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US

Arizona’s key Senate showdown is quickly heating up

Chandler, Ariz. — Blake Masters went all in with Donald Trump, and it propelled him to victory in a highly competitive Republican nomination for Arizona’s coveted Senate seat.

Now, his campaign to unseat Democratic Sen. Mark Kelly this fall will test whether the Trump wing is strong enough to repaint Arizona red two years after Trump became the first Republican presidential candidate to lose the state in 24 years.

As Kelly’s campaign labels Masters a “dangerous” and fringe candidate, Masters’ strategy is to tie Kelly to an unpopular President Joe Biden and undercut his image as a moderate. He’ll need to join a party fractured by an ugly primary, unlike Kelly, who ran unchallenged for his party’s renomination and ended June with $25 million cash on hand.

“I think he’s the worst senator. This guy, Mark Kelly, he campaigns as a moderate, but he votes like a radical,” Masters told voters at his election night party in this Phoenix suburb. “We are sick of Joe Biden and the Democrats destroying our country.”

In what is shaping up to be one of the most hotly contested Senate races in 2022, one that could decide control of a chamber that is currently split 50-50, the newly minted Republican nominee begins his general election bid with a polling and fundraising deficit .

Kelly leads Masters 49% to 44% among likely Arizona voters in a new survey conducted by Republican firm Fabrizio, Lee & Associates for the pro-Masters super PAC Saving America.

The polling memo, provided to NBC News by a super PAC supporting Masters, also found Biden with a dismal approval rating of 38% in the state and suggested that Kelly is vulnerable if he is perceived as “more liberal and in lockstep with Biden than voters believed when they elected Kelly two years ago.”

Kelly’s team seeks to brand Masters

Kelly campaign manager Emma Brown said the senator is “an independent leader who cuts through political noise to deliver real results for Arizonans, like lowering costs at the grocery store and gas pump” and “creating good-paying Arizona jobs.”

“Blake Masters has dangerous beliefs that are wildly out of step with Arizona and harmful to Arizona families — like a national abortion ban with no exceptions for rape or incest and privatizing Social Security,” Brown said on Wednesday.

Republican Senate candidate Blake Masters speaks at a campaign event on July 30, 2022, in Phoenix, Ariz.
Republican Senate candidate Blake Masters speaks at a campaign event on July 30, 2022, in Phoenix, Ariz.Brandon Bell/Getty Images

The GOP has a voter registration advantage in Arizona. But the state has a history of favoring institutionalist Republicans, from Sen. John McCain to Sen. Jeff Flake to outgoing Gov. Doug Duey. It is unclear if Masters, a Trump disciple who has backed the Jan. 6 objections to counting some 2020 electors, can win moderate and well-educated voters who have drifted away from Republicans in recent elections.

Masters “is all Trump,” said Brooks D. Simpson, a political historian at Arizona State University. “He buys into the illegitimacy of the 2020 election.”

“The outcome will shape discussions about whether Arizona’s now a purple or even a blue state; it will be a measure of Trump’s influence on him in a state he narrowly lost in 2020; and it will tell us how the messages offered by extreme Trump Republicans resonate with voters in a general election,” he said.

Masters recalibrates for general election

The newly-minted nominee made a plea for GOP unity Tuesday, after defeating businessman Jim Lamon and state Attorney General Mark Brnovich.

“You may have noticed we had a spirited primary reply here. And it got a little loud. Maybe it got a little mean,” Masters said. “If you supported a different primary candidate, it’s all good. I get it. He probably had good ideas. But now it’s time to unite.”

The Phoenix metropolitan area, flush with well-educated and prosperous suburbs like Paradise Valley and Scottsdale, makes up about two-thirds of the state’s population. Kelly’s path to victory, his team said, is a strong Democratic turnout, holding the voters who have sourced on Republicans and maintaining high Latino support.

Andy Surabian, a Republican strategist advising the pro-Masters Saving Arizona PAC, said the blueprint for Masters to defeat Kelly is “really simple.”

“Just tie him to Joe Biden, who’s very unpopular in Arizona, and the even more unpopular policies of Joe Biden,” Surabian said, adding that Masters will need to “dominate in the rural” areas and “keep it competitive in Maricopa” and do not lose the county “by double digits.” He said it would help to “over-perform a little bit with Hispanics in a state like Arizona.”

Kelly is currently running a TV ad attacking corporate “price gouging” by oil companies who are “earning record profits” by exploiting a crisis and calling for a cut to the federal gas tax. His campaign for him rolled out a Spanish-language ad touting his support for Arizona’s small businesses.

Sen.  Mark Kelly, D-Ariz., speaks with members of the media as veterans, military family members and advocates, rally outside the Capitol in Washington on Aug. 2, 2022, in support of a bill that enhances health care and disability benefits for millions of veterans exposed to the toxic burn pits.
Sen. Mark Kelly, D-Ariz., speaks with members of the media as veterans, military family members and advocates, rally outside the Capitol in Washington on Aug. 2, 2022, in support of a bill that enhances health care and disability benefits for millions of veterans exposed to the toxic burn pits.Mariam Zuhaib/AP

Asked about Masters’ portrayal of him as an extremist in lockstep with Biden, a Kelly campaign strategist said the Democrat has shown a willingness to “stand up to the president,” citing his opposition to Biden revoking the Trump-era Title 42 border rule and his letter pushing Biden to act against high gas prices. The strategist added that Kelly outperformed Biden in Arizona in 2020.

