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Business

Ford Focus ST and Fiesta ST axed in Australia

Just as fresh-faced updates to the Ford Focus ST and Ford Fiesta ST are rolling into local showrooms, the company has announced the shock departure of its two remaining hot hatches.


The future of hot hatches in Australia has been dealt another blow with the shock axing of two fan favorites — the Ford Focus ST and Fiesta ST.

Both will be gone before the end of this year, a statement issued by Ford Australia this afternoon has confirmed.

It leaves the Ford Mustang as the sole remaining passenger car in the Ford Australia line-up — all other models are utes, SUVs, four-wheel drives or delivery vans.



The final shipment of Focus ST and ST X — only 40 cars in total — is on the way from Europe, with the Fiesta ST to continue for a little longer, though exact numbers are yet to be disclosed by Ford Australia.

Drive understands Ford Australia could be holding about 50 customer orders for the Fiesta ST – though a few more cars will be made available to customers who have yet to place an order.

The departure of Ford’s hot hatches from Australian showrooms – both models are still on sale in Europe, where they are manufactured – is a reflection of slowing sales across the broader small-car segment.



Indeed, Drive understands Ford Australia was lucky to be able to retain the Fiesta ST and Focus ST variants amid the overall market decline in recent years for small cars and hot hatches.

This generation Ford Fiesta was scaled back to include only the ST variant since its local introduction in 2020, while the Ford Focus line-up in Australia was reduced to only the ST model at the start of 2022.

But now their days are numbered, as both models are no longer considered financially viable in Australia.



Official confirmation of the “departure” of the hot hatches came today from Ford Australia, which said it “focuses on areas of growing customer demand” — including the Ranger Raptor and Ford Mustang.

“Both the Focus ST and Fiesta ST have been segment-defining hot hatches for Ford Australia and have put smiles on the faces of enthusiasts across the country,” Andrew Birkic, President and CEO of Ford Australia, said in a media statement.

“But with semi-conductor-related supply shortages and our focus on emerging areas of growth, we’ve made the difficult decision to call time on these iconic hot hatches in Australia.”



Sales of the Focus ST and ST X have been falling steadily over the past 18 months, with 285 deliveries in 2021 but only 72 in the first half of this year.

In the same period, sales of the Fiesta ST — which outlasted a model cull to become the only surviving Fiesta model in Australia — have dropped from 342 to 71.

In contrast, sales of the baby Puma SUV crossover have held strong — 3,218 last year and 1,380 in the first half of this year.



The prospects for potential buyers of the remaining inbound examples of the Ford Fiesta ST and Ford Focus ST are not good.

“The next Focus ST shipment is the very last one,” a Ford Australia spokesperson told Drive.

“We’ve secured some production of Fiesta ST through to the back end of the year, so we will be able to fulfill our existing customer orders. There might be limited extra availability.”

The loss of the fast Fords means another thinning of the ranks of hot hatches in Australia.

In the city-sized compact class the only remaining runners are the Hyundai i20 N, Suzuki Swift Sport and Volkswagen Polo GTI.

Things are better in the small-car ranks, where the reducing roster still includes the Audi RS3, BMW M135i, Honda Civic Type-R, Mercedes-AMG A45, Renault Megane RS, and Volkswagen Golf GTI and R.



There is little chance of future replacements for the small Ford ST siblings, with the Focus expected to die in 2025, although the name could continue on a future electric car.

Even so, Mr Birkic said Ford Australia is committed to the owners of Fiesta ST and Focus ST models, and is hinting about the coming next Mustang, due to be unveiled at the Detroit Motor Show in September 2022.

“We look forward to sharing more about the next era of our performance vehicle line-up soon,” the Ford executive said in the media statement.

Paul Gover

Paul Gover has been a motoring journalist for more than 40 years, working on newspapers, magazines, websites, radio and television. A qualified general news journalist and sports reporter, his passion for motoring led him to Wheels, Motor, Car Australia, Which Car and Auto Action magazines. He is a champion racing driver as well as a World Car of the Year judge.

