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			  <news:name>Meet Royce Keys: WWE SmackDown&apos;s newest &apos;monstar&apos; looking to bring the pain</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T09:40:42.582Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Meet Royce Keys: WWE SmackDown&apos;s newest &apos;monstar&apos; looking to bring the pain</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Royce Keys’ backstory has been well-chronicled as he made his way to SmackDown.
The 6-foot-1, East Palo Alto, California, native started out grinding on the independent scene and worked his way up to All Elite Wrestling when his mother suffered a shocking fatal overdose in 2021. He kept pushing and kept working, knowing that his grandparents and the spirit of his mother was still with him as he made his WWE debut in 2026.
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&quot;I like to say I was born to be a professional wrestler and born to be in this business as a sports entertainer,&quot; he told Fox News Digital. &quot;So my grandparents moved from Mississippi to San Francisco and they lived right across the street from the Cow Palace. … I grew up hearing about ‘High Chief’ Peter Maivia, Ray Stevens, Pat Patterson, Kenji Shibuya, Pepper Gomez and so ever since I can remember anything, wrestling was one of my first memories. It’s brought a lot of joy, happiness and success to my life.&quot;
Keys made his debut with the company as a surprise entrant in the men’s Royal Rumble match in Saudi Arabia. He eliminated one opponent before he was eliminated himself.
He said walking through the curtain was an experience like any other.
&quot;For me, it was it was a huge test of new audience, new style, being so far away from home, I didn’t know what to expect. Probably one of the handful of times I’ve been nervous in my life,&quot; he recalled. &quot;But once I got to walk down that aisle, everything felt so natural, getting in the ring and just being there. All eyes on me so. It was definitely rewarding. You ever get that feeling like you were meant to do something? I had that feeling then.&quot;
Keys was off-screen for a bit as he worked to get his feet underneath him in a WWE ring.
CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM
After working a few dark matches, Keys defeated Berto in his first SmackDown appearance. He then appeared in and won the Andre the Giant Memorial Battle Royal on the night before WrestleMania 42 in Las Vegas.
He said he’s bringing a certain X-factor that makes him standout among other big men on the roster.
&quot;I think intensity, intimidation, fear, you know, when I am in the ring, I tend to get straight to the point. I believe the certain things I do in the ring, not only to the people in the arenas kinda go, ‘Ohh,’ they feel it but people at home feel that as well through their TV screens,&quot; he said. &quot;It’s just a lot of domination. I think my life, everything that I’ve been through in my life has set me up for this point and I intend to be that monster, or I like to say, as we say in the hood, I’d like to be that ‘monstar’ that’s going to change, help or elevate the game.&quot;
Keys said he will be bringing the pain to his opponents as he looks to get into the title picture – whether it’s the Undisputed WWE Championship or the United States Championship.
&quot;I think all of the above,&quot; he told Fox News Digital. &quot;I have one motto that I’ve been living by since I was a kid and that was being taught by the OGs and a lot of the guys out here (in the Bay Area) – I take everything I want. Anything I want to take or I see, I’m gonna take it whether it’s championships, or whether it’s hurting people, whether it’s dominating the SmackDown brand and dominating who else wants to come over, going to another brand and dominating over there. My life has put me in this position and everything that I’ve went through in my life has put me to this point and I don’t think there’s anybody that could stop me.&quot;
Keys will be a mainstay on the SmackDown roster every Friday night.
It will be intriguing to see who steps up to the challenge and which wrestlers will fall to his powerful force.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
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		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f47069a200899a00e62001</loc>
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			  <news:name>Billionaire Chris Larsen Plans to Spend $3.5 Million in NY House Race Amid Midterm Clash Over A.I.</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T09:20:41.648Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Billionaire Chris Larsen Plans to Spend $3.5 Million in NY House Race Amid Midterm Clash Over A.I.</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Chris Larsen, who hails from California, plans to spend $3.5 million to help Alex Bores, a New York congressional candidate at the center of a proxy war over A.I. regulation.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
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		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f47056a200899a00e61ff8</loc>
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			  <news:name>What to Know About the Maine Senate Race After Janet Mills Drops Out</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T09:20:22.102Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>What to Know About the Maine Senate Race After Janet Mills Drops Out</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The exit of Gov. Janet Mills kicked off the general election early in what is likely to be one of the most important, expensive and combative Senate races of 2026.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
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		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f46e75a200899a00e61f91</loc>
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			  <news:name>Trump is trying to negotiate with an Iranian regime at war with itself</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T09:12:21.705Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Trump is trying to negotiate with an Iranian regime at war with itself</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The conflict among power factions in Tehran is no longer hidden; signs of confusion in a tense atmosphere, internal clashes and a power struggle are clearly visible, and internal rifts have become more apparent than ever. Under current conditions, Ahmad Vahidi, commander-in-chief of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), operates as a shadow leader; his faction stands in opposition to the faction of parliamentary Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, while in the meantime the faction of Director of the Supreme National Security Council Mohammad Zolghadr plays the role of a hidden orchestrator. The circle of power is becoming tighter day by day, and in practice, the structure of governance has turned into a kind of joint-stock company of intelligence-security criminals.
Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei’s son, Mojtaba Khamenei, too, has so far been kept hidden by the core of power; and gradually, rumors of his death are spreading in society. But the question remains: how long can the ruling establishment continue this game? Is he even alive to be unveiled one day? If conditions are normal, what is the purpose of all this cat-and-mouse game; and if he is not alive, does this not mean an intensification of the power struggle within the regime?
At present, the remnants of the Assembly of Experts have issued a statement declaring that he is alive, and some regime-affiliated clerics — known as Shiite sources of emulation — have also confirmed this claim through official notices. But are all these staged scenes anything more than a political trick? Are the street mobilizations and regime propaganda among its supporters real, or merely part of a controlled performance? If the truth is revealed, does the regime have the capacity to respond to the destructive consequences?
Meanwhile, U.S. and Israeli intelligence and espionage agencies have so far not fully confirmed whether he is alive or dead. On the other hand, it is still unclear why and how he was selected, through what process he rose to this position and by what mechanism he was approved.
TIME FOR ISRAEL TO TAKE OUT ‘HEAD OF THE SNAKE,’ TARGET MEMBERS OF IRANIAN REGIME, SAYS FORMER IDF INTEL CHIEF
What is also evident to international observers is that within the logic governing this structure, democracy, the people’s vote and electoral mechanisms have no place; what exists is the continuation of a dictatorship defined under the title of &quot;absolute guardianship of the jurist,&quot; and referred to by the Islamic community as &quot;pure Muhammadan Islam&quot; — a delusional interpretation that, within its specific ideological framework, is completely detached from the common standards of modern governance, rationality and civility.
The junta-like segment of the regime also acts as a serious obstacle to any negotiation with President Donald Trump and the United States and continues to pursue its declared goal of the destruction of Israel. From Tehran’s perspective, Trump is not inclined toward entering a war and seeks to avoid direct confrontation; for this reason, a strategy of attrition, wasting time and deception has been placed on the agenda.
At the same time, the first circle of power and the regime’s hard core still include figures who have not been eliminated by Israel or the United States — a combination of fanatical elements with Russophile and Anglophile tendencies who are unwilling to concede any advantage. Internal divisions and conflicts are far deeper than what U.S. and Israeli intelligence agencies imagine or analyze. In this context, it is still unclear who will ultimately be willing to &quot;drink from the poisoned chalice.&quot;
LIZ PEEK: TRUMP IS PUTTING AMERICA FIRST BY BACKING IRAN INTO A CORNER
At the same time, it has nothing to offer at the negotiating table. In this context, giving time under the guise of diplomacy by Washington and Israel can effectively create an opportunity for propaganda exploitation, allowing Tehran’s government to claim a kind of &quot;victory&quot; through narrative construction; as if there is no decisive will to bring the process of structural change to an end.
The regime, in order to preserve appearances, has kept this negotiation channel open and created a quasi-suspended and ambiguous atmosphere. At the same time, it tends to expand the scope of tensions in order to use them as a tool for extracting concessions and wearing down the other side.
What is stated by the IRGC is more a play on words than a clear response; neither transparent diplomacy is visible, nor is there a specific answer to U.S. demands. The main strategy is to buy time and continue the game within the dimension of time — a deliberate effort to exhaust the opposing side, particularly the United States and the Trump administration. In this framework, time has become one of the most important tools in the hands of Iran’s ruling actors.
OPERATION EPIC FURY: HOW AMERICA&apos;S AIR POWER IS CRUSHING IRAN’S TERROR REGIME
At various times, the regime leaves the negotiating table — not as part of a calculated diplomatic strategy, but due to its inability to understand the logic of diplomacy and its inclination toward psychological warfare, displays of leverage and the reproduction of crisis. These very behaviors are themselves signs of Tehran’s disorientation. The ruling establishment is caught in a vague and deadlocked situation and seeks to project that it determines the timing and conditions; whereas this is more than anything a psychological game to preserve prestige. The main objective is to avoid direct confrontation, not to move toward a real agreement. In this framework, the tactic of pressure is employed as the primary tool.
What is presented by the IRGC lacks real credibility and weight in the eyes of the United States, and Israel is well aware that Iran’s responses will never be clear or reliable. This political structure, more than being familiar with the language of negotiation, is shaped within a framework that prioritizes confrontation and the application of pressure. In such an environment, genuine dialogue has been replaced by ambiguity, suspension and attritional tactics.
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For this ruling establishment, Iran’s national interests are not a priority, and there is no inclination to offer concessions, because it possesses only limited reliable tools. Excessive reliance on levers such as the nuclear program or regional networks, rather than generating sustainable power, has led to the deepening of crises. Under such conditions, the prospect of stability in Iran and the Middle East is increasingly tied to fundamental transformations in the structure of power. This is no longer a structure of power; it is a scene of the erosion of power. In other words, power in Tehran is not being divided — it is collapsing from within.
Ultimately, what is unfolding in Tehran today is not a sign of power management, but an image of its erosion. This is no longer a cohesive structure; it is a collection of rival factions, each fighting for survival, not for governing the country. Power in this system is neither consolidated nor distributed — it is disintegrating from within.
Secrecy, psychological warfare, playing with time and propaganda displays are all signs of a deeper reality: a ruling system that no longer has the capacity for decisive decision-making and is merely trying to buy time. Under such conditions, even diplomacy has turned into a tool for delaying crisis, not resolving it.
In this context, the main question is no longer who will take power, but whether this worn-out structure can continue at all. What is seen in Tehran is not competition for the future, but a struggle over the survival of a decaying order — an order that is closer than ever to its endpoint.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
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		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f46e62a200899a00e61f88</loc>
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			  <news:name>DR. BEN CARSON: I know how bad the SPLC was, it came after me and put me at risk</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T09:12:02.113Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>DR. BEN CARSON: I know how bad the SPLC was, it came after me and put me at risk</news:title>
			<news:keywords>For years now, the only question worth asking about the Southern Poverty Law Center has been whether the SPLC had become a cynical grift for the radical left … or a hate group itself. The latest findings from a Justice Department investigation indicate it’s both.
The Justice Department’s 11-count fraud and money-laundering indictment of the SPLC last week may have shocked the country. But it did not surprise anyone who has paid attention to the organization’s long descent into alleged corruption — least of all those of us the SPLC slandered.
In 2014, the SPLC added me to their list of dangerous extremists, for the &quot;hate crime&quot; of being a Black, Christian conservative. They called me a bigot knowing that it was false and knowing that it would put my family and me in danger.
They knew that because two years prior, a gay-rights activist opened fire at the conservative Family Research Council after te SPLC falsely branded them a hate group. But the SPLC didn’t care. Because — as we see now — spreading hate was the SPLC’s core business all along.
MICHAEL SHELLENBERGER: THE LEFT IS GETTING PEOPLE KILLED
According to the indictment, the organization doled out more than $3 million to real hate groups like the Ku Klux Klan and the Nazi Party. They allegedly bankrolled the &quot;imperial wizard&quot; of the United Klans of America and one of the organizers of the deadly 2017 Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia.
Most Americans would call a supposed civil rights organization secretly financing White supremacist violence disgusting. To the SPLC, it was an investment. The following year, their revenues almost tripled from $51 million to more than $130 million.
What the indictment shows is that the SPLC is not an anti-bigotry organization at all. It’s a bigotry profiteer. It profits off the leftist narrative of invisible &quot;systemic&quot; racism, rampant KKK terrorism and imagined violent homophobia. While the rest of the country recoiled in horror at what happened in Charlottesville, Va., the SPLC was secretly cheering.
SPLC SCANDAL UNDERSCORES HOW THE DEMAND FOR RACISM OUTSTRIPS THE SUPPLY | BOBBY BURACK
Despite the SPLC’s Cash for Klansmen program, the United States is the least racist country in the world. In the 21st century we are mostly living Martin Luther King’s dream of a colorblind society. That’s a tremendous achievement for a nation that had so far to come on that score in the last century.
In fact, there is so little bigotry in America today that the SPLC reportedly had to fabricate it. To hate-hustling grifters like the SPLC, moral progress poses an existential threat. If they ever admitted the truth, they would lose their money and their power. So, they perpetuate their lucrative lie.
It’s the same scam the left has run for years now. Congressional Democrats knew &quot;Russiagate&quot; was a hoax before they impeached President Donald Trump for it. Liberal public health officials knew COVID-19 was a manmade virus leaked from a Chinese lab when they said it came from a food market.
They knew President Joe Biden was mentally impaired when they swore up and down he was sharper than ever. They knew Obamacare would kick people off their health insurance when they promised, &quot;if you like your plan you can keep your plan.&quot; They know unborn babies aren’t &quot;clumps of cells.&quot; And they know today that &quot;trans women&quot; aren’t women.
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They lie about these things because they care more about power than they care about the truth. They can’t beat conservatives in honest, good faith debate. So, they resort to weaponized rhetoric that demonizes dissent. They kept it up even after Trump survived multiple assassination attempts. And even after TPUSA founder Charlie Kirk didn’t.
The mainstream media never calls out the left’s lies — they amplify them. So, the left will never stop lying on their own. They have to be stopped. That means holding leftists accountable when their lies cross the line from sins to alleged crimes. That’s what the Justice Department’s SPLC indictment is about trying to figure out.
The First Amendment protects dissent and debate. It does not protect fraud, or incitement or slander. The SPLC will have their day in court to decide where its actions landed.
Now that the president has survived yet another would-be assassination, disinfecting our national discourse of the left’s criminal dishonesty is more urgent than ever.
CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM DR. BEN CARSON</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
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		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f46e4ea200899a00e61f7f</loc>
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			  <news:name>Vance, Cruz, head to Iowa on 2026 missions as 2028 GOP race to succeed Trump heats up</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T09:11:42.512Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Vance, Cruz, head to Iowa on 2026 missions as 2028 GOP race to succeed Trump heats up</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Two of the biggest names in the Republican Party are making stops the next few days in Iowa, a key 2026 midterm battleground state whose caucuses, for a half century, have kicked off the GOP&apos;s presidential nominating calendar.
Vice President JD Vance and Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas will have the midterms on their minds during their visits, which come with just over six months to go until this year&apos;s elections, when Republicans will be defending their slim Senate and razor-thin House majorities.
But the moment the midterms are over, the next presidential race officially gets underway. So the trips by Vance and Cruz may also pay dividends if either move forward and launch 2028 White House runs in the race to succeed term-limited President Donald Trump.
With three competitive House seats as well as what are expected to be close Senate and gubernatorial showdowns, veteran Republican strategist David Kochel said &quot;Iowa’s important.&quot;
KAMALA HARRIS FUELS MORE 2028 SPECULATION WITH A STOP IN THIS KEY PRESIDENTIAL PRIMARY STATE
&quot;Because of how competitive Iowa looks to be right now... there’s going to be a lot of money coming in and a lot of attention paid and because it’s Iowa, I think we’ll have a pretty healthy parade of 2028 potentials coming through to try to do what they can to help in the midterms,&quot; Kochel emphasized. &quot;It’s the best excuse to come to Iowa and get to know people and get seen and road test some messaging.&quot;
Cruz heads to Iowa on Friday, where he&apos;ll deliver the keynote address at the Annual Spring Kickoff for the Iowa Faith &amp; Freedom Coalition, a very influential Iowa social conservative political advocacy group.
The title of the firebrand conservative senator&apos;s speech is &quot;Constitutional Courage — ‘Cruzing’ Toward Victory: A Roadmap for 2026.&quot;
Cruz won the 2016 Iowa presidential caucuses, and was runner-up to Trump in that cycle&apos;s combustible GOP presidential primaries. The senator took a hard look at making another run in the 2024 cycle before deciding to seek re-election to the Senate.
&quot;There will be plenty of time to make those decisions. I don&apos;t have an announcement for you today,&quot; Cruz answered when asked by Fox News Digital recently if he was seriously considering another White House campaign.
STEPHEN A. SMITH WARNS ‘NOT A DAMN SOUL’ CAN BEAT VANCE-RUBIO TICKET IN 2028 PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION
But he appears to be laying the groundwork for a possible bid, as he positions himself as a conservative alternative to Vance, who is currently the odds-on favorite to be Trump&apos;s MAGA and America First heir.
Cruz has grabbed plenty of attention with his clashes with far-right figures, such as Tucker Carlson, and he&apos;s enhanced his already strong standing among conservative leaders and donors. And he&apos;s bolstered his grassroots outreach with his popular and widely downloaded podcast, &apos;Verdict with Ted Cruz.&apos;
Vance stops in Iowa on Tuesday, where he&apos;ll appear with Republican Rep. Zach Nunn, who&apos;s facing a tough re-election this year in a swing district in southwestern portion of the state.
The trip — Vance&apos;s first as vice president to either Iowa or New Hampshire, which follows Iowa and holds the first presidential primary in the GOP&apos;s nominating calendar — comes before what is widely expected to be a Vance 2028 campaign for the White House in the race to succeed his boss.
WHITE HOUSE RACE UNDERWAY: WITH 2026 LOOMING, BOTH PARTIES ARE ALREADY PLAYING FOR 2028
&quot;He’s going to get a lot exposure and TV coverage,&quot; Kochel said of Vance.
Vance has demurred when questioned about 2028, labeling speculation as &quot;premature&quot; and &quot;disloyal&quot; to Trump. He has said he&apos;s focused on his job as vice president and on helping Republicans defend their slim Senate and fragile House majorities in the midterms.
But Vance has built a political team of advisers who, if he runs as expected, would quickly build out a presidential campaign.
While Vance is the clear front-runner in the very early 2028 Republican presidential nomination polls, Secretary of State Marco Rubio has seen his support for a possible presidential bid soar this year, thanks to an increase in his responsibilities and public profile, most recently around the U.S. operation in Venezuela and the Iran war.
Rubio — who as a senator from Florida was part of the large field of GOP White House contenders who Trump defeated en route to winning the 2016 presidential election — finished a strong second to Vance last month in the 2028 Republican presidential nomination straw poll at the annual Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC).
Partially fueling Rubio&apos;s rise is Trump, who has lavishly praised his secretary of state.
The president recently declared that Rubio would go down as &quot;the greatest secretary of state in history.&quot;
‘ROCK STAR’ NEWSOM STEALS THE SHOW AT DNC SUMMIT AS DEMOCRATS HUNT FOR 2028 CONTENDER TO TAKE ON TRUMP
Trump has also promoted a Vance-Rubio ticket — calling it &quot;unstoppable&quot; a few months ago—but has not said who should be at the top of the ticket.
But the president did say last year that Vance is &quot;most likely&quot; his heir apparent. &quot;In all fairness, he&apos;s the vice president,&quot; Trump added.
Rubio told Vanity Fair late last year, &quot;If JD Vance runs for president, he&apos;s going to be our nominee, and I&apos;ll be one of the first people to support him.&quot;
Regardless, Republican sources earlier this year confirmed to Fox News that a group of GOP donors who support the secretary of state are quietly working on ways to boost Rubio&apos;s political profile.
That&apos;s not sitting well with some in the president&apos;s political orbit.
&quot;Vice President Vance is the future of the Republican Party and Marco Rubio is one of his closest friends in the administration,&quot; an operative in Trump&apos;s political orbit told Fox News.
&quot;The divisive stories from some donors trying to cause chaos are not helpful,&quot; the operative, who asked to remain anonymous to speak more freely, emphasized.
Vance has also weighed in, telling Fox News&apos; Martha MacCallum in February that &quot;Marco is my closest friend in the administration.&quot;
And the vice president, in an interview on Fox News&apos; &quot;The Story,&quot; said, &quot;I think it&apos;s so interesting the media wants to create this conflict where there just isn&apos;t any conflict.&quot;
In addition to Vance, Cruz, and Rubio, political pundits consider a number of other well-known Republican politicians as possible 2028 presidential contenders.
VANCE IN &apos;CATBIRD SEAT&apos; FOR 2028 GOP PRESIDENTIAL NOMINATION, BUT THESE REPUBLICANS MAY ALSO RUN
They are Govs. Ron DeSantis of Florida, Brian Kemp of Georgia, Sarah-Huckabee Sanders of Arkansas, former Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin, and Sens. Tom Cotton of Arkansas, Josh Hawley of Missouri, and Rick Scott of Florida.
Also not to be ignored is Rep. Byron Donalds of Florida, a MAGA champion who&apos;s running for governor this year.
Then there is Donald Trump Jr., the president-elect&apos;s eldest son and MAGA warrior. However, the younger Trump is very close to Vance, which would likely prevent him from making any White House bid in the next cycle.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
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		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f46e3aa200899a00e61f76</loc>
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			  <news:name>Dana White &apos;wasn&apos;t going to see 65&apos; before longevity expert intervened with strict new regimen</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T09:11:22.861Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Dana White &apos;wasn&apos;t going to see 65&apos; before longevity expert intervened with strict new regimen</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Longevity expert Gary Brecka said his work with Dana White led to startling blood test results, revealing that the UFC CEO may have only had a few years left to live based on his prior lifestyle.
Brecka, who spent 20 years as a mortality-modeling expert in the insurance industry, said on &quot;Hang Out With Sean Hannity&quot; that people in White&apos;s inner circle &quot;quietly&quot; asked him to get ahold of the UFC president, reporting that he was falling asleep during important meetings.
The biohacker said he &quot;tricked&quot; White by telling the UFC boss he needed blood work and a genetic test to predict his life expectancy due to worries over White&apos;s symptoms, while in reality, existing medical records and demographic data could have sufficed.
He said White was experiencing sleep apnea, low blood oxygen levels, aches and pains, among other ailments. But White&apos;s blood test provided cause for concern even before the results were in.
UFC HEAVYWEIGHT CHAMP ENTERS THE RING FOR HEALTHCARE REFORM WITH NEW PRICE TRANSPARENCY PARTNERSHIP
&quot;His blood coagulated at room temperature. As a percentage, there was more fat in his blood than blood,&quot; said Brecka, due to &quot;lethal&quot; levels of triglycerides.
After sending the blood off to the lab for testing, he got a call at 1 a.m. — a move usually reserved for emergencies. The results were dire, he said.
Given the life-threatening alert, Brecka said he immediately booked a flight to White and was on the ground in Las Vegas by 9 a.m.
3 SIMPLE LIFESTYLE CHANGES COULD ADD ALMOST A DECADE TO YOUR LIFE, RESEARCH SHOWS
White was floored when Brecka rattled off a list of his symptoms based solely on his test results. It turned out the UFC president had &quot;hyper-homocystinemia,&quot; Brecka said, or the inability to break down an amino acid called homocysteine.
Homocysteine at high levels can irritate the interior lining of the arteries, causing them to &quot;clamp down,&quot; Brecka explained.
&quot;And if you make the pipe smaller in a fixed system, the pressure goes up. So his [blood] pressure wasn&apos;t being driven up because there was a malfunction with the heart. It was being driven because the pipes were too small.&quot;
TRUMP GETS DANA WHITE TO ADD FIGHT TO UFC WHITE HOUSE CARD AFTER PERSONAL ASK
Because the vascular system contracted, White began experiencing hypertension. &quot;They start to medicate the heart for a crime it&apos;s not committing,&quot; since the problem actually lay in his arteries, Brecka said.
He put White on a strict keto diet and blood pressure monitoring regimen.
&quot;He wasn&apos;t going to see 65,&quot; said Brecka, based on his preliminary evaluation of White&apos;s lab results.
Ultimately, he was able to extend White&apos;s predicted lifespan from his initial assessment of 10.4 years.</news:keywords>
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			  <news:name>ACTING LABOR SECRETARY SONDERLING: A fast-track way to get a job without college debt</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T09:11:03.088Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>ACTING LABOR SECRETARY SONDERLING: A fast-track way to get a job without college debt</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Hollywood actor Patrick Ball recently made headlines for calling his $80,000 in student loan debt a &quot;huge burden.&quot; In an interview with Cultured magazine, Ball said he believes he would have died in debt if not for landing a starring role in the award-winning drama &quot;The Pitt.&quot;
Ball lucked out, but for most Americans, there’s no such happy ending. More than 42 million Americans have student loans, bringing the total outstanding federal-student-loan debt to over $1.6 trillion. The average borrower has an outstanding balance of around $40,000.
Pursuing a college degree makes sense for many individuals, but it’s not a one-size-fits-all solution. Too many students graduate to discover a drought of job prospects in their field while simultaneously struggling to afford student-loan payments. Even if they manage to land a job, the average annual salary of a recent college graduate is barely enough to sustain one person, let alone a family. The result is paralyzing debt and a stalled future.
But it doesn’t have to be this way. Under President Donald Trump’s leadership, the Department of Labor (DOL) is working hard to create alternative pathways for Americans seeking secure, family-supporting, in-demand careers. As we celebrate National Apprenticeship Week, we’re spotlighting programs that offer hands-on training, strong mentorship opportunities, and credentials that benefit workers and employers alike.
TRUMP HAS SET THE STAGE FOR AN AMERICAN COMEBACK AFTER BIDEN’S DISMAL ECONOMY
Last year, Trump issued an executive order titled &quot;Preparing Americans for High-Paying Skilled Trade Jobs of the Future&quot; and set a goal of securing more than 1 million active apprentices. To achieve this mission, DOL partnered with the Departments of Commerce and Education to develop America’s Talent Strategy.
For too long, there’s been a mismatch between the training workers receive and the skills that employers seek. America’s Talent Strategy aims to change that by meeting the needs of employers and preparing more Americans to access high-wage careers. We’re realigning federal workforce programs with investments in private sector training and evolving skill demands as well as partnering with American businesses who are dedicated to employing new apprentices as key pieces of their talent pipelines.
That’s not all. The Labor Department has committed $3,500 incentive payments to partner employers for every registered apprentice hired. Under Trump’s leadership, we’re also streamlining the process for potential partner companies and slashing the red tape that discourages organizations from creating similar programs.
DAVID MARCUS: MAGA’S H-1B ‘CIVIL WAR’ IS EXACTLY HOW POLITICS IS SUPPOSED TO WORK
Additionally, we’re breaking down the silos that have hampered how America prepares its workforce. Last year, DOL signed a historic partnership agreement with the Department of Education. Under this arrangement, DOL can support and influence a broader set of workforce programs previously spread across federal agencies. That means cutting redundant efforts, shrinking bloated government bureaucracy and giving more flexibility to states.
All of this has empowered the Labor Department to add more than 386,000 apprentices and more than 3,300 new Registered Apprenticeship programs since Trump took office last January. Apprentices enjoy an &quot;earn while you learn&quot; model, and those who complete their program can land an average starting salary of $86,000 per year — $20,000 more than that of recent college graduates.
These are significant steps toward closing our nation’s skills gap of approximately 700,000 jobs. But it’s also significant because of the lives we’re impacting.
CLICK HERE FOR MORE FOX NEWS OPINION
Brent Davis is one such example. For years, Brent struggled to provide for his family — until a friend urged him to apply to the Norfolk Naval Shipyard Apprenticeship Program in Virginia. Brent was accepted as a boilermaker apprentice, eventually becoming a journeyman in the shipyard and then an official Shop 41 Boilermaker. Brent graduated with glowing marks across the board for his workmanship. Thanks to his hard work and dedication, he was nominated for the Department of Labor and Industry’s Division of Registered Apprenticeship Outstanding Apprentice of the Year.
Shane Siler of Wyoming has a similar story. For 15 years, Shane worked in the food industry and dabbled in drilling and construction. But after he became a single father, he realized he needed to pursue a more stable and promising career path. Shane was attracted to the trades because they  offered the opportunity to earn a full-time wage while still attending school. He joined a Registered Apprenticeship Program, and today he works as an Industrial and Heavy Commercial Electrician. The Registered Apprenticeship Program has empowered Shane to build a better life for himself and his son.
These stories are exactly what National Apprenticeship Week is all about. Our task is to equip Americans to find their place in an evolving economy so that testimonials like Brent and Shane’s are the standard — not the exception. Registered Apprenticeships have the power to strengthen our supply chains, fill skill gaps in industries critical to our national security, and ensure America stays on the cutting edge of innovation and industry.
Most of all, they empower hardworking Americans to achieve the American Dream. That’s something truly worth celebrating.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
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		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f46dffa200899a00e61f62</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>How A.I. Data Centers Are Building a New Political Coalition</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T09:10:23.524Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>How A.I. Data Centers Are Building a New Political Coalition</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Sabrina Tavernise, a national writer-at-large, traveled to Saline Township, Mich., where the state’s first hyperscale A.I. data center is under construction. Residents are banding together to oppose the center, crossing political lines in surprising new ways.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f45bc2a200899a00e61ba0</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Best Bets: Friday, May 1, 2026</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T07:52:34.135Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Best Bets: Friday, May 1, 2026</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Coming Up</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
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		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f45baea200899a00e61b97</loc>
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			  <news:name>Gas prices May 1</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T07:52:14.556Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Gas prices May 1</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Arizona average: $4.63</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
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		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f45b9aa200899a00e61b8e</loc>
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			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Davis Dam releases for May 1</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T07:51:54.579Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Davis Dam releases for May 1</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Tuesday</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
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		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f45b84a200899a00e61b6e</loc>
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			  <news:name>Hamadeh Introduces Federal “Kayleigh’s Law” To Protect Survivors Of Violent Crimes</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T07:51:32.714Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Hamadeh Introduces Federal “Kayleigh’s Law” To Protect Survivors Of Violent Crimes</news:title>
			<news:keywords>By Ethan Faverino |
Congressman Abraham Hamadeh (R-AZ-08) introduced Kayleigh’s Law, a landmark federal legislation designed to provide survivors of dangerous crimes with permanent, lifelong protection from their convicted abusers by requiring courts to issue no-contact injunctions that remain in effect for the rest of the offender’s life.
Named after Kayleigh Kozak, an Arizona mother and prominent victim advocate who was sexually abused as a child by her teacher, the bill aims to end the repeated “legal tug-of-war” that forces survivors to return to court multiple times to maintain basic safety protections against their predators.
Kayleigh’s Law would mandate that federal courts impose lifetime no-contact injunctions against individuals convicted of federal sex crimes and violent felonies when requested by the victim or the government at sentencing.
The legislation builds directly on successful state-level reforms. Kayleigh’s Law has been enacted in Arizona and Wisconsin since 2022, where it has provided critical relief to survivors. In its first year alone in Arizona, the law enabled over 1,000 victims to secure lifetime protective orders against their abusers.
“As a former prosecutor, I know how vulnerable victims can be, how determined their predators often are, and how judges can frequently fail victims of crime. That is why we must require federal courts to impose these lifetime injunctions when requested by the government or the victim during sentencing,” stated Congressman Hamadeh. “I have seen what victims go through as the predator’s adjudication process plays out, and I know how important it is for the victim’s healing process to begin. That process cannot be interrupted by their predators simply because our courts fail to take crime seriously and fail to impose lifetime injunctions.”
Kayleigh Kozak, whose personal experience drove the creation of the original state law, emphasized the lifelong impact of sexual violence.
“The harm caused by sexual assault is not temporary. It is lifelong,” stated Kayleigh. “The protections for those who have been sexually violated should be lifelong too. No survivor should have to repeatedly return to court just to request the continuation of a protective order from the person who was convicted of sexually violating them. Kayleigh’s Law ensures no victim ever has to endure the nightmare of continuously justifying their need for safety. When I was a little girl, I could not protect myself from the teacher who sexually abused me at school – but I can fight now to protect myself, other innocent children, and every victim.”
Under the federal proposal, the lifetime injunction would prohibit all forms of direct or indirect contact with the victim and would remain enforceable even after the offender completes prison, probation, or supervised release.
Original cosponsors of Kayleigh’s Law include Representatives Brian Babin (TX-36), Andy Biggs (AZ-05), Tim Burchett (TN-02), Juan Ciscomani (AZ-06), Eli Crane (AZ-02), Troy Downing (MT-02), Mike Ezell (MS-04), Brandon Gill (TX-26), Paul Gosar (AZ-09), David Joyce (OH-14), Nancy Mace (SC-01), Dan Meuser (PA-09), Barry Moore (AL-01), Gary Palmer (AL-06), Chris Smith (NJ-04), David Schweikert (AZ-01), Greg Steube (FL-17), Marlin Stutzman (IN-03), David Taylor (OH-02), and Delegate Kimberly King-Hinds (MP).
Congressman Juan Ciscomani (AZ-06) stated, “Kayleigh’s Law originated in Arizona and will uplift thousands of victims of unspeakable crimes. I’m proud to join my colleagues in supporting this commonsense legislation to ensure victims of dangerous crimes can obtain lifetime protections against their abusers. Survivors should not be faced with uncertainty about those who have harmed them. Kayleigh’s Law will close critical gaps in federal law by strengthening protections, enhancing enforcement, and ensuring lasting safety for victims.”
Congressman Marlin Stutzman (IN-03) added, “Victims of violent crime and sexual assault deserve to have permanent, basic safety protections without having to repeatedly face their attacker in court. The emotional and psychological toll of these legal proceedings is high. Kayleigh’s Law gives victims one less thing to worry about by removing the fear and dread of reliving these experiences. I am proud to cosponsor Congressman Hamadeh’s bill to ensure these criminals hold no power over their victims.”
The bill mirrors key elements of Arizona Statute (A.R.S. 13-719), which applies to dangerous offenses, serious/violent felonies, and specific sex offenses under Chapters 14 and 35.1. Injunctions issued under the law are effective immediately upon sentencing and do not expire for the predator’s natural lifetime.
Kayleigh’s Law is being introduced during Sexual Assault Awareness Month, underscoring its focus on empowering survivors and closing critical gaps in federal protections for victims of sexual assault and violent crimes.





Ethan Faverino is a reporter for AZ Free News. You can send him news tips using this link.
The post Hamadeh Introduces Federal “Kayleigh’s Law” To Protect Survivors Of Violent Crimes first appeared on AZ FREE NEWS.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
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		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f45b6fa200899a00e61b65</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Report: Arizona Off-Cycle Elections Draw Low Turnout While Deciding Billions In Spending</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T07:51:11.723Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Report: Arizona Off-Cycle Elections Draw Low Turnout While Deciding Billions In Spending</news:title>
			<news:keywords>By Matthew Holloway |
Arizona’s off-cycle elections draw significantly lower voter turnout than general elections while deciding billions of dollars in public spending, according to a new report from the Goldwater Institute.
The report, titled “Off-Cycle Voting in Arizona: Economic and Democratic Costs?”, was authored by Henry Thomson, an associate professor at Arizona State University. It analyzes municipal and school district elections held outside of regularly scheduled general election cycles.
A 2018 state law sought to require that most Arizona elections, except special and recall contests, be held alongside regularly scheduled general elections. However, the City of Tucson challenged the law, prompting a legal dispute over whether the state can mandate election timing for charter cities. In 2020, the Arizona Supreme Court ruled that charter cities have constitutional authority over local election matters and that state law cannot override those provisions unless the issue is one of statewide concern.
According to the report, voter turnout in recent off-cycle municipal elections in Arizona averaged 26.9%, which the analysis states is more than 44 percentage points lower than turnout in comparable on-cycle elections. The report attributes this difference to the timing of elections held outside traditional November general election dates.


Real-world examples underscore the disparity. In Phoenix, a 2023 bond election authorizing hundreds of millions in spending drew just 22% turnout, compared to 77% turnout in the city’s 2024 general election. 
Similar gaps exist across Arizona cities and school districts, where…
— Goldwater Institute (@GoldwaterInst) April 28, 2026





The report further states that the composition of the electorate in off-cycle elections differs from that of general elections. It describes off-cycle voters as, on average, older and wealthier, and more likely to have a direct financial interest in government spending decisions.
Thomson writes that these differences in turnout and voter composition may influence policy outcomes. The report states that policies adopted through off-cycle elections may reflect the preferences of a smaller subset of voters rather than the broader electorate.
The report also highlights the scale of fiscal measures decided through off-cycle elections. In November 2023, $4.36 billion in school district spending measures were placed on ballots in Maricopa County, an amount it compares to the county’s annual budget of approximately $4.35 billion.


Read more in our latest report here: https://t.co/ZdVfOgFdN8
— Goldwater Institute (@GoldwaterInst) April 28, 2026





Examples cited in a Tuesday press release from the Goldwater Institute included a regional transportation plan approved by voters in Pima County in 2026, authorizing approximately $2.67 billion in spending, with less than one-third of registered voters participating, as well as a 2023 Phoenix bond election with a turnout of approximately 22% that authorized hundreds of millions of dollars in spending.
The report argues that the timing of elections is a policy choice made by local governments and may affect participation levels. It states that holding elections outside of general election cycles can result in lower turnout.
“Off-cycle elections convert community decision-making into a procedural rubber stamp, providing a democratic varnish of approval to policies pushed by special interests that benefit from growing local governments and ballooning municipal budgets,” Thomson wrote in the report. “They allow a small, unrepresentative electorate to decide enormous public spending commitments at the local level and should be reformed.”
The report recommends aligning local elections with higher-turnout general election cycles as a potential reform. It states that such changes could increase participation and broaden the electorate involved in local fiscal decisions that impact taxpayers for decades.





Matthew Holloway is a senior reporter for AZ Free News. Follow him on X for his latest stories, or email tips to Matthew@azfreenews.com.
The post Report: Arizona Off-Cycle Elections Draw Low Turnout While Deciding Billions In Spending first appeared on AZ FREE NEWS.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
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		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f45b5aa200899a00e61b5c</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>ASU Using AI Tool To Create Courses From Professors’ Work Without Their Knowledge</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T07:50:50.557Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>ASU Using AI Tool To Create Courses From Professors’ Work Without Their Knowledge</news:title>
			<news:keywords>By Staff Reporter |
Arizona State University (ASU) is using an AI tool, ASU Atomic, to create educational modules using content ripped from professors’ work.
Professors say they were not made aware of their lectures being used in this way; they also characterized the outcome as inaccurate “AI slop” as first reported by 404 Media. 
“AI slop” refers generally to poor, undesired generative content. In some circles, “slop” may refer to not just some but all generative content under the perception that generative AI tools rely on stolen original works.
ASU Atomic promises to create an unlimited amount of custom learning modules for subscribers by taking long lectures and condensing them into smaller clips based on prompts. These synthetic clips “grounded in trusted ASU courses” fit within condensed courses that amount to less than 10 hours. 
The tool began as a pilot launch earlier this month within an initiative called “Project Atomizer.” 
Subscriptions for ASU Atomic cost $5 a month. At present, course content produced by the tool doesn’t translate to ASU academic credits, nor badges or credentials. 
Not much exists publicly on Project Atomizer. The initiative was mentioned briefly in a February presentation by ASU President Michael Crow, part of a larger proposal to make AI the focus of the future: “current realities require current solutions,” according to the presentation. 
Crow said in an interview last week with the Greater Phoenix Chamber that ASU has 50 AI tools, three of which are augmentative AI tools for students. Crow said he uses AI for “everything” in his daily life.
“[W]hen I’m driving to work, I use the Gemini tool. Basically, I’ll pick a subject that I don’t know enough about and I’ll get myself educated in like 22 minutes or 25 minutes,” said Crow. “I use it for basically quick analysis of really complicated things that I don’t have enough facts [for].”
Crow also revealed that he has used AI to write 20 white papers since November. He’s also used AI to create multiple architectural proposals: one for a site in Hawaii near the village of Javi, another for an addition to the West Valley campus in Phoenix. 
ASU literature professor Chris Hanlon was one of the first to raise awareness of ASU Atomic. Hanlon told 404 Media that no professors he’d spoken with had given their permission for this generative content. 
“None of the ASU faculty whose course materials were harvested for the module I generated were aware that their image, lectures, lessons, or other teaching materials are being used,” posted Hanlon on Bluesky. 
Hanlon said the course materials were pulled from Canvas, a course management system. Hanlon criticized the AI-generated clips as error-laden, jumbled, lacking context, and confused.
“Concerning the course itself, there’s no throughline I can see; none of the videos really speak to one another — it’s a mishmash, though the individual lessons that comprise it probably make a lot more sense in their original context,” said Hanlon. 
The ASU Atomic website says the tool relies on content pulled from the ASU Online library.
“If ASU teaches it, Atom — your AI learning partner — can build a hyper-personalized learning module around it,” stated the Atomic. 
Since 404 Media broke their investigative report, ASU closed off new signups. Instead, interested users or curious onlookers will have to join a waitlist. 
Faculty asked Crow about the AI tool during a recent faculty Q&amp;A following that initial report, as later revealed by Inside Higher Ed. According to Crow, the tool remains an early-stage experimental project without substantial promotion. 
ASU Atom told Inside Higher Ed that its model was built on Anthropic’s Claude. ASU has declined to speak on the training and development of the tool. 