“Trump-Kelly voters are real,” the strategist said.

This week, Kelly was in Washington as the Senate voted on a bill to provide health care benefits to veterans exposed to burn pits and other toxins. He praised elements of the Democrats’ big agenda package, which grew out of a deal between Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and Sen. Joe Manchin, DW.Va., including a provision empowering Medicare to negotiate drug prices as well as funding for health insurance coverage and clean energy. Kelly has also touted his support for the recent law that will provide new investments in US computer chip production and the $550 billion bipartisan infrastructure law.

Progressives in Arizona say Kelly isn’t as left-leaning as they want him to be. But they find him accessible and forthcoming.

“He’s not a senator that I would say aligns 100% with everything that progressives and Democrats are asking for Arizona. But he is constantly communicating with us,” said Luis Ávila, 40, a community organizer in Phoenix. “But he has town halls; he has meetings with us; he’s traveling across the state and meeting with constituencies. So at least we know where he stands.”

‘A bold America First caucus in the Senate’

Masters closed the primary with a TV ad touting Trump’s endorsement, an illustration of the former president’s influence over committed Republican voters in this state.

At an election eve rally in Phoenix alongside 2020 election conspiracy theorist and Republican candidate for governor Kari Lake, Masters served up red meat and a cocktail of cultural grievances over legal abortion, “critical race theory,” the 1619 Project, “woke ideology” and big tech He said the only good reason not to impeach Biden and remove him from office is that Vice President Kamala Harris would replace him.

“Pretty soon,” Masters told the cheering crowd on Monday, “we’re going to have a bold America First caucus in the Senate.”

A Masters supporter in the crowd, 56-year-old Kristin Zenk from Phoenix, said she worries Kelly isn’t going to be easy to defeat.

“Because people like him,” Zenk said. “He’s likable.”

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Business

Sydney cafe, Nuriyah Cafe, owner defends employee with Tourette Syndrome

Read the one-star restaurant review an angry customer left a café because their barista with a disability made them ‘uncomfortable’ – as the trendy eatery fires back in an epic way

  • A café owner stood up for his employee after a review criticized his disability
  • Review said a barista at the café, who has Tourettes, made them uncomfortable
  • Adam Kakaati, the café owner, said the review was insensitive and angered him

An upset café boss has rushed to defend one of his employees after a nasty online review criticized the barista’s disability.

Adam Kakaati, the owner of Nuriyah Café in the southwest Sydney suburb of Gregory Hills, said Vari Desho is the best barista in town despite suffering from Tourette Syndrome.

However, an angry customers said Mr Desho’s ‘tics’ – involuntary noises or movements – caused them to leave the café without eating or paying for their food because they were uncomfortable.

Adam Kakaati, the owner of Nuriyah Café (left) in the southwest Sydney suburb of Gregory Hills, said Vari Desho (right) is the best barista in town despite suffering from Tourette Syndrome

Adam Kakaati, the owner of Nuriyah Café (left) in the southwest Sydney suburb of Gregory Hills, said Vari Desho (right) is the best barista in town despite suffering from Tourette Syndrome

The customer gave Nuriyah Cafe a one-star review because Mr Desho's Tourettes Syndrome made them uncomfortable (pictured, the negative review)

The customer gave Nuriyah Cafe a one-star review because Mr Desho’s Tourettes Syndrome made them uncomfortable (pictured, the negative review)

‘Unfortunately the front of house team member had a physical condition which we initially dismissed,’ the review said.

‘It causes him to ‘bark’ and as we said, we thought it would happen especially as when he took our order it stopped completely.

‘Unfortunately it then got much worse and much louder and more constant. We felt sooo bad and really wanted to stay but when it got so bad we couldn’t even have a conversation we very reluctantly had to cancel our order and leave.’

Mr Kakaati was quick to fire back with a post of his own.

‘Today at Nuriyah it was brought to our attention that a customer took it upon themselves to post a negative review regarding one of our employees,’ he wrote on Facebook.

‘Here at Nuriyah we treat all our staff & customers like family and we wanted to address how we feel about the incident that occurred, over the weekend.

‘We welcome and support anyone with a life changing condition.’

The defensive boss later said the review made him ‘so angry’ because Mr Desho isn’t able to help his condition.

‘His knowledge towards coffee, everything about the machine, and the way he makes it, no one does it better than him,’ Mr Kaakati told the Herald Sun.

Adam Kakaati said his employees at Nuriyah Cafe are 'like family' and said the review made him 'so angry' because Mr Desho didn't do anything wrong (pictured, food from Nuriyah Cafe)

Adam Kakaati said his employees at Nuriyah Cafe are ‘like family’ and said the review made him ‘so angry’ because Mr Desho didn’t do anything wrong (pictured, food from Nuriyah Cafe)

‘I told him don’t ever say sorry to someone like that. You haven’t done anything wrong.

‘People said ‘he might affect your business’, but I don’t care. He has a family to provide for and he’s one of the best workers I have.’