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Sports

casualty ward, injuries, Melbourne Storm, Jahrome Hughes, shoulder

Sea Eagles playmaker Kieran Foran suffered a hamstring injury in his side’s clash against the Eels in a brutal blow to the club’s final chances.

The 32-year-old left the field with seven minutes remaining in the contest and was spotted by Fox League’s Greg Alexander.

“That is not a good picture, Kieren Foran sitting there with an ice pack on his hamstring,” Fox League’s Greg Alexander said.

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Manly coach Des Hasler conceded the veteran is unlikely to feature in Round 22.

“He has got a mild hamstring strain, so I don’t think he will make it next week,” Hasler said in the post-match press conference.

As it stands, the Sea Eagles sit four points outside the top eight and need all hands on deck if they want to make a late finals charge.

But now, Hasler will need to look elsewhere, potentially handing young gun Josh Schuster a chance to return at five-eighth.

Meanwhile, Fox League’s Lara Pitt confirmed Titans star Aaron Booth will be sidelined for an extended period after his knee dislocated.

X-rays revealed Booth suffered a small break in his leg, with scans tomorrow expected to show an ACL, MCL and PCL rupture.

MELBOURNE’S COSTLY BLOW

Melbourne’s injury crisis may have deepened with halfback Jahrome Hughes leaving the game against the Titans on Friday night with a shoulder complaint.

Hughes played out the first half but was assessed at half-time and Storm coach Craig Bellamy opted against using him in the second stanza.

“Jahrome Hughes will not be risked for the rest of this match, the Storm need to have his injured shoulder looked at,” Fox League sideline reporter Lara Pitt said.

“He’s with the physio in the sheds, the club telling me he simply had no strength in that shoulder, there were concerns he dislocated it in contact but it popped straight back in, so he’s going to have some scans tomorrow.”

Fox League caller Dan Ginnane said the injury could have huge implications on the finals.

“That is huge what happens there, they’ve got Penrith next week. Brisbane at Suncorp, the Roosters down here in Melbourne and then Parramatta,” Ginnane said.

“That is a brutal finish and top four is obviously no guarantee. It’s becoming a survival of the fittest this NRL (season).”

Read on for all the latest news in our NRL casualty ward.

INJURED IN ROUND 21

Jahrome Hughes (shoulder)

Aaron Booth (knee)

Kieren Foran (hamstring)

