer has suggested the operation would be open to.

“In the short term, we now have to replace Fernando with the absolute best driver, but what we mustn’t forget is we have [a] 100 race plan to start winning races and vying for a championship,” Szafnauer explained.

“We’re over 10 races into that, so we’ve got 80-some races left.

“The choice for us has to be one that complements that goal.

“That driver that sits next to Esteban [Ocon] has to be the best choice for us, that complements and helps us attain that goal.

“If you looked at Fernando, for example, he comes and goes, and I think that happens to other drivers too,” he added specifically referring to a Ricciardo return.

“I don’t think that’s an issue at all.

“I think what we need to focus on, for the plans that we have, for the next 89/88 races.

“We’ve got to make sure that we complement that plan with the best driver that we can, and there are some options out there for us.”

Categories
Australia

New Adelaide accommodation for domestic violence victims expected to be full within weeks

Eight new units have been set up in an undisclosed location in Adelaide to help women and children escape domestic violence.

South Australia is the first state to get new upgraded facilities, with other states set to follow suit.

It is a part of a $20 million federal government program to upgrade domestic violence services across the nation.

The Adelaide facility, operated by the Salvation Army, will accommodate approximately 40 people, with on average one adult and four children per property.

Salvation Army general manager of family violence Lorrinda Hamilton said the facility was in high demand.

“We are almost half full and we’ve only been open for two weeks,” she said.

A woman standing with a beige jacket and looking serious
Lorrinda Hamilton says the Salvation Army runs domestic violence refuge facilities across the nation. (abcnews )

“We are expected to be fully occupied within the next week.

“These facilities are critical. The demand for family violence responses outstrips the supply of refuge accommodation.

“It is one of the leading causes of homelessness.”

The site includes recreational facilities and outdoor play areas for children, but in a high-security setting.

DV Shelter Adelaide (1)
Bedroom and living areas have been designed to maximize privacy and safety for parents, while affording them the opportunity to easily supervise their children and ensure their safety. (abcnews )

Ms Hamilton said it was important the location was kept secret.

“It is imperative that we operate in non-disclosed locations, and that’s particularly important when we are working with high-risk family violence, particularly women who might be an imminent risk of death,” she said.

“The majority of people using this facility are from South Australia but there are some women who will be fleeing from interstate who will use this facility.”

A woman with brown curly hair and glasses mid-sentence with everything else around her blurred out
Minister for Social Services Amanda Rishworth says no woman should have to choose between having a home or experiencing violence.(ABC News: Matt Roberts)

Minister for Social Services Amanda Rishworth said the federal government fund was “about supporting women and children who are escaping family and domestic violence.”

“Every 10 days, one woman is killed by their former or current partner,” she said.

“This is a really big problem, family and domestic violence in this country.”

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Categories
US

Milwaukee to host 2024 GOP convention after Nashville pulls out

Beer, Brats, and Elephants.

The Republican National Committee has officially tapped Milwaukee to host the party’s 2024 national convention, where state and territory delegates will officially select the GOP’s next nominees for president and vice president.

“Milwaukee is a world-class city, and we are eager to see it shine in the spotlight come 2024,” RNC Chair Ronna McDaniel said. “I look forward to working with the members of the Republican National Committee, Milwaukee Mayor Cavalier Johnson, the Milwaukee Host Committee, and Visit Milwaukee to deliver an incredible convention for our Party and nominate the next President of the United States.”

Milwaukee was the last candidate city standing after Nashville’s city council rejected a draft agreement to host the event on Tuesday. However, the RNC’s site committee had already recommended last month that Milwaukee be the pick.

The choice marks a return to the Midwest for the GOP’s quadrennial extravaganza. The Republican Party has held 14 presidential nominating conventions in Chicago since its first election in 1856. Since the last Chicago Republican Convention in 1960, the party has picked Kansas City (1976), Detroit (1980) Saint Paul, Minn. (2008) and Cleveland (2016) as notable convention sites.