Commenters underneath Mr Kakaati’s emotional post also defended Mr Desho and called out the reviewer for being insensitive.

‘I know this man personally, and it is very heartbreaking to see someone go to such lengths to write a review like that,’ one person wrote.

‘He is such a nice man, who would do anything to make sure you are happy and comfortable. Shame on you.’

‘It makes me so happy to see a business that supports inclusion and stands by it when challenged. It’s people like this that will make positive change when it comes to stigma and judgement,’ another said.

What is Tourette Syndrome?

Tourette Syndrome (TS) is a neurological disorder, which most often begins between the ages of 2 and 21, and lasts throughout life.

TS is NOT degenerative and people with TS can expect to live a normal life span.

Symptoms:

TS is characterized by rapid, repetitive and involuntary muscle movements and vocalisations called ‘tics’, and often involves behavioral difficulties.

The term ‘involuntary’, used to describe tics, is a source of confusion since it is known that most people with TS do have some control over their symptoms.

What is often not recognized is that the control which can be exerted, from seconds to hours at a time, only delays more severe outbursts of symptoms.

Tics are experienced as a build up of tension, are irresistible and eventually must be performed.

Typically tics increase as a result of tension or stress and decrease with relaxation or concentration on an absorbing task.

TS symptoms have long been misconstructed as a sign of behavioral abnormality or ‘nervous habits’, which they are not.

Source: Tourette.org

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Entertainment

Home and Away’s Sam Frost praises fiancé Jordie Hansen for taking care of her

Home and Away’s Sam Frost praises fiancé Jordie Hansen for taking care of her as she shares intimate photos from their weekend away

Sam Frost has shared rarely seen pictures from her romantic weekend away with fiancé, Jordie Hansen.

The star, 33, took to Instagram on Wednesday to share a cute photo of Jordie standing by the couple’s king-size bed with food on it.

‘He’s an angel. I’ve been feeling a bit crook lately so he treated me to a romantic weekend away,’ Sam wrote.

Home and Away's Sam Frost praised fiancé Jordie Hansen for taking care of her on Wednesday as she shared intimate photos from their weekend.  Pictured with Jordie

Home and Away’s Sam Frost praised fiancé Jordie Hansen for taking care of her on Wednesday as she shared intimate photos from their weekend. Pictured with Jordie

The former Home and Away star then shared a clip of the couple’s delicious meal as they watched a movie in the hotel room.

The couple enjoyed pasta and ice-cream along with other room service dishes.

Sam confirmed on her podcast the pair recently became engaged after just five months of dating.

Jordie proposed to the Bachelorette beauty during a road trip from the Northern Territory to South Australia back in May.

'He's an angel.  I've been feeling a bit crook lately so he treated me to a romantic weekend away,' Sam wrote, sharing a photo with food on their hotel bed

‘He’s an angel. I’ve been feeling a bit crook lately so he treated me to a romantic weekend away,’ Sam wrote, sharing a photo with food on their hotel bed

Jordie proposed to The Bachelorette beauty during a road trip to the Northern Territory

Jordie proposed to The Bachelorette beauty during a road trip to the Northern Territory

‘It’s a very important time of our lives, we just recently got engaged and to celebrate we thought, let’s hit the road, let’s go on a 14-day road trip,’ Sam said.

Jordie, 26, went on to describe his romantic proposal: ‘We were at Uluru and we had just had brekky and were about to head back down south.

‘Sambo had just been delivered her coffee, and so I said, “Hey, when would you say yes to getting married?”

Sam chimed in: ‘I said, “Pretty much anytime from now.”‘

Sam spoke about the couple's engagement story on her podcast

Sam spoke about the couple’s engagement story on her podcast

Jordie continued: ‘And so I took that as, ‘I’m going to do it this afternoon’.’

The Australian Survivor: Blood V Water star explained how he tried to rush his soon-to-be fiancée so they could get to Coober Pedy before sunset for the big moment.

‘[We got there and] I set up the camera in what I thought would be the perfect position, and Sambo’s come around and said, ‘I know exactly what you’re going to do here’.’

Jordie proposed to the Bachelorette beauty during a road trip to South Australia in May

Jordie proposed to the Bachelorette beauty during a road trip to South Australia in May

Sam said she ‘had no clue’ what was coming until she saw Jordie setting up a camera in the back of the car with ‘tears in his eyes’.

‘It was beautiful. He was really shaking and couldn’t sit down,’ she recalled.

‘I don’t remember a lot of it because I was so nervous. I was trying not to cry and just trying to speak. I remember saying something along the lines of, ‘Baby, we love jokes but this is not one of them. This is very serious’,’ Jordie added.

Sam, 33, said she was 'happy' being back in her home city, and was looking forward to getting 'more acting' roles

Sam, 33, said she was ‘happy’ being back in her home city, and was looking forward to getting ‘more acting’ roles

Sam sparked engagement rumors last month when a photo of her with a ring on her wedding finger at a hens’ party circulated on social media.

The happy news comes after Sam moved back to Melbourne to live with Jordie in May.

‘We have taken the next step and it’s nice,’ she told the Herald Sun at the time. ‘I feel so happy. Being able to travel again is great.’