FULL CASUALTY WARD

BRONCOS

Selwyn Cobbo (concussion) – Round 21

Albert Kelly (foot) – Round 22

TC Robati (arm) – Round 22

Herbie Farnworth (biceps) – indefinite

raiders

Adam Elliott (hip) – Round 21

Jordan Rapana (suspended) – Round 21

Semi Valemei (knee) – Round 21

Trey Mooney (ankle) – Round 21

James Schiller (ankle) – Round 22

Harry Rushton (jaw) – Round 25

Jarrod Croker (shoulder) – season

Josh Hodgson (knee) – season

Harley Smith-Shields (knee) – season

BULLDOGS

Paul Alamoti (cheekbone) – Round 21

Ava Seumanufagai (calf) – Round 21

Raymond Faitala-Mariner (ribs) – Round 21-22

Corey Allan (groin) – Round 22

Corey Waddell (suspension) – Round 25

Luke Thompson (concussion) – indefinite

Jack Hetherington (shoulder) – season

Billy Tsikrikas (knee) – season

SHARKS

Dale Finucane (suspension) – Round 22

Royce Hunt (shoulder) – indefinite

Jack Williams (shoulder) – season

Sione Katoa (pectoral) – season

TITANS

Joe Vuna (knee) – indefinite

Shallin Fuller (leg) – season

BE EAGLES

Sean Keppie (shoulder) – Round 21

Ben Trbojevic (head knock) – Round 21

Tom Trbojevic (shoulder) – finals/World Cup

Karl Lawton (knee) – season

STORM

Jahrome Hughes (shoulder) TBD

Jack Howarth (shoulder) – Round 21

Will Warbrick (quad) – Round 21

Tepai Moeroa (shoulder) – Round 22

Nick Meaney (shoulder) – Round 22

Trent Loiero (back) – indefinite

Ryan Papenhuyzen (knee) – season

Reimis Smith (pectoral) – season

Christian Welch (Achilles) – season

George Jennings (knee) – season

KNIGHTS

Bradman Best (thumb) – Round 21

Kurt Mann (quad) – Round 22

Kalyn Ponga (concussion) – indefinite

Lachlan Fitzgibbon (shoulder) – indefinite

Chris Vea’ila (leg) – indefinite

Bailey Hodgson (elbow) – season

Dylan Lucas (pectoral) – season

COWBOYS

Kyle Feldt (hamstring) – Round 23

Jordan McLean (hamstring) – Round 24

Mitch Dunn (knee) – season

Heilum Luki (knee) – season

EELS

Haze Dunster (knee) – season

Ray Stone (knee) – season

Mitch Moses (finger) – Finals

PANTHERS

Eddie Blacker (hamstring) – Round 21

Mitch Kenny (knee) – Round 21

Stephen Crichton (ear/concussion) – Round 21

Kurt Falls (leg) – Round 21

Mavrik Geyer (thumb) – Round 21

Jarome Luai (knee) – Round 25-finals

Nathan Cleary (suspension) – Finals

RABBITOHS

Peter Mamouzelos (wrist) – Round 24

Hame Sele (hamstring) – Round 25

Michael Chee Kam (thumb) – Round 25

Campbell Graham (cheekbone) – indefinite

Jed Cartwright (hamstring) – indefinite

Liam Knight (knee) – season

Jacob Host (shoulder) – season

dragons

Cody Ramsey (knee) – Round 22

Jayden Sullivan (shoulder) – Round 23

Mikaele Ravalawa (hamstring) – Finals

Moses Suli (ankle) – Finals

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ROOSTERS

Siosiua Taukeiaho (cheekbone) – Round 22

Lindsay Collins (concussion) – Round 24-25

Billy Smith (knee) – season

Sitili Tupouniua (knee) – season

WARRIORS

Bayley Sironen (eye socket) – Round 21

Aaron Pene (illness) – Round 21

Jack Murchie (staff) – Round 21

Jesse Arthars (quad) – Round 22

Chanel Harris-Tavita (knee) – Round 22-23

Ben Murdoch-Masila (elbow) – indefinite

Jazz Tevaga (shoulder) – season

TIGERS

Luke Garner (neck) – Round 21

Tommy Talau (knee) – Round 21

Stefano Utoikamanu (wrist) – Round 24

Luke Brooks (calf) – Round 24

Jackson Hastings (leg) – season

Alex Twal (concussion) – season

Shawn Blore (ACL) – season

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Categories
US

Lightning strikes near White House kills 2, injures 2 others

A couple from Janesville, Wisconsin, died after a lightning strike in Lafayette Square, the public park right next to the White House.

A couple from Janesville, Wisconsin, died after a lightning strike in Lafayette Square, the public park right next to the White House.

Two others were left with critical injuries Thursday night.

DC police tell WTOP the elderly couple died overnight.

The strike occurred as severe storms moved across the region bringing with them thunder, lightning and heavy rain.



“Upon arrival we found four patients,” said DC Fire and EMS spokesman Vito Maggiolo. “All four were suffering critical, life-threatening injuries. We were able to quickly treat and transport those four individuals to area hospitals.”

The two men and two women were found near a cluster of trees, and it wasn’t immediately clear whether they were hit directly by lightning or whether they were struck by a falling tree.

“I cannot describe the injuries,” Maggiolo said. “All we know for sure is that there was a lightning strike in their immediate vicinity, and all four were injured.”

Maggiolo stressed that their location was not safe during the severe weather.

