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Republicans Begin Adjusting to a Fierce Abortion Backlash

Republican candidates, facing a stark reality check from Kansas voters, are softening their once-uncompromising stands against abortion as they move toward the general election, recognizing that strict bans are unpopular and that the issue may be a major driver in the fall campaigns.

In swing states and even conservative corners of the country, several Republicans have shifted their talk on abortion bans, newly emphasizing support for exceptions. Some have noticeably stopped discussing details at all. Pitched battles in Republican-dominated state legislatures have broken out now that the Supreme Court has made what has long been a theoretical argument a reality.

In Pennsylvania, Doug Mastriano, the Republicans’ ardently anti-abortion candidate for governor, has lately taken to saying “the people of Pennsylvania” will “decide what abortion looks like” in the state, not the governor. In Minnesota, Scott Jensen, a family physician who said in March that he would “try to ban abortion” as governor, said in a video released before the Kansas vote that he does support some exceptions: “If I’ve been unclear previously, I want to be clear now.”

Republican consultants for Senate and House campaigns said Thursday that while they still believe inflation and the economy will drive voters to the GOP, candidates are going to have to talk about abortion to blunt Democratic attacks that the party’s position is extreme. They have started advising Republicans to endorse bans that allow exceptions for pregnancies from rape or incest or those that threaten the life of the mother. They have told candidates to emphasize care for women during and after their pregnancies.

“If we are going to ban abortion, there are things we’ve got to do to make sure the need for abortion is reduced, and that women are not endangered,” said Representative Nancy Mace, Republican of South Carolina, who won an exemption for rape and incest in her state’s abortion law as a state representative. Now, she says Republicans need to press to expand access to gynecological and obstetrics care, contraception, including emergency contraception, and even protect the right of women to leave their states to get an abortion without fear of prosecution.

Messaging alone cannot free the GOP from the drumbeat of news after the Supreme Court’s decision, including the story of a 10-year-old rape victim who crossed state lines to receive an abortion, and headlines about women who confronted serious health problems under new, far-reaching restrictions or bans.

On Thursday, Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida, who has recently avoided talking about abortion, suspended a state attorney from Hillsborough County who refused to prosecute people who try to provide abortions prohibited by the state’s new 15-week ban, prompting angry recriminations from Democrats.

The recalibration for some began before voters of deeply Republican Kansas voted overwhelmingly on Tuesday against removing abortion rights from the state’s constitution. Since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, retracting the constitutional right to the procedure, many Republicans were slow to detail what would come next. As they rush to enact long-promised laws, Republican-led legislatures have learned how difficult banning abortion can be.

“Not just the pro-choice movement but the pro-life movement was caught by surprise” by the Supreme Court, said Brandon Steele, a West Virginia delegate who pressed for an abortion ban without exceptions in a special session of the legislature that ended this week with the Republican supermajority stymied. “Without having the talking points, without being told what to do, legislators had to start saying what they were actually going to do. You could see the confusion in the room.”

“We’re finding out who is really pro-life and who is pro-life only to get elected, not just in West Virginia but across the country,” Mr. Steele said.

In Indiana, a special session of the state legislature to consider a near-total abortion ban has had brutal debates over whether to include exemptions and how far those exemptions should go.

“For some it’s very black and white: if you’re pro-life with no exceptions or if you’re pro-choice with no restrictions,” said State Senator Kyle Walker, an Indiana Republican who said abortion should be legal during at least the first trimester of pregnancy. “When you are in the gray area, you are forced to reconcile in your own mind where your own limits are.”

For months, Republicans have maintained that abortion rights would be a footnote in a midterm campaign driven by the worst inflation in 40 years, crime, immigration and a Democratic president whose approval ratings are mired around 40 percent.

That is still the public line, even after the Kansas referendum, where voters faced a single issue, not the multiplicity of factors they will be considering in November.

But the reality on the campaign trail is different. Sarah Longwell, a Republican pollster, said in her focus groups that swing voters do bring up inflation and the economy when asked what issues are on their minds. But when prompted to discuss abortion, real passion flares. That indicates that if Democrats can pursue a campaign to keep the issue front and center, they will find an audience, she said.

