After Lecornu's fall, all eyes on Macron's next move with France in political turmoilNew Foto - After Lecornu's fall, all eyes on Macron's next move with France in political turmoil

PARIS (AP) — Outgoing French Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu, aiming to calm the political storm triggered byhis resignation on Mondayless than 24 hours after unveiling his ministers, faced a tight deadline Wednesday to break the deadlock caused by his departure. After accepting Lecornu's resignation, President Emmanuel Macron gave him 48 hours to hold further talks with political parties, citing the need to preserve national stability. The tight time frame for Lecornu bought Macron some time to consider his options. But all eyes turned to Macron on Wednesday asdebate swirls about how he may respondto France's political crisis and dig himself out of the crisis. The fragile coalition between Macron's centrists and the conservatives unraveled almost immediately after Lecornu's government was announced, leaving parties deeply divided, and he failed to secure the parliamentary backing needed to pass the 2026 budget. Lecornu invited all political forces to talks, but far-right leadersMarine Le PenandJordan Bardellaof the National Rally party rejected the call, pressing instead for snap elections. On the far left, France Unbowed officials also boycotted. The French constitution gives large powers to the president, who names the prime minister. Even when weakened politically, he still holds some powers over foreign policy, European affairs and negotiates and ratifies international treaties. The president also is the commander-in-chief of the armed forces. Macron, whose approval ratings have sunk to record lows, has not indicated his next move if Lecornu fails. Rivals say his choices are limited to calling new elections, appointing a prime minister from outside his camp or resigning. Here is a closer look at Macron's options: Choosing an outsider for a political cohabitation Republicans party leader Bruno Retailleau, along with the Socialists, Greens and Communists, have pushed for the inclusion of a prime minister from another party. Retailleau, who withdrew support from the government coalition, said he could join a new cabinet only under such an arrangement. The left also argues cohabitation is overdue. Their alliance,the New Popular Front, won the most seats in the2024 French legislative election, though it fell short of a majority and later split amid infighting with Jean-Luc Mélenchon's France Unbowed. Under cohabitation, the prime minister governs with the backing of parliament, while the president retains influence mainly over foreign policy, defense and European affairs. France has seen three such periods, most recently from 1997 to 2002, when PresidentJacques Chiracshared power with Socialist Prime Minister Lionel Jospin. Calling snap elections The French president can dissolve the National Assembly and call elections before the end of deputies' terms. The tool has been used repeatedly under since 1958 to resolve political crises, but it carries risks of deepening divisions. Macron already tried this path last year after the European elections, when the National Rally surged to a historic win. The moveproduced a fractured Assemblyin which the far right and left now hold more than 320 seats, while centrists and conservatives control 210. That fragmentation has led to chronic instability and a rapid succession of governments. While unlikely to win an outright majority, the National Rally views a snap election as a golden chance to come to power. Jordan Bardella, the party president, has said he would be ready to work with Republicans MPs in order to secure a majority. Lecornu voiced hopes Wednesday morning that a compromise could be reached to end the crisis and avoid new elections. "There is a will to secure a budget for France before Dec. 31," he said ahead of a meeting with Socialist officials. "And this will is creating momentum and convergence, which clearly pushes back the prospect of a dissolution." Resignation is possible but unlikely Macron's second term is set to end in May 2027 and he has repeatedly said he will not resign. But if his mind changed and he quit, the Constitutional Council would declare a vacancy, the Senate president would assume interim powers and a new presidential election would be held within 35 days. On the far left, Melenchon's France Unbowed has asked for Macron's departure. More surprisingly, and a sign of Macron's growing isolation inside his own camp, Édouard Philippe, Macron's first prime minister after he swept to power in 2017 and once a close ally, has suggested the president should step down and call an early presidential election once the 2026 budget is adopted. Since 1958 and the inception of the Fifth Republic, only one French president has resigned: Charles De Gaulle after losing a 1969 referendum. ___ Petrequin reported from London.

After Lecornu’s fall, all eyes on Macron’s next move with France in political turmoil

After Lecornu's fall, all eyes on Macron's next move with France in political turmoil PARIS (AP) — Outgoing French Prime Minister Sé...
Caretaker French PM Lecornu: hopeful on budget, snap election becomes more remoteNew Foto - Caretaker French PM Lecornu: hopeful on budget, snap election becomes more remote

PARIS (Reuters) -Caretaker French Prime Minister Sebastien Lecornu struck a cautiously optimistic tone on Wednesday, saying a deal could potentially be reached on the country's budget by year-end, making the risk of a snap election more remote. Lecornu's remarks came as he was set to wrap up talks on Wednesday with various parties and report back to President Emmanuel Macron on whether he has found a way to end France's worst political crisis in decades. "There is a willingness to have a budget for France before December 31 of this year," Lecornu told reporters after meetings on Tuesday with conservatives and centre-right parties, and before meeting the Socialist Party. "And this willingness creates momentum and convergence, obviously, which distances the prospects of dissolution (of parliament)," he said. Lecornu added that he would meet Macron later on Wednesday as planned to discuss the results of his discussions. Macron has faced calls from the opposition to call snap parliamentary elections, or resign, to end the political crisis. Lecornu, France's fifth prime minister in two years, tendered his and his government's resignation on Monday, hours after it was announced on Sunday, making it the shortest-lived administration in modern France. That came after allies and foes alike had threatened to topple the new government, with Lecornu saying that would make it impossible for him to do his job. (Reporting by Inti Landauro, Makini Brice, Sudip Kar-Gupta; Writing by Ingrid Melander; Editing by Ros Russell)

Caretaker French PM Lecornu: hopeful on budget, snap election becomes more remote

Caretaker French PM Lecornu: hopeful on budget, snap election becomes more remote PARIS (Reuters) -Caretaker French Prime Minister Sebastien...
Erdogan says Turkey is explaining to Hamas best approach for Palestinian futureNew Foto - Erdogan says Turkey is explaining to Hamas best approach for Palestinian future

ANKARA (Reuters) -Turkey is explaining to Palestinian militant group Hamas what the best approach is for the future of a Palestinian state, as part of a plan by U.S.President Donald Trumpto end the war in Gaza, President Tayyip Erdogan said. In comments to reporters on a flight back from Azerbaijan, Erdogan said Turkish officials were involved in negotiations in Egypt and that Ankara supports peace efforts by Trump, whom he added had asked Turkey to convince Hamas to accept the proposal. Erdogan also said that in any post-war scenario, Gaza must remain part of a Palestinian state and that it must be governed by Palestinians, according to a transcript of his remarks shared by his office on Wednesday. He added that the deployment of foreign forces to Gaza and ensuring security there should be discussed in detail, and that Ankara was ready to contribute to all efforts. (Reporting by Tuvan Gumrukcu and Daren Butler; Editing by Alison Williams)

Erdogan says Turkey is explaining to Hamas best approach for Palestinian future

Erdogan says Turkey is explaining to Hamas best approach for Palestinian future ANKARA (Reuters) -Turkey is explaining to Palestinian milita...
Jessica Pegula advances to the third round in Wuhan with a tight win over BaptisteNew Foto - Jessica Pegula advances to the third round in Wuhan with a tight win over Baptiste

WUHAN, China (AP) — Jessica Pegula was twice broken while serving for the match in the third set but recovered to edge Hailey Baptiste in a tight tiebreaker Wednesday and advance at the Wuhan Open. Sixth-seeded Pegula beat her fellow American 6-4, 4-6, 7-6 (6) on her seventh match point to reach the third round. Pegula, wholost in the China Open semifinalslast week, will next play ninth-seeded Ekaterina Alexandrova, who beat American Ann Li 7-6 (5), 6-2. No. 3Coco Gauff, coming off a semifinal loss to eventualchampion Amanda Anisimova at the China Openlast week, breezed into the next round with a 6-1, 6-0 win over Moyuka Uchijima in 51 minutes. No. 16 Liudmila Samsonova rallied to beat 2020 Australian Open champion Sofia Kenin 3-6, 6-3, 6-1, and qualifier Kateřina Siniaková beat Maya Joint 6-3, 6-1. U.S. Open championAryna Sabalenka and 11th-seeded Naomi Osaka were scheduled to play later Wednesday. Top-ranked Sabalenka, who took a Greek holiday after her second consecutive win at Flushing Meadows, withdrew from last week's China Open, another WTA 1000-level event. "I feel good," Sabalenka said on her arrival in Wuhan. "I just didn't want to rush my body into the tournament. So I think we made the right decision to take extra time for recovery and for the preparation. Physically, I feel ready to go." Sabalenka has had an amazing run in Wuhan — her record is 17-0 while winning titles in 2018, 2019 and 2024. ___ AP tennis:https://apnews.com/hub/tennis

Jessica Pegula advances to the third round in Wuhan with a tight win over Baptiste

Jessica Pegula advances to the third round in Wuhan with a tight win over Baptiste WUHAN, China (AP) — Jessica Pegula was twice broken while...
Yankees need strong encore from Cam Schlittler to extend ALDS againNew Foto - Yankees need strong encore from Cam Schlittler to extend ALDS again

