New CIA report criticizes investigation into Russia's support for Trump in 2016New Foto - New CIA report criticizes investigation into Russia's support for Trump in 2016

WASHINGTON (AP) — A declassified CIA memo released Wednesday challenges the work intelligence agencies did to conclude that Russia interfered in the 2016 presidential election because it wanted RepublicanDonald Trumpto win. Thememowas written on the orders of CIA Director John Ratcliffe, aDonald Trumployalist who spoke out against the Russia investigation as a member of Congress. It finds fault with a 2017 intelligence assessment that concluded the Russian government, at the direction of President Vladimir Putin,waged a covert influence campaignto help Trump win. It does not address that multiple investigations since then, including a report from theRepublican-led Senate Intelligence Committeein 2020, reached the same conclusion about Russia's influence and motives. The eight-page document is part of an ongoing effort by Trump and close allies who now lead key government agencies to revisit the history of the long-concluded Russia investigation, which resulted in criminal indictments and shadowed most of his first term but also produced unresolved grievances and contributed to the Republican president's deep-rootedsuspicions of the intelligence community. The report is also the latest effort by Ratcliffe to challenge the decision-making and actions of intelligence agencies during the course of the Russia investigation. A vocal Trump supporter in Congresswho aggressively questioned former special counselRobert Muellerduring his 2019 testimony on Russian election interference, Ratcliffe later used his position as director of national intelligence todeclassify Russian intelligencealleging damaging information about Democrats during the 2016 election even as he acknowledged that it might not be true. The new, "lessons-learned" review ordered by Ratcliffe in May was meant to examine the tradecraft that went into the intelligence community's 2017 assessment on Russian interference and to scrutinize in particular the conclusion that Putin "aspired" to help Trump win. The report cited several "anomalies" that the authors wrote could have affected that conclusion, including a rushed timeline and a reliance on unconfirmed information, such as Democratic-funded opposition research about Trump's ties to Russiacompiled by a former British spy, Christopher Steele. The report takes particular aim at the inclusion of a two-page summary of the Steele dossier, which included salacious and uncorroborated rumors about Trump's ties to Russia, in an annex of the intelligence community assessment. It said that decision, championed by the FBI, "implicitly elevated unsubstantiated claims to the status of credible supporting evidence, compromising the analytical integrity of the judgment." But even as Ratcliffe faulted top intelligence officials for a "politically charged environment that triggered an atypical analytic process," his agency's report does not directly contradict any previous intelligence. Russia's support for Trump has been outlined in a number of intelligence reports and the August 2020 conclusions of the Senate Intelligence Committee, then chaired by Sen.Marco Rubio, who now serves as Trump's secretary of state. It also was backed by Mueller,who in his 2019 report said that Russia interfered on Trump's behalfand that the campaign welcomed the aid even if there was insufficient evidence to establish a criminal conspiracy. "This report doesn't change any of the underlying evidence — in fact it doesn't even address any of that evidence," said Brian Taylor, a Russia expert who directs the Moynihan Institute of Global Affairs at Syracuse University. Taylor suggested the report may have been intended to reinforce Trump's claims that investigations into his ties to Russia are part of a Democratic hoax. "Good intelligence analysts will tell you their job is to speak truth to power," Taylor said. "If they tell the leader what he wants to hear, you often get flawed intelligence." Intelligence agencies regularly perform after-action reports to learn from past operations and investigations, but it's uncommon for the evaluations to be declassified and released to the public. Ratcliffe has said he wants to release material on a number of topics of public debate and has already declassified records relating to theassassinations of President John Kennedyand his brother,Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, as well as theorigins of COVID-19.