Ms. Mace agreed, saying that abortion is rising fast and that Republicans have to respond.

In Minnesota, Dr. Jensen, the Republican candidate expected to take on Gov. Tim Walz, suggested it was interactions with voters after the fall of Roe that, he said, prompted him to clarify his position on abortion.

“Once the Roe v. Wade decision was overturned, we told Minnesota, and basically told everybody that we would engage in a conversation,” he said. “During that conversation, I learned of the need for me to elaborate on my position.”

That elaboration included embracing a family and maternity leave program, promoting a $2,500-per-child adoption tax credit, and improving access to birth control, including providing oral contraceptives over the counter with a price ceiling. And, like adam laxaltthe GOP Senate nominee in Nevada, Dr. Jensen pointed to abortion protections already in place in Minnesota to cast the matter as settled rather than on the ballot this year.

Mr. Walz said he would stay on offense, and did not accept any softening of the Republican line.

“I take them at their first word,” he said of Dr. Jensen and his running mate, Matt Birk, a former NFL player and anti-abortion rights advocate. “If they get the opportunity they will criminalize this while we’re trying to protect it. So it’s become a central theme, obviously, I think that flip on their part was in response to that.”

The Kansas vote implies that around 65 percent of voters nationwide would reject rolling back abortion rights, including a majority in more than 40 of the 50 states, according to a New York Times analysis.

Republicans believe their party can grab the mantle of moderation from Democrats, in part by conveying empathy toward pregnant women and offering exemptions to abortion bans, and casting Democrats as the extremists when it comes to regulating abortion. If Democrats insist on making abortion the centerpiece of their campaigns, they argue, they risk looking out of touch with voters in an uncertain economy.

But Republicans who moderate their views must still contend with a core base of support that remains staunchly anti-abortion. Abortion opponents said Thursday that Republican candidates should not read too much into the Kansas vote, a single-issue referendum with language that was criticized by voters on both sides as confusing.

“Regardless of what the consultant class is telling the candidates, they would be wise to recognize that the right-to-life community is an important constituency and an important demographic of voters,” warned Penny Nance, chief executive and president of Concerned Women for America, a conservative organization that opposes abortion rights.

After the Kansas vote, Democrats stepped up efforts to squeeze their opponents between a conservative base eager for quick action to ban all abortions and a broader electorate that wants no such thing. Representative Elaine Luria, a moderate Democrat running in a Republican-leaning district in southeastern Virginia, released a new advertisement against her Republican opponent, Jen Kiggans, painting her as “too extreme” on abortion. Ms. Luria had initially said she would campaign on her work for the district and her support for the Navy, a big force in the region, but the landscape has shifted. Ms. Kiggans’s campaign did not respond to a request for comment.

A group aligned with the Democratic Governors Association is already advertising off abortion-related remarks made by Tudor Dixon of Michigan, who won the Republican nomination for governor this week.

“If you take Tudor Dixon at her word when it comes to outlawing abortion, she’s told us exactly who she is,” the spot, titled “No Exceptions,” intones, featuring clips of Ms. Dixon highlighting her opposition to a range of abortion -related exceptions. Ms. Dixon was unambiguous about her position earlier this summer, writing on Twitter“My only exception is to protect the LIFE of the mother.”

In a lengthy statement that highlighted her opposition to an expected ballot measure in Michigan intended to protect abortion rights, Ms. Dixon also insisted that her race would be defined by jobs, schools, crime and being “able to afford your gas and groceries.”

For Republicans, one problem might be the extensive trail on the issue they left during the primary season.

In May, Mr. Mastriano was unequivocal in Pennsylvania as he courted Republican primary voters: “That baby deserves a right to life whether it is conceived in incest or rape or there are concerns otherwise for the mom.”

Last month, he said it was not up to him. “You decide on exceptions. You decide on how early. And that’s in the hands of the people,” he said on Philadelphia talk radio. “That’s a fact. That’s not a dodge.”

mitch smith, trip gabriel and Reid J. Epstein contributed reporting.