Milwaukee was due to host the 2020 Democratic National Convention, but the COVID-19 pandemic intervened and forced all events to be held virtually. The city used its preparations for that convention to argue to Republicans that it had a “turnkey” operation ready to host for real in 2024.

DowntownMilwaukee,
Milwaukee was originally due to host the 2020 DNC but was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Getty Images/iStockphoto

“Milwaukee welcomes the 2024 Republican National Convention. My city is ready to show the world what a great destination we are for conventions and tourism,” Milwaukee Mayor Cavalier Johnson said. “We look forward to the positive economic impact of the Presidential nomination convention, and, as the host city, I am confident all the attendees will find Milwaukee to be a splendid location for the event.”

Like most big cities, Milwaukee leans heavily Democratic. In the 2020 presidential election, Milwaukee County residents backed President Biden over Donald Trump by 40 percentage points, helping the Democrat to a narrow win in the Badger State after Trump pulled off an upset in 2016.

The winner in Wisconsin has been elected president the past four elections.

“My stance, and I think that most Democrats understand this, is that this is not a political decision, it is a business decision,” Johnson told CNN. “It will present an opportunity for us to have millions of dollars of economic impact … for us to fill our restaurants, our bars, our hotels, and to support our hospitality industry that’s been battered by COVID, of course, over the last couple of years.”

The Democratic Party has yet to announce where it will be holding its 2024 convention, but Atlanta, Chicago, Houston and New York have all submitted bids.

With Post wires

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Categories
Business

Bupa dispute with Ramsay Health Care leaves patients in limbo

Sick or injured Australians may have to pay more in up-front costs at hospitals as patients become a bargaining chip in negotiations between two multi-billion-dollar medical firms.

Hospital giant Ramsay Health Care formally ended its long-standing deal with private health insurer Bupa and its 3.9 million members on August 2 when the pair failed to agree on hospital costs for patients.

There is now a 60-day window, which expires on October 2, before Bupa customers have to pay more at Ramsay’s 72 private hospitals across the country.

‘I feel sorry for anyone else’

Bupa customer Liz Havriluk from Coolum on Queensland’s Sunshine Coast said she felt lucky her surgery would still be covered.

She just made the company’s deadline for her nasal surgery next month at Sunshine Coast University Private Hospital.

A sign on a building reads Bupa
Bupa customers will likely pay more if they try to be treated at certain hospitals.(ABC News: Nic MacBean)

Ms Havriluk said she felt for others who would be left with mounting hospital costs.

“Ramsay hospitals are just about all we have up here, so I feel sorry for anyone else,” she said.

Ramsay Health Care has four of the five major private facilities on the Sunshine Coast, including Noosa Hospital, Caloundra Private Clinic, Selangor Private Hospital at Nambour and Sunshine Coast University Private Hospital.

Ms Havriluk has been a member of Bupa health insurance for 22 years and her partner since 1953.

The pair pay $195 a fortnight for their cover.

Hospital with gardens
Ramsay Health owns Sunshine Coast University Private Hospital.(Supplied)

GP says patients sold ‘false promise’

Sunshine Coast Local Medical Association president Roger Faint said he was already having to comfort and advise patients in similar situations to Ms Havriluk, who were feeling lost because of the stalemate between the two giant health companies.

A man standing in a surgical waiting room
Roger Faint says patients face uncertainty in the wake of the dispute.(Supplied: Roger Faint)

Dr Faint said they could need to look further afield.

“It puts them in a difficult financial situation — where there was a certainty there’s now uncertainty,” Dr Faint said.

He said older people would be affected by the fallout.

“These people don’t want to travel to Brisbane, or they can’t travel to Brisbane because transport is difficult and they may or may not have family,” he said.

signage of hospital outside entry with person walking in background
Bupa customers with treatment booked at Ramsay Health Care facilities may have to pay more.(ABC Gold Coast: Steve Keen)

Dr Faint said patients might not realize they were affected until they became sick or injured.

