Second Democrat announces campaign to unseat GOP congressman in competitive Michigan districtNew Foto - Second Democrat announces campaign to unseat GOP congressman in competitive Michigan district

LANSING, Mich. (AP) — A second Democrat is seeking to flip one of Michigan's most competitive U.S. House districts as the party seeks to reclaim a majority in the 2026 midterms. Maat Maasdam, a former Navy SEAL, announced his campaign Tuesday to unseat Tom Barrett, a former Army helicopter pilot who delivered a key win for Republicans in 2026 when he flipped the 7th Congressional District in central Michigan. Maasdam joinsBridget Brink, former U.S. ambassador to Ukraine, in the Democratic primary as both seek to introduce themselves to voters in the critical district. "I'm running for Congress to continue serving my country, not any political party," Maasdam said in a campaign announcement. Maasdam is emphasizing his military experience, setting up his background to compete with Barrett. According to Maasdam's campaign, he served as former President Barack Obama's military aide who carried the "nuclear football," a briefcase that contains atomic war plans and enables the president to transmit nuclear orders to the Pentagon. His campaign noted that his wife was a Navy helicopter pilot. "In the military, whether you're Republican or Democrat, you're still working together on the same mission," he said in an interview with The Associated Press ahead of his announcement. "It really gives you the opportunity to find common solutions and get the job done. And I haven't seen a lot of that recently." The district — which includes the capital city of Lansing and surrounding rural areas — was previously held by rising Democratic star and former CIA analystElissa Slotkinbefore she successfully ran for U.S. Senate in the 2024 election. In the subsequent race for the open seat in November,Barrett emerged victoriousfrom an expensive race with a 3.7-point lead. He has already brought in more than $900,000 in the first three months of his time in Congress. Brink, Maasdam's Democratic competition, resigned from her position as ambassador to Ukraine in April in protest of what she says isPresident Donald Trump's unfair treatment of the war-torn country. Alongtime diplomatwho previously held high-ranking State Department roles in other former Soviet and Eastern European countries, Trump picked Brink to be the country's ambassador to Slovakia in 2019. Former President Joe Biden tapped her to beambassador to Ukraineshortly afterRussia invadedthe country in 2022.

Second Democrat announces campaign to unseat GOP congressman in competitive Michigan district

Second Democrat announces campaign to unseat GOP congressman in competitive Michigan district LANSING, Mich. (AP) — A second Democrat is see...
Opening Florida's 'Alligator Alcatraz' gives DeSantis a chance to boost his ties to TrumpNew Foto - Opening Florida's 'Alligator Alcatraz' gives DeSantis a chance to boost his ties to Trump