AZ Free News is your #1 source for Arizona news and politics. You can send us news tips using this link.
The post ASU Using AI Tool To Create Courses From Professors’ Work Without Their Knowledge first appeared on AZ FREE NEWS.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
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		</url>
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		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f45461a200899a00e619d4</loc>
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			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Why the Supreme Court gutted the Voting Rights Act after six decades in a blow to Black politicians</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T07:21:05.086Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Why the Supreme Court gutted the Voting Rights Act after six decades in a blow to Black politicians</news:title>
			<news:keywords>For those of us who grew up during the Civil Rights era, there are some ugly memories.
There was &quot;Bloody Sunday&quot; in 1965, at Alabama’s Edmund Pettus Bridge, when troopers brutally attacked Black protesters. 
These marchers, led by John Lewis, were met with tear gas and whips as they demanded voting rights.
Two days later, Martin Luther King Jr. led a smaller march to the bridge, where the demonstrators prayed and turned back to avoid further violence.
SUPREME COURT RULES ON KEY VOTING RIGHTS ACT RULE AS REPUBLICANS AND DEMOCRATS WAGE REDISTRICTING WAR
There was a sit-in at the White House, a protest at the Capitol and, that summer, the Watts riots in Los Angeles.
Two years earlier, Alabama’s Bull Connor turned powerful hoses on protesters, including children, powerful enough to knock them down and cause injury. 
All this led to LBJ signing the Voting Rights Act passed by Congress, barring racial discrimination in voting, with strong support from Republicans as well as Democrats.
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And now, thanks to the Supreme Court, it is pretty much dead.
Much has changed in the last six decades, I’m the first to admit. We’ve had a Black president who was elected for two terms. Most major cities have had one or more Black mayors. There have been Black governors, dozens of Black members of Congress and a Black vice president.
Now the court claims the voting law has been a victim of its own success.
In a raw display of ideological power, all six conservative justices voted to gut the law, with the three liberal members strongly opposed.
By the way, newsrooms were virtually all White in 1965, leaving the L.A. Times in the embarrassing position of having to send a Black salesman to Watts. Now we have Black anchors, newspaper editors and heads of news divisions, though that entailed its own battles over affirmative action.
The John Roberts court has specialized in overturning laws that have governed the country since deep into the last century. Roe v. Wade comes to mind.
The opinion by Samuel Alito says it’s perfectly fine for states to engage in gerrymandering to protect incumbents, or favor one political party, as long as it doesn’t involve race.
The voting act is violated only when &quot;the circumstances give rise to a strong inference that intentional discrimination occurred.&quot; 
In the Louisiana case at hand, the court ruled that the state had violated the Constitution by creating a second majority-Black district.
JUDGES SAY THEY&apos;LL REDRAW LOUISIANA CONGRESSIONAL MAP THEMSELVES IF LAWMAKERS CAN&apos;T
The Wall Street Journal editorial page hailed the ruling: &quot;The Voting Rights Act was a landmark of American liberty that helped to break Jim Crow. But that storied purpose has been twisted over the years by both parties to justify the use of race to gerrymander.&quot;
In effect, supporters say, the creation of majority-Black districts has ghettoized Black lawmakers, many of whom have grown old in these safe seats.
This question of intent was an issue back when I was covering the Justice Department during the Reagan administration. And the high court has been chipping away at the law since then.
The New York Times reports that critics &quot;expect that any reconfiguration will not only endanger Black incumbents, some of whom have held office for decades, but also threaten a rising generation of Black Democrats in the South, who already have few avenues for ascending in politics.&quot;
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The conservative court has leaned hard to the right on other racial issues, such as striking down affirmative action in college admissions in 2023 by saying race cannot be considered a &quot;plus&quot; factor for applicants.
Alito argues that Black voters now participate in elections at similar rates as others. Presto, problem solved! 
The SCOTUS ruling on voting rights leaves a gray area by leaving the door ajar without slamming it shut, which means challenges will undoubtedly make it back to the justices – without much chance of success.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
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		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f4544da200899a00e619cb</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Suspect arrested for allegedly running meth lab at Michigan State University’s largest academic building</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T07:20:45.401Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Suspect arrested for allegedly running meth lab at Michigan State University’s largest academic building</news:title>
			<news:keywords>A suspect was arrested after allegedly running a secret meth lab at Michigan State University’s Wells Hall, the institution&apos;s largest academic building.
Xin Tong, 31, is facing felony charges in connection with the alleged operation, as well as misdemeanor trespassing, according to police.
Officers responded earlier this week to Wells Hall over reports of a suspicious person, a strong odor and unknown substances on the floor, WILX reported. Officers found Tong and confirmed his identity by using his expired MSU student ID.
FIVE MEXICAN NATIONALS INDICTED AFTER MASSIVE METH LAB BUST UNCOVERS ENORMOUS QUANTITIES OF DRUGS
Tong was in possession of multiple bags, which officers later searched through after obtaining a search warrant, discovering several bottles containing substances commonly used in the manufacture of meth, according to the outlet.
&quot;The chemicals include sodium hydroxide pellets, hydrochloric acid, methanol, isopropyl alcohol, acetone, and butane. Multiple tests performed by the Office of Environmental Health and Safety (EHS) confirm the environment in Wells Hall does not pose a risk to our community,&quot; MSU police said.
Officials later clarified that a meth lab was never located inside Wells Hall.
&quot;The suspect was found in possession of chemicals and/or equipment that could be used in the production of methamphetamine, which were contained within his personal property,&quot; police said.
Tong allegedly caused significant damage to the doors, flooring, and fixtures in Wells Hall between April 10 and April 26.
He has been charged with trespassing, malicious destruction of a building over $20,000 and felony controlled substance-operate/maintain lab involving methamphetamine.
HUNDREDS JOIN SEARCH FOR MISSING MICHIGAN COLLEGE STUDENT LAST SEEN &apos;DISORIENTED&apos; ON VIDEO
Wells Hall was evacuated on Monday, and it remained closed through Friday &quot;out of an abundance of caution,&quot; the university said in a press release, adding that there &quot;continues to be no known threat to the campus community.&quot;
Tong is being held at the Ingham County Jail on a $500,000 bond. The Department of Homeland Security also reportedly placed a hold on his bond.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
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		</url>
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		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f451f3a200899a00e617a1</loc>
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			  <news:name>Two Kentucky bank employees shot and killed during robbery, police hunting suspect</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T07:10:43.694Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Two Kentucky bank employees shot and killed during robbery, police hunting suspect</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Two bank employees were shot and killed during a robbery at a Kentucky bank on Thursday and police are still on the hunt for the suspect.
Trooper Scottie Pennington, a spokesperson for Kentucky State Police, said a man wearing a gray-and-white hoodie, gloves and a mask entered a U.S. Bank branch in Berea and opened fire, killing a male and female employee.
&quot;They’re our people that work in our community, and they’re no longer with us,&quot; Pennington said. &quot;At this time we do have some leads, and we’re trying our best to bring this evil person to justice.&quot;
State police released a photo of the suspect on social media. He is believed to be about 6-foot-3 and fled the scene toward East Chestnut Street.
MONTANA FUGITIVE&apos;S BROTHER SERVING LIFE SENTENCE FOR SEPARATE MURDER CONVICTION IN SAME TOWN
Authorities said it remains unclear whether the suspect later escaped on foot, in a vehicle or with assistance.
Pennington declined to say whether anything was taken during the robbery.
Law enforcement agencies, including local police, state troopers and the FBI, are searching for the suspect, using helicopters, drones and K-9 units.
STUDENTS STABBED INSIDE WASHINGTON STATE HIGH SCHOOL AS POLICE RESPOND TO CHAOTIC SCENE
&quot;If you see something strange and you don’t feel right about it — you know, your dogs are acting weird — call us,&quot; Pennington said.
Police said local schools were temporarily placed on lockdown, with students later released to their parents.
U.S. Bank said it is working closely with law enforcement and supporting those affected.
&quot;We’re deeply saddened by the tragic event that took the lives of two of our employees at our Berea, Kentucky branch earlier today,&quot; the company said in a statement. &quot;Our hearts go out to the families of the victims, our colleagues and the entire Berea community.&quot;
The Associated Press contributed to this report.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f448afa200899a00e60f99</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>NAU ROUNDUP: Men&apos;s tennis to face Arizona in NCAA Tournament on Friday</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T06:31:11.034Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>NAU ROUNDUP: Men&apos;s tennis to face Arizona in NCAA Tournament on Friday</news:title>
			<news:keywords>A look at news and results from NAU.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f4489ba200899a00e60f90</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Big Sky men&apos;s tennis championship team</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T06:30:51.120Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Big Sky men&apos;s tennis championship team</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The Northern Arizona men&apos;s tennis team poses for a team photo with medals and the Big Sky Conference championship trophy on Saturday at Phoenix Tennis Center.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f44191a200899a00e60b7a</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Arizona mother reunites with former CPS caseworker to thank her for changing her life</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T06:00:49.355Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Arizona mother reunites with former CPS caseworker to thank her for changing her life</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Nearly 20 years after leaving foster care, a Valley mother reunites with the former CPS caseworker she credits with changing her life.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f43f34a200899a00e60a53</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Artemis crew says they wanted to &apos;connect with humanity,&apos; show what can be done when they put their mind to it</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T05:50:44.543Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Artemis crew says they wanted to &apos;connect with humanity,&apos; show what can be done when they put their mind to it</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The Artemis II crew, following their return to Earth after a historic 10-day lunar flyby, spoke with U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Mike Waltz, describing the mission as a &quot;glorious&quot; experience.
The crew — Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch and Jeremy Hansen — returned to Earth on April 10, splashing down off the coast of San Diego after their journey around the Moon during which they set a new record for the farthest distance traveled by humans in space, surpassing the mark set by Apollo 13 in 1970.
Waltz gifted the crew &quot;MUNGA,&quot; or &quot;Make the U.N. Great Again,&quot; hats, inspired by President Donald Trump&apos;s &quot;Make America Great Again&quot; slogan.
The crew was asked by Waltz what they thought as they looked back at Earth from space.
ARTEMIS II PILOT VICTOR GLOVER PRAISES GOD AFTER RETURN, SAYS MISSION WAS &apos;TOO BIG TO BE IN ONE BODY&apos;
&quot;As a crew, we wanted to go for all and by all,&quot; Wiseman said at U.N. headquarters in New York. &quot;And we wanted to set the stage for Artemis III. We wanted to get this space agency in this world ready for Artemis III and IV. But in the end, we really wanted to connect with humanity. We wanted humanity to just pause for a second and see that this world can still do something exceptionally well when they put their mind to it.&quot;
Artemis III is expected to launch next year, and Artemis IV is targeted for the following year.
&quot;You asked how it felt, and it wasn&apos;t one feeling for the entire mission,&quot; Glover told Waltz. &quot;What we saw out the window was changing, and that is one of the unique things … I always felt the urge to just be grateful for what we were seeing, and to be grateful for what we were eventually going back to. And the other thing was just how blessed we are to have this.&quot;
Koch said that when she looked back at Earth, the surrounding darkness made the planet feel &quot;even more special than it&apos;s ever been.&quot;
&quot;Instead of this absolute background that just exists everywhere for us, because that&apos;s all we&apos;ve had, it makes the lines that we redraw on it seem big and important,&quot; she said. &quot;You realize that actually, there&apos;s nothing absolute or guaranteed about this, and that actually, there is such thing as a global scale. And this is the first time I&apos;ve said that at the U.N., but the truth is that the global scale is our world. And what we do with it is our choice.&quot;
Hansen described the experience of seeing the vastness of space and feeling both small as an individual and empowered by what humanity can accomplish together.
&quot;It was like this weird thing where, like stars, some stars look closer in our galaxy than others. And it just kept catching my eye, and it just kept making me feel really tiny, really small as an individual. But then, at the same time, I was out there experiencing it, and it made me feel very powerful as a human race. What we can do together, the fact that we were out there and something that has been really heartwarming since we got back to Earth and started to see how many people stopped to watch the mission and resonate with it,&quot; he said.
Glover also recalled the many emotions tied to the mission, including the &quot;glorious moment&quot; of returning to Earth.
ARTEMIS II ASTRONAUTS FACE TOILET TROUBLE AS THEY HEAD TOWARD THE MOON
During the visit to the U.N., NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman wanted to take a moment to appreciate how far they had come, noting that it was not long ago that Trump established the Artemis program that led to the Artemis II mission.
&quot;In fact, in just 2020, President Trump established the Artemis Accords. Now, the initial framework was an agreement of principles between the United States and seven other like-minded countries on the responsible exploration of space,&quot; he said.
The crew&apos;s visit to the U.N. comes after they met with Trump at the White House on Wednesday. Trump had also spoken to the crew as they were orbiting the moon in early April.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f43ce2a200899a00e60900</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Mesa mobile home residents face eviction deadline amid housing uncertainty</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T05:40:50.762Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Mesa mobile home residents face eviction deadline amid housing uncertainty</news:title>
			<news:keywords>With one day left La Casita residents scramble for housing, saying aid falls short and emotions remain high as evictions take effect.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f419b8a200899a00e5fe38</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Family plans to file lawsuit after 10-year-old was sexually assaulted at school</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T03:10:48.780Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Family plans to file lawsuit after 10-year-old was sexually assaulted at school</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The notice of claim is being served against employees at Orangewood Elementary, the Washington Elementary School District, and probation officers.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f41504a200899a00e5fd04</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Fever star Caitlin Clark avoids serious injury after scary fall leads to early exit in preseason game</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T02:50:44.053Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Fever star Caitlin Clark avoids serious injury after scary fall leads to early exit in preseason game</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Indiana Fever star guard Caitlin Clark exited Thursday night’s preseason game against the Dallas Wings after colliding with one of their players.  
Clark was seen hobbling on the court after taking a step-back three-point shot and landing on Wings star defender Alanna Smith’s foot in the third quarter of the matchup. Upon landing, Clark told reporters after the 95-80 loss that she hit her knee hard when she went down after the foul by Smith.  
Clark rolled over on the court and tried to walk it off as she went toward the Fever bench. Officials ended up reviewing the play and gave Smith, the reigning co-Defensive Player of the Year in the WNBA, a Flagrant 1 foul for not giving Clark a safe amount of room to land after shooting.
CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM
Clark exited the game with fewer than eight minutes left in the third quarter.
She finished with a team-high 21 points despite missing most of the second half. Clark hit two of her three attempted three-pointers, while knocking down 11 of 13 from the free throw line. She also had two rebounds, four assists and one steal in the contest.
Being this was a preseason matchup, Fever fans were holding their collective breath watching Clark in the moment, especially considering the tumultuous season she had in 2025.
CAITLIN CLARK RETURNS TO WNBA COMPETITION AFTER 2025 INJURY IN FEVER PRESEASON GAME
Clark played just 13 games in her sophomore campaign, far from what she had hoped after winning WNBA Rookie of the Year and setting the single-season assists record in 2024.
But it appeared Clark avoided a serious injury that could’ve come in that situation. Being in someone’s landing zone after a shot can lead to severe injuries, especially ankles turning.
Fever head coach Stephanie White didn’t seem to want to push Clark, and sat her the rest of the way.
The Fever still have one more preseason game remaining on the schedule, as they face the Nigerian national team on Saturday. Then, it’s regular-season basketball, with the Fever’s first game that counts on the record against these same Wings in Dallas on May 9.
The Wings are an intriguing team to watch, with Azzi Fudd, the No. 1 overall pick in this year’s WNBA Draft, reuniting with fellow UConn teammate Paige Bueckers to begin her pro journey. Bueckers led the Wings with 20 points on Thursday night, while Fudd finished with four points.
Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f412c6a200899a00e5fcb8</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>&apos;He could have died&apos;: Surprise police investigate assault on 15-year-old at pool party</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T02:41:10.173Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>&apos;He could have died&apos;: Surprise police investigate assault on 15-year-old at pool party</news:title>
			<news:keywords>One juvenile was taken into custody in connection to the incident, according to police.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f412ada200899a00e5fc7e</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Dominican migrant with deportation order, wanted for murder in home country freed by Biden-appointed judge</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T02:40:45.120Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Dominican migrant with deportation order, wanted for murder in home country freed by Biden-appointed judge</news:title>
			<news:keywords>A suspected illegal migrant from the Dominican Republic with a deportation order and an Interpol Red Notice related to a homicide case in his home country was released by a judge appointed by former President Joe Biden, according to the Department of Homeland Security. 
Gomez was ordered released from Immigration and Customs Enforcement custody on Tuesday by U.S. District Judge Melissa DuBose in Rhode Island.
DuBose ordered that Gomez be released from ICE custody because of &quot;continuous unlawful detention,&quot; while ICE argued that he was subject to mandatory detention for having an international arrest warrant for murder.
The judge found that ICE was holding Gomez under a legal authority designed for migrants apprehended at the border, which DuBose determined did not apply to him since he was arrested by local police inside the U.S. A court order reviewed by Fox News shows DuBose found Gomez was not subject to mandatory detention under the statute cited by ICE and was instead entitled to a bond hearing. 
ICE NABS 5 ILLEGAL IMMIGRANTS WANTED FOR MURDER ABROAD IN NEW ENGLAND CRACKDOWN
ICE cannot rearrest him due to DuBose’s order, DHS said.
Gomez was arrested on April 4 for assault and battery in Worcester, Massachusetts. A detainer was then honored, and ICE Boston arrested him after he was released on $500 bail, according to DHS.
He had been held in Rhode Island, where he was issued a deportation order on Tuesday by an immigration judge.
&quot;Bryan Rafael Gomez is a criminal illegal alien from the Dominican Republic with an international warrant for homicide,&quot; DHS Acting Assistant Secretary of Public Affairs Lauren Bis said in a statement. &quot;An activist judge appointed by Joe Biden released this wanted murderer back into American communities.&quot;
&quot;This is yet another example of an activist judge trying to thwart President Trump’s mandate from the American people to remove criminal illegal aliens from our communities,&quot; she continued. &quot;Under President Trump and Secretary Mullin, DHS will continue to fight for the removal of criminal illegal aliens who have no right to be in our country.&quot;
HAITIAN MAN CHARGED IN NC TRIPLE MURDER FLEW INTO US UNDER BIDEN MIGRANT FLIGHTS PROGRAM: ICE
Gomez entered the U.S. illegally in 2022, when he was caught and released by Border Patrol near Lukeville, Arizona, according to DHS.
On January 24, 2023, the Coordination of the Courts of Instruction of the National District of Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, issued a criminal arrest warrant for Bryan Rafael Gomez for homicide. ICE has separately described Gomez as the subject of an Interpol Red Notice.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f41054a200899a00e5fb65</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Wyoming official faces backlash after posting &apos;hang bad judges&apos; comment on abortion ruling</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T02:30:44.146Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Wyoming official faces backlash after posting &apos;hang bad judges&apos; comment on abortion ruling</news:title>
			<news:keywords>A Wyoming city councilman is facing backlash after posting a comment suggesting the state should &quot;hang bad judges&quot; in response to a court ruling on abortion, later insisting the remark was &quot;not a threat.&quot;
State Rep. Mike Yin, a Democrat, shared a post from Wyoming Public Radio &amp; Media on Facebook regarding a Natrona County judge temporarily blocking the state’s six-week abortion ban, allowing abortions to resume while the law faces ongoing legal challenges.
&quot;The legislature should obey the Constitution and the freedom to make your own healthcare choices. Instead we keep making it harder to keep doctors in Wyoming and kids in this state,&quot; Yin wrote in the post. &quot;The only way that changes is at the ballot box.&quot;
Troy Bray, a city councilman in Powell, Wyoming, commented on the post about a judge blocking the state’s so-called &quot;heartbeat&quot; abortion law.
MAINE REP. LAUREL LIBBY&apos;S LAWSUIT OVER CENSURE FOR TRANS ATHLETE POST GOES TO FEDERAL COURT
&quot;In order for Wyoming to find justice, we will have to hang bad judges,&quot; Bray wrote.
The comment quickly drew criticism from other users, some of whom described the remark as dangerous and inappropriate given the role of elected officials.
Bray later addressed the backlash in a lengthy Facebook post, saying his comment was &quot;a statement of my beliefs, NOT a threat,&quot; and not intended as a call for others to act.
MORNING GLORY: MANY FEDERAL JUDGES ARE OVERSTEPPING THEIR POWER, BUT &apos;IMPEACHMENT!&apos; IS NOT THE ANSWER
&quot;That is a statement of my beliefs, NOT a threat, as some have characterized it, nor is it a call for others to act,&quot; Bray wrote.
Bray added that he is working to address what he sees as systemic issues &quot;by any means necessary,&quot; a phrase that has drawn additional scrutiny, though he said he intends to pursue peaceful solutions.
&quot;I will exhaust every peaceful means I can find,&quot; he wrote.
JUDGES BACKING OUT OF RETIREMENT AHEAD OF TRUMP TERM LEAVE GOP SENATORS FUMING
He also argued that Wyoming’s judicial system is &quot;broken&quot; and accused judges of overstepping their authority, writing that courts are often the &quot;last place you will ever find justice.&quot;
Bray expanded on that point in his follow-up post, arguing the legal system is often inaccessible to ordinary people.
&quot;Lawyers file frivolous lawsuits intended to use the system as a punishment, financially draining their adversaries with a process that is formatted to require a specialist lawyer just to participate,&quot; he wrote. &quot;Show up without a lawyer, and you aren&apos;t even allowed to present an argument. Justice is denied to anybody who doesn&apos;t pay for it.&quot;
SCOOP: HOUSE REPUBLICANS REVIVE PUSH TO IMPEACH &apos;ACTIVIST&apos; JUDGES AFTER JOHNSON&apos;S GREEN LIGHT
He also pointed to historical and international examples of public unrest, arguing that people will &quot;fight&quot; for justice when they believe it is being denied.
The comment came as legal battles over Wyoming’s abortion laws continue to play out in court.
Bray, who serves on the Powell City Council, is one of several local officials who have weighed in publicly on the issue, which has drawn strong reactions from both supporters and opponents of abortion restrictions.
Fox News Digital reached out to Bray for additional comment but did not immediately receive a response.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40cfba200899a00e5faac</loc>
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			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>3 months later, Nancy Guthrie remains missing</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T02:16:27.348Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>3 months later, Nancy Guthrie remains missing</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Nancy Guthrie, 84, was reported missing on Feb. 1. Here is a timeline of events.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40cd1a200899a00e5fa99</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Lake Havasu City seeks new board, commission members</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T02:15:45.497Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Lake Havasu City seeks new board, commission members</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Lake Havasu City has several board and commission seats available for citizens to serve in. The City Clerk’s Office is currently accepting applications from citizens interested in volunteering.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40cbda200899a00e5fa90</loc>
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			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Enhanced traffic, dui enforcement expected for Cinco de Mayo</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T02:15:25.900Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Enhanced traffic, dui enforcement expected for Cinco de Mayo</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The Lake Havasu City Police Department is conducting enhanced traffic and DUI enforcement during the Cinco de Mayo holiday, Tuesday, May 5. Funding for this effort is provided by a grant awarded by the Arizona Governor’s Office of Highway Safety.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40ca9a200899a00e5fa87</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Spring Havasu Residents Academy celebrates second round of graduates</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T02:15:05.930Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Spring Havasu Residents Academy celebrates second round of graduates</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Lake Havasu City congratulated the 2026 spring graduates of the Havasu Residents and celebrated the completion of its second class, continuing efforts to strengthen connections between residents and local government.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40c95a200899a00e5fa7e</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>‘Storage Wars’ episode pays tribute to Havasu’s Darrell Sheets days after his death</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T02:14:45.998Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>‘Storage Wars’ episode pays tribute to Havasu’s Darrell Sheets days after his death</news:title>
			<news:keywords>A&amp;E closed a recent episode of “Storage Wars” with an on-air tribute to longtime cast member Darrell Sheets, a well-known Lake Havasu City resident found dead at his home days earlier, according to TV Insider.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40c81a200899a00e5fa75</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>ASU researchers that helped with NASA’s Artemis missions are using Arizona landmarks to prepare for future Moon landing</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T02:14:25.995Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>ASU researchers that helped with NASA’s Artemis missions are using Arizona landmarks to prepare for future Moon landing</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Even as the world celebrated the success of the Artemis II mission, researchers in Arizona were already looking ahead to Artemis III.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40c6ea200899a00e5fa5a</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Hobbs, GOP leaders trade blame as Arizona budget talks stall</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T02:14:06.256Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Hobbs, GOP leaders trade blame as Arizona budget talks stall</news:title>
			<news:keywords>PHOENIX -- House Speaker Steve Montenegro said Wednesday it&apos;s up to Gov. Katie Hobbs to reach for the phone if she wants a deal on the budget</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40c5aa200899a00e5fa51</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>People of Havasu: Brenda Johnson brings friendship, comradery to special athletes</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T02:13:46.478Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>People of Havasu: Brenda Johnson brings friendship, comradery to special athletes</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Over the past four years, Brenda Johnson’s cheerleading team has won three gold medals and two silver medals - but the awards have never mattered more than the athletes themselves.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40c46a200899a00e5fa48</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Flagstaff beach volleyball wins state championship over Gilbert Christian, 3-1</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T02:13:26.250Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Flagstaff beach volleyball wins state championship over Gilbert Christian, 3-1</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The Eagles won their first state title in their third championship appearance in five years.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40c32a200899a00e5fa3f</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Coconino County hosting Roadway Safety Summit community meetings</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T02:13:06.254Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Coconino County hosting Roadway Safety Summit community meetings</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Coconino County holding Roadway Safety Summit meetings through July.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40c1ea200899a00e5fa36</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Polling predicts uphill battle for public safety funding measure in Flagstaff</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T02:12:46.297Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Polling predicts uphill battle for public safety funding measure in Flagstaff</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Polling shows mixed results by voters in response to potential bond sale and sales tax increase to fund for police, fire and other public safety services.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40c0aa200899a00e5fa2d</loc>
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			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Arizona Department of Forestry and Fire Management to continue community cleanup event</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T02:12:26.317Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Arizona Department of Forestry and Fire Management to continue community cleanup event</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Arizona Department of Forestry and Fire Management to continue cleanup efforts by dissolved Bear Jaw Interagency Fire and Fuels Crew.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40bf6a200899a00e5fa24</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>The Taylor House kitchen in Flagstaff dedicated to Nackard Pepsi</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T02:12:06.359Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>The Taylor House kitchen in Flagstaff dedicated to Nackard Pepsi</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Nackard Pepsi recently had the space&apos;s kitchen renamed in its honor.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40be2a200899a00e5fa1b</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Two-time cross country state champion Alex Bland soars to MIT</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T02:11:46.361Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Two-time cross country state champion Alex Bland soars to MIT</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Bland chose MIT over Arizona and Arizona State, looking for a prestigious academic experience.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40bcea200899a00e5fa12</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Gardening Etcetera: Rooted in Flagstaff, plants are in her genes</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T02:11:26.319Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Gardening Etcetera: Rooted in Flagstaff, plants are in her genes</news:title>
			<news:keywords>This week&apos;s edition of the Gardening Etcetera column, written for the community by certified Master Gardeners of the University of Arizona&apos;s Coconino County Cooperative Extension Master Gardener Program.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40bb7a200899a00e5f9e7</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Former colleagues detail CHP captain’s spiral before alleged murder-for-hire plot against husband</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T02:11:03.245Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Former colleagues detail CHP captain’s spiral before alleged murder-for-hire plot against husband</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Former colleagues of a once-rising California Highway Patrol captain say they watched her spiral before her estranged husband was killed by an alleged hitman.
Retired Sgt. Brian Wittmer testified Wednesday at the Kentucky trial of alleged Napa hitman Thomas O’Donnell that Capt. Julie Harding, 49, began acting differently toward the end of their 3 1/2 year working relationship.
Prosecutors allege O’Donnell fatally shot Michael Harding, 53, in a murder-for-hire plot orchestrated by Harding, a former CHP commander. O’Donnell has pleaded not guilty to capital murder charges.
Wittmer testified, according to KCRA, that Harding got thinner, acted erratically and began sharing more about her personal life.
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In September 2022, Wittmer said, Harding called to tell him her husband was dead. He testified that the call felt exaggerated.
&quot;When I hung up the phone, I thought she wanted me to remember this moment in time,&quot; Wittmer said, according to KCRA.
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Then-Assistant Chief Doug Lyons later took the stand and described receiving a similar phone call from Harding. Lyons said he had just taken on a new role at CHP and had become her supervisor.
&quot;It was 35 minutes of rambling, and I didn’t even know Julie. So that was the strange part. I never met her,&quot; Lyons said.
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Asked whether he believed Harding might be a suspect in Michael Harding’s killing based on that conversation, Lyons responded, &quot;Absolutely.&quot;
FBI Agent Wayne Johnson testified that he found no evidence of a payment between Harding and O’Donnell and no forensic evidence tying O’Donnell to a murder weapon.
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Harding later died by a self-inflicted gunshot wound after O’Donnell was arrested at Sacramento International Airport in connection with Michael Harding’s death, KCRA reported.
Investigators said phone data eventually led them to O’Donnell after repeated calls between the two surfaced in Harding’s phone records.
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&quot;There was this number that she was calling and talking to almost every single day, sometimes more than once a day,&quot; Kentucky State Police Det. B.J. Burton said.
The California Highway Patrol said in a statement that Harding was on leave at the time of her death. She had worked at the department since 1999 and had been commander of the Yuba Sutter area office since 2018.
After the couple separated, she remained in California while Michael Harding moved to the couple’s home in Celina, Tennessee. According to CourtTV, on September 22, 2022, Michael, who owned a HVAC business, traveled from Tennessee to Burkesville, Kentucky, for what he believed was an emergency service call. Prosecutors allege that the call was a setup, and he was killed at the vacant Kentucky house.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40b8ca200899a00e5f9b7</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>ChatGPT Images 2.0 is a hit in India, but not a big winner elsewhere, yet</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T02:10:20.784Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>ChatGPT Images 2.0 is a hit in India, but not a big winner elsewhere, yet</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Users in India are embracing ChatGPT Images 2.0 for creative, personal visuals — from avatars to cinematic portraits.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f4094ca200899a00e5f94f</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Doctor and son accused of running dangerous side-business scheme in New York</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T02:00:44.607Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Doctor and son accused of running dangerous side-business scheme in New York</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Officials announced Thursday that a doctor and his son have been accused of operating a family-run pill mill in New York, in what authorities describe as a brazen abuse of medical authority to fuel the illegal distribution of prescription drugs.
Over a roughly three-month period in 2022, the physician allegedly wrote fraudulent prescriptions for highly addictive medications without ever examining patients, while his son found buyers and collected payments as part of the scheme, according to the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA).
Authorities say the pair distributed a wide range of drugs, including those commonly known as Percocet, Adderall and Xanax.
Dr. Richard Taubman, a 71-year-old retired physician, and his 33-year-old son, Eric Taubman, surrendered Thursday to investigators with the Nassau County District Attorney&apos;s Office following an extensive, multi-year joint investigation.
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&quot;Their alleged scheme to unlawfully distribute controlled substance prescriptions, placing profits above public health, is not only reckless and dangerous, but unconscionable,&quot; DEA New York Enforcement Division Special Agent in Charge Farhana Islam said in a statement. 
&quot;Medical professionals are entrusted with protecting patients’ lives, not destroying them by exploiting them to addiction and harm.&quot; 
According to the DEA, the father is a retired obstetrician-gynecologist from Great Neck who returned to practice at a non-surgical weight loss center in Islandia, in Suffolk County, in early 2022.
&apos;GAS STATION HEROIN&apos; BANNED IN ANOTHER STATE AMID NATIONWIDE CRACKDOWNS
Investigators allege that between April 5 and June 29, 2022, Taubman wrote dozens of prescriptions for controlled substances for multiple individuals without a legitimate medical purpose and outside the course of his practice. 
He also submitted the prescriptions electronically from his home in Glen Head to pharmacies across Queens, officials further alleged. 
Separately, the son allegedly provided the father with the personal information and drug requests of friends and acquaintances.
TEXAS DOCTOR SENTENCED TO 10 YEARS IN PRISON IN ONE OF THE ‘MOST SIGNIFICANT’ CASES OF PATIENT HARM
Numerous reports from pharmacist employees soon flooded the DEA, and the agency said the father’s prescription license was stripped roughly one month later.
The investigation also revealed that some individuals allegedly circulated the drugs even further, selling them for profit, trading them for cash and other drugs, or simply using them. 
The father and son turned themselves in on Thursday and pleaded not guilty to multiple charges.
They are specifically charged with 23 counts of illegally selling or trying to sell drug prescriptions, along with one count of illegally teaming up to carry out this scheme.
If convicted, they face up to five and a half years in prison.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40707a200899a00e5f8da</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Deadly hospital stabbing puts Newsom under pressure over ICE detainer fight</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:51:03.489Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Deadly hospital stabbing puts Newsom under pressure over ICE detainer fight</news:title>
			<news:keywords>A man is dead after a brutal stabbing inside a San Francisco hospital and now federal immigration officials are pointing squarely at California’s sanctuary policies and the Biden administration’s border decisions as contributing factors.
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) is urging Governor Gavin Newsom and state officials not to release the suspect, a Venezuelan national in the country illegally who had previously been encountered and released by Border Patrol.
Wilfredo Jose Tortolero-Arriechi is accused of fatally stabbing 51-year-old Alberto Rangel inside Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital on December 4. Rangel succumbed to his injuries two days later, on December 6.
According to the Department of Homeland Security, ICE has already lodged a detainer request to keep Tortolero-Arriechi in custody — a request that now hangs in the balance in a state that has repeatedly clashed with federal immigration enforcement.
DHS TAKES VICTORY LAP AFTER ARRESTING OVER 10K ILLEGAL ALIENS IN DEEP BLUE CITY DESPITE VIOLENT RIOTS
&quot;If it weren’t for the Biden administration’s reckless open-border policies, Alberto Rangel would still be alive,&quot; Acting Assistant Secretary Lauren Bis said in a statement, directly tying the killing to federal immigration policy. She also called on Newsom to ensure the suspect is not released, blasting sanctuary policies that she says &quot;put American lives at risk.&quot;
The suspect had reportedly displayed alarming behavior in the weeks leading up to the attack, allegedly threatening hospital staff and his own doctor before the deadly stabbing unfolded.
EXCLUSIVE: ILLEGAL IMMIGRANT RELEASED UNDER BIDEN &apos;CATCH AND RELEASE&apos; ALLEGEDLY KILLS DRIVER IN POLICE CHASE
Federal officials say Tortolero-Arriechi was first encountered by U.S. Border Patrol in 2023 and then released into the country. The case is adding new fuel to the fight over California’s sanctuary policies.
Earlier this year, ICE revealed that more than 33,000 criminal illegal immigrants are currently in custody across California with active detainers, including individuals accused or convicted of serious crimes such as homicide, sexual assault and drug trafficking.
Despite that, officials say thousands have been released.
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Since January 2026 alone, California jurisdictions have declined to honor ICE detainers in more than 4,500 cases, according to the agency. Those releases included individuals tied to dozens of homicides, hundreds of assaults and a wide range of other violent and drug-related offenses, ICE said.
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The latest push from federal officials builds on earlier warnings. In February, Acting ICE Director Todd Lyons sent a letter to California Attorney General Rob Bonta urging him to &quot;put the safety of Americans first&quot; by honoring detainers for more than 33,000 criminal illegal immigrants in state custody.
Lyons warned that &quot;no community serious about keeping its residents safe will tolerate a clear aberration of the law,&quot; pressing California officials to cooperate with ICE and take &quot;the worst of the worst off the streets.&quot;
Meanwhile, Alberto Rangel’s death is now being used by federal officials to underscore what they argue are the real-world consequences of those policies.
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Newsom’s office pushed back on that characterization, saying the state’s approach prioritizes accountability and public safety.
&quot;If someone commits a serious crime, they should be held accountable in our justice system,&quot; a spokesperson for Newsom’s office told Fox News Digital. &quot;Allowing someone to evade responsibility simply by being deported undermines the rule of law and completely disrespects the victims harmed by that crime. Our focus must always be to ensure those who commit violent acts face their consequences here.&quot;
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The governor’s office also pointed to California’s record of cooperating with federal immigration authorities in certain cases, noting that, since 2019, the state has coordinated the transfer of more than 12,000 individuals, including those convicted of serious and violent crimes, into ICE custody.
Officials added that state law allows coordination with ICE for individuals convicted of serious felonies or those facing credible charges, and said California does not interfere with federal immigration enforcement.
They also argued that federal authorities do not always take custody of individuals when detainers are issued, claiming ICE fails to pick up roughly one in eight people released from state prisons who have immigration holds.
Tortolero-Arriechi remains in custody at the San Francisco County Jail, where he faces homicide and weapons charges, as pressure mounts on California leaders over whether they will comply with federal requests to keep him there.
In a statement issued after his death in December 2025, SEIU Local 521 Chief Elected Officer Riko Mendez said, &quot;Our hearts are with the family, friends, and coworkers of Alberto Rangel,&quot; remembering him as a dedicated social worker.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f406f3a200899a00e5f8d1</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Louisiana grandmother allegedly forced 4-year-old granddaughter to drink lethal amount of whiskey</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:50:43.742Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Louisiana grandmother allegedly forced 4-year-old granddaughter to drink lethal amount of whiskey</news:title>
			<news:keywords>A Louisiana grandmother is facing a jury this week on first-degree murder charges after prosecutors allege she forced her 4-year-old granddaughter to drink a lethal amount of whiskey as a &quot;punishment.&quot;
Roxanne Record, 57, appeared in court as prosecutors described the final moments of her granddaughter, China Record’s, life in April 2022. Prosecutors said the child was forced to her knees and made to finish a bottle of Canadian Mist whiskey while her mother, Kadjah Record, allegedly looked on and did nothing.
During opening statements, Assistant District Attorney Dana Cummings described the typical relationship children have with their grandparents, noting that China had the opposite.
&quot;China never had that because her grandmother never, ever took to her, never liked her, treated her differently than she treated the other children,&quot; Cummings said, according to The Advocate.
EX-MAYOR CONVICTED AFTER SON WALKS IN ON LEWD ACT AT ALCOHOL-INFUSED POOL BASH
Prosecutors alleged a &quot;pattern of cruelty&quot; inside the Baton Rouge home, saying China was so marginalized that her siblings were conditioned to believe the 4-year-old was &quot;stealing&quot; when she tried to access basic necessities like food and water.
Prosecutors said the punishment began when China took a single sip from a whiskey bottle left on a kitchen counter.
They allege Roxanne Record then forced the child to consume the rest of the 750ml bottle — approximately 1.6 pints of 80-proof liquor.
KAREN READ SAYS SHE POURED EXTRA SHOTS INTO HER COCKTAILS BEFORE JOHN O&apos;KEEFE&apos;S DEATH
First responders found the child unresponsive at the family’s Wallis Street home. An autopsy later revealed a blood alcohol content of 0.680 — more than eight times the legal limit for an adult driver.
The Baton Rouge Police Department did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital&apos;s request for comment.
&quot;She… just went on with daily life while she died,&quot; Cummings told the jury.
FAMILY OF SLAIN BOSTON COP JOHN O&apos;KEEFE FUMES AS EX-GIRLFRIEND KAREN READ WALKS FREE: &apos;SICKENING&apos;
Meanwhile, defense attorney Caitlin Fowlkes countered that while China&apos;s death was a &quot;tragedy that nobody should have to endure,&quot; it was also an accident.
She argued Record attempted to save the girl with CPR and said the state cannot prove the &quot;specific intent&quot; required for a first-degree murder conviction.
If convicted of first-degree murder, Roxanne Record faces a mandatory sentence of life in prison without the possibility of parole.
The child’s mother, Kadjah Record, is also charged with murder and is expected to stand trial later this summer.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40652a200899a00e5f894</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Byron York: Protect Trump first</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:48:02.369Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Byron York: Protect Trump first</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The recent assassination attempt on President Donald Trump set off a round of soul-searching about the state of American society. There is clearly something deeply wrong in a nation that has seen the third serious attempt on a president&apos;s life…</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f4063ea200899a00e5f88b</loc>
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			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>David Allan Coe, who wrote &apos;Take This Job and Shove It&apos; and other country hits, dies at 86</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:47:42.554Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>David Allan Coe, who wrote &apos;Take This Job and Shove It&apos; and other country hits, dies at 86</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Outlaw country singer-songwriter David Allan Coe, who wrote the blue-collar anthem “Take This Job and Shove It&apos;&apos; and created a singing career after a stint in prison, has died. He was 86. A statement to People said he died Wednesday.…</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f4062aa200899a00e5f881</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Supreme Court hollows out a landmark law that had protected minority voting rights for 6 decades</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:47:22.956Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Supreme Court hollows out a landmark law that had protected minority voting rights for 6 decades</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The Voting Rights Act over its six decades became one of the most consequential laws in the nation’s history, preventing discrimination against minorities at the ballot box and helping to elect thousands of Black and Hispanic representatives at all levels…</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40621a200899a00e5f878</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Supreme Court hollows out a landmark law that had protected minority voting rights for 6 decades</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:47:13.261Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Supreme Court hollows out a landmark law that had protected minority voting rights for 6 decades</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The Voting Rights Act over its six decades became one of the most consequential laws in the nation’s history, preventing discrimination against minorities at the ballot box and helping to elect thousands of Black and Hispanic representatives at all levels…</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40617a200899a00e5f86f</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Trump floats new plan aimed at creating maritime alliance to reopen Strait of Hormuz as Iran war shows no end in sight</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:47:03.071Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Trump floats new plan aimed at creating maritime alliance to reopen Strait of Hormuz as Iran war shows no end in sight</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Trump floats new plan aimed at creating maritime alliance to reopen Strait of Hormuz as Iran war shows no end in sight.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f4060da200899a00e5f866</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Trump floats new plan aimed at creating maritime alliance to reopen Strait of Hormuz as Iran war shows no end in sight</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:46:53.631Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Trump floats new plan aimed at creating maritime alliance to reopen Strait of Hormuz as Iran war shows no end in sight</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Trump floats new plan aimed at creating maritime alliance to reopen Strait of Hormuz as Iran war shows no end in sight.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40603a200899a00e5f85d</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>ASU women’s tennis looks to make history as NCAA Tournament begins</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:46:43.178Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>ASU women’s tennis looks to make history as NCAA Tournament begins</news:title>
			<news:keywords>TEMPE – It’s easy for coaches and players to talk about culture from the inside of a program. That talk gains credibility when the same view exists from the outside.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
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			<news:title>ASU women’s tennis looks to make history as NCAA Tournament begins</news:title>
			<news:keywords>TEMPE – It’s easy for coaches and players to talk about culture from the inside of a program. That talk gains credibility when the same view exists from the outside.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
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			<news:title>ASU women’s tennis looks to make history as NCAA Tournament begins</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The Arizona State women&apos;s tennis team will attempt to reach the round of 32 at the NCAA Tournament for the sixth time in the past seven, and will attempt to make the round of 16 for the first time since…</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
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			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:46:13.870Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>ASU women’s tennis looks to make history as NCAA Tournament begins</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The Arizona State women&apos;s tennis team will attempt to reach the round of 32 at the NCAA Tournament for the sixth time in the past seven, and will attempt to make the round of 16 for the first time since…</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
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			  <news:name>Top rung: ASU’s Ofek Shimanov adjusting to midseason elevation to No. 1 singles</news:name>
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			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:46:03.229Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Top rung: ASU’s Ofek Shimanov adjusting to midseason elevation to No. 1 singles</news:title>
			<news:keywords>PHOENIX – When the Arizona State men’s tennis team took down Texas Tech 4-3 on April 3, the scoresheet omitted a familiar name – Bor Artnak. 
The junior from Slovenia had been the Sun Devils’ No. 1 singles player since Murphy Cassone decided to forgo his senior year of eligibility to play on the Associations of Tennis Professionals tour, but then Artnak abruptly left the team in late March.
Even without Artnak’s services, the Sun Devils were ready to move forward. 
In stepped Ofek Shimanov, a sophomore transfer from Southern Methodist University who had primarily played No. 3 singles for the Sun Devils. 
Although Mathis Bondaz, a redshirt senior cemented at No. 2 singles, appeared an obvious choice to move up, Shimanov’s consecutive performances against TCU’s Duncan Chan, the No. 7 singles player in the country, and Baylor’s Zsombor Velcz, ranked No. 39, convinced coach Matt Hill to back his young prospect. The Israeli was up 5-2 in a deciding set against Chan that went unfinished and was locked into a battle with Velcz that also wasn’t complete. 
“Seniority is not the decision-making factor for us on who to play where,” Hill said. “You (compete with) those two guys, you can beat anybody in college tennis. He was showing some great progress in his game. He’s showing the weapons and the ability to take points, collect points, hurt a player, which you need to have at line one.”
Shimanov’s tennis journey began as a 3-year-old coached by his father, Ariel, in his hometown of Ramla. Despite the familial bond, Shimanov moved to the Israel Tennis &amp; Education Center as a teenager for better opportunities, living at the academy. 
After receiving an army exemption when he turned 18 due to medical problems, Shimanov got the opportunity to play collegiate tennis in the US. Hill was initially interested in bringing Shimanov to Tempe as a freshman, but uncertainty around Cassone’s pending led the Israeli to head to SMU instead. 
The first thing Hill recalled from scouting Shimanov was his timing of the ball, referring to Shimanov’s ability to sync his swing, body movement and racket contact point with the incoming ball’s speed and trajectory to produce a clean shot.
“His timing is not normal,” Hill said. “(It’s) super special.” 
Shimanov entered SMU speaking almost no English, a difficult transition on a team featuring nearly all American-born players, but the process helped the freshman experience the culture of college tennis. 
“I saw how college is working when it’s a system with a coach coming to you and doing the matches and (it’s) so loud and millions of things going on during the match,” Shimanov said. “I think I got the experience there, and just to move, I think I did a really, really good choice.”
Shimanov’s goal is to turn professional, and during his lone year as a Mustang, he came to the conclusion that SMU wasn’t the right environment for him to do so. Revisiting his previous relationship with Hill, Shimanov took a trip to ASU, where he felt at home. 
“I have one more Israeli guy here (Roi Ginat),” Shimanov said. “I felt (like I was) in Israel with the weather, with the places, with the trees, and with the people and with the food.” 
ASU’s roster is now primarily made up of international students and Ginat, a senior who came to Tempe from Kfar Saba in 2023, was Shimanov’s biggest reason for becoming a Sun Devil.
Ginat and Shimanov have a relationship stretching back to their childhood in Israel, and the senior aided Shimanov’s decision-making throughout the transfer process, even advocating for Hill to pursue the freshman in the portal. 
“When you have Roi here, another Israeli that’s been here for four years, and can help guide you, that’s been incredible,” Hill said. 
Starting the season behind Artnak and Bondaz, two upperclassmen returning from last season, Shimanov began at singles No. 3, a position he was familiar with from his time at SMU. His doubles partners frequently shifted around but he’s been paired with sophomore Milos Mikovic for the latter half of the season, a partnership that’s just starting to develop. 
“It’s growing, the trust in each other, and that’s really important in doubles, knowing that you can rely on your teammates no matter (what), especially deuce points,” Mikovic said. “If he’s returning better this game, you have to be like, ‘Hey, dude. You got this, I believe in you’, and that means a lot.”
Since taking over the top spot, Shimanov has continued to expand his game. Hill has worked on increasing Shimanov’s net clearance on serves and being more aggressive in tight spaces, pushing him to drive balls from the corners that he would previously slice. 
Hill noticed a rare “sureness” that Shimanov carries with him throughout his matches, one that carries over to his return game. Those fast hands and eye for timing have enabled Shimanov to improve tactically, balancing which points to be aggressive on and which situations to play more safely. 
Juxtaposed with his energetic demeanor on-court, Shimanov is reserved as a person. Part of it ties back to his lack of familiarity with English but when he does speak, his words carry “a lot of weight,” Hill said. 
Physical changes have also aided Shimanov’s transformation across his first season in Tempe. When ASU hosted regionals in October, the staff highlighted weaknesses in Shimanov’s physicality, where he lagged behind the rest of the draw. 
“(Shimanov) made a commitment at that time to pull back on the competitive calendar and get in the gym double time,” Hill said. “He’s been doing pretty much double (the) gym of any other player.”
Near the end of Shimanov’s interview with Cronkite News, he asked for the time and then asked if he could leave early. He was headed for the gym, with his ultimate pursuit of turning professional taking another step. 
For now, Shimanov is hoping to help the Sun Devils extend their season when they open the NCAA Tournament on Friday in San Diego against No. 20 UCLA.
The post Top rung: ASU’s Ofek Shimanov adjusting to midseason elevation to No. 1 singles appeared first on Cronkite News.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
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			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:45:53.905Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Top rung: ASU’s Ofek Shimanov adjusting to midseason elevation to No. 1 singles</news:title>
			<news:keywords>PHOENIX – When the Arizona State men’s tennis team took down Texas Tech 4-3 on April 3, the scoresheet omitted a familiar name – Bor Artnak. 
The junior from Slovenia had been the Sun Devils’ No. 1 singles player since Murphy Cassone decided to forgo his senior year of eligibility to play on the Associations of Tennis Professionals tour, but then Artnak abruptly left the team in late March.
Even without Artnak’s services, the Sun Devils were ready to move forward. 
In stepped Ofek Shimanov, a sophomore transfer from Southern Methodist University who had primarily played No. 3 singles for the Sun Devils. 
Although Mathis Bondaz, a redshirt senior cemented at No. 2 singles, appeared an obvious choice to move up, Shimanov’s consecutive performances against TCU’s Duncan Chan, the No. 7 singles player in the country, and Baylor’s Zsombor Velcz, ranked No. 39, convinced coach Matt Hill to back his young prospect. The Israeli was up 5-2 in a deciding set against Chan that went unfinished and was locked into a battle with Velcz that also wasn’t complete. 
“Seniority is not the decision-making factor for us on who to play where,” Hill said. “You (compete with) those two guys, you can beat anybody in college tennis. He was showing some great progress in his game. He’s showing the weapons and the ability to take points, collect points, hurt a player, which you need to have at line one.”
Shimanov’s tennis journey began as a 3-year-old coached by his father, Ariel, in his hometown of Ramla. Despite the familial bond, Shimanov moved to the Israel Tennis &amp; Education Center as a teenager for better opportunities, living at the academy. 
After receiving an army exemption when he turned 18 due to medical problems, Shimanov got the opportunity to play collegiate tennis in the US. Hill was initially interested in bringing Shimanov to Tempe as a freshman, but uncertainty around Cassone’s pending led the Israeli to head to SMU instead. 
The first thing Hill recalled from scouting Shimanov was his timing of the ball, referring to Shimanov’s ability to sync his swing, body movement and racket contact point with the incoming ball’s speed and trajectory to produce a clean shot.
“His timing is not normal,” Hill said. “(It’s) super special.” 
Shimanov entered SMU speaking almost no English, a difficult transition on a team featuring nearly all American-born players, but the process helped the freshman experience the culture of college tennis. 
“I saw how college is working when it’s a system with a coach coming to you and doing the matches and (it’s) so loud and millions of things going on during the match,” Shimanov said. “I think I got the experience there, and just to move, I think I did a really, really good choice.”
Shimanov’s goal is to turn professional, and during his lone year as a Mustang, he came to the conclusion that SMU wasn’t the right environment for him to do so. Revisiting his previous relationship with Hill, Shimanov took a trip to ASU, where he felt at home. 
“I have one more Israeli guy here (Roi Ginat),” Shimanov said. “I felt (like I was) in Israel with the weather, with the places, with the trees, and with the people and with the food.” 
ASU’s roster is now primarily made up of international students and Ginat, a senior who came to Tempe from Kfar Saba in 2023, was Shimanov’s biggest reason for becoming a Sun Devil.
Ginat and Shimanov have a relationship stretching back to their childhood in Israel, and the senior aided Shimanov’s decision-making throughout the transfer process, even advocating for Hill to pursue the freshman in the portal. 
“When you have Roi here, another Israeli that’s been here for four years, and can help guide you, that’s been incredible,” Hill said. 
Starting the season behind Artnak and Bondaz, two upperclassmen returning from last season, Shimanov began at singles No. 3, a position he was familiar with from his time at SMU. His doubles partners frequently shifted around but he’s been paired with sophomore Milos Mikovic for the latter half of the season, a partnership that’s just starting to develop. 
“It’s growing, the trust in each other, and that’s really important in doubles, knowing that you can rely on your teammates no matter (what), especially deuce points,” Mikovic said. “If he’s returning better this game, you have to be like, ‘Hey, dude. You got this, I believe in you’, and that means a lot.”
Since taking over the top spot, Shimanov has continued to expand his game. Hill has worked on increasing Shimanov’s net clearance on serves and being more aggressive in tight spaces, pushing him to drive balls from the corners that he would previously slice. 
Hill noticed a rare “sureness” that Shimanov carries with him throughout his matches, one that carries over to his return game. Those fast hands and eye for timing have enabled Shimanov to improve tactically, balancing which points to be aggressive on and which situations to play more safely. 
Juxtaposed with his energetic demeanor on-court, Shimanov is reserved as a person. Part of it ties back to his lack of familiarity with English but when he does speak, his words carry “a lot of weight,” Hill said. 
Physical changes have also aided Shimanov’s transformation across his first season in Tempe. When ASU hosted regionals in October, the staff highlighted weaknesses in Shimanov’s physicality, where he lagged behind the rest of the draw. 
“(Shimanov) made a commitment at that time to pull back on the competitive calendar and get in the gym double time,” Hill said. “He’s been doing pretty much double (the) gym of any other player.”
Near the end of Shimanov’s interview with Cronkite News, he asked for the time and then asked if he could leave early. He was headed for the gym, with his ultimate pursuit of turning professional taking another step. 
For now, Shimanov is hoping to help the Sun Devils extend their season when they open the NCAA Tournament on Friday in San Diego against No. 20 UCLA.
The post Top rung: ASU’s Ofek Shimanov adjusting to midseason elevation to No. 1 singles appeared first on Cronkite News.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
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		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f405cda200899a00e5f828</loc>
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			  <news:name>Top rung: ASU’s Ofek Shimanov adjusting to midseason elevation to No. 1 singles</news:name>
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			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:45:49.401Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Top rung: ASU’s Ofek Shimanov adjusting to midseason elevation to No. 1 singles</news:title>
			<news:keywords>PHOENIX – When the Arizona State men’s tennis team took down Texas Tech 4-3 on April 3, the scoresheet omitted a familiar name – Bor Artnak. 
The junior from Slovenia had been the Sun Devils’ No. 1 singles player since Murphy Cassone decided to forgo his senior year of eligibility to play on the Associations of Tennis Professionals tour, but then Artnak abruptly left the team in late March.
Even without Artnak’s services, the Sun Devils were ready to move forward. 
In stepped Ofek Shimanov, a sophomore transfer from Southern Methodist University who had primarily played No. 3 singles for the Sun Devils. 
Although Mathis Bondaz, a redshirt senior cemented at No. 2 singles, appeared an obvious choice to move up, Shimanov’s consecutive performances against TCU’s Duncan Chan, the No. 7 singles player in the country, and Baylor’s Zsombor Velcz, ranked No. 39, convinced coach Matt Hill to back his young prospect. The Israeli was up 5-2 in a deciding set against Chan that went unfinished and was locked into a battle with Velcz that also wasn’t complete. 
“Seniority is not the decision-making factor for us on who to play where,” Hill said. “You (compete with) those two guys, you can beat anybody in college tennis. He was showing some great progress in his game. He’s showing the weapons and the ability to take points, collect points, hurt a player, which you need to have at line one.”
Shimanov’s tennis journey began as a 3-year-old coached by his father, Ariel, in his hometown of Ramla. Despite the familial bond, Shimanov moved to the Israel Tennis &amp; Education Center as a teenager for better opportunities, living at the academy. 
After receiving an army exemption when he turned 18 due to medical problems, Shimanov got the opportunity to play collegiate tennis in the US. Hill was initially interested in bringing Shimanov to Tempe as a freshman, but uncertainty around Cassone’s pending led the Israeli to head to SMU instead. 
The first thing Hill recalled from scouting Shimanov was his timing of the ball, referring to Shimanov’s ability to sync his swing, body movement and racket contact point with the incoming ball’s speed and trajectory to produce a clean shot.
“His timing is not normal,” Hill said. “(It’s) super special.” 
Shimanov entered SMU speaking almost no English, a difficult transition on a team featuring nearly all American-born players, but the process helped the freshman experience the culture of college tennis. 
“I saw how college is working when it’s a system with a coach coming to you and doing the matches and (it’s) so loud and millions of things going on during the match,” Shimanov said. “I think I got the experience there, and just to move, I think I did a really, really good choice.”
Shimanov’s goal is to turn professional, and during his lone year as a Mustang, he came to the conclusion that SMU wasn’t the right environment for him to do so. Revisiting his previous relationship with Hill, Shimanov took a trip to ASU, where he felt at home. 
“I have one more Israeli guy here (Roi Ginat),” Shimanov said. “I felt (like I was) in Israel with the weather, with the places, with the trees, and with the people and with the food.” 
ASU’s roster is now primarily made up of international students and Ginat, a senior who came to Tempe from Kfar Saba in 2023, was Shimanov’s biggest reason for becoming a Sun Devil.
Ginat and Shimanov have a relationship stretching back to their childhood in Israel, and the senior aided Shimanov’s decision-making throughout the transfer process, even advocating for Hill to pursue the freshman in the portal. 
“When you have Roi here, another Israeli that’s been here for four years, and can help guide you, that’s been incredible,” Hill said. 
Starting the season behind Artnak and Bondaz, two upperclassmen returning from last season, Shimanov began at singles No. 3, a position he was familiar with from his time at SMU. His doubles partners frequently shifted around but he’s been paired with sophomore Milos Mikovic for the latter half of the season, a partnership that’s just starting to develop. 
“It’s growing, the trust in each other, and that’s really important in doubles, knowing that you can rely on your teammates no matter (what), especially deuce points,” Mikovic said. “If he’s returning better this game, you have to be like, ‘Hey, dude. You got this, I believe in you’, and that means a lot.”
Since taking over the top spot, Shimanov has continued to expand his game. Hill has worked on increasing Shimanov’s net clearance on serves and being more aggressive in tight spaces, pushing him to drive balls from the corners that he would previously slice. 
Hill noticed a rare “sureness” that Shimanov carries with him throughout his matches, one that carries over to his return game. Those fast hands and eye for timing have enabled Shimanov to improve tactically, balancing which points to be aggressive on and which situations to play more safely. 
Juxtaposed with his energetic demeanor on-court, Shimanov is reserved as a person. Part of it ties back to his lack of familiarity with English but when he does speak, his words carry “a lot of weight,” Hill said. 
Physical changes have also aided Shimanov’s transformation across his first season in Tempe. When ASU hosted regionals in October, the staff highlighted weaknesses in Shimanov’s physicality, where he lagged behind the rest of the draw. 
“(Shimanov) made a commitment at that time to pull back on the competitive calendar and get in the gym double time,” Hill said. “He’s been doing pretty much double (the) gym of any other player.”
Near the end of Shimanov’s interview with Cronkite News, he asked for the time and then asked if he could leave early. He was headed for the gym, with his ultimate pursuit of turning professional taking another step. 
For now, Shimanov is hoping to help the Sun Devils extend their season when they open the NCAA Tournament on Friday in San Diego against No. 20 UCLA.
The post Top rung: ASU’s Ofek Shimanov adjusting to midseason elevation to No. 1 singles appeared first on Cronkite News.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
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			  <news:name>Top rung: ASU’s Ofek Shimanov adjusting to midseason elevation to No. 1 singles</news:name>
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			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:45:48.345Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Top rung: ASU’s Ofek Shimanov adjusting to midseason elevation to No. 1 singles</news:title>
			<news:keywords>PHOENIX – When the Arizona State men’s tennis team took down Texas Tech 4-3 on April 3, the scoresheet omitted a familiar name – Bor Artnak. 
The junior from Slovenia had been the Sun Devils’ No. 1 singles player since Murphy Cassone decided to forgo his senior year of eligibility to play on the Associations of Tennis Professionals tour, but then Artnak abruptly left the team in late March.
Even without Artnak’s services, the Sun Devils were ready to move forward. 
In stepped Ofek Shimanov, a sophomore transfer from Southern Methodist University who had primarily played No. 3 singles for the Sun Devils. 
Although Mathis Bondaz, a redshirt senior cemented at No. 2 singles, appeared an obvious choice to move up, Shimanov’s consecutive performances against TCU’s Duncan Chan, the No. 7 singles player in the country, and Baylor’s Zsombor Velcz, ranked No. 39, convinced coach Matt Hill to back his young prospect. The Israeli was up 5-2 in a deciding set against Chan that went unfinished and was locked into a battle with Velcz that also wasn’t complete. 
“Seniority is not the decision-making factor for us on who to play where,” Hill said. “You (compete with) those two guys, you can beat anybody in college tennis. He was showing some great progress in his game. He’s showing the weapons and the ability to take points, collect points, hurt a player, which you need to have at line one.”
Shimanov’s tennis journey began as a 3-year-old coached by his father, Ariel, in his hometown of Ramla. Despite the familial bond, Shimanov moved to the Israel Tennis &amp; Education Center as a teenager for better opportunities, living at the academy. 
After receiving an army exemption when he turned 18 due to medical problems, Shimanov got the opportunity to play collegiate tennis in the US. Hill was initially interested in bringing Shimanov to Tempe as a freshman, but uncertainty around Cassone’s pending led the Israeli to head to SMU instead. 
The first thing Hill recalled from scouting Shimanov was his timing of the ball, referring to Shimanov’s ability to sync his swing, body movement and racket contact point with the incoming ball’s speed and trajectory to produce a clean shot.
“His timing is not normal,” Hill said. “(It’s) super special.” 
Shimanov entered SMU speaking almost no English, a difficult transition on a team featuring nearly all American-born players, but the process helped the freshman experience the culture of college tennis. 
“I saw how college is working when it’s a system with a coach coming to you and doing the matches and (it’s) so loud and millions of things going on during the match,” Shimanov said. “I think I got the experience there, and just to move, I think I did a really, really good choice.”
Shimanov’s goal is to turn professional, and during his lone year as a Mustang, he came to the conclusion that SMU wasn’t the right environment for him to do so. Revisiting his previous relationship with Hill, Shimanov took a trip to ASU, where he felt at home. 
“I have one more Israeli guy here (Roi Ginat),” Shimanov said. “I felt (like I was) in Israel with the weather, with the places, with the trees, and with the people and with the food.” 
ASU’s roster is now primarily made up of international students and Ginat, a senior who came to Tempe from Kfar Saba in 2023, was Shimanov’s biggest reason for becoming a Sun Devil.
Ginat and Shimanov have a relationship stretching back to their childhood in Israel, and the senior aided Shimanov’s decision-making throughout the transfer process, even advocating for Hill to pursue the freshman in the portal. 
“When you have Roi here, another Israeli that’s been here for four years, and can help guide you, that’s been incredible,” Hill said. 
Starting the season behind Artnak and Bondaz, two upperclassmen returning from last season, Shimanov began at singles No. 3, a position he was familiar with from his time at SMU. His doubles partners frequently shifted around but he’s been paired with sophomore Milos Mikovic for the latter half of the season, a partnership that’s just starting to develop. 
“It’s growing, the trust in each other, and that’s really important in doubles, knowing that you can rely on your teammates no matter (what), especially deuce points,” Mikovic said. “If he’s returning better this game, you have to be like, ‘Hey, dude. You got this, I believe in you’, and that means a lot.”
Since taking over the top spot, Shimanov has continued to expand his game. Hill has worked on increasing Shimanov’s net clearance on serves and being more aggressive in tight spaces, pushing him to drive balls from the corners that he would previously slice. 
Hill noticed a rare “sureness” that Shimanov carries with him throughout his matches, one that carries over to his return game. Those fast hands and eye for timing have enabled Shimanov to improve tactically, balancing which points to be aggressive on and which situations to play more safely. 
Juxtaposed with his energetic demeanor on-court, Shimanov is reserved as a person. Part of it ties back to his lack of familiarity with English but when he does speak, his words carry “a lot of weight,” Hill said. 
Physical changes have also aided Shimanov’s transformation across his first season in Tempe. When ASU hosted regionals in October, the staff highlighted weaknesses in Shimanov’s physicality, where he lagged behind the rest of the draw. 
“(Shimanov) made a commitment at that time to pull back on the competitive calendar and get in the gym double time,” Hill said. “He’s been doing pretty much double (the) gym of any other player.”
Near the end of Shimanov’s interview with Cronkite News, he asked for the time and then asked if he could leave early. He was headed for the gym, with his ultimate pursuit of turning professional taking another step. 
For now, Shimanov is hoping to help the Sun Devils extend their season when they open the NCAA Tournament on Friday in San Diego against No. 20 UCLA.
The post Top rung: ASU’s Ofek Shimanov adjusting to midseason elevation to No. 1 singles appeared first on Cronkite News.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
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		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f405c7a200899a00e5f817</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Falcon field fees take flight: New airport fees set to take effect on May 1st</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:45:43.629Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Falcon field fees take flight: New airport fees set to take effect on May 1st</news:title>
			<news:keywords>MESA –  New landing fees that are going into effect on May 1st, at Falcon Field Airport in Mesa have flight schools worried and residents still rankled that the measure doesn’t go far enough. 
The fees are the latest clash in an ongoing squabble between the flight school and residents who have long complained about the racket the planes make. 
Flight instructors and their students are worried about the rising costs. Meanwhile, nearby residents say the changes are long overdue. 
Advocates for the flight schools say that these fees will destroy local businesses.
The newer planes, while more quiet than the older planes, can still be heard – and felt – rumbling in nearby communities.