“Anytime there’s lightning, you should go indoors or you should go to a safe place,” he said. “Trees of course are not safe places. So anybody who goes to seek shelter under a tree, that’s a very dangerous place to be.”

Officials with the US Secret Service and the US Park Police were nearby and were able to help, potentially saving their lives, Maggiolo said.

“I want to thank them because their agents and their officers witnessed this lightning strike and immediately began to render aid to the four victims,” Maggiolo said.

The incident was similar to one that happened a couple of years ago, when National Guard members were in DC due to protests in June of 2020.

Two members of the National Guard were injured when lightning struck in Lafayette Square, which is where they were stationed.

WTOP’s Mike Jakaitis contributed to this report.

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Sports

A-League: Danny Vukovic signs with Central Coast Mariners

Veteran goalkeeper Danny Vukovic’s bid for regular first-team football to secure a spot in the Socceroos’ World Cup squad has brought him back to the A-League.

The 37-year-old gloveman has returned to the Central Coast Mariners, where he has spent five seasons from 2005 to 2010.

Vukovic has since spent time at four other A-League clubs – Wellington Phoenix, Perth Glory, Melbourne Victory and Sydney FC – and had spells in Turkey (Konyaspor), Japan (Vegalta Sendai), Belgium (Genk) and the Netherlands (NEC Nijmegen). ).

However, a lack of first-team football last season with NEC forced him to look elsewhere to help his chances of maintaining his spot in Australia’s World Cup squad.

Central Coast coach Nick Montgomery said Vukovic was a “massive signing” for the Mariners, who recently lost keeper Mark Birighitti to Scottish Premiership club Dundee United.

“He is a top class goalkeeper and a great person who will add so much value and experience to this young squad,” Montgomery said.

“He has played at the highest level in Europe, is a real family man and is well known in our community.

“To bring him home to play in Australia and hopefully help him make selection for the World Cup at the end of the year would be a special thing.”

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Categories
US

Jury to decide if Alex Jones has to pay punitive damages to Sandy Hook parents : NPR

Infowars founder Alex Jones listens to a supporter at the Texas State Capital building in April 2020 in Austin, Texas.

Sergio Flores/Getty Images


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InfoWars host Alex Jones returns to court Friday for his defamation trial, where he is being sued for falsely saying the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary school shooting was a hoax.

The jury will decide if Jones has to pay punitive damages to Neil Heslin and Scarlett Lewis, the parents of Sandy Hook first-grader Jesse Lewis, who was gunned down along with 25 other children and school staffers at Sandy Hook in Newtown, Conn.

Jones was ordered Thursday to pay $4.1 million in compensatory damages to the couple, who said they received death threats and were harassed due to Jones’s false claims that the federal government orchestrated the shooting to crack down on guns. Heslin and Lewis are seeking $150 million in damages in their lawsuit.

Jones said in 2015 on his InfoWars radio show that “Sandy Hook is synthetic, completely fake with actors, in my view, manufactured.”

“I am a mother, first and foremost, and I know that you’re a father. And my son existed,” Lewis said to Jones on Thursday. “You’re still on your show implying that I’m an actress, that I’m deep state, and I don’t understand. Truth is so vital to our world.”

Jones conceded Wednesday that the shooting, the deadliest at an elementary school in US history, was not a fabricated event.

The conspiracy theorist has been booted off Twitter, Facebook, YouTube and other mainstream platforms over hate speech and lies. But Infowars is still broadcast on many radio stations, and its website still attracts millions of visitors each month.

In this next phase of Jones’ trial, lawyers for the parents are expected to say that Jones is hiding millions of dollars in assets.

Categories
Sports

Manly Sea Eagles v Parramatta Eels live score, updates, stream, start time, teams, Supercoach scores, Clint Gutherson, Mitchell Moses

Parramatta have all but ended Manly’s season with an emphatic 36-20 victory at a sold-out Brookvale Oval on Friday night.

The win featured a try of the season contender and moved the Eels above the Broncos into fifth on the ladder with four rounds remaining.