New CIA report criticizes investigation into Russia's support for Trump in 2016

New CIA report criticizes investigation into Russia's support for Trump in 2016 WASHINGTON (AP) — A declassified CIA memo released Wedne...
Some education grants in limbo were used for 'leftwing agenda,' Trump administration saysNew Foto - Some education grants in limbo were used for 'leftwing agenda,' Trump administration says

The Trump administration has accused states and schools of using federal education grants earmarked forimmigrants' children and low-income students to help fund "a radicalleftwing agenda." The administration this weekwithheld more than $6 billionintended for after-school and summer programs, English language instruction, adult literacy and more, saying it would review the grants to ensure they align with PresidentDonald Trump'spriorities. The freeze sent schools and summer camp providers scrambling to determine whether they can still provide programs like day camps this summer or after-hours child care this fall. On Wednesday, the Office of Management and Budget said an initial review showed schools used some of the money to support immigrants in the country illegally or promote LGBTQ+ inclusion. The administration said it hadn't made any final decisions about whether to withhold or release individual grants. "Many of these grant programs have been grossly misused to subsidize a radical leftwing agenda," the Office of Management and Budget said in a statement. It said New York schools had used money for English language instruction to promote organizations that advocate for immigrants in the country illegally. Washington state used the money to direct immigrants without legal status toward scholarships the Trump administration says were "intended for American students." Grant funds also were used for a seminar on "queer resistance in the arts," the office said. Officials from New York and Washington state didn't immediately respond to requests for comment. Advocates for low-income and immigrant children connected the grant freeze to the Trump administration's largercrackdown on immigrants. Two of the federal programs put on hold were appropriated by Congress to help support English proficiency of students still learning the language and migrant children who move with their parents to follow agricultural and other jobs. School districts use the $890 million earmarked for English learners in a wide range of purposes, fromtraining teachers' aideswho work with English learners, to running summer schools designed for them, to hiring family liaisons whospeak the parents' native languages. The $375 million appropriated for migrant education is often used to hire dedicated teachers to travel close to where students live. By "cherrypicking extreme examples," the administration is seeking to conflate all students learning English with people who are in the country illegally, said Amaya Garcia, who directs education research at New America, a left-leaning think tank in Washington, D.C. In reality, the majority of English learners in public schools were born in the United States, according to data from the Migration Policy Institute. "The way they're framing it is that we're using this money for undocumented students and families," said Margarita Machado-Casas, president of the National Association of Bilingual Educators. "It's a distraction. A distraction from what's actually happening: that 5.3 million English learners who speak lots of different languages, not just Spanish, will suffer." Even if the students lack legal status, states may not deny public education to children in the country illegally under a 1982 Supreme Court decision known as Plyler v. Doe. Conservative politicians in states such as Oklahoma, Texas and Tennessee have pursued policies that question whetherimmigrants without legal residencyshould have the right to a public education, raising the possibility of challenges to that landmark ruling. Meanwhile, states and school districts are still trying to understand what it will mean for their students and their staff if these funds never arrive. In Oregon, eliminating grants for English learners and migrant students would "undermine the state's efforts to increase academic outcomes for multilingual students, promote multilingualism, close opportunity gaps and provide targeted support to mobile and vulnerable student groups," said Liz Merah, spokeswoman for the state's Department of Education. ____ Associated Press writer Collin Binkley contributed from Washington. _____ The Associated Press' education coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP'sstandardsfor working with philanthropies, alistof supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.

Some education grants in limbo were used for ‘leftwing agenda,’ Trump administration says

Some education grants in limbo were used for 'leftwing agenda,' Trump administration says The Trump administration has accused state...
Trump names two new nominees to serve as appeals court judgesNew Foto - Trump names two new nominees to serve as appeals court judges