If a student pays $17,000 for flight school, and has to complete two hundred touch-and-gos at $20 per landing, it adds an additional $4,000 increase toward their tuition, . 
“The airport management does not think outside the box,” said Steve Adams, pilot and owner of Nacho Offroad Lighting. “They do not think about creative ways to solve their budget or the noise issue. Instead, they’re going to just crush all small businesses at Falcon.” 
Another point of contention has been whether or not Mesa city taxpayers should foot the bill for airport maintenance, including runway improvements – or should it be paid for by the pilots and flight schools that utilize the airport.
The landing fees are not for noise abatement, according to officials. City officials said the revenue from the landing fees will be utilized for the upkeep of Falcon Field. 
“I just hope that the landing fees can be reevaluated and relooked at,” Greg Hadley, owner of Simplifly Flight School said. “As a business owner here, I already pay land lease fees, tie down fees, fuel flowage fees. There’s a lot of fees that we already pay here, and we enjoy being here. But, I’ve got a feeling, ultimately, it’s not going to pan out the way the city is hoping.”
Local resident, Robert Graham, spoke to the effects of working from home. 
“It’s gotten so bad where if I’m trying to think or if I’m trying to talk on the phone, or even if I have Zoom meetings with other employees of my company, they can’t even hear me.”
Graham said Mesa is part of a larger conflict pitting planes versus people across the nation. 
“Right now, they are running out of funds,”  Graham said. “They’re going to be in the red next year, so they have to start charging something. It’s becoming a nationwide issue, where people are charging landing fees.”
The post Falcon field fees take flight: New airport fees set to take effect on May 1st appeared first on Cronkite News.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
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		  <news:news>
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			  <news:name>Falcon field fees take flight: New airport fees set to take effect on May 1st</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:45:34.032Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Falcon field fees take flight: New airport fees set to take effect on May 1st</news:title>
			<news:keywords>MESA –  New landing fees that are going into effect on May 1st, at Falcon Field Airport in Mesa have flight schools worried and residents still rankled that the measure doesn’t go far enough. 
The fees are the latest clash in an ongoing squabble between the flight school and residents who have long complained about the racket the planes make. 
Flight instructors and their students are worried about the rising costs. Meanwhile, nearby residents say the changes are long overdue. 
Advocates for the flight schools say that these fees will destroy local businesses.
The newer planes, while more quiet than the older planes, can still be heard – and felt – rumbling in nearby communities.






If a student pays $17,000 for flight school, and has to complete two hundred touch-and-gos at $20 per landing, it adds an additional $4,000 increase toward their tuition, . 
“The airport management does not think outside the box,” said Steve Adams, pilot and owner of Nacho Offroad Lighting. “They do not think about creative ways to solve their budget or the noise issue. Instead, they’re going to just crush all small businesses at Falcon.” 
Another point of contention has been whether or not Mesa city taxpayers should foot the bill for airport maintenance, including runway improvements – or should it be paid for by the pilots and flight schools that utilize the airport.
The landing fees are not for noise abatement, according to officials. City officials said the revenue from the landing fees will be utilized for the upkeep of Falcon Field. 
“I just hope that the landing fees can be reevaluated and relooked at,” Greg Hadley, owner of Simplifly Flight School said. “As a business owner here, I already pay land lease fees, tie down fees, fuel flowage fees. There’s a lot of fees that we already pay here, and we enjoy being here. But, I’ve got a feeling, ultimately, it’s not going to pan out the way the city is hoping.”
Local resident, Robert Graham, spoke to the effects of working from home. 
“It’s gotten so bad where if I’m trying to think or if I’m trying to talk on the phone, or even if I have Zoom meetings with other employees of my company, they can’t even hear me.”
Graham said Mesa is part of a larger conflict pitting planes versus people across the nation. 
“Right now, they are running out of funds,”  Graham said. “They’re going to be in the red next year, so they have to start charging something. It’s becoming a nationwide issue, where people are charging landing fees.”
The post Falcon field fees take flight: New airport fees set to take effect on May 1st appeared first on Cronkite News.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
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		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f405b9a200899a00e5f805</loc>
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			  <news:name>Falcon field fees take flight: New airport fees set to take effect on May 1st</news:name>
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			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:45:29.528Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Falcon field fees take flight: New airport fees set to take effect on May 1st</news:title>
			<news:keywords>MESA –  New landing fees that are going into effect on May 1st, at Falcon Field Airport in Mesa have flight schools worried and residents still rankled that the measure doesn’t go far enough. 
The fees are the latest clash in an ongoing squabble between the flight school and residents who have long complained about the racket the planes make. 
Flight instructors and their students are worried about the rising costs. Meanwhile, nearby residents say the changes are long overdue. 
Advocates for the flight schools say that these fees will destroy local businesses.
The newer planes, while more quiet than the older planes, can still be heard – and felt – rumbling in nearby communities.






If a student pays $17,000 for flight school, and has to complete two hundred touch-and-gos at $20 per landing, it adds an additional $4,000 increase toward their tuition, . 
“The airport management does not think outside the box,” said Steve Adams, pilot and owner of Nacho Offroad Lighting. “They do not think about creative ways to solve their budget or the noise issue. Instead, they’re going to just crush all small businesses at Falcon.” 
Another point of contention has been whether or not Mesa city taxpayers should foot the bill for airport maintenance, including runway improvements – or should it be paid for by the pilots and flight schools that utilize the airport.
The landing fees are not for noise abatement, according to officials. City officials said the revenue from the landing fees will be utilized for the upkeep of Falcon Field. 
“I just hope that the landing fees can be reevaluated and relooked at,” Greg Hadley, owner of Simplifly Flight School said. “As a business owner here, I already pay land lease fees, tie down fees, fuel flowage fees. There’s a lot of fees that we already pay here, and we enjoy being here. But, I’ve got a feeling, ultimately, it’s not going to pan out the way the city is hoping.”
Local resident, Robert Graham, spoke to the effects of working from home. 
“It’s gotten so bad where if I’m trying to think or if I’m trying to talk on the phone, or even if I have Zoom meetings with other employees of my company, they can’t even hear me.”
Graham said Mesa is part of a larger conflict pitting planes versus people across the nation. 
“Right now, they are running out of funds,”  Graham said. “They’re going to be in the red next year, so they have to start charging something. It’s becoming a nationwide issue, where people are charging landing fees.”
The post Falcon field fees take flight: New airport fees set to take effect on May 1st appeared first on Cronkite News.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f405b8a200899a00e5f7fc</loc>
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			  <news:name>Falcon field fees take flight: New airport fees set to take effect on May 1st</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:45:28.641Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Falcon field fees take flight: New airport fees set to take effect on May 1st</news:title>
			<news:keywords>MESA –  New landing fees that are going into effect on May 1st, at Falcon Field Airport in Mesa have flight schools worried and residents still rankled that the measure doesn’t go far enough. 
The fees are the latest clash in an ongoing squabble between the flight school and residents who have long complained about the racket the planes make. 
Flight instructors and their students are worried about the rising costs. Meanwhile, nearby residents say the changes are long overdue. 
Advocates for the flight schools say that these fees will destroy local businesses.
The newer planes, while more quiet than the older planes, can still be heard – and felt – rumbling in nearby communities.






If a student pays $17,000 for flight school, and has to complete two hundred touch-and-gos at $20 per landing, it adds an additional $4,000 increase toward their tuition, . 
“The airport management does not think outside the box,” said Steve Adams, pilot and owner of Nacho Offroad Lighting. “They do not think about creative ways to solve their budget or the noise issue. Instead, they’re going to just crush all small businesses at Falcon.” 
Another point of contention has been whether or not Mesa city taxpayers should foot the bill for airport maintenance, including runway improvements – or should it be paid for by the pilots and flight schools that utilize the airport.
The landing fees are not for noise abatement, according to officials. City officials said the revenue from the landing fees will be utilized for the upkeep of Falcon Field. 
“I just hope that the landing fees can be reevaluated and relooked at,” Greg Hadley, owner of Simplifly Flight School said. “As a business owner here, I already pay land lease fees, tie down fees, fuel flowage fees. There’s a lot of fees that we already pay here, and we enjoy being here. But, I’ve got a feeling, ultimately, it’s not going to pan out the way the city is hoping.”
Local resident, Robert Graham, spoke to the effects of working from home. 
“It’s gotten so bad where if I’m trying to think or if I’m trying to talk on the phone, or even if I have Zoom meetings with other employees of my company, they can’t even hear me.”
Graham said Mesa is part of a larger conflict pitting planes versus people across the nation. 
“Right now, they are running out of funds,”  Graham said. “They’re going to be in the red next year, so they have to start charging something. It’s becoming a nationwide issue, where people are charging landing fees.”
The post Falcon field fees take flight: New airport fees set to take effect on May 1st appeared first on Cronkite News.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
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<url>
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			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Nature is out of reach for many Latinos in southern Arizona, new study finds</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:45:24.032Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Nature is out of reach for many Latinos in southern Arizona, new study finds</news:title>
			<news:keywords>PHOENIX – Access to nature in southern Arizona has been limited not only by environmental risks but also by immigration enforcement and cost, according to a study about barriers to outdoor access for Mexican immigrants and low-income people.   
Fiorella Carlos Chavez wanted to celebrate her birthday at a local park – set up at a table in the shade, and enjoy the scenery. 
“Then one of my friends told me, ‘You actually have to register and pay,’ and I said, ‘Register? I don’t get it’,” she said, referring to the fee required to reserve a picnic area for larger groups. 
Carlos Chavez, a Peruvian immigrant and an assistant professor at Arizona State University, was surprised: “It blew my mind. This is a park, what do you mean you have to make a reservation?” 
Mexican immigrants and low-income communities have limited access to nature in Tucson, not because of distance, but because of legal, economic and structural barriers, said Rebecca Crocker, an assistant research professor at the University of Arizona and one of the co-authors of the recent study.
“Each of us have different natural inclinations to what feels like nature,” Crocker said, adding that fear can hinder the experience and health effects of the outdoors. 
“Whether that fear comes from the fact that you are worried you are going to see a rattlesnake or, more presently, you are worried about getting perceived by immigration enforcement and get deported.”
Crocker explained that many Latinos feel that moving across Arizona’s landscape has always put them at risk. “I feel that the localized experience of immigration surveillance in southern Arizona is very detrimental to people’s health in lots of ways. And not being able to feel free to move across the landscape that they now reside in is a huge piece of why it’s so unhealthy for them.” 
Immigration and Customs Enforcement arrests in Arizona more than tripled in fiscal year 2025 compared to the prior year, according to reporting by Arizona Luminaria, a nonprofit based in Tucson. 
In March, the Tucson City Council unanimously approved an ordinance to restrict federal immigration enforcement on city property, barring staging or operations in areas such as parks.
Gary Nabhan, research social scientist emeritus at the University of Arizona, has spent decades studying what he calls the human microbiome — the trillions of microorganisms accumulated through contact with soil, plants and animals that form the foundation of the immune system.
Nabhan also refers to it as the “hidden landscape” on a person’s body –  “a reflection of the natural landscape around us. We get those microbes from our contact with nature and animals and soil and plants.”
Nabhan links the lack of microbiomes and a weakened immune system to vulnerability to chronic diseases and shorter lifespans. 




“It’s not just a perk, it’s not just an amenity for the rich,” said Peter James, an adjunct associate professor of Environmental Health at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. “We should really look at nature as just as important as the sewer system, the electricity grid. This is vital infrastructure.”
For Latino communities, that vital infrastructure is deeply rooted in history. Generations of people, particularly those of Mexican descent, worked the land in the U.S. Southwest as farmers and ranchers, shaped by Spanish colonization, Mexican land grants and ranching traditions. 
In Tucson, the problem isn’t that parks don’t exist near Latino neighborhoods. It’s that for thousands of residents, those parks might as well be behind a wall.
James said that “objective access or availability of a park nearby” does not mean that Latino communities will use that park: “Proximity does not equal access.”
Carlos Chavez said in Latino communities, “people are overworked. … It’s a part of (their) identity.”
Even in her own life, she sees time in nature “as a luxury.” 
“Yes, I want to go to the park, but I’m too tired, I’m not going to do it, or I have something else to do from work,” she said. “So I think it comes to that decision: Can I give up what I need to do now from work in order to enjoy the outdoors?”
This is one of the main barriers Crocker focused on in her study. Tiredness and lack of time are not only personal but also systematic barriers in the communities. “There’s always a deeper story there,” she said. 
“To expect at the end of the day, someone is going to have time and energy and resources to figure this all out on their own is too much to expect of an individual person. We really need to look more structurally at how we can promote access,” Crocker said. 
The post Nature is out of reach for many Latinos in southern Arizona, new study finds appeared first on Cronkite News.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
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		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f405aaa200899a00e5f7ea</loc>
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			  <news:name>Nature is out of reach for many Latinos in southern Arizona, new study finds</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:45:14.307Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Nature is out of reach for many Latinos in southern Arizona, new study finds</news:title>
			<news:keywords>PHOENIX – Access to nature in southern Arizona has been limited not only by environmental risks but also by immigration enforcement and cost, according to a study about barriers to outdoor access for Mexican immigrants and low-income people.   
Fiorella Carlos Chavez wanted to celebrate her birthday at a local park – set up at a table in the shade, and enjoy the scenery. 
“Then one of my friends told me, ‘You actually have to register and pay,’ and I said, ‘Register? I don’t get it’,” she said, referring to the fee required to reserve a picnic area for larger groups. 
Carlos Chavez, a Peruvian immigrant and an assistant professor at Arizona State University, was surprised: “It blew my mind. This is a park, what do you mean you have to make a reservation?” 
Mexican immigrants and low-income communities have limited access to nature in Tucson, not because of distance, but because of legal, economic and structural barriers, said Rebecca Crocker, an assistant research professor at the University of Arizona and one of the co-authors of the recent study.
“Each of us have different natural inclinations to what feels like nature,” Crocker said, adding that fear can hinder the experience and health effects of the outdoors. 
“Whether that fear comes from the fact that you are worried you are going to see a rattlesnake or, more presently, you are worried about getting perceived by immigration enforcement and get deported.”
Crocker explained that many Latinos feel that moving across Arizona’s landscape has always put them at risk. “I feel that the localized experience of immigration surveillance in southern Arizona is very detrimental to people’s health in lots of ways. And not being able to feel free to move across the landscape that they now reside in is a huge piece of why it’s so unhealthy for them.” 
Immigration and Customs Enforcement arrests in Arizona more than tripled in fiscal year 2025 compared to the prior year, according to reporting by Arizona Luminaria, a nonprofit based in Tucson. 
In March, the Tucson City Council unanimously approved an ordinance to restrict federal immigration enforcement on city property, barring staging or operations in areas such as parks.
Gary Nabhan, research social scientist emeritus at the University of Arizona, has spent decades studying what he calls the human microbiome — the trillions of microorganisms accumulated through contact with soil, plants and animals that form the foundation of the immune system.
Nabhan also refers to it as the “hidden landscape” on a person’s body –  “a reflection of the natural landscape around us. We get those microbes from our contact with nature and animals and soil and plants.”
Nabhan links the lack of microbiomes and a weakened immune system to vulnerability to chronic diseases and shorter lifespans. 




“It’s not just a perk, it’s not just an amenity for the rich,” said Peter James, an adjunct associate professor of Environmental Health at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. “We should really look at nature as just as important as the sewer system, the electricity grid. This is vital infrastructure.”
For Latino communities, that vital infrastructure is deeply rooted in history. Generations of people, particularly those of Mexican descent, worked the land in the U.S. Southwest as farmers and ranchers, shaped by Spanish colonization, Mexican land grants and ranching traditions. 
In Tucson, the problem isn’t that parks don’t exist near Latino neighborhoods. It’s that for thousands of residents, those parks might as well be behind a wall.
James said that “objective access or availability of a park nearby” does not mean that Latino communities will use that park: “Proximity does not equal access.”
Carlos Chavez said in Latino communities, “people are overworked. … It’s a part of (their) identity.”
Even in her own life, she sees time in nature “as a luxury.” 
“Yes, I want to go to the park, but I’m too tired, I’m not going to do it, or I have something else to do from work,” she said. “So I think it comes to that decision: Can I give up what I need to do now from work in order to enjoy the outdoors?”
This is one of the main barriers Crocker focused on in her study. Tiredness and lack of time are not only personal but also systematic barriers in the communities. “There’s always a deeper story there,” she said. 
“To expect at the end of the day, someone is going to have time and energy and resources to figure this all out on their own is too much to expect of an individual person. We really need to look more structurally at how we can promote access,” Crocker said. 
The post Nature is out of reach for many Latinos in southern Arizona, new study finds appeared first on Cronkite News.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
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		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f405a5a200899a00e5f7e1</loc>
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			  <news:name>Nature is out of reach for many Latinos in southern Arizona, new study finds</news:name>
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			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:45:09.696Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Nature is out of reach for many Latinos in southern Arizona, new study finds</news:title>
			<news:keywords>PHOENIX – Access to nature in southern Arizona has been limited not only by environmental risks but also by immigration enforcement and cost, according to a study about barriers to outdoor access for Mexican immigrants and low-income people.   
Fiorella Carlos Chavez wanted to celebrate her birthday at a local park – set up at a table in the shade, and enjoy the scenery. 
“Then one of my friends told me, ‘You actually have to register and pay,’ and I said, ‘Register? I don’t get it’,” she said, referring to the fee required to reserve a picnic area for larger groups. 
Carlos Chavez, a Peruvian immigrant and an assistant professor at Arizona State University, was surprised: “It blew my mind. This is a park, what do you mean you have to make a reservation?” 
Mexican immigrants and low-income communities have limited access to nature in Tucson, not because of distance, but because of legal, economic and structural barriers, said Rebecca Crocker, an assistant research professor at the University of Arizona and one of the co-authors of the recent study.
“Each of us have different natural inclinations to what feels like nature,” Crocker said, adding that fear can hinder the experience and health effects of the outdoors. 
“Whether that fear comes from the fact that you are worried you are going to see a rattlesnake or, more presently, you are worried about getting perceived by immigration enforcement and get deported.”
Crocker explained that many Latinos feel that moving across Arizona’s landscape has always put them at risk. “I feel that the localized experience of immigration surveillance in southern Arizona is very detrimental to people’s health in lots of ways. And not being able to feel free to move across the landscape that they now reside in is a huge piece of why it’s so unhealthy for them.” 
Immigration and Customs Enforcement arrests in Arizona more than tripled in fiscal year 2025 compared to the prior year, according to reporting by Arizona Luminaria, a nonprofit based in Tucson. 
In March, the Tucson City Council unanimously approved an ordinance to restrict federal immigration enforcement on city property, barring staging or operations in areas such as parks.
Gary Nabhan, research social scientist emeritus at the University of Arizona, has spent decades studying what he calls the human microbiome — the trillions of microorganisms accumulated through contact with soil, plants and animals that form the foundation of the immune system.
Nabhan also refers to it as the “hidden landscape” on a person’s body –  “a reflection of the natural landscape around us. We get those microbes from our contact with nature and animals and soil and plants.”
Nabhan links the lack of microbiomes and a weakened immune system to vulnerability to chronic diseases and shorter lifespans. 




“It’s not just a perk, it’s not just an amenity for the rich,” said Peter James, an adjunct associate professor of Environmental Health at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. “We should really look at nature as just as important as the sewer system, the electricity grid. This is vital infrastructure.”
For Latino communities, that vital infrastructure is deeply rooted in history. Generations of people, particularly those of Mexican descent, worked the land in the U.S. Southwest as farmers and ranchers, shaped by Spanish colonization, Mexican land grants and ranching traditions. 
In Tucson, the problem isn’t that parks don’t exist near Latino neighborhoods. It’s that for thousands of residents, those parks might as well be behind a wall.
James said that “objective access or availability of a park nearby” does not mean that Latino communities will use that park: “Proximity does not equal access.”
Carlos Chavez said in Latino communities, “people are overworked. … It’s a part of (their) identity.”
Even in her own life, she sees time in nature “as a luxury.” 
“Yes, I want to go to the park, but I’m too tired, I’m not going to do it, or I have something else to do from work,” she said. “So I think it comes to that decision: Can I give up what I need to do now from work in order to enjoy the outdoors?”
This is one of the main barriers Crocker focused on in her study. Tiredness and lack of time are not only personal but also systematic barriers in the communities. “There’s always a deeper story there,” she said. 
“To expect at the end of the day, someone is going to have time and energy and resources to figure this all out on their own is too much to expect of an individual person. We really need to look more structurally at how we can promote access,” Crocker said. 
The post Nature is out of reach for many Latinos in southern Arizona, new study finds appeared first on Cronkite News.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f405a5a200899a00e5f7d8</loc>
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			  <news:name>Nature is out of reach for many Latinos in southern Arizona, new study finds</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:45:09.187Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Nature is out of reach for many Latinos in southern Arizona, new study finds</news:title>
			<news:keywords>PHOENIX – Access to nature in southern Arizona has been limited not only by environmental risks but also by immigration enforcement and cost, according to a study about barriers to outdoor access for Mexican immigrants and low-income people.   
Fiorella Carlos Chavez wanted to celebrate her birthday at a local park – set up at a table in the shade, and enjoy the scenery. 
“Then one of my friends told me, ‘You actually have to register and pay,’ and I said, ‘Register? I don’t get it’,” she said, referring to the fee required to reserve a picnic area for larger groups. 
Carlos Chavez, a Peruvian immigrant and an assistant professor at Arizona State University, was surprised: “It blew my mind. This is a park, what do you mean you have to make a reservation?” 
Mexican immigrants and low-income communities have limited access to nature in Tucson, not because of distance, but because of legal, economic and structural barriers, said Rebecca Crocker, an assistant research professor at the University of Arizona and one of the co-authors of the recent study.
“Each of us have different natural inclinations to what feels like nature,” Crocker said, adding that fear can hinder the experience and health effects of the outdoors. 
“Whether that fear comes from the fact that you are worried you are going to see a rattlesnake or, more presently, you are worried about getting perceived by immigration enforcement and get deported.”
Crocker explained that many Latinos feel that moving across Arizona’s landscape has always put them at risk. “I feel that the localized experience of immigration surveillance in southern Arizona is very detrimental to people’s health in lots of ways. And not being able to feel free to move across the landscape that they now reside in is a huge piece of why it’s so unhealthy for them.” 
Immigration and Customs Enforcement arrests in Arizona more than tripled in fiscal year 2025 compared to the prior year, according to reporting by Arizona Luminaria, a nonprofit based in Tucson. 
In March, the Tucson City Council unanimously approved an ordinance to restrict federal immigration enforcement on city property, barring staging or operations in areas such as parks.
Gary Nabhan, research social scientist emeritus at the University of Arizona, has spent decades studying what he calls the human microbiome — the trillions of microorganisms accumulated through contact with soil, plants and animals that form the foundation of the immune system.
Nabhan also refers to it as the “hidden landscape” on a person’s body –  “a reflection of the natural landscape around us. We get those microbes from our contact with nature and animals and soil and plants.”
Nabhan links the lack of microbiomes and a weakened immune system to vulnerability to chronic diseases and shorter lifespans. 




“It’s not just a perk, it’s not just an amenity for the rich,” said Peter James, an adjunct associate professor of Environmental Health at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. “We should really look at nature as just as important as the sewer system, the electricity grid. This is vital infrastructure.”
For Latino communities, that vital infrastructure is deeply rooted in history. Generations of people, particularly those of Mexican descent, worked the land in the U.S. Southwest as farmers and ranchers, shaped by Spanish colonization, Mexican land grants and ranching traditions. 
In Tucson, the problem isn’t that parks don’t exist near Latino neighborhoods. It’s that for thousands of residents, those parks might as well be behind a wall.
James said that “objective access or availability of a park nearby” does not mean that Latino communities will use that park: “Proximity does not equal access.”
Carlos Chavez said in Latino communities, “people are overworked. … It’s a part of (their) identity.”
Even in her own life, she sees time in nature “as a luxury.” 
“Yes, I want to go to the park, but I’m too tired, I’m not going to do it, or I have something else to do from work,” she said. “So I think it comes to that decision: Can I give up what I need to do now from work in order to enjoy the outdoors?”
This is one of the main barriers Crocker focused on in her study. Tiredness and lack of time are not only personal but also systematic barriers in the communities. “There’s always a deeper story there,” she said. 
“To expect at the end of the day, someone is going to have time and energy and resources to figure this all out on their own is too much to expect of an individual person. We really need to look more structurally at how we can promote access,” Crocker said. 
The post Nature is out of reach for many Latinos in southern Arizona, new study finds appeared first on Cronkite News.</news:keywords>
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			  <news:name>A digital casino that fits in your pocket:High-profile Arizona sporting events highlights problem gambling </news:name>
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			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:45:04.588Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>A digital casino that fits in your pocket:High-profile Arizona sporting events highlights problem gambling </news:title>
			<news:keywords>PHOENIX-  Jaleni Dudley has been on a losing streak.
It started with a simple bet during March Madness and college basketball season. He placed $60 on the University of Arizona versus Michigan Final Four game. For his first bet, Dudley, 22, got an account with  BETMGM sportsbook.
But it didn’t stop there. 
Dudley ended up acquiring more betting apps on his phone.
He’s used these apps to test his odds. He ended up using it more and more during the men’s and women’s NCAA Basketball Tournament. It reached the point where his app store has turned into a digital casino. The different apps offered options from fantasy football, sports betting and event wagering, all at a click of a button.
As a Phoenix resident, Dudley has found himself chasing his losses. Dudley wasn’t the only one gambling during the tournament. Gambling has become a big business in Arizona. In 2021, sports betting and event wagering became legal in the state. 
In December 2025 alone, the Department of Gaming shared that Arizonans gambled roughly $816 million in event wagering through their mobile devices. Even with big wins can come significant losses, as Arizonans lost about $90 million in event wagering. 
Jessica Roza, who works for the Arizona Department of Gaming as the Assistant Director of Government and Community Affairs, says losing and gambling addiction are a part of the risks.
“Some of the common signs we see are people who become obsessed with betting the odds and become really into the scores, what the players are doing and getting really emotional,” Roza said. 
Dudley wasn’t the only one gambling, big events like the Women’s Final Four in Phoenix attracted crowds to participate in wagering. With high-profile events like the Super Bowl, MLB spring training and collegiate tournaments drawing crowds, more visitors and residents are engaging in legalized wagering. Event wagering is a form of gambling that includes placing bets via regulated operators from sporting events to horse racing.  In the state, bettors must be at least 21 and use regulated operators,which will help prevent the chances of people chasing their losses.






Problem gambling becomes a part of a larger issue, which is addiction.  The Arizona Department of Gaming recognizes problem gambling as a public health issue. Mobile devices have had a role in this with accessibility to event wagering and sports betting which brings another group of people at risk: athletes. 
Just this week, Brendan Sorsby of Texas Tech, one of the top returning college quarterbacks, announced that he was entering a residential treatment program for a gambling addiction. The NCAA is investigating Sorsby’s gambling. Last year, the NCAA releasedthat a ban on sports betting for events the NCAA sponsors a championship in would remain in effect. 
The NCAA policy prohibits athletes and coaches to participate in sports betting in all three divisions of the NCAA. Outside of the NCAA, sports has seen serious legal issues and crossover where coaches have engaged in gambling. 
In 2025, Portland Trailblazers coach Chauncey Billups and 31 defendants were charged in schemes to rig illegal poker games. The Department of Justice released a press release about the charges. With incidents of coaches gambling on the radar, it poaches their integrity. 
As coaches may be engaged, it’s important for the athletes to stay out the way. Attorney of IBF Law Group, Sheree Wright, has experience working in sports law. As an attorney that helps collegiate athletes with contracts, she said they must avoid sports betting at all times. 
“The most important thing is to maintain distance from anything that involves sports betting because it is so easy to put an athlete in that situations because everyone is sports betting their friends, their family,” Wright said.
If an athlete engages in sports betting, there is a high probability it could ruin their career. 
“You see very few things where an athlete gets in trouble for illegal sports betting,” Wright said.  
To avoid falling into a gambling loophole, the best advice from the Arizona Department of Gaming is to make a plan and stick to it. The department released a platform called “Check Your Bet” where individuals can check their bet with a regulated operator and participate in self-exclusion programs for both in-person and online betting resources.
“Check your bet, make sure you’re betting with a regulated operator but also set a budget, stick to it. Don’t chase your losses,” Roza said. For those facing problem gambling, the state can connect individuals to either out-patient treatment centers or the self-exclusion programs.
The post A digital casino that fits in your pocket:High-profile Arizona sporting events highlights problem gambling  appeared first on Cronkite News.</news:keywords>
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			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:44:54.486Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>A digital casino that fits in your pocket:High-profile Arizona sporting events highlights problem gambling </news:title>
			<news:keywords>PHOENIX-  Jaleni Dudley has been on a losing streak.
It started with a simple bet during March Madness and college basketball season. He placed $60 on the University of Arizona versus Michigan Final Four game. For his first bet, Dudley, 22, got an account with  BETMGM sportsbook.
But it didn’t stop there. 
Dudley ended up acquiring more betting apps on his phone.
He’s used these apps to test his odds. He ended up using it more and more during the men’s and women’s NCAA Basketball Tournament. It reached the point where his app store has turned into a digital casino. The different apps offered options from fantasy football, sports betting and event wagering, all at a click of a button.
As a Phoenix resident, Dudley has found himself chasing his losses. Dudley wasn’t the only one gambling during the tournament. Gambling has become a big business in Arizona. In 2021, sports betting and event wagering became legal in the state. 
In December 2025 alone, the Department of Gaming shared that Arizonans gambled roughly $816 million in event wagering through their mobile devices. Even with big wins can come significant losses, as Arizonans lost about $90 million in event wagering. 
Jessica Roza, who works for the Arizona Department of Gaming as the Assistant Director of Government and Community Affairs, says losing and gambling addiction are a part of the risks.
“Some of the common signs we see are people who become obsessed with betting the odds and become really into the scores, what the players are doing and getting really emotional,” Roza said. 
Dudley wasn’t the only one gambling, big events like the Women’s Final Four in Phoenix attracted crowds to participate in wagering. With high-profile events like the Super Bowl, MLB spring training and collegiate tournaments drawing crowds, more visitors and residents are engaging in legalized wagering. Event wagering is a form of gambling that includes placing bets via regulated operators from sporting events to horse racing.  In the state, bettors must be at least 21 and use regulated operators,which will help prevent the chances of people chasing their losses.






Problem gambling becomes a part of a larger issue, which is addiction.  The Arizona Department of Gaming recognizes problem gambling as a public health issue. Mobile devices have had a role in this with accessibility to event wagering and sports betting which brings another group of people at risk: athletes. 
Just this week, Brendan Sorsby of Texas Tech, one of the top returning college quarterbacks, announced that he was entering a residential treatment program for a gambling addiction. The NCAA is investigating Sorsby’s gambling. Last year, the NCAA releasedthat a ban on sports betting for events the NCAA sponsors a championship in would remain in effect. 
The NCAA policy prohibits athletes and coaches to participate in sports betting in all three divisions of the NCAA. Outside of the NCAA, sports has seen serious legal issues and crossover where coaches have engaged in gambling. 
In 2025, Portland Trailblazers coach Chauncey Billups and 31 defendants were charged in schemes to rig illegal poker games. The Department of Justice released a press release about the charges. With incidents of coaches gambling on the radar, it poaches their integrity. 
As coaches may be engaged, it’s important for the athletes to stay out the way. Attorney of IBF Law Group, Sheree Wright, has experience working in sports law. As an attorney that helps collegiate athletes with contracts, she said they must avoid sports betting at all times. 
“The most important thing is to maintain distance from anything that involves sports betting because it is so easy to put an athlete in that situations because everyone is sports betting their friends, their family,” Wright said.
If an athlete engages in sports betting, there is a high probability it could ruin their career. 
“You see very few things where an athlete gets in trouble for illegal sports betting,” Wright said.  
To avoid falling into a gambling loophole, the best advice from the Arizona Department of Gaming is to make a plan and stick to it. The department released a platform called “Check Your Bet” where individuals can check their bet with a regulated operator and participate in self-exclusion programs for both in-person and online betting resources.
“Check your bet, make sure you’re betting with a regulated operator but also set a budget, stick to it. Don’t chase your losses,” Roza said. For those facing problem gambling, the state can connect individuals to either out-patient treatment centers or the self-exclusion programs.
The post A digital casino that fits in your pocket:High-profile Arizona sporting events highlights problem gambling  appeared first on Cronkite News.</news:keywords>
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			  <news:name>A digital casino that fits in your pocket:High-profile Arizona sporting events highlights problem gambling </news:name>
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			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:44:50.098Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>A digital casino that fits in your pocket:High-profile Arizona sporting events highlights problem gambling </news:title>
			<news:keywords>PHOENIX-  Jaleni Dudley has been on a losing streak.
It started with a simple bet during March Madness and college basketball season. He placed $60 on the University of Arizona versus Michigan Final Four game. For his first bet, Dudley, 22, got an account with  BETMGM sportsbook.
But it didn’t stop there. 
Dudley ended up acquiring more betting apps on his phone.
He’s used these apps to test his odds. He ended up using it more and more during the men’s and women’s NCAA Basketball Tournament. It reached the point where his app store has turned into a digital casino. The different apps offered options from fantasy football, sports betting and event wagering, all at a click of a button.
As a Phoenix resident, Dudley has found himself chasing his losses. Dudley wasn’t the only one gambling during the tournament. Gambling has become a big business in Arizona. In 2021, sports betting and event wagering became legal in the state. 
In December 2025 alone, the Department of Gaming shared that Arizonans gambled roughly $816 million in event wagering through their mobile devices. Even with big wins can come significant losses, as Arizonans lost about $90 million in event wagering. 
Jessica Roza, who works for the Arizona Department of Gaming as the Assistant Director of Government and Community Affairs, says losing and gambling addiction are a part of the risks.
“Some of the common signs we see are people who become obsessed with betting the odds and become really into the scores, what the players are doing and getting really emotional,” Roza said. 
Dudley wasn’t the only one gambling, big events like the Women’s Final Four in Phoenix attracted crowds to participate in wagering. With high-profile events like the Super Bowl, MLB spring training and collegiate tournaments drawing crowds, more visitors and residents are engaging in legalized wagering. Event wagering is a form of gambling that includes placing bets via regulated operators from sporting events to horse racing.  In the state, bettors must be at least 21 and use regulated operators,which will help prevent the chances of people chasing their losses.






Problem gambling becomes a part of a larger issue, which is addiction.  The Arizona Department of Gaming recognizes problem gambling as a public health issue. Mobile devices have had a role in this with accessibility to event wagering and sports betting which brings another group of people at risk: athletes. 
Just this week, Brendan Sorsby of Texas Tech, one of the top returning college quarterbacks, announced that he was entering a residential treatment program for a gambling addiction. The NCAA is investigating Sorsby’s gambling. Last year, the NCAA releasedthat a ban on sports betting for events the NCAA sponsors a championship in would remain in effect. 
The NCAA policy prohibits athletes and coaches to participate in sports betting in all three divisions of the NCAA. Outside of the NCAA, sports has seen serious legal issues and crossover where coaches have engaged in gambling. 
In 2025, Portland Trailblazers coach Chauncey Billups and 31 defendants were charged in schemes to rig illegal poker games. The Department of Justice released a press release about the charges. With incidents of coaches gambling on the radar, it poaches their integrity. 
As coaches may be engaged, it’s important for the athletes to stay out the way. Attorney of IBF Law Group, Sheree Wright, has experience working in sports law. As an attorney that helps collegiate athletes with contracts, she said they must avoid sports betting at all times. 
“The most important thing is to maintain distance from anything that involves sports betting because it is so easy to put an athlete in that situations because everyone is sports betting their friends, their family,” Wright said.
If an athlete engages in sports betting, there is a high probability it could ruin their career. 
“You see very few things where an athlete gets in trouble for illegal sports betting,” Wright said.  
To avoid falling into a gambling loophole, the best advice from the Arizona Department of Gaming is to make a plan and stick to it. The department released a platform called “Check Your Bet” where individuals can check their bet with a regulated operator and participate in self-exclusion programs for both in-person and online betting resources.
“Check your bet, make sure you’re betting with a regulated operator but also set a budget, stick to it. Don’t chase your losses,” Roza said. For those facing problem gambling, the state can connect individuals to either out-patient treatment centers or the self-exclusion programs.
The post A digital casino that fits in your pocket:High-profile Arizona sporting events highlights problem gambling  appeared first on Cronkite News.</news:keywords>
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			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:44:49.392Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>A digital casino that fits in your pocket:High-profile Arizona sporting events highlights problem gambling </news:title>
			<news:keywords>PHOENIX-  Jaleni Dudley has been on a losing streak.
It started with a simple bet during March Madness and college basketball season. He placed $60 on the University of Arizona versus Michigan Final Four game. For his first bet, Dudley, 22, got an account with  BETMGM sportsbook.
But it didn’t stop there. 
Dudley ended up acquiring more betting apps on his phone.
He’s used these apps to test his odds. He ended up using it more and more during the men’s and women’s NCAA Basketball Tournament. It reached the point where his app store has turned into a digital casino. The different apps offered options from fantasy football, sports betting and event wagering, all at a click of a button.
As a Phoenix resident, Dudley has found himself chasing his losses. Dudley wasn’t the only one gambling during the tournament. Gambling has become a big business in Arizona. In 2021, sports betting and event wagering became legal in the state. 
In December 2025 alone, the Department of Gaming shared that Arizonans gambled roughly $816 million in event wagering through their mobile devices. Even with big wins can come significant losses, as Arizonans lost about $90 million in event wagering. 
Jessica Roza, who works for the Arizona Department of Gaming as the Assistant Director of Government and Community Affairs, says losing and gambling addiction are a part of the risks.
“Some of the common signs we see are people who become obsessed with betting the odds and become really into the scores, what the players are doing and getting really emotional,” Roza said. 
Dudley wasn’t the only one gambling, big events like the Women’s Final Four in Phoenix attracted crowds to participate in wagering. With high-profile events like the Super Bowl, MLB spring training and collegiate tournaments drawing crowds, more visitors and residents are engaging in legalized wagering. Event wagering is a form of gambling that includes placing bets via regulated operators from sporting events to horse racing.  In the state, bettors must be at least 21 and use regulated operators,which will help prevent the chances of people chasing their losses.