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Entertainment

Edwina Bartholomew says her daughter has turned into a ‘monster’ after welcoming her second child

Edwina Bartholomew says her daughter Molly turned into a ‘monster’ after she welcomed her second child Tom: ‘I frankly struggled to cope’

Edwina Bartholomew has spoken about the trials and tribulations of her growing family.

The newsreader, 39, has ‘happily’ returned to the Sunrise desk after welcoming her second child – son Tom – in March, but is still trying to navigate raising two kids under the age of three.

‘I’m repeatedly told that moving from one to two kids is the most challenging step,’ she said in her latest column for the Daily Telegraph.

Edwina Bartholomew says her daughter Molly turned into a 'monster' after she welcomed her second child Tom (pictured here)

Edwina Bartholomew says her daughter Molly turned into a ‘monster’ after she welcomed her second child Tom (pictured here)

Edwina said she thought she had ‘child one down pat’ as her daughter Molly, two, was ‘finally sleeping through the night’.

But following the arrival of Tom, the Sunrise newsreader said her daughter is battling the terrible twos.

‘Our gentle, girl morphed into a monster within a few weeks and I frankly struggled to cope,’ she said.

‘There was food on the walls, full-blown tantrums on the floor, screaming and that was just me.’

Despite it being the ‘most challenging period’ of her life, Edwina said it has also been ‘the most beautiful’.

Following the arrival of Tom, who was born March 1, the Sunrise newsreader said her daughter Molly (pictured here) is battling the terrible twos

Following the arrival of Tom, who was born March 1, the Sunrise newsreader said her daughter Molly (pictured here) is battling the terrible twos

The newsreader, 39, has 'happily' returned to the Sunrise desk after welcoming her second child - son Tom - in March, but is still trying to navigate raising two kids under the age of three

The newsreader, 39, has ‘happily’ returned to the Sunrise desk after welcoming her second child – son Tom – in March, but is still trying to navigate raising two kids under the age of three

‘Watching my daughter blow raspberries on my son’s little tummy makes my heart explode every time,’ she added.

‘Although her cuddles border on suffocation, his little face lights up when he’s on the receiving end of one of her aggressive squeezes.’

Edwina returned to Channel Seven’s breakfast show Sunrise this week after taking five months’ maternity leave.

On Monday, Edwina, who was previously a roving weather presenter before being promoted to the news desk, said it was ‘lovely’ to be back in the studio.

Edwina and Neil announced the birth of their son Thomas in early March

Edwina and Neil announced the birth of their son Thomas in early March

She was joined by co-anchors Natalie Barr and David Koch, while sports reporter Mark Beretta provided updates on the Aussie swimmers at the 2022 Commonwealth Games live from Birmingham, England.

‘It’s been such a lovely five months,’ Edwina said.

‘We’ve had such a lovely time as a family unit, so it was a bit sad to leave them at home, but also lovely to come back to work.’

Edwina returned to Channel Seven's breakfast show Sunrise this week after taking five months' maternity leave

Edwina returned to Channel Seven’s breakfast show Sunrise this week after taking five months’ maternity leave

Natalie added: ‘Eddie has come back to work for a rest, like most new mums! He it can be much more restful at work than at home.’

Edwina and Neil announced the birth of their son in early March.

‘Some little news from our family. Thomas Donald Elliott Varcoe born on the 1st of March, 2022,’ she wrote on Instagram alongside a gallery of photos of the newborn.

‘At such a difficult time for so many, many people, we hope Tom’s little face puts a smile on yours.’

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What’s Next in the Alex Jones Trial? Jury to Weight Additional Damages

After ordering the conspiracy theorist Alex Jones to pay more than $4 million in compensatory damages to the parents of a child killed in the mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School, jurors will return on Friday to consider awarding punitive damages.