NEW YORK -- A monster performance by Aaron Judge allowed the New York Yankees to keep their season going. It also provided them a chance to get rookie Cam Schlittler another opportunity at making a postseason start. Schlittler will be on the mound Wednesday night when the Yankees host the Toronto Blue Jays and attempt to even the American League Division Series at two wins apiece. The Blue Jays will employ a bullpen game, with Louis Varland serving as the opener after he endured an ugly relief outing on Tuesday. The Yankees are trying to overcome a two-games-to-none deficit in the best-of-five division series for the third time. They achieved the feat in 2001 against the Athletics and in 2017 against Cleveland. Judge is 7-for-11 in the series after going 3-for-4 with four RBIs in New York's 9-6 win on Tuesday. The two-time MVP helped keep the Yankees alive by hitting a tying three-run homer in the fourth inning off Varland. He also made a diving catch in right field in the fifth inning, and he scored on a sacrifice fly by Ben Rice in the sixth. "Tonight was special, but there's still more work to be done," Judge said after the Tuesday contest. "Hopefully we have some more cool moments like this the rest of the postseason. We've got another big game tomorrow night." Judge helped the Yankees overcome a 6-1 deficit, improving his average to .500 (11-for-22) in six playoff games this season. He also is 4-for-6 with runners in scoring position in the postseason. Including the playoffs, Judge is batting .397 (48-for-121) with 14 homers and 27 RBIs over his past 36 games since Aug. 27. "It was the best-player-in-the-game type (of) performance," Yankees manager Aaron Boone said. "It was special when obviously, needless to say, we're backs against the wall and then some in a Game 3 situation. " The Blue Jays hit .392 and scored 23 runs in the first two games at Toronto, but they mustered just two hits in the final five innings of Game 3. Errors by second baseman Isiah Kiner-Falefa and third baseman Addison Barger set up four runs for the Yankees. Blue Jays slugger Vladimir Guerrero Jr. hit a two-run homer in the first inning and is 8-for-13 with eight RBIs and five runs in the series. Ernie Clement had four hits and is 7-for-11 in the series, but the Blue Jays struck out 11 times. George Springer went 0-for-5 with three strikeouts, and Alejandro Kirk was 0-for-4. "It just goes to show if you leave your foot off the gas for even a second, a good team will pounce on you and make stuff happen," Clement said. Schlittler will take the mound after a historic 12-strikeout performance in eight innings during a 4-0 win over the Boston Red Sox in Game 3 of the AL wild-card series on Thursday. The 24-year-old right-hander threw 107 pitches and allowed five hits in his postseason debut, becoming the first pitcher in major league history to toss at least eight scoreless innings and fan at least 12 without allowing a walk in a postseason game. Since making his major league debut on July 9, Schlittler had his worst start on Sept. 5 in a home game against the Blue Jays. He lasted 1 2/3 innings, allowing four runs on five hits in a 7-1 loss. Toronto batters fouled off 24 of Schlittler's 66 pitches. "It was impressive how many foul balls there were, but I think I'm a different pitcher now than I was when I faced them a month ago and now even from two weeks ago," Schlittler said Tuesday afternoon. "They had a good game plan that day and they were able to foul a lot of balls off and work my count. Going into tomorrow, just making sure that I can make those adjustments and get the weak contact that I'm looking for." Schlittler also pitched in New York's lone win in Toronto this year, on July 22. In that outing, he allowed two runs on seven hits in five innings for a no-decision, throwing 90 pitches in the Yankees' 5-4 victory. Toronto heads into a bullpen game one day after using six relievers -- Mason Fluharty, Varland, Braydon Fisher, Brendon Little, Yariel Rodriguez and Tommy Nance -- to cover 5 1/3 innings. Every Blue Jays reliever except Justin Bruihl, Jeff Hoffman and Rodriguez has pitched at least twice in the series. Varland got three outs on Tuesday, but he served up Judge's tying homer in the fourth inning and Jazz Chisholm Jr.'s go-ahead blast in the fifth. Eric Lauer is expected to serve as the Blue Jays' bulk reliever. The left-hander allowed three hits while getting only one out in the seventh inning on Sunday. He has faced the Yankees in the regular season just once in his career, when he threw 5 1/3 innings of one-run ball for a win in 2019. "These guys will be ready to go," Toronto manager John Schneider said. "It's really comforting for me to see them do that all year. I know they're going to do it again and you have to take out the outside noise that comes with playing here and all that kind of stuff." --Larry Fleisher, Field Level Media

Yankees need strong encore from Cam Schlittler to extend ALDS again

Yankees need strong encore from Cam Schlittler to extend ALDS again NEW YORK -- A monster performance by Aaron Judge allowed the New York Ya...
MLB playoffs 2025: With one game-tying swing, Aaron Judge reorients the ALDS vs. Toronto and quiets the October criticsNew Foto - MLB playoffs 2025: With one game-tying swing, Aaron Judge reorients the ALDS vs. Toronto and quiets the October critics

NEW YORK — For four seconds, Aaron Judge, like the rest of us, was transfixed. The Yankees' captain, silent and motionless in a sea of rising decibels, lingered by home plate, waiting. His eyes, wide with anticipation, tracked the white sphere curving through the night air. They held no sign of panic. And then, suddenly, a joyous clang. The ball ricocheted off the foul pole. The reaction, from the crowd, was volcanic. For Judge, predictably, it was business as usual. After delivering the most significant swing of his career thus far —a game-tying, three-run tank that reoriented the complexion of this ALDS vs. Toronto— Judge paused for a beat, discarded his bat, motioned calmly toward his teammates going ballistic in the dugout and began his slow trot around the bases. It was the type of moment Yankees fans had been waiting for, praying for, an exhale of Judge-ian proportions. Perhaps that was the case for the man himself. But in typical fashion, he didn't show it. Although Judge, in the aftermath, clearly understood the significance of it all, he downplayed his own role in the story. "Felt like I made good contact. Thought we had a chance," he said afterNew York's 9-6 victory on Tuesday in Game 3. "You just never know with the wind, if it's gonna push it foul, if it's gonna keep curving or not. I guess a couple of ghosts out there in monument park helped kinda keep that fair." How do you hold something so big and not let it consume you? To thrive in this demanding, unrelenting cauldron called Yankeedom, one must simultaneously appreciate and ignore the significance of it all. That is a complicated, formidable endeavor. The history is unavoidable here, laid on thick and on purpose. Yankee Stadium is a museum with a museum. There's an entire park of monuments. A plaque with Joe DiMaggio's famous quote — "I wanna thank the good lord for making me a Yankee" — hangs in the hallway between clubhouse and dugout. It sounds grandiose, saccharine, overwrought, but love it or hate it, this franchise is the throughline of this pastime's past. History is everywhere here. Itlivesin this place, like a spectral fog trapped beneath the iconic frieze that circles this rebuilt colossus. Judge thoroughly understands this dynamic and the expectations that accompany it, and he floats through it with ease. Jeter wrote the blueprint, but the big guy, in this modern age of always-on, has perfected it. He knows when to smile at the cameras and when to avoid them. What to say and, more importantly, what not to say. As part of this dance, Judge often references the legends who came before him, but he does not, it seems, compare himself to them. That's outside noise, pure distraction, a job for scribes and talking heads. "It's hard to think about it like that. If you carry it around, it's gonna weigh you down," Game 3 starter Carlos Rodón told Yahoo Sports. "If he carried it around, he wouldn't hit .330 with 54 homers. "He just walks in here, and he lives it." [Get more New York news: Yankees team feed] For nine seasons now, that has been the case. Judge has won two AL MVP awards and is in line for a possible third. He has a batting title, 368 career home runs, the largest contract in franchise history, enough fame, fortune and accomplishment for five lifetimes. Yet he is most defined by what he does not have: a championship. Such is life in the Bronx. This is Judge's eighth trip to the playoffs. He has already taken the seventh-most postseason plate appearances in franchise history. If the Yankees win this series, he will soon pass Yogi Berra and Paul O'Neill and move into fifth. But his career October stat line before Tuesday — .223/.333/.454 — was pedestrian, well below his lofty standards. His numbers in situations defined as "high-leverage" were even worse: 3-for-17 with three walks, two singles and a double. As such, he has endured an avalanche of criticism from many corners of YankeeLand for what he hasn't been when the games mattered most. His now-iconic flub in Game 5 of last year's World Series didn't help matters. Fair or not, the "Judge can't handle October" narrative existed, growing in power with every game. But witha timely blast with his team on the brink of elimination, he silenced that chatter, at least for now. Up as the tying run, with his Yankees —his Yankees— down three in the game, down two in the series, staring winter in the face, Judge rose to the moment. With the count 0-2, he turned on a 99.7-mph heater under his hands from Toronto reliever Louis Varland and dispatched it 373 feet into the seats. The drama was made possible only because Toronto jumped to an early 2-0 lead on a stadium-silencing drive from Vladimir Guerrero Jr., their own franchise anchor. Guerrero's homer, his third of the series, was an absolute no-doubter, half warning shot, half hammer blow. But faced with that opening salvo, New York didn't back down. They answered in the bottom half, when Giancarlo Stanton roped an RBI single to plate Judge and trim the deficit to one. That score didn't hold for long. The Jays pounced on Rodón in the top of the third, chasing the southpaw from the game by scoring four runs on four hits to secure what appeared to be a commanding 6-1 lead. But again, the Yankees punched back immediately in the bottom half. A Judge double scored Grisham, a Stanton sac fly scored Bellinger, and suddenly, New York was within striking distance. Those runs set up Judge's game-changing, season-altering, legacy-defining long ball one inning later. The moment felt gigantic in scope and scale, difficult to wrap your arms around. But the grand euphoria was made possible only by the micro, by the millimeter-perfect details of the swing itself and the hours of fine-tuning those details in the cage. Asked to explain, mechanically, what it takes to get to a pitch like that and the work that goes in behind the scenes, Judge let out a "woof," smiled and just shook his head. "We'd be here all night." But Judge's home run merely tied the game. Toronto escaped the fourth without further damage. It wasn't until Jazz Chisholm Jr. unleashed a 409-foot, go-ahead laser off the facing of the second deck that the Yankees and their fans could breathe, smile, relax. The Bombers, in the fifth inning of the third game, had the lead for the first time in this ALDS. They tacked on a few more for comfort's sake — an Austin Wells RBI single, a Bellinger double that scored an intentionally walked Judge — and the bullpen held firm. After Rodón's early exit, New York relievers combined to toss 5 2/3 scoreless innings. In some ways — Aaron Judge's legacy, for instance — Tuesday night felt bigger than a single victory. But for the sake of this series, it was just one win. The Yankees are still trailing. The Jays still hold home-field advantage in this best-of-five. And yet, the tenor of this series changed in Game 3. It felt like an enormous ocean liner beginning to turn. The pitching matchup forGame 4 on Wednesdayfavors the Yankees. Toronto plans to start Varland as the opener of what looks to be a bullpen game. New York will hand the rock to rookie Cam Schlittler, who electrified the sport last weekwith a sparkling, eight-inning, 12-strikeout performance in the wild-card clincher against Boston. A trip back north for an all-deciding Game 5 feels entirely possible, if not likely. "Tonight was special, but there's still more work to be done," Judge proclaimed in his postgame media conference. "Hopefully we have some more cool moments like this the rest of the postseason. We've got another big game tomorrow night. Maybe we can do something special tomorrow night and talk to all of you all one more time before we head back up north." Injured Yankees ace Gerrit Cole, the only other person on the roster who can begin to comprehend the weight on Judge's shoulders, explained it like this. "He's well aware it's a sick moment," Cole told Yahoo Sports. "But you know, he has a lot of sick moments. It's part of the deal, you know? He just kind of looks at it as an executed swing and moves on." Perhaps that is how Judge does it, by minimizing it all. A swing is just a swing. A win is just a win. Tomorrow, another day. Teammates above all else. Baseball is a process-oriented life, so perhaps committing to those cliches makes it easier to tune out expectations. Maybe walking in and living it, as Rodón put it, lets Judge lessen the weight of his place in history. The ghosts in monument park are only as real as you make them.