Just months after PresidentDonald Trump's administration quietly moved to undercut a hardline immigration push by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, the two Republican former rivals are appearing side by side on Tuesday for the opening of a new migrant detention center in the Everglades. Trump and DeSantis are touring the compound — nicknamed"Alligator Alcatraz"— built on a remote airstrip surrounded by swamp and predators. In the latest display of his support for a signature Trump priority, DeSantis used emergency powers to seize the land and fast-track construction with encouragement from the Trump administration. While a White House official described the Trump-DeSantis relationship as "fine," DeSantis has faced a strained dynamic ever sincehe ran for the 2024 Republican nomination, crossing Trump, who believed he was responsible for the governor's rise. The White House for months has moved in ways that effectively isolated DeSantis in his own state, working behind the scenes with Florida lawmakers who refused the governor's demands on immigration. And Trump has elevated other Florida Republicans, inviting them to events in Washington that the governor did not attend. Also expected to attend Tuesday's event: Rep. Byron Donalds,Trump's favored pick to replacethe term-limited DeSantis as governor, a not-so-subtle reminder of shifting Republican loyalties in their shared home state. DeSantis, meanwhile, has publicly suggested that his wife, Florida first lady Casey DeSantis, would be a worthwhile successor. The couple have quietly urged the president to scale back his involvement in the race. Trump has since made several high-profile appearances with Donalds. As Trump was leaving the White House for Florida on Tuesday, he said his visit "should be very exciting, very good. Worked very hard on it with Ron and everybody, and I think it's going to be great." No state moved more aggressively to align itself with Trump's immigration crackdown than Florida. Under a new law signed by DeSantis, local police agencies must cooperate with federal immigration officials — a policy shift that has helped Florida account for nearly 40% of the 737 agreements Immigration and Customs Enforcement has signed with local law enforcement departments since Trump took office, according to agency data. Earlier this year, DeSantis' office and ICE announced the arrest of 1,120 undocumented immigrants over a week in what Florida called a "first-of-its-kind" statewide operation. During a visit with Fox News on Friday, DeSantis described the new Everglades facility as a "one-stop shop" for detaining, processing and deporting undocumented migrants. When completed, it will hold up to 5,000 beds. "This is going to be a force multiplier," DeSantis said, "and we're happy to work with the federal government to satisfy President Trump's mandate." Trump's border czar, Tom Homan, offered DeSantis some praise for his efforts ahead of the visit. "I mean, Gov. DeSantis, I'll give him credit. We got that facility that he's putting up in Florida. We'll be filling those beds as quick as we can, because we need more beds," Homan told reporters at the White House. But DeSantis had sought to go further. His office drafted legislation granting him unprecedented authority to deport migrants using state resources, a power traditionally reserved for the federal government. In a rare rejection of the governor's ambitions by Florida's Republican-led legislature, lawmakers declined to cede that power to DeSantis. Instead, they passed their own immigration package — one that notably excluded the deportation provision and was crafted in consultation with the White House, according to state House Speaker Daniel Perez. "We were talking to the White House the entire time," Perez told CNN on Monday. "The product that we finalized was the result of input from the House, the Senate, the governor and the White House. Our goal was to best assist the federal government in doing their job. They needed beds. And that's what this bill addressed." Perez declined to say whom he worked with in the Trump administration. The White House declined to comment. Perez was seen alongside Trump on multiple occasions this year. He attended the White House Easter Egg Roll and later celebrated the Florida Panthers' Stanley Cup victory with the president. DeSantis did not attend either event. As the 2024 Republican primary intensified, DeSantis increasingly criticized Trump's first-term immigration record, accusing him of failing to deliver on his central promise to build a border wall and force Mexico pay for it. "If Trump had built the border wall, it would have been very difficult for (President Joe) Biden to bring in all those many people," DeSantis said during a CNN town hall ahead of the Iowa caucuses. "That's why you want a wall. It's a physical fact of life, that even an open-border president would not be able to get around, so I will get the job done." After Trump defeated DeSantis, the two did not talk for months. Many in Trump's orbit harbor ill feelings toward DeSantis, including White House chief of staff Susie Wiles, who once worked for the governor before a bitter falling out. Lately, Trump and DeSantis have maintained a friendly public rapport. They have golfed together, and DeSantis has vocally defended Trump during public appearances, reprising the role that first endeared him to the president during his time in Congress. Trump has taken a personal interest in the detention facility that DeSantis has moved rapidly to build, the White House official said. The US Department of Homeland Security has approved the plan to temporarily repurpose the Dade-Collier Training and Transition Airport for use as a detention center. Another site at the Camp Blanding National Guard training center in northeast Florida is also under consideration, DeSantis spokeswoman Molly Best said in a statement to CNN. The airstrip sits in the middle of the Florida Everglades, an ecosystem dense with alligators, pythons, panthers and marshes that are notoriously difficult to navigate. Its surroundings have captured the immigration of many Republicans, including inside the Trump administration. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt suggested the location will serve as a natural deterrent for people trying to escape. DHS posted an image to social media over the weekend of alligators wearing Immigration and Customs Enforcement hats standing guard outside a prison. "Coming soon!" a caption said. DeSantis floated the idea of a Trump visit when talking with Fox News on Friday, gesturing toward a runway. "An invitation from me: We can land Air Force One right there no problem," he said. "I think the president would be impressed with what the guys are doing out here." This story has been updated with additional details. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Opening Florida’s ‘Alligator Alcatraz’ gives DeSantis a chance to boost his ties to Trump

Opening Florida's 'Alligator Alcatraz' gives DeSantis a chance to boost his ties to Trump Just months after PresidentDonald Trum...
Trump says he will 'have a lot of fun' with Zohran Mamdani if he's elected New York mayorNew Foto - Trump says he will 'have a lot of fun' with Zohran Mamdani if he's elected New York mayor