Problem gambling becomes a part of a larger issue, which is addiction.  The Arizona Department of Gaming recognizes problem gambling as a public health issue. Mobile devices have had a role in this with accessibility to event wagering and sports betting which brings another group of people at risk: athletes. 
Just this week, Brendan Sorsby of Texas Tech, one of the top returning college quarterbacks, announced that he was entering a residential treatment program for a gambling addiction. The NCAA is investigating Sorsby’s gambling. Last year, the NCAA releasedthat a ban on sports betting for events the NCAA sponsors a championship in would remain in effect. 
The NCAA policy prohibits athletes and coaches to participate in sports betting in all three divisions of the NCAA. Outside of the NCAA, sports has seen serious legal issues and crossover where coaches have engaged in gambling. 
In 2025, Portland Trailblazers coach Chauncey Billups and 31 defendants were charged in schemes to rig illegal poker games. The Department of Justice released a press release about the charges. With incidents of coaches gambling on the radar, it poaches their integrity. 
As coaches may be engaged, it’s important for the athletes to stay out the way. Attorney of IBF Law Group, Sheree Wright, has experience working in sports law. As an attorney that helps collegiate athletes with contracts, she said they must avoid sports betting at all times. 
“The most important thing is to maintain distance from anything that involves sports betting because it is so easy to put an athlete in that situations because everyone is sports betting their friends, their family,” Wright said.
If an athlete engages in sports betting, there is a high probability it could ruin their career. 
“You see very few things where an athlete gets in trouble for illegal sports betting,” Wright said.  
To avoid falling into a gambling loophole, the best advice from the Arizona Department of Gaming is to make a plan and stick to it. The department released a platform called “Check Your Bet” where individuals can check their bet with a regulated operator and participate in self-exclusion programs for both in-person and online betting resources.
“Check your bet, make sure you’re betting with a regulated operator but also set a budget, stick to it. Don’t chase your losses,” Roza said. For those facing problem gambling, the state can connect individuals to either out-patient treatment centers or the self-exclusion programs.
The post A digital casino that fits in your pocket:High-profile Arizona sporting events highlights problem gambling  appeared first on Cronkite News.</news:keywords>
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			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:44:44.730Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>SpaceX rocket launch could be visible in Arizona Wednesday evening</news:title>
			<news:keywords>SpaceX is scheduled to launch Starlink satellites on Wednesday night.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
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			<news:title>SpaceX rocket launch could be visible in Arizona Wednesday evening</news:title>
			<news:keywords>SpaceX is scheduled to launch Starlink satellites on Wednesday night.</news:keywords>
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			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:44:30.130Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>SpaceX rocket launch could be visible in Arizona Wednesday evening</news:title>
			<news:keywords>SpaceX is scheduled to launch Starlink satellites on Wednesday night.</news:keywords>
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			<news:title>Scottsdale kindergarten teacher arrested for allegedly accessing CSAM</news:title>
			<news:keywords>A kindergarten teacher for the Scottsdale Unified School District is accused of accessing &quot;child sex abuse material&quot; on his devices.</news:keywords>
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			<news:title>Scottsdale kindergarten teacher arrested for allegedly accessing CSAM</news:title>
			<news:keywords>A kindergarten teacher for the Scottsdale Unified School District is accused of accessing &quot;child sex abuse material&quot; on his devices.</news:keywords>
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			<news:title>Scottsdale kindergarten teacher arrested for allegedly accessing CSAM</news:title>
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			<news:title>Scottsdale kindergarten teacher arrested for allegedly accessing CSAM</news:title>
			<news:keywords>A kindergarten teacher for the Scottsdale Unified School District is accused of accessing &quot;child sex abuse material&quot; on his devices.</news:keywords>
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			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40555a200899a00e5f748</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Harley Feldman fought for justice for his daughter, murdered in Scottsdale. Less than a month after a conviction, he has died.</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:43:49.611Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Harley Feldman fought for justice for his daughter, murdered in Scottsdale. Less than a month after a conviction, he has died.</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Harley was a public advocate in getting justice for Allison&apos;s murder. He often spoke to media outlets about his daughter&apos;s legacy and the long trial process.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40551a200899a00e5f73f</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Single mother of 11 overcomes hearing loss, earns master&apos;s degree from GCU</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:43:45.360Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Single mother of 11 overcomes hearing loss, earns master&apos;s degree from GCU</news:title>
			<news:keywords>After losing her hearing and rebuilding it through surgery, a single mother of 11 crossed the graduation stage at GCU with a message of hope and perseverance.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40547a200899a00e5f736</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Single mother of 11 overcomes hearing loss, earns master&apos;s degree from GCU</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:43:35.490Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Single mother of 11 overcomes hearing loss, earns master&apos;s degree from GCU</news:title>
			<news:keywords>After losing her hearing and rebuilding it through surgery, a single mother of 11 crossed the graduation stage at GCU with a message of hope and perseverance.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40542a200899a00e5f724</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Single mother of 11 overcomes hearing loss, earns master&apos;s degree from GCU</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:43:30.883Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Single mother of 11 overcomes hearing loss, earns master&apos;s degree from GCU</news:title>
			<news:keywords>After losing her hearing and rebuilding it through surgery, a single mother of 11 crossed the graduation stage at GCU with a message of hope and perseverance.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40541a200899a00e5f71b</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Single mother of 11 overcomes hearing loss, earns master&apos;s degree from GCU</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:43:29.625Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Single mother of 11 overcomes hearing loss, earns master&apos;s degree from GCU</news:title>
			<news:keywords>After losing her hearing and rebuilding it through surgery, a single mother of 11 crossed the graduation stage at GCU with a message of hope and perseverance.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f4053da200899a00e5f708</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Arizona family mourns 3-year-old killed in suspected street racing crash</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:43:25.495Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Arizona family mourns 3-year-old killed in suspected street racing crash</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Two people have been arrested following the crash that killed 3-year-old Anna Garcia on April 10 in Tucson.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40533a200899a00e5f6fe</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Arizona family mourns 3-year-old killed in suspected street racing crash</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:43:15.802Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Arizona family mourns 3-year-old killed in suspected street racing crash</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Two people have been arrested following the crash that killed 3-year-old Anna Garcia on April 10 in Tucson.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f4052fa200899a00e5f6f4</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Arizona family mourns 3-year-old killed in suspected street racing crash</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:43:11.035Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Arizona family mourns 3-year-old killed in suspected street racing crash</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Two people have been arrested following the crash that killed 3-year-old Anna Garcia on April 10 in Tucson.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f4052da200899a00e5f6ea</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Arizona family mourns 3-year-old killed in suspected street racing crash</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:43:09.897Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Arizona family mourns 3-year-old killed in suspected street racing crash</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Two people have been arrested following the crash that killed 3-year-old Anna Garcia on April 10 in Tucson.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40529a200899a00e5f6e1</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>SRP reaches solar energy deal to power more than 500,000 homes</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:43:05.565Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>SRP reaches solar energy deal to power more than 500,000 homes</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Salt River Project has announced a new agreement to generate 3,000 megawatts of solar energy by 2034.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40520a200899a00e5f6d8</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>SRP reaches solar energy deal to power more than 500,000 homes</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:42:56.062Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>SRP reaches solar energy deal to power more than 500,000 homes</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Salt River Project has announced a new agreement to generate 3,000 megawatts of solar energy by 2034.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f4051ba200899a00e5f6cf</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>SRP reaches solar energy deal to power more than 500,000 homes</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:42:51.190Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>SRP reaches solar energy deal to power more than 500,000 homes</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Salt River Project has announced a new agreement to generate 3,000 megawatts of solar energy by 2034.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f4051aa200899a00e5f6c6</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>SRP reaches solar energy deal to power more than 500,000 homes</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:42:50.056Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>SRP reaches solar energy deal to power more than 500,000 homes</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Salt River Project has announced a new agreement to generate 3,000 megawatts of solar energy by 2034.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40516a200899a00e5f6bd</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Powerball ticket bought in Scottsdale worth $1 million</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:42:46.049Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Powerball ticket bought in Scottsdale worth $1 million</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The million-dollar Powerball ticket was bought at a Circle K in Scottsdale.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f4050ca200899a00e5f6b4</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Powerball ticket bought in Scottsdale worth $1 million</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:42:36.269Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Powerball ticket bought in Scottsdale worth $1 million</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The million-dollar Powerball ticket was bought at a Circle K in Scottsdale.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40507a200899a00e5f6ab</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Powerball ticket bought in Scottsdale worth $1 million</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:42:31.345Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Powerball ticket bought in Scottsdale worth $1 million</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The million-dollar Powerball ticket was bought at a Circle K in Scottsdale.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40506a200899a00e5f6a2</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Powerball ticket bought in Scottsdale worth $1 million</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:42:30.102Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Powerball ticket bought in Scottsdale worth $1 million</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The million-dollar Powerball ticket was bought at a Circle K in Scottsdale.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40502a200899a00e5f699</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>&apos;This is solvable&apos;: Valley pastor works to solve homelessness as need grows higher</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:42:26.541Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>&apos;This is solvable&apos;: Valley pastor works to solve homelessness as need grows higher</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The outreach pastor said he&apos;s seeing more seniors and families in need than ever before.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f404f8a200899a00e5f690</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>&apos;This is solvable&apos;: Valley pastor works to solve homelessness as need grows higher</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:42:16.302Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>&apos;This is solvable&apos;: Valley pastor works to solve homelessness as need grows higher</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The outreach pastor said he&apos;s seeing more seniors and families in need than ever before.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f404f3a200899a00e5f687</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>&apos;This is solvable&apos;: Valley pastor works to solve homelessness as need grows higher</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:42:11.768Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>&apos;This is solvable&apos;: Valley pastor works to solve homelessness as need grows higher</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The outreach pastor said he&apos;s seeing more seniors and families in need than ever before.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f404f2a200899a00e5f67e</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>&apos;This is solvable&apos;: Valley pastor works to solve homelessness as need grows higher</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:42:10.130Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>&apos;This is solvable&apos;: Valley pastor works to solve homelessness as need grows higher</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The outreach pastor said he&apos;s seeing more seniors and families in need than ever before.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f404eea200899a00e5f675</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>&apos;It&apos;s like home&apos;: Families find more than a place to stay at Vista Colina</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:42:06.918Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>&apos;It&apos;s like home&apos;: Families find more than a place to stay at Vista Colina</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Vista Colina provides 36 families with a private apartment for up to six months at a time.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f404e4a200899a00e5f66c</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>&apos;It&apos;s like home&apos;: Families find more than a place to stay at Vista Colina</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:41:56.386Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>&apos;It&apos;s like home&apos;: Families find more than a place to stay at Vista Colina</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Vista Colina provides 36 families with a private apartment for up to six months at a time.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f404dfa200899a00e5f663</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>&apos;It&apos;s like home&apos;: Families find more than a place to stay at Vista Colina</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:41:51.800Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>&apos;It&apos;s like home&apos;: Families find more than a place to stay at Vista Colina</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Vista Colina provides 36 families with a private apartment for up to six months at a time.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f404dea200899a00e5f65a</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>&apos;It&apos;s like home&apos;: Families find more than a place to stay at Vista Colina</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:41:50.296Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>&apos;It&apos;s like home&apos;: Families find more than a place to stay at Vista Colina</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Vista Colina provides 36 families with a private apartment for up to six months at a time.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f404dba200899a00e5f651</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>DPS trooper taken to hospital after collision during pursuit near I-10</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:41:47.091Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>DPS trooper taken to hospital after collision during pursuit near I-10</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The motorcycle trooper was involved in a collision near the Estrella Parkway off-ramp of Interstate 10.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f404d0a200899a00e5f648</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>DPS trooper taken to hospital after collision during pursuit near I-10</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:41:36.413Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>DPS trooper taken to hospital after collision during pursuit near I-10</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The motorcycle trooper was involved in a collision near the Estrella Parkway off-ramp of Interstate 10.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f404cba200899a00e5f63f</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>DPS trooper taken to hospital after collision during pursuit near I-10</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:41:31.866Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>DPS trooper taken to hospital after collision during pursuit near I-10</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The motorcycle trooper was involved in a collision near the Estrella Parkway off-ramp of Interstate 10.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f404caa200899a00e5f636</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>DPS trooper taken to hospital after collision during pursuit near I-10</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:41:30.684Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>DPS trooper taken to hospital after collision during pursuit near I-10</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The motorcycle trooper was involved in a collision near the Estrella Parkway off-ramp of Interstate 10.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f404c2a200899a00e5f5ff</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>DOJ sues New Jersey over laws giving illegal aliens in-state tuition, says citizens treated as &apos;second-class&apos;</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:41:22.517Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>DOJ sues New Jersey over laws giving illegal aliens in-state tuition, says citizens treated as &apos;second-class&apos;</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The Department of Justice filed a lawsuit Thursday against New Jersey, challenging state laws that allow illegal aliens to receive in-state tuition and financial aid, arguing the policies discriminate against U.S. citizens.
The lawsuit, filed in federal court, targets the state, several higher education agencies and officials, and is seeking to block enforcement of laws that provide reduced tuition rates and financial assistance to students regardless of their immigration status.
DOJ officials argue the policies violate federal law by offering benefits to illegal immigrants that are not equally available to all U.S. citizens.
&quot;This is a simple matter of federal law: In New Jersey and nationwide, colleges cannot provide benefits to illegal aliens that they do not provide to U.S. citizens,&quot; Assistant Attorney General Brett A. Shumate said. &quot;This Department of Justice will not tolerate American students being treated like second-class citizens in their own country.&quot;
TRUMP &apos;TOOK NOTES FROM THE GRINCH&apos;: STATES SUE OVER SNAP PROGRAM CHANGES
Under current New Jersey law, students who meet residency requirements can qualify for in-state tuition at public colleges regardless of whether they are in the U.S. legally. The state also allows certain illegal immigrant students to access financial aid and scholarships.
Associate Attorney General Stanley Woodward said the policies unfairly put American students at a disadvantage.
&quot;Imagine being denied the opportunity of education in your own country,&quot; Woodward said. &quot;By granting illegal aliens in-state tuition, the state of New Jersey is doing just that.&quot;
TRUMP DOJ FILES LAWSUIT AGAINST MINNESOTA OVER TRANS ATHLETE POLICY
The lawsuit is the latest in a broader effort by President Donald Trump’s administration to challenge state policies that provide benefits to illegal immigrants.
According to the DOJ, it marks the ninth such legal action filed as part of that initiative.
Similar lawsuits in Texas, Kentucky and Oklahoma have resulted in rulings that blocked comparable laws, while additional cases are pending in states including Illinois, Minnesota and California.
NEBRASKA ENDS IN-STATE TUITION BENEFITS FOR ILLEGAL IMMIGRANTS UNDER DOJ DEAL
Supporters of the policy have argued that in-state tuition eligibility is based on residency, not immigration status, and is intended to expand access to higher education for students who have lived in the state for years.
Fox News Digital has reached out to Democrat New Jersey Gov. Mikie Sherrill&apos;s office for comment on the matter.
The case is pending in the U.S. District Court for the District of New Jersey.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
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			  <news:name>Sheriff&apos;s office seeking help identifying woman found dead near I-40 in 1989</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:41:16.887Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Sheriff&apos;s office seeking help identifying woman found dead near I-40 in 1989</news:title>
			<news:keywords>According to the sheriff&apos;s office, the woman was found dead off Interstate 40 near the Hualapai Mountains on Nov. 24, 1989. Her death remains unsolved.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f404b7a200899a00e5f5ed</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Sheriff&apos;s office seeking help identifying woman found dead near I-40 in 1989</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:41:11.986Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Sheriff&apos;s office seeking help identifying woman found dead near I-40 in 1989</news:title>
			<news:keywords>According to the sheriff&apos;s office, the woman was found dead off Interstate 40 near the Hualapai Mountains on Nov. 24, 1989. Her death remains unsolved.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f404b6a200899a00e5f5e4</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Sheriff&apos;s office seeking help identifying woman found dead near I-40 in 1989</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:41:10.960Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Sheriff&apos;s office seeking help identifying woman found dead near I-40 in 1989</news:title>
			<news:keywords>According to the sheriff&apos;s office, the woman was found dead off Interstate 40 near the Hualapai Mountains on Nov. 24, 1989. Her death remains unsolved.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f404aea200899a00e5f5db</loc>
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			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>New video shows WHCD suspect inside hotel before rushing security checkpoint with weapon</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:41:02.683Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>New video shows WHCD suspect inside hotel before rushing security checkpoint with weapon</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Newly released Justice Department video appears to show Cole Tomas Allen moving through the Washington Hilton in the hours before the White House Correspondents’ Dinner shooting and later approaching a security checkpoint with a weapon. 
Federal prosecutors say the footage supports their account of the incident, while court proceedings remain in an early stage and the allegations have not been proven at trial.
The footage shows Cole Tomas Allen, 31, walking through the hotel on April 24 and visiting areas including the gym, where he is seen speaking with a woman at the front desk.
The video appears to show Allen running toward a security checkpoint Saturday evening with a weapon in hand, rushing past agents as they quickly react and draw their weapons. A muzzle flash from a Secret Service agent can be seen as Allen runs by.
Moments earlier, an officer is seen walking past the door Allen later burst through, while a K-9 appears to react just before he sprinted out.
AFTER THIRD ASSASSINATION ATTEMPT, DEBATE GROWS OVER WHETHER TRUMP ATTACK WARRANTS ANOTHER INVESTIGATION
The footage follows a separate video released Saturday that appeared to show Allen running through the checkpoint toward a ballroom and shooting a U.S. Secret Service agent.
Prosecutors were prepared to present the video during a detention hearing Thursday to argue that Allen posed a danger to the community, but his defense team agreed to detention.
Allen, 31, of Torrance, California, remains in federal custody after his defense agreed not to contest detention at this stage. He faces federal charges including attempted assassination of the president, firearm transport across state lines and discharging a firearm during a crime of violence.
ALLEGED TRUMP ASSASSINATION PLOT: ANALYSIS SHOWS 1 IN 5 LEFT-WING POSTS CRY HOAX, ADMIN SHREDS ‘MORON’ CLAIMS
Federal prosecutors charged him with, among other counts, attempting to assassinate the president of the United States, transporting a firearm across state lines and discharging a firearm during a crime of violence.
Allen is scheduled to return to court for a preliminary hearing on May 11.
U.S. Secret Service Director Sean Curran confirmed Thursday that an agent was shot in the chest while wearing a bulletproof vest and is expected to be OK.
CHARLAMAGNE BLAMES TRUMP FOR HEATED RHETORIC AMID WCHA DINNER FALLOUT
Curran said Allen shot the agent, who was wearing a bulletproof vest, while charging through security, though a later Justice Department filing did not repeat that allegation. He is expected to be OK.
Curran said the agent returned fire at Allen but missed.
He also pushed back on speculation that the agent may have been struck by friendly fire, saying the wounded agent was the only person besides Allen who discharged a weapon during the incident.
While an initial criminal complaint alleged Allen shot the agent, that claim was not included in a later Justice Department filing.
The Justice Department also released new photos of evidence tied to the shooting, including weapons and ammunition Allen allegedly had in his possession.
Fox News Digital&apos;s Alexandra Koch contributed to this report.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f404a9a200899a00e5f5d2</loc>
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			  <news:name>Arizona man sentenced to more than 9 years in prison for selling fentanyl</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
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			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:40:57.016Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Arizona man sentenced to more than 9 years in prison for selling fentanyl</news:title>
			<news:keywords>While serving a search warrant, investigators found significant quantities of fentanyl and cocaine, along with several scales and a money counter.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f404a4a200899a00e5f5c9</loc>
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			  <news:name>Arizona man sentenced to more than 9 years in prison for selling fentanyl</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:40:52.289Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Arizona man sentenced to more than 9 years in prison for selling fentanyl</news:title>
			<news:keywords>While serving a search warrant, investigators found significant quantities of fentanyl and cocaine, along with several scales and a money counter.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f404a3a200899a00e5f5c0</loc>
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			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Arizona man sentenced to more than 9 years in prison for selling fentanyl</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:40:51.362Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Arizona man sentenced to more than 9 years in prison for selling fentanyl</news:title>
			<news:keywords>While serving a search warrant, investigators found significant quantities of fentanyl and cocaine, along with several scales and a money counter.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f4049ba200899a00e5f5b7</loc>
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			  <news:name>Carville, co-host warn &apos;abolish ICE&apos; is new &apos;Defund the Police&apos;</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:40:43.215Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Carville, co-host warn &apos;abolish ICE&apos; is new &apos;Defund the Police&apos;</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Veteran Democratic strategist James Carville and his co-host spoke on Thursday about the dangers of Democrats falling for the same far-left rhetoric that weighed them down in past elections.
Throughout the 2024 election and long afterward, Carville has continually told his fellow liberals and Democrats to steer clear of divisive identity politics and radical social agendas, warning that they alienate voters and simply aren’t viable policy.
He and his co-host, Al Hunt, highlighted Texas congressional candidate Bobby Pulido for his rhetoric across the board during their podcast.
Pulido has been widely quoted for offering an explanation to fellow Democrats as to why aspirational Latino voters have shifted rightward, saying, &quot;People down here don&apos;t consider themselves poor — they consider themselves broke. When you&apos;re broke, you say, &apos;Tomorrow I&apos;m going to make it.&apos; Democrats treated people like they&apos;re poor, not like they&apos;re broke.&quot;
CARVILLE SAYS GEORGIA COULD BE HUGE SUCCESS IF &apos;IDIOT PROGRESSIVES&apos; DON&apos;T SCREW IT UP
Carville said that he loved this insight, but Hunt praised Pulido’s answer on whether ICE should be abolished.
&quot;He basically said, ‘No, we should reform ICE,’&quot; Hunt said. &quot;I think that question abolishing ICE is to ‘Defund the police’ of 2026. And Democrats that come into that are giving Republicans an opening. And boy, he didn&apos;t. He really answered that well.&quot;
Later in the show, they both praised retired Democratic politician Barney Frank, who has recently entered hospice care and begun to call out the far-left for having &quot;embraced an agenda that goes beyond what’s politically acceptable.&quot;
‘THIS S--- HAS TO STOP’: FORMER JILL BIDEN SPOX RIPS DEMS FOR &apos;VILIFYING&apos; DEI CRITICS AS &apos;WHITE SUPREMACISTS&apos;
&quot;I want to tip my hat to one of my favorite people in my life in American politics,&quot; Carville said, summarizing that that politician’s advice to Democrats boils down to &quot;Keep the goal in mind, you&apos;re trying to help people. You don&apos;t overreach. You do things that you need to do.&quot;
Carville went on to contrast this &quot;wise man&quot; with the &quot;blooming idiots at Working Families Party. Look up these dopes.&quot;
&quot;There&apos;s not a single person that identifies with them that lives more than 15 miles away from salt water,&quot; he said, appearing to lean into stereotypes about coastal far-left progressives.
He went on to argue that Frank, even at 87 years old and possibly nearing the end of his life, &quot;represents the future and the success of the Democratic Party.&quot;
CLICK HERE FOR MORE COVERAGE OF MEDIA AND CULTURE</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
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<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40495a200899a00e5f5ae</loc>
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			  <news:name>Federal government picks ASU to offer war degrees</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
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			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:40:37.434Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Federal government picks ASU to offer war degrees</news:title>
			<news:keywords>ASU has won a federal contract to offer a master&apos;s degree program in war and strategy.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40490a200899a00e5f5a5</loc>
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			  <news:name>Federal government picks ASU to offer war degrees</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:40:32.703Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Federal government picks ASU to offer war degrees</news:title>
			<news:keywords>ASU has won a federal contract to offer a master&apos;s degree program in war and strategy.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f4048fa200899a00e5f59c</loc>
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			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Federal government picks ASU to offer war degrees</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:40:31.829Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Federal government picks ASU to offer war degrees</news:title>
			<news:keywords>ASU has won a federal contract to offer a master&apos;s degree program in war and strategy.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40481a200899a00e5f591</loc>
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			  <news:name>Where to find heat relief in Maricopa County</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:40:17.613Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Where to find heat relief in Maricopa County</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The Heat Relief Network launches May 1, providing 200 free, cooled spaces during the hottest months of the year.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f4047ca200899a00e5f588</loc>
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			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Where to find heat relief in Maricopa County</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:40:12.909Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Where to find heat relief in Maricopa County</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The Heat Relief Network launches May 1, providing 200 free, cooled spaces during the hottest months of the year.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f4047ba200899a00e5f57f</loc>
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			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Where to find heat relief in Maricopa County</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:40:11.933Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Where to find heat relief in Maricopa County</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The Heat Relief Network launches May 1, providing 200 free, cooled spaces during the hottest months of the year.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f4046ea200899a00e5f547</loc>
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			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Gas prices soar to record highs amid war in Iran</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:39:58.166Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Gas prices soar to record highs amid war in Iran</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Arizona drivers are paying an average of $4.76 per gallon for regular gasoline in Maricopa County, 46 cents above the national average.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40469a200899a00e5f53e</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Gas prices soar to record highs amid war in Iran</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:39:53.427Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Gas prices soar to record highs amid war in Iran</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Arizona drivers are paying an average of $4.76 per gallon for regular gasoline in Maricopa County, 46 cents above the national average.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40468a200899a00e5f535</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Gas prices soar to record highs amid war in Iran</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:39:52.406Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Gas prices soar to record highs amid war in Iran</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Arizona drivers are paying an average of $4.76 per gallon for regular gasoline in Maricopa County, 46 cents above the national average.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f4045aa200899a00e5f52c</loc>
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			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Loop 202 closed in Mesa</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:39:38.572Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Loop 202 closed in Mesa</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The westbound lanes of the Red Mountain Freeway are closed in Mesa. There is no estimated time of reopening.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40455a200899a00e5f523</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Loop 202 closed in Mesa</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:39:33.610Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Loop 202 closed in Mesa</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The westbound lanes of the Red Mountain Freeway are closed in Mesa. There is no estimated time of reopening.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40454a200899a00e5f51a</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Loop 202 closed in Mesa</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:39:32.797Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Loop 202 closed in Mesa</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The westbound lanes of the Red Mountain Freeway are closed in Mesa. There is no estimated time of reopening.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40446a200899a00e5f511</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Poll: Drug Pricing Reform A Winning Issue For GOP Candidates</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:39:18.745Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Poll: Drug Pricing Reform A Winning Issue For GOP Candidates</news:title>
			<news:keywords>By Ethan Faverino |
A new national poll conducted by Pulse Decision Science reveals that pharmaceutical reform represents a powerful and politically advantageous issue for Republican candidates heading into this election cycle.
The data shows the issue effectively consolidates support within the GOP base during primaries while delivering meaningful gains among independent and battleground voters in general elections.
The poll highlights near-universal frustration with the high costs of prescription drugs, creating a rare opportunity for Republicans to claim ownership of an issue that resonates deeply across demographic and partisan lines.
According to the survey, 84% of voters report using prescription medication, underscoring how broadly the issue affects American households. Cost pressures are forcing significant behavioral changes, with 55% of respondents admitting they have skipped doses, turned to over-the-counter alternatives, or ignored doctor recommendations due to high prices.
These coping behaviors are particularly common among younger women, lower-education voters, and independents/moderates.
Voters across the political spectrum overwhelmingly attribute rising drug prices to pharmaceutical industry practices rather than investments in innovation. Major factors cited include:
Increasing profits: 81%
Rising executive compensation: 76%
Unethical business practices: 70%
By contrast, only 52% of voters view research and development costs as a major driver of prices—the weakest factor identified by a wide margin.
This perception creates fertile ground for messaging focused on corporate greed, price gouging, and unfair practices, which the poll indicates resonates strongly even with the Republican base.
When voters are presented with a candidate who supports specific, targeted pharmaceutical reforms—including Most Favorable Nation (MFN) pricing, patent reform, and measures to increase competition—that candidate sees a net +5-point gain in overall support.
Notable gains were recorded among key subgroups:
Hispanics: +10 points
High-propensity general election voters (3 of 4 voting history): +9 points
Women 55 and older: +7 points
Voters in lean Democratic Congressional districts: +7 points
High school education or less: +7 points
Republicans: +6 points
Conservatives: +6 points
Bachelor’s degree holders: +6 points
These shifts demonstrate that pharmaceutical reform serves both a base-unifying issue and a tool for expanding appeal in competitive general election environments.
The poll further shows that framing pharmaceutical reform through an “America First” lens is especially powerful in Republican primaries. Fully 89% of GOP primary voters indicated they are more likely to support a candidate who prioritizes codifying President Trump’s Most Favorable Nation Executive Order.
When paired with messaging that emphasizes America-First pricing, the issue delivers strong consolidation within the Republican coalition. Key subgroup gains in the primary context include:
Males 18-34: +13 points
Voters in lean Republican Congressional districts: +11 points
Mid-turnout voters (2 of 4 voting history): +10 points
Self-described “Not So Strong” Republicans: +10 points
The findings arrive as the Trump administration continues to focus on delivering tangible results on pharmaceutical pricing. On April 23, 2026, President Trump announced the 17th agreement with a major pharmaceutical manufacturer—this time with Regeneron—bringing MFN-style pricing to American patients.
The deal provides every State Medicaid program access to MFN prices on Regeneron products, delivering hundreds of millions in savings. It covers 86% of the branded drug market across 17 leading manufacturers and includes commitments to end foreign freeloading on American innovation.
Key provisions include significant price reductions, such as lowering the price of Regeneron’s cholesterol medication, Praluent, from $537 to $225 when purchased through TrumpRx.
Additionally, Regeneron’s new gene therapy for a rare form of genetic deafness, Otarmeni, will be provided at no cost to American families. The company also committed to a $27 billion investment in U.S. research, development, and manufacturing by 2029, contributing to a total of $448 billion in pharmaceutical investments secured under President Trump in just 15 months.





Ethan Faverino is a reporter for AZ Free News. You can send him news tips using this link.
The post Poll: Drug Pricing Reform A Winning Issue For GOP Candidates first appeared on AZ FREE NEWS.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
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		</url>
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		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40441a200899a00e5f508</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Poll: Drug Pricing Reform A Winning Issue For GOP Candidates</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:39:13.627Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Poll: Drug Pricing Reform A Winning Issue For GOP Candidates</news:title>
			<news:keywords>By Ethan Faverino |
A new national poll conducted by Pulse Decision Science reveals that pharmaceutical reform represents a powerful and politically advantageous issue for Republican candidates heading into this election cycle.
The data shows the issue effectively consolidates support within the GOP base during primaries while delivering meaningful gains among independent and battleground voters in general elections.
The poll highlights near-universal frustration with the high costs of prescription drugs, creating a rare opportunity for Republicans to claim ownership of an issue that resonates deeply across demographic and partisan lines.
According to the survey, 84% of voters report using prescription medication, underscoring how broadly the issue affects American households. Cost pressures are forcing significant behavioral changes, with 55% of respondents admitting they have skipped doses, turned to over-the-counter alternatives, or ignored doctor recommendations due to high prices.
These coping behaviors are particularly common among younger women, lower-education voters, and independents/moderates.
Voters across the political spectrum overwhelmingly attribute rising drug prices to pharmaceutical industry practices rather than investments in innovation. Major factors cited include:
Increasing profits: 81%
Rising executive compensation: 76%
Unethical business practices: 70%
By contrast, only 52% of voters view research and development costs as a major driver of prices—the weakest factor identified by a wide margin.
This perception creates fertile ground for messaging focused on corporate greed, price gouging, and unfair practices, which the poll indicates resonates strongly even with the Republican base.
When voters are presented with a candidate who supports specific, targeted pharmaceutical reforms—including Most Favorable Nation (MFN) pricing, patent reform, and measures to increase competition—that candidate sees a net +5-point gain in overall support.
Notable gains were recorded among key subgroups:
Hispanics: +10 points
High-propensity general election voters (3 of 4 voting history): +9 points
Women 55 and older: +7 points
Voters in lean Democratic Congressional districts: +7 points
High school education or less: +7 points
Republicans: +6 points
Conservatives: +6 points
Bachelor’s degree holders: +6 points
These shifts demonstrate that pharmaceutical reform serves both a base-unifying issue and a tool for expanding appeal in competitive general election environments.
The poll further shows that framing pharmaceutical reform through an “America First” lens is especially powerful in Republican primaries. Fully 89% of GOP primary voters indicated they are more likely to support a candidate who prioritizes codifying President Trump’s Most Favorable Nation Executive Order.
When paired with messaging that emphasizes America-First pricing, the issue delivers strong consolidation within the Republican coalition. Key subgroup gains in the primary context include:
Males 18-34: +13 points
Voters in lean Republican Congressional districts: +11 points
Mid-turnout voters (2 of 4 voting history): +10 points
Self-described “Not So Strong” Republicans: +10 points
The findings arrive as the Trump administration continues to focus on delivering tangible results on pharmaceutical pricing. On April 23, 2026, President Trump announced the 17th agreement with a major pharmaceutical manufacturer—this time with Regeneron—bringing MFN-style pricing to American patients.
The deal provides every State Medicaid program access to MFN prices on Regeneron products, delivering hundreds of millions in savings. It covers 86% of the branded drug market across 17 leading manufacturers and includes commitments to end foreign freeloading on American innovation.
Key provisions include significant price reductions, such as lowering the price of Regeneron’s cholesterol medication, Praluent, from $537 to $225 when purchased through TrumpRx.
Additionally, Regeneron’s new gene therapy for a rare form of genetic deafness, Otarmeni, will be provided at no cost to American families. The company also committed to a $27 billion investment in U.S. research, development, and manufacturing by 2029, contributing to a total of $448 billion in pharmaceutical investments secured under President Trump in just 15 months.





Ethan Faverino is a reporter for AZ Free News. You can send him news tips using this link.
The post Poll: Drug Pricing Reform A Winning Issue For GOP Candidates first appeared on AZ FREE NEWS.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40440a200899a00e5f4ff</loc>
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			  <news:name>Poll: Drug Pricing Reform A Winning Issue For GOP Candidates</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:39:12.981Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Poll: Drug Pricing Reform A Winning Issue For GOP Candidates</news:title>
			<news:keywords>By Ethan Faverino |
A new national poll conducted by Pulse Decision Science reveals that pharmaceutical reform represents a powerful and politically advantageous issue for Republican candidates heading into this election cycle.
The data shows the issue effectively consolidates support within the GOP base during primaries while delivering meaningful gains among independent and battleground voters in general elections.
The poll highlights near-universal frustration with the high costs of prescription drugs, creating a rare opportunity for Republicans to claim ownership of an issue that resonates deeply across demographic and partisan lines.
According to the survey, 84% of voters report using prescription medication, underscoring how broadly the issue affects American households. Cost pressures are forcing significant behavioral changes, with 55% of respondents admitting they have skipped doses, turned to over-the-counter alternatives, or ignored doctor recommendations due to high prices.
These coping behaviors are particularly common among younger women, lower-education voters, and independents/moderates.
Voters across the political spectrum overwhelmingly attribute rising drug prices to pharmaceutical industry practices rather than investments in innovation. Major factors cited include:
Increasing profits: 81%
Rising executive compensation: 76%
Unethical business practices: 70%
By contrast, only 52% of voters view research and development costs as a major driver of prices—the weakest factor identified by a wide margin.
This perception creates fertile ground for messaging focused on corporate greed, price gouging, and unfair practices, which the poll indicates resonates strongly even with the Republican base.
When voters are presented with a candidate who supports specific, targeted pharmaceutical reforms—including Most Favorable Nation (MFN) pricing, patent reform, and measures to increase competition—that candidate sees a net +5-point gain in overall support.
Notable gains were recorded among key subgroups:
Hispanics: +10 points
High-propensity general election voters (3 of 4 voting history): +9 points
Women 55 and older: +7 points
Voters in lean Democratic Congressional districts: +7 points
High school education or less: +7 points
Republicans: +6 points
Conservatives: +6 points
Bachelor’s degree holders: +6 points
These shifts demonstrate that pharmaceutical reform serves both a base-unifying issue and a tool for expanding appeal in competitive general election environments.
The poll further shows that framing pharmaceutical reform through an “America First” lens is especially powerful in Republican primaries. Fully 89% of GOP primary voters indicated they are more likely to support a candidate who prioritizes codifying President Trump’s Most Favorable Nation Executive Order.
When paired with messaging that emphasizes America-First pricing, the issue delivers strong consolidation within the Republican coalition. Key subgroup gains in the primary context include:
Males 18-34: +13 points
Voters in lean Republican Congressional districts: +11 points
Mid-turnout voters (2 of 4 voting history): +10 points
Self-described “Not So Strong” Republicans: +10 points
The findings arrive as the Trump administration continues to focus on delivering tangible results on pharmaceutical pricing. On April 23, 2026, President Trump announced the 17th agreement with a major pharmaceutical manufacturer—this time with Regeneron—bringing MFN-style pricing to American patients.
The deal provides every State Medicaid program access to MFN prices on Regeneron products, delivering hundreds of millions in savings. It covers 86% of the branded drug market across 17 leading manufacturers and includes commitments to end foreign freeloading on American innovation.
Key provisions include significant price reductions, such as lowering the price of Regeneron’s cholesterol medication, Praluent, from $537 to $225 when purchased through TrumpRx.
Additionally, Regeneron’s new gene therapy for a rare form of genetic deafness, Otarmeni, will be provided at no cost to American families. The company also committed to a $27 billion investment in U.S. research, development, and manufacturing by 2029, contributing to a total of $448 billion in pharmaceutical investments secured under President Trump in just 15 months.





Ethan Faverino is a reporter for AZ Free News. You can send him news tips using this link.
The post Poll: Drug Pricing Reform A Winning Issue For GOP Candidates first appeared on AZ FREE NEWS.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40432a200899a00e5f4f6</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Arizona Superintendent Of Schools Pleads For More Safety Funding</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:38:58.863Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Arizona Superintendent Of Schools Pleads For More Safety Funding</news:title>
			<news:keywords>By Staff Reporter |
Arizona Superintendent of Public Instruction Tom Horne is pleading with the state legislature to approve an additional $40 million for school safety. 
Horne said in a Monday press release that those proposed millions are just the minimum that hardly reflects the outsized need on Arizona’s campuses for security. 
Superintendent Horne said the latest deadline for school safety grant requests yielded a demand of over 800 counselors or social workers and over 700 officers. He said the funding needed to fulfill the cost of these requests would amount to nearly $187 million.  
Under Horne’s administration, the number of armed officers under the School Safety Program (SSP) grew from just over 100 to nearly 500—nearly five times the size in just three years. SSP determines the distribution of resources through competitive, state-funded grants lasting three-year cycles. 
Horne said that the best model for the SSP is to have officers present to work alongside the certified mental health counselors. There are nearly 600 counselors and social workers that work alongside the nearly 500 armed officers at over 1,100 locations statewide. 
There are over 1,500 district public schools and over 500 public charter schools in the state. Over 1 million students attend these schools, and nearly 60,700 educators that teach in them. 
The average SSO salary according to the fiscal year 2027 FAQ runs at about $157,000. 
“If the funding isn’t there to provide for them, and then a tragedy happens in one of those schools, that would be a terrible occurrence,” said Horne. “Any school that asks for a police officer should be able to get one to defend the students, to defend the staff and the teachers.” 
Superintendent Horne cited the recent near-tragedy that occurred in Oklahoma earlier this month. An unarmed high school principal, Kirk Moore, confronted and stopped an adult former student, Victor Lee Hawkins, who was attempting to shoot up the school. Moore survived the encounter with a gunshot wound to the leg; no fatalities occurred. 
He also cited the 2012 tragedy out of New England, where another principal made a similar attempt to stop a gunman and lost her life in the infamous Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting. An elementary school principal, Dawn Hochsprung, was shot and killed by gunman Adam Lanza as she confronted him. 
Both cases, Horne says, justified his argument that every Arizona school requires an armed officer to prevent injuries or deaths. 
“My biggest nightmare is that an armed maniac gets onto a school campus and kills people. Just a few weeks ago, a heroic principal in Oklahoma subdued an armed gunman at a school and was wounded in the process. While we praise his actions, having unarmed teachers be the first line of defense is not acceptable,” said Horne. 






Horne said that current law will ensure those 500 armed officers remain funded, but that no new funding will mean no additional officers and, further, will mean a loss of funding for the nearly 600 counselors and social workers.





AZ Free News is your #1 source for Arizona news and politics. You can send us news tips using this link.
The post Arizona Superintendent Of Schools Pleads For More Safety Funding first appeared on AZ FREE NEWS.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
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		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f4042ca200899a00e5f4ed</loc>
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			  <news:name>Arizona Superintendent Of Schools Pleads For More Safety Funding</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:38:52.651Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Arizona Superintendent Of Schools Pleads For More Safety Funding</news:title>
			<news:keywords>By Staff Reporter |
Arizona Superintendent of Public Instruction Tom Horne is pleading with the state legislature to approve an additional $40 million for school safety. 
Horne said in a Monday press release that those proposed millions are just the minimum that hardly reflects the outsized need on Arizona’s campuses for security. 
Superintendent Horne said the latest deadline for school safety grant requests yielded a demand of over 800 counselors or social workers and over 700 officers. He said the funding needed to fulfill the cost of these requests would amount to nearly $187 million.  
Under Horne’s administration, the number of armed officers under the School Safety Program (SSP) grew from just over 100 to nearly 500—nearly five times the size in just three years. SSP determines the distribution of resources through competitive, state-funded grants lasting three-year cycles. 
Horne said that the best model for the SSP is to have officers present to work alongside the certified mental health counselors. There are nearly 600 counselors and social workers that work alongside the nearly 500 armed officers at over 1,100 locations statewide. 
There are over 1,500 district public schools and over 500 public charter schools in the state. Over 1 million students attend these schools, and nearly 60,700 educators that teach in them. 
The average SSO salary according to the fiscal year 2027 FAQ runs at about $157,000. 
“If the funding isn’t there to provide for them, and then a tragedy happens in one of those schools, that would be a terrible occurrence,” said Horne. “Any school that asks for a police officer should be able to get one to defend the students, to defend the staff and the teachers.” 
Superintendent Horne cited the recent near-tragedy that occurred in Oklahoma earlier this month. An unarmed high school principal, Kirk Moore, confronted and stopped an adult former student, Victor Lee Hawkins, who was attempting to shoot up the school. Moore survived the encounter with a gunshot wound to the leg; no fatalities occurred. 
He also cited the 2012 tragedy out of New England, where another principal made a similar attempt to stop a gunman and lost her life in the infamous Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting. An elementary school principal, Dawn Hochsprung, was shot and killed by gunman Adam Lanza as she confronted him. 
Both cases, Horne says, justified his argument that every Arizona school requires an armed officer to prevent injuries or deaths. 
“My biggest nightmare is that an armed maniac gets onto a school campus and kills people. Just a few weeks ago, a heroic principal in Oklahoma subdued an armed gunman at a school and was wounded in the process. While we praise his actions, having unarmed teachers be the first line of defense is not acceptable,” said Horne. 






Horne said that current law will ensure those 500 armed officers remain funded, but that no new funding will mean no additional officers and, further, will mean a loss of funding for the nearly 600 counselors and social workers.





AZ Free News is your #1 source for Arizona news and politics. You can send us news tips using this link.
The post Arizona Superintendent Of Schools Pleads For More Safety Funding first appeared on AZ FREE NEWS.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
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			  <news:name>Arizona Superintendent Of Schools Pleads For More Safety Funding</news:name>
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			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:38:52.014Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Arizona Superintendent Of Schools Pleads For More Safety Funding</news:title>
			<news:keywords>By Staff Reporter |
Arizona Superintendent of Public Instruction Tom Horne is pleading with the state legislature to approve an additional $40 million for school safety. 
Horne said in a Monday press release that those proposed millions are just the minimum that hardly reflects the outsized need on Arizona’s campuses for security. 
Superintendent Horne said the latest deadline for school safety grant requests yielded a demand of over 800 counselors or social workers and over 700 officers. He said the funding needed to fulfill the cost of these requests would amount to nearly $187 million.  
Under Horne’s administration, the number of armed officers under the School Safety Program (SSP) grew from just over 100 to nearly 500—nearly five times the size in just three years. SSP determines the distribution of resources through competitive, state-funded grants lasting three-year cycles. 
Horne said that the best model for the SSP is to have officers present to work alongside the certified mental health counselors. There are nearly 600 counselors and social workers that work alongside the nearly 500 armed officers at over 1,100 locations statewide. 
There are over 1,500 district public schools and over 500 public charter schools in the state. Over 1 million students attend these schools, and nearly 60,700 educators that teach in them. 
The average SSO salary according to the fiscal year 2027 FAQ runs at about $157,000. 
“If the funding isn’t there to provide for them, and then a tragedy happens in one of those schools, that would be a terrible occurrence,” said Horne. “Any school that asks for a police officer should be able to get one to defend the students, to defend the staff and the teachers.” 
Superintendent Horne cited the recent near-tragedy that occurred in Oklahoma earlier this month. An unarmed high school principal, Kirk Moore, confronted and stopped an adult former student, Victor Lee Hawkins, who was attempting to shoot up the school. Moore survived the encounter with a gunshot wound to the leg; no fatalities occurred. 
He also cited the 2012 tragedy out of New England, where another principal made a similar attempt to stop a gunman and lost her life in the infamous Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting. An elementary school principal, Dawn Hochsprung, was shot and killed by gunman Adam Lanza as she confronted him. 
Both cases, Horne says, justified his argument that every Arizona school requires an armed officer to prevent injuries or deaths. 
“My biggest nightmare is that an armed maniac gets onto a school campus and kills people. Just a few weeks ago, a heroic principal in Oklahoma subdued an armed gunman at a school and was wounded in the process. While we praise his actions, having unarmed teachers be the first line of defense is not acceptable,” said Horne. 






Horne said that current law will ensure those 500 armed officers remain funded, but that no new funding will mean no additional officers and, further, will mean a loss of funding for the nearly 600 counselors and social workers.





AZ Free News is your #1 source for Arizona news and politics. You can send us news tips using this link.
The post Arizona Superintendent Of Schools Pleads For More Safety Funding first appeared on AZ FREE NEWS.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
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		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f4041fa200899a00e5f4db</loc>
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			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Arizona Republicans Question Mayes’ Handling Of Hobbs Pay-To-Play Probe</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:38:39.288Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Arizona Republicans Question Mayes’ Handling Of Hobbs Pay-To-Play Probe</news:title>
			<news:keywords>By Staff Reporter |
The Arizona Republican Party is questioning why Attorney General Kris Mayes hasn’t taken action against her fellow Democrat, Gov. Katie Hobbs, over an alleged pay-to-play arrangement. 
Mayes is investigating Hobbs over allegations that she awarded a unique rate increase by the Department of Children Services (DCS) to Sunshine Residential Homes, a group home operator, following sizable donations to her gubernatorial campaign and the Arizona Democratic Party. Mayes asked to interview Hobbs this week, but it appears the governor may decline that invitation. 
Republican support for Mayes investigating Hobbs has been a whiplash; certain lawmakers and state leaders contended it was best for Mayes to recuse herself given their close party ties. 
Hobbs spokesman Christian Slater told the Arizona Republic that Hobbs declined to comment on her decision to sit for an interview. Slater said the lack of evidence proving Hobbs’ knowledge of the rate increase meant there was no proof of her guilt. 
Sunshine Residential Homes donated more than $400,000 to Hobbs and the Arizona Democratic Party. After Hobbs took office, DCS awarded the operator a 30% rate increase. Officials say the details of DCS actions surrounding the rate increase were suspicious: no other group homes received rate increases; other group homes’ rate averages fell below Sunshine Residential Homes; and DCS ended state contracts with 16 group homes. 
In a new statement released on Wednesday, the Arizona Republican Party called on Mayes to keep up the pressure on Hobbs by putting aside any political favoritism. The party also urged the governor to cooperate with investigators. 
The party’s chairman, Sergio Arellano, said Hobbs’ actions were consistent with corruption. 
“Governor Hobbs has spent years lecturing Arizonans about ethics while her own administration was allegedly steering millions in taxpayer dollars to a generous donor,” said Arellano. “The fact that her campaign manager was dining with the contractor’s CEO as the deal was finalized only adds to the stench of a pay-to-play scheme that puts special interests ahead of Arizona’s most vulnerable children in state care. Hobbs owes the people of Arizona full transparency and cooperation with this criminal probe, not more stonewalling and self-serving denials.”
The Republican-led Arizona House launched an independent investigation into the pay-to-play allegations earlier this year. They are working with Mayes and Maricopa County Attorney Rachel Mitchell on the investigation; Mayes and Mitchell began investigating nearly two years ago. 
The results of the legislature’s investigation will go to the advisory team created in the aftermath of 2024 investigative reporting that outlined the alleged pay-to-play scheme. The advisory team will coordinate the parallel investigations from Mitchell and Mayes to work out a conclusion on the matter. 
Hobbs derided the legislative investigation in a statement to The Center Square as the “same old partisan games” by “extremist legislators” spreading misinformation. The governor has repeatedly denied any involvement with the DCS decision. 
“I’m looking forward to the conclusion of this investigation which I know will show what reporting has confirmed that I was not involved in the decision and that DCS acted in the best interest of Arizona’s foster children,” said Hobbs in a Tuesday statement.