MLB playoffs 2025: With one game-tying swing, Aaron Judge reorients the ALDS vs. Toronto and quiets the October critics

MLB playoffs 2025: With one game-tying swing, Aaron Judge reorients the ALDS vs. Toronto and quiets the October critics NEW YORK — For four ...
Analysis-Turkey's gas shift threatens Russia and Iran's last big European marketNew Foto - Analysis-Turkey's gas shift threatens Russia and Iran's last big European market

By Can Sezer ISTANBUL (Reuters) -Turkey could meet more than half of its gas needs by the end of 2028 by ramping up production and increasing U.S. imports, in a shift that threatens to shrink the last major European market for Russian and Iranian suppliers. Washington has publicly pressured allies, including NATO member Turkey, to cut energy ties with Moscow and Tehran. At their White House meeting on September 25, U.S.President Donald Trumppressed Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan to cut Russian energy purchases. Diversifying supply would also strengthen Turkey's energy security and support its ambitions to become a regional gas hub. Ankara aims to re-export imported liquefied natural gas and its own gas production to Europe while burning Russian and Iranian gas domestically, analysts said. "Turkey has been signalling that it will take advantage of the (global) LNG abundance," said Sohbet Karbuz, from the Paris-based Mediterranean Organisation for Energy and Climate. Russia remains Turkey's largest gas supplier, but its share of the market has fallen from more than 60% two decades ago to 37% in the first half of 2025. Most European countries halted imports following Moscow's invasion of Ukraine in 2022. RUSSIA'S PIPELINE CONTRACTS NEAR EXPIRY Russia's long-term pipeline contracts with Turkey to supply 22 billion cubic metres (bcm) annually via the Blue Stream and TurkStream pipelines are close to expiry. Iran's 10 bcm contract expires in the middle of next year, while Azerbaijan's contracts, totalling 9.5 bcm, run until 2030 and 2033. While Turkey is likely to extend some of these contracts, it is likely to seek more flexible terms and smaller volumes to increase the diversity of its supply, Karbuz said. At the same time, Turkey is rapidly expanding alternative sources. State-owned TPAO is boosting output from local gas fields, while state and private companies have expanded LNG import terminals to bring gas in from the U.S. and Algeria. Domestic production and contracted LNG imports are set to exceed 26 bcm annually from 2028 from 15 bcm this year, according to Reuters calculations. US LNG IMPORTS SET TO DOUBLE That would cover more than half of Turkey's gas demand of around 53 bcm, reducing the gap for pipeline imports to around 26 bcm - well below the 41 bcm of current contracted supplies from Russia, Iran and Azerbaijan combined. To support this shift, Turkey has signed a series of LNG deals with U.S. suppliers worth $43 billion, including a 20-year agreement with Mercuria in September. The country has built 58 bcm annual LNG import capacity, enough to cover its entire demand, according to Turkey's energy exchange. Despite this, Russian gas continues to flow at full capacity, and the Kremlin has said cooperation with Ankara remains strong. Since Turkey needs less Russian gas, BOTAS could, in theory, stop imports from Moscow in two to three years, said Alexey Belogoryev of the Moscow-based Institute for Energy and Finance. "However, it won't do so, because Russian gas is price-competitive and creates a surplus that BOTAS can use to pressure other suppliers," Belogoryev said. Turkey's energy minister Alparslan Bayraktar said in a TV interview in October that Turkey must source gas from all available suppliers, including Russia, Iran and Azerbaijan, but noted that U.S. LNG offers cheaper alternatives. The energy ministry declined to comment on future supply deals and pricing. Russian gas pipeline export monopoly Gazprom did not reply to a request for comment. Turkey could burn Russian and Iranian gas at home, export its own production and re-export imported LNG after Europe bans Russian energy imports by 2028, said Karbuz. Turkey's BOTAS has already signed deals to supply Hungary and Romania with small volumes of gas in its bid to become a regional gas trading hub. Beyond gas, Ankara has deep ties with Moscow. Russia's Rosatom is building Turkey's first nuclear plant and Moscow is also the country's top crude and diesel supplier. (Reporting by Can Sezer; Editing by Jonathan Spicer and Louise Heavens)

Analysis-Turkey's gas shift threatens Russia and Iran's last big European market

Analysis-Turkey's gas shift threatens Russia and Iran's last big European market By Can Sezer ISTANBUL (Reuters) -Turkey could meet ...
Analysis-Rising tungsten prices worsen oil drillers' inflation worriesNew Foto - Analysis-Rising tungsten prices worsen oil drillers' inflation worries

By Anushree Mukherjee and Shariq Khan (Reuters) -U.S. shale drillers are facing higher prices for tungsten, a rare, ultra-hard metal used for industrial tools like drillbits, as Chinese export controls have squeezed supply, threatening U.S.President Donald Trump's ambitions to boost America's fossil fuel production. Tungsten makes up as much as 75% of the drillbits deployed in oilfields. The metal's price has surged to over $600 per metric ton unit from around $330–$340 in early February, when Trump imposed a 10% tariff on Chinese goods and Beijing hit back with curbs on exports of five critical metals, including tungsten. While the curbs fall short of an outright ban, previous such measures have sharply curtailed exports. China controls more than two-thirds of global tungsten production, according to the U.S. Geological Survey, making it difficult to replace its supply, industry experts said. As a result, polycrystalline diamond compact (PDC) drill bits, typically priced at $20,000 to $100,000 depending on their size, design and other factors, now cost an additional $3,000 to $25,000, said Yaseer Ismail, supply chain manager at supply chain management firm Scan Global Logistics. PDC drill bits are prized in oilfields for their abrasion resistance, Ismail said. Top U.S. services provider SLB calls them the 'workhorse of the oilfield' on its website. WHEN IT RAINS IT POURS Tungsten costs highlight an unexpected consequence of Trump's policies, despite his campaign promises to uplift the energy industry. Ben Dieterich, a spokesperson for the U.S. Department of Energy, said the department gave a grant this year to Melt Technologies, a Texas company that reclaims and recycles industrial metals, to fund a pilot facility to produce tungsten carbide products. "This will ultimately deliver greater savings for consumers," he said about the grant made in the final days of the administration of former President Joe Biden. The DOE did not immediately respond to a request for comment about the fact that it came during the Biden administration. The American Exploration & Production Council, which represents U.S. energy producers, declined to comment. Since Beijing's retaliation, Trump has slapped even higher duties on Chinese imports, and levied tariffs on other items widely used in oilfields, like steel. The industry also faces a potential oversupply after OPEC+ opted on Sunday to continue raising output after years of cuts. U.S. oil producers have been reducing drilling activity due to declining commodity prices, after output hit record levels in July according to the latest government data. Oilfield service providers will most likely have to absorb U.S. tariff costs instead of passing them on, said Mark Chapman, lead OFS analyst at Enverus Intelligence Research. These companies had warned in their second-quarter earnings reports that the steel tariffs would cut margins by 20 to 50 basis points, and surging tungsten costs will likely have a similar financial impact, Chapman said. SLB said in July it expected to take the hit in the second half of the year, after it reported sharply lower second-quarter earnings from a year ago. Days later, smaller rival Halliburton also posted a large drop in second-quarter profits and warned of a full-year revenue decline, citing softer demand. Global benchmark Brent crude oil futures were trading below $65 a barrel on Tuesday, down over 12% so far this year. "While the industry can generally pass through higher costs, it is challenging to do so in a market with flat to lower activity levels and especially difficult given anticipated pressure on commodity prices," said Samantha Hoh, senior clean tech analyst at HSBC. (Reporting by Anushree Mukherjee in Bengaluru and Shariq Khan in New York; additional reporting by Timothy Gardner in Washington; Editing by Liz Hampton and Richard Chang)

Analysis-Rising tungsten prices worsen oil drillers' inflation worries

Analysis-Rising tungsten prices worsen oil drillers' inflation worries By Anushree Mukherjee and Shariq Khan (Reuters) -U.S. shale drill...
Turkey floated $100 million Halkbank settlement idea at White House last month, sources sayNew Foto - Turkey floated $100 million Halkbank settlement idea at White House last month, sources say

By Humeyra Pamuk and Jonathan Spicer WASHINGTON/ISTANBUL (Reuters) -Turkish officials proposed settling a U.S. legal case against state lender Halkbank for some $100 million during a meeting betweenPresident Donald Trumpand Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan at the White House last month, two sources told Reuters. Under the proposal that was discussed, which included additional conditions, the bank would not admit guilt in the case - a key priority for Ankara - the sources familiar with the conversations said. Halkbank is facing fraud, money laundering and conspiracy charges in the United States for allegedly helping Iran evade U.S. economic sanctions related to its nuclear program. The bank has pleaded not guilty. Erdogan's office declined to comment on any settlement talks, when contacted by Reuters. The White House did not respond to a request for comment. Halkbank, Turkey's fourth-largest lender by assets, did not immediately comment. U.S.-TURKEY RELATIONS WARMING AFTER YEARS OF STRAIN Any settlement could bolster Ankara's efforts to mend its relationship with Washington, which was undermined by Turkey's decision to purchase S-400 missile systems from Russia in 2019 during Trump's first term. The U.S. cancelled a planned sale of F-35 fighter jets to Turkey in response and ousted it from a joint production programme for the planes. It also imposed sanctions on Turkey's top defense procurement body. The case against Halkbank was brought later that year. Bilateral relations between the two NATO allies are now warming due in part to the two leaders' friendly personal ties, though the state visit failed to secure Trump's prompt blessing to overcome U.S. sanctions and buy F-35s, as Turkey had hoped. Reuters was unable to determine what specific conditions were discussed as part of last month's White House talks over a possible Halkbank settlement. It was not clear how the U.S. side reacted to the Turkish proposal or whether discussions continued after the meeting, which took place between Trump, Erdogan and their top secretaries and ministers. ERDOGAN SOUGHT TO DISCUSS BANK WITH TRUMP The U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear Halkbank's latest appeal on Monday, upholding a lower court's ruling that the U.S. government's criminal case should proceed. The decision sent Halkbank shares down 10% and, barring a settlement, clears the way for a possible trial, though the bank said efforts were under way to reach a solution. "Initiatives to find a legal ground of conciliation within the framework of the understandings between the United States and Turkey are also ongoing in a positive direction," the bank said following the ruling. Erdogan, seated next to Trump after arriving at his first White House reception in six years, told reporters that they would discuss Halkbank among other matters. He has previously called the charges "unlawful" and "ugly". Gonul Tol, director of the Washington-based Middle East Institute's Turkish program, had flagged the potential $100 million fine on X shortly after the White House meeting, calling it a possible "concrete step" in otherwise mixed talks. The Supreme Court decision "does not mean an agreement cannot be reached between Ankara and Washington," she wrote on X on Monday. "The courts can grant the administration the right to decide on cases that concern foreign policy like this." ALLEGATIONS BANK EVADED U.S. SANCTIONS ON IRAN Prosecutors with the Manhattan U.S. Attorney's office have accused Halkbank of using money servicers and front companies in Iran, Turkey and the United Arab Emirates to help Iran evade U.S. sanctions. According to prosecutors, Halkbank secretly transferred $20 billion in restricted funds, converted oil revenues into gold and cash to benefit Iranian interests and documented fake food shipments to justify transfers of oil proceeds. In its appeal to the Supreme Court, Halkbank had argued that, as a Turkish state-owned entity, it should be immune from legal actions in another country's courts. Some analysts have speculated that any settlement could be higher than the $100 million that the sources said had been floated at the White House. Between 2009 and 2015, eight European banks – including HSBC, BNP Paribas, Standard Chartered, and Credit Suisse – were penalized over $14 billion for, among other offenses, violating various U.S. sanctions programs. France's BNP Paribas alone agreed to pay almost $9 billion to resolve accusations that it violated U.S. sanctions against Sudan, Cuba and Iran. The bank had pleaded guilty. (Reporting by Jonathan Spicer in Istanbul and Humeyra Pamuk in Washington; Additional reporting by Luc Cohen and Steve Holland; Editing by Joe Bavier)