MATCH CENTER: Sea Eagles v Eels, stats, video, teams

The Eels burst out of the blocks with winger Maika Sivo scoring two tries in the opening eight minutes to stun a pumping home crowd.

Sivo crossed untouched for both tries and with Mitchell Moses sidelined the kicking duties fell to Clint Gutherson who missed the conversions.

But Manly then scored 14 unanswered points as the sides went into halftime all locked up at 14-14.

The Sea Eagles hit back against the run of play when Daly Cherry-Evans put in a kick for Toluatau Koula to fly above the pack and score in the 20th minute.

Manly then slotted a penalty to draw level, before Jason Saab finished sensationally in the corner and Reuben Garrick converted to make it 14-8.

“What an amazing turnaround after all the pressure the Eels put them under,” Greg Alexander said on Fox League.

Parramatta center Tom Opacic finished a well-worked team try in the 33rd minute to lock the scores back up.

Manly struck first in the second half when Christian Tuipulotu burrowed his way over in the corner.

Garrick slotted a penalty in front of the sticks in the 54th minute to make it 20-14 before Eels winger Waqa Blake scored an incredible try.

Blake used every inch available to him to produce one of the best finishes of the season over the top of Morgan Harper.

“That’s an incredible try, he brought the ball well above his head, he was smashed by morgan harper but he still gets the ball down in that corner,” Alexander said.

“He is a blade of grass in from touch in goal,” Voss replied.

Eels skipper Clint Gutherson then scored from long-range after Shaun Lane broke the line and off-loaded to his skipper who raced away.

“Shaun Lane has had 10 try assists this year, it’s been a very effected year for him down that left edge,” Alexander said.

Eels center Will Penisini scored after pouncing on a smart grubber from Jakob Arthur before Dylan Brown sealed the result in the 71st minute.

RE-LIVE THE ACTION IN OUR BLOG BELOW. CAN’T SEE IT? CLICK HERE.

MATCH PREVIEW

Manly must win their remaining five games to secure a finals spot and they get back a host of stars against the Eels.

Jason Saab, Christian Tuipulotu, Tolutau Koula, Haumole Olakau’atu and Toafofoa Sipley all return after standing down last week amid the pride jersey controversy.

Marty Taupau starts for Toafofoa Sipley who moves onto the bench alongside Ethan Bullmor.

Parramatta are coming off their best win of the season, beating Penrith 34-10, but without Mitchell Moses (finger) they’ll start slight outsiders.

Jakob Arthur replaces Moses at halfback on the team sheet but Fox Sports understands Clint Gutherson has been training in the halves with Dylan Brown.

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Categories
Australia

Barilaro inquiry hears female candidate was ranked highest to fulfill mandate to appoint a woman to the role

She was sent a final version of the panel report on June 15, placing Barilaro as the first-ranked candidate, several days after he had already signed a contract on June 9.

“I wasn’t aware that an offer had been made when I received this, and I wasn’t aware that Mr Barilaro [had signed a] contract,” Lo said.

She said she was never told that one of Barilaro’s informal referees was Ayres, the minister in charge of the portfolio.

Lo also said the other independent panel member, Warwick Smith, had asked her to put on the record that “had he known then what he knows now, he also would not have endorsed the report” recommending Barilaro.

She still believed Barilaro would have been successful in the US job, but maintained serious concerns about the process that placed him in the role.

The government had been highly critical of the committee for not immediately calling the commissioner to the inquiry.

It also raised concerns about the treatment of the third-ranked candidate, who had applied in an earlier recruitment round. She said the panel was given her first interview report, without being told it had been substantially downgraded for the second review.

“I had trusted that the first assessment would be carried over,” she said.

“I should have asked to see the first panel’s report. I deeply regret not doing so, and I’ve learned a hard lesson.”

Earlier, Investment NSW managing director Kylie Bell told the inquiry that Cole, a global executive, was initially ranked higher than Barilaro because of a preference to appoint a female to the role.

Cole and Barilaro were the top two candidates from a recruitment round for the New York trade commissioner role.