The jury, which announced the partial award on Thursday after several dramatic days in court, is scheduled to hear additional testimony about Mr. Jones and his misinformation-peddling media outlet Infowars that is likely to include discussion of his net worth and his company’s.

Compensatory damages are based on proven harm, loss or injury, and are often calculated based on the fair market value of damaged property, lost wages and expenses, according to Cornell Law School. Punitive damages are designed to punish especially harmful behavior and tend to be granted at the court’s discretion, and are sometimes many multiples of a compensatory award.

Mr. Jones is accused of defaming the families of children killed in the mass shooting at the Sandy Hook school in 2012, falsely describing them as actors participating in a hoax (he acknowledged this week that the shooting was “100 percent real”). The award on Thursday announced for Scarlett Lewis and Neil Heslin, whose 6-year-old son, Jesse Lewis, died in the attack, was the first to arise from several lawsuits filed by victims’ parents in 2018.

A trial for damages in another of the suits was scheduled to begin next month in Connecticut, but it could be delayed because of a bankruptcy filing last week by Free Speech Systems, Infowars’ parent company. Lawyers for the families criticized the move as another attempt by Mr. Jones to shield his wealth from him and evade judgment.

Starting on Friday, lawyers for Ms. Lewis and Mr. Heslin are expected to delve more deeply into Mr. Jones’ financial situation, calling an economist as an expert witness. This week, they presented records showing that, at one point in 2018, Infowars made more than $800,000 a day.

The parents had sought $150 million in compensatory damages.

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Business

Tesla’s Elon Musk slams electric start-up rival

The controversial Tesla founder has taken a swipe at one of his emerging rivals in a dismissive Twitter post.


Tesla CEO and soon-to-be Twitter owner Elon Musk.

Outspoken Tesla founder Elon Musk has trolled one of his potential electric car rivals after Lucid Motors failed to hit its production and revenue targets at the end of June.

The Californian start-up massively under-delivered on its second-quarter predictions for both sales and revenue — delivering just 679 cars despite claiming to hold more than 37,000 reservations — and was called-out by a US financial analyst, Gary Black.

As Mr Black highlighted a $US50 million shortfall in Lucid’s revenue for the quarter he was quickly joined on Twitter by Musk.



“I had more kids in Q2 than they made cars!,” Musk replied to Mr Black’s original tweet, an apparent reference (at Musk’s own expense) to having multiple children with multiple partners over the years.

Musk knows better than most about the difficulties in producing electric cars.

Many of Tesla’s promised production plans have been delivered late, including the headlining Cyber ​​Cybertruck.



In the case of Lucid Motors, which is led by a former Tesla employee Peter Rawlinson, the problems are centered on its luxury Air sedan which is priced from $US87,400.

“Our revised production guidance reflects the extraordinary supply chain and logistics challenges we encountered,” said Rawlinson, Lucid’s CEO, in a statement on the company’s website.

“We’ve identified the primary bottlenecks, and we are taking appropriate measures – bringing our logistics operations in-house, adding key hires to the executive team, and restructuring our logistics and manufacturing organisation.



“We continue to see strong demand for our vehicles, with over 37,000 customer reservations, and I remain confident that we shall overcome these near-term challenges.”

Even so, Lucid Motors has now downgraded its full-year production forecast at its Arizona factory to 6000-7000 cars from a previous prediction of 12,000-14,000.

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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Prince William, Princess Charlotte fly chopper at Commonwealth Games in Birmingham

Prince William has taken the term “helicopter parent” to a whole new level.

The Duke of Cambridge flew a chopper, with daughter Princess Charlotte riding co-pilot on a very special trip to the Commonwealth Games.

The royals were spotted arriving in Birmingham on Tuesday in the Bell 429 Global Ranger.

The royals were spotted arriving in Birmingham on Tuesday in the Bell 429 Global Ranger.
Camera IconThe royals were spotted arriving in Birmingham on Tuesday in the Bell 429 Global Ranger. Credit: Cobra Emergency /Youtube

Prince William, who previously served as a Royal Air Force search and rescue pilot, executed a perfect landing.