Turkey floated $100 million Halkbank settlement idea at White House last month, sources say

Turkey floated $100 million Halkbank settlement idea at White House last month, sources say By Humeyra Pamuk and Jonathan Spicer WASHINGTON/...
Championship series berths are there for the taking during MLB's playoff quadrupleheaderNew Foto - Championship series berths are there for the taking during MLB's playoff quadrupleheader

For one more day, the out-of-town scoreboard will glow with significant happenings from coast to coast. Oct. 8 brings us the final quadrupleheader ofMajor League Baseball's playoffs, with a pair of Game 3s in the National League Division Series and two Game 4s in the American League – and the possibility of four booze-fueled celebrations. Desperation will come from all quarters, an all-hands-on-deck situation both for teams facing elimination and those wanting to administer the knockout before their beleaguered opponent gets back up. With that, a look at the fourAL and NL Division Seriesmatchups, with berths in the respective league championship series there for the taking: This series is a lot closer than it looks. With the Tigers' inconsistent offense chasing pitches and largely flailing against Logan Gilbert, the Mariners took an 8-1 lead into the ninth inning of Game 3 beforeprevailing 8-4. Two shots at a third victory makes their advancement to the ALCS seem like a formality. But the Tigers can still turn this into at least a pebble fight. They have a slight advantage on the mound in Game 4, starting All-Star Casey Mize – who tailed off in the second half – against fellow righty Bryce Miller, who battled elbow inflammation and posted a 5.68 ERA and 1.41 WHIP this year. Miller returned from injury in August yet was still hit hard in September (5.61 ERA, 1.40 WHIP in five starts). Meanwhile, the Mariners' great bullpen will soon have to worry about diminishing October returns. Ace relievers Eduard Bazardo, Matt Brash and closer Andres Muñoz all pitched in the first three games, which isn't totally anomalous; Muñoz pitched three times in four days on eight occasions in the regular season. Yet getting him in the game by scoring three runs in the ninth of Game 3 was both a moral and actual victory for the Tigers. "It was nice to get Muñoz an inning in there," says Tigers manager A.J. Hinch. A win, and they all go back to Seattle, where presumed AL Cy Young Award winner Tarik Skubal will start the winner-take-all-game for Detroit. But it's all immaterial unless they can hit: The Tigers have struck out 35 times against just 10 walks in this series. It's been seven years since the Brewers wona one-game playoffat Wrigley Field to win the NL Central in 2018, and the Cubs haven't been past the division series since. Wrigley Field has since been renovated, but the smaller-market Brewers have been more relevant in the years since. "You took a shower, and there's a foot of water, you're standing in a foot of water as you're showering, but somehow it felt good," Brewers manager Pat Murphy, then the bench coach under Craig Counsell, remembers of that day. Now, Milwaukee can send its Great Lakes nemeses – and former skipper Counsell - home for the winter. In taking a 2-0 lead, the Brewers certainly made the Cubs look like a dead team walking, blitzing lefty starters Matthew Boyd and Shota Imanaga for a combined 10 runs and nine hits in just 3 ⅓ innings. Now, veteran Jameson Taillon must prove he's not out of gas to stave off elimination – as he did inGame 3 of the wild-card seriesagainst San Diego. The Brewers? They'll turn to a kid from Chicagoland's northwest suburbs to put the Cubs away. Quinn Priester, a kid from Cary, has been the biggest revelation for Milwaukee this season, settling into the rotation after failed stints with Pittsburgh and Boston. "Growing up, coming to Wrigley Field all the time, let alone starting a playoff game here is definitely something that's really cool," says Priester. "If I would have told my 10-year-old self this, it would be pretty darned cool." So, just which team is going for the kill, here? Toronto came into Yankee Stadium with bands of house money to play with, knowing one loss would only nominally hurt – yet things went about as bad as they possibly could've from a vibes standpoint. Oh, Vlad Guerrero Jr. hit his daily home run and Superman'd across home plate for another run. But blowing a 6-1 lead and committing three pretty grim defensive gaffes – the coup de grace Addison Barger's dropped popup precedingAaron Judge's game-tying three-run homer– was about the worst thing that could've happened. Now, the Yankees have cocksure rookie Cam Schlittler – coming off hisepic season-saving Game 3 wild card performance– aiming to square the series. The Blue Jays will counter with a bullpen game of some sort – or, something else. "I think everyone's available tomorrow," Blue Jays manager John Schneider said after Game 3. While Toronto has its own rookie ace in the hole for a Game 5 – Trey Yesavage – Schneider must ponder just how all-in he might go to win Game 4 and keep the Yankees out of Canada for a winner-take-all contest. Deploy Kevin Gausman in relief on three days' rest? Burn Yesavage in a short burst now, knowing he threw just 78 pitches in Game 2? Either way, it's fantastic theater for prime time in the Bronx. The superstars have checked in: Guerrero is 8-for-13 with three homers and eight RBIs in the three games, while Judge is 7-for-11 with that season-saving, foul pole-clanging Game 3 blast. In a series with Shohei Ohtani, Kyle Schwarber, Bryce Harper, Mookie Betts, Teoscar Hernández and other sluggers in tow, a grand total of one home run has been hit in the first two games. That was Hernández's series-shifting Game 1 blast in Philadelphia and with the teams reconvening in L.A., the team on the wrong end of the 2-0 score would like the vibes to shift, too. "We want to go up there, we want to hit, we want to bang the best way we can," Harper said on Tuesday's off day. That, they have not done: Schwarber and Harper are a combined 1-for-14 with eight strikeouts, enabling the Dodgers to escape with a pair of high-wire wins in Philly. Now? The Phillies have no choice but piggyback veteran right-hander Aaron Nola and lefty Ranger Suarez, while the Dodgers counter with ace Yoshinobu Yamamoto. The odds are overwhelmingly in the Dodgers' favor, and a lifeless Phillies offense makes the notion of a sweep feel palpable. That would send the Phillies into another winter of discontent and uncertainty, starting with manager Rob Thomson and extending to pending free agents Schwarber and Realmuto – and what, exactly, a team consistently in the mid-90s win range needs to translate it to the playoffs. For now, at least one more game. "I think that's the biggest thing, too, man, is enjoying the moment because not every year you can play in the postseason," Harper said. "Obviously our biggest goal and ultimate goal is to win a World Series every time you get to spring training, just like any other team. "It's still got to be the same mindset, same ultimate goal of doing that." This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:MLB playoff games today: Division series could be clinched Wednesday

Championship series berths are there for the taking during MLB's playoff quadrupleheader

Championship series berths are there for the taking during MLB's playoff quadrupleheader For one more day, the out-of-town scoreboard wi...
Martin Necas scores 2 goals, and the Avalanche rout the Kings 4-1 in a dominant season openerNew Foto - Martin Necas scores 2 goals, and the Avalanche rout the Kings 4-1 in a dominant season opener

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Martin Necas scored two goals, Nathan MacKinnon had two assists to become the leading scorer in Avalanche history, and Colorado opened the regular season with a 4-1 victory over the Los Angeles Kings on Tuesday night. Sam Malinski and Artturi Lehkonen also scored during Colorado's three-goal second period. Scott Wedgewood made 24 saves during a commanding performance by the Avalanche in their first game back from their disappointingfirst-round playoff exit to Dallas. Kevin Fiala scored a power-play goal with 4:53 left for the Kings, who matched the franchise records for victories and points last season before their fourth consecutive first-round playoff loss to the Edmonton Oilers. Darcy Kuemper stopped 19 shots for Los Angeles, which made only a few changes undernew general manager Ken Holland— but the defense-first club looked slow during the Avs' second period. Anze Kopitar beganhis 20th and final NHL seasonafter the Los Angeles captain announced his impending retirement last month. Colorado captain Gabriel Landeskog played in his first season opener since October 2021 and his first regular-season game since March 10, 2022. He missed the past three regular seasons due to multiple knee surgeries, only returning for the playoffs last April. MacKinnon's first assist was his 1,016th point in 871 games, pushing him past Joe Sakic's 1,015 points in 870 games for the Avalanche — although Sakic scored an additional 626 points before his Quebec Nordiques moved to Denver. This game was played exactly 30 years after the Avalanche visited the Forum in Inglewood for their first road game following relocation. Lehkonen made it 3-0 on a rebound after Norris Trophy winner Cale Makar made a stunning drive to the net. Necas added a power-play goal in the third. The Kings surprised their fans by wearing a previously unannounced third jersey for the game after warming up in their regular home sweaters. The new jersey is black and silver with the historic crown logo blown up into the main crest. Up next Avalanche: Host Mammoth on Thursday. Kings: At Golden Knights on Wednesday. ___ AP NHL:https://apnews.com/NHL

Martin Necas scores 2 goals, and the Avalanche rout the Kings 4-1 in a dominant season opener

Martin Necas scores 2 goals, and the Avalanche rout the Kings 4-1 in a dominant season opener LOS ANGELES (AP) — Martin Necas scored two goa...
MLB playoffs 2025: From Victor Robles' dash to Cal Raleigh's blast, Mariners take ALDS Game 3 with strong showing from up and down the lineupNew Foto - MLB playoffs 2025: From Victor Robles' dash to Cal Raleigh's blast, Mariners take ALDS Game 3 with strong showing from up and down the lineup

