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Yearly Archives :

2025

Homeland Security agents in Minneapolis investigating "rampant fraud"

Homeland Security agents in Minneapolis investigating "rampant fraud" 150 150 admin

Homeland Security agents were in Minneapolis on Monday “conducting a massive investigation on childcare and other rampant fraud,” Secretary Kristi Noem said.
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Ivory Coast’s ruling party increases its majority in weekend vote

Ivory Coast’s ruling party increases its majority in weekend vote 150 150 admin

By Ange Aboa

ABIDJAN, Dec 30 (Reuters) – Ivory Coast’s ruling party increased its majority in parliament in elections held at the weekend, while the main opposition party, led by former Credit Suisse CEO Tidjane Thiam, lost half of its seats, provisional results showed.

The strong showing for the Rally of Houphouëtists for Democracy and Peace, or RHDP, should make it easier for President Alassane Ouattara to implement his agenda that includes luring private investment to French-speaking West Africa’s largest economy, the world’s biggest cocoa grower.

Ouattara, an 83-year-old former deputy managing director of the International Monetary Fund who secured a fourth term in October, has also said he would use his mandate to prepare the way for a new generation of political leaders.

The RHDP took 197 of 255 seats in the National Assembly in Saturday’s elections, according to provisional results announced on Monday by the electoral commission, up from 163. 

Thiam’s Democratic Party of Ivory Coast, or PDCI, won 32 seats, down from 65, while independent candidates won 23 seats.

Voter turnout was 35.04%, down from 37.88% during the last legislative elections in 2021.

Ouattara first came to power in 2011 after a four-month war.

He was re-elected with more than 89% of the vote in the presidential contest on October 25 in which Thiam and former President Laurent Gbagbo were barred from running. 

Gbagbo’s party boycotted this year’s legislative elections, saying they would not be credible.

(Writing by Ayen Deng Bior and Robbie Corey-Boulet; Editing by Barbara Lewis)

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Two Chinese airlines plan Airbus jet purchases worth up to $8.2 billion

Two Chinese airlines plan Airbus jet purchases worth up to $8.2 billion 150 150 admin

BEIJING, Dec 29 (Reuters) – China’s Spring Airlines and Juneyao Airlines on Monday announced plans to buy 30 and 25 Airbus A320-family jets respectively, according to stock exchange filings.

Budget carrier Spring Airlines has agreed to buy 30 A320neo aircraft at a price not exceeding the $4.13 billion list price, the company’s filing to the Shanghai Stock Exchange showed. The jets will be delivered in batches between 2028 and 2032, it said.

Shanghai-based Juneyao Airlines said in its filing to the Shanghai bourse that it planned to sign an agreement with Airbus about buying 25 A320-family jets. The planes are worth about $4.1 billion based on list prices and are also expected to be delivered between 2028 and 2032, the filing showed.

Both deals still need to obtain government approvals, according to the filings.

Airbus has been in on-off negotiations since at least 2024 to try to secure an order for 500 jets from China. The planemaker said earlier this month that it had secured Chinese agreement to go ahead with the delivery of 120 previously ordered jets, but was still waiting for progress on new orders.

(Reporting by Yukun Zhang and Ryan Woo;Editing by Tomasz Janowski)

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Peruvian shamans predict Maduro’s fall, continued global conflicts in 2026

Peruvian shamans predict Maduro’s fall, continued global conflicts in 2026 150 150 admin

LIMA, Peru (AP) — A group of shamans gathered Monday by the sea in the Miraflores district of Peru’s capital, Lima, to carry out an annual ritual in which they make predictions for the upcoming year.

Dressed in traditional Andean ponchos and headdresses, the group performed a ceremony, and made predictions about the course of international relations, ongoing conflicts and the fate of world leaders.

In this year’s event, the shamans said that Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro will be removed from office, and added that global conflicts, like the war in Ukraine will continue.

“We have asked for Maduro to leave, to retire, for President Donald Trump of the United States to be able to remove him, and we have visualized that next year this will happen,” said shaman Ana María Simeón.

The group has a mixed record with its annual predictions.

Last year, they warned a “nuclear war” would break out between Israel and Gaza, where a ceasefire is currently in place.

But in December 2023, the group correctly predicted that former Peruvian President Alberto Fujimori, who had been imprisoned for human rights abuses, would perish within twelve months.

Fujimori died from cancer in September 2024 at the age of 86.