Footage of the royal arrival was uploaded to YouTube by Cobra Emergency — a channel featuring security, military, emergency vehicles, and other transport for enthusiasts.

Eagle-eyed fans spotted Charlotte waving to cameras as the chopper landed before a black Range Rover arrived and ferried the group away.

It seems there was no room in the aircraft for the Duchess of Cambridge who traveled to Birmingham by train with the other peasants.

It comes only weeks after the Queen reportedly scolded the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge for using the royal chopper too much.

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White House summons Chinese ambassador for rebuke on Taiwan response

Comment

The White House summoned China’s ambassador on Thursday to condemn Beijing’s escalating actions against Taiwan and reiterate that the United States does not want a crisis in the region, after a visit to the island by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) sharply escalated tensions in the Taiwan Strait this week.

“After China’s actions overnight, we summoned [People’s Republic of China] Ambassador Qin Gang to the White House to démarche him about the PRC’s provocative actions,” National Security Council spokesman John Kirby said in a statement provided to The Washington Post. “We condemned the PRC’s military actions, which are irresponsible and at odds with our long-standing goal of maintaining peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait.” A démarche is a protest lodged through diplomatic channels.

China’s show of force against Taiwan on Thursday included firing missiles into the sea and threatening the island’s territorial waters. Taiwan said China fired 11 ballistic missiles into the waters off its northeastern and southwestern coasts, and Japanese officials said five Chinese missiles landed in Japan’s exclusive economic zone.

The White House also reiterated to Qin that it wants to keep all lines of communication open and that nothing has changed about the United States’ one-China policy, which stipulates that there is a single Chinese entity and no independent enclaves. But the White House also stressed that it found Beijing’s actions unacceptable and would stand up for its values ​​in the Indo-Pacific.

The meeting, which has not been previously reported, was between Qin and Kurt Campbell, deputy assistant to President Biden and coordinator for Indo-Pacific affairs on the National Security Council, according to a White House official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to share details of a private conversation.

China’s military actions Thursday increased tensions in the Taiwan Strait to the highest level in decades, raising fears of a dangerous miscalculation in one of the world’s most charged geopolitical flash points. Beijing has openly voiced its anger over Pelosi’s visit to Taiwan, which it considers part of its territory awaiting unification, and US-China relations were already strained because of disputes over trade, human rights and other issues.

Pelosi: Why I’m visiting Taiwan

The White House highlighted to Qin a statement from the Group of Seven industrialized democracies, Kirby said, which stressed that China should not use Pelosi’s visit as a pretext for aggressive military action in the Taiwan Strait. The White House also expressed support for a statement from the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, or ASEAN, which called on all sides to de-escalate tensions and engage in dialogue.

“We made clear once again as we have done privately at the highest levels and publicly: Nothing has changed about our one-China policy. We also made it clear that the United States is prepared for what Beijing chooses to do,” Kirby said. “We will not seek and do not want a crisis. At the same time, we will not be deterred from operating in the seas and skies of the Western Pacific, consistent with international law, as we have for decades — supporting Taiwan and defending a free and open Indo-Pacific.”

Chinese state broadcaster CCTV said the Eastern Theater Command of the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) carried out long-range, live-fire exercises and “precision strikes” on eastern parts of the strait. Taiwan’s Defense Ministry said the PLA fired 11 Dongfeng ballistic missiles.

The White House sought to de-escalate tensions with China ahead of and during Pelosi’s visit, which the speaker undertook against the administration’s wishes. White House officials warned earlier this week that China was preparing for possible aggressive actions that could continue well beyond Pelosi’s visit.

Virtually all the senior members of Biden’s national security team had privately expressed deep reservations about the trip and its timing, the White House official said. They were especially concerned because US-China tensions are already high, and Washington is seeking China’s cooperation on the war in Ukraine and other matters.

Top White House officials defended Pelosi’s right to travel to Taiwan both publicly and to their counterparts in China, but even so, some of them still did not think the trip was a good idea, the official said.