DETROIT — Victor Robles saw an opening. The Seattle Mariners' outfielder, notorious for his ambitious exploits on the basepaths, watched as a wayward throw from left fielder Riley Greene caromed through the legs of Detroit Tigers catcher Dillon Dingler. Robles had initially been held up by third-base coach Kristopher Negron after J.P. Crawford dropped a single into left field, but as the ball skipped away from Dingler, plans changed. With pitcher Jack Flaherty scrambling to recover the ball, Robles embarked on a mad dash toward home. Flaherty hurried the ball to Dingler, but Robles slid in safely just in the nick of time. 1-0 Mariners. At that moment —in the top of the third inning of ALDS Game 3— Robles' run felt enormously consequential. Runs tend to come at a premium in October, as demonstrated by these clubs trading narrow 3-2 victories in the first two games of the series. And after two scoreless frames to openGame 3 on Tuesday, it seemed like Detroit and Seattle were destined for yet another tense and tight ballgame. [Get more Seattle news: Mariners team feed] As it turned out, Robles' bold gambit to capitalize on Detroit's unusual sequence of defensive miscues was merely the opening act in what turned out to be a fairly lopsided contest. Over the remainder of the game, nearly every member of the Mariners' roster contributed, while very few Tigers could muster much of anything. The excitement of a Comerica Park sellout crowd of 41,525 who had waited to welcome their team home after two grueling weeks on the road — plus another three hours due to rain that delayed first pitch — slowly dissipated asthe Mariners coasted to an 8-4 victory. Flaherty looked comfortable in the early going, but Robles' double to lead off the third and subsequent scoring sparked an uptick in both confidence and production from Seattle's hitters. The chaos involved in Robles' run enabled Crawford to get to second base on the play, which immediately proved costly when Randy Arozarena drove him in with a single in the next at-bat, making it 2-0 Mariners. Returning to the mound for the fourth inning with hopes of calming things down against the bottom of the Mariners' lineup, Flaherty was greeted by an authoritative swing from slugger Eugenio Suárez, who pummeled a poorly placed fastball deep to left field for a solo home run. Flaherty's outing concluded shortly thereafter, but reliever Tommy Kahnle was unable to escape the inning without further damage. He surrendered an RBI single to Cal Raleigh to make it 4-0 Mariners. Eugenio Suárez entered Game 3 with 29 career plate appearances against Jack Flaherty (by far the most of any SEA hitter) including 3 HR (in 2018, 2019, 2021)big swing here for HR #4 on a poorly located fastball from Flahertypic.twitter.com/XtIZvFFZKK — Jordan Shusterman (@j_shusterman_)October 8, 2025 Opposite Flaherty's abbreviated outing was a strong effort from Seattle starter Logan Gilbert, who completed six frames while allowing just one run on 85 pitches. Although Gilbert didn't walk any batters, his command wasn't pinpoint by any stretch, with several offerings sailing far from their intended target, especially in the early frames. No matter. His trio of primary pitches — a four-seam fastball sitting at 95 mph, a sharp slider that kept diving below barrels and a splendid splitter that was dancing all over the zone — had so much life that Tigers hitters conjured few competent swings against him. "It was nice trying to work everything in there tonight, and Cal always does a great job seeing what's working, what we need to go to, so I just try to follow his lead," Gilbert said afterward. "I didn't get a ton of first-pitch strikes, which I try to focus on. But after that, I felt like I did a pretty good job making pitches when I needed to." With the Tigers struggling to find any offensive momentum against Gilbert, the Mariners continued to add on. Crawford was especially busy, torching a solo homer off lefty reliever Brant Hurter in the sixth and lofting a sacrifice fly to score Luke Raley after Raley advanced to third when Tigers right fielder Kerry Carpenter dropped a fly ball from Robles — another Tigers defensive miscue capitalized upon. And just when it seemed like Seattle's night couldn't be going any better, an exclamation point of extraordinary happenstance unfolded in the top of the ninth. The play itself — a two-run home run by Raleigh to make it 8-1 Mariners — was not especially unusual, given the hitter involved and the relatively low leverage. But Raleigh's blast bounced into the Seattle bullpen beyond the left-field fence and landed in the hands of a Mariners fan named Jameson Turner, who waswearing a custom-made teal shirt with a silver "DUMP 61 HERE" emblazoned on the front, a nod to the Mariners' backstop's "Big Dumper" moniker and 60 long balls in the regular season. After celebrating catching the ball, Turner immediately ripped off the garment to reveal "DUMP 62 HERE" on a different shirt, extending the bit with perfection. "That's crazy," Raleigh said postgame. "What are the odds?" Adding to the improbable nature of the sequence was where Turner was sitting. Raleigh hit 38 home runs left-handed in the regular season, but just five of them were to the opposite field. He picked a pretty good time to hit a sixth. "I was like,no way," marveled Mariners reliever Gabe Speier, who was in the bullpen when Raleigh's home run found its unlikely destination. "The only guy in the whole stadium with that shirt!" It didn't take long for Turner to realize the kind of attention he had just seized. After the game, he was invited into the tunnel outside the Mariners' clubhouse to meet Raleigh and take the perfect picture. As a wide-eyed Turner spoke to a group of reporters, Mariners general manager Justin Hollander walked by and insisted that he needed a picture with Turner as well. DUMP HERE 🤝pic.twitter.com/Zy8E19UocN — Seattle Mariners (@Mariners)October 8, 2025 Improbable circumstances aside, Raleigh's home run represented an emphatic final blow in what was a comprehensive effort from the Mariners' lineup. Even in a game in which 3-4-5 hitters Julio Rodriguez, Jorge Polanco and Josh Naylor combined to go 0-for-14, Seattle scored eight runs on eight hits. The potential of the Mariners lineup is sometimes obscured at home, in the hitter-unfriendly confines of T-Mobile Park, but its potency has been on display away from Seattle all season. The Marinersranked second in MLB in road OPSin the regular season, behind only the Yankees, and were tied with New York for most home runs away from home, with 134 in 81 games. That ability to mash as the visiting squad provided more than enough offense to secure a Game 3 victory and 2-1 lead in this series. "We had two games where we pitched tremendously well, and we had a lot of parts of this game where we pitched tremendously well. But listen, this is the playoffs," Detroit manager A.J. Hinch said afterward. "And I keep saying they got here for a reason, too. And they won some of the at-bats and certainly hit the ball out of the ballpark a couple times. … "They do hit homers when you make mistakes, but we're going to play the rest of this series out and see if we can answer the challenge of getting through this lineup and putting up more runs." Although the Tigers' effort in Game 3 didn't inspire much confidence in their ability to extend this series further, Seattle's pitching plans forGame 4 on Wednesdaymight allow Detroit to make things interesting. On the mound for the Mariners will be right-hander Bryce Miller, the 27-year-old who shined as a second-year starter in 2024 but has been extremely ineffective across an injury-marred 2025, with a 5.68 ERA andtroubling underlying datathat confirms opponents have been squaring him up with regularity. Miller is being relied on in this spot because the Mariners are without their top starter in the regular season, Bryan Woo,who isn't on the ALDS roster due to a pec injurysuffered in September. The Mariners have done well to secure a lead in the series before asking Miller to tackle this high-stakes assignment, but Woo's absence undeniably opens the door for a scuffling Tigers offense to perhaps get something going against a pitcher who has struggled to limit hard contact and prevent runs. On the other side, facing elimination at home, Casey Mize will take the ball for Detroit for his second start of the postseason after an unremarkable three innings vs. the Guardians in Game 2 of the wild-card round. The former No. 1 pick will be tasked with slowing down a Seattle lineup starting to find its groove, but his efforts might be moot if the Tigers' bats can't wake up themselves. Before first pitch Wednesday afternoon, this Detroit team will need to flush Tuesday's collective letdown and find a way to rediscover some positive baseballing energy, the kind that helped propel them to a terrific first half of the season. "We've earned our way here, and we've had to play more and more back-against-the-wall-type games. I know our guys are going to be ready," Hinch said. "We knew it wasn't going to be easy. We knew it wasn't going to be hand-gifted to us. We're going to have to earn it and play better in all aspects against a really good team. "And we can because we have a really good team, too."

MLB playoffs 2025: From Victor Robles' dash to Cal Raleigh's blast, Mariners take ALDS Game 3 with strong showing from up and down the lineup

MLB playoffs 2025: From Victor Robles' dash to Cal Raleigh's blast, Mariners take ALDS Game 3 with strong showing from up and down t...
Sherrill, Ciattarelli to meet in final debate in New Jersey governor's raceNew Foto - Sherrill, Ciattarelli to meet in final debate in New Jersey governor's race