“And they’ve paid their premiums which are thousands of dollars a year, in some cases for a very long time, then they can’t get the service they thought they were paying for,” he said.

“It’s almost been like a false promise as well, isn’t it?”

Hospital spat will ‘ring alarm bells’

Australia Medical Association president Steve Robson said the dispute would make people question why they should bother with private health cover.

“I think people around the country who have private health insurance are looking at this with some trepidation and saying, ‘Why are we in a situation where our health fund and our hospital can’t agree on things,'” Professor Robson said.

A man in blue medical scrubs smiles at the camera.
Steve Robson says customers will be left questioning why they bother with health insurance.(ABC News: Dave Sciasci)

He said hospitals were under pressure with staff shortages and supply issues while insurers spent less because so many surgeries were cancelled.

“I would think there’d be an enormous pressure on Bupa to actually do the right thing by the people who paid them so much money, and for them to have the care that they need,” he said.

“And I think it’s going to ring alarm bells around the country if it’s not resolved quickly.”

In statements, Ramsay Health Care said Bupa’s offer was below inflation and did not cover the increases in its costs.

Bupa said it would not accept a deal that would significantly push up premiums for its members.

Bupa said it would continue to pay some of the costs for care, even at Ramsay, but that the hospital may decide to charge more without a deal in place.

On Friday, Bupa competitor HCF confirmed it had made a five-year deal with Ramsay that “recognizes the increased costs hospitals are facing.”

Ms Havriluk said she was still facing out-of-pocket costs of $2,500 for her September surgery to address her sleep apnea, despite having gold-class membership.

“Bupa only covers only 85 per cent of the very first nasal procedure and then the other side I get 50 per cent, then 25 per cent for a third surgery,” she said.

“When you think about all the money you’ve spent, it’s pretty lousy.”

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Categories
Technology

The Best Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 3 prices and deals of August 2022

Rumor has it that an announcement regarding Samsung’s next generation of foldable phones is just around the corner, which means it’s a pretty perfect time to track down the best Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 3 deals.

Hefty discounts on the popular phone are becoming more and more common, and that’s a very good thing: with its $1,799.99 price tag, the cost is prohibitive for most people unless they can find a really good deal. Luckily, that’s why we’re here. Below you’ll find the best offers of the month, with everything from straight discounts to enhanced trade-in opportunities up for grabs.

With its lightning-fast performance, excellent cameras, and unique, one-of-a-kind user experience, the Galaxy Z Fold 3 was the first device to transform the idea of ​​the foldable from a gimmick into a serious phone that anyone could use . While we’re still trying to make sense of everything we know about the Galaxy Z Fold 4 so far, why not take advantage of the buzz surrounding the upcoming device and pick up a still-excellent foldable from last year.

Best Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 3 deals

Once you get your new Z Fold 3, you’re obviously going to want to keep it safe. Check out our list of the best Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 3 cases for some stylish and reliable protection.

Categories
Sports

Commonwealth Games 2022 – Australia’s team of matchwinners will take some stopping

Take an inch against Australia and they’ll still win by a mile. That’s the realization other teams have come to in recent years as the depth of talent enjoyed by the reigning ODI and T20I world champions has come to bite them again and again.

In the opening match of the Women’s Ashes in January, England started brightly with an 82-run opening stand to reach 169 for 4 from their 20-over allocation. Then Alyssa Healy fell for just 7 and Australia were 26 for 1, only for Tahlia McGrath to smash an unbeaten 91 in a 144-run stand with Meg Lanning and Australia won by nine wickets. England didn’t win another match in that series, despite challenging in the drawn Test.