WASHINGTON ―President Donald TrumpmockedZohran Mamdani, the New York City Democratic nominee for mayor, as a "pure, true communist" and a "total nut job," predicting he will "have a lot of fun with him" if the Democratic socialist is elected. "I think he's terrible. He's a communist. The last thing we need is a communist," Trump told reporters on July 1 on the south lawn of the White House before departing to tourthe so-called "Alligator Alcatraz" detention center in Florida. "I think he's bad news, and I think I'm going to have a lot of fun with him watching him because he has to go right through this building to get his money," Trump said, gesturing toward the White House. "And don't worry, he's not going to run away with anything. Frankly, I've heard he's a total nut job." Mamdanirode a wave of support from young votersand liberals to win last week's Democratic primary in a major upset over former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo. Mamdani rejected prior accusations from Trump that he's a communist during a June 29 appearance on NBC's "Meet the Press." "No, I am not," said Mamdani, a 33-year old New York state assemblyman. "And I have already had to start to get used to the fact that the president will talk about how I look, how I sound, where I'm from, who I am, ultimately, because he wants to distract from what I'm fighting for." More:'We made history.' What Zohran Mamdani's win means for Democrats and the Trump GOP While communism adheres to the collective ownership of all property and the end of capitalism, a democratic socialist doesn't believe in ending capitalism, but aims to reform it through democracy. "I don't think that we should have billionaires because, frankly, it is so much money in a moment of such inequality," Mamdanisaid in his "Meet the Press" interviewwhen asked whether he believes billionaires should exist. More:NYC mayoral candidate Mamdani says 'I don't think we should have billionaires' Trump has threatened to withhold federal funds from New York City if Mamdani doesn't "do the right thing" if he is elected mayor. "The people of New York are crazy," Trump said. "If they go this route, I think they're crazy. We will have a communist ‒ for the first time really, a pure, true communist. He wants to operate the grocery stores, the department stores. What about the people who are there? I think it's crazy." In the November general election, Mamdani will face incumbentMayor Eric Adams, who is running as an independent, Republican and founder of the Guardian Angels,Curtis Sliwa, former federal prosecutorJim Walden, andpossibly Cuomo, who is considering an independent run for mayor in November as part of a "Fight and Deliver" party that he formed. Contributing: Sara Wire of USA TODAY Reach Joey Garrison on X @joeygarrison. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Trump predicts 'a lot of fun' with Mamdani if he's elected NYC mayor

Trump says he will 'have a lot of fun' with Zohran Mamdani if he's elected New York mayor

Trump says he will 'have a lot of fun' with Zohran Mamdani if he's elected New York mayor WASHINGTON ―President Donald Trumpmock...
Jessica Pegula loses in first round at Wimbledon to Elisabetta CocciarettoNew Foto - Jessica Pegula loses in first round at Wimbledon to Elisabetta Cocciaretto

LONDON (AP) — Third-ranked Jessica Pegula thought she was done with first-round hiccups. Then she faced Elisabetta Cocciaretto, who needed just 58 minutes to stun the American 6-2, 6-3 atWimbledonon Tuesday. It was the third-seeded Pegula's earliest exit at a Grand Slam tournament in five years. And it came days after Pegulawon the the grass-court Bad Homburg Openin Germany on Saturday, beating Iga Swiatek in straight sets. "This is definitely probably the worst result I've had all year," she said. Pegula, a quarterfinalist at Wimbledon in 2023, hit only five winners and made 24 unforced errors. "For this to happen today, it's disappointing. I don't know how else to put it," she said. "I'm upset that I wasn't able to turn anything around. But at the same time, I do feel like she played kind of insane. Hats off to her. Kudos to her for playing at a high level that I couldn't match it today." Six of Pegula's first seven appearances at majors ended in the first round — the last of those being at the French Open in 2020 when she was beaten by Aryna Sabalenka. She said she was able to "flip that mentality" to push into the second week of major tournaments — her best result being runner-up to Sabalenka at the U.S. Open last year. Pegula couldn't slow down Cocciaretto, though, as the Italian didn't face a break point on her serve. The 24-year-old Cocciaretto missed Wimbledon last year because she had pneumonia. "I went to the hospital, and I was sick until the Olympic Games," she said, adding that she later picked up a stomach virus that sidelined her for two months. "I'm really grateful that now I can play, that now I'm in this big tournament, big stage. So yeah, I'm just enjoying it," Cocciaretto said. Pegula's only other first-round loss at the All England Club was in her debut in 2019. She has reached five singles finals this year — second only to top-ranked Aryna Sabalenka's seven. Her pursuit of her first Grand Slam title moves to Flushing Meadows in August. "Bonus is I can go prep for the hard courts," Pegula said, "which seems to be my favorite surface anyways, and see if I can just make some more magic this summer, I guess." ___ AP tennis:https://apnews.com/hub/tennis