Before Monday’s ceremony, the shamans met to drink hallucinogenic concoctions derived from native plants — including Ayahuasca and the San Pedro cactus — which are believed to give them the power to predict the future.

During the ceremony, they placed blankets with yellow flowers, coca leaves, swords and other objects on La Herradura beach, asking for positive energy for the new year.

After dancing in circles and playing ancestral instruments, the shamans asked for peace in the Middle East, an end to the conflict between Ukraine and Russia and the fall of President Maduro.

The prayers to the gods, performed amid flowers and incense, as well as dances, are intended to encourage leaders to make good decisions.

The shamans also predicted natural disasters, such as earthquakes and climatic phenomena.

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National Guard deploying to New Orleans as city marks 1 year since terror attack

National Guard deploying to New Orleans as city marks 1 year since terror attack 150 150 admin

The Guard members will stay through Carnival season, when residents and tourists descend on the Big Easy to partake in costumed celebrations and massive parades before ending with Mardi Gras.
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Watch: Trump takes questions after Netanyahu arrives for meeting

Watch: Trump takes questions after Netanyahu arrives for meeting 150 150 admin

President Trump took questions Monday alongside Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. The two are meeting in Florida to discuss the second phase of the Gaza peace plan.
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Trump has another call with Putin after meeting with Zelenskyy

Trump has another call with Putin after meeting with Zelenskyy 150 150 admin

The White House said Monday that President Trump had another call with Russia’s Vladimir Putin following his Sunday meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. CBS News national security contributor Samantha Vinograd has more.
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Zohran Mamdani has bold promises. Can he make them come true as New York City mayor?

Zohran Mamdani has bold promises. Can he make them come true as New York City mayor? 150 150 admin

Zohran Mamdani has promised to transform New York City government when he becomes mayor. Can he do it?

Mamdani, a 34-year-old democratic socialist, already faces intense scrutiny, even before taking office in one of the country’s most scrutinized political jobs. Republicans have cast him as a liberal boogeyman. Some of his fellow Democrats have deemed him too far left. Progressives are closely watching for any signs of him shifting toward the center.

On Jan. 1, he will assume control of America’s biggest city under that harsh spotlight, with the country watching to see if he can pull off the big promises that vaulted him to office and handle the everyday duties of the job. All while skeptics call out his every stumble.

For Mamdani, starting off strong is key, said George Arzt, a veteran Democratic political consultant in New York who worked for former Mayor Ed Koch.

“He’s got to use the first 100 days of the administration to show people he can govern,” he said. “You’ve got to set a mindset for people that’s like, ‘Hey, this guy’s serious.’”

That push should begin with Mamdani’s first speech as mayor, where Arzt said it will be important for the city’s new leader to establish a clear blueprint of his agenda and tell New Yorkers what he plans to do and how he plans to do it.

Mamdani will be sworn-in around midnight during a private ceremony at a historic, out-of-use City Hall subway station. Then in the afternoon, he will be sworn-in a second time on the steps of City Hall, while his supporters are expected to crowd surrounding streets for an accompanying block party.

From there, Arzt said Mamdani will have to count on the seasoned hands he’s hired to help him handle the concrete responsibilities of the job, while he and his team also pursue his ambitious affordability agenda.

Mamdani campaigned on a big idea: shifting the power of government toward helping working class New Yorkers, rather than the wealthy.

His platform — which includes free child care, free city bus service and a rent freeze for people living in rent stabilized apartments — excited voters in one of America’s most expensive cities and made him a leading face of a Democratic Party searching for bright, new leaders during President Donald Trump’s second term.

But Mamdani may find himself contending with the relentless responsibilities of running New York City. That includes making sure the trash is getting picked up, potholes are filled and snow plows go out on time. When there’s a subway delay or flooding, or a high-profile crime or a police officer parks in a bicycle lane, it’s not unusual for the city’s mayor to catch some heat.

“He had a movement candidacy and that immediately raises expectations locally and nationally,” said Basil Smikle, a Democratic political strategist and Columbia University professor, who added that it might be good for Mamdani to “Just focus on managing expectations and get a couple of good wins under your belt early on.”

“There’s a lot to keep you busy here,” he said.

A large part of Mamdani’s job will also be to sell his politics to the New Yorkers who remain skeptical of him, with Smikle saying “the biggest hurdle” is getting people comfortable with his policies and explaining how what he’s pushing could help the city.