AZ Free News is your #1 source for Arizona news and politics. You can send us news tips using this link.
The post Arizona Republicans Question Mayes’ Handling Of Hobbs Pay-To-Play Probe first appeared on AZ FREE NEWS.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
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<url>
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			  <news:name>Arizona Republicans Question Mayes’ Handling Of Hobbs Pay-To-Play Probe</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:38:32.095Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Arizona Republicans Question Mayes’ Handling Of Hobbs Pay-To-Play Probe</news:title>
			<news:keywords>By Staff Reporter |
The Arizona Republican Party is questioning why Attorney General Kris Mayes hasn’t taken action against her fellow Democrat, Gov. Katie Hobbs, over an alleged pay-to-play arrangement. 
Mayes is investigating Hobbs over allegations that she awarded a unique rate increase by the Department of Children Services (DCS) to Sunshine Residential Homes, a group home operator, following sizable donations to her gubernatorial campaign and the Arizona Democratic Party. Mayes asked to interview Hobbs this week, but it appears the governor may decline that invitation. 
Republican support for Mayes investigating Hobbs has been a whiplash; certain lawmakers and state leaders contended it was best for Mayes to recuse herself given their close party ties. 
Hobbs spokesman Christian Slater told the Arizona Republic that Hobbs declined to comment on her decision to sit for an interview. Slater said the lack of evidence proving Hobbs’ knowledge of the rate increase meant there was no proof of her guilt. 
Sunshine Residential Homes donated more than $400,000 to Hobbs and the Arizona Democratic Party. After Hobbs took office, DCS awarded the operator a 30% rate increase. Officials say the details of DCS actions surrounding the rate increase were suspicious: no other group homes received rate increases; other group homes’ rate averages fell below Sunshine Residential Homes; and DCS ended state contracts with 16 group homes. 
In a new statement released on Wednesday, the Arizona Republican Party called on Mayes to keep up the pressure on Hobbs by putting aside any political favoritism. The party also urged the governor to cooperate with investigators. 
The party’s chairman, Sergio Arellano, said Hobbs’ actions were consistent with corruption. 
“Governor Hobbs has spent years lecturing Arizonans about ethics while her own administration was allegedly steering millions in taxpayer dollars to a generous donor,” said Arellano. “The fact that her campaign manager was dining with the contractor’s CEO as the deal was finalized only adds to the stench of a pay-to-play scheme that puts special interests ahead of Arizona’s most vulnerable children in state care. Hobbs owes the people of Arizona full transparency and cooperation with this criminal probe, not more stonewalling and self-serving denials.”
The Republican-led Arizona House launched an independent investigation into the pay-to-play allegations earlier this year. They are working with Mayes and Maricopa County Attorney Rachel Mitchell on the investigation; Mayes and Mitchell began investigating nearly two years ago. 
The results of the legislature’s investigation will go to the advisory team created in the aftermath of 2024 investigative reporting that outlined the alleged pay-to-play scheme. The advisory team will coordinate the parallel investigations from Mitchell and Mayes to work out a conclusion on the matter. 
Hobbs derided the legislative investigation in a statement to The Center Square as the “same old partisan games” by “extremist legislators” spreading misinformation. The governor has repeatedly denied any involvement with the DCS decision. 
“I’m looking forward to the conclusion of this investigation which I know will show what reporting has confirmed that I was not involved in the decision and that DCS acted in the best interest of Arizona’s foster children,” said Hobbs in a Tuesday statement.





AZ Free News is your #1 source for Arizona news and politics. You can send us news tips using this link.
The post Arizona Republicans Question Mayes’ Handling Of Hobbs Pay-To-Play Probe first appeared on AZ FREE NEWS.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40417a200899a00e5f4c9</loc>
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			  <news:name>Arizona Republicans Question Mayes’ Handling Of Hobbs Pay-To-Play Probe</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:38:31.508Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Arizona Republicans Question Mayes’ Handling Of Hobbs Pay-To-Play Probe</news:title>
			<news:keywords>By Staff Reporter |
The Arizona Republican Party is questioning why Attorney General Kris Mayes hasn’t taken action against her fellow Democrat, Gov. Katie Hobbs, over an alleged pay-to-play arrangement. 
Mayes is investigating Hobbs over allegations that she awarded a unique rate increase by the Department of Children Services (DCS) to Sunshine Residential Homes, a group home operator, following sizable donations to her gubernatorial campaign and the Arizona Democratic Party. Mayes asked to interview Hobbs this week, but it appears the governor may decline that invitation. 
Republican support for Mayes investigating Hobbs has been a whiplash; certain lawmakers and state leaders contended it was best for Mayes to recuse herself given their close party ties. 
Hobbs spokesman Christian Slater told the Arizona Republic that Hobbs declined to comment on her decision to sit for an interview. Slater said the lack of evidence proving Hobbs’ knowledge of the rate increase meant there was no proof of her guilt. 
Sunshine Residential Homes donated more than $400,000 to Hobbs and the Arizona Democratic Party. After Hobbs took office, DCS awarded the operator a 30% rate increase. Officials say the details of DCS actions surrounding the rate increase were suspicious: no other group homes received rate increases; other group homes’ rate averages fell below Sunshine Residential Homes; and DCS ended state contracts with 16 group homes. 
In a new statement released on Wednesday, the Arizona Republican Party called on Mayes to keep up the pressure on Hobbs by putting aside any political favoritism. The party also urged the governor to cooperate with investigators. 
The party’s chairman, Sergio Arellano, said Hobbs’ actions were consistent with corruption. 
“Governor Hobbs has spent years lecturing Arizonans about ethics while her own administration was allegedly steering millions in taxpayer dollars to a generous donor,” said Arellano. “The fact that her campaign manager was dining with the contractor’s CEO as the deal was finalized only adds to the stench of a pay-to-play scheme that puts special interests ahead of Arizona’s most vulnerable children in state care. Hobbs owes the people of Arizona full transparency and cooperation with this criminal probe, not more stonewalling and self-serving denials.”
The Republican-led Arizona House launched an independent investigation into the pay-to-play allegations earlier this year. They are working with Mayes and Maricopa County Attorney Rachel Mitchell on the investigation; Mayes and Mitchell began investigating nearly two years ago. 
The results of the legislature’s investigation will go to the advisory team created in the aftermath of 2024 investigative reporting that outlined the alleged pay-to-play scheme. The advisory team will coordinate the parallel investigations from Mitchell and Mayes to work out a conclusion on the matter. 
Hobbs derided the legislative investigation in a statement to The Center Square as the “same old partisan games” by “extremist legislators” spreading misinformation. The governor has repeatedly denied any involvement with the DCS decision. 
“I’m looking forward to the conclusion of this investigation which I know will show what reporting has confirmed that I was not involved in the decision and that DCS acted in the best interest of Arizona’s foster children,” said Hobbs in a Tuesday statement.





AZ Free News is your #1 source for Arizona news and politics. You can send us news tips using this link.
The post Arizona Republicans Question Mayes’ Handling Of Hobbs Pay-To-Play Probe first appeared on AZ FREE NEWS.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
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		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f4040ba200899a00e5f4c0</loc>
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			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>AZFEC: Katie Hobbs’ “Energy Promise” To Arizona Ratepayers: Higher Costs, More Subsidies</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:38:19.440Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>AZFEC: Katie Hobbs’ “Energy Promise” To Arizona Ratepayers: Higher Costs, More Subsidies</news:title>
			<news:keywords>By the Arizona Free Enterprise Club |
Last year, Katie Hobbs, by executive order, established a “task force” headed by her Office of “Sustainability” to develop a report on energy affordability and reliability. This month, her task force submitted their plan which would do the opposite of that: make energy more expensive and less reliable. This shouldn’t come as a surprise considering the “task force” called by Hobbs is made up of solar special interests, environmental activists, her own agencies, and utilities that have all committed to going Net Zero anyway.  
Instead of reading 81 pages that brings nothing new to the table, the only questions that need to be asked (and answered) about the report are below.  
Does it call for new natural gas generation? Not really.  
Does it call on utilities to keep our coal plants open? No, they want to shut them down and “repower” them to “clean” energy.  
Does it pave the way for new nuclear? Not until the mid-2040s, at the earliest. 
What, then, does it advocate doing? Subsize special interests by blanketing state trust land and government buildings with even more solar, wind, and battery storage. The very thing causing utility rates to increase and leading to blackouts…
&gt;&gt;&gt; CONTINUE READING &gt;&gt;&gt;
The post AZFEC: Katie Hobbs’ “Energy Promise” To Arizona Ratepayers: Higher Costs, More Subsidies first appeared on AZ FREE NEWS.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40403a200899a00e5f4b7</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>AZFEC: Katie Hobbs’ “Energy Promise” To Arizona Ratepayers: Higher Costs, More Subsidies</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:38:11.028Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>AZFEC: Katie Hobbs’ “Energy Promise” To Arizona Ratepayers: Higher Costs, More Subsidies</news:title>
			<news:keywords>By the Arizona Free Enterprise Club |
Last year, Katie Hobbs, by executive order, established a “task force” headed by her Office of “Sustainability” to develop a report on energy affordability and reliability. This month, her task force submitted their plan which would do the opposite of that: make energy more expensive and less reliable. This shouldn’t come as a surprise considering the “task force” called by Hobbs is made up of solar special interests, environmental activists, her own agencies, and utilities that have all committed to going Net Zero anyway.  
Instead of reading 81 pages that brings nothing new to the table, the only questions that need to be asked (and answered) about the report are below.  
Does it call for new natural gas generation? Not really.  
Does it call on utilities to keep our coal plants open? No, they want to shut them down and “repower” them to “clean” energy.  
Does it pave the way for new nuclear? Not until the mid-2040s, at the earliest. 
What, then, does it advocate doing? Subsize special interests by blanketing state trust land and government buildings with even more solar, wind, and battery storage. The very thing causing utility rates to increase and leading to blackouts…
&gt;&gt;&gt; CONTINUE READING &gt;&gt;&gt;
The post AZFEC: Katie Hobbs’ “Energy Promise” To Arizona Ratepayers: Higher Costs, More Subsidies first appeared on AZ FREE NEWS.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40402a200899a00e5f4ae</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>AZFEC: Katie Hobbs’ “Energy Promise” To Arizona Ratepayers: Higher Costs, More Subsidies</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:38:10.638Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>AZFEC: Katie Hobbs’ “Energy Promise” To Arizona Ratepayers: Higher Costs, More Subsidies</news:title>
			<news:keywords>By the Arizona Free Enterprise Club |
Last year, Katie Hobbs, by executive order, established a “task force” headed by her Office of “Sustainability” to develop a report on energy affordability and reliability. This month, her task force submitted their plan which would do the opposite of that: make energy more expensive and less reliable. This shouldn’t come as a surprise considering the “task force” called by Hobbs is made up of solar special interests, environmental activists, her own agencies, and utilities that have all committed to going Net Zero anyway.  
Instead of reading 81 pages that brings nothing new to the table, the only questions that need to be asked (and answered) about the report are below.  
Does it call for new natural gas generation? Not really.  
Does it call on utilities to keep our coal plants open? No, they want to shut them down and “repower” them to “clean” energy.  
Does it pave the way for new nuclear? Not until the mid-2040s, at the earliest. 
What, then, does it advocate doing? Subsize special interests by blanketing state trust land and government buildings with even more solar, wind, and battery storage. The very thing causing utility rates to increase and leading to blackouts…
&gt;&gt;&gt; CONTINUE READING &gt;&gt;&gt;
The post AZFEC: Katie Hobbs’ “Energy Promise” To Arizona Ratepayers: Higher Costs, More Subsidies first appeared on AZ FREE NEWS.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
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			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Republicans vie to unseat AZ secretary of State</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:37:59.617Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Republicans vie to unseat AZ secretary of State</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Kolodin, Swoboda debate election integrity, voter rolls Arizona Secretary of State Republican candidates, Arizona State Rep. Alexander Kolodin [District 3] and Gina Swoboda, the former chairwoman of the Arizona Republican Party for the last two years, made their pitches to their party’s voters durin</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
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<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f403eda200899a00e5f49b</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Republicans vie to unseat AZ secretary of State</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:37:49.624Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Republicans vie to unseat AZ secretary of State</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Kolodin, Swoboda debate election integrity, voter rolls Arizona Secretary of State Republican candidates, Arizona State Rep. Alexander Kolodin [District 3] and Gina Swoboda, the former chairwoman of the Arizona Republican Party for the last two years, made their pitches to their party’s voters durin</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f403eda200899a00e5f493</loc>
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			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Republicans vie to unseat AZ secretary of State</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:37:49.231Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Republicans vie to unseat AZ secretary of State</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Kolodin, Swoboda debate election integrity, voter rolls Arizona Secretary of State Republican candidates, Arizona State Rep. Alexander Kolodin [District 3] and Gina Swoboda, the former chairwoman of the Arizona Republican Party for the last two years, made their pitches to their party’s voters durin</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
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			  <news:name>City weighs $2.4M service contracts for 7 nonprofits</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
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			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:37:39.928Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>City weighs $2.4M service contracts for 7 nonprofits</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Serving homeless families, Hope House of Sedona added to list of Community Service Providers The city of Sedona looks to spend $431,261 more than last year in funding to seven local nonprofits that serve community needs. The Sedona City Council is set to weigh renewal of its service provider agreeme</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
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<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f403daa200899a00e5f481</loc>
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			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>City weighs $2.4M service contracts for 7 nonprofits</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:37:30.144Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>City weighs $2.4M service contracts for 7 nonprofits</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Serving homeless families, Hope House of Sedona added to list of Community Service Providers The city of Sedona looks to spend $431,261 more than last year in funding to seven local nonprofits that serve community needs. The Sedona City Council is set to weigh renewal of its service provider agreeme</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
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<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f403d9a200899a00e5f478</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>City weighs $2.4M service contracts for 7 nonprofits</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:37:29.634Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>City weighs $2.4M service contracts for 7 nonprofits</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Serving homeless families, Hope House of Sedona added to list of Community Service Providers The city of Sedona looks to spend $431,261 more than last year in funding to seven local nonprofits that serve community needs. The Sedona City Council is set to weigh renewal of its service provider agreeme</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f403d0a200899a00e5f46f</loc>
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			  <news:name>Cinco de Mayo comes early to Tlaquepaque</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:37:20.413Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Cinco de Mayo comes early to Tlaquepaque</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The Cinco de Mayo fun comes early this Saturday May 2, from 1 to 4 p.m., with annual celebration taking place across Tlaquepaque Arts &amp; Shopping Village. The free event transforms Tlaquepaque’s charming courtyards into a lively cultural gathering filled with color, rhythm and authentic expression. S</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f403c6a200899a00e5f464</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Cinco de Mayo comes early to Tlaquepaque</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:37:10.200Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Cinco de Mayo comes early to Tlaquepaque</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The Cinco de Mayo fun comes early this Saturday May 2, from 1 to 4 p.m., with annual celebration taking place across Tlaquepaque Arts &amp; Shopping Village. The free event transforms Tlaquepaque’s charming courtyards into a lively cultural gathering filled with color, rhythm and authentic expression. S</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f403c6a200899a00e5f45d</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Cinco de Mayo comes early to Tlaquepaque</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:37:10.177Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Cinco de Mayo comes early to Tlaquepaque</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The Cinco de Mayo fun comes early this Saturday May 2, from 1 to 4 p.m., with annual celebration taking place across Tlaquepaque Arts &amp; Shopping Village. The free event transforms Tlaquepaque’s charming courtyards into a lively cultural gathering filled with color, rhythm and authentic expression. S</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f403bca200899a00e5f454</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Ken Barnes</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:37:00.364Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Ken Barnes</news:title>
			<news:keywords>John Kenneth “Ken” Barnes, 95, passed away quickly on April 27, 2026. He was born Dec. 6, 1930, to Jewel Kenneth Barnes and Emily Brown Barnes. In 1945, at age 14, his family moved to Snowflake and purchased their home, where he was living at the time of his passing.
      Ken graduated from Snowflake High School, served a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, and later served in the U.S. Army during the Korean War. He married Mary Lue Rogers on Sept. 25, 1953, in the Mesa Arizona Temple.
      Ken worked as a police officer in Phoenix and later returned to Snowflake, where he worked for the school district as a mechanic and bus driver. He also served his community as a volunteer firefighter and fire chief.
      He loved hunting, fishing, family games, Western films and reading.
      Ken is survived by his wife, Mary Lue; his children; 23 grandchildren; 57 great-grandchildren; and one great-great-grandchild.
      A memorial service will be held at 10 a.m. on Saturday, May 9, at Temple View Chapel in Snowflake, followed by a grave dedication at Snowflake Cemetery.
      Owens Livingston Mortuary of Snowflake handled the arrangements.

Screenshot

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			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
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		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f403b2a200899a00e5f44a</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Ken Barnes</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:36:50.264Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Ken Barnes</news:title>
			<news:keywords>John Kenneth “Ken” Barnes, 95, passed away quickly on April 27, 2026. He was born Dec. 6, 1930, to Jewel Kenneth Barnes and Emily Brown Barnes. In 1945, at age 14, his family moved to Snowflake and purchased their home, where he was living at the time of his passing.
      Ken graduated from Snowflake High School, served a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, and later served in the U.S. Army during the Korean War. He married Mary Lue Rogers on Sept. 25, 1953, in the Mesa Arizona Temple.
      Ken worked as a police officer in Phoenix and later returned to Snowflake, where he worked for the school district as a mechanic and bus driver. He also served his community as a volunteer firefighter and fire chief.
      He loved hunting, fishing, family games, Western films and reading.
      Ken is survived by his wife, Mary Lue; his children; 23 grandchildren; 57 great-grandchildren; and one great-great-grandchild.
      A memorial service will be held at 10 a.m. on Saturday, May 9, at Temple View Chapel in Snowflake, followed by a grave dedication at Snowflake Cemetery.
      Owens Livingston Mortuary of Snowflake handled the arrangements.

Screenshot

The post Ken Barnes first appeared on Painted Desert Tribune.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
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		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f403b2a200899a00e5f442</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Ken Barnes</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:36:50.158Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Ken Barnes</news:title>
			<news:keywords>John Kenneth “Ken” Barnes, 95, passed away quickly on April 27, 2026. He was born Dec. 6, 1930, to Jewel Kenneth Barnes and Emily Brown Barnes. In 1945, at age 14, his family moved to Snowflake and purchased their home, where he was living at the time of his passing.
      Ken graduated from Snowflake High School, served a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, and later served in the U.S. Army during the Korean War. He married Mary Lue Rogers on Sept. 25, 1953, in the Mesa Arizona Temple.
      Ken worked as a police officer in Phoenix and later returned to Snowflake, where he worked for the school district as a mechanic and bus driver. He also served his community as a volunteer firefighter and fire chief.
      He loved hunting, fishing, family games, Western films and reading.
      Ken is survived by his wife, Mary Lue; his children; 23 grandchildren; 57 great-grandchildren; and one great-great-grandchild.
      A memorial service will be held at 10 a.m. on Saturday, May 9, at Temple View Chapel in Snowflake, followed by a grave dedication at Snowflake Cemetery.
      Owens Livingston Mortuary of Snowflake handled the arrangements.

Screenshot

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			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
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		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f403a7a200899a00e5f439</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>House Republicans pass budget plan — Hobbs is ready to negotiate</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:36:39.968Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>House Republicans pass budget plan — Hobbs is ready to negotiate</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Key Points:
House GOP pass $17.9B budget using agency cuts to fund tax conformity
Governor supports some provisions, opposes Medicaid and SNAP eligibility changes
Both sides say they’re ready to negotiate, but Hobbs hasn’t lifted bill-signing moratorium
Republican lawmakers are close to sending Gov. Katie Hobbs a budget, although several GOP members and the governor have signaled they’re already waiting for the next set of negotiations given the plan’s lack of Democratic support. 
House Republicans passed a $17.9 billion budget package April 29 on a party-line vote. And while the Senate did not gavel in on April 29 to move that package, Senate Republicans did share their support for the GOP proposal in a Joint Appropriations Committee earlier in the week.
Senate Majority Director of Communications Kim Quintero told the Arizona Capitol Times that the Senate is planning on moving the budget Monday morning and voting on the package later in the day. 
The budget is largely a continuation of last year with the inclusion of new broad cuts to state government designed to help the state pay for full federal tax conformity — which the governor has vetoed twice this session. 
Still, Hobbs said there are parts of the GOP budget that she can support, like $66 million in funding for public schools, $23 million to backfill federal funding for the Victims of Crime Act and full funding for the state’s Division of Developmental Disabilities. However, she also criticized the plan for prioritizing “special interests and billionaires over everyday Arizonans.” 
House and Senate Republicans said in an April 27 news release that their plan is about $800 million less than Hobbs’ executive proposal that was introduced in January. It’s also a goal for the caucus to be the only state in the nation that is fully conforming state tax code to federal policy.
State Representative Steve Montenegro speaks at a 2023 press conference. (Gage Skidmore / Flickr)
“Republicans have crafted a budget that’s thoughtful, that’s serious and has Arizona families in mind,” said House Speaker Steve Montenegro, R-Goodyear. “The government should take less of your earned money. This budget is about that mission. This is the third time we’re going to send this governor tax relief for families.”
Governor’s Office staff say the state can afford full tax conformity, but Hobbs isn’t willing to impose the funding cuts required to make the math work — especially if the Legislature refuses to extend Proposition 123. 
Additionally, Hobbs said she is not in favor of the “across the board” cuts at state agencies that Republicans have proposed to help pay for tax conformity. The GOP plan would reduce all agency budgets by 5% — excluding the Department of Child Safety, Department of Public Safety and Department of Corrections, Rehabilitation and Reentry — to save the state around $99 million.
State Representative David Livingston speaking with attendees on the floor of the Arizona House of Representatives on opening day of the 57th legislature in Phoenix. (Gage Skidmore / Flickr)
House Appropriations Chairman David Livingston, R-Peoria, said he preferred a budget that gave agencies discretion with what’s cut instead of lawmakers making those decisions. He said this was also the preferred approach for the Governor’s Office when state agencies faced cuts in a previous budget. 
“I hope my members don’t take this the wrong way, but (agency directors) know more about what’s happening in that agency than my guys do,” Livingston said. 
Hobbs also criticized the plan for attempting to implement eligibility changes to Medicaid and the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, saying the budget will pay for large tax cuts by “kicking Arizonans off their health care and taking food off their tables.” 
The GOP budget includes several provisions that Hobbs has already vetoed this session, like expanded work requirements for SNAP and increased eligibility checks for the Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System.
The budget would also require the Department of Economic Security to reduce the state’s SNAP payment error rate to 3% or lower, going beyond the 6% payment error rate mandated by H.R. 1. DES Director Michael Wisehart told reporters that the department’s SNAP distribution has already been strained by the federal changes and the 2025 federal government shutdown, a strain that has led to more SNAP recipients being kicked off the program in Arizona than in any other state.
“All of that led to a situation where we had to leverage the resources that were available to us to do some tremendously challenging work,” Wisehart said. “We are also utilizing an eligibility IT system — this isn’t an exaggeration — that was built more than 45 years ago. And so when you add all of these things together, it becomes extremely challenging to navigate through all of the changes that are happening simultaneously.”
The Governor’s Office noted that Republicans are not offering any additional funding to DES or AHCCCS to implement the eligibility changes required by both H.R.1 and the GOP’s proposed budget.
Both legislative Democrats and Hobbs have also called for a repeal of the state’s data center tax exemption, a proposal not included in the GOP plan which Hobbs estimates could generate $38 million in new revenue for the state.  
House Minority Leader Oscar De Los Santos, left, chats with Speaker Steve Montenegro over last year’s budget plans. (Howard Fischer / Capitol Media Services)
“This Republican budget protects tax breaks for large corporations, including data centers, while cutting support for working families. That is corporations first, Arizonans last,” said House Minority Leader Oscar De Los Santos, D-Laveen. 
Democrats have also raised alarm over a proposed increase to state employee health insurance premiums. Under the plan, state employees would see their premiums increase by 10% this year, 5% the next year and another 5% the following year. State employees currently pay about 7% of health insurance costs.
“It’s a hell of a deal,” Livingston said. “I think most of us would agree that our state employees are not paying their fair share.” 
Hobbs has not yet signaled publicly if she will veto the budget, but without Democratic support and with Republicans already saying they’re ready to resume negotiations, the proposal, as currently written, is unlikely to be signed. 
Hovering over negotiations is Hobbs’ yet-unlifted bill moratorium — an April 13 promise she made to veto any measure that makes it to her desk before a Republican proposal.  
“When we issued the bill moratorium, it was about seeing their budget and getting back to the negotiating table in good faith,” Hobbs told reporters April 28. “I’m hopeful that we can get back to the table and start having real conversations about a budget that works for Arizona.”
The bill signing moratorium came about three weeks after Hobbs announced she was pausing budget negotiations because Republicans were unwilling to consider potential revenue from a Prop. 123 renewal in budget discussions. 
And while a Prop. 123 renewal would free up about $300 million for the budget, the measure still remains dependent on voter approval.
“I invite the governor to come back to the negotiation table,” said Rep. Matt Gress, R-Phoenix. “This is the budget package and there will be some modifications made, but at the end of the day, we’re going to respect Arizona taxpayers.”
The post House Republicans pass budget plan — Hobbs is ready to negotiate first appeared on Arizona Capitol Times.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f4039da200899a00e5f42e</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>House Republicans pass budget plan — Hobbs is ready to negotiate</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:36:29.263Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>House Republicans pass budget plan — Hobbs is ready to negotiate</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Key Points:
House GOP pass $17.9B budget using agency cuts to fund tax conformity
Governor supports some provisions, opposes Medicaid and SNAP eligibility changes
Both sides say they’re ready to negotiate, but Hobbs hasn’t lifted bill-signing moratorium
Republican lawmakers are close to sending Gov. Katie Hobbs a budget, although several GOP members and the governor have signaled they’re already waiting for the next set of negotiations given the plan’s lack of Democratic support. 
House Republicans passed a $17.9 billion budget package April 29 on a party-line vote. And while the Senate did not gavel in on April 29 to move that package, Senate Republicans did share their support for the GOP proposal in a Joint Appropriations Committee earlier in the week.
Senate Majority Director of Communications Kim Quintero told the Arizona Capitol Times that the Senate is planning on moving the budget Monday morning and voting on the package later in the day. 
The budget is largely a continuation of last year with the inclusion of new broad cuts to state government designed to help the state pay for full federal tax conformity — which the governor has vetoed twice this session. 
Still, Hobbs said there are parts of the GOP budget that she can support, like $66 million in funding for public schools, $23 million to backfill federal funding for the Victims of Crime Act and full funding for the state’s Division of Developmental Disabilities. However, she also criticized the plan for prioritizing “special interests and billionaires over everyday Arizonans.” 
House and Senate Republicans said in an April 27 news release that their plan is about $800 million less than Hobbs’ executive proposal that was introduced in January. It’s also a goal for the caucus to be the only state in the nation that is fully conforming state tax code to federal policy.
State Representative Steve Montenegro speaks at a 2023 press conference. (Gage Skidmore / Flickr)
“Republicans have crafted a budget that’s thoughtful, that’s serious and has Arizona families in mind,” said House Speaker Steve Montenegro, R-Goodyear. “The government should take less of your earned money. This budget is about that mission. This is the third time we’re going to send this governor tax relief for families.”
Governor’s Office staff say the state can afford full tax conformity, but Hobbs isn’t willing to impose the funding cuts required to make the math work — especially if the Legislature refuses to extend Proposition 123. 
Additionally, Hobbs said she is not in favor of the “across the board” cuts at state agencies that Republicans have proposed to help pay for tax conformity. The GOP plan would reduce all agency budgets by 5% — excluding the Department of Child Safety, Department of Public Safety and Department of Corrections, Rehabilitation and Reentry — to save the state around $99 million.
State Representative David Livingston speaking with attendees on the floor of the Arizona House of Representatives on opening day of the 57th legislature in Phoenix. (Gage Skidmore / Flickr)
House Appropriations Chairman David Livingston, R-Peoria, said he preferred a budget that gave agencies discretion with what’s cut instead of lawmakers making those decisions. He said this was also the preferred approach for the Governor’s Office when state agencies faced cuts in a previous budget. 
“I hope my members don’t take this the wrong way, but (agency directors) know more about what’s happening in that agency than my guys do,” Livingston said. 
Hobbs also criticized the plan for attempting to implement eligibility changes to Medicaid and the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, saying the budget will pay for large tax cuts by “kicking Arizonans off their health care and taking food off their tables.” 
The GOP budget includes several provisions that Hobbs has already vetoed this session, like expanded work requirements for SNAP and increased eligibility checks for the Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System.
The budget would also require the Department of Economic Security to reduce the state’s SNAP payment error rate to 3% or lower, going beyond the 6% payment error rate mandated by H.R. 1. DES Director Michael Wisehart told reporters that the department’s SNAP distribution has already been strained by the federal changes and the 2025 federal government shutdown, a strain that has led to more SNAP recipients being kicked off the program in Arizona than in any other state.
“All of that led to a situation where we had to leverage the resources that were available to us to do some tremendously challenging work,” Wisehart said. “We are also utilizing an eligibility IT system — this isn’t an exaggeration — that was built more than 45 years ago. And so when you add all of these things together, it becomes extremely challenging to navigate through all of the changes that are happening simultaneously.”
The Governor’s Office noted that Republicans are not offering any additional funding to DES or AHCCCS to implement the eligibility changes required by both H.R.1 and the GOP’s proposed budget.
Both legislative Democrats and Hobbs have also called for a repeal of the state’s data center tax exemption, a proposal not included in the GOP plan which Hobbs estimates could generate $38 million in new revenue for the state.  
House Minority Leader Oscar De Los Santos, left, chats with Speaker Steve Montenegro over last year’s budget plans. (Howard Fischer / Capitol Media Services)
“This Republican budget protects tax breaks for large corporations, including data centers, while cutting support for working families. That is corporations first, Arizonans last,” said House Minority Leader Oscar De Los Santos, D-Laveen. 
Democrats have also raised alarm over a proposed increase to state employee health insurance premiums. Under the plan, state employees would see their premiums increase by 10% this year, 5% the next year and another 5% the following year. State employees currently pay about 7% of health insurance costs.
“It’s a hell of a deal,” Livingston said. “I think most of us would agree that our state employees are not paying their fair share.” 
Hobbs has not yet signaled publicly if she will veto the budget, but without Democratic support and with Republicans already saying they’re ready to resume negotiations, the proposal, as currently written, is unlikely to be signed. 
Hovering over negotiations is Hobbs’ yet-unlifted bill moratorium — an April 13 promise she made to veto any measure that makes it to her desk before a Republican proposal.  
“When we issued the bill moratorium, it was about seeing their budget and getting back to the negotiating table in good faith,” Hobbs told reporters April 28. “I’m hopeful that we can get back to the table and start having real conversations about a budget that works for Arizona.”
The bill signing moratorium came about three weeks after Hobbs announced she was pausing budget negotiations because Republicans were unwilling to consider potential revenue from a Prop. 123 renewal in budget discussions. 
And while a Prop. 123 renewal would free up about $300 million for the budget, the measure still remains dependent on voter approval.
“I invite the governor to come back to the negotiation table,” said Rep. Matt Gress, R-Phoenix. “This is the budget package and there will be some modifications made, but at the end of the day, we’re going to respect Arizona taxpayers.”
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			  <news:name>House Republicans pass budget plan — Hobbs is ready to negotiate</news:name>
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			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:36:29.240Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>House Republicans pass budget plan — Hobbs is ready to negotiate</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Key Points:
House GOP pass $17.9B budget using agency cuts to fund tax conformity
Governor supports some provisions, opposes Medicaid and SNAP eligibility changes
Both sides say they’re ready to negotiate, but Hobbs hasn’t lifted bill-signing moratorium
Republican lawmakers are close to sending Gov. Katie Hobbs a budget, although several GOP members and the governor have signaled they’re already waiting for the next set of negotiations given the plan’s lack of Democratic support. 
House Republicans passed a $17.9 billion budget package April 29 on a party-line vote. And while the Senate did not gavel in on April 29 to move that package, Senate Republicans did share their support for the GOP proposal in a Joint Appropriations Committee earlier in the week.
Senate Majority Director of Communications Kim Quintero told the Arizona Capitol Times that the Senate is planning on moving the budget Monday morning and voting on the package later in the day. 
The budget is largely a continuation of last year with the inclusion of new broad cuts to state government designed to help the state pay for full federal tax conformity — which the governor has vetoed twice this session. 
Still, Hobbs said there are parts of the GOP budget that she can support, like $66 million in funding for public schools, $23 million to backfill federal funding for the Victims of Crime Act and full funding for the state’s Division of Developmental Disabilities. However, she also criticized the plan for prioritizing “special interests and billionaires over everyday Arizonans.” 
House and Senate Republicans said in an April 27 news release that their plan is about $800 million less than Hobbs’ executive proposal that was introduced in January. It’s also a goal for the caucus to be the only state in the nation that is fully conforming state tax code to federal policy.
State Representative Steve Montenegro speaks at a 2023 press conference. (Gage Skidmore / Flickr)
“Republicans have crafted a budget that’s thoughtful, that’s serious and has Arizona families in mind,” said House Speaker Steve Montenegro, R-Goodyear. “The government should take less of your earned money. This budget is about that mission. This is the third time we’re going to send this governor tax relief for families.”
Governor’s Office staff say the state can afford full tax conformity, but Hobbs isn’t willing to impose the funding cuts required to make the math work — especially if the Legislature refuses to extend Proposition 123. 
Additionally, Hobbs said she is not in favor of the “across the board” cuts at state agencies that Republicans have proposed to help pay for tax conformity. The GOP plan would reduce all agency budgets by 5% — excluding the Department of Child Safety, Department of Public Safety and Department of Corrections, Rehabilitation and Reentry — to save the state around $99 million.
State Representative David Livingston speaking with attendees on the floor of the Arizona House of Representatives on opening day of the 57th legislature in Phoenix. (Gage Skidmore / Flickr)
House Appropriations Chairman David Livingston, R-Peoria, said he preferred a budget that gave agencies discretion with what’s cut instead of lawmakers making those decisions. He said this was also the preferred approach for the Governor’s Office when state agencies faced cuts in a previous budget. 
“I hope my members don’t take this the wrong way, but (agency directors) know more about what’s happening in that agency than my guys do,” Livingston said. 
Hobbs also criticized the plan for attempting to implement eligibility changes to Medicaid and the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, saying the budget will pay for large tax cuts by “kicking Arizonans off their health care and taking food off their tables.” 
The GOP budget includes several provisions that Hobbs has already vetoed this session, like expanded work requirements for SNAP and increased eligibility checks for the Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System.
The budget would also require the Department of Economic Security to reduce the state’s SNAP payment error rate to 3% or lower, going beyond the 6% payment error rate mandated by H.R. 1. DES Director Michael Wisehart told reporters that the department’s SNAP distribution has already been strained by the federal changes and the 2025 federal government shutdown, a strain that has led to more SNAP recipients being kicked off the program in Arizona than in any other state.
“All of that led to a situation where we had to leverage the resources that were available to us to do some tremendously challenging work,” Wisehart said. “We are also utilizing an eligibility IT system — this isn’t an exaggeration — that was built more than 45 years ago. And so when you add all of these things together, it becomes extremely challenging to navigate through all of the changes that are happening simultaneously.”
The Governor’s Office noted that Republicans are not offering any additional funding to DES or AHCCCS to implement the eligibility changes required by both H.R.1 and the GOP’s proposed budget.
Both legislative Democrats and Hobbs have also called for a repeal of the state’s data center tax exemption, a proposal not included in the GOP plan which Hobbs estimates could generate $38 million in new revenue for the state.  
House Minority Leader Oscar De Los Santos, left, chats with Speaker Steve Montenegro over last year’s budget plans. (Howard Fischer / Capitol Media Services)
“This Republican budget protects tax breaks for large corporations, including data centers, while cutting support for working families. That is corporations first, Arizonans last,” said House Minority Leader Oscar De Los Santos, D-Laveen. 
Democrats have also raised alarm over a proposed increase to state employee health insurance premiums. Under the plan, state employees would see their premiums increase by 10% this year, 5% the next year and another 5% the following year. State employees currently pay about 7% of health insurance costs.
“It’s a hell of a deal,” Livingston said. “I think most of us would agree that our state employees are not paying their fair share.” 
Hobbs has not yet signaled publicly if she will veto the budget, but without Democratic support and with Republicans already saying they’re ready to resume negotiations, the proposal, as currently written, is unlikely to be signed. 
Hovering over negotiations is Hobbs’ yet-unlifted bill moratorium — an April 13 promise she made to veto any measure that makes it to her desk before a Republican proposal.  
“When we issued the bill moratorium, it was about seeing their budget and getting back to the negotiating table in good faith,” Hobbs told reporters April 28. “I’m hopeful that we can get back to the table and start having real conversations about a budget that works for Arizona.”
The bill signing moratorium came about three weeks after Hobbs announced she was pausing budget negotiations because Republicans were unwilling to consider potential revenue from a Prop. 123 renewal in budget discussions. 
And while a Prop. 123 renewal would free up about $300 million for the budget, the measure still remains dependent on voter approval.
“I invite the governor to come back to the negotiation table,” said Rep. Matt Gress, R-Phoenix. “This is the budget package and there will be some modifications made, but at the end of the day, we’re going to respect Arizona taxpayers.”
The post House Republicans pass budget plan — Hobbs is ready to negotiate first appeared on Arizona Capitol Times.</news:keywords>
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			  <news:name>Appeals court declines to order state study of San Pedro River</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:36:20.467Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Appeals court declines to order state study of San Pedro River</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Key Points:
Judges say law requires periodic groundwater studies, but doesn’t define how often
Lawsuit filed by biological diversity group claims area is going dry
Group official accuses governor of failing to act
Arizona judges won’t force the state to determine if there needs to be greater state oversight of water use along the upper San Pedro River — a move that could ultimately lead to a limit on groundwater pumping.
In a new ruling April 29, the state Court of Appeals acknowledged that Arizona law requires the Department of Water Resources to “periodically review” whether to create what are known as “active management areas” in parts of the state which now have minimal to no limits on the pumping of groundwater. Such a designation would give the state the power to impose new restrictions.
And the court did not dispute arguments by two environmental groups that it has been more than 20 years since the state agency conducted such a review of the San Pedro Basin.
But appellate Judge Kent Cattani, writing for the unanimous three-judge panel, pointed out that the Legislature, in crafting the law, never spelled out how often such reviews must be conducted. Nor did they define the term “periodically” in the state Groundwater Code.
“This phrasing thus leaves the department discretion to determine how frequently to conduct reviews,” Cattani wrote.
The ruling drew an angry reaction from Robin Silver, a co-founder and board member of the Center for Biological Diversity, one of the groups that filed suit.
“We understand why the court ruled,” he said, even if, as he contends, it is “laughable that ‘discretion’ is more than 20 years.”
But his harshest comments were reserved for Gov. Katie Hobbs who has oversight of the Department of Water Resources, even able to replace Tom Buschatzke, its director.
“Why would a governor who professes to care about water fight an active management area for an area whose central area is going dry and whose aquifer is over-allocated,” Silver asked. “The governor has made a choice to aggressively try to help the river die. That’s on her.”
He also said that Hobbs has sided with developers on other issues in the area, fighting efforts over whether there is sufficient water for a planned 7,000-home development in Sierra Vista.
“What has she done environmentally?” Silver asked. “She’s done absolutely nothing.”
There was no immediate response from the governor.
The 2024 lawsuit contends that the Department of Water Resources has failed to carry out its ‘mandatory duty” to conduct a review to determine if there needs to be some sort of state management to “preserve long-term, reliable groundwater supplies” in the San Pedro basin. And the lawsuit separately says that the governor, by failing to tell the agency to conduct a review, has violated her constitutional duty to “take care that the laws be faithfully executed.”
What a study would determine, the lawsuit says, is if the basin needs to be designated as an “active management area.”
The 1990 groundwater code initially set up four such AMAs in the Tucson, Pinal, Phoenix and Prescott areas. There are now eight, with one formed by a vote of residents of the Douglas area and the others designated by the Department of Water Resources based on studies about things like water use and potential water quality degradation.
In filing suit, the Center for Biological Diversity and the San Pedro Alliance said those conditions are present in the area. More to the point, they argued that the law requires the state to act.
Cattani, in the eight-page opinion, agreed that the San Pedro River, at the heart of the basin, is unique, being the last undamned, free-flowing river in the desert Southwest.
“It is an arid region, and groundwater is the sole source of water for inhabitants of the basin, which includes Sierra Vista, Benson, Bisbee, Tombstone, Huachuca City, and the Fort Huachuca Military Reservation,” he wrote. “Pubic and private water use over the past century has contributed to the degradation of the San Pedro River ecosystem and the alteration of the river’s flow.”
Cattani also pointed out that the basin includes the San Pedro Riparian National Conservation Area, designated by Congress in 1988 “to protect the riparian area and the aquatic, wildlife, archeological, paleontological, scientific, cultural, educational, and recreational resources of the public lands surrounding the San Pedro River.” And he noted that Congress reserved water “sufficient to fulfill the purposes” of the conservation area.
But none of that, the judge noted, entitles the challengers to what is known as “mandamus” relief, essentially a court order to compel a public official to perform an act that is specifically required by law.
The key to getting that legal relief, he said, is that the act that someone wants a court to enforce has to be purely “ministerial.” And that means the law specifically describes what the official must do and “nothing is left to the public official’s discretion.”
But Cattani said the law requiring the director of the Department of Water Resources to “periodically” conduct a review to look for areas to regulate hardly meets that test. And the key is the failure of lawmakers to define how often that has to occur.
“The Legislature did not specify a frequency for review under (the law), although it could have done so,” he wrote. “The omission of a fixed time period thus indicates that the Legislature did not intend to prescribe a particular frequency and instead left the matter to the department’s discretion.”
Challengers said that may be true. But they argued that the responsibility of the Department of Water Resources to control and supervise Arizona’s groundwater, coupled with worsening water conditions in the basin, means that the court should conclude that “periodically” in this case necessarily denotes something more frequent than what the agency has done — or not done for more than 20 years.
The appellate court was not convinced.
“Nothing in the statute requires the department to take into account area conditions before it decides whether to conduct a review to determine if conditions in the area meet the criteria for active management,” Cattani wrote. “And we may not read such a requirement into the statute.”
And there’s something else.
The judge noted that even if the Department of Water Resources won’t create a new active management area, that isn’t the only option. Cattani said the law allows the Legislature itself to do that — or even local voters, as happened in the Douglas area.
The post Appeals court declines to order state study of San Pedro River first appeared on Arizona Capitol Times.</news:keywords>
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			  <news:name>Appeals court declines to order state study of San Pedro River</news:name>
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			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:36:09.791Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Appeals court declines to order state study of San Pedro River</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Key Points:
Judges say law requires periodic groundwater studies, but doesn’t define how often
Lawsuit filed by biological diversity group claims area is going dry
Group official accuses governor of failing to act
Arizona judges won’t force the state to determine if there needs to be greater state oversight of water use along the upper San Pedro River — a move that could ultimately lead to a limit on groundwater pumping.
In a new ruling April 29, the state Court of Appeals acknowledged that Arizona law requires the Department of Water Resources to “periodically review” whether to create what are known as “active management areas” in parts of the state which now have minimal to no limits on the pumping of groundwater. Such a designation would give the state the power to impose new restrictions.
And the court did not dispute arguments by two environmental groups that it has been more than 20 years since the state agency conducted such a review of the San Pedro Basin.
But appellate Judge Kent Cattani, writing for the unanimous three-judge panel, pointed out that the Legislature, in crafting the law, never spelled out how often such reviews must be conducted. Nor did they define the term “periodically” in the state Groundwater Code.
“This phrasing thus leaves the department discretion to determine how frequently to conduct reviews,” Cattani wrote.
The ruling drew an angry reaction from Robin Silver, a co-founder and board member of the Center for Biological Diversity, one of the groups that filed suit.
“We understand why the court ruled,” he said, even if, as he contends, it is “laughable that ‘discretion’ is more than 20 years.”
But his harshest comments were reserved for Gov. Katie Hobbs who has oversight of the Department of Water Resources, even able to replace Tom Buschatzke, its director.
“Why would a governor who professes to care about water fight an active management area for an area whose central area is going dry and whose aquifer is over-allocated,” Silver asked. “The governor has made a choice to aggressively try to help the river die. That’s on her.”
He also said that Hobbs has sided with developers on other issues in the area, fighting efforts over whether there is sufficient water for a planned 7,000-home development in Sierra Vista.
“What has she done environmentally?” Silver asked. “She’s done absolutely nothing.”
There was no immediate response from the governor.
The 2024 lawsuit contends that the Department of Water Resources has failed to carry out its ‘mandatory duty” to conduct a review to determine if there needs to be some sort of state management to “preserve long-term, reliable groundwater supplies” in the San Pedro basin. And the lawsuit separately says that the governor, by failing to tell the agency to conduct a review, has violated her constitutional duty to “take care that the laws be faithfully executed.”
What a study would determine, the lawsuit says, is if the basin needs to be designated as an “active management area.”
The 1990 groundwater code initially set up four such AMAs in the Tucson, Pinal, Phoenix and Prescott areas. There are now eight, with one formed by a vote of residents of the Douglas area and the others designated by the Department of Water Resources based on studies about things like water use and potential water quality degradation.
In filing suit, the Center for Biological Diversity and the San Pedro Alliance said those conditions are present in the area. More to the point, they argued that the law requires the state to act.
Cattani, in the eight-page opinion, agreed that the San Pedro River, at the heart of the basin, is unique, being the last undamned, free-flowing river in the desert Southwest.
“It is an arid region, and groundwater is the sole source of water for inhabitants of the basin, which includes Sierra Vista, Benson, Bisbee, Tombstone, Huachuca City, and the Fort Huachuca Military Reservation,” he wrote. “Pubic and private water use over the past century has contributed to the degradation of the San Pedro River ecosystem and the alteration of the river’s flow.”
Cattani also pointed out that the basin includes the San Pedro Riparian National Conservation Area, designated by Congress in 1988 “to protect the riparian area and the aquatic, wildlife, archeological, paleontological, scientific, cultural, educational, and recreational resources of the public lands surrounding the San Pedro River.” And he noted that Congress reserved water “sufficient to fulfill the purposes” of the conservation area.
But none of that, the judge noted, entitles the challengers to what is known as “mandamus” relief, essentially a court order to compel a public official to perform an act that is specifically required by law.
The key to getting that legal relief, he said, is that the act that someone wants a court to enforce has to be purely “ministerial.” And that means the law specifically describes what the official must do and “nothing is left to the public official’s discretion.”
But Cattani said the law requiring the director of the Department of Water Resources to “periodically” conduct a review to look for areas to regulate hardly meets that test. And the key is the failure of lawmakers to define how often that has to occur.
“The Legislature did not specify a frequency for review under (the law), although it could have done so,” he wrote. “The omission of a fixed time period thus indicates that the Legislature did not intend to prescribe a particular frequency and instead left the matter to the department’s discretion.”
Challengers said that may be true. But they argued that the responsibility of the Department of Water Resources to control and supervise Arizona’s groundwater, coupled with worsening water conditions in the basin, means that the court should conclude that “periodically” in this case necessarily denotes something more frequent than what the agency has done — or not done for more than 20 years.
The appellate court was not convinced.
“Nothing in the statute requires the department to take into account area conditions before it decides whether to conduct a review to determine if conditions in the area meet the criteria for active management,” Cattani wrote. “And we may not read such a requirement into the statute.”
And there’s something else.
The judge noted that even if the Department of Water Resources won’t create a new active management area, that isn’t the only option. Cattani said the law allows the Legislature itself to do that — or even local voters, as happened in the Douglas area.
The post Appeals court declines to order state study of San Pedro River first appeared on Arizona Capitol Times.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
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			  <news:name>Appeals court declines to order state study of San Pedro River</news:name>
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			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:36:09.675Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Appeals court declines to order state study of San Pedro River</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Key Points:
Judges say law requires periodic groundwater studies, but doesn’t define how often
Lawsuit filed by biological diversity group claims area is going dry
Group official accuses governor of failing to act
Arizona judges won’t force the state to determine if there needs to be greater state oversight of water use along the upper San Pedro River — a move that could ultimately lead to a limit on groundwater pumping.
In a new ruling April 29, the state Court of Appeals acknowledged that Arizona law requires the Department of Water Resources to “periodically review” whether to create what are known as “active management areas” in parts of the state which now have minimal to no limits on the pumping of groundwater. Such a designation would give the state the power to impose new restrictions.
And the court did not dispute arguments by two environmental groups that it has been more than 20 years since the state agency conducted such a review of the San Pedro Basin.
But appellate Judge Kent Cattani, writing for the unanimous three-judge panel, pointed out that the Legislature, in crafting the law, never spelled out how often such reviews must be conducted. Nor did they define the term “periodically” in the state Groundwater Code.
“This phrasing thus leaves the department discretion to determine how frequently to conduct reviews,” Cattani wrote.
The ruling drew an angry reaction from Robin Silver, a co-founder and board member of the Center for Biological Diversity, one of the groups that filed suit.
“We understand why the court ruled,” he said, even if, as he contends, it is “laughable that ‘discretion’ is more than 20 years.”
But his harshest comments were reserved for Gov. Katie Hobbs who has oversight of the Department of Water Resources, even able to replace Tom Buschatzke, its director.
“Why would a governor who professes to care about water fight an active management area for an area whose central area is going dry and whose aquifer is over-allocated,” Silver asked. “The governor has made a choice to aggressively try to help the river die. That’s on her.”
He also said that Hobbs has sided with developers on other issues in the area, fighting efforts over whether there is sufficient water for a planned 7,000-home development in Sierra Vista.
“What has she done environmentally?” Silver asked. “She’s done absolutely nothing.”
There was no immediate response from the governor.
The 2024 lawsuit contends that the Department of Water Resources has failed to carry out its ‘mandatory duty” to conduct a review to determine if there needs to be some sort of state management to “preserve long-term, reliable groundwater supplies” in the San Pedro basin. And the lawsuit separately says that the governor, by failing to tell the agency to conduct a review, has violated her constitutional duty to “take care that the laws be faithfully executed.”
What a study would determine, the lawsuit says, is if the basin needs to be designated as an “active management area.”
The 1990 groundwater code initially set up four such AMAs in the Tucson, Pinal, Phoenix and Prescott areas. There are now eight, with one formed by a vote of residents of the Douglas area and the others designated by the Department of Water Resources based on studies about things like water use and potential water quality degradation.
In filing suit, the Center for Biological Diversity and the San Pedro Alliance said those conditions are present in the area. More to the point, they argued that the law requires the state to act.
Cattani, in the eight-page opinion, agreed that the San Pedro River, at the heart of the basin, is unique, being the last undamned, free-flowing river in the desert Southwest.
“It is an arid region, and groundwater is the sole source of water for inhabitants of the basin, which includes Sierra Vista, Benson, Bisbee, Tombstone, Huachuca City, and the Fort Huachuca Military Reservation,” he wrote. “Pubic and private water use over the past century has contributed to the degradation of the San Pedro River ecosystem and the alteration of the river’s flow.”
Cattani also pointed out that the basin includes the San Pedro Riparian National Conservation Area, designated by Congress in 1988 “to protect the riparian area and the aquatic, wildlife, archeological, paleontological, scientific, cultural, educational, and recreational resources of the public lands surrounding the San Pedro River.” And he noted that Congress reserved water “sufficient to fulfill the purposes” of the conservation area.
But none of that, the judge noted, entitles the challengers to what is known as “mandamus” relief, essentially a court order to compel a public official to perform an act that is specifically required by law.
The key to getting that legal relief, he said, is that the act that someone wants a court to enforce has to be purely “ministerial.” And that means the law specifically describes what the official must do and “nothing is left to the public official’s discretion.”
But Cattani said the law requiring the director of the Department of Water Resources to “periodically” conduct a review to look for areas to regulate hardly meets that test. And the key is the failure of lawmakers to define how often that has to occur.
“The Legislature did not specify a frequency for review under (the law), although it could have done so,” he wrote. “The omission of a fixed time period thus indicates that the Legislature did not intend to prescribe a particular frequency and instead left the matter to the department’s discretion.”
Challengers said that may be true. But they argued that the responsibility of the Department of Water Resources to control and supervise Arizona’s groundwater, coupled with worsening water conditions in the basin, means that the court should conclude that “periodically” in this case necessarily denotes something more frequent than what the agency has done — or not done for more than 20 years.
The appellate court was not convinced.
“Nothing in the statute requires the department to take into account area conditions before it decides whether to conduct a review to determine if conditions in the area meet the criteria for active management,” Cattani wrote. “And we may not read such a requirement into the statute.”
And there’s something else.
The judge noted that even if the Department of Water Resources won’t create a new active management area, that isn’t the only option. Cattani said the law allows the Legislature itself to do that — or even local voters, as happened in the Douglas area.
The post Appeals court declines to order state study of San Pedro River first appeared on Arizona Capitol Times.</news:keywords>
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			  <news:name>Republicans ram through Arizona budget two days after unveiling it, setting up showdown with Hobbs</news:name>
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			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:36:00.195Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Republicans ram through Arizona budget two days after unveiling it, setting up showdown with Hobbs</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Photo via Getty Images

Two days after introducing their nearly $18 billion state budget, Republicans in the Arizona House of Representatives pushed through a party-line vote to approve it. 
The Republican proposal includes about $800 million less in spending than the budget plan that Gov. Katie Hobbs, a Democrat, released in January, and would slash spending by 5% for all but a handful of state agencies. 