The former Bachelorette met Jordie through her younger brother, Alex Frost

The former Bachelorette met Jordie through her younger brother, Alex Frost

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Sports

Ricciardo eager for summer break after “not the six months I wanted” RaceFans

Daniel Ricciardo is eagerly anticipating the month-long break between the Hungarian and Belgian grands prix after a disappointing start to his second season at McLaren.

After finishing 15th in Hungary, a lap down after collecting a five-second time penalty for colliding with Lance Stroll, the McLaren driver Ricciardo said he was “so happy to have a break.”

He goes into the summer break having contributed just 19 of the 95 points McLaren has scored over the opening 13 races. He admitted it was “not the six months I wanted” and was looking forward to relaxing over the four-week August rest period.

“I need it,” said Ricciardo after Sunday’s Hungarian Grand Prix. “More so because it hasn’t been a good six months.

“But even if the season was going awesome, I think a break is still nice, just to get away. F1 these days, it’s intense. Even the hotels, they’re full of people and these kind of weekends are just so full-on that I think just getting away from the circus for a few weeks is going to be really nice.”

Ricciardo splits his time during the season between the United Kingdom where McLaren is based and his property in the USA, and usually visits his home country during the off-season.

“To be honest, switching normally gives me a natural reset to a point where I imagine, say 10 days, two weeks into the break, I would have kind of got the holiday out of my system, and then I’ll build that hunger back again.

“I kind of unnaturally think about it after getting time off. That’s normally how it works for me. Again, go out, be with friends, drink some beers, have fun. And then I’ll feel like I’ll get to the point where I start to feel, not guilty but just like ‘alright, time to turn it on again’. Then it’s kind of a natural switch that’ll come back in, probably after 14 days.”

Last month Ricciardo firmly rejected speculation he could find lose his McLaren drive a year early. He is currently in the second season of a three-year deal to drive for the team, but apart from a surprise win at Monza last year the expected results have largely failed to materialize.

Meanwhile Alpine reserve driver Oscar Piastri yesterday surprisingly rejected his team’s claim he will race from them next year. His manager Mark Webber is rumored to be looking at placing him elsewhere, and McLaren would be an appealing option if a place can be found for him.

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Categories
US

GOP Governors Cause Havoc by Busing Migrants to East Coast

WASHINGTON — Lever Alejos arrived in the nation’s capital last week on a bus with dozens of fellow Venezuelans who had traveled more than 1,300 miles from their broken country to the United States. Most had braved poisonous plants and thugs as they trudged through dense jungle on the Colombian border and waded in water up to their chins to cross the Rio Grande into Texas, some clutching babies.

After being processed by US border authorities, the undocumented migrants were released into South Texas, free to go where they wanted. Mr. Alejos, 28, said he was offered two options: a $50 bus ride to San Antonio or a free bus ride to Washington, DC, paid for by the State of Texas. “I wanted San Antonio, but I had run out of money,” said Mr. Alejos, who has no family in the United States. “I boarded the bus to Washington.”

A few days later, he arrived in the nation’s capital, among a busload of weary migrants. He spent the first night in the plaza across from Union Station but eventually found a bed at Central Union Mission, where he hopes to stay until he can apply for asylum, get a work permit and find a job — a process that could take months.

A political tactic by the governors of Texas and Arizona to offload the problems caused by record levels of migration at the border is beginning to hit home in Washington, as hundreds of undocumented migrants arriving on the governors’ free bus rides each week increasingly tax the capital’s ability to provide emergency food and housing.

With no money and no family to receive them, the migrants are overwhelming immigrant nonprofits and other volunteer groups, with many ending up in homeless shelters or on park benches. Five buses arrived on a recent day, spilling young men and families with nowhere to go into the streets near the Capitol.

Since April, Texas has delivered more than 6,200 migrants to the nation’s capital, with Arizona dispatching an additional 1,000 since May. The influx has prompted Muriel E. Bowser, Washington’s Democratic major, to ask the Defense Department to send the National Guard in. The request has infuriated organizations that have been assisting the migrants without any city support.

A vast majority of recent bus riders are Venezuelans fleeing their crisis-ridden country, and many have also been arriving in New York, often via Washington. Eric Adams, Mayor of New York City, announced emergency measures on Monday to enable the city to quickly build additional shelter capacity. The mayor, also a Democrat, said the city had received 4,000 asylum seekers since May, fueling a 10 percent growth in the homeless population, with about 100 new arrivals each day.

Venezuelans have been showing up daily at the offices of Catholic Charities of the Archdiocese of New York seeking help. “Their primary concern has been a place to stay, food for their children,” said Maryann Tharappel, who directs the organization’s immigrant and refugee services.

“The infrastructure in New York is not built for this,” she said. “We are not on the border.”

Gov. Greg Abbott of Texas and Gov. Doug Ducey of Arizona, both Republicans, blame President Biden for record numbers of migrants crossing the southern border.

Cities along the border in Texas and Arizona have at times been overwhelmed with a surge in unauthorized border crossings that peaked under the Biden administration, which has sought to unravel some of the harsh border restrictions imposed by former President Donald J. Trump.