China has sought for years to diplomatically isolate Taiwan. The Chinese Communist Party claims the island, a self-governing democracy that is home to over 23 million people, as its territory, and Chinese leader Xi Jinping has pledged to “reunify” Taiwan with China, by force if necessary.

Chinese ambassador: Why we opposed Pelosi’s visit

But Pelosi doubled down on Thursday, saying China would not succeed in bullying the island.

“They may try to keep Taiwan from visiting or participating in other places, but they will not isolate Taiwan,” Pelosi said in Tokyo, the last stop of her tour. “They are not doing our traveling schedule. The Chinese government is not doing that.”

At a news briefing Thursday, Kirby said the United States is responding to China’s actions.

The United States will conduct standard air and maritime transits through the Taiwan Strait over the next few weeks, he said, and will take “further steps” to stand with its allies in the region, including Japan, although he did not specify what those actions would be. The aircraft carrier Ronald Reagan and its battle group will remain near Taiwan to monitor the situation, Kirby added.

Lily Kuo contributed to this report.

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Business

RBA crashes Sydney house prices

CoreLogic’s daily dwelling values ​​index, which measures price changes across Australia’s five major capital cities, fell another 0.22% in the week ended 5 August – the 13th consecutive weekly decline:

CoreLogic weekly price movements

Thirteenth straight loss.

Once again, the fall in dwelling values ​​was driven by Sydney (-0.29%), Melbourne (-0.34%) and Brisbane (-0.14%), whereas Adelaide (+0.12%) and Perth (+0.07%) recorded rises:

CoreLogic weekly price movements

The ‘big 3’ continue to drive price falls.

It has been roughly one quarter since the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) first hiked the official cash rate (OCR) by 0.25% on 3 May. Since then, dwelling values ​​at the 5-city aggregate level have plunged by 2.8%, driven entirely by heavy falls across Sydney (-4.8%) and Melbourne (-3.4%):

The next chart plots the time series of price movements across Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane and the 5-city aggregate since the beginning of the year, alongside their declines from peak as at 4 August:

Decline from peak

Sydney and Melbourne lead declines from peak.

Sydney’s dwelling values ​​have fallen 5.4% from their mid-February peak, Melbourne’s are down 3.6%, and 5-city aggregate values ​​have fallen 2.9%. Losses across each market accelerated after the RBA’s first rate hike.

Brisbane was late to the party and only began falling in late June. However, dwelling values ​​are down 1.1% from peak.

With the RBA hiking interest rates four times over the past quarter, by a cumulative 1.75%, it is inevitable that dwelling values ​​will continue to fall, led by Sydney and Melbourne.

Already borrowing capacity has been reduced by 23% because of these hikes, and soon price falls will spread across the other capital cities and the regions.

Ultimately, the magnitude of Australia’s house price bust will depend on how aggressively the RBA hike rates. Will it follow ANZ’s, Westpac’s and the financial market’s forecasts and hike the OCR above 3%? Or will it take a more measured approach?

Only time will tell. Pass the popcorn.

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Married At First Sight’s Domenica Calarco reveals her VERY unusual remedy for anxiety

Married At First Sight’s Domenica Calarco reveals her VERY unusual remedy for anxiety

Married At First Sight star Domenica Calarco has revealed the bizarre treatment she uses to manage her stress and anxiety.

Speaking during a Q+A segment on her podcast Sit With Us alongside co-star Ella Ding, the 29-year-old opened up about her struggle with mental health over the years.

‘I’ve dealt with anxiety and depression since I was 16 years old,’ she said. ‘I’ve got every trick in the book.’

Married At First Sight star Domenica Calarco (left) revealed the bizarre treatment she uses to manage her stress and anxiety.  Speaking during her podcast Sit With Us alongside co-star Ella Ding (right), the 29-year-old opened up about her struggle with mental health over the years

Married At First Sight star Domenica Calarco (left) revealed the bizarre treatment she uses to manage her stress and anxiety. Speaking during her podcast Sit With Us alongside co-star Ella Ding (right), the 29-year-old opened up about her struggle with mental health over the years

‘Look it’s odd but whatever. Everyone’s got their own little thing.’