                
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State representatives spent the majority of Wednesday on the floor of the Arizona House of Representatives either praising or criticising the budget, depending on their party, and making procedural challenges to silence arguments from the other party. Democrats hammered on their claim that the Republican budget takes money from programs that benefit Arizonans who are struggling in order to give hand-outs to billionaires and corporations, while Republicans heaped congratulations on one another on a job well done. 
The best part of the GOP budget proposal, said Rep. Justin Olson, a Mesa Republican, is that it brings Arizona’s tax code in line with the changes made in President Trump’s “One Big Beautiful Bill.” He thanked all the Republicans for their part in approving the $500 million in tax cuts and for preventing taxpayers from having to refile their state taxes. 
“This is a huge success for Arizonans,” he said. 
Hobbs has already vetoed two pieces of Republican legislation this year that would have conformed Arizona’s tax code with the federal code, and it’s likely she’ll also veto this one — and the entire GOP spending plan. The Arizona Department of Revenue issued tax returns with the assumption that the state would fully conform with the federal changes, so if the state doesn’t conform, some people would have to file amended returns. 
There were some provisions in the Republican plan that Democrats said they could get behind, including middle class tax cuts, funding for free school lunches and child care tax credits. 
But there were far more things that Democrats disliked, such as increasing insurance premiums for state employees, sweeping $14 million from the Housing Trust Fund and $90 million in cuts for higher education. That’s in addition to deep cuts to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program and Medicaid that are already being enacted due to federal cuts, and that would only be worsened by the Republican budget. 
Passing a budget by the June 30 deadline is the Arizona Legislature’s only statutory duty each year. With Republicans in control of the legislature and a Democrat in the Governor’s Office, coming to consensus has proven to be a painful process. 
Republicans criticized Hobbs’s budget plan because it relied on the extension of Prop. 123, a vital source of K-12 funding that voters approved in 2016 and which expired last year. Hobbs walked away from budget negotiations more than a month ago after Republicans said that an extension of the $300 million school funding mechanism is off the table this year.
Rep. Matt Gress, R-Phoenix, said Hobbs made a serious mistake in walking away from the budget talks, giving Republicans time to create a united front against her. But they still need her approval to sign the budget into law, and that won’t happen until they actually negotiate a spending plan with her. Once that happens, Democratic votes are sure to materialize.
But since that hasn’t happened yet, legislative Democrats spent Wednesday hammering the GOP budget.
“Stating that Arizona will be the first state to fully conform (with the federal tax code) is not a flex,” said Rep. Elda Luna-Nájera, D-Phoenix. “It is proof that we are imposing partisan Washington, D.C., priorities on Arizonans. But, plainly, this budget misses the mark. I urge the members to stop putting corporations first, and Arizona last.” 
The GOP budget bills passed the House of Representatives Wednesday after hours of discussion, by a party-line vote of 33-22. The package of budget bills will next head to the Senate.
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			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:35:49.620Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Republicans ram through Arizona budget two days after unveiling it, setting up showdown with Hobbs</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Photo via Getty Images

Two days after introducing their nearly $18 billion state budget, Republicans in the Arizona House of Representatives pushed through a party-line vote to approve it. 
The Republican proposal includes about $800 million less in spending than the budget plan that Gov. Katie Hobbs, a Democrat, released in January, and would slash spending by 5% for all but a handful of state agencies. 

                
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State representatives spent the majority of Wednesday on the floor of the Arizona House of Representatives either praising or criticising the budget, depending on their party, and making procedural challenges to silence arguments from the other party. Democrats hammered on their claim that the Republican budget takes money from programs that benefit Arizonans who are struggling in order to give hand-outs to billionaires and corporations, while Republicans heaped congratulations on one another on a job well done. 
The best part of the GOP budget proposal, said Rep. Justin Olson, a Mesa Republican, is that it brings Arizona’s tax code in line with the changes made in President Trump’s “One Big Beautiful Bill.” He thanked all the Republicans for their part in approving the $500 million in tax cuts and for preventing taxpayers from having to refile their state taxes. 
“This is a huge success for Arizonans,” he said. 
Hobbs has already vetoed two pieces of Republican legislation this year that would have conformed Arizona’s tax code with the federal code, and it’s likely she’ll also veto this one — and the entire GOP spending plan. The Arizona Department of Revenue issued tax returns with the assumption that the state would fully conform with the federal changes, so if the state doesn’t conform, some people would have to file amended returns. 
There were some provisions in the Republican plan that Democrats said they could get behind, including middle class tax cuts, funding for free school lunches and child care tax credits. 
But there were far more things that Democrats disliked, such as increasing insurance premiums for state employees, sweeping $14 million from the Housing Trust Fund and $90 million in cuts for higher education. That’s in addition to deep cuts to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program and Medicaid that are already being enacted due to federal cuts, and that would only be worsened by the Republican budget. 
Passing a budget by the June 30 deadline is the Arizona Legislature’s only statutory duty each year. With Republicans in control of the legislature and a Democrat in the Governor’s Office, coming to consensus has proven to be a painful process. 
Republicans criticized Hobbs’s budget plan because it relied on the extension of Prop. 123, a vital source of K-12 funding that voters approved in 2016 and which expired last year. Hobbs walked away from budget negotiations more than a month ago after Republicans said that an extension of the $300 million school funding mechanism is off the table this year.
Rep. Matt Gress, R-Phoenix, said Hobbs made a serious mistake in walking away from the budget talks, giving Republicans time to create a united front against her. But they still need her approval to sign the budget into law, and that won’t happen until they actually negotiate a spending plan with her. Once that happens, Democratic votes are sure to materialize.
But since that hasn’t happened yet, legislative Democrats spent Wednesday hammering the GOP budget.
“Stating that Arizona will be the first state to fully conform (with the federal tax code) is not a flex,” said Rep. Elda Luna-Nájera, D-Phoenix. “It is proof that we are imposing partisan Washington, D.C., priorities on Arizonans. But, plainly, this budget misses the mark. I urge the members to stop putting corporations first, and Arizona last.” 
The GOP budget bills passed the House of Representatives Wednesday after hours of discussion, by a party-line vote of 33-22. The package of budget bills will next head to the Senate.
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			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:35:49.303Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Republicans ram through Arizona budget two days after unveiling it, setting up showdown with Hobbs</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Photo via Getty Images

Two days after introducing their nearly $18 billion state budget, Republicans in the Arizona House of Representatives pushed through a party-line vote to approve it. 
The Republican proposal includes about $800 million less in spending than the budget plan that Gov. Katie Hobbs, a Democrat, released in January, and would slash spending by 5% for all but a handful of state agencies. 

                
GET THE MORNING HEADLINES.
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State representatives spent the majority of Wednesday on the floor of the Arizona House of Representatives either praising or criticising the budget, depending on their party, and making procedural challenges to silence arguments from the other party. Democrats hammered on their claim that the Republican budget takes money from programs that benefit Arizonans who are struggling in order to give hand-outs to billionaires and corporations, while Republicans heaped congratulations on one another on a job well done. 
The best part of the GOP budget proposal, said Rep. Justin Olson, a Mesa Republican, is that it brings Arizona’s tax code in line with the changes made in President Trump’s “One Big Beautiful Bill.” He thanked all the Republicans for their part in approving the $500 million in tax cuts and for preventing taxpayers from having to refile their state taxes. 
“This is a huge success for Arizonans,” he said. 
Hobbs has already vetoed two pieces of Republican legislation this year that would have conformed Arizona’s tax code with the federal code, and it’s likely she’ll also veto this one — and the entire GOP spending plan. The Arizona Department of Revenue issued tax returns with the assumption that the state would fully conform with the federal changes, so if the state doesn’t conform, some people would have to file amended returns. 
There were some provisions in the Republican plan that Democrats said they could get behind, including middle class tax cuts, funding for free school lunches and child care tax credits. 
But there were far more things that Democrats disliked, such as increasing insurance premiums for state employees, sweeping $14 million from the Housing Trust Fund and $90 million in cuts for higher education. That’s in addition to deep cuts to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program and Medicaid that are already being enacted due to federal cuts, and that would only be worsened by the Republican budget. 
Passing a budget by the June 30 deadline is the Arizona Legislature’s only statutory duty each year. With Republicans in control of the legislature and a Democrat in the Governor’s Office, coming to consensus has proven to be a painful process. 
Republicans criticized Hobbs’s budget plan because it relied on the extension of Prop. 123, a vital source of K-12 funding that voters approved in 2016 and which expired last year. Hobbs walked away from budget negotiations more than a month ago after Republicans said that an extension of the $300 million school funding mechanism is off the table this year.
Rep. Matt Gress, R-Phoenix, said Hobbs made a serious mistake in walking away from the budget talks, giving Republicans time to create a united front against her. But they still need her approval to sign the budget into law, and that won’t happen until they actually negotiate a spending plan with her. Once that happens, Democratic votes are sure to materialize.
But since that hasn’t happened yet, legislative Democrats spent Wednesday hammering the GOP budget.
“Stating that Arizona will be the first state to fully conform (with the federal tax code) is not a flex,” said Rep. Elda Luna-Nájera, D-Phoenix. “It is proof that we are imposing partisan Washington, D.C., priorities on Arizonans. But, plainly, this budget misses the mark. I urge the members to stop putting corporations first, and Arizona last.” 
The GOP budget bills passed the House of Representatives Wednesday after hours of discussion, by a party-line vote of 33-22. The package of budget bills will next head to the Senate.
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			  <news:name>Republicans vote to give Trump $140 billion for mass deportation campaigns</news:name>
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			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:35:40.332Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Republicans vote to give Trump $140 billion for mass deportation campaigns</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The U.S. Capitol building in Washington, D.C., on Tuesday, Jan. 13, 2026. (Photo by Jennifer Shutt/States Newsroom)

WASHINGTON — U.S. House Republicans adopted their budget resolution Wednesday night, clearing the way for the party to pass a bill in the coming weeks that will provide tens of billions in additional funding for immigration enforcement. 
The 215-211 party-line vote unlocks the complicated budget reconciliation process that will allow the GOP to fund Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the Border Patrol for the rest of President Donald Trump’s term in office. California independent Rep. Kevin Kiley, formerly a Republican, voted “present.”
The budget resolution was approved by the Senate earlier this month and does not need Trump’s signature.
When combined with a separate Senate-passed bill, which Speaker Mike Johnson has so far refused to put on the House floor for a vote, the two measures are expected to eventually end the shutdown at the Department of Homeland Security that began in mid-February. 
House Budget Committee ranking member Rep. Brendan Boyle, D-Pa., said during floor debate that lawmakers should place constraints on immigration agents after they shot and killed two U.S. citizens earlier this year in Minneapolis. 
“I think the vast majority of the American people agree with me that we need to have a secure border, but that we cannot have any agency of our government carrying out killings on our streets,” he said. 
Republicans removed ICE and Border Patrol funding from the annual DHS appropriations bill after negotiators were unable to broker agreement with Democrats to place new guardrails on immigration activities.
Placing funding for those two agencies in a reconciliation bill allows Republicans to move the measure through the Senate without securing 60 votes to end debate, which would require bipartisanship. 
Immigration enforcement debated
House Budget Committee Chairman Jodey Arrington, R-Texas, said the shutdown isn’t “just about the inconvenience of long lines at airports.” 
“This is an unprecedented national security and public safety crisis. And this is the moment we take the keys from the kids and we say no more of this nonsense,” he added.  
DHS includes the Coast Guard, Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, Federal Emergency Management Agency, Secret Service and Transportation Security Administration. 
Arrington used his debate time to criticize Democrats for demanding constraints on immigration agents, arguing federal officers shouldn’t have to secure a judicial warrant to enter someone’s home to detain a person in the country without proper documentation.
“There is not a Democrat or Republican former commander-in-chief that would ever find that acceptable,” he said. 
Democrats also called for federal immigration agents to: 
Wear body cameras.
Only wear masks to conceal their identities in “extraordinary and unusual circumstances.”
Not undertake roving patrols.
Not detain people in certain locations, like houses of worship, schools, or polling places.
Not engage in racial profiling.
Not detain or deport American citizens. 
Up to $140 billion
The GOP used the reconciliation process last year to enact its “big, beautiful” law, which included an additional $170 billion for immigration and deportation enforcement. 
The reconciliation bill Republicans hope to approve in the next month can cost up to $140 billion, according to the instructions in the budget resolution. But GOP lawmakers expect the price tag to come in around $70 billion.
The additional funding is significantly higher than the $10 billion allocation for ICE and the $18.3 billion for Customs and Border Protection that Congress was on track to approve earlier this year. About $550 million of the CBP total was for the Border Patrol. 
White House officials have repeatedly urged lawmakers to quickly approve the reconciliation bill that has yet to be released and for House Republicans to clear the Senate-passed DHS appropriations bill for Trump’s signature. 
The Office of Management and Budget sent a memo to lawmakers this week notifying them the administration is running out of money to pay DHS employees during the shutdown. 
“If this funding is exhausted, the Administration will be unable to pay all DHS personnel beginning in May, which will once again unleash havoc on air travel, leave critical law enforcement officers—including our brave Secret Service agents—and the Coast Guard without paychecks, and jeopardize national security,” it says.</news:keywords>
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			  <news:name>Republicans vote to give Trump $140 billion for mass deportation campaigns</news:name>
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			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:35:29.345Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Republicans vote to give Trump $140 billion for mass deportation campaigns</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The U.S. Capitol building in Washington, D.C., on Tuesday, Jan. 13, 2026. (Photo by Jennifer Shutt/States Newsroom)

WASHINGTON — U.S. House Republicans adopted their budget resolution Wednesday night, clearing the way for the party to pass a bill in the coming weeks that will provide tens of billions in additional funding for immigration enforcement. 
The 215-211 party-line vote unlocks the complicated budget reconciliation process that will allow the GOP to fund Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the Border Patrol for the rest of President Donald Trump’s term in office. California independent Rep. Kevin Kiley, formerly a Republican, voted “present.”
The budget resolution was approved by the Senate earlier this month and does not need Trump’s signature.
When combined with a separate Senate-passed bill, which Speaker Mike Johnson has so far refused to put on the House floor for a vote, the two measures are expected to eventually end the shutdown at the Department of Homeland Security that began in mid-February. 
House Budget Committee ranking member Rep. Brendan Boyle, D-Pa., said during floor debate that lawmakers should place constraints on immigration agents after they shot and killed two U.S. citizens earlier this year in Minneapolis. 
“I think the vast majority of the American people agree with me that we need to have a secure border, but that we cannot have any agency of our government carrying out killings on our streets,” he said. 
Republicans removed ICE and Border Patrol funding from the annual DHS appropriations bill after negotiators were unable to broker agreement with Democrats to place new guardrails on immigration activities.
Placing funding for those two agencies in a reconciliation bill allows Republicans to move the measure through the Senate without securing 60 votes to end debate, which would require bipartisanship. 
Immigration enforcement debated
House Budget Committee Chairman Jodey Arrington, R-Texas, said the shutdown isn’t “just about the inconvenience of long lines at airports.” 
“This is an unprecedented national security and public safety crisis. And this is the moment we take the keys from the kids and we say no more of this nonsense,” he added.  
DHS includes the Coast Guard, Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, Federal Emergency Management Agency, Secret Service and Transportation Security Administration. 
Arrington used his debate time to criticize Democrats for demanding constraints on immigration agents, arguing federal officers shouldn’t have to secure a judicial warrant to enter someone’s home to detain a person in the country without proper documentation.
“There is not a Democrat or Republican former commander-in-chief that would ever find that acceptable,” he said. 
Democrats also called for federal immigration agents to: 
Wear body cameras.
Only wear masks to conceal their identities in “extraordinary and unusual circumstances.”
Not undertake roving patrols.
Not detain people in certain locations, like houses of worship, schools, or polling places.
Not engage in racial profiling.
Not detain or deport American citizens. 
Up to $140 billion
The GOP used the reconciliation process last year to enact its “big, beautiful” law, which included an additional $170 billion for immigration and deportation enforcement. 
The reconciliation bill Republicans hope to approve in the next month can cost up to $140 billion, according to the instructions in the budget resolution. But GOP lawmakers expect the price tag to come in around $70 billion.
The additional funding is significantly higher than the $10 billion allocation for ICE and the $18.3 billion for Customs and Border Protection that Congress was on track to approve earlier this year. About $550 million of the CBP total was for the Border Patrol. 
White House officials have repeatedly urged lawmakers to quickly approve the reconciliation bill that has yet to be released and for House Republicans to clear the Senate-passed DHS appropriations bill for Trump’s signature. 
The Office of Management and Budget sent a memo to lawmakers this week notifying them the administration is running out of money to pay DHS employees during the shutdown. 
“If this funding is exhausted, the Administration will be unable to pay all DHS personnel beginning in May, which will once again unleash havoc on air travel, leave critical law enforcement officers—including our brave Secret Service agents—and the Coast Guard without paychecks, and jeopardize national security,” it says.</news:keywords>
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			  <news:name>Yes, Gov. Hobbs, it’s our business to know who paid for your Mexico trip</news:name>
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			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:35:27.054Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Yes, Gov. Hobbs, it’s our business to know who paid for your Mexico trip</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Gov. Katie Hobbs at an Arizona Chamber of Commerce and Industry event on Jan. 5, 2024. Photo by Gage Skidmore (modified) | Flickr/CC BY-SA 2.0

With one snappy remark, Arizona Gov. Katie Hobbs drew the wrong kind of attention to what should have been a smart trip to Mexico.
The Democratic governor was in Mexico City over the weekend alongside Sonora Gov. Alfonso Durazo. She appeared relaxed in a video Durazo shared on social media, hugging him, shaking hands and taking in the MLB World Tour game featuring the D-Backs and Padres.
	
Read more of Elvia’s work at NOTAS, where she takes on Arizona’s political power struggles, border battles, and the national consequences that start in the Southwest.

But when someone asked Hobbs at the game whether she had paid for the trip herself or whether it was funded with Mexican money, she fired back: “None of the above. It’s none of your business.”
That was the worst possible answer she could’ve given.
Sure, it was clearly a gotcha moment. But Hobbs should have known the difference between an annoying question and a terrible answer.
Instead, she took the bait and handed her political rivals a clean shot.

                
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U.S. Rep. Andy Biggs, who’s seeking the Republican nomination for governor to face her in November, quickly seized on the viral clip.
“Why would Katie Hobbs refuse to tell an Arizonan who paid for her trip to Mexico? What’s she hiding?” he said on X where he posted the clip.
On April 28, Hobbs clarified that she was part of a delegation of business leaders organized by the Arizona Hispanic Chamber of Commerce to strengthen ties with Mexico. She also said tickets to the Diamondbacks game were paid for through the state’s protocol fund, according to 12 News.
That explains the ticket game, though not the full trip. Seriously, this shouldn’t have to be a scavenger hunt to find out.
The trip itself makes sense
I always felt Hobbs should take more trips to Mexico, or at least put greater effort herself into strengthening relations with the country that shares a 370-mile border with Arizona and huge trade.
In 2024, Arizona’s two-way trade with Mexico totaled $20.5 billion, including $8.9 billion in Arizona exports and $11.6 billion in imports. Mexico supported roughly 96,000 Arizona jobs tied to trade, according to trade data compiled by Mexican and Arizona economic agencies.
Arizonans have every right to know who funds the governor’s trips abroad and what public benefit the state gets in return. It’s not harassment. It’s accountability. And it is, in fact, our business.
In 2025, Arizona’s trade ties deepened further. Arizona exported $14.6 billion in goods to Mexico and imported $14 billion, according to the Arizona Commerce Authority.
Former Republican Gov. Doug Ducey, for instance, made cross-border engagement a priority after the economic backlash and economic boycott by Arizona’s anti-immigrant law SB1070. He understood Arizona couldn’t afford to stay away from Mexico and set out to restore relations.
So, yes, Hobbs and any future governor must keep that engagement, meet with Mexican officials to expand business opportunities and strengthen border security.
But Hobbs’s “it’s not of your business” reply made it weird and secretive.  
Hobbs already faces an investigation into donations tied to Sunshine Residential Homes. In 2024, at Republicans’ request, Attorney General Kris Mayes opened an investigation after reports that the company got a huge state reimbursement hike after donating $200,000 Hobbs and her inauguration.
Hobbs has denied wrongdoing. The investigation is still ongoing — this week, in fact, Mayes’ office reportedly asked Hobbs for an interview over it. The governor hasn’t committed to doing so.
The timing of her “it’s not of your business” answer couldn’t have landed better for Biggs.
“Arizonans deserve to know the truth about who funds foreign trips for our governor. What’s Katie Hobbs hiding?” Biggs said on X.
I agree. Arizonans have every right to know who funds the governor’s trips abroad and what public benefit the state gets in return.
It’s not harassment. It’s accountability. And it is, in fact, our business.
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			<news:title>Yes, Gov. Hobbs, it’s our business to know who paid for your Mexico trip</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Gov. Katie Hobbs at an Arizona Chamber of Commerce and Industry event on Jan. 5, 2024. Photo by Gage Skidmore (modified) | Flickr/CC BY-SA 2.0

With one snappy remark, Arizona Gov. Katie Hobbs drew the wrong kind of attention to what should have been a smart trip to Mexico.
The Democratic governor was in Mexico City over the weekend alongside Sonora Gov. Alfonso Durazo. She appeared relaxed in a video Durazo shared on social media, hugging him, shaking hands and taking in the MLB World Tour game featuring the D-Backs and Padres.
	
Read more of Elvia’s work at NOTAS, where she takes on Arizona’s political power struggles, border battles, and the national consequences that start in the Southwest.

But when someone asked Hobbs at the game whether she had paid for the trip herself or whether it was funded with Mexican money, she fired back: “None of the above. It’s none of your business.”
That was the worst possible answer she could’ve given.
Sure, it was clearly a gotcha moment. But Hobbs should have known the difference between an annoying question and a terrible answer.
Instead, she took the bait and handed her political rivals a clean shot.

                
GET THE MORNING HEADLINES.
SUBSCRIBE
            
U.S. Rep. Andy Biggs, who’s seeking the Republican nomination for governor to face her in November, quickly seized on the viral clip.
“Why would Katie Hobbs refuse to tell an Arizonan who paid for her trip to Mexico? What’s she hiding?” he said on X where he posted the clip.
On April 28, Hobbs clarified that she was part of a delegation of business leaders organized by the Arizona Hispanic Chamber of Commerce to strengthen ties with Mexico. She also said tickets to the Diamondbacks game were paid for through the state’s protocol fund, according to 12 News.
That explains the ticket game, though not the full trip. Seriously, this shouldn’t have to be a scavenger hunt to find out.
The trip itself makes sense
I always felt Hobbs should take more trips to Mexico, or at least put greater effort herself into strengthening relations with the country that shares a 370-mile border with Arizona and huge trade.
In 2024, Arizona’s two-way trade with Mexico totaled $20.5 billion, including $8.9 billion in Arizona exports and $11.6 billion in imports. Mexico supported roughly 96,000 Arizona jobs tied to trade, according to trade data compiled by Mexican and Arizona economic agencies.
Arizonans have every right to know who funds the governor’s trips abroad and what public benefit the state gets in return. It’s not harassment. It’s accountability. And it is, in fact, our business.
In 2025, Arizona’s trade ties deepened further. Arizona exported $14.6 billion in goods to Mexico and imported $14 billion, according to the Arizona Commerce Authority.
Former Republican Gov. Doug Ducey, for instance, made cross-border engagement a priority after the economic backlash and economic boycott by Arizona’s anti-immigrant law SB1070. He understood Arizona couldn’t afford to stay away from Mexico and set out to restore relations.
So, yes, Hobbs and any future governor must keep that engagement, meet with Mexican officials to expand business opportunities and strengthen border security.
But Hobbs’s “it’s not of your business” reply made it weird and secretive.  
Hobbs already faces an investigation into donations tied to Sunshine Residential Homes. In 2024, at Republicans’ request, Attorney General Kris Mayes opened an investigation after reports that the company got a huge state reimbursement hike after donating $200,000 Hobbs and her inauguration.
Hobbs has denied wrongdoing. The investigation is still ongoing — this week, in fact, Mayes’ office reportedly asked Hobbs for an interview over it. The governor hasn’t committed to doing so.
The timing of her “it’s not of your business” answer couldn’t have landed better for Biggs.
“Arizonans deserve to know the truth about who funds foreign trips for our governor. What’s Katie Hobbs hiding?” Biggs said on X.
I agree. Arizonans have every right to know who funds the governor’s trips abroad and what public benefit the state gets in return.
It’s not harassment. It’s accountability. And it is, in fact, our business.
YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE.
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			  <news:name>Yes, Gov. Hobbs, it’s our business to know who paid for your Mexico trip</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:35:08.977Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Yes, Gov. Hobbs, it’s our business to know who paid for your Mexico trip</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Gov. Katie Hobbs at an Arizona Chamber of Commerce and Industry event on Jan. 5, 2024. Photo by Gage Skidmore (modified) | Flickr/CC BY-SA 2.0

With one snappy remark, Arizona Gov. Katie Hobbs drew the wrong kind of attention to what should have been a smart trip to Mexico.
The Democratic governor was in Mexico City over the weekend alongside Sonora Gov. Alfonso Durazo. She appeared relaxed in a video Durazo shared on social media, hugging him, shaking hands and taking in the MLB World Tour game featuring the D-Backs and Padres.
	
Read more of Elvia’s work at NOTAS, where she takes on Arizona’s political power struggles, border battles, and the national consequences that start in the Southwest.

But when someone asked Hobbs at the game whether she had paid for the trip herself or whether it was funded with Mexican money, she fired back: “None of the above. It’s none of your business.”
That was the worst possible answer she could’ve given.
Sure, it was clearly a gotcha moment. But Hobbs should have known the difference between an annoying question and a terrible answer.
Instead, she took the bait and handed her political rivals a clean shot.

                
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U.S. Rep. Andy Biggs, who’s seeking the Republican nomination for governor to face her in November, quickly seized on the viral clip.
“Why would Katie Hobbs refuse to tell an Arizonan who paid for her trip to Mexico? What’s she hiding?” he said on X where he posted the clip.
On April 28, Hobbs clarified that she was part of a delegation of business leaders organized by the Arizona Hispanic Chamber of Commerce to strengthen ties with Mexico. She also said tickets to the Diamondbacks game were paid for through the state’s protocol fund, according to 12 News.
That explains the ticket game, though not the full trip. Seriously, this shouldn’t have to be a scavenger hunt to find out.
The trip itself makes sense
I always felt Hobbs should take more trips to Mexico, or at least put greater effort herself into strengthening relations with the country that shares a 370-mile border with Arizona and huge trade.
In 2024, Arizona’s two-way trade with Mexico totaled $20.5 billion, including $8.9 billion in Arizona exports and $11.6 billion in imports. Mexico supported roughly 96,000 Arizona jobs tied to trade, according to trade data compiled by Mexican and Arizona economic agencies.
Arizonans have every right to know who funds the governor’s trips abroad and what public benefit the state gets in return. It’s not harassment. It’s accountability. And it is, in fact, our business.
In 2025, Arizona’s trade ties deepened further. Arizona exported $14.6 billion in goods to Mexico and imported $14 billion, according to the Arizona Commerce Authority.
Former Republican Gov. Doug Ducey, for instance, made cross-border engagement a priority after the economic backlash and economic boycott by Arizona’s anti-immigrant law SB1070. He understood Arizona couldn’t afford to stay away from Mexico and set out to restore relations.
So, yes, Hobbs and any future governor must keep that engagement, meet with Mexican officials to expand business opportunities and strengthen border security.
But Hobbs’s “it’s not of your business” reply made it weird and secretive.  
Hobbs already faces an investigation into donations tied to Sunshine Residential Homes. In 2024, at Republicans’ request, Attorney General Kris Mayes opened an investigation after reports that the company got a huge state reimbursement hike after donating $200,000 Hobbs and her inauguration.
Hobbs has denied wrongdoing. The investigation is still ongoing — this week, in fact, Mayes’ office reportedly asked Hobbs for an interview over it. The governor hasn’t committed to doing so.
The timing of her “it’s not of your business” answer couldn’t have landed better for Biggs.
“Arizonans deserve to know the truth about who funds foreign trips for our governor. What’s Katie Hobbs hiding?” Biggs said on X.
I agree. Arizonans have every right to know who funds the governor’s trips abroad and what public benefit the state gets in return.
It’s not harassment. It’s accountability. And it is, in fact, our business.
YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE.
SUPPORT</news:keywords>
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			  <news:name>Mesa airport warns ICE facility’s landlord that overcrowding may violate its lease</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:35:06.711Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Mesa airport warns ICE facility’s landlord that overcrowding may violate its lease</news:title>
			<news:keywords>A detainee boards a 747 that is part of Immigration and Customs Enforcement&apos;s Air Operations at Mesa Gateway Airport on Sept. 23, 2025. (Photo by Jerod MacDonald-Evoy/Arizona Mirror)

The Mesa airport that houses a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement temporary holding facility warned the building’s owner that the overcrowding witnessed by members of Congress and documented by the Arizona Mirror could violate the building’s lease. 
“Any occupancy beyond the approved capacity of the facility may be in violation of City of Mesa Fire Codes and in default of (Strategic Government Properties) land lease agreement with (Mesa-Gateway Airport Authority),” J. Brian O’Neill, executive director and CEO of MGAA, said in a letter sent on Tuesday that the Mirror obtained through a public records request. 

                
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The letter comes after multiple reports by the Mirror showing that the Arizona Removal Operations Coordination Center has housed more than the 157 detainees it is listed as being able to house, sometimes upwards of 777 people in a single day and for longer periods of time. A certificate of occupancy issued by the City of Mesa allows for no more than 203 people to be in the building at any one time.
The building is owned by Strategic Government Properties, a subsidiary of Strategic Equity Investors, who then leases the building to ICE and other government agencies that share the building. 
“There have been several recent articles highlighting and detailing instances of overcrowding,” O’Neill says. “Mesa Gateway Airport Authority (MGAA) finds these articles very concerning. As the building owner, and per your land lease agreement with MGAA, Strategic Government Properties Mesa, LLC (SGP) and its sublessees shall at all times comply with Federal, State, and local laws, ordinances, rules, and regulations applicable to the premises, as well as abide by MGAA Airport Minimum Standards and Rules and Regulations.”
In late January, the Mesa Fire and Medical Department responded to a medical call at the facility where it found such severe overcrowding that it gave ICE a list of corrections it needed to make.
ICE said that the 238 people records show were detained that day was an aberration because of a measles outbreak at another Arizona facility. The agency promised the number of detainees would be back under the listed maximum capacity of 157 within a week. 
But the next day, records show the daily population was 646 people. The day after that, it was 526. Within a couple of days, there were 777 people being housed at AROCC, which ICE says is designed to hold people for less than 12 hours. On Feb. 4, the day ICE had said the overcrowding would be resolved, there were 513 people locked in the facility’s detention rooms.
Two months later, three members of Congress who conducted a surprise visit said they saw “shocking” overcrowding, with the estimated 250 people being detained being housed “like sardines” and unable to even lay down.
The inspection in late January by MFMD was conducted by the city’s fire marshal and an assistant fire chief after reports from a “front-line response unit” of the overcrowding came in, according to MFMD. 
“Field personnel are directed to report any observed capacity issues during calls; however, no concerns have been reported following the initial notification. MFMD does not track the daily population at this facility,” MFMD said in response to follow-up questions about population data analyzed by the Mirror. 
Mesa Fire and Medical Department confirmed that it conducted an inspection on April 23, the same day the Mirror sent a series of questions about the facility and provided ICE detention data numbers. That visit “did not generate any violations.” 
“The City of Mesa remains committed to working cooperatively with our federal partners and will continue to coordinate as appropriate, and we will continue to monitor the situation within the scope of our authority,” MFMD told the Mirror. 
George Baker, cofounder and partner of SEI, said in an emailed response to O’Neill that his company is taking the concerns seriously and looking into the matter. ICE and the U.S. Department of Homeland Security did not respond to the Mirror’s request for comment for this story. 
Within the lease agreement between MGAA and SEI, if a violation of a city code is found, SEI has 10 days to correct the violation. If there are three or more “curable defaults” within a 12 month period, then MGAA would have the right to terminate the lease. 
However, even though the overcrowding far exceeded Mesa’s fire codes, there’s nothing the city can do about it.
Even if city officials decided to take action on the overcrowding, it could ultimately be a futile battle. Due to the Supremacy Clause in the U.S. Constitution, local governments have little to no say over what is done at federal facilities. 
For places like AROCC, this means that oversight likely has to be done internally by the Office of the Inspector General or internal DHS units that have all been gutted by the Trump administration.
The three congressional Democrats who visited the facility earlier this month and witnessed the overcrowding firsthand are trying to address this with legislation. 
Earlier this week, U.S. Rep. Greg Stanton introduced the Short-Term Holding Facilities Standards Restoration Act alongside the two other Democrats who visited the facility with him. 
The bill ensures that short-term hold facilities like AROCC are only used for short durations except for cases of medical emergencies or transportation delays. It also requires DHS to justify and document the conditions at these facilities and provide those records to Congress. 
“It’s clear that massive overcrowding and stays beyond the facility’s intended short-term holding period are standard operating procedure under Trump’s mass deportation agenda. This legislation brings these facilities back in line with their intended use,” Stanton said in a press release about the legislation. 
At AROCC, ICE is detaining more people for longer periods than it ever has. The average length of stay in 2026 is about 36 hours, compared to the same time frame in 2025, when detainees were housed for just about 12 hours on average. 
In 2025, the average daily population was approximately 21 people for the same timeframe. So far in 2026, there have been an average of 274 detainees each day. The Mirror found one individual in the data who stayed for 18 days, coinciding with a time when the population of the facility was near its peak of 777 people. 
On April 27, the Mirror noted an unusually large aircraft at the facility being loaded with detainees. The Eastern Airlines Boeing 777 can hold up to 305 people, although it was unclear how many were aboard the aircraft as it departed for New Hampshire, where there is another ICE detention facility. 
The larger aircraft is uncommon for ICE. The bulk of the aircrafts used to transport detainees are Boeing 737s, which have a maximum capacity of around 190 passengers. ICE did not respond to questions asking if the 777 was due to reports of overcrowding at the facility. 
In previous statements, ICE has contended that the three Democrats are lying about the conditions inside, saying that they maintain better detention standards than most U.S. prisons. 
When asked by the Mirror if they could provide photographic or video evidence from the lawmakers visit that showed no overcrowding, ICE did not respond.
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			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
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			  <news:name>Mesa airport warns ICE facility’s landlord that overcrowding may violate its lease</news:name>
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			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:35:01.103Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Mesa airport warns ICE facility’s landlord that overcrowding may violate its lease</news:title>
			<news:keywords>A detainee boards a 747 that is part of Immigration and Customs Enforcement&apos;s Air Operations at Mesa Gateway Airport on Sept. 23, 2025. (Photo by Jerod MacDonald-Evoy/Arizona Mirror)

The Mesa airport that houses a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement temporary holding facility warned the building’s owner that the overcrowding witnessed by members of Congress and documented by the Arizona Mirror could violate the building’s lease. 
“Any occupancy beyond the approved capacity of the facility may be in violation of City of Mesa Fire Codes and in default of (Strategic Government Properties) land lease agreement with (Mesa-Gateway Airport Authority),” J. Brian O’Neill, executive director and CEO of MGAA, said in a letter sent on Tuesday that the Mirror obtained through a public records request. 

                
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The letter comes after multiple reports by the Mirror showing that the Arizona Removal Operations Coordination Center has housed more than the 157 detainees it is listed as being able to house, sometimes upwards of 777 people in a single day and for longer periods of time. A certificate of occupancy issued by the City of Mesa allows for no more than 203 people to be in the building at any one time.
The building is owned by Strategic Government Properties, a subsidiary of Strategic Equity Investors, who then leases the building to ICE and other government agencies that share the building. 
“There have been several recent articles highlighting and detailing instances of overcrowding,” O’Neill says. “Mesa Gateway Airport Authority (MGAA) finds these articles very concerning. As the building owner, and per your land lease agreement with MGAA, Strategic Government Properties Mesa, LLC (SGP) and its sublessees shall at all times comply with Federal, State, and local laws, ordinances, rules, and regulations applicable to the premises, as well as abide by MGAA Airport Minimum Standards and Rules and Regulations.”
In late January, the Mesa Fire and Medical Department responded to a medical call at the facility where it found such severe overcrowding that it gave ICE a list of corrections it needed to make.
ICE said that the 238 people records show were detained that day was an aberration because of a measles outbreak at another Arizona facility. The agency promised the number of detainees would be back under the listed maximum capacity of 157 within a week. 
But the next day, records show the daily population was 646 people. The day after that, it was 526. Within a couple of days, there were 777 people being housed at AROCC, which ICE says is designed to hold people for less than 12 hours. On Feb. 4, the day ICE had said the overcrowding would be resolved, there were 513 people locked in the facility’s detention rooms.
Two months later, three members of Congress who conducted a surprise visit said they saw “shocking” overcrowding, with the estimated 250 people being detained being housed “like sardines” and unable to even lay down.
The inspection in late January by MFMD was conducted by the city’s fire marshal and an assistant fire chief after reports from a “front-line response unit” of the overcrowding came in, according to MFMD. 
“Field personnel are directed to report any observed capacity issues during calls; however, no concerns have been reported following the initial notification. MFMD does not track the daily population at this facility,” MFMD said in response to follow-up questions about population data analyzed by the Mirror. 
Mesa Fire and Medical Department confirmed that it conducted an inspection on April 23, the same day the Mirror sent a series of questions about the facility and provided ICE detention data numbers. That visit “did not generate any violations.” 
“The City of Mesa remains committed to working cooperatively with our federal partners and will continue to coordinate as appropriate, and we will continue to monitor the situation within the scope of our authority,” MFMD told the Mirror. 
George Baker, cofounder and partner of SEI, said in an emailed response to O’Neill that his company is taking the concerns seriously and looking into the matter. ICE and the U.S. Department of Homeland Security did not respond to the Mirror’s request for comment for this story. 
Within the lease agreement between MGAA and SEI, if a violation of a city code is found, SEI has 10 days to correct the violation. If there are three or more “curable defaults” within a 12 month period, then MGAA would have the right to terminate the lease. 
However, even though the overcrowding far exceeded Mesa’s fire codes, there’s nothing the city can do about it.
Even if city officials decided to take action on the overcrowding, it could ultimately be a futile battle. Due to the Supremacy Clause in the U.S. Constitution, local governments have little to no say over what is done at federal facilities. 
For places like AROCC, this means that oversight likely has to be done internally by the Office of the Inspector General or internal DHS units that have all been gutted by the Trump administration.
The three congressional Democrats who visited the facility earlier this month and witnessed the overcrowding firsthand are trying to address this with legislation. 
Earlier this week, U.S. Rep. Greg Stanton introduced the Short-Term Holding Facilities Standards Restoration Act alongside the two other Democrats who visited the facility with him. 
The bill ensures that short-term hold facilities like AROCC are only used for short durations except for cases of medical emergencies or transportation delays. It also requires DHS to justify and document the conditions at these facilities and provide those records to Congress. 
“It’s clear that massive overcrowding and stays beyond the facility’s intended short-term holding period are standard operating procedure under Trump’s mass deportation agenda. This legislation brings these facilities back in line with their intended use,” Stanton said in a press release about the legislation. 
At AROCC, ICE is detaining more people for longer periods than it ever has. The average length of stay in 2026 is about 36 hours, compared to the same time frame in 2025, when detainees were housed for just about 12 hours on average. 
In 2025, the average daily population was approximately 21 people for the same timeframe. So far in 2026, there have been an average of 274 detainees each day. The Mirror found one individual in the data who stayed for 18 days, coinciding with a time when the population of the facility was near its peak of 777 people. 
On April 27, the Mirror noted an unusually large aircraft at the facility being loaded with detainees. The Eastern Airlines Boeing 777 can hold up to 305 people, although it was unclear how many were aboard the aircraft as it departed for New Hampshire, where there is another ICE detention facility. 
The larger aircraft is uncommon for ICE. The bulk of the aircrafts used to transport detainees are Boeing 737s, which have a maximum capacity of around 190 passengers. ICE did not respond to questions asking if the 777 was due to reports of overcrowding at the facility. 
In previous statements, ICE has contended that the three Democrats are lying about the conditions inside, saying that they maintain better detention standards than most U.S. prisons. 
When asked by the Mirror if they could provide photographic or video evidence from the lawmakers visit that showed no overcrowding, ICE did not respond.
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			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
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			  <news:name>Mesa airport warns ICE facility’s landlord that overcrowding may violate its lease</news:name>
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			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:34:49.433Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Mesa airport warns ICE facility’s landlord that overcrowding may violate its lease</news:title>
			<news:keywords>A detainee boards a 747 that is part of Immigration and Customs Enforcement&apos;s Air Operations at Mesa Gateway Airport on Sept. 23, 2025. (Photo by Jerod MacDonald-Evoy/Arizona Mirror)

The Mesa airport that houses a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement temporary holding facility warned the building’s owner that the overcrowding witnessed by members of Congress and documented by the Arizona Mirror could violate the building’s lease. 
“Any occupancy beyond the approved capacity of the facility may be in violation of City of Mesa Fire Codes and in default of (Strategic Government Properties) land lease agreement with (Mesa-Gateway Airport Authority),” J. Brian O’Neill, executive director and CEO of MGAA, said in a letter sent on Tuesday that the Mirror obtained through a public records request. 