While thousands of migrants have been swiftly expelled under a pandemic-related health order known as Title 42, thousands of others are being allowed into the country to pursue asylum claims because they cannot be returned to Mexico or their own countries.

State officials in Texas and Arizona have been greeting many of the migrants after their release from US Border Patrol custody, offering them free bus rides to Washington in a bid to force the federal government to take responsibility for what they say is a failed immigration system.

After reaching their destinations, migrants may remain in the country for months or even years while they fight their deportation cases in court; they are allowed to work while they pursue asylum claims.

The situation has become acute in recent weeks with the arrival of so many Venezuelans, who cannot be expelled under Title 42 because Mexico will not take them and their own government does not have an agreement with the United States to accept deportation flights. And unlike most migrants from Mexico and Central America who have family and friends in the United States, Venezuelans often arrive with no money and nowhere to go.

Border Patrol encountered 110,467 Venezuelans along the southern border in the first nine months of this fiscal year, compared with 47,408 in the entire 2021 fiscal year. Overall unauthorized crossings have declined with the arrival of hot summer temperatures.

The situation has led to back-and-forth accusations with the Democratic mayors on the East Coast in recent weeks. In the latest salvo, on Monday, Mr. Abbott sent a letter to the mayors, Mr. Adams and Ms. Bowser, inviting them to tour the “dire situation” on the border with Mexico.

“Your recent interest in this historic and preventable crisis is a welcome development — especially as the president and his administration have shown no remorse for their actions nor desire to address the situation themselves,” Mr. Abbott wrote.

Fabien Levy, the New York mayor’s press secretary, had this statement: “Instead of a photo op at the border, we hope Governor Abbott will focus his energy and resources on providing support and resources to asylum seekers in Texas as we have been hard at work doing in New York City.”

The Texas governor and the mayors agree on one point: All three are calling on the federal government to act.

“The migrant crisis facing our city and our country through cruel political gamesmanship from the governors of Texas and Arizona must be dealt with at a federal level,” Ms. Bowser wrote in a letter to White House officials.

In requesting a processing center at the DC Armory and activation of the National Guard, she said that the number of migrants had reached a “tipping point” that had “overwhelmed” the district’s ability to handle them.

Ms. Bower’s request drew rebuke from immigrant advocates who said she had ignored repeated requests for shelter space, a respite center and coronavirus rapid testing for the migrants, among other things.

“The last thing we want is a militarized response to a humanitarian crisis,” said Andrea Scherff, a core organizer with the Migrant Solidarity Mutual Aid Network, a coalition of grass-roots groups.

Noting that Washington is a sanctuary city for immigrants, she said, “We should meet housing needs for everyone.”

The Biden administration said it had been in touch with Mayor Bowser, but Karine Jean-Pierre, the White House press secretary, said the governors were using the migrants as a “political tool” for their own ends.

“There is a process in place for managing migrants at the border. This is not it,” she said, adding that the administration was continuing to expel some migrants, place others in custody and release those eligible to the care of local nonprofits “as they await processing.”

About 15 faith and community-based groups in Washington have opened their doors to the migrants, offering them meals, showers and hygiene items during daylight hours. But the increase in the frequency of buses, from two to four a day to now sometimes eight, has depleted donations and exceeded capacity, and many volunteers have contracted Covid-19, said Ms. Scherff.

“The mayors have been playing into the Republican governors’ hands,” said Adam Isacson, a scholar at the Washington Office on Latin America who studies the border.

“Of course they’re making noise about the migrant arrivals because those who need shelter are a strain on their cities’ social services,” he said. But “the tenor of their comments,” he said, is giving the governors ammunition to push for a clampdown on immigration, including such measures as erecting border walls and eliminating asylum.

On a recent night, migrants climbing down from three buses were greeted by volunteers and staff from SAMU First Response, an international aid organization that has received some funding from the Federal Emergency Management Agency and began operating in Washington in late June.

They were given water, pizza and granola bars, and some were provided tickets for onward travel. By 1 am, most had settled for the night on the marble floor of the East Hall of Union Station. Others, from earlier buses, were forced to sleep on the streets. It created an unusual tableau: unhoused Americans on one side of the plaza; on the other, migrants with their meager belongings splayed on the ground — all within sight of the Capitol.

Tatiana Laborde, SAMU’s managing director, said her organization had enough funds to buy tickets to other destinations for about a third of the migrants for whom they were providing services. The group’s shelter in Montgomery County, Md., could not provide long-term housing, she said.

Ten City Council members sent a letter to the greater Washington urging her to not just seek federal assistance, but also release contingency funds and enlist staff members to help migrants, as well as provide Covid testing, isolation hotels and other resources.

“This is a crisis created by Republican leaders in other states, however, unfortunately it’s failed on the greatest to allocate resources locally,” said Brianne Nadeau, the council member who prepared the letter.

Many Venezuelans have said that they made the journey to the United States because they believed that the country’s doors were open.

“On TikTok we saw that people were easily getting into the United States,” said Yennifer Ortiz, who made the trip with her partner, Luis Moreno, and their 5-year-old daughter, Sofia.

Their trek to the United States lasted 45 days, including nine days traversing the perilous jungle on the border of Colombia and Panama known as the Darién Gap, Mr. Moreno said.