“It’s difficult to have this all happen on day one,” he said, “or even day 30 or even day 100.”

Mamdani’s universal free child care proposal — perhaps one of his more expensive plans — is also one that has attracted some of the strongest support from New York Gov. Kathy Hochul, a moderate from Buffalo who endorsed the mayor-elect.

Hochul is eager to work with Mamdani on the policy and both leaders consider the program a top priority, although it’s not yet clear how exactly the plan could come to fruition. The governor, who is up for reelection next year, has repeatedly said she does not want to raise income taxes — something Mamdani supports for wealthy New Yorkers — however she has appeared open to raising corporate taxes.

“I think he has allies and supporters for his agenda, but the question is how far will the governor go,” said state Senate Deputy Leader Michael Gianaris, a Mamdani ally.

“There’s an acknowledgement that the voters have spoken, and there’s very clear policies that were associated with his successful campaign,” he said, “so to not make progress on them would be us thumbing our noses at the voters.”

Mamdani’s pledge to freeze the rent for roughly 1 million rent stabilized apartments in the city would not require state cooperation.

But that proposal — perhaps the best known of his campaign — is already facing headwinds, after the city’s departing mayor, Eric Adams, made a series of appointments in recent weeks to a local board that determines annual rent increases for the city’s rent stabilized units.

The move could potentially complicate the mayor-elect’s ability to follow through on the plan, at least in his first year, although Mamdani has said he remains confident in his ability to enact the freeze.

His relationship with some of the city’s Jewish community remains in tatters over his criticisms of Israel’s government and support for Palestinian human rights.

The Anti-Defamation League, a prominent Jewish advocacy organization, plans to track Mamdani’s policies and hires as it pledged to “protect Jewish residents across the five boroughs during a period of unprecedented antisemitism in New York City.”

Earlier this month, a Mamdani appointee resigned over social media posts she made more than a decade ago that featured antisemitic tropes, after the Anti-Defamation League shared the posts online.

The group has since put out additional findings on others who are serving in committees that Mamdani set up as he transitions into his mayoral role. In response, Mamdani said the ADL often “ignores the distinction” between antisemitism and criticism of the Israeli government.

The mayor-elect’s past call to defund the city’s police department continue to be a vulnerability. His decision to retain Jessica Tisch, the city’s current police commissioner, has eased some concerns about a radical shakeup at the top of the nation’s largest police force.

And then there’s Trump.

Tensions between Trump and Mamdani have appeared to cool — for now — after months of rancor led into a surprisingly friendly Oval Office meeting. Future clashes may emerge given the sharp political differences between them, particularly on immigration enforcement, along with anything else that could set off the mercurial president.

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US pending home sales surge to highest in nearly 3 years in November, NAR says

US pending home sales surge to highest in nearly 3 years in November, NAR says 150 150 admin

Dec 29 (Reuters) – Contracts to purchase previously owned U.S. homes unexpectedly shot to the highest in nearly three years in November, as improving affordability conditions drew in buyers, the National Association of Realtors said on Monday.

Pending home sales rose 3.3% last month after an upwardly revised 2.4% gain in October, the NAR said. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast contracts, which become sales after a month or two, rising 1.0%. 

Pending home sales rose 2.6% from a year earlier.

The index tracking sales rose to its highest level since February 2023.

“Homebuyer momentum is building. The data shows the strongest performance of the year after accounting for seasonal factors, and the best performance in nearly three years, dating back to February 2023,” said Lawrence Yun, the NAR’s chief economist.

“Improving housing affordability – driven by lower mortgage rates and wage growth rising faster than home prices – is helping buyers test the market,” Yun said. “More inventory choices compared to last year are also attracting more buyers to the market.”

Contracts rose in the Northeast, Midwest, the South and the West.

Mortgage rates have edged lower since the Federal Reserve resumed interest rate cuts in September, though it is unclear if rates will fall much further in the months ahead with the central bank signaling a likely pause in the reductions.

Data from mortgage finance agency Freddie Mac showed the latest 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage rate was 6.18%, near the lowest since the fall of 2024.

(Reporting by Dan Burns; Editing by Andrea Ricci)

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11/24: The Takeout with Major Garrett

11/24: The Takeout with Major Garrett 150 150 admin

Judge dismisses James Comey and Letitia James cases; President Trump holds call with Chinese President Xi Jinping.
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