NEW BRUNSWICK, N.J. (AP) — Democrat Mikie Sherrill and Republican Jack Ciattarelli will go head-to-head Wednesday in their final debate forNew Jersey governor, as the federal government shutdown, Sherrill's military records and the high cost of living have become major issues in the closely watched race. New Jersey is one of two states, along with Virginia, electing governors this fall — contests that are being viewed as a measure of how voters feel about PresidentDonald Trump'ssecond term and how Democrats are responding. The hourlong debate gives the candidates a chance to cement their pitches to voters, who have already begun mailing in ballots ahead of the Nov. 4 election. Early in-person voting is scheduled for Oct. 25 to Nov. 2. New Jersey has gone Democratic in presidential and Senate contests for decades, but it's alternated between Republicans and Democrats in its odd-year elections for governor. Going back to the 1980s, voters went with the nominee from the party opposite of the president's. But term-limited Democratic Gov. Phil Murphy broke that pattern in 2021 when he won reelection narrowly over Ciattarelli, now in his third campaign for governor. The state, however, has grown more conservative in recent years, withDonald Trumplosing last November to Democrat Kamala Harris by just 6 points — a dramatic swing from his nearly 13-point deficit in 2016. In their first debate, thecandidates clashed pointedly, with Ciattarelli calling his opponent's promises vague and dishonest and Sherrill tying Ciattarelli to Trump and questioning the former business owner and accountant's math skills. Trumpendorsed Ciattarelliin the GOP primary, saying he'd gone "ALL IN" and was "now 100% (PLUS!)" on the president's "Make America Great Again" agenda, despite past criticism. Here's what to watch for in the debate, televised locally on ABC: Shutdown and the Hudson River tunnel The candidates are taking different approaches on thefederal government shutdown, which started last week. One key difference centers on the Hudson River rail project, which has been decades in the planning and would replace more than century-old tunnels connecting New Jersey and New York City.The Trump administration has used the shutdown as a pretext to freeze fundingfor the project amid a review of its compliance with the administration's diversity policies. Sherrill, a four-term congresswoman elected during Trump's first midterm to a longtime GOP-held seat, has advocated for funding throughout her time in office and has sharply criticized the freeze, holding a news conference outside a suburban New York rail station. She could lean into the effect the shutdown could have on the project, which is continuing work for now, though it's unclear when federal reimbursements might run out if the shutdown drags on. "Trump has frozen the funding for this all important project. And what has Jack Ciattarelli said? Not much," Sherrill said at the recent event in Glen Ridge, New Jersey. Ciattarelli has blasted Sherrill as responsible for the shutdown as a member of Congress. Look for him to criticize her for voting for previous continuing resolutions that kept the government open under former President Joe Biden despite voting against the current Republican-backed measure. The release of military records Another topic likely to be raised in the debate stems from two related butseparate stories about Sherrill's timein the Navy. One story detailed how Sherrill's mostly unredacted military record was released to a Republican operative close to Ciattarelli's campaign. The other centers on news that Sherrill did not participate in the 1994 graduation from the Naval Academy amid fallout that year from a well-documented cheating scandal. Sherrill said she was barred from walking because she did not turn in fellow classmates. She still graduated, was commissioned and went on to become a helicopter pilot. Ciattarelli's campaign has called on her to release additional records to back up that defense, but she has declined. "If those sealed disciplinary records match Representative Sherrill's current explanation, we are unsure why she would refuse to release the records and put this matter to rest," the campaign said in an email. In a recent interview, Sherrill said her files show a "record of service." "I'm certainly not going to allow him," she said, "to rampage through the records of my classmates at the academy." Instead, Sherrill's campaign has seized on the improper release of information to the National Archives with personal information unredacted. Her campaign has publicized an inspector general's investigation into the release, and she's published letters online from the archives, including an apology saying the records were given out "in error." It's not clear whether any of the records the National Archives released in error were related to the reasons she was not allowed to participate in the graduation ceremony. Affordability and who's to blame Both candidates are hammering the high cost of living in New Jersey. Sherrill has said she'd issue an executive order freezing utility rates, which have climbed steadily over the summer. Ciattarelli talks about capping sky-high property taxes as a percentage of home value. Ciattarelli blames the economic woes on longtime Democratic control of the state Legislature and the governorship for the past eight years. Calling for a change in Trenton has been a central plank of his campaign. Sherrill, meanwhile, points to the president's tariffs and trade wars as the cause of voters' belt tightening. She regularly asks voters to elect her to stand up to Trump's policies, which she casts as out of touch in the Democratic-leaning state.

Sherrill, Ciattarelli to meet in final debate in New Jersey governor's race

Sherrill, Ciattarelli to meet in final debate in New Jersey governor's race NEW BRUNSWICK, N.J. (AP) — Democrat Mikie Sherrill and Repub...
A New Orleans candidate's murder conviction was tossed but the state still challenges his pastNew Foto - A New Orleans candidate's murder conviction was tossed but the state still challenges his past

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — A down-ballot race for New Orleans clerk of criminal court has turned personal and contentious, as candidate Calvin Duncan, who spent three decades in prison before his conviction was vacated, faces attacks from Louisiana's attorney general and the incumbent clerk over whether he was truly exonerated. Duncan, 62, taught himself law while in prison and struggled for years access his records. He says that makes his quest to be the city's chief criminal recordkeeper personal. "I don't never want to have what happened to me happen to nobody else," said Duncan, whose murder conviction was vacated by a judge in 2021. He's listed in the National Registry of Exonerations alongside figures like "Central Park Five" memberYousef Salaam, now a New York City councilmember. But Duncan's campaign has been overshadowed by disputes about the word "exoneration" in his case, injecting drama into the final stretch of an otherwise sleepy municipal race. Voters head to the polls Saturday. Louisiana Attorney General Liz Murrill and incumbent clerk Darren Lombard have both denied Duncan's innocence, pointing to a 2011 plea deal for manslaughter and armed robbery that Duncan says he accepted only to secure his release. In televised debates, media interviews and campaign advertisements, Lombard has called Duncan a murderer. Duncan, a Democrat, accuses his opponents of trying to mislead voters. Duncan's supporters say it's an example of bare-knuckle politics in New Orleans, where more than 10 candidates are also running to replace term-limited Mayor LaToya Cantrell, whopleaded not guiltyin September to corruption charges. Jessica Paredes, executive director of the exoneration registry, said there should be no doubt that Duncan's case deserves to be listed among the more than 3,700 exonerations tracked since 1989. "We err conservatively to maintain the integrity of the database," she said. "Calvin's exoneration was not one of these close calls. His case clearly meets our inclusion criteria." A guilty plea and a vacated conviction Duncan presented new evidence of his innocence in a 1981 fatal shooting — including that police officers had lied in court — prior to his release from prison. A judge later vacated Duncan's conviction under a legal statute of "factual innocence" and prosecutors dismissed the charges. Legal scholars say there is no across-the-board legal standard for exoneration, but Paredes' group generally defines it as occurring "when a person who has been convicted of a crime is officially cleared after new evidence of innocence becomes available." Even before Duncan ran for office, his case drew scrutiny from Murrill, the state's Republican attorney general. After Duncan earned a law degree in 2023 and sought to obtain $330,000 in state compensation for his wrongful conviction, Murrill threatened to contest his ability to practice law unless he dropped his claim for the money, according to Jacob Weixler, Duncan's attorney. Murrill's spokesperson, Lester Duhe, confirmed that account, saying Duncan "knowingly and intentionally pled guilty to this manslaughter in court." Duncan dropped his claim to avoid any impediment to practicing law, Weixler said. Less than two weeks before the election, Murrill escalated the dispute, releasing a public letter accusing Duncan of "gross misrepresentation" for calling himself exonerated. On Monday, dozens of attorneys in Louisiana signed a letter rejecting her claims. A self-taught lawyer In the legal community, Duncan had already achieved a degree of celebrity before running for office. He recalls in his memoir how an older inmate advised him to learn the law to save himself. With only an eighth-grade education, Duncan honed his legal skills and was allowed to help other inmates prepare court documents as part of a prison legal program. His persistence eventually shaped national law. Duncan was the driving force behind a 2020 U.S. Supreme Court decision that endednon-unanimous jury convictionsin Louisiana and Oregon, the only two states still allowing a practice rooted in the Jim Crow era, said G. Ben Cohen, an attorney in the case. Duncan said getting a police report, let alone a trial transcript, could take years for inmates. The New Orleans criminal court system still leans heavily on paper records, and thousands of files were lost during Hurricane Katrina. In August, troves of criminal court records were mistakenly thrown away, requiring the clerk's office tosalvage them from a landfill. Lombard said a new digital filing system will come online this year. He calls his opponent unqualified, while Duncan argues he would bring a unique appreciation for the weight of the office. "I've seen and experienced firsthand when a clerk office does not function properly," he said. ___ Associated Press journalist Stephen Smith contributed to this report. Brook is a corps member for The Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative.Report for Americais a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues.

A New Orleans candidate's murder conviction was tossed but the state still challenges his past

A New Orleans candidate's murder conviction was tossed but the state still challenges his past NEW ORLEANS (AP) — A down-ballot race for...
Trump's threat to invoke Insurrection Act escalates showdown with Democratic citiesNew Foto - Trump's threat to invoke Insurrection Act escalates showdown with Democratic cities

By Emily Schmall and Andrea Shalal CHICAGO (Reuters) -Donald Trump's threat to invoke a federal anti-insurrection law to deploy troops to more U.S. cities has intensified his legal battle with Democratic leaders over the limits of presidential authority, as hundreds of National Guard soldiers from Texas prepared to start patrolling in Chicago as early as Tuesday. The Republican president on Tuesday again left open the possibility that he might utilize the centuries-old Insurrection Act in an effort to sidestep any court rulings blocking his orders to send Guard troops into cities over the objections of local and state officials. A federal judge has temporarily barred Guard troops from heading to Portland, Oregon, though a separate judge has allowed for now a deployment to proceed in Chicago, where federal agents have embarked on a sweeping crackdown on illegal immigration. "Well, it's been invoked before," Trump told reporters in the Oval Office, who has claimed troops are needed to protect federal property and personnel in carrying out their duties, as well as assisting an overall drive to suppress crime. "If you look at Chicago, Chicago is a great city where there's a lot of crime, and if the governor can't do the job, we'll do the job. It's all very simple." The law, which gives the president authority to deploy the military to quell unrest in an emergency, has typically been used only in extreme cases, and almost always at the invitation of state governors. The act was last invoked by President George H.W. Bush during the Los Angeles riots of 1992. Under federal law, National Guard and other military troops are generally prohibited from conducting civilian law enforcement. But the Insurrection Act allows for an exception, giving troops the power to directly police and arrest people. Using the act would represent a significant escalation of Trump's effort to deploy the military to Democratic cities. Since his second term as president began in January, he has shown little hesitation in seeking to wield governmental authority against his political opponents, as he pushes to expand the powers of the presidency in ways that have tested the limits of the law. Last week, in a speech to top military commanders, Trump suggested using U.S. cities as "training grounds" for the armed forces, alarming Democrats and civil liberties groups. Randy Manner, a retired Army major general who served as acting vice chief of the National Guard Bureau, said using the Insurrection Act in the way Trump appears to be contemplating has no real precedent. "It's an extremely dangerous slope, because it essentially says the president can just do about whatever he chooses," said Manner, who served under both Republican and Democratic administrations before retiring in 2012. "It's absolutely, absolutely the definition of dictatorship and fascism." TRUMP TARGETS CHICAGO, PORTLAND Trump has ordered Guard troops to Chicago, the third-largest U.S. city, and Portland, Oregon, following his earlier deployments to Los Angeles and Washington, D.C. In each case, he has done so despite staunch opposition from Democratic mayors and governors, who say Trump's claims of lawlessness and violence do not reflect reality. In Chicago and Portland, protests over Trump's immigration policies had been largely peaceful and relatively limited in size, according to local officials, far from the "war zone" conditions described by Trump. Since the surge of federal agents to the Chicago area last month, the demonstrations have done little to upset life in a city where violent crime has fallen sharply. Restaurants and theaters are busy as ever, and crowds have flocked to lakefront beaches to enjoy an unusual stretch of warm weather. Protests have been much less disruptive than the unrest in 2020 triggered by the death of George Floyd, an unarmed Black man, at the hands of Minneapolis police officers. The most regular demonstration has taken place outside an immigration processing facility in suburban Broadview. Several dozen people have been engaged in increasingly violent standoffs with federal officers, who have fired tear gas and rubber bullets at them. Several people, including at least one reporter, have been arrested, and dozens of people have been injured. GOVERNOR ALLEGES TRUMP USING GUARD AS PROPS Illinois Governor JB Pritzker, a Democrat, accused Trump of intentionally trying to foment violence, which the president could then use to justify further militarization. "Donald Trump is using our service members as political props and as pawns in his illegal effort to militarize our nation's cities," Pritzker said on Monday. Illinois and Chicago sued the Trump administration on Monday, seeking to block orders to federalize 300 Illinois Guard troops and send 400 Texas Guard troops to Chicago. During a hearing, Justice Department lawyers told a federal judge that Texas Guard troops were already in transit to Illinois. The judge, April Perry, permitted the deployment to proceed for now but ordered the U.S. government to file a response by Wednesday. Separately, a federal judge in Oregon on Sunday temporarily blocked the administration from sending any troops to police Portland, the state's largest city. National Guard troops are state-based militia who normally answer to the governors of their states and are often deployed in response to natural disasters. During Trump's deployments to various cities, the Guard has been limited to protecting federal agents and property, though the Defense Department has said troops have the authority to detain people temporarily. Any effort by Trump to invoke the Insurrection Act would also likely face legal challenges. While the law has rarely been interpreted by the courts, the Supreme Court has ruled that the president alone can determine if the act's conditions have been met. Those conditions include when the U.S. government's authority is facing "unlawful obstructions, combinations or assemblages or rebellion." The act, a version of which was first enacted in 1792, has been used by past presidents to deploy troops within the U.S. in response to crises such as rise of the Ku Klux Klan after the American Civil War. (Reporting by Andrea Shalal in Washington and Emily Schmall in Chicago; Additional reporting by Tom Hals, Jan Wolfe and Dietrich Knauth; Writing by Joseph Ax; Editing by Frank McGurty and Nick Zieminski)