“[Cole] was an excellent candidate, no doubt,” Bell said on Friday. “I suspect [the recruitment manager] was trying to help us fulfill our mandate of looking at someone from a diverse background.”

Bell added that someone “should not be employed because they’re a female if they are not the best person for the job”.

Investment NSW managing director Kylie Bell gives evidence to the inquiry on Friday.

Investment NSW managing director Kylie Bell gives evidence to the inquiry on Friday.Credit:Kate Geraghty

Bell on Friday said she dismissed an unflattering report about Barilaro from the recruitment firm, arguing it reflected an “unconscious bias” against him.

Leader of the Opposition in the upper house Penny Sharpe asked if she was suggesting the firm “did not like him”.

“Potentially,” Bell said.

Bell said she conducted an informal referee check for Cole, who received a “glowing” reference and had strong business credentials in Asia, but that did not make Cole right for the US role.

“Because someone is a fantastic business person in Hong Kong or China does not mean they’re going to succeed in New York.”

Asked if Barilaro had the requisite international experience, Bell conceded he had not worked offshore but said he had led “a small business, that he took overseas as an exporting business”.

The inquiry on Friday also heard evidence from Barilaro’s former chief of staff Siobhan Hamblin, who worked for him between February 2020 and October 2021.

Hamblin told the committee she urged Barilaro not to quit politics amid the COVID crisis for the good of the government and the state, after the shock resignation of premier Gladys Berejiklian on October 1.

Siobhan Hamblin the former chief of staff to John Barilaro.

Siobhan Hamblin the former chief of staff to John Barilaro.Credit:Kate Geraghty

“My advice to Mr Barilaro on that day was that any plans that you may have to leave politics should be shelved for the sake of stable government and for the people of NSW, as we were still in the grips of a lockdown”.

Barilaro did not heed her advice and ultimately followed through with his resignation two days later.

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Hamblin said Barilaro never raised with her any personal interest in the trade roles.

Barilaro is due to front the inquiry on Monday.

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Categories
US

Dems unwilling to back Biden

Correction: This table has been corrected to reflect that Mandela Barnes and John Fetterman are lieutenant governors, not senators. Data: Axios research; Table: Axios Visuals

A starting number of lawmakers in President Biden’s own party have been unwilling in recent days to say he should seek re-election in 2024, amid gnawing fears he’ll be too old or unpopular to win.

Why it matters: Backing your own party’s first-term president is usually so automatic that no one would bother to ask. But behind the scenes, there’s a very real concern that going all in on Biden could be a mistake.

reality check: Some Democrats privately don’t want Biden to run again, for three reasons:

  1. He’s deeply unpopular. Many Americans associate him with inflation, high gas prices, entrenched COVID-19 and an inglorious end to the war in Afghanistan.
  2. Progressives want to move away from centrism and convention.
  3. Many Democratic voters want generational change. Biden was older when he took office than Ronald Reagan was when he left office. If re-elected, Biden would be 86 at the end of his second term.

Driving the news: Just this week, two high-ranking New York Democrats cast doubt on the president’s future.

  • Rep. Jerry Nadler and Carolyn Maloney were asked, during a Democratic primary debate for the 12th congressional district, whether Biden should run again in 2024. Neither would answer in the affirmative.
  • That followed a refusal by Sen. Joe Manchin (DW.Va.) to commit to Biden ’24 while trying to get a climate change deal over the finish line, and flat-out “no”s to Biden ’24 from two House Democrats in Minnesota during local interviews.

Yes but: Some strategists see all this as a misdirection of Democrats’ nervous energy.

  • “The chatter right now is more about anxiety about ’22 than ’24, and it is not really helpful for Democrats,” David Axelrod, director of the University of Chicago’s Institute of Politics and a former senior adviser to President Obama, told Axios. “This is a Washington parlor game.”
  • “Now’s not the time for the conversation. What voters say about an election two years and change away is about as meaningful as the Farmer’s Almanac.”
  • Biden’s age is “an issue he’ll have to consider and, if he runs, he’ll have to confront. But he doesn’t have to right now.”