By Nate Raymond and Christian Martinez (Reuters) -U.S. President Donald Trump said on Wednesday he is nominating a Maine litigator and a former clerk to a pair of conservative U.S. Supreme Court justices to serve as life-tenured judges on two federal appeals courts. Trump in posts on his social media platform Truth Social said he is nominating Joshua Dunlap to join the Boston-based 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals and Eric Tung to serve on the San Francisco-based 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. The two picks to serve as life-tenured judges brought to 14 the number of judicial nominees announced by Trump in his second term. Trump has now nominated four appeals court judges, as he looks to add to the 234 judicial appointments in his first term in office. Dunlap, a Maine-based lawyer at the law firm Pierce Atwood, has been nominated to fill the lone vacancy on the Boston-based 1st Circuit, which currently is the only one of the 13 appeals courts with no active judges appointed by Republican presidents. Former President Joe Biden had sought to fill the vacancy and solidify a six-judge court with only Democratic-appointed judges, but did not secure confirmation of his nominee, Julia Lipez, before he left office. The New England trial courts that sit below the 1st Circuit have become a popular venue for litigants seeking to challenge Trump's agenda, and the 1st Circuit has in several instances rejected his administration's requests to halt injunctions blocking key parts of his agenda. "We need more TOUGH and SMART Judges on the Federal Bench, who fearlessly defend our Constitution, and Joshua will do just do that," Trump wrote. Tung, a Los Angeles-based partner at the law firm Jones Day, has previously served as a federal prosecutor and held positions at the U.S. Department of Justice. He previously clerked for Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch as well as Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, who died in 2016. "Eric is a Tough Patriot, who will uphold the Rule of Law in the most RADICAL, Leftist States like California, Oregon, and Washington," Trump wrote, citing three states that are within the jurisdiction of the 9th Circuit. (Reporting by Nate Raymond and Christian Martinez; Editing by Lincoln Feast and Christopher Cushing)

Trump names two new nominees to serve as appeals court judges

Trump names two new nominees to serve as appeals court judges By Nate Raymond and Christian Martinez (Reuters) -U.S. President Donald Trump...
Big 12 quarterback rankings: Experienced signal-callers headline 2025 seasonNew Foto - Big 12 quarterback rankings: Experienced signal-callers headline 2025 season