Trump's threat to invoke Insurrection Act escalates showdown with Democratic cities

Trump's threat to invoke Insurrection Act escalates showdown with Democratic cities By Emily Schmall and Andrea Shalal CHICAGO (Reuters...
Yankees wipe out Jays' 5-run lead, stay alive in ALDSNew Foto - Yankees wipe out Jays' 5-run lead, stay alive in ALDS

NEW YORK -- Aaron Judge hit a tying three-run homer in the fourth inning, Jazz Chisholm Jr. socked a go-ahead solo homer in the fifth and the New York Yankees avoided elimination in the American League Division Series with a 9-6 victory over the Toronto Blue Jays in Game 3 on Tuesday. The Yankees stormed back from a 6-1 deficit through 2 1/2 innings thanks to the homers from Judge and Chisholm off Louis Varland (0-1). New York forced Game 4 at Yankee Stadium on Wednesday, when rookie Cam Schlittler will start for the hosts while the Blue Jays are expected to use a bullpen game. New York also overcame Vladimir Guerrero Jr.'s third homer of the series. Guerrero went deep on Carlos Rodon's 2-0 changeup three batters into the contest and scored on a headfirst slide on a single by Ernie Clement in Toronto's four-run third. The Blue Jays led 6-3 with one out in the bottom of the fourth when New York's Austin Wells reached on a fielding error by third baseman Addison Barger. Trent Grisham walked, and Varland replaced Mason Fluharty on the mound. Judge swung and missed at a 100 mph fastball for an 0-2 count and took a timeout. On the next pitch, the AL batting champion and two-time MVP hit a fastball off the left field foul pole to forge a 6-6 tie. It was Judge's 17th career postseason homer. Before connecting, Judge was seen consulting with Giancarlo Stanton in the dugout during the pitching change. Judge ended the night 3-for-4 with a walk, his second career three-hit game in the postseason. He set a career playoff high with four RBIs. After Varland fanned Stanton for the first out of the fifth, Chisholm sent a 1-1 fastball into the second deck of the right field seats for a 7-6 lead. Wells added an RBI single later in the inning. In the sixth, Judge was intentionally walked with the bases empty and one out. After Cody Bellinger doubled Judge to third, Ben Rice lifted a sacrifice fly. For the Blue Jays, Daulton Varsho hit an RBI single and Anthony Santander had a two-run single in the third. Rodon allowed six runs on six hits in 2 1/3 innings and was lifted after Santander's hit. After Rodon's short start, five New York relievers combined on 6 2/3 scoreless innings. Fernando Cruz got four outs, and Camilo Doval recorded three outs. Tim Hill (1-0) stranded Clement at second with the score tied in the fifth before pitching a 1-2-3 sixth. Devin Williams pitched a perfect seventh and got the first out of the eighth. David Bednar ended a five-out save by retiring Guerrero on a grounder to third base. --Larry Fleisher, Field Level Media

Yankees wipe out Jays' 5-run lead, stay alive in ALDS

Yankees wipe out Jays' 5-run lead, stay alive in ALDS NEW YORK -- Aaron Judge hit a tying three-run homer in the fourth inning, Jazz Chi...
Video of deadly crash involving late LSU player released after lawyer claims his innocenceNew Foto - Video of deadly crash involving late LSU player released after lawyer claims his innocence

The Louisiana State Policepublished new videoTuesday from the deadly pileup involving LSU wide receiver Kyren Lacy, defending its investigation of the crash as "supported by facts," after Lacy's lawyer claimed to have new evidence exonerating the late college football star. Lacy, 24,died by suicide on April 12as prosecutors were pushing a case against him in a fatal crash on Dec. 17 on Louisiana Highway 20 in Lafourche Parish, which is about an hour outside New Orleans. "The Louisiana State Police is committed to providing a thorough and objective investigation grounded in science and supported by facts," state police said in a release Tuesday. "While we recognize that external narratives may arise, often based on selective information, we urge the public to rely on the full body of facts," the release said. At the start of an11½-minute video presentation, Col. Robert Hodges, superintendent of the state police, said the probe was ongoing. "As this comprehensive investigation develops, our understanding of the incident may change as additional evidence is collected, analyzed and reviewed," he said. Video released Tuesday showed the green Dodge Charger driven by Lacy passing in opposite lanes of traffic before the sound of cars crashing. "A green Dodge Charger is seen traveling south in the opposing lane on LA 20 at a high rate of speed, passing three passenger vehicles and one loaded 18-wheeler in a designated no passing zone with a 40 mph posted speed limit," a narrator of the video said. "As the green Dodge Charger returns to the southbound lane, aggressive braking and engine deceleration are immediately followed by a crash that can be heard on the surveillance footage." Lacy's attorney, Matt Ory, insists newly discovered video exonerates his late client, claiming Lacy was more than 70 yards behind the crashing cars. Herman Hall, a 78-year-old Vietnam War veteran, was killed in the crash that led to Lacy's being booked on suspicion of negligent homicide, hit-and-run driving and reckless operation of a vehicle. "He's 72.6 yards behind the vehicles at the time of impact, key word 'behind' the vehicles,"Ory told HTV in Houmaover the weekend. "That is not how this story was ever painted [by authorities]. Never." The 11½-minute package of videos included body camera video from a trooper who arrived shortly after the crash. As soon as he steps out of his cruiser, the trooper is immediately greeted by a witness who asks: "Is there still a green Charger flying that way?" The trooper specifically asks whether the Charger hit anyone, and witnesses say cars in the pileup were forced to take evasive action to dodge the car and the driver, later found to be Lacy. "A green Charger caused all of this," another witness says. Lacy played five seasons of college football, the first two at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette before he transferred for three seasons in Baton Rouge. He caught 58 passes for 866 yards and nine touchdowns in 2024. The nine scoring grabs were tied for the most in theSEC last season. Lacy had been projected to be a high NFL draft pick before his involvement in the deadly crash. Louisiana Attorney General Liz Murrell defended local prosecutors and said they were right to escalate Lacy's case to the grand jury. "The evidence is not disputed here. The Lafourche Parish District Attorney's Office was prepared to present the case to a grand jury that showed Kyren Lacy returning to his lane. However, that does not absolve Kyren Lacy of responsibility in this matter," she said in a statement. "Every witness identified the green Charger Kyren Lacy was determined to be driving, as having put the events in motion that led to the head-on collision, which killed 78-year-old veteran Herman Hall," she said.

Video of deadly crash involving late LSU player released after lawyer claims his innocence

Video of deadly crash involving late LSU player released after lawyer claims his innocence The Louisiana State Policepublished new videoTues...
Report: North Carolina assistant coach suspended for allegedly giving a player's family extra sideline passesNew Foto - Report: North Carolina assistant coach suspended for allegedly giving a player's family extra sideline passes

North Carolina assistant coach Armond Hawkins has reportedly been suspended after allegations of providing players with extra benefits became public on Monday. According to the Athletic, Hawkins has been suspended following the publication of a lengthy storyabout frustrations around Bill Belichick's first year in charge of the North Carolina football programby WRAL. Per the Athletic's report, the suspension stems from allegedly giving a player's family sideline passes — a violation of NCAA rules and something mentioned in WRAL's story. [Yahoo Sports TV is here! Watch live shows and highlights 24/7] From WRAL: According to several sources, some Belichick-recruited transfers have preferential parking for themselves and their parents, as well as more tickets for games. Khmori House and Thaddeus Dixon played for Belichick's son, Steve Belichick, at the University of Washington. Their names come up repeatedly when talking to sources about preferential treatment. Dixon's family has field access on game days, something that no other family is believed to have. Hawkins came to North Carolina from Washington with defensive coordinator Steve Belichick. Hawkins was a defensive analyst with the Huskies in 2024 after previously working at Arizona, Colorado and USC. North Carolina is 2-3 heading into its second and final off week of the season. The Tar Heels' only victories have come against FCS-level Richmond and Charlotte, one of the worst teams at the top level of college football. UNC has been outscored by 77 points in its three losses to TCU, UCF and Clemson. The Tigers were up 28-3 in the first quarter of their 38-10 win in Chapel Hill in Week 6. The anecdote about Hawkins wasn't the only revelation about Belichick's program in the WRAL story. The school cited multiple sources that said Belichick didn't meet with returning players for weeks after he was hired in December and one source told the station that Steve Belichick "has not talked or had a conversation with most of the guys on the defense." Steve Belichick is in his second year as a college defensive coordinator after running Washington's defense in 2024 following his father's departure from the New England Patriots.