By the time they reached Texas, they had no money and were happy to board a free bus to Washington. “They told us that here, there would be people to receive us and help us,” Ms. Ortiz said.

When their bus pulled in around 8 am on a recent day, volunteers directed them to a respite center run by a church, where they bathed and received a fresh change of clothes. They spent their first night on park benches, and since then have been bouncing between the homes of Americans, they said.

Juan Rojas, 22, said that when he and a friend arrived in Washington, they were sent to a city shelter housing mainly Americans, where they felt unwelcome.

“The guys were yelling at us, and we couldn’t understand a word,” he said. “It was clear they didn’t want us there.” The pair left after two nights and spent a week sleeping on the streets, he said.

In recent days, Mr. Rojas said, they have been hosted by a “woman who helps migrants” some nights and in hotels arranged by volunteers other nights. He said that he had not yet given up on America after his odyssey of her.

But he was not optimistic. “In Texas, they told us that here, we would get help with housing, work and everything else we needed,” he said. “It was all a lie.”

Categories
Business

Bank of England raises 0.5pc to 1.75pc, warns of long recession

“The Bank is forecasting stagflation and saying that the medicine is higher interest rates,” said Paul Dales, chief UK economist at Capital Economics.

He reckoned interest rates might need to climb to 3 per cent in the coming year, and – like many commentators – he did not rule out another sharp move of 0.5 percentage points in September or November.

Matthew Ryan, head of market strategy at financial services firm Ebury, said he had “run out of fingers and toes keeping track of the number of occasions that the MPC has revised upwards its inflation forecasts in the past year”.

“The priority now clearly remains focused on controlling inflation at the expense of growth,” he said.

The BoE said even the labor market would not escape the economic carnage: the unemployment rate, which is now at a historic low of 3.8 per cent, will march up to 6.3 per cent by 2025.

The Bank of England’s big problem is that no matter how high interest rates go, this will have little impact on household and business energy bills, which are being driven by the Ukraine war’s impact on global commodity and energy prices.

Inflationary pressures have “intensified significantly,” the BOE said in its statement. “The latest rise in gas prices has led to another significant deterioration in the outlook for activity in the United Kingdom.”

energy nightmare

The worst of the energy inflation is yet to come in Britain. The maximum amount that energy companies can charge households is set at fixed intervals by the regulator Ofgem, which in April jacked up the cap by 54 per cent, for an average annual gas-electricity bill of £1971 ($3,440).

Energy analysis firm Cornwall Insights expects the next review, in October, will lift this to £3358, at 70 per cent surge.

The government has been shelling out money to help cushion the blow: every household is getting a £400 payment, with welfare recipients receiving an additional £650 grant.

On the business side of the ledger, Cornwall predicts that many companies might experience a fivefold surge in energy costs when their two-year contracts are renegotiated in October.

“While the business energy markets have so far managed to cope with the price increases … October’s increase in bills, coupled with other economic concerns being seen in the market, could tip businesses over the edge,” Cornwall’s analysts said in a note.

“This is particularly true for certain firms whose profitability is most exposed to energy cost increases, including hospitality, leisure, retail and many in the industrial sector. … The corresponding job losses [could] reverberate throughout the economy.”

The most recent GDP growth figure for Britain was 0.5 per cent in May, following a 0.2 per cent decline in April. The annual rate in the 12 months to May was 3.5 per cent.

But retail sales are falling, business confidence has declined, and the PMI flash economic indicators for both services and manufacturing are decelerating.

If the Bank of England continues raising interest rates as the economy begins to shrink, it would be the first time it has had to do this since the stagflationary dollars of 1975.

political pressure

The grim economic outlook is likely to put further pressure on the government, which has been accused of doing too little to ease the cost-of-living pressures and prevent a decline in living standards.

Prime ministerial hopeful Liz Truss has blamed the BoE for not moving sooner on inflation, and has vowed to review its mandate. But she is also proposing massive tax cuts that could further stoke inflation.

Meanwhile, the Bank is also trying to unload the holdings of government bonds that it bought to keep the economy afloat during the COVID-19 pandemic. It is looking to start selling off about £10 billion a quarter from September, followed by smaller sales of corporate bonds.

Categories
Technology

No new Nintendo Switch model expected before March 2023 – Nintendo

Following the release of Nintendo’s Q1 financial results yesterday, Japanese outlet Nikkei has been able to ask Nintendo President Shuntaro Furukawa about the possibility of any new Nintendo Switch models this year.

It doesn’t look good.

According to the report (which is paywalled), when asked, Furukawa said there will be no new Nintendo Switch consoles this year. That’s this financial year which for Nintendo ends at March 2023.

So if you were hoping for a newer Nintendo Switch model for Christmas, you might just be waiting a little bit longer. Nikkei has an interesting history when it comes to reporting Nintendo items, check out this article we wrote about it previously.

Source: Nikkei via Takashi Mochizuki

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Entertainment

Kylie Gillies breaks down live on TV as Larry Emdur recalls their Morning Show audition

The Morning Show host Kylie Gillies got emotional live on air as co-host Larry Emdur recalled the moment they “just clicked.”

Recalling their audition for the morning show in 2007, Emdur got sentimental about their instant connection and how over the past 15 years they “never unclicked”.