The outcome of November contests and whether Democrats lose control of one or both chambers of Congress is likely to shape Biden’s fate.

  • There’s no party consensus around how to have a what’s-next conversation, or who could be the strongest alternative if Biden ultimately decided not to pursue a second term.
  • Vice President Kamala Harris has the standing as Biden’s No. 2 but faces concerns about her popularity within her own party as well as her general election prospects.

By the numbers: Biden’s overall approval rating with Americans has sunk to 39%.

  • Only one in four Democratic voters said they’d want him to run again in 2024, per a July poll from The New York Times and Siena College.
  • Age and job performance were the top factors. Roughly 94% of Democrats under 30 don’t want him to be the nominee next time.

What they’re saying: Democrats running competitive statewide campaigns in swing states are quick when asked about Biden to refocus on the issues they say voters want their party to address — like abortion access, the economy and inflation, crime and gun violence.

  • John Fetterman’s Senate campaign told Axios: “Pennsylvanians care about whether they have a senator who’s actually from Pennsylvania, understands their struggles, and will actually fight for abortion rights and to combat inflation.”
  • Nevada Gov. Steve Sisolak told us he is “more focused on lowering costs for Nevadans and continuing our state’s quick economic recovery,” but that he would support Biden’s re-election.

  • “Biden is the leader of our party and if he runs again I’ll support him, but if he’s going to win Ohio back in 2024 I’d urge him to keep a laser focus on lowering costs for working families – which is exactly what I’m doing in this race,” Nan Whaley, running for Ohio governor, told Axios.
  • Josh Shapiro, the Democratic nominee for governor in Pennsylvania, takes the president at his word” that he’s running again. His campaign told Axios that Shapiro is more focused on whether his GOP opponent Doug Mastriano, if elected, would discard legitimate votes in 2024 if he didn’t like the outcome.

A handful of vocal House Democrats have been clear they don’t think President Biden should — or will — run again.

  • Rep. Dean Phillips (D-Minn.) told a local radio show last week: “I think the country would be well served by a new generation of compelling, well-prepared, dynamic Democrats who step up,” after replying “no” to the question of whether he would support Biden in 2024.
  • Rep. Angie Craig (D-Minn.) told MinnPost: “I think Dean Phillips and I are in lockstep and alignment with that, and I’m going to do everything in my power as a member of Congress to make sure that we have a new generation of leadership.”
  • Rep. Dan Kildee (D-Mich.) told Axios he has heard rumblings on the Hill that some want younger leadership, even though he doesn’t agree with that. “If the president decides not to run again obviously it’s going to be game on,” Rep. Kildee said. “But he’s got to make that decision.”
  • Rep. Carolyn Maloney (DN.Y.) said—on two separate occasions — that she doesn’t believe Biden will run for president again. She has since clarified that she wants him to run, but maintained during a CNN interview on Thursday: “I happen to think you [Biden] won’t be running.”

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Categories
Sports

McLaren set to end Ricciardo’s 2023 F1 deal to make way for Piastri

McLaren is believed to have signed Piastri initially on a reserve driver deal for 2023, one that it intends to upgrade to a race seat, assuming that a plan for Ricciardo’s early exit is eventually agreed.

Ricciardo has a signed McLaren contract for next season as part of the original three-year deal that he signed in early 2020, while still at Renault.

Ricciardo and the team will now have to agree to a settlement involving a substantial pay-off in order for him to walk away at the end of this season.

He is understood to have no interest in moving sideways into the team’s Formula E programme, and is determined to find another seat in F1.

The Woking team is confident that it can hang on to Piastri despite Alpine’s claim that it has a valid contract with the youngster for 2023.

The Enstone team made an announcement to that effect on Tuesday that was subsequently challenged by Piastri on social media.