Report: North Carolina assistant coach suspended for allegedly giving a player's family extra sideline passes

Report: North Carolina assistant coach suspended for allegedly giving a player's family extra sideline passes North Carolina assistant c...
Bondi rips Democratic senators, dodges questions on 'weaponization' in fiery hearingNew Foto - Bondi rips Democratic senators, dodges questions on 'weaponization' in fiery hearing

President Donald Trump's tightening grip over the Justice Department totarget his political opponentsand lawmakers' increasing calls for the release of more files from federal investigations into deceased sex offenderJeffrey Epsteintook center stage at a contentious Senate hearing Tuesday for Attorney General Pam Bondi. The hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee is the first time since July that Bondi has faced questions from lawmakers and follows a tumultuous summer for the department that included deployments of federal law enforcement to Democratic-run cities, a growing number of investigations announced into Trump's political foes and the controversialindictment of former FBI Director James Comey. Senate Judiciary Chairman Chuck Grassley kicked off the hearing with extensive remarks seeking to highlight instances of what Republicans have labeled "weaponization" of the Justice Department under the Biden Administration, citing selective disclosures by FBI Director Kash Patel of the investigation into President Trump's attempt to overturn his 2020 election loss. "These are indefensible acts," Grassley said. "This was a political fishing expedition to get Trump at all costs." Specifically, Grassley singled out a timely disclosure by the FBI on Monday that showed former Special Counsel Jack Smith's investigators at one point sought limited phone toll records of several Republican senators around the time of the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol. As part of his investigation, Smith extensively investigated Trump and his allies' pressure campaign on lawmakers to block the certification of former President Joe Biden's election win -- including calls that were made to senators after the Capitol was breached by the pro-Trump mob. There's no indication that Republican senators were a target of Smith's investigation, and the toll records sought by investigators would not include any information about the content of conversations they may have had. "We're pointing this all out because we can't have this repeated in the United States," Grassley said. "We want to end it right now, whether we have Republican or Democrat administrations." Grassley made no mention of recent directives from Trump to have the Justice Department act "now" to carry out prosecutions of his political foes, or other instances of alleged politicization during Bondi's tenure that have led to scores of departures of longtime career officials who have sounded alarm about the department being used as a tool to enact political retribution. Ranking Democratic member Dick Durbin said in his opening statement assailed the Trump administration for the conduct in Chicago, a city in which Durbin represents. "As President Trump turns the full force of the federal government on Chicago and other American cities, the assault on the city I am proud to represent is just one example of how President Trump and Attorney General Bondi shut down justice at the Department of Justice, even before the president's party controlling the white House, Senate and House of Representatives shut down the government," Durbin said. "The attorney general has systematically weaponized our nation's leading law enforcement agency to protect President Trump and his allies and attack his opponents. And sadly, the American people. You have purged hundreds of senior career officials since you first appeared before us," he added. Durbin listed various controversies for critics of Bondi's Justice Department, the closed investigation into Border Czar Tom Homan, the Eric Adams case being dropped, the hiring of a Jan. 6 defendant who attacked MPD officers, the handling of the Jeffrey Epstein files, and the case against James Comey. "What has taken place since Jan. 20, 2025, would make even President Nixon recoil. This is your legacy," Durbin said. Sen. Mazie Hirono, D-Hawaii, also pressed Bondi on Tuesday over whether Bondi personally approved closing the investigation into Homan. "Miss Bondi, did you approve closing the Homan investigation? Bribery investigation?" Hirono said. "Senator Hirono, as I stated earlier, the Department of Justice and the FBI conducted a thorough review, and they found no credible evidence of any wrongdoing," Bondi responded. Hirono then pressed Bondi over the department's removal of dozens of prosecutors who worked on investigations involving President Trump and the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol. Bondi shot back, "I'm not going to discuss personnel matters with you." Hirono concluded her questioning by accusing Bondi of deliberately politicizing the department, turning it from the Department of Justice into the "Department of revenge and corruption." In another heated exchanges at the hearing, Bondi reacted with outrage as she accused Sen. Peter Welch, D-Vt., of suggesting she was lying as she evaded questions about the investigation into Homan. "First of all, is there a tape that has audio and video of the transfer the $50,000?" Welch asked. "You would have to talk to Director Patel about that," Bondi replied. "No, I'm talking to you," Welch said. "I don't know the answer --" Bondi said before Welch interjected, "You do know the answer." "Don't call me a liar!" Bondi shot back. "I didn't call you a liar," Welch responded. Bondi pushed back against her critics and Democrats during the hearing. In her opening statement, she framed her tenure as the "end" of weaponization of law enforcement, while reinforcing her extensive efforts to enact President Trump's agenda. "We will work to earn that back every single day. We are returning to our core mission of fighting real crime. While there is more work to do, I believe in eight short months we have made tremendous progress towards those ends," she said. She also railed against judges who have ruled against the administration in the months since Trump took office, while highlighting the Justice Department's string of victories at the Supreme Court. "My attorneys have done incredible work advancing President Trump's agenda and protecting the Executive Branch from judicial overreach," she said. Bondi continued to hit back at Durbin, who questioned her about the federal deployment to Illinois. The attorney general taunted the senator about Chicago's crime rate. Bondi said that Patel and Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche were on their way to the city. "Chairman, as you shut down the government, you voted to shut down the government and you're sitting here as law enforcement officers aren't being paid. They're out there working to protect you. I wish you love Chicago as much as you hate President Trump," she said. Durbin was taken aback by Bondi's responses. "Madam attorney general, it's my job to grill you. Investigation of your agency is part of my responsibility. And this - this committee, you mean. I'd like the experience, but others have weathered the storm and answered questions in a respectful manner," he said. Bondi faced heavy scrutiny over conflicting statements out of the administration on the Epstein files, after the Justice Department and FBI said in aJuly letterthat no further releases were warranted and that there was no evidence suggesting others participated or enabled Epstein's abuse of minor girls. Democrats have accused the administration of seeking to cover up any mentions of Trump or high-profile appointees who had past associations with Epstein, which the administration has denied. Trump was told by Bondi his name appeared multiple times in Epstein files: Report Trump and Epstein, who died by suicide in 2019 while awaiting trial on charges of trafficking young girls and women, were friends in the 1990s but the president said the relationship soured after Epsteinpoached some employeesfrom Trump's Florida club after he explicitly warned him not to do so. When asked on Fox News about the alleged Epstein client list, the attorney general told Fox News in February, "It's sitting on my desk right now to review." She refused to elaborate about those past comments or the growing calls for the Epstein files while testifying. Bondi responded to individual Democrats who sought more details by surfacing donations they allegedly may have received from Reid Hoffman -- an entrepreneur and founder of LinkedIn who is known to have past associations with Epstein. She again surfaced Hoffman's alleged donations in an exchange with Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, in which she again refused to answer his direct questions about the Epstein files. Trump has recently ordered the department to ramp up investigations into so-called "radical left" organizations that he and other senior White House officials have alleged, without providing evidence, as helping to fund perpetrators who have attacked federal law enforcement officials dispatched around the country. Just days after Trump's comments, a senior official in the Justice Department ordered several U.S. Attorney's offices around the country to prepare to open sweepingcriminal investigationsin to the Open Society Foundations founded by billionaire George Soros, naming criminal statutes ranging from robbery, material support for terrorism and racketeering, ABC News previously confirmed. In a statement, the Open Society Foundations called the accusations "politically motivated attacks on civil society, meant to silence speech the administration disagrees with and undermine the First Amendment right to free speech." Bondi sought to brush off pointed questions from Democrats by repeatedly deflecting to crimes committed by undocumented immigrants in their states and districts that were among the briefing materials she brought with her to the hearings. She has also dismissed any characterization of the Justice Department appearing to work in lockstep with the White House as "politicization" of law enforcement. Bondi and other senior DOJ officials have instead argued that the two federal cases brought against Trump by a special counsel under the Biden Administration represented a far more egregious example of weaponization, echoing grievances leveled at the department by Trump. As ABC News first reported, the move to seek Comey's indictment came over the objections of career prosecutors and followed Trump's removal of his appointee to lead the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Eastern District of Virginia, Erik Siebert, who expressed reservations about pursuing charges against Comey and New York Attorney General Letitia James, sources told ABC News. Bondi faces criticism for saying DOJ will 'target' anyone who engages in 'hate speech' Trump eventually installed a White House aide and former personal attorney Lindsey Halligan to lead the office and move forward with the case against Comey, and a grand jury narrowly voted to indict him on two counts of making false statements to Congress and obstructing a congressional investigation -- while declining to indict on a third false statements charge. Comey has denied wrongdoing and is set to appear Thursday in federal court for his arraignment. While sources told ABC News that leadership at the DOJ expressed reservations about pursuing the case, Bondi and FBI Director Kash Patel went on to publicly cheer news of Comey's indictment in news interviews and social media posts. The next week, the administration moved to fire a top national security prosecutor in the office, Michael Ben'Ary, over a misleading social media post that falsely suggested he was among the prosecutors who resisted charging Comey. Ben'Ary was leading a major case against one of the alleged plotters of the Abbey Gate bombing during the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan. In a scathing departure letter, Ben'Ary set his sights squarely on the Justice Department's leadership and labeled his removal as just one in a series of recent moves taken to root out career officials for political reasons at the expense of the nation's security. "This example highlights the most troubling aspect of the current operations of the Department of Justice: the leadership is more concerned with punishing the President's perceived enemies than they are with protecting our national security," Ben'Ary wrote. "Justice for Americans killed and injured by our enemies should not be contingent on what someone in the Department of Justice sees in their social media feed that day." The DOJ declined to comment when asked about Ben'Ary's letter. Sen. Richard Blumenthal pressed Bondi repeatedly on Tuesday over instances of pressure on the department by Trump and what conversations she may have had with him in the days leading up to the indictment of Comey. "I'd like to know from you what conversations you had with President Trump about the indictment of James Comey," Blumenthal said. "Senator, I am not going to discuss any conversations I have or have not had with the President of the United States. You're an attorney, you have a law degree, and you know that I'm not going to do that," Bondi said on Tuesday. DOJ drops charges against another client of AG Pam Bondi's brother Brad Those actions have causedunprecedented turmoilat the Eastern District, which oversees some of the nation's most sensitive national security, terrorism and espionage investigations. Current and former officials say that turmoil has reverberated further across the Justice Department's workforce around the country, with attorneys concerned they'll face professional repercussions if they resist taking part in politicized investigations or prosecutions. On Monday, nearly 300 DOJ employees who left the department since Trump's inaugurationreleased a letteron the eve of Bondi's hearing describing her leadership as "appalling" in its treatment of the career workforce and the elimination of longstanding norms of independence from the White House. "We call on Congress to exercise its oversight responsibilities far more vigorously," the former employees said. "Members in both chambers and on both sides of the aisle must provide a meaningful check on the abuses we're witnessing. And we call on all Americans -- whose safety, prosperity, and rights depend on a strong DOJ -- to speak out against its destruction." The DOJ declined to comment on the letter.

Bondi rips Democratic senators, dodges questions on 'weaponization' in fiery hearing

Bondi rips Democratic senators, dodges questions on 'weaponization' in fiery hearing President Donald Trump's tightening grip ov...

 

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