In the Big 12, continuity is the name of the game at the quarterback position. When examining the most important position in football,, there's something all the top arms in the conference have in common: experience, and plenty of it. Of the 16 teams in the league, 12 have quarterbacks that have made at least 10 career starts. Even better? Nine have made those double-digit starts at their current school, proving how valuable it is for head coaches to make sure their quarterbacks are sticking around in a time where massive roster turnover is constant. With so much talent returning in 2025, there are bound to be exciting contest in the race for the College Football Playoff. It's fair to say the Big 12 is one of the most unpredictable leagues. A look at this year's list ranking the Big 12 quarterbacks illustrates this. Sam Levitt ofArizona Statewasn't on any radars 365 days ago. He then led the Sun Devils to the conference title and College Football Playoff. So here's our list of the top arms heading into the upcoming season, but we've learned this list could be turn upside down by the end of November. The guy with playoff experience happens to be the best quarterback in the Big 12. Once he found his footing after transferring from Michigan State, Leavitt and the Sun Devils took off. He had 21 touchdowns to just four interceptions in the final nine games. He's got running capabilities, and he's shown he can deliver in big games. Leavitt has gone from unnoticed to undeniable, and with a loss of skill players, he'll face bigger pressure to keep the Sun Devils rolling. But he has all the traits that make it possible for Arizona State to make it back in the CFP. Dave Aranda can thank Robertson cooling his hot seat, as few players had as impressive of a second half of the season as the Baylor quarterback. After taking over in the third game, he led the Bears to a 6-0 finish in the regular season, throwing for 1,581 yards with 17 touchdowns during the stretch. His 153.1 efficiency rating is the best among returning Big 12 starters. The test will be if Robertson can continue to be elite against better defenses to lead the Bears to the conference title. After getting a chance at the end of 2023, Hoover asserted himself as the guy at TCU following a monster 2024. His single-season school record 3,949 passing yards and 66.5% completion percentage are the most among returning conference quarterbacks. He's got an arm destined to make big plays, as noted with 61 completions of at least 20 yards last season. He's got great pocket presence and while he won't scramble often, he can maneuver the backfield and still get the ball through tight windows on the run. It's hard to fly under the radar when you're a Power Four conference title contender, but it's time people outside of Ames learn who Becht is. He guided Iowa State to its first 11-win season in program history. While he won't wow any defenses with his physical tool, he'll certainly make life frustrating for opponents. Becht is consistent with a touchdown thrown in 18 consecutive games and one of the most experienced players in the conference with 27 career starts. Kansas State has to love where it's at in the development of Johnson. He was given the keys of the offense in 2024 after Will Howard's departure and played to his strengths, notably with his running ability. There were mistakes most first-year player would make, but Johnson should take a major step forward with a second season in charge. Look for him to rank among the league leaders in 2025, and he could flirt with jumping to the NFL afterward. Another gunslinger could be emerging in Lubbock as Morton enters his final season with the Red Raiders. He fits the mold of the traditional pass-heavy Texas Tech offenses as evidenced with his 3,300-yard season. And for as much as he airs it out, Morton takes care of the ball with only eight interceptions on 466 passing attempts. His play has given the Red Raiders hope for a highly successful season, and he has the ability to stuff the statsheet slinging it around the field. If the rankings were about potential, Daniels could top the list. But it's been a matter of "what if" in Kansas. After an electric 2022 season, Daniels was poised to be among the top players in the country, but injuries derailed most of his 2023 campaign. He then had an extremely slow start last season. Turnovers and accuracy were major concerns and a 14:12 touchdown-interception ratio is a major concern. He did play better later in the season when Kansas rattled off three consecutive wins against ranked opponents. If that version of Daniels can show up out of the gate, the Jayhawks can be a player in the conference title race. It's been a tale of two careers for Fifita. He had an electric freshman season and looked to be the key for Arizona's success in its first Big 12 season. But Jedd Fisch departed and Fifita struggled in Brent Brennan's offense. It could all be pointed to his decision making. He went from posting a school record 72.4% completion percentage in 2023 to 60.5% in 2024, and he threw 12 picks after just throwing six interceptions the season prior. He won't have Tetairoa McMillan to rely on, so this season will ultimately test whether Fifita is legit. A quarterback that flew under the radar in last season was Sorsby, who was third in the Big 12 in completion percentage (64%) and his nine rushing touchdowns were most among the league's signal callers. Cincinnati ended the season on a five-game losing streak, and while Sorsby's production throwing the ball fell off during the skid, he was still producing with his legs. With 19 career starts dating back to his time at Indiana, Sorsby gives the Bearcats a starting point toward getting back to bowl eligibility. Salter looks to be the Deion Sanders' first quarterback at Colorado that isn't his son, with the Liberty transfer appearing to be ahead of freshman Julian Lewis. Salters is capable of manning a high-potent offense. He led Liberty to a perfect 2023 regular season as the Conference USA MVP and finishing among the top five in the nation in passing and rushing touchdowns. His numbers dipped significantly in 2024, but he can turn things around with the weapons at his disposal this year. Utah may finally have the answer to its quarterback issue more than two years after Cam Rising's injury in the Rose Bowl. In comes New Mexico transfer Devon Dampier, who turned heads with the Lobos. He started all 12 games last season and was a dynamic play maker with 2,768 passing yards and 1,166 yards and 19 touchdowns on the ground. He held his own against Power Four opponents, but the question will be whether he can make better decisions after throwing 12 interceptions. Cleaning up those errors will make him one of the most dangerous players in the league. After having the worst passing offense in the Big 12, Houston turns to Weigman to reignite the offense. Once a five-star prized recruit of Jimbo Fisher, Weigman never lived up to the expectations at Texas A&M. Injuries kept getting in the way and he couldn't find consistency. Now with a fresh start, Weigman has the potential to be the best story in the conference in getting the Cougars some success in the Big 12. Marchiol won both of the games he started in 2024, and his performance against Arizona, when he went 18-for-22 for 198 yards and two touchdowns, gave Rich Rodriguez a great sample size to determine who will be his guy in his return to Morgantown. The next step in his development is to take more chances down the field. His job might not be totally secure as he'll have to fend off transfers Jaylen Henderson and Max Brown should he struggle through the first few games of the season. There's a three-way battle at Central Florida as Scott Frost returns to lead the program. While Brown is the lone incumbent, he didn't shine much in 2024 and Indiana transfer Jackson has the inside edge. He's played in 11 games, and he was solid when started for the Hoosiers against Washington last season. Fancher arrived from Marshall this winter and could work himself into the discussion. The fallout from the Jake Retzlaff situation has drastically changed the quarterback room for Brigham Young. The Cougars go from a quarterback that nearly got them to the College Football Playoff to picking an inexperience one among Hillstead, Bourguet or Bachmeier. A dual-threat, Hillstead played eight games for Utah State in 2023 while the strong-armed Bourguet played 10 games for Western Michigan in 2022-23. The two were in a battle for the backup role before Retzlaff's off-field issues. Bachmeier could be a the wild card after enrolling early this spring at Stanford. The freshman likely is the future for the Cougars. Kalani Sitake has a tough situation on his hands as he tries to compete for a conference title. The murkiest quarterback situation resides in Stillwater. After a disastrous 2024, Oklahoma State starts the new campaign with very little experience among the signal-callers. Henjy, a TCU transfer, is the front-runner over Flores, but the former four-star recruit didn't throw a pass in his four games as a freshman last year. Flores has been with the Cowboys for two seasons but redshirted in 2023 and had a medical redshirt in 2024 after appearing in one game. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Big 12 quarterback rankings: Sam Leavitt leads college football list