Oscar Piastri, Reserve Driver, Alpine F1 Team

Oscar Piastri, Reserve Driver, Alpine F1 Team

Photo by: Motorsport Images

It’s believed that Piastri’s ability to walk away from Alpine is based on a claim that his 2023 deal with the team was never properly signed. The July 31 date – widely believed to be related to an option the team had on him – is understood to have no special relevance.

The dispute looks set to go to the Contract Recognition Board, although there is also some question of whether or Alpine actually lodged a contract with the CRB that covered 2023.

It has emerged that McLaren began to explore the possibility of hiring Piastri several weeks ago as it looked for possible replacements for Ricciardo.

McLaren team principal Andreas Seidl is close to Piastri’s manager Mark Webber, having worked with him with Porsche in the FIA ​​World Endurance Championship.

At that time Piastri looked set to go to Williams on a loan deal that would see him return to Alpine in 2024 or possibly 2025.

However, after McLaren showed an interest, it emerged that Piastri could be a free agent for 2023 after all, and with the Woking outfit seen as a step up from Williams, negotiations became more serious.

Ricciardo meanwhile is clearly high on the list of possible replacements for Fernando Alonso at Alpine, although he upset the Renault top management when he agreed his McLaren move, and that hurdle will have to be overcome.

Haas could also be an option if as expected Mick Schumacher leaves, although in theory Ferrari has a claim on who takes the seat.

Sometimes pay-off deals like the one Ricciardo is set to receive can be impacted by the driver concerned subsequently finding a seat elsewhere. When Kimi Raikkonen was dropped by Ferrari at the end of 2009 he spent two years out of F1 in part so he could retain the full amount.

However, it’s understood that given the sums involved required to satisfy Ricciardo’s original deal, one scenario is that even if he lands a drive elsewhere he may end up still being paid by McLaren not to race for the team in 2023.

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Australia

Assange family barred from taking book about WikiLeaks founder into Australia’s parliament | Julian Assange

Security staff at Parliament House in Canberra seized copies of a book about Julian Assange from his family members as they entered the building to meet MPs on Thursday, deeming it “protest material”.

Assange’s family and supporters visited parliament on Thursday to urge the Albanese government to intervene in the proposed extradition of the WikiLeaks founder from the UK to the United States.

They were carrying copies of a book on Assange’s case by Nils Melzer, the former United Nations special rapporteur on torture, which they intended to give to MPs and media.

But Assange’s brother, Gabriel Shipton, said parliament security refused to let the family take the book into the building, because they deemed it to be “protest material”.

“I was saying ‘this is ridiculous. They’re books’,” Gabriel Shipton said. “I offered to call Andrew Wilkie, who was the MP who co-chaired the Parliamentary Friends of the Bring Julian Assange Home Group. He said ‘yes, go ahead, call him, but you can’t take the books in’.”

The family was able to distribute books to MPs and media from a box already stored in Wilkie’s office, and a staffer from Wilkie’s office was able to later retrieve the seized books.

But Louise Bennet, a campaigner with the Bring Assange Home Campaign, said the actions of security were “ridiculous”.

“They were incredibly adamant that it was protest material and that it was not allowed into the building,” Bennett said.

“It just blows my mind. This is the sort of thing that we see in Trump’s America, that we criticize in China. What is our parliament afraid of that we can’t bring a book in?”

The Department of Parliamentary Services said it could not comment on “specific operational security matters”.

Gabriel Shipton attended parliament with Assange’s father, John Shipton, and other campaigners.

During their visit, they raised concerns about the lack of progress since the May election. The family urged Anthony Albanese to make the issue “non-negotiable” with the US.

Gabriel Shipton said on Friday that he was disappointed in the rhetoric from the new government, which he said had undergone a “significant change” since it won office.

He said Labor had been much more forthright in its criticism of the treatment of Assange before the election.

“They were elected on that platform, [it was] one of their promises essentially, and it’s one of the first ones that they’ve gone back on,” he said.

Albanese has said that he intends to pursue the matter diplomatically and that “not all foreign affairs is best done with the loudhailer”.