Against India in their opening match of the Commonwealth Games, Australia slid to 49 for 5 chasing 155 before Ashleigh Gardner and Grace Harris launched a successful rescue mission with a 51-run partnership for the sixth wicket. And when McGrath and Beth Mooney dug Australia out of trouble at 19 for 2 in their final group match to beat Pakistan by 44 runs, a key to their success was rammed home yet again – if one or two players fail, someone else inevitably steps up .

“We were in a bit of a sticky situation early,” McGrath said after the Pakistan game. “Then Moons and I both probably struggled a bit early and had to work through that. Then that sort of allowed us to have that freedom at the end and get us to what was a really good total.”

McGrath has been a revelation in T20Is, going unbeaten in four of her six innings in the format, although she said her approach wasn’t so much about valuing her wicket.

“In T20 cricket I sort of just go out there with no fear, a bit of freedom,” she said. “I get to play my shots and I know that the batters I’ve got coming in before me are world-class, that allows me to play with that freedom.

“I’ve just been lucky that I’ve had a few not-outs because it doesn’t happen very often in T20. So I’ll just ride it for as long as I can do it.”

Her partnership with Mooney has also been key, in this instance yielding 141 runs for the third wicket.

“We’re both very chill,” McGrath said. “I remember there was a game in the Gold Coast where we got caught in traffic and it was Moons and I in the car and we literally rocked up two minutes before the start of warm-up. The security guard said to us he was glad it was us two because everyone would be freaking out.

“We’ve batted a fair bit together now. I really enjoy with Moons and we both recognize when each other is struggling.”

Mooney agreed: “She’s awesome to work with. I think we’ve got a pretty good understanding of each other and each other’s games. We’re both pretty level-headed people.

“She just comes out and plays to her strengths straight away and takes some pressure off the person at the other end, so she’s a very impressive player and hopefully she can continue that form for a while yet.”

Their union against Pakistan was all the most important after Healy, the hero of Australia’s ODI World Cup triumph in April, fell for four runs, as did Lanning, the captain. In six innings since her knock of 170 in the World Cup final against England, Healy has not passed 23. But Mooney wasn’t concerned.

“She’s looking really good in the nets,” Mooney said of Healy. “Ella She’s just been a little bit unlucky. We also know that when we get into semis and finals, that she steps up and is one of the best players in the world.

“So there’s no doubt in our changeroom that she’s going to show up and do that again for us. We’re really behind her and we know that she’s got the capacity to do some serious damage against the opposition, so I’m sure she ‘ll be fine.”

With Australia having set such a high standard for themselves, Mooney warned against seeing them as “robots” in light of “a couple of low scores”.

With the ball, Australia are also in a good place. McGrath took 3 for 13 against both Pakistan and Barbados, while spinners Alana King and Jess Jonassen have been in fine form.

New Zealand are well aware of the task they face in Saturday’s second semi-final of the Commonwealth Games, scheduled to start at Edgbaston at 6pm local time, which will be 3am on Sunday in Sydney and 5am in Auckland.

Having managed just 71 for 9 in their final group game – a seven-wicket loss to England, who will play India in the other semi-final earlier on Saturday – Sophie Devine, the New Zealand captain, was keen to put their latest result behind them .

“We were well below par and it wasn’t through lack of effort or lack of planning or anything like that, I think you just get days like that,” Devine said. “It’s never nice to be a part of but we’ve got to flush it down the dunny pretty quickly and move on to something that’s actually really exciting for us, playing in a semi-final against Australia at a Commonwealth Games.”

And Devine embraced underdog status against a side New Zealand, like everyone else, knows are capable of great things.

“I think a lot of the pressure is going to be on Australia,” she said. “They’ve certainly come into this competition as favorites and hopeful of taking that gold medal whereas a lot of people didn’t think we’d maybe make the semi-finals.

“We can really take that on board and just play with a bit of freedom and take it to the Aussies. We obviously know them really well, so I think our plans are going to be pretty spot on and likewise they know us really well too It’s always just a great battle against the Australians.”

Valkerie Baynes is a general editor at ESPNcricinfo

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