WATCH THE VIDEO ABOVE: Kylie Gillies gets emotional as Larry Emdur recalls their first meeting

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On Wednesday’s episode of The Morning Show, the TV personalities celebrated the launch of Emdur’s memoir Happy As Larry, which was just released.

Gillies shared with the audience her favorite line from the book, asking Emdur to “shed some light on it.”

“We just clicked, and we’ve never unclicked,” was the line Gillies chose.

Kylie gets emotional. Credit: TMS

“That’s about us Kylie, that’s about you,” Emdur laughed.

“The only line in the book to read out on TV of course I would make it about me,” she said.

“No, no, no, that is about us, it’s about the first time we sat on The Morning Show couch for our audition, and how we looked into each other’s eyes and we just smiled, we laughed, we had fun, and we ‘ve never stopped doing that,” Emdur explained.

“And I wrote this to you in the cover of your book: This show and you are such an important part of all of this.

Kylie and Larry in 2007. Credit: TMS

“All of this, all of these silly little stories over the last 40 years has led to this,” he said, referring to their partnership.

“And I am so grateful for you and this show. And we just clicked and we’ve never unclicked.”

Hearing Emdur’s sweet words, Gillies was overcome with emotion as she said, “aw how can I make fun of that now because that was really nice!”

“Well it’s true, it’s true,” Emdur said.

Kylie and Larry recall their first audition. Credit: TMS

‘Most fulfilling chapter of my life’

“I mean, all this stuff it’s all about me growing up and me as a kid.”

“This was about growing up and nostalgia and getting to a certain point in my life, and that point was 15 to 20 years ago and that’s when this started.”

Emdur said that his time on The Morning Show has been “the best and most fulfilling chapter of my life and work life and our partnership started and that’s very special”.

Gillies responded, “Aw that’s so nice, that’s gorgeous.

Larry Emdur and Kylie Gillies in June 2007. Credit: SUPPLIED/PR IMAGE

“When you started off with the words ‘couch and audition’ I was wondering where you were going with that. Glad it turned out really nice.”

“But you got the job, so well done,” Emdur joked.

“That’s all that counts,” Gillies added.

For more engaging The Morning Show content, visit 7Life on Facebook.

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Categories
Sports

There’s ‘no reason’ Collingwood can’t win the flag as shades of Baby Bombers emerge

There is “no reason” why Collingwood can’t win the 2022 premiership, according to David King, with the club even compared to the ‘Baby Bombers’ of 1993.

The Magpies are running hot on a 10-match winning streak to sit in third – just one win off top spot after 20 rounds.

And while the criticism has been that they’ve beaten 11th, 12th, 14th, 15th, 16th and 18th in that run of victories, there’s also been wins over Fremantle, Carlton and Melbourne.

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“You can say what you like about the numbers, the stats, the possessions,” King said on AFL360.

“They turn up for each other – this is building something quite special.

“There’s no reason why they can’t do it this year – we saw Chris Scott do it first year, we saw Rodney Eade make a grand finale his first year, (Luke) Beveridge and (John) Longmire win it in their second year – this is big, come with it.”

AFL360 co-host Mark Robinson laughed as he admitted: “I’m on the dark side already, I’m all in on Collingwood”.

“It might be the Baby Bombers of ’93 all over again,” he said.

Tim Watson with the 1993 premiership cup.Source: Supplied

The Essendon premiership side were dubbed Baby Bombers for having 12 players aged under 25 years in that winning team.

Against Port Adelaide last weekend, the Pies had 10 players under the age of 25, and two players currently aged 25.

King highlighted the fact Collingwood are outrunning their opponents as one of the best features of their game.

“I don’t know how you can just put a line through them,” he said.

“They are doing this better than the comp – they are gut running. Their running and power running is enabling them to end up with an extra number.

“Their run and link, kick forward, their demand for corridor we all see. But we don’t recognize their desire to just work harder than the opposition.

“This is a club in sync.”

King said every club needed a point of difference to win the AFL premiership.

It’s clear to see the love for coach Craig McRae. Picture: Michael WillsonSource: Getty Images

“Maybe (Collingwood’s) is not in the stats, it’s on effort. It’s on a buy-in. (Craig McRae) may just be a special coach,” King said.

“What I do love is what they are doing for each other.”

Statistics show that the Pies share one similar trait with the premiers of the past two seasons – Melbourne and Richmond – and it’s their ranking for what they without the footy.

The Magpies are currently the best ranked team in the competition – like Melbourne were in 2021, while Richmond were ranked fourth when they took the flag in 2020.

Collingwood do have a tough run home with games to come against Melbourne, Sydney (away) and Carlton – who could be battling for finals by Round 23.