Jessica Pegula loses in first round at Wimbledon to Elisabetta Cocciaretto

Jessica Pegula loses in first round at Wimbledon to Elisabetta Cocciaretto LONDON (AP) — Third-ranked Jessica Pegula thought she was done wi...
Ohio governor grants Browns public funding for new stadiumNew Foto - Ohio governor grants Browns public funding for new stadium

TheCleveland Brownsare one step closer to moving to the suburbs. They had already bought the plot of land, and on Monday night, they got the public funding. Ohio governor Mike DeWinesigned a new budgetinto law on Monday that allocates $600 million in unclaimed funds to partially fund the Browns' new stadium project in the southeastern Cleveland suburb, according to92.3 The Fan. The budget decision came three days after the Haslam Sports Group officially purchased a 176-acre plot of land for $76 million, according to Cuyahoga County Fiscal Office viaSportico. The Browns originally revealed the plans to move to Brook Park in August 2024, at the time calling it "a modern, dynamic, world-class venue that would greatly enhance the fan experience and enable the State of Ohio and our region to compete for some of the biggest events in the world 365 days a year." BROWNS NEWS:Haslams grateful for 'responsible way to support' Browns stadium funding after budget signed The Browns estimate the project to build a new, domed stadium will cost $2.4 billion in total. They've now received $600 million from the state of Ohio for the stadium, and the team expects to use an additional $400 million from Brook Park's income taxes for the new Huntington Bank Stadium. Haslam Sports Group has also committed $2 billion to mixed-use area development surrounding the stadium. Though they've officially received the public funding, the Browns still have a bit to go before they can begin building the stadium. According to theColumbus Dispatch, former Ohio Attorney General Marc Dann and former state Rep. Jeff Crossman announced they would immediately file a lawsuit if the state budget included funding the Browns' stadium project with unclaimed funds. BROWNS STADIUM LAWSUIT:Former Ohio leaders say they will sue over plan using unclaimed funds That said, Gov. DeWine already helped the Browns clear another potential road bump by adjusting language in the Modell Law. The law is nicknamed after infamous former Browns owner Art Modell, who moved the team to Baltimore in 1996. Its actual title isOhio Revised Code 9.67, which requires any Ohio-based team to give their city six months' notice to allow "political subdivision or any individual or group of individuals who reside in the area the opportunity to purchase the team." DeWine passed an amendment that changes language in the Modell Law to only apply to teams attempting to leave the state. SHEDEUR SANDERS:Browns rookie pays speeding tickets, addresses citations at team event Thrilled to move forward on a transformative project with generational impactpic.twitter.com/gym7FVv2o2 — Cleveland Browns (@Browns)July 1, 2025 With the Ohio governor backing their project and providing a sizable portion of the state's budget, the Browns are pushing ahead. Team principal owner Jimmy Haslam says he hopes to break ground in Brook Park by early next year. "We respect the firm commitment and leadership that Governor DeWine, and the Ohio Senate and House have shown in their collaborative work to find a responsible way to support such a transformative project, one that will create a generational impact for our region and the State," the Haslams said in a statement. "Our fans deserve a world-class facility, and we are committed to building a state-of-the-art enclosed stadium that resonates with Cleveland, highlighting our loyal and passionate fans and the Dawg Pound, while also incorporating innovation, bold design, and an immersive experience. The new enclosed Huntington Bank Field will be completely fan-centric, a first-of-its-kind design in the NFL, and a dynamic venue that draws visitors from across Ohio and beyond, for concerts and significant sporting events throughout the year. "This premiere facility will anchor a major lifestyle and entertainment development and be a catalyst for one of Northeast Ohio's largest economic development projects ever and something our community will be proud of and can enjoy for years to come. We appreciate the support of State leaders and their belief in this transformative project." This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Browns stadium: Ohio governor grants team $600 million in funds

Ohio governor grants Browns public funding for new stadium

Ohio governor grants Browns public funding for new stadium TheCleveland Brownsare one step closer to moving to the suburbs. They had already...

 

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