The makeup artist explained she carries Vicks VapoRub around no matter where she goes.

‘For me, when I smell Vicks, it instantly calms me,’ she explained. ‘So Vicks is like my safety blanket.’

‘It’s always in my bag. If I’m feeling a bit anxious before I get out of the car or I’ve got a meeting or something, I just smell my Vicks. I put some on the inside of my wrists or a little bit on my chest and it just calms my nerves.’

The makeup artist explained she carries Vicks VapoRub around no matter where she goes

The makeup artist explained she carries Vicks VapoRub around no matter where she goes

Dom’s admission comes after her dramatic makeover following her split from her former talent manager.

Late last month, she unveiled her cropped bleach-blonde hair in a selfie posted to Instagram, after jetting to London for a working holiday.

‘Blonde, bra-less and in London,’ Dom captioned the photo.

‘Obsessed [with] this look!’ one fan commented, while another wrote: ‘Loving this icy blonde moment.’

Domenica recently debuted her stylish ‘breakover’ after splitting from her former talent manager. (Left: on MAFS, and right: in London on Wednesday_

Dom parted ways with leading celebrity agent Sharon Finnigan, who handles major TV stars including Karl Stefanovic and Natalie Barr.

The former makeup artist confirmed the split by updating her Instagram bio this week, removing all references to SF Management.

She is now on the hunt for an international agent and has lined up several meetings while she is in the UK, a source tells Daily Mail Australia.

Late last month, she unveiled her cropped bleach-blonde hair in a selfie posted to Instagram, after jetting to London for a working holiday

Late last month, she unveiled her cropped bleach-blonde hair in a selfie posted to Instagram, after jetting to London for a working holiday

‘Domenica is determined to get her own reality show, and only cares about increasing her OnlyFans numbers, while Sharon had other plans of her’ the insider added.

According to the source, Dom thought Sharon ‘could help land her a TV gig since she works with top-notch clients like Karl Stefanovic and Natalie Barr’.

It follows reports her relationship with Sharon was ‘anything but harmonious’.

The pair went their separate ways because the OnlyFans creator’s expectations ‘exceeded reality’.

Dom parted ways with leading celebrity agent Sharon Finnigan, who handles major TV stars including Karl Stefanovic and Natalie Barr

Dom parted ways with leading celebrity agent Sharon Finnigan, who handles major TV stars including Karl Stefanovic and Natalie Barr

Dom had enlisted Sharon to manage her fledgling career in April, following her breakout appearance on Nine's Married At First Sight.  Pictured: Dom (left) with MAFS partner Jack (right)

Dom had enlisted Sharon to manage her fledgling career in April, following her breakout appearance on Nine’s Married At First Sight. Pictured: Dom (left) with MAFS partner Jack (right)

Daily Mail Australia understands Sharon decided to end their professional relationship early, despite being contractually bound until September.

Dom had listed her to manage her fledgling career in April, following her breakout appearance on Nine’s Married At First Sight.

They held a series of meetings in which Dom reportedly expressed her desire to launch her own podcast and makeup range.

She has since started the podcast with her co-host Ella Ding, and also collaborated with online retailer Showpo for a clothing line.

Since MAFS, Dom has since started a podcast with her co-star Ella Ding

Since MAFS, Dom has since started a podcast with her co-star Ella Ding

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Alabama Girl Was Kept Captive With Remains of Mother and Brother – NBC 7 San Diego

What to Know

  • After being held captive for a week, the 12-year-old girl managed to escape by gnawing through restraints tying her to a bed while her captor was away.
  • Police found two dismembered bodies in the mobile home after the child escaped, the remains of her mother and brother.
  • The mother’s live-in boyfriend has been arrested, police said.

A 12-year-old girl who was held captive for a week in a mobile home with the dismembered remains of her mother and brother provided key information that led to the arrest of the woman’s live-in boyfriend, authorities said Thursday.