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Categories
US

Cincinnati zoo’s hippo Bibi gives birth to second hippo baby

ZOO TODAY F US WITH THE ENTIRE HIPPO FAMILY. IT’SRU YOU WORLD FAMOUS. HIPPO FIONA WILL HAVE TO SHARE THE SPOTLIGHT SOON BECAUSE THERE’S GOING TO BE A NEW BABY. TOWN IT’S HARD TO BELIEVE FIONA IS GOING TO BE A BIG SISTER NOW MATT. I KNOW THERE’S ANOTHER BABY ON THE WAY. I’M SO EXCITING F ALRIGHT. YES, BB IS EXPECTING AND YOU COULD CALL THIS A SURPRISE PREGNANCY. WE WEREN’T EECXPTING IT. WE WON’T LIE. SHE WAS ON BIRTH CONTROL, BUT I FOUND A WAY SO WE ARE READY TO VEHA A SIBLING FOR FIONAHE T ZOO SHARED THIS ULTRASOUND IMAGE SUNDAY ON SOCIAL MEDIA SAYING PPHAY SIBLINGS DAY. THE POST WAS FOLLOWED BY A PICTURE OF WATERMELON AND JUST A FEW HOURS LATER. IT WAS MADE OFFICIAL THE ZOO ANNOUNCED TODAY BABIES. IN BIRTH, BUT WE DECIDED IT MIGHT BE CZYRA SINCE SHE IS UNCONSCIOUS, BUT SHE COULD BE PREGNANT AND WE DECIDED TO DO AN ULTRASOUND AND WE SAW A LITTLE BABY HIPPO IN THERE FIVE YEAR OLD FIONA BECAME A WORLDWIDE INSPIRATION WHEN THE FAMOUS HIPPO WAS BORN SIX WEEKS PREMATURELY DEFYING THE ODDS OF HER PREEMIE BIRTH. YOU COULD SAY SHE’S A ZOO FAN FAVORITE. WHAT DO YOU THINK ABOUT FIONA BECOMING A BIG SISTER? I MUST SAY REALLY EXCITED AND I PRETTY MUCH STJU HERE TODAY. FIONA WILL ALWAYS BE THE HIPPO WHO DEFIED THE ODDS. AND THE HIPPO WHO SOON WILL HAVE TO LEARN TO SHARE THE SPOTLIGHT THWI HER BABY BROTHER OR SISTER 18 YEAR OLD MALE HIPPO TUCKER IS THE PROUD PAPA. THE ZOOIL WL BE SHARING UPDATES ON BB’S PREGNANCY AND BABY PREPARATIONS LEANGDI UP TO THE BIRTH FROMHE

Fiona is a big sister: Cincinnati zoo’s hippo Bibi gives birth to second hippo baby

Cincinnati Zoo’s most famous resident Fiona is officially a big sister. The Cincinnati Zoo announced Bibi has given birth to her second baby hippo. The new addition to the family came around 10 pm Wednesday night. “This calf looks huge to us because Fiona, Bibi’s first baby, only weighed 29 pounds when she was born six weeks premature and wasn’t able to stand on her own. This new calf weighs at least twice as much as Fiona did and is already walking,” said Christina Gorsuch, Cincinnati Zoo’s director of animal care. “We’re not sure if nursing has occurred yet because the water is murky. It’s Bibi’s first time nursing, since Fiona had to be cared for by the hippo staff, so we’re keeping a close eye on them to make sure we don’t need to step in.”Fiona weighed only 29 pounds at birth — 25 pounds less than the lowest recorded birth weight for her species. She survived because of her animal care team’s tireless efforts to save her and has inspired many to care about her species and wildlife.“Bibi and the baby, yet to be named, will spend the next two weeks bonding behind the scenes,” said Gorsuch . “A female would take her newborn away from the bloat for about that amount of time in the wild, and we try to give Bibi the choice to do what feels natural to her.” The zoo says the baby and Bibi will not be visible to the public right away, but videos will be shared via social media by the Zoo. Tucker and Fiona will still be in their outdoor habitat as usual. The zoo’s dad-to-be Tucker arrived in Cincinnati in September from the San Francisco Zoo. Bibi and Tucker bred in December, the zoo says.

Cincinnati Zoo’s most famous resident Fiona is officially a big sister.

The Cincinnati Zoo announced Bibi has given birth to her second baby hippo. The new addition to the family came around 10 pm Wednesday night.

“This calf looks huge to us because Fiona, Bibi’s first baby, only weighed 29 pounds when she was born six weeks premature and wasn’t able to stand on her own. This new calf weighs at least twice as much as Fiona did and is already walking,” said Christina Gorsuch, Cincinnati Zoo’s director of animal care. “We’re not sure if nursing has occurred yet because the water is murky. It’s Bibi’s first time nursing, since Fiona had to be cared for by the hippo staff, so we’re keeping a close eye on them to make sure we don’t need to step in.”

Fiona weighed only 29 pounds at birth — 25 pounds less than the lowest recorded birth weight for her species. She survived because of her animal care team’s tireless efforts to save her and has inspired many to care about her species and wildlife.

“Bibi and the baby, yet to be named, will spend the next two weeks bonding behind the scenes,” said Gorsuch. “A female would take her newborn away from the bloat for about that amount of time in the wild, and we try to give Bibi the choice to do what feels natural to her.”

The zoo says the baby and Bibi will not be visible to the public right away, but videos will be shared via social media by the Zoo.

Tucker and Fiona will still be in their outdoor habitat as usual.

The zoo’s dad-to-be Tucker arrived in Cincinnati in September from the San Francisco Zoo.

Bibi and Tucker bred in December, the zoo says.