                
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The letter comes after multiple reports by the Mirror showing that the Arizona Removal Operations Coordination Center has housed more than the 157 detainees it is listed as being able to house, sometimes upwards of 777 people in a single day and for longer periods of time. A certificate of occupancy issued by the City of Mesa allows for no more than 203 people to be in the building at any one time.
The building is owned by Strategic Government Properties, a subsidiary of Strategic Equity Investors, who then leases the building to ICE and other government agencies that share the building. 
“There have been several recent articles highlighting and detailing instances of overcrowding,” O’Neill says. “Mesa Gateway Airport Authority (MGAA) finds these articles very concerning. As the building owner, and per your land lease agreement with MGAA, Strategic Government Properties Mesa, LLC (SGP) and its sublessees shall at all times comply with Federal, State, and local laws, ordinances, rules, and regulations applicable to the premises, as well as abide by MGAA Airport Minimum Standards and Rules and Regulations.”
In late January, the Mesa Fire and Medical Department responded to a medical call at the facility where it found such severe overcrowding that it gave ICE a list of corrections it needed to make.
ICE said that the 238 people records show were detained that day was an aberration because of a measles outbreak at another Arizona facility. The agency promised the number of detainees would be back under the listed maximum capacity of 157 within a week. 
But the next day, records show the daily population was 646 people. The day after that, it was 526. Within a couple of days, there were 777 people being housed at AROCC, which ICE says is designed to hold people for less than 12 hours. On Feb. 4, the day ICE had said the overcrowding would be resolved, there were 513 people locked in the facility’s detention rooms.
Two months later, three members of Congress who conducted a surprise visit said they saw “shocking” overcrowding, with the estimated 250 people being detained being housed “like sardines” and unable to even lay down.
The inspection in late January by MFMD was conducted by the city’s fire marshal and an assistant fire chief after reports from a “front-line response unit” of the overcrowding came in, according to MFMD. 
“Field personnel are directed to report any observed capacity issues during calls; however, no concerns have been reported following the initial notification. MFMD does not track the daily population at this facility,” MFMD said in response to follow-up questions about population data analyzed by the Mirror. 
Mesa Fire and Medical Department confirmed that it conducted an inspection on April 23, the same day the Mirror sent a series of questions about the facility and provided ICE detention data numbers. That visit “did not generate any violations.” 
“The City of Mesa remains committed to working cooperatively with our federal partners and will continue to coordinate as appropriate, and we will continue to monitor the situation within the scope of our authority,” MFMD told the Mirror. 
George Baker, cofounder and partner of SEI, said in an emailed response to O’Neill that his company is taking the concerns seriously and looking into the matter. ICE and the U.S. Department of Homeland Security did not respond to the Mirror’s request for comment for this story. 
Within the lease agreement between MGAA and SEI, if a violation of a city code is found, SEI has 10 days to correct the violation. If there are three or more “curable defaults” within a 12 month period, then MGAA would have the right to terminate the lease. 
However, even though the overcrowding far exceeded Mesa’s fire codes, there’s nothing the city can do about it.
Even if city officials decided to take action on the overcrowding, it could ultimately be a futile battle. Due to the Supremacy Clause in the U.S. Constitution, local governments have little to no say over what is done at federal facilities. 
For places like AROCC, this means that oversight likely has to be done internally by the Office of the Inspector General or internal DHS units that have all been gutted by the Trump administration.
The three congressional Democrats who visited the facility earlier this month and witnessed the overcrowding firsthand are trying to address this with legislation. 
Earlier this week, U.S. Rep. Greg Stanton introduced the Short-Term Holding Facilities Standards Restoration Act alongside the two other Democrats who visited the facility with him. 
The bill ensures that short-term hold facilities like AROCC are only used for short durations except for cases of medical emergencies or transportation delays. It also requires DHS to justify and document the conditions at these facilities and provide those records to Congress. 
“It’s clear that massive overcrowding and stays beyond the facility’s intended short-term holding period are standard operating procedure under Trump’s mass deportation agenda. This legislation brings these facilities back in line with their intended use,” Stanton said in a press release about the legislation. 
At AROCC, ICE is detaining more people for longer periods than it ever has. The average length of stay in 2026 is about 36 hours, compared to the same time frame in 2025, when detainees were housed for just about 12 hours on average. 
In 2025, the average daily population was approximately 21 people for the same timeframe. So far in 2026, there have been an average of 274 detainees each day. The Mirror found one individual in the data who stayed for 18 days, coinciding with a time when the population of the facility was near its peak of 777 people. 
On April 27, the Mirror noted an unusually large aircraft at the facility being loaded with detainees. The Eastern Airlines Boeing 777 can hold up to 305 people, although it was unclear how many were aboard the aircraft as it departed for New Hampshire, where there is another ICE detention facility. 
The larger aircraft is uncommon for ICE. The bulk of the aircrafts used to transport detainees are Boeing 737s, which have a maximum capacity of around 190 passengers. ICE did not respond to questions asking if the 777 was due to reports of overcrowding at the facility. 
In previous statements, ICE has contended that the three Democrats are lying about the conditions inside, saying that they maintain better detention standards than most U.S. prisons. 
When asked by the Mirror if they could provide photographic or video evidence from the lawmakers visit that showed no overcrowding, ICE did not respond.
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			  <news:name>Can a candidate for governor list a UPS Store as his home address? Arizona’s high court will decide.</news:name>
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			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:34:46.973Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Can a candidate for governor list a UPS Store as his home address? Arizona’s high court will decide.</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Hugh Lytle, an independent candidate for governor, held a press conference on Feb. 16, 2026, outside of the state house to criticize a bill that would make his party name, the Arizona Independent Party, illegal and he said would derail his campaign. (Photo by Dermont Stevenson/Cronkite News)

If the Arizona Supreme Court doesn’t kick a third-party candidate for governor off the ballot for listing a P.O. box as his address on key paperwork, then a state law requiring candidates to declare their actual residential address will be unenforceable, attorneys challenging Hugh Lytle’s candidacy argued in a legal filing this week.
“According to Mr. Lytle, a candidate for statewide office could list any commercial address in Arizona — a law firm, a hotel, a FedEx store, or anywhere else. That’s not what the statutes say,” wrote Austin Yost, an attorney for Democratic activist Craig Beckman.
Lytle, a wealthy entrepreneur, hopes to be on the ballot as a candidate for the No Labels Party. But Beckman claims that, because Lytle listed a P.O. box on his nomination paperwork and nominating petitions instead of the “actual residential address” that is required by state law, his candidacy is illegal.
“Allowing him to list a UPS store instead of his actual residence address would undermine legislative intent and turn this statutory scheme into a dead letter,” Yost argued in an opening brief to the Supreme Court.

                
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Earlier this month, a trial court judge rejected Beckman’s challenge, ruling that Lytle “substantially complied” with the law and concluding that the purpose of the address requirement is so voters can know that candidates live in the jurisdiction they hope to represent. Because Lytle is running for a statewide position, the UPS Store and Lytle’s home are in Scottsdale, and Lytle is the only person with that name registered to vote in Arizona, the use of the mailbox address did not mislead voters, Maricopa County Superior Court Judge Michael Mandell ruled. 
Lytle’s attorney, Andrew Pappas, argued in his opening brief that that trial court applied the law correctly because “no voter could be confused or misled about whether Mr. Lytle resides in the jurisdiction he seeks to represent as Governor: the State of Arizona.”
And the Arizona Supreme Court has never kicked a candidate off the ballot for using a P.O. box or a different address that is in the correct jurisdiction, Pappas noted.
“Different facts could yield a different result. But the Court has always found substantial compliance where nomination documents list an address in the same jurisdiction the candidate seeks to represent, because voters are unlikely to be confused or misled about the candidate’s eligibility for office,” he argued.
But Yost said Lytle’s situation is different than the four Supreme Court cases in which addresses were the basis of a candidate challenge and the candidates were allowed to appear on the ballot.
In one, a school board candidate launched a campaign with one residential address and then moved — within the same school district — and failed to adopt the new address on nominating paperwork. In another, a legislative candidate used an incomplete address, but there was never any contention that the candidate lived outside the legislative district. And in a third, a candidate for sheriff used a P.O. box in the same ZIP code as his house.
Much of Yost’s argument centers on the fourth, and most recent, address-based candidate challenge — a case that prompted the legislature to change the state law requiring residential addresses.
In that 2020 case, Shawnna Bolick used a P.O. box as the address on her nomination paperwork instead of her home address. The Supreme Court ultimately ruled that she did so in good faith, because her address and voting records are shielded from public view because her husband is a justice on the Arizona Supreme Court. 
In Bolick’s case, the mailbox address was in the same legislative district and ZIP code as her house, meaning voters would not have been confused about whether she lived in the district.
When the legislature convened in 2021, it amended the law requiring candidates list their “actual residential address” on nominating forms to codify that court ruling. In doing so, it said the only reason a candidate can legally use a private mailbox is if their residential address is protected under the state law that shielded Bolick’s.
And that, Yost argued, is key in Lytle’s case. 
“A candidate who has an actual residence address that is not protected under (state law) must provide the candidate’s ‘actual residence address,’” he wrote. “Mr. Lytle violated (the law’s) simple command by falsely declaring under penalty of perjury that his ‘[r]esidential [a]ddress’ was the (P.O. box).”
Lytle’s campaign said the strict letter of that law is not what should determine whether he stays on the ballot. Rather, Pappas wrote, the fact that no voters were — or could have been — confused by the P.O. box address renders the whole exercise moot.
“(V)oters couldn’t have been confused or misled about Mr. Lytle’s eligibility for the statewide office he seeks because both the mailbox and his home are in Scottsdale, and no one disputes that he meets the residency requirements to be Governor,” he argued.
Like the trial court ruled, the Supreme Court should find that Lytle substantially complied with the law, Pappas concluded.
Yost warned the justices that adopting that view would have serious consequences in future elections.
“That cannot be the law because it would create perverse incentives and produce absurd results,” he wrote. “Arizona law requires candidates to publicly disclose their actual residential addresses — a substantial personal burden that the Legislature imposes as a condition of seeking public office. 
“A ruling in Mr. Lytle’s favor would tell future candidates that the easier path is to consistently ignore the statutory requirements and invoke substantial compliance when challenged.”
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			  <news:name>Can a candidate for governor list a UPS Store as his home address? Arizona’s high court will decide.</news:name>
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			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:34:41.425Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Can a candidate for governor list a UPS Store as his home address? Arizona’s high court will decide.</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Hugh Lytle, an independent candidate for governor, held a press conference on Feb. 16, 2026, outside of the state house to criticize a bill that would make his party name, the Arizona Independent Party, illegal and he said would derail his campaign. (Photo by Dermont Stevenson/Cronkite News)

If the Arizona Supreme Court doesn’t kick a third-party candidate for governor off the ballot for listing a P.O. box as his address on key paperwork, then a state law requiring candidates to declare their actual residential address will be unenforceable, attorneys challenging Hugh Lytle’s candidacy argued in a legal filing this week.
“According to Mr. Lytle, a candidate for statewide office could list any commercial address in Arizona — a law firm, a hotel, a FedEx store, or anywhere else. That’s not what the statutes say,” wrote Austin Yost, an attorney for Democratic activist Craig Beckman.
Lytle, a wealthy entrepreneur, hopes to be on the ballot as a candidate for the No Labels Party. But Beckman claims that, because Lytle listed a P.O. box on his nomination paperwork and nominating petitions instead of the “actual residential address” that is required by state law, his candidacy is illegal.
“Allowing him to list a UPS store instead of his actual residence address would undermine legislative intent and turn this statutory scheme into a dead letter,” Yost argued in an opening brief to the Supreme Court.

                
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Earlier this month, a trial court judge rejected Beckman’s challenge, ruling that Lytle “substantially complied” with the law and concluding that the purpose of the address requirement is so voters can know that candidates live in the jurisdiction they hope to represent. Because Lytle is running for a statewide position, the UPS Store and Lytle’s home are in Scottsdale, and Lytle is the only person with that name registered to vote in Arizona, the use of the mailbox address did not mislead voters, Maricopa County Superior Court Judge Michael Mandell ruled. 
Lytle’s attorney, Andrew Pappas, argued in his opening brief that that trial court applied the law correctly because “no voter could be confused or misled about whether Mr. Lytle resides in the jurisdiction he seeks to represent as Governor: the State of Arizona.”
And the Arizona Supreme Court has never kicked a candidate off the ballot for using a P.O. box or a different address that is in the correct jurisdiction, Pappas noted.
“Different facts could yield a different result. But the Court has always found substantial compliance where nomination documents list an address in the same jurisdiction the candidate seeks to represent, because voters are unlikely to be confused or misled about the candidate’s eligibility for office,” he argued.
But Yost said Lytle’s situation is different than the four Supreme Court cases in which addresses were the basis of a candidate challenge and the candidates were allowed to appear on the ballot.
In one, a school board candidate launched a campaign with one residential address and then moved — within the same school district — and failed to adopt the new address on nominating paperwork. In another, a legislative candidate used an incomplete address, but there was never any contention that the candidate lived outside the legislative district. And in a third, a candidate for sheriff used a P.O. box in the same ZIP code as his house.
Much of Yost’s argument centers on the fourth, and most recent, address-based candidate challenge — a case that prompted the legislature to change the state law requiring residential addresses.
In that 2020 case, Shawnna Bolick used a P.O. box as the address on her nomination paperwork instead of her home address. The Supreme Court ultimately ruled that she did so in good faith, because her address and voting records are shielded from public view because her husband is a justice on the Arizona Supreme Court. 
In Bolick’s case, the mailbox address was in the same legislative district and ZIP code as her house, meaning voters would not have been confused about whether she lived in the district.
When the legislature convened in 2021, it amended the law requiring candidates list their “actual residential address” on nominating forms to codify that court ruling. In doing so, it said the only reason a candidate can legally use a private mailbox is if their residential address is protected under the state law that shielded Bolick’s.
And that, Yost argued, is key in Lytle’s case. 
“A candidate who has an actual residence address that is not protected under (state law) must provide the candidate’s ‘actual residence address,’” he wrote. “Mr. Lytle violated (the law’s) simple command by falsely declaring under penalty of perjury that his ‘[r]esidential [a]ddress’ was the (P.O. box).”
Lytle’s campaign said the strict letter of that law is not what should determine whether he stays on the ballot. Rather, Pappas wrote, the fact that no voters were — or could have been — confused by the P.O. box address renders the whole exercise moot.
“(V)oters couldn’t have been confused or misled about Mr. Lytle’s eligibility for the statewide office he seeks because both the mailbox and his home are in Scottsdale, and no one disputes that he meets the residency requirements to be Governor,” he argued.
Like the trial court ruled, the Supreme Court should find that Lytle substantially complied with the law, Pappas concluded.
Yost warned the justices that adopting that view would have serious consequences in future elections.
“That cannot be the law because it would create perverse incentives and produce absurd results,” he wrote. “Arizona law requires candidates to publicly disclose their actual residential addresses — a substantial personal burden that the Legislature imposes as a condition of seeking public office. 
“A ruling in Mr. Lytle’s favor would tell future candidates that the easier path is to consistently ignore the statutory requirements and invoke substantial compliance when challenged.”
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			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
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			  <news:name>Can a candidate for governor list a UPS Store as his home address? Arizona’s high court will decide.</news:name>
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			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:34:29.742Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Can a candidate for governor list a UPS Store as his home address? Arizona’s high court will decide.</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Hugh Lytle, an independent candidate for governor, held a press conference on Feb. 16, 2026, outside of the state house to criticize a bill that would make his party name, the Arizona Independent Party, illegal and he said would derail his campaign. (Photo by Dermont Stevenson/Cronkite News)

If the Arizona Supreme Court doesn’t kick a third-party candidate for governor off the ballot for listing a P.O. box as his address on key paperwork, then a state law requiring candidates to declare their actual residential address will be unenforceable, attorneys challenging Hugh Lytle’s candidacy argued in a legal filing this week.
“According to Mr. Lytle, a candidate for statewide office could list any commercial address in Arizona — a law firm, a hotel, a FedEx store, or anywhere else. That’s not what the statutes say,” wrote Austin Yost, an attorney for Democratic activist Craig Beckman.
Lytle, a wealthy entrepreneur, hopes to be on the ballot as a candidate for the No Labels Party. But Beckman claims that, because Lytle listed a P.O. box on his nomination paperwork and nominating petitions instead of the “actual residential address” that is required by state law, his candidacy is illegal.
“Allowing him to list a UPS store instead of his actual residence address would undermine legislative intent and turn this statutory scheme into a dead letter,” Yost argued in an opening brief to the Supreme Court.

                
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Earlier this month, a trial court judge rejected Beckman’s challenge, ruling that Lytle “substantially complied” with the law and concluding that the purpose of the address requirement is so voters can know that candidates live in the jurisdiction they hope to represent. Because Lytle is running for a statewide position, the UPS Store and Lytle’s home are in Scottsdale, and Lytle is the only person with that name registered to vote in Arizona, the use of the mailbox address did not mislead voters, Maricopa County Superior Court Judge Michael Mandell ruled. 
Lytle’s attorney, Andrew Pappas, argued in his opening brief that that trial court applied the law correctly because “no voter could be confused or misled about whether Mr. Lytle resides in the jurisdiction he seeks to represent as Governor: the State of Arizona.”
And the Arizona Supreme Court has never kicked a candidate off the ballot for using a P.O. box or a different address that is in the correct jurisdiction, Pappas noted.
“Different facts could yield a different result. But the Court has always found substantial compliance where nomination documents list an address in the same jurisdiction the candidate seeks to represent, because voters are unlikely to be confused or misled about the candidate’s eligibility for office,” he argued.
But Yost said Lytle’s situation is different than the four Supreme Court cases in which addresses were the basis of a candidate challenge and the candidates were allowed to appear on the ballot.
In one, a school board candidate launched a campaign with one residential address and then moved — within the same school district — and failed to adopt the new address on nominating paperwork. In another, a legislative candidate used an incomplete address, but there was never any contention that the candidate lived outside the legislative district. And in a third, a candidate for sheriff used a P.O. box in the same ZIP code as his house.
Much of Yost’s argument centers on the fourth, and most recent, address-based candidate challenge — a case that prompted the legislature to change the state law requiring residential addresses.
In that 2020 case, Shawnna Bolick used a P.O. box as the address on her nomination paperwork instead of her home address. The Supreme Court ultimately ruled that she did so in good faith, because her address and voting records are shielded from public view because her husband is a justice on the Arizona Supreme Court. 
In Bolick’s case, the mailbox address was in the same legislative district and ZIP code as her house, meaning voters would not have been confused about whether she lived in the district.
When the legislature convened in 2021, it amended the law requiring candidates list their “actual residential address” on nominating forms to codify that court ruling. In doing so, it said the only reason a candidate can legally use a private mailbox is if their residential address is protected under the state law that shielded Bolick’s.
And that, Yost argued, is key in Lytle’s case. 
“A candidate who has an actual residence address that is not protected under (state law) must provide the candidate’s ‘actual residence address,’” he wrote. “Mr. Lytle violated (the law’s) simple command by falsely declaring under penalty of perjury that his ‘[r]esidential [a]ddress’ was the (P.O. box).”
Lytle’s campaign said the strict letter of that law is not what should determine whether he stays on the ballot. Rather, Pappas wrote, the fact that no voters were — or could have been — confused by the P.O. box address renders the whole exercise moot.
“(V)oters couldn’t have been confused or misled about Mr. Lytle’s eligibility for the statewide office he seeks because both the mailbox and his home are in Scottsdale, and no one disputes that he meets the residency requirements to be Governor,” he argued.
Like the trial court ruled, the Supreme Court should find that Lytle substantially complied with the law, Pappas concluded.
Yost warned the justices that adopting that view would have serious consequences in future elections.
“That cannot be the law because it would create perverse incentives and produce absurd results,” he wrote. “Arizona law requires candidates to publicly disclose their actual residential addresses — a substantial personal burden that the Legislature imposes as a condition of seeking public office. 
“A ruling in Mr. Lytle’s favor would tell future candidates that the easier path is to consistently ignore the statutory requirements and invoke substantial compliance when challenged.”
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			  <news:name>Trump, US House speaker prod GOP states to gerrymander after voting rights ruling</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:34:27.259Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Trump, US House speaker prod GOP states to gerrymander after voting rights ruling</news:title>
			<news:keywords>President Donald Trump gives a speech at the World Economic Forum on Jan. 21, 2026 in Davos, Switzerland. (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

President Donald Trump on Thursday moved to capitalize on a U.S. Supreme Court decision weakening the federal Voting Rights Act as he urged one governor to gerrymander his state and praised another for suspending an approaching primary.
The court’s decision on Wednesday struck down Louisiana’s congressional map as unconstitutional and empowered other Republican states to break apart districts where most residents are Black for a partisan advantage.
The opinion could reinvigorate Trump’s push for states to redraw their maps to give Republicans an edge in the November midterm elections. The president’s party typically performs poorly in the midterms and Trump’s approval has fallen in polls, making Democrats hopeful they can retake the U.S. House.
Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry and state Attorney General Liz Murrill announced on Thursday that the state’s congressional primary election, set for mid-May, would be suspended. The pause gives state lawmakers time to draw a new map aimed at ousting at least one, if not two, Black Democrats.
Trump thanked Landry on his social media platform, Truth Social, for “moving so quickly to fix the Unconstitutionality” of the state’s map. In a separate post, Trump wrote that he had spoken with Tennessee Republican Gov. Bill Lee, who faces calls to immediately gerrymander the state.
“I had a very good conversation with Governor Bill Lee, of Tennessee, this morning, wherein he stated that he would work hard to correct the unconstitutional flaw in the Congressional Maps of the Great State of Tennessee,” Trump wrote.
A spokesperson for Lee didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.
The redistricting rush 
Historically, states draw new maps once a decade after each census but eight states have now broken that norm after Trump urged Republicans to gerrymander. 
Texas, Missouri, North Carolina, Ohio and Utah have drawn fresh GOP-leaning maps, as well as Florida, whose legislature approved a gerrymander hours after the Supreme Court’s decision. California and Virginia have enacted new maps favorable to Democrats. 
Before Wednesday, the redistricting war was essentially a wash. But the court’s decision gives Republicans more options to gain the upper hand this year, if states can move quickly. 
Alabama, Georgia, Missouri and Tennessee are among the red states with upcoming primaries where lawmakers could theoretically still act. In some states — like Georgia and Tennessee — top Republicans haven’t ruled out action. In others, like Alabama and Georgia, GOP leaders have ruled out or played down the possibility of action this year.
U.S. House Speaker Mike Johnson, a Louisiana Republican, urged states to gerrymander their maps before the midterm elections.
“I think all states that have unconstitutional maps should look at that very carefully and I think they should do it before the midterms,” Johnson told CNN on Thursday. 
Dems also talk gerrymandering
Democrats have also floated the possibility of additional gerrymanders — whether this year or ahead of the 2028 election. 
New York Gov. Kathy Hochul said on social media after the court’s decision that she would work with the legislature to change the state’s redistricting process. New York currently uses a commission system to draw maps, limiting opportunities for partisan gerrymandering.
At a news conference hosted by the Congressional Black Caucus on Wednesday, Rep. Terri Sewell, an Alabama Democrat, suggested she would support additional Democratic gerrymanders.
“It values partisan politics over discrimination,” Sewell said of the court’s decision. “It’s really, really, really — I mean, it takes us back. So to the extent it’s urging, it’s inviting red states to totally take away all of the Democratic seats and be totally red, it also encourages blue states to do exactly the same.”</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
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			  <news:name>Trump, US House speaker prod GOP states to gerrymander after voting rights ruling</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:34:21.653Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Trump, US House speaker prod GOP states to gerrymander after voting rights ruling</news:title>
			<news:keywords>President Donald Trump gives a speech at the World Economic Forum on Jan. 21, 2026 in Davos, Switzerland. (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

President Donald Trump on Thursday moved to capitalize on a U.S. Supreme Court decision weakening the federal Voting Rights Act as he urged one governor to gerrymander his state and praised another for suspending an approaching primary.
The court’s decision on Wednesday struck down Louisiana’s congressional map as unconstitutional and empowered other Republican states to break apart districts where most residents are Black for a partisan advantage.
The opinion could reinvigorate Trump’s push for states to redraw their maps to give Republicans an edge in the November midterm elections. The president’s party typically performs poorly in the midterms and Trump’s approval has fallen in polls, making Democrats hopeful they can retake the U.S. House.
Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry and state Attorney General Liz Murrill announced on Thursday that the state’s congressional primary election, set for mid-May, would be suspended. The pause gives state lawmakers time to draw a new map aimed at ousting at least one, if not two, Black Democrats.
Trump thanked Landry on his social media platform, Truth Social, for “moving so quickly to fix the Unconstitutionality” of the state’s map. In a separate post, Trump wrote that he had spoken with Tennessee Republican Gov. Bill Lee, who faces calls to immediately gerrymander the state.
“I had a very good conversation with Governor Bill Lee, of Tennessee, this morning, wherein he stated that he would work hard to correct the unconstitutional flaw in the Congressional Maps of the Great State of Tennessee,” Trump wrote.
A spokesperson for Lee didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.
The redistricting rush 
Historically, states draw new maps once a decade after each census but eight states have now broken that norm after Trump urged Republicans to gerrymander. 
Texas, Missouri, North Carolina, Ohio and Utah have drawn fresh GOP-leaning maps, as well as Florida, whose legislature approved a gerrymander hours after the Supreme Court’s decision. California and Virginia have enacted new maps favorable to Democrats. 
Before Wednesday, the redistricting war was essentially a wash. But the court’s decision gives Republicans more options to gain the upper hand this year, if states can move quickly. 
Alabama, Georgia, Missouri and Tennessee are among the red states with upcoming primaries where lawmakers could theoretically still act. In some states — like Georgia and Tennessee — top Republicans haven’t ruled out action. In others, like Alabama and Georgia, GOP leaders have ruled out or played down the possibility of action this year.
U.S. House Speaker Mike Johnson, a Louisiana Republican, urged states to gerrymander their maps before the midterm elections.
“I think all states that have unconstitutional maps should look at that very carefully and I think they should do it before the midterms,” Johnson told CNN on Thursday. 
Dems also talk gerrymandering
Democrats have also floated the possibility of additional gerrymanders — whether this year or ahead of the 2028 election. 
New York Gov. Kathy Hochul said on social media after the court’s decision that she would work with the legislature to change the state’s redistricting process. New York currently uses a commission system to draw maps, limiting opportunities for partisan gerrymandering.
At a news conference hosted by the Congressional Black Caucus on Wednesday, Rep. Terri Sewell, an Alabama Democrat, suggested she would support additional Democratic gerrymanders.
“It values partisan politics over discrimination,” Sewell said of the court’s decision. “It’s really, really, really — I mean, it takes us back. So to the extent it’s urging, it’s inviting red states to totally take away all of the Democratic seats and be totally red, it also encourages blue states to do exactly the same.”</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
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		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40312a200899a00e5f1e2</loc>
		  <news:news>
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			  <news:name>Trump, US House speaker prod GOP states to gerrymander after voting rights ruling</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:34:10.020Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Trump, US House speaker prod GOP states to gerrymander after voting rights ruling</news:title>
			<news:keywords>President Donald Trump gives a speech at the World Economic Forum on Jan. 21, 2026 in Davos, Switzerland. (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

President Donald Trump on Thursday moved to capitalize on a U.S. Supreme Court decision weakening the federal Voting Rights Act as he urged one governor to gerrymander his state and praised another for suspending an approaching primary.
The court’s decision on Wednesday struck down Louisiana’s congressional map as unconstitutional and empowered other Republican states to break apart districts where most residents are Black for a partisan advantage.
The opinion could reinvigorate Trump’s push for states to redraw their maps to give Republicans an edge in the November midterm elections. The president’s party typically performs poorly in the midterms and Trump’s approval has fallen in polls, making Democrats hopeful they can retake the U.S. House.
Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry and state Attorney General Liz Murrill announced on Thursday that the state’s congressional primary election, set for mid-May, would be suspended. The pause gives state lawmakers time to draw a new map aimed at ousting at least one, if not two, Black Democrats.
Trump thanked Landry on his social media platform, Truth Social, for “moving so quickly to fix the Unconstitutionality” of the state’s map. In a separate post, Trump wrote that he had spoken with Tennessee Republican Gov. Bill Lee, who faces calls to immediately gerrymander the state.
“I had a very good conversation with Governor Bill Lee, of Tennessee, this morning, wherein he stated that he would work hard to correct the unconstitutional flaw in the Congressional Maps of the Great State of Tennessee,” Trump wrote.
A spokesperson for Lee didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.
The redistricting rush 
Historically, states draw new maps once a decade after each census but eight states have now broken that norm after Trump urged Republicans to gerrymander. 
Texas, Missouri, North Carolina, Ohio and Utah have drawn fresh GOP-leaning maps, as well as Florida, whose legislature approved a gerrymander hours after the Supreme Court’s decision. California and Virginia have enacted new maps favorable to Democrats. 
Before Wednesday, the redistricting war was essentially a wash. But the court’s decision gives Republicans more options to gain the upper hand this year, if states can move quickly. 
Alabama, Georgia, Missouri and Tennessee are among the red states with upcoming primaries where lawmakers could theoretically still act. In some states — like Georgia and Tennessee — top Republicans haven’t ruled out action. In others, like Alabama and Georgia, GOP leaders have ruled out or played down the possibility of action this year.
U.S. House Speaker Mike Johnson, a Louisiana Republican, urged states to gerrymander their maps before the midterm elections.
“I think all states that have unconstitutional maps should look at that very carefully and I think they should do it before the midterms,” Johnson told CNN on Thursday. 
Dems also talk gerrymandering
Democrats have also floated the possibility of additional gerrymanders — whether this year or ahead of the 2028 election. 
New York Gov. Kathy Hochul said on social media after the court’s decision that she would work with the legislature to change the state’s redistricting process. New York currently uses a commission system to draw maps, limiting opportunities for partisan gerrymandering.
At a news conference hosted by the Congressional Black Caucus on Wednesday, Rep. Terri Sewell, an Alabama Democrat, suggested she would support additional Democratic gerrymanders.
“It values partisan politics over discrimination,” Sewell said of the court’s decision. “It’s really, really, really — I mean, it takes us back. So to the extent it’s urging, it’s inviting red states to totally take away all of the Democratic seats and be totally red, it also encourages blue states to do exactly the same.”</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
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			  <news:name>Mayes won’t appeal ruling that her office broke public records law over Judicial Watch request</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:34:07.455Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Mayes won’t appeal ruling that her office broke public records law over Judicial Watch request</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Attorney General Kris Mayes in January 2023. Photo by Gage Skidmore (modified) | Flickr/CC BY-SA 2.0

An appellate court ruled that Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes’s office broke the law when it gave a conservative advocacy group almost no information about dozens of emails and documents it said weren’t public records.
The court also found that the Attorney General’s Office failed to justify redacting names from one document and inadequately searched for the records that Judicial Watch sought.
“It’s an important ruling and exposes the gamesmanship we’ve had to go through to expose the relationships we’ve been investigating,” Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton told the Arizona Mirror. “It’s such a waste of taxpayer resources.”
Richie Taylor, a spokesman for Mayes, said the AG’s Office won’t appeal the ruling.
“We disagree with the court’s analysis, but we will abide by the ruling and produce a more detailed privilege log for review by the trial court and plaintiffs as required by the ruling,” he said in an emailed statement.

                
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In December 2024, Judicial Watch filed a public records request seeking communications between Mayes’s office and States United Democracy Fund, a nonpartisan organization that advocates for democracy and fair elections, stretching back to Jan. 1, 2020. The request also sought documents and communications with Voter Protection Program, a predecessor organization to States United.
The next month, the AG’s Office turned over some records, but also informed Judicial Watch that some records had been withheld because they were either subject to attorney-client privilege or were attorney work product, and therefore weren’t subject to the public records law.
In February 2025, Judicial Watch sued and accused Mayes’s office of not turning over records “promptly,” as Arizona law requires, and failing to provide an index of the records it withheld, something the law allows and that Judicial Watch requested. After the lawsuit was filed, the AG’s Office supplied an index.
A trial court judge concluded that the AG’s Office complied with Arizona public records law and dismissed the lawsuit.
But the Arizona Court of Appeals said that judge got it wrong: the index of withheld records was too vague to be of any use in determining whether the documents were privileged, one document was unreasonably redacted and the office didn’t actually search for all the records Judicial Watch sought.
The index covered 50 records that Mayes’s office claimed were privileged, but included only two entries: emails from AG’s attorneys to States United attorneys and email from States United’s attorneys to the AG’s attorneys. It did not include any other information, such as dates, names of senders or recipients or any description of the emails or their attachments. 
And that doesn’t meet the standard the Arizona Supreme Court set in a 2022 ruling that privilege logs “must contain more than generalities,” Judge Jeffrey Sklar wrote for the three-judge appellate panel in its unanimous ruling.
Some detail must be provided in such indexes, the Supreme Court held, to shed some light on whether a privilege is being improperly applied to materials that should be public record. 
“Here, the index provided by the attorney general’s office supplies no context about the withheld emails that would allow a court or any other party to determine if a privilege applies,” Sklar wrote.
In one of the records that Mayes’s office did turn over to Judicial Watch, it redacted the names of every States United employee. The trial judge didn’t analyze if there was a legal reason to redact those names, and the appellate court said she should have because an attorney’s name “generally falls outside the privilege’s protections” and shouldn’t be redacted.
Finally, the court concluded that the AG’s Office failed to search for all of the documents that Judicial Watch sought: Instead of searching for records dating back to 2020, it only looked at records beginning in January 2023, when Mayes took office. The office’s public records employee testified that, because the records request was related to Mayes’s prosecution of “fake electors” from the 2020 election, there was no reason to search before 2023 because that prosecution hadn’t begun.
“The office was not entitled to disregard Judicial Watch’s unambiguous records request in favor of its own, narrower interpretation,” Sklar wrote.
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			  <news:name>Mayes won’t appeal ruling that her office broke public records law over Judicial Watch request</news:name>
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			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:34:01.842Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Mayes won’t appeal ruling that her office broke public records law over Judicial Watch request</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Attorney General Kris Mayes in January 2023. Photo by Gage Skidmore (modified) | Flickr/CC BY-SA 2.0

An appellate court ruled that Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes’s office broke the law when it gave a conservative advocacy group almost no information about dozens of emails and documents it said weren’t public records.
The court also found that the Attorney General’s Office failed to justify redacting names from one document and inadequately searched for the records that Judicial Watch sought.
“It’s an important ruling and exposes the gamesmanship we’ve had to go through to expose the relationships we’ve been investigating,” Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton told the Arizona Mirror. “It’s such a waste of taxpayer resources.”
Richie Taylor, a spokesman for Mayes, said the AG’s Office won’t appeal the ruling.
“We disagree with the court’s analysis, but we will abide by the ruling and produce a more detailed privilege log for review by the trial court and plaintiffs as required by the ruling,” he said in an emailed statement.

                
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In December 2024, Judicial Watch filed a public records request seeking communications between Mayes’s office and States United Democracy Fund, a nonpartisan organization that advocates for democracy and fair elections, stretching back to Jan. 1, 2020. The request also sought documents and communications with Voter Protection Program, a predecessor organization to States United.
The next month, the AG’s Office turned over some records, but also informed Judicial Watch that some records had been withheld because they were either subject to attorney-client privilege or were attorney work product, and therefore weren’t subject to the public records law.
In February 2025, Judicial Watch sued and accused Mayes’s office of not turning over records “promptly,” as Arizona law requires, and failing to provide an index of the records it withheld, something the law allows and that Judicial Watch requested. After the lawsuit was filed, the AG’s Office supplied an index.
A trial court judge concluded that the AG’s Office complied with Arizona public records law and dismissed the lawsuit.
But the Arizona Court of Appeals said that judge got it wrong: the index of withheld records was too vague to be of any use in determining whether the documents were privileged, one document was unreasonably redacted and the office didn’t actually search for all the records Judicial Watch sought.
The index covered 50 records that Mayes’s office claimed were privileged, but included only two entries: emails from AG’s attorneys to States United attorneys and email from States United’s attorneys to the AG’s attorneys. It did not include any other information, such as dates, names of senders or recipients or any description of the emails or their attachments. 
And that doesn’t meet the standard the Arizona Supreme Court set in a 2022 ruling that privilege logs “must contain more than generalities,” Judge Jeffrey Sklar wrote for the three-judge appellate panel in its unanimous ruling.
Some detail must be provided in such indexes, the Supreme Court held, to shed some light on whether a privilege is being improperly applied to materials that should be public record. 
“Here, the index provided by the attorney general’s office supplies no context about the withheld emails that would allow a court or any other party to determine if a privilege applies,” Sklar wrote.
In one of the records that Mayes’s office did turn over to Judicial Watch, it redacted the names of every States United employee. The trial judge didn’t analyze if there was a legal reason to redact those names, and the appellate court said she should have because an attorney’s name “generally falls outside the privilege’s protections” and shouldn’t be redacted.
Finally, the court concluded that the AG’s Office failed to search for all of the documents that Judicial Watch sought: Instead of searching for records dating back to 2020, it only looked at records beginning in January 2023, when Mayes took office. The office’s public records employee testified that, because the records request was related to Mayes’s prosecution of “fake electors” from the 2020 election, there was no reason to search before 2023 because that prosecution hadn’t begun.
“The office was not entitled to disregard Judicial Watch’s unambiguous records request in favor of its own, narrower interpretation,” Sklar wrote.
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			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
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			  <news:name>Mayes won’t appeal ruling that her office broke public records law over Judicial Watch request</news:name>
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			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:33:50.421Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Mayes won’t appeal ruling that her office broke public records law over Judicial Watch request</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Attorney General Kris Mayes in January 2023. Photo by Gage Skidmore (modified) | Flickr/CC BY-SA 2.0

An appellate court ruled that Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes’s office broke the law when it gave a conservative advocacy group almost no information about dozens of emails and documents it said weren’t public records.
The court also found that the Attorney General’s Office failed to justify redacting names from one document and inadequately searched for the records that Judicial Watch sought.
“It’s an important ruling and exposes the gamesmanship we’ve had to go through to expose the relationships we’ve been investigating,” Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton told the Arizona Mirror. “It’s such a waste of taxpayer resources.”
Richie Taylor, a spokesman for Mayes, said the AG’s Office won’t appeal the ruling.
“We disagree with the court’s analysis, but we will abide by the ruling and produce a more detailed privilege log for review by the trial court and plaintiffs as required by the ruling,” he said in an emailed statement.

                
GET THE MORNING HEADLINES.
SUBSCRIBE
            
In December 2024, Judicial Watch filed a public records request seeking communications between Mayes’s office and States United Democracy Fund, a nonpartisan organization that advocates for democracy and fair elections, stretching back to Jan. 1, 2020. The request also sought documents and communications with Voter Protection Program, a predecessor organization to States United.
The next month, the AG’s Office turned over some records, but also informed Judicial Watch that some records had been withheld because they were either subject to attorney-client privilege or were attorney work product, and therefore weren’t subject to the public records law.
In February 2025, Judicial Watch sued and accused Mayes’s office of not turning over records “promptly,” as Arizona law requires, and failing to provide an index of the records it withheld, something the law allows and that Judicial Watch requested. After the lawsuit was filed, the AG’s Office supplied an index.
A trial court judge concluded that the AG’s Office complied with Arizona public records law and dismissed the lawsuit.
But the Arizona Court of Appeals said that judge got it wrong: the index of withheld records was too vague to be of any use in determining whether the documents were privileged, one document was unreasonably redacted and the office didn’t actually search for all the records Judicial Watch sought.
The index covered 50 records that Mayes’s office claimed were privileged, but included only two entries: emails from AG’s attorneys to States United attorneys and email from States United’s attorneys to the AG’s attorneys. It did not include any other information, such as dates, names of senders or recipients or any description of the emails or their attachments. 
And that doesn’t meet the standard the Arizona Supreme Court set in a 2022 ruling that privilege logs “must contain more than generalities,” Judge Jeffrey Sklar wrote for the three-judge appellate panel in its unanimous ruling.
Some detail must be provided in such indexes, the Supreme Court held, to shed some light on whether a privilege is being improperly applied to materials that should be public record. 
“Here, the index provided by the attorney general’s office supplies no context about the withheld emails that would allow a court or any other party to determine if a privilege applies,” Sklar wrote.
In one of the records that Mayes’s office did turn over to Judicial Watch, it redacted the names of every States United employee. The trial judge didn’t analyze if there was a legal reason to redact those names, and the appellate court said she should have because an attorney’s name “generally falls outside the privilege’s protections” and shouldn’t be redacted.
Finally, the court concluded that the AG’s Office failed to search for all of the documents that Judicial Watch sought: Instead of searching for records dating back to 2020, it only looked at records beginning in January 2023, when Mayes took office. The office’s public records employee testified that, because the records request was related to Mayes’s prosecution of “fake electors” from the 2020 election, there was no reason to search before 2023 because that prosecution hadn’t begun.
“The office was not entitled to disregard Judicial Watch’s unambiguous records request in favor of its own, narrower interpretation,” Sklar wrote.
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			  <news:name>New DOJ ruling clears the way to deport 500,000 Dreamers without first revoking their status</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
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			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:33:47.994Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>New DOJ ruling clears the way to deport 500,000 Dreamers without first revoking their status</news:title>
			<news:keywords>A demonstrator carries a sign reading &apos;My Dreams Are Not Illegal&apos; near American flags as immigrants rights supporters march in Los Angeles on March 1, 2025. The march was organized by faith groups along with immigrants rights organizations as a peaceful protest over the Trump administration&apos;s immigration policies. (Photo by Mario Tama/Getty Images) 

WASHINGTON — Members of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus raised serious concerns Thursday about the impact of a recent Department of Justice decision that will make it easier to deport hundreds of thousands of people brought into the country unlawfully as children, referred to as Dreamers. 
Texas Democratic Rep. Joaquin Castro said the April 24 decision from the Department of Justice’s Board of Immigration Appeals, “put a target for deportation on every single Dreamer in this country.”
The decision from the BIA found that having Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA, status is not enough to prevent a deportation, making it easier for Dreamers to be removed from the U.S. There are roughly 500,000 DACA recipients. 
The case before the three-judge panel stemmed from an appeal from immigration attorneys from the Department of Homeland Security after an immigration judge terminated removal proceedings for a DACA recipient, Catalina “Xóchitl” Santiago that cited her status as reason she could not be deported.  
While the decision does not mean Santiago will be immediately deported, it does set precedent for similar cases. 
Separately, immigration advocates have warned that DACA recipients have been swept up in President Donald Trump’s mass deportation drive and have been detained despite their legal status. 
Congressional Hispanic Caucus Chair Adriano Espaillat said the decision will allow immigration judges to remove DACA recipients first without terminating their status.
“Before, you had to terminate their DACA status, before they got deported,” the New York Democrat said. “Now they could go straight ahead and do this egregious action by the Board of Immigration Appeals. This is a serious escalation (of) the assault against DACA recipients.”
Spokespeople for the Justice Department did not return a message seeking comment Thursday.
Trump ‘crusade’ against DACA
Democratic Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto of Nevada said the recent decision “is the Trump administration’s latest move to attack Dreamers.” She criticized Trump for going back on his comments that he would “work with the Democrats on a plan,” to keep DACA recipients in the country. 
“That is just an indefensible decision,” she said. “Their ruling on DACA is a clear escalation in President Trump’s crusade to strip protections from DACA recipients. He is attacking the program from every angle.”
DACA was created by President Barack Obama’s administration in 2012 to protect eligible residents from deportation and allow them to obtain temporary work permits,  driver’s licenses and to qualify for in-state tuition for higher education.
In Trump’s first term, he tried to rescind the program in 2017 by halting new applications and sending hundreds of thousands of recipients across the country into limbo. The Supreme Court eventually ruled against the Trump administration.
Some Republican-led states have challenged the legality of DACA and an appeals court allowed for work permits to expire in Texas, but kept deportation protections.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
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		  <news:news>
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			  <news:name>New DOJ ruling clears the way to deport 500,000 Dreamers without first revoking their status</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:33:42.223Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>New DOJ ruling clears the way to deport 500,000 Dreamers without first revoking their status</news:title>
			<news:keywords>A demonstrator carries a sign reading &apos;My Dreams Are Not Illegal&apos; near American flags as immigrants rights supporters march in Los Angeles on March 1, 2025. The march was organized by faith groups along with immigrants rights organizations as a peaceful protest over the Trump administration&apos;s immigration policies. (Photo by Mario Tama/Getty Images) 

WASHINGTON — Members of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus raised serious concerns Thursday about the impact of a recent Department of Justice decision that will make it easier to deport hundreds of thousands of people brought into the country unlawfully as children, referred to as Dreamers. 
Texas Democratic Rep. Joaquin Castro said the April 24 decision from the Department of Justice’s Board of Immigration Appeals, “put a target for deportation on every single Dreamer in this country.”
The decision from the BIA found that having Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA, status is not enough to prevent a deportation, making it easier for Dreamers to be removed from the U.S. There are roughly 500,000 DACA recipients. 
The case before the three-judge panel stemmed from an appeal from immigration attorneys from the Department of Homeland Security after an immigration judge terminated removal proceedings for a DACA recipient, Catalina “Xóchitl” Santiago that cited her status as reason she could not be deported.  
While the decision does not mean Santiago will be immediately deported, it does set precedent for similar cases. 
Separately, immigration advocates have warned that DACA recipients have been swept up in President Donald Trump’s mass deportation drive and have been detained despite their legal status. 
Congressional Hispanic Caucus Chair Adriano Espaillat said the decision will allow immigration judges to remove DACA recipients first without terminating their status.
“Before, you had to terminate their DACA status, before they got deported,” the New York Democrat said. “Now they could go straight ahead and do this egregious action by the Board of Immigration Appeals. This is a serious escalation (of) the assault against DACA recipients.”
Spokespeople for the Justice Department did not return a message seeking comment Thursday.
Trump ‘crusade’ against DACA
Democratic Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto of Nevada said the recent decision “is the Trump administration’s latest move to attack Dreamers.” She criticized Trump for going back on his comments that he would “work with the Democrats on a plan,” to keep DACA recipients in the country. 
“That is just an indefensible decision,” she said. “Their ruling on DACA is a clear escalation in President Trump’s crusade to strip protections from DACA recipients. He is attacking the program from every angle.”
DACA was created by President Barack Obama’s administration in 2012 to protect eligible residents from deportation and allow them to obtain temporary work permits,  driver’s licenses and to qualify for in-state tuition for higher education.
In Trump’s first term, he tried to rescind the program in 2017 by halting new applications and sending hundreds of thousands of recipients across the country into limbo. The Supreme Court eventually ruled against the Trump administration.
Some Republican-led states have challenged the legality of DACA and an appeals court allowed for work permits to expire in Texas, but kept deportation protections.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
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			  <news:name>New DOJ ruling clears the way to deport 500,000 Dreamers without first revoking their status</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:33:30.528Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>New DOJ ruling clears the way to deport 500,000 Dreamers without first revoking their status</news:title>
			<news:keywords>A demonstrator carries a sign reading &apos;My Dreams Are Not Illegal&apos; near American flags as immigrants rights supporters march in Los Angeles on March 1, 2025. The march was organized by faith groups along with immigrants rights organizations as a peaceful protest over the Trump administration&apos;s immigration policies. (Photo by Mario Tama/Getty Images) 