The girl, who gnawed through restraints to escape from the residence while the man was away, “is a hero for surviving the incident and coming forward with the information that she provided us in order to charge him,” said Tallapoosa County Sheriff Jimmy Abbett.

Discovered along a country road by a passerby following her escape on Monday, the child is now safe in the custody of state child welfare officials. Assaulted and plied with alcohol to keep her in a stupor, the girl fled after chewing through the ties that held her down on a bed, authorities said in court documents.

José Paulino Pascual-Reyes, 37, was charged with kidnapping and multiple counts of capital murder in the slayings of the girl’s mother, 29-year-old Sandra Vazquez Ceja, and her son, who court records show was younger than 14.

“They were boyfriend and girlfriend,” Abbett said of Pascual-Reyes and Ceja. “They were actually living there all together.”

The kidnapping charge alleges that the girl was held hostage against her will, not that she was physically abducted from elsewhere and taken to the home, Abbett said.

The girl was taken captive on July 24 around the time her mother and brother were killed, allege authorities, and police found two dismembered bodies in the mobile home after the child escaped on Monday morning. Abbett declined to comment on whether the girl knew the fate of her mother and brother de ella while she was still a hostage, but the chopped-up remains were found inside the home.

Pascual-Reyes was arrested Monday night while working at a construction site in Auburn, more than 20 miles (32 kilometers) from the mobile home. He is being held without bond. Two attorneys appointed to represent him did not immediately respond to an email seeking comment on his behalf.

Reyes, who is from Mexico, was in the country illegally after being deported and returning without proper documentation, Abbett said. It wasn’t clear when he last entered the United States, said the sheriff, but the group had been living in the mobile home since February.

Ceja and the two children entered the United States from Mexico in 2017 and remained after requesting asylum, but their claims had yet to be decided by immigration officials, the sheriff said.

While a few other people live near the mobile home and others had lived at the residence, there’s no indication anyone else knew about the killings or that the girl was being held against her will, Abbett said.

“No one has come forward with information,” he said.

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Business

Adam Blumenthal keeps his distance from Croesus

Distance? The universe must have collapsed in on itself because there’s barely a cigarette paper between the two. This may be odd, given that ASIC’s investigation, we are told, remains ongoing.

Take, for instance, Creso Pharma’s $7 million placement outlined to the market on Thursday. Not only did Blumenthal (and his nominee) chip in $1.74 million to raise, EverBlu Capital Corporate Pty Ltd acted as lead manager on the equity issue.

Based on the 6 per cent cash fee, EverBlu took in a tidy $420,000 for the deal, which will see EverBlu trousing 175 million options in Croesus, barring shareholder disapproval (luckily, Blumenthal held 10.31 per cent of the shares as at July 2021).

The fees and options are apparently negotiated at “arm’s length”. Creso must deserve entry into the Guiness World Records book for shortest limbs, given it is “mandated by Everblu Capital as its corporate adviser and lead manager for capital raisings”.

Or consider Croesus’s $5 million raising in March this year, to fund an expansion into the US. There, Blumenthal committed to chip in $318,250, just slightly more than the $300,000 EverBlu earned facilitating the raising.

Creso’s 2021 annual report lists $5.4 million in related party transactions with EverBlu, and $5.7 million the year before that.

Croesus’s raising this week comes as it looks to swallow up fellow ASX-listed weed barn Health House International. Deidre Chambers, what a coincidence, EverBlu is acting as Creso’s corporate adviser for the proposed merger and will receive a 7.5 per cent transaction fee.

Health House, which counts former South Australian premier mike rann among its directors, was recently jilted by another ASX-listed dope show, Zelira Therapeutics Ltd. Any awkwardness at that situation for Tim Slatewho sits on the board of both Health House and Zelira, could have been smoothed over with a few passes of the dutchie.

But surely other employees of Health House could use something a bit stronger. Creso plans to “immediately” cut costs of the merger partner, including “the removal of all corporate overheads, reduction in headcount, sales, manufacturing, distribution costs”.

Hey, someone’s gotta foot the bill for those corporate advisory fees!