Big 12 quarterback rankings: Experienced signal-callers headline 2025 season

Big 12 quarterback rankings: Experienced signal-callers headline 2025 season In the Big 12, continuity is the name of the game at the quarte...
Caitlin Clark: Commissioner's Cup pay 'makes no sense'New Foto - Caitlin Clark: Commissioner's Cup pay 'makes no sense'

WNBA superstarCaitlin Clarktook time out of celebrating herIndiana Fever's Commissioner's Cup winto call out the desire for better pay for the league's athletes. The injured Clark didn't play in the Fever's win Tuesday over the Minnesota Lynx, but in the postgame celebration on Instagram livestream, she pointed out the disparity in the financial rewards for winning the Commissioner's Cup and winning the WNBA Finals. "You get more (money) for this than you do if you're the (WNBA Finals) champion," Clark said to the camera Tuesday night. "It makes no sense. Someone tell (WNBA commissioner) Cathy (Engelbert) to help us out." Each rostered player on the winning Commissioner's Cup team earned up to $30,000 as part of the majority portion of the $500,000 purse, per multiple reports. For comparison, players on the team that wins the WNBA championship reportedly receive $20,825. In another postgame video Tuesday, Clark referred to the in-season tournament final as the "Cathy Cup." Clark's comments come as WNBA players are negotiating for a new collective bargaining agreement amid surging popularity in the league. The WNBA registered its highest attendance in 26 years for an opening month to the season as well as record TV ratings. The league announced in June that 400,000 fans attended games since the season tipped off on May 14 through the end of the month, its highest since nearly the league's inception; the WNBA began play in 1997. Further, more than half of all WNBA games were sellouts, a 156 percent increase year over year, according to the release. Additionally, games are averaging 1.32 million viewers across all network partners, nearly tripling last season's average (462,000 viewers), per the league's June 10 release. Clark won't be back on the court when the Fever return to action Thursday against the visiting Las Vegas Aces. She will miss her fourth game in a row (counting the non-regular-season Commissioner's Cup final) because of a left groin ailment. A strained left quad kept Clark out for five games from May 28-June 10. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Caitlin Clark: Commissioner’s Cup pay ‘makes no sense’

Caitlin Clark: Commissioner's Cup pay 'makes no sense' WNBA superstarCaitlin Clarktook time out of celebrating herIndiana Fever...

 

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