WASHINGTON — Members of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus raised serious concerns Thursday about the impact of a recent Department of Justice decision that will make it easier to deport hundreds of thousands of people brought into the country unlawfully as children, referred to as Dreamers. 
Texas Democratic Rep. Joaquin Castro said the April 24 decision from the Department of Justice’s Board of Immigration Appeals, “put a target for deportation on every single Dreamer in this country.”
The decision from the BIA found that having Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA, status is not enough to prevent a deportation, making it easier for Dreamers to be removed from the U.S. There are roughly 500,000 DACA recipients. 
The case before the three-judge panel stemmed from an appeal from immigration attorneys from the Department of Homeland Security after an immigration judge terminated removal proceedings for a DACA recipient, Catalina “Xóchitl” Santiago that cited her status as reason she could not be deported.  
While the decision does not mean Santiago will be immediately deported, it does set precedent for similar cases. 
Separately, immigration advocates have warned that DACA recipients have been swept up in President Donald Trump’s mass deportation drive and have been detained despite their legal status. 
Congressional Hispanic Caucus Chair Adriano Espaillat said the decision will allow immigration judges to remove DACA recipients first without terminating their status.
“Before, you had to terminate their DACA status, before they got deported,” the New York Democrat said. “Now they could go straight ahead and do this egregious action by the Board of Immigration Appeals. This is a serious escalation (of) the assault against DACA recipients.”
Spokespeople for the Justice Department did not return a message seeking comment Thursday.
Trump ‘crusade’ against DACA
Democratic Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto of Nevada said the recent decision “is the Trump administration’s latest move to attack Dreamers.” She criticized Trump for going back on his comments that he would “work with the Democrats on a plan,” to keep DACA recipients in the country. 
“That is just an indefensible decision,” she said. “Their ruling on DACA is a clear escalation in President Trump’s crusade to strip protections from DACA recipients. He is attacking the program from every angle.”
DACA was created by President Barack Obama’s administration in 2012 to protect eligible residents from deportation and allow them to obtain temporary work permits,  driver’s licenses and to qualify for in-state tuition for higher education.
In Trump’s first term, he tried to rescind the program in 2017 by halting new applications and sending hundreds of thousands of recipients across the country into limbo. The Supreme Court eventually ruled against the Trump administration.
Some Republican-led states have challenged the legality of DACA and an appeals court allowed for work permits to expire in Texas, but kept deportation protections.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
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<url>
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			  <news:name>Nina Dobrev, Martha Stewart turn heads at King Charles’ star-studded charity gala</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:33:28.256Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Nina Dobrev, Martha Stewart turn heads at King Charles’ star-studded charity gala</news:title>
			<news:keywords>King Charles and Queen Camilla hosted the King&apos;s Trust Global Gala during their trip to the United States.
While in New York, the king and queen held the annual gala at Christie’s New York in Rockefeller Center, celebrating 50 years since he started the charity.
&quot;It’s a wonderfully proud but extraordinary moment to think that it’s 50 years since I started this trust,&quot; King Charles said according to Town &amp; Country. &quot;Quite difficult to get it off the ground in the first place, but we did.&quot;
Many of Hollywood&apos;s biggest stars were in attendance at the event, including Nina Dobrev, Martha Stewart and Meghann Fahy, who stunned in their gowns.
KING CHARLES EXPECTED TO KNIGHT DAVID BECKHAM AS BOTH NAVIGATE FAMILY FEUDS
&quot;The king has a unique charm, elegance, wide knowledge of guests and has a track record with celebrities going back decades, making them feel respected and supported in their lives and activities,&quot; royal broadcaster Ian Pelham Turner said. 
&quot;This is a constant reminder to nobility and celebrities alike and filters through to others of a similar ilk right across the world.&quot;
Also in attendance at the gala were models Karlie Kloss and Iman, as well as designers such as Donatella Versace and Stella McCartney. Singer Lionel Richie also made an appearance on the red carpet, looking dapper in a black suit.
According to Town &amp; Country, Richie, who is a co-chair of the event, spoke at the gala, telling the audience, &quot;This is an honor.&quot;
PRINCE WILLIAM’S ENVIRONMENTAL CHARITY REPORTED OVER PARTNER’S EPSTEIN TIES
&quot;They actually wrote a speech for me, but I actually feel that I know this gentleman from the heart,&quot; he reportedly said about King Charles. &quot;When I met him, we didn’t have too much in common in terms of the way we grew up. 
&quot;And then we started talking, and we realized we’re from the same place; we have the same heart. Then we started getting involved with people who automatically have the same heart, who have that same philanthropic [mindset] of how can we help kids?&quot;
Pelham Turner told Fox News Digital &quot;the King is seen not only as the head of state but also through his work for good causes many events held within the opulence of palaces in Britain.&quot;
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Due to this, he believes these events &quot;are seen as the crème de la crème for those enjoying the spectacle.&quot;
&quot;Many older celebrities will remember when Charles and Diana came to America, invited by President Ronald Reagan, who ensured every A-list celebrity in the country attended the event ending with the famous dance of Diana and John Travolta,&quot; he said.
Although this is the first visit to the United States, Pelham Turner thinks &quot;there is still an air of magical once in a lifetime ambiance meeting the royal family&quot; especially when it comes to the king, saying it will then create &quot;a subsequent memory passed down to future generations.&quot;
Royal expert Richard Fitzwilliams told Fox News Digital the king &quot;leverages the unique magic of the world’s most high-profile monarchy.&quot;
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&quot;His personal prestige having begun the King’s Trust and been involved with so many charitable institutions, and his expertise as a campaigner from his days as Prince of Wales, all these combine to give him the clout he undoubtedly has as a world statesman,&quot; Fitzwilliams said. 
&quot;He&apos;s just proved it with his brilliant and witty speeches on his state visit to the United States, and he&apos;s battling cancer at the same time.&quot;
Charles started the King&apos;s Trust charity in 1976 when he was the Prince of Wales. He started the charity during a time of mass unemployment in England, with Charles using his Navy severance pay of £7,600 to start pilot projects and to create grants for unemployed young people.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
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		</url>
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		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f402e2a200899a00e5f19a</loc>
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			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Nina Dobrev, Martha Stewart turn heads at King Charles’ star-studded charity gala</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:33:22.333Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Nina Dobrev, Martha Stewart turn heads at King Charles’ star-studded charity gala</news:title>
			<news:keywords>King Charles and Queen Camilla hosted the King&apos;s Trust Global Gala during their trip to the United States.
While in New York, the king and queen held the annual gala at Christie’s New York in Rockefeller Center, celebrating 50 years since he started the charity.
&quot;It’s a wonderfully proud but extraordinary moment to think that it’s 50 years since I started this trust,&quot; King Charles said according to Town &amp; Country. &quot;Quite difficult to get it off the ground in the first place, but we did.&quot;
Many of Hollywood&apos;s biggest stars were in attendance at the event, including Nina Dobrev, Martha Stewart and Meghann Fahy, who stunned in their gowns.
KING CHARLES EXPECTED TO KNIGHT DAVID BECKHAM AS BOTH NAVIGATE FAMILY FEUDS
&quot;The king has a unique charm, elegance, wide knowledge of guests and has a track record with celebrities going back decades, making them feel respected and supported in their lives and activities,&quot; royal broadcaster Ian Pelham Turner said. 
&quot;This is a constant reminder to nobility and celebrities alike and filters through to others of a similar ilk right across the world.&quot;
Also in attendance at the gala were models Karlie Kloss and Iman, as well as designers such as Donatella Versace and Stella McCartney. Singer Lionel Richie also made an appearance on the red carpet, looking dapper in a black suit.
According to Town &amp; Country, Richie, who is a co-chair of the event, spoke at the gala, telling the audience, &quot;This is an honor.&quot;
PRINCE WILLIAM’S ENVIRONMENTAL CHARITY REPORTED OVER PARTNER’S EPSTEIN TIES
&quot;They actually wrote a speech for me, but I actually feel that I know this gentleman from the heart,&quot; he reportedly said about King Charles. &quot;When I met him, we didn’t have too much in common in terms of the way we grew up. 
&quot;And then we started talking, and we realized we’re from the same place; we have the same heart. Then we started getting involved with people who automatically have the same heart, who have that same philanthropic [mindset] of how can we help kids?&quot;
Pelham Turner told Fox News Digital &quot;the King is seen not only as the head of state but also through his work for good causes many events held within the opulence of palaces in Britain.&quot;
CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR THE ENTERTAINMENT NEWSLETTER
Due to this, he believes these events &quot;are seen as the crème de la crème for those enjoying the spectacle.&quot;
&quot;Many older celebrities will remember when Charles and Diana came to America, invited by President Ronald Reagan, who ensured every A-list celebrity in the country attended the event ending with the famous dance of Diana and John Travolta,&quot; he said.
Although this is the first visit to the United States, Pelham Turner thinks &quot;there is still an air of magical once in a lifetime ambiance meeting the royal family&quot; especially when it comes to the king, saying it will then create &quot;a subsequent memory passed down to future generations.&quot;
Royal expert Richard Fitzwilliams told Fox News Digital the king &quot;leverages the unique magic of the world’s most high-profile monarchy.&quot;
LIKE WHAT YOU’RE READING? CLICK HERE FOR MORE ENTERTAINMENT NEWS
&quot;His personal prestige having begun the King’s Trust and been involved with so many charitable institutions, and his expertise as a campaigner from his days as Prince of Wales, all these combine to give him the clout he undoubtedly has as a world statesman,&quot; Fitzwilliams said. 
&quot;He&apos;s just proved it with his brilliant and witty speeches on his state visit to the United States, and he&apos;s battling cancer at the same time.&quot;
Charles started the King&apos;s Trust charity in 1976 when he was the Prince of Wales. He started the charity during a time of mass unemployment in England, with Charles using his Navy severance pay of £7,600 to start pilot projects and to create grants for unemployed young people.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f402d6a200899a00e5f191</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Nina Dobrev, Martha Stewart turn heads at King Charles’ star-studded charity gala</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:33:10.708Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Nina Dobrev, Martha Stewart turn heads at King Charles’ star-studded charity gala</news:title>
			<news:keywords>King Charles and Queen Camilla hosted the King&apos;s Trust Global Gala during their trip to the United States.
While in New York, the king and queen held the annual gala at Christie’s New York in Rockefeller Center, celebrating 50 years since he started the charity.
&quot;It’s a wonderfully proud but extraordinary moment to think that it’s 50 years since I started this trust,&quot; King Charles said according to Town &amp; Country. &quot;Quite difficult to get it off the ground in the first place, but we did.&quot;
Many of Hollywood&apos;s biggest stars were in attendance at the event, including Nina Dobrev, Martha Stewart and Meghann Fahy, who stunned in their gowns.
KING CHARLES EXPECTED TO KNIGHT DAVID BECKHAM AS BOTH NAVIGATE FAMILY FEUDS
&quot;The king has a unique charm, elegance, wide knowledge of guests and has a track record with celebrities going back decades, making them feel respected and supported in their lives and activities,&quot; royal broadcaster Ian Pelham Turner said. 
&quot;This is a constant reminder to nobility and celebrities alike and filters through to others of a similar ilk right across the world.&quot;
Also in attendance at the gala were models Karlie Kloss and Iman, as well as designers such as Donatella Versace and Stella McCartney. Singer Lionel Richie also made an appearance on the red carpet, looking dapper in a black suit.
According to Town &amp; Country, Richie, who is a co-chair of the event, spoke at the gala, telling the audience, &quot;This is an honor.&quot;
PRINCE WILLIAM’S ENVIRONMENTAL CHARITY REPORTED OVER PARTNER’S EPSTEIN TIES
&quot;They actually wrote a speech for me, but I actually feel that I know this gentleman from the heart,&quot; he reportedly said about King Charles. &quot;When I met him, we didn’t have too much in common in terms of the way we grew up. 
&quot;And then we started talking, and we realized we’re from the same place; we have the same heart. Then we started getting involved with people who automatically have the same heart, who have that same philanthropic [mindset] of how can we help kids?&quot;
Pelham Turner told Fox News Digital &quot;the King is seen not only as the head of state but also through his work for good causes many events held within the opulence of palaces in Britain.&quot;
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Due to this, he believes these events &quot;are seen as the crème de la crème for those enjoying the spectacle.&quot;
&quot;Many older celebrities will remember when Charles and Diana came to America, invited by President Ronald Reagan, who ensured every A-list celebrity in the country attended the event ending with the famous dance of Diana and John Travolta,&quot; he said.
Although this is the first visit to the United States, Pelham Turner thinks &quot;there is still an air of magical once in a lifetime ambiance meeting the royal family&quot; especially when it comes to the king, saying it will then create &quot;a subsequent memory passed down to future generations.&quot;
Royal expert Richard Fitzwilliams told Fox News Digital the king &quot;leverages the unique magic of the world’s most high-profile monarchy.&quot;
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&quot;His personal prestige having begun the King’s Trust and been involved with so many charitable institutions, and his expertise as a campaigner from his days as Prince of Wales, all these combine to give him the clout he undoubtedly has as a world statesman,&quot; Fitzwilliams said. 
&quot;He&apos;s just proved it with his brilliant and witty speeches on his state visit to the United States, and he&apos;s battling cancer at the same time.&quot;
Charles started the King&apos;s Trust charity in 1976 when he was the Prince of Wales. He started the charity during a time of mass unemployment in England, with Charles using his Navy severance pay of £7,600 to start pilot projects and to create grants for unemployed young people.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f402d4a200899a00e5f188</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Makai Lemon becomes first Eagle to wear No. 9 since Nick Foles led Philadelphia to its first Super Bowl title</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:33:08.657Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Makai Lemon becomes first Eagle to wear No. 9 since Nick Foles led Philadelphia to its first Super Bowl title</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The Philadelphia Eagles believe they have another dynamic weapon who can help them get back to the Super Bowl.
Wide receiver Makai Lemon, the Eagles’ first-round pick, chose a jersey number synonymous with winning in Philadelphia, and that’s all fans are thinking about Thursday at rookie minicamp.
Lemon is going to be wearing No. 9, becoming the first player since Nick Foles to do so. 
Foles needs no introduction to those who sing &quot;Fly, Eagles, Fly&quot; at the top of their lungs. He is a true sports folk hero who helped the team win its first-ever Vince Lombardi Trophy during the 2017 season.
CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM
The number may not have been retired, but Foles gave Lemon his blessing nonetheless. Lemon appreciated the sentiment.
&quot;I appreciate the Eagles so much and Nick Foles, especially to pass that number down because I know he could have easily kept that number to himself,&quot; Lemon told reporters Thursday at rookie minicamp, according to NBC Sports Philadelphia.
&quot;Such a great player when he was here wearing that No. 9, led them to the Super Bowl. I appreciate him so much. I definitely cherish that so much, and I’ll represent the No. 9 well, wearing it. I’ll represent the team well. I’m just super excited to get that number for sure.&quot;
CARDINALS&apos; TOP PICK JEREMIYAH LOVE EXPLAINS WHY HE PLANS TO NEVER TOUCH HIS $53M NFL SALARY
The Eagles haven’t given out No. 9 at all since Foles left after the 2018 campaign. But Foles and Lemon spoke on the phone, and the former told the latter it was his if he wanted it.
&quot;He wanted to pass that number over, wanted to speak to me before anybody else told me,&quot; Lemon added. &quot;I appreciate him, and hopefully I can meet him soon when he’s around the building.&quot;
The Eagles originally held pick No. 23 in this year’s NFL Draft, but when they saw Lemon falling down the draft board, they traded up to No. 20 via trade, and GM Howie Roseman was quick to tell Lemon of the good news.
In fact, a draft-night fiasco occurred when the Pittsburgh Steelers, owners of the No. 21 pick and host of the draft this year outside their Acrisure Stadium, were already on the phone with Lemon to inform him they would be taking him with their pick. The Steelers, though, didn’t know the Eagles had traded in front of them to land the talented USC Trojans star, who won the Biletnikoff Award in 2025 as the best receiver in college football.
Lemon wore No. 6 while he was at USC, but another Eagles first-round pick who they traded up for, DeVonta Smith, already rocks that number in green and black. Smith wasn’t up for a switch, so Lemon was looking for the lowest possible number after that.
No. 9 was available, but there was sacred Eagles history behind it. Still, Lemon said it was the team’s suggestion for him to potentially choose No. 9.
With trade rumors still swirling around Eagles Pro Bowl receiver A.J. Brown, it’s unknown exactly what role Lemon will play in a new offense for the club this season. Kevin Patullo was fired this offseason, leading the way for Sean Mannion accepting the offensive coordinator role.
But Lemon has proven to be an all-around receiver, whether it’s hauling in contested deep shots or creating separation in the short and intermediate routes to set up potential big gains.
Lemon’s junior season with the Trojans in 2025 led to an All-American nod, with 1,156 yards and 11 touchdowns on 79 receptions in 12 games.
Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f402cea200899a00e5f17f</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Makai Lemon becomes first Eagle to wear No. 9 since Nick Foles led Philadelphia to its first Super Bowl title</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:33:02.833Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Makai Lemon becomes first Eagle to wear No. 9 since Nick Foles led Philadelphia to its first Super Bowl title</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The Philadelphia Eagles believe they have another dynamic weapon who can help them get back to the Super Bowl.
Wide receiver Makai Lemon, the Eagles’ first-round pick, chose a jersey number synonymous with winning in Philadelphia, and that’s all fans are thinking about Thursday at rookie minicamp.
Lemon is going to be wearing No. 9, becoming the first player since Nick Foles to do so. 
Foles needs no introduction to those who sing &quot;Fly, Eagles, Fly&quot; at the top of their lungs. He is a true sports folk hero who helped the team win its first-ever Vince Lombardi Trophy during the 2017 season.
CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM
The number may not have been retired, but Foles gave Lemon his blessing nonetheless. Lemon appreciated the sentiment.
&quot;I appreciate the Eagles so much and Nick Foles, especially to pass that number down because I know he could have easily kept that number to himself,&quot; Lemon told reporters Thursday at rookie minicamp, according to NBC Sports Philadelphia.
&quot;Such a great player when he was here wearing that No. 9, led them to the Super Bowl. I appreciate him so much. I definitely cherish that so much, and I’ll represent the No. 9 well, wearing it. I’ll represent the team well. I’m just super excited to get that number for sure.&quot;
CARDINALS&apos; TOP PICK JEREMIYAH LOVE EXPLAINS WHY HE PLANS TO NEVER TOUCH HIS $53M NFL SALARY
The Eagles haven’t given out No. 9 at all since Foles left after the 2018 campaign. But Foles and Lemon spoke on the phone, and the former told the latter it was his if he wanted it.
&quot;He wanted to pass that number over, wanted to speak to me before anybody else told me,&quot; Lemon added. &quot;I appreciate him, and hopefully I can meet him soon when he’s around the building.&quot;
The Eagles originally held pick No. 23 in this year’s NFL Draft, but when they saw Lemon falling down the draft board, they traded up to No. 20 via trade, and GM Howie Roseman was quick to tell Lemon of the good news.
In fact, a draft-night fiasco occurred when the Pittsburgh Steelers, owners of the No. 21 pick and host of the draft this year outside their Acrisure Stadium, were already on the phone with Lemon to inform him they would be taking him with their pick. The Steelers, though, didn’t know the Eagles had traded in front of them to land the talented USC Trojans star, who won the Biletnikoff Award in 2025 as the best receiver in college football.
Lemon wore No. 6 while he was at USC, but another Eagles first-round pick who they traded up for, DeVonta Smith, already rocks that number in green and black. Smith wasn’t up for a switch, so Lemon was looking for the lowest possible number after that.
No. 9 was available, but there was sacred Eagles history behind it. Still, Lemon said it was the team’s suggestion for him to potentially choose No. 9.
With trade rumors still swirling around Eagles Pro Bowl receiver A.J. Brown, it’s unknown exactly what role Lemon will play in a new offense for the club this season. Kevin Patullo was fired this offseason, leading the way for Sean Mannion accepting the offensive coordinator role.
But Lemon has proven to be an all-around receiver, whether it’s hauling in contested deep shots or creating separation in the short and intermediate routes to set up potential big gains.
Lemon’s junior season with the Trojans in 2025 led to an All-American nod, with 1,156 yards and 11 touchdowns on 79 receptions in 12 games.
Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f402c3a200899a00e5f176</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Makai Lemon becomes first Eagle to wear No. 9 since Nick Foles led Philadelphia to its first Super Bowl title</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:32:51.020Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Makai Lemon becomes first Eagle to wear No. 9 since Nick Foles led Philadelphia to its first Super Bowl title</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The Philadelphia Eagles believe they have another dynamic weapon who can help them get back to the Super Bowl.
Wide receiver Makai Lemon, the Eagles’ first-round pick, chose a jersey number synonymous with winning in Philadelphia, and that’s all fans are thinking about Thursday at rookie minicamp.
Lemon is going to be wearing No. 9, becoming the first player since Nick Foles to do so. 
Foles needs no introduction to those who sing &quot;Fly, Eagles, Fly&quot; at the top of their lungs. He is a true sports folk hero who helped the team win its first-ever Vince Lombardi Trophy during the 2017 season.
CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM
The number may not have been retired, but Foles gave Lemon his blessing nonetheless. Lemon appreciated the sentiment.
&quot;I appreciate the Eagles so much and Nick Foles, especially to pass that number down because I know he could have easily kept that number to himself,&quot; Lemon told reporters Thursday at rookie minicamp, according to NBC Sports Philadelphia.
&quot;Such a great player when he was here wearing that No. 9, led them to the Super Bowl. I appreciate him so much. I definitely cherish that so much, and I’ll represent the No. 9 well, wearing it. I’ll represent the team well. I’m just super excited to get that number for sure.&quot;
CARDINALS&apos; TOP PICK JEREMIYAH LOVE EXPLAINS WHY HE PLANS TO NEVER TOUCH HIS $53M NFL SALARY
The Eagles haven’t given out No. 9 at all since Foles left after the 2018 campaign. But Foles and Lemon spoke on the phone, and the former told the latter it was his if he wanted it.
&quot;He wanted to pass that number over, wanted to speak to me before anybody else told me,&quot; Lemon added. &quot;I appreciate him, and hopefully I can meet him soon when he’s around the building.&quot;
The Eagles originally held pick No. 23 in this year’s NFL Draft, but when they saw Lemon falling down the draft board, they traded up to No. 20 via trade, and GM Howie Roseman was quick to tell Lemon of the good news.
In fact, a draft-night fiasco occurred when the Pittsburgh Steelers, owners of the No. 21 pick and host of the draft this year outside their Acrisure Stadium, were already on the phone with Lemon to inform him they would be taking him with their pick. The Steelers, though, didn’t know the Eagles had traded in front of them to land the talented USC Trojans star, who won the Biletnikoff Award in 2025 as the best receiver in college football.
Lemon wore No. 6 while he was at USC, but another Eagles first-round pick who they traded up for, DeVonta Smith, already rocks that number in green and black. Smith wasn’t up for a switch, so Lemon was looking for the lowest possible number after that.
No. 9 was available, but there was sacred Eagles history behind it. Still, Lemon said it was the team’s suggestion for him to potentially choose No. 9.
With trade rumors still swirling around Eagles Pro Bowl receiver A.J. Brown, it’s unknown exactly what role Lemon will play in a new offense for the club this season. Kevin Patullo was fired this offseason, leading the way for Sean Mannion accepting the offensive coordinator role.
But Lemon has proven to be an all-around receiver, whether it’s hauling in contested deep shots or creating separation in the short and intermediate routes to set up potential big gains.
Lemon’s junior season with the Trojans in 2025 led to an All-American nod, with 1,156 yards and 11 touchdowns on 79 receptions in 12 games.
Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f402c1a200899a00e5f16d</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Louisiana suspends congressional primaries in wake of Supreme Court gerrymandering ruling</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:32:49.009Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Louisiana suspends congressional primaries in wake of Supreme Court gerrymandering ruling</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Louisiana’s May congressional primaries have been suspended after a U.S. Supreme Court ruling Wednesday that struck down a majority Black congressional district.
Republican Gov. Jeff Landry and Attorney General Liz Murrill released a statement Thursday saying the &quot;historic Supreme Court victory for Louisiana has an immediate consequence for the State.&quot;
&quot;The Supreme Court previously stayed an injunction against the State’s enforcement of the current Congressional map,&quot; the officials wrote. 
&quot;By the Court’s order, however, that stay automatically terminated with [Wednesday’s] decision. Accordingly, the State is currently enjoined from carrying out congressional elections under the current map.&quot;
SUPREME COURT RULES ON KEY VOTING RIGHTS ACT RULE AS REPUBLICANS AND DEMOCRATS WAGE REDISTRICTING WAR
Landry and Murrill said they are working with the state legislature and the secretary of state’s office to &quot;develop a path forward.&quot;
Early voting was scheduled to begin Saturday ahead of the May 16 primary.
MEDIA OUTRAGE OVER SUPREME COURT&apos;S VOTING RIGHTS ACT DECISION COLLIDES WITH REALITY
&quot;This is going to cause mass confusion among voters — Democrats, Republicans, White, Black, everybody,&quot; Louisiana state Sen. Royce Duplessis, a Democrat who represents the New Orleans area, told The Associated Press. &quot;What they’re effectively doing is changing the rules of the game in the middle of the game. It’s rigging the system.&quot;
There are four Republicans and two Democrats representing Louisiana in the U.S. House of Representatives.
A change to the map could result in at least one additional Republican seat ahead of the November midterm elections.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f402baa200899a00e5f164</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Louisiana suspends congressional primaries in wake of Supreme Court gerrymandering ruling</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:32:42.968Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Louisiana suspends congressional primaries in wake of Supreme Court gerrymandering ruling</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Louisiana’s May congressional primaries have been suspended after a U.S. Supreme Court ruling Wednesday that struck down a majority Black congressional district.
Republican Gov. Jeff Landry and Attorney General Liz Murrill released a statement Thursday saying the &quot;historic Supreme Court victory for Louisiana has an immediate consequence for the State.&quot;
&quot;The Supreme Court previously stayed an injunction against the State’s enforcement of the current Congressional map,&quot; the officials wrote. 
&quot;By the Court’s order, however, that stay automatically terminated with [Wednesday’s] decision. Accordingly, the State is currently enjoined from carrying out congressional elections under the current map.&quot;
SUPREME COURT RULES ON KEY VOTING RIGHTS ACT RULE AS REPUBLICANS AND DEMOCRATS WAGE REDISTRICTING WAR
Landry and Murrill said they are working with the state legislature and the secretary of state’s office to &quot;develop a path forward.&quot;
Early voting was scheduled to begin Saturday ahead of the May 16 primary.
MEDIA OUTRAGE OVER SUPREME COURT&apos;S VOTING RIGHTS ACT DECISION COLLIDES WITH REALITY
&quot;This is going to cause mass confusion among voters — Democrats, Republicans, White, Black, everybody,&quot; Louisiana state Sen. Royce Duplessis, a Democrat who represents the New Orleans area, told The Associated Press. &quot;What they’re effectively doing is changing the rules of the game in the middle of the game. It’s rigging the system.&quot;
There are four Republicans and two Democrats representing Louisiana in the U.S. House of Representatives.
A change to the map could result in at least one additional Republican seat ahead of the November midterm elections.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f402afa200899a00e5f15b</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Louisiana suspends congressional primaries in wake of Supreme Court gerrymandering ruling</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:32:31.210Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Louisiana suspends congressional primaries in wake of Supreme Court gerrymandering ruling</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Louisiana’s May congressional primaries have been suspended after a U.S. Supreme Court ruling Wednesday that struck down a majority Black congressional district.
Republican Gov. Jeff Landry and Attorney General Liz Murrill released a statement Thursday saying the &quot;historic Supreme Court victory for Louisiana has an immediate consequence for the State.&quot;
&quot;The Supreme Court previously stayed an injunction against the State’s enforcement of the current Congressional map,&quot; the officials wrote. 
&quot;By the Court’s order, however, that stay automatically terminated with [Wednesday’s] decision. Accordingly, the State is currently enjoined from carrying out congressional elections under the current map.&quot;
SUPREME COURT RULES ON KEY VOTING RIGHTS ACT RULE AS REPUBLICANS AND DEMOCRATS WAGE REDISTRICTING WAR
Landry and Murrill said they are working with the state legislature and the secretary of state’s office to &quot;develop a path forward.&quot;
Early voting was scheduled to begin Saturday ahead of the May 16 primary.
MEDIA OUTRAGE OVER SUPREME COURT&apos;S VOTING RIGHTS ACT DECISION COLLIDES WITH REALITY
&quot;This is going to cause mass confusion among voters — Democrats, Republicans, White, Black, everybody,&quot; Louisiana state Sen. Royce Duplessis, a Democrat who represents the New Orleans area, told The Associated Press. &quot;What they’re effectively doing is changing the rules of the game in the middle of the game. It’s rigging the system.&quot;
There are four Republicans and two Democrats representing Louisiana in the U.S. House of Representatives.
A change to the map could result in at least one additional Republican seat ahead of the November midterm elections.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f402ada200899a00e5f152</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Joey Chestnut reveals foods he won&apos;t eat in competition as he tours minor league stadiums for local delicacies</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:32:29.233Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Joey Chestnut reveals foods he won&apos;t eat in competition as he tours minor league stadiums for local delicacies</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Joey Chestnut will eat almost anything.
The 17-time Nathan&apos;s Hot Dog Eating Contest champion is the greatest competitive eater of all time, once even chowing down cow brain tacos.
But there are two foods that are off limits.
CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM
&quot;The only things that would stop me is if I&apos;m, like, really worried about getting sick,&quot; said Chestnut who apparently has no concerns about cow brain.
&quot;Like raw oysters. I&apos;d have to be really confident that these oysters are coming from somewhere where I&apos;m not going to get sick.&quot;
There are some foods that seem tasty at first, but they do provide difficulties for Chestnut. Popcorn causes chapped lips and bloating due to swallowing air, and Twinkies provide a &quot;sugar headache.&quot;
&quot;But if I do my prep right going in, I feel pretty good,&quot; he said confidently.
There is one more &quot;oyster&quot; though, made from an animal&apos;s — let&apos;s say body part — that is not on Chestnut&apos;s menu.
&quot;There was a casino that wanted to do Rocky Mountain oysters. And their track record wasn&apos;t good on preparing them,&quot; Chestnut recalled.
ALBERT PUJOLS OPEN TO BECOMING A MANGER, SAYS HIS &apos;NAME IS IN THE HAT&apos; AFTER RECENT MLB FIRINGS
&quot;They&apos;re bull testicles. I kind of rejected that one.&quot;
This summer, though, tasty delights are on the table with Chestnut partnering with Diamond Baseball Holdings (DBH) to visit minor league ballparks nationwide this season to take on some of the signature dishes that define the club’s communities.
Chestnut traveled to Wichita last month to tackle chili buns, a Midwestern dish that is a combination of chili and cinnamon buns. In Scranton/Wilkes-Barre, he&apos;ll go with pierogies. And in upstate New York, he&apos;ll try his hand at cider donuts. Cheeseburger dogs are also on deck in Reading, Pennsylvania.
&quot;I&apos;m super pumped. Minor league ballparks are always fun, just great atmospheres. I think minor league ballparks are responsible for major league ballparks stepping up their food game, so I&apos;m going to be doing some good eating,&quot; Chestnut said.
&quot;There&apos;s gonna be some good ones. I think it&apos;s a huge burger they&apos;re building in Birmingham that will be the biggest burger in minor league baseball. Tacos next week.&quot;
Chestnut will go for 18 Nathan&apos;s titles July 4.
Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f402a7a200899a00e5f149</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Joey Chestnut reveals foods he won&apos;t eat in competition as he tours minor league stadiums for local delicacies</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:32:23.356Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Joey Chestnut reveals foods he won&apos;t eat in competition as he tours minor league stadiums for local delicacies</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Joey Chestnut will eat almost anything.
The 17-time Nathan&apos;s Hot Dog Eating Contest champion is the greatest competitive eater of all time, once even chowing down cow brain tacos.
But there are two foods that are off limits.
CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM
&quot;The only things that would stop me is if I&apos;m, like, really worried about getting sick,&quot; said Chestnut who apparently has no concerns about cow brain.
&quot;Like raw oysters. I&apos;d have to be really confident that these oysters are coming from somewhere where I&apos;m not going to get sick.&quot;
There are some foods that seem tasty at first, but they do provide difficulties for Chestnut. Popcorn causes chapped lips and bloating due to swallowing air, and Twinkies provide a &quot;sugar headache.&quot;
&quot;But if I do my prep right going in, I feel pretty good,&quot; he said confidently.
There is one more &quot;oyster&quot; though, made from an animal&apos;s — let&apos;s say body part — that is not on Chestnut&apos;s menu.
&quot;There was a casino that wanted to do Rocky Mountain oysters. And their track record wasn&apos;t good on preparing them,&quot; Chestnut recalled.
ALBERT PUJOLS OPEN TO BECOMING A MANGER, SAYS HIS &apos;NAME IS IN THE HAT&apos; AFTER RECENT MLB FIRINGS
&quot;They&apos;re bull testicles. I kind of rejected that one.&quot;
This summer, though, tasty delights are on the table with Chestnut partnering with Diamond Baseball Holdings (DBH) to visit minor league ballparks nationwide this season to take on some of the signature dishes that define the club’s communities.
Chestnut traveled to Wichita last month to tackle chili buns, a Midwestern dish that is a combination of chili and cinnamon buns. In Scranton/Wilkes-Barre, he&apos;ll go with pierogies. And in upstate New York, he&apos;ll try his hand at cider donuts. Cheeseburger dogs are also on deck in Reading, Pennsylvania.
&quot;I&apos;m super pumped. Minor league ballparks are always fun, just great atmospheres. I think minor league ballparks are responsible for major league ballparks stepping up their food game, so I&apos;m going to be doing some good eating,&quot; Chestnut said.
&quot;There&apos;s gonna be some good ones. I think it&apos;s a huge burger they&apos;re building in Birmingham that will be the biggest burger in minor league baseball. Tacos next week.&quot;
Chestnut will go for 18 Nathan&apos;s titles July 4.
Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f4029ba200899a00e5f140</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Joey Chestnut reveals foods he won&apos;t eat in competition as he tours minor league stadiums for local delicacies</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:32:11.705Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Joey Chestnut reveals foods he won&apos;t eat in competition as he tours minor league stadiums for local delicacies</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Joey Chestnut will eat almost anything.
The 17-time Nathan&apos;s Hot Dog Eating Contest champion is the greatest competitive eater of all time, once even chowing down cow brain tacos.
But there are two foods that are off limits.
CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM
&quot;The only things that would stop me is if I&apos;m, like, really worried about getting sick,&quot; said Chestnut who apparently has no concerns about cow brain.
&quot;Like raw oysters. I&apos;d have to be really confident that these oysters are coming from somewhere where I&apos;m not going to get sick.&quot;
There are some foods that seem tasty at first, but they do provide difficulties for Chestnut. Popcorn causes chapped lips and bloating due to swallowing air, and Twinkies provide a &quot;sugar headache.&quot;
&quot;But if I do my prep right going in, I feel pretty good,&quot; he said confidently.
There is one more &quot;oyster&quot; though, made from an animal&apos;s — let&apos;s say body part — that is not on Chestnut&apos;s menu.
&quot;There was a casino that wanted to do Rocky Mountain oysters. And their track record wasn&apos;t good on preparing them,&quot; Chestnut recalled.
ALBERT PUJOLS OPEN TO BECOMING A MANGER, SAYS HIS &apos;NAME IS IN THE HAT&apos; AFTER RECENT MLB FIRINGS
&quot;They&apos;re bull testicles. I kind of rejected that one.&quot;
This summer, though, tasty delights are on the table with Chestnut partnering with Diamond Baseball Holdings (DBH) to visit minor league ballparks nationwide this season to take on some of the signature dishes that define the club’s communities.
Chestnut traveled to Wichita last month to tackle chili buns, a Midwestern dish that is a combination of chili and cinnamon buns. In Scranton/Wilkes-Barre, he&apos;ll go with pierogies. And in upstate New York, he&apos;ll try his hand at cider donuts. Cheeseburger dogs are also on deck in Reading, Pennsylvania.
&quot;I&apos;m super pumped. Minor league ballparks are always fun, just great atmospheres. I think minor league ballparks are responsible for major league ballparks stepping up their food game, so I&apos;m going to be doing some good eating,&quot; Chestnut said.
&quot;There&apos;s gonna be some good ones. I think it&apos;s a huge burger they&apos;re building in Birmingham that will be the biggest burger in minor league baseball. Tacos next week.&quot;
Chestnut will go for 18 Nathan&apos;s titles July 4.
Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40299a200899a00e5f137</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Heart-stopping video shows officers use unlikely tool to save family trapped in floodwaters</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:32:09.532Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Heart-stopping video shows officers use unlikely tool to save family trapped in floodwaters</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Police in North Texas are highlighting a dramatic overnight rescue after officers used quick thinking and an unconventional tool to help save a mother and her children stranded in fast-moving floodwaters.
Body camera video released by the White Settlement Police Department captured the tense moments as officers worked to keep the woman from being swept away while her children were rushed to safety.
The incident unfolded around 11:12 p.m. on April 25, as officers were already positioned across the city responding to severe storms and flash flooding.
The department said that Sgt. John Banner spotted a vehicle that had become stranded in rushing water with its front end stuck in a channel flowing toward a creek.
NYPD OFFICERS SAVE CHOKING 2-YEAR-OLD BOY, BODYCAM VIDEO SHOWS
As Banner arrived, he found three small children outside the vehicle near the rising water and quickly moved them into his patrol SUV.
Their mother, however, remained stranded near the driver’s side door, unable to make it to higher ground as the current surged around her.
&quot;I got you! Y’all get in the car!&quot; an officer shouted in the bodycam video as the woman cries out, &quot;Help me! Help me!&quot;
HERO OFFICERS AND GOOD SAMARITANS WHO WENT ABOVE AND BEYOND IN 2024
With water rushing against the vehicle and the woman struggling to keep her footing, officers quickly formed a plan to prevent her from being swept away.
&quot;Don’t lose your footing. … I need assistance!&quot; one officer shouted over the rushing water.
Realizing they needed a way to secure her, the department noted that Officer Christopher Wiseman ran to his patrol vehicle and grabbed a pair of jumper cables.
TEXAS WOMAN TRIES TO FLEE TO MEXICO ACROSS RIO GRANDE WITH INFANT AFTER HUMAN SMUGGLING BUST, AUTHORITIES SAY
&quot;Well, this will have to work,&quot; he said.
Officers instructed the woman to place the cables under her arms and around her chest, creating a makeshift harness while they held the other end, ready to pull her to safety if she slipped.
At one point, as conditions worsened, an officer said, &quot;Don’t let me fall in, man,&quot; underscoring the danger facing both the victim and first responders.
TEXAS SCHOOL GATHERS SUPPLIES TO HELP FLOOD-IMPACTED LOCALS AFTER SPOTLIGHT MOVES ON
As they held their position, officers radioed for fire crews, noting the woman was tiring.
&quot;Her legs are getting tired,&quot; one officer said. &quot;I need a ladder.&quot;
GOT A TIP?
Firefighters with the White Settlement Fire Department soon arrived and attached a line to the stranded vehicle, slowly pulling it out of the rushing water and back onto the roadway.
The woman and her children were evaluated and were not injured.
FOLLOW US ON X
Officials praised the coordinated response by officers, dispatchers and fire crews.
&quot;I am grateful for the proactive response of Sergeant John Banner, his team of officers, our WEST COMM Dispatch Center, partner agencies and Fire Department during this dangerous situation,&quot; Police Chief Christopher Cook said. 
&quot;Law enforcement officers put the highest priority on the preservation of life, and this was evident based upon getting creative and using a pair of jumper cables to serve as an additional safety tool.&quot;
GET BREAKING NEWS BY EMAIL
City Manager Jeffrey J. James also commended the effort.
&quot;What I saw during this rescue was brave police officers doing what they could to save lives,&quot; James said. &quot;I am equally proud of our entire public safety team who pulled together to provide the highest level of service to this family.&quot;
CLICK HERE FOR MORE US NEWS
Police said the mother remained calm during the ordeal and had earlier directed her children to move to higher ground, a decision officials say likely helped prevent injuries.
After the incident, officials said each patrol vehicle will now be equipped with a water rescue throw bag to improve response in future emergencies.
Officials said the rescue was just one of several weather-related emergencies crews responded to that night.
&quot;Our public safety teams were busy with the weather,&quot; the department said. &quot;From one water rescue of a family stuck in a car to multiple crashes and flooded vehicles along roadways with high water, your WSPD team worked hard with the fire department to ensure everyone made it to safety.&quot;
Authorities also plan to reunite the family with the first responders involved in the rescue.
Officials say the incident serves as a reminder of how quickly flash flooding can become dangerous and how critical quick decisions can be in saving lives.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40293a200899a00e5f12e</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Heart-stopping video shows officers use unlikely tool to save family trapped in floodwaters</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:32:03.776Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Heart-stopping video shows officers use unlikely tool to save family trapped in floodwaters</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Police in North Texas are highlighting a dramatic overnight rescue after officers used quick thinking and an unconventional tool to help save a mother and her children stranded in fast-moving floodwaters.
Body camera video released by the White Settlement Police Department captured the tense moments as officers worked to keep the woman from being swept away while her children were rushed to safety.
The incident unfolded around 11:12 p.m. on April 25, as officers were already positioned across the city responding to severe storms and flash flooding.
The department said that Sgt. John Banner spotted a vehicle that had become stranded in rushing water with its front end stuck in a channel flowing toward a creek.
NYPD OFFICERS SAVE CHOKING 2-YEAR-OLD BOY, BODYCAM VIDEO SHOWS
As Banner arrived, he found three small children outside the vehicle near the rising water and quickly moved them into his patrol SUV.
Their mother, however, remained stranded near the driver’s side door, unable to make it to higher ground as the current surged around her.
&quot;I got you! Y’all get in the car!&quot; an officer shouted in the bodycam video as the woman cries out, &quot;Help me! Help me!&quot;
HERO OFFICERS AND GOOD SAMARITANS WHO WENT ABOVE AND BEYOND IN 2024
With water rushing against the vehicle and the woman struggling to keep her footing, officers quickly formed a plan to prevent her from being swept away.
&quot;Don’t lose your footing. … I need assistance!&quot; one officer shouted over the rushing water.
Realizing they needed a way to secure her, the department noted that Officer Christopher Wiseman ran to his patrol vehicle and grabbed a pair of jumper cables.
TEXAS WOMAN TRIES TO FLEE TO MEXICO ACROSS RIO GRANDE WITH INFANT AFTER HUMAN SMUGGLING BUST, AUTHORITIES SAY
&quot;Well, this will have to work,&quot; he said.
Officers instructed the woman to place the cables under her arms and around her chest, creating a makeshift harness while they held the other end, ready to pull her to safety if she slipped.
At one point, as conditions worsened, an officer said, &quot;Don’t let me fall in, man,&quot; underscoring the danger facing both the victim and first responders.
TEXAS SCHOOL GATHERS SUPPLIES TO HELP FLOOD-IMPACTED LOCALS AFTER SPOTLIGHT MOVES ON
As they held their position, officers radioed for fire crews, noting the woman was tiring.
&quot;Her legs are getting tired,&quot; one officer said. &quot;I need a ladder.&quot;
GOT A TIP?
Firefighters with the White Settlement Fire Department soon arrived and attached a line to the stranded vehicle, slowly pulling it out of the rushing water and back onto the roadway.
The woman and her children were evaluated and were not injured.
FOLLOW US ON X
Officials praised the coordinated response by officers, dispatchers and fire crews.
&quot;I am grateful for the proactive response of Sergeant John Banner, his team of officers, our WEST COMM Dispatch Center, partner agencies and Fire Department during this dangerous situation,&quot; Police Chief Christopher Cook said. 
&quot;Law enforcement officers put the highest priority on the preservation of life, and this was evident based upon getting creative and using a pair of jumper cables to serve as an additional safety tool.&quot;
GET BREAKING NEWS BY EMAIL
City Manager Jeffrey J. James also commended the effort.
&quot;What I saw during this rescue was brave police officers doing what they could to save lives,&quot; James said. &quot;I am equally proud of our entire public safety team who pulled together to provide the highest level of service to this family.&quot;
CLICK HERE FOR MORE US NEWS
Police said the mother remained calm during the ordeal and had earlier directed her children to move to higher ground, a decision officials say likely helped prevent injuries.
After the incident, officials said each patrol vehicle will now be equipped with a water rescue throw bag to improve response in future emergencies.
Officials said the rescue was just one of several weather-related emergencies crews responded to that night.
&quot;Our public safety teams were busy with the weather,&quot; the department said. &quot;From one water rescue of a family stuck in a car to multiple crashes and flooded vehicles along roadways with high water, your WSPD team worked hard with the fire department to ensure everyone made it to safety.&quot;
Authorities also plan to reunite the family with the first responders involved in the rescue.
Officials say the incident serves as a reminder of how quickly flash flooding can become dangerous and how critical quick decisions can be in saving lives.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40288a200899a00e5f125</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Heart-stopping video shows officers use unlikely tool to save family trapped in floodwaters</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:31:52.174Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Heart-stopping video shows officers use unlikely tool to save family trapped in floodwaters</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Police in North Texas are highlighting a dramatic overnight rescue after officers used quick thinking and an unconventional tool to help save a mother and her children stranded in fast-moving floodwaters.
Body camera video released by the White Settlement Police Department captured the tense moments as officers worked to keep the woman from being swept away while her children were rushed to safety.
The incident unfolded around 11:12 p.m. on April 25, as officers were already positioned across the city responding to severe storms and flash flooding.
The department said that Sgt. John Banner spotted a vehicle that had become stranded in rushing water with its front end stuck in a channel flowing toward a creek.
NYPD OFFICERS SAVE CHOKING 2-YEAR-OLD BOY, BODYCAM VIDEO SHOWS
As Banner arrived, he found three small children outside the vehicle near the rising water and quickly moved them into his patrol SUV.
Their mother, however, remained stranded near the driver’s side door, unable to make it to higher ground as the current surged around her.
&quot;I got you! Y’all get in the car!&quot; an officer shouted in the bodycam video as the woman cries out, &quot;Help me! Help me!&quot;
HERO OFFICERS AND GOOD SAMARITANS WHO WENT ABOVE AND BEYOND IN 2024
With water rushing against the vehicle and the woman struggling to keep her footing, officers quickly formed a plan to prevent her from being swept away.
&quot;Don’t lose your footing. … I need assistance!&quot; one officer shouted over the rushing water.
Realizing they needed a way to secure her, the department noted that Officer Christopher Wiseman ran to his patrol vehicle and grabbed a pair of jumper cables.
TEXAS WOMAN TRIES TO FLEE TO MEXICO ACROSS RIO GRANDE WITH INFANT AFTER HUMAN SMUGGLING BUST, AUTHORITIES SAY
&quot;Well, this will have to work,&quot; he said.
Officers instructed the woman to place the cables under her arms and around her chest, creating a makeshift harness while they held the other end, ready to pull her to safety if she slipped.
At one point, as conditions worsened, an officer said, &quot;Don’t let me fall in, man,&quot; underscoring the danger facing both the victim and first responders.
TEXAS SCHOOL GATHERS SUPPLIES TO HELP FLOOD-IMPACTED LOCALS AFTER SPOTLIGHT MOVES ON
As they held their position, officers radioed for fire crews, noting the woman was tiring.
&quot;Her legs are getting tired,&quot; one officer said. &quot;I need a ladder.&quot;
GOT A TIP?
Firefighters with the White Settlement Fire Department soon arrived and attached a line to the stranded vehicle, slowly pulling it out of the rushing water and back onto the roadway.
The woman and her children were evaluated and were not injured.
FOLLOW US ON X
Officials praised the coordinated response by officers, dispatchers and fire crews.
&quot;I am grateful for the proactive response of Sergeant John Banner, his team of officers, our WEST COMM Dispatch Center, partner agencies and Fire Department during this dangerous situation,&quot; Police Chief Christopher Cook said. 
&quot;Law enforcement officers put the highest priority on the preservation of life, and this was evident based upon getting creative and using a pair of jumper cables to serve as an additional safety tool.&quot;
GET BREAKING NEWS BY EMAIL
City Manager Jeffrey J. James also commended the effort.
&quot;What I saw during this rescue was brave police officers doing what they could to save lives,&quot; James said. &quot;I am equally proud of our entire public safety team who pulled together to provide the highest level of service to this family.&quot;
CLICK HERE FOR MORE US NEWS
Police said the mother remained calm during the ordeal and had earlier directed her children to move to higher ground, a decision officials say likely helped prevent injuries.
After the incident, officials said each patrol vehicle will now be equipped with a water rescue throw bag to improve response in future emergencies.
Officials said the rescue was just one of several weather-related emergencies crews responded to that night.
&quot;Our public safety teams were busy with the weather,&quot; the department said. &quot;From one water rescue of a family stuck in a car to multiple crashes and flooded vehicles along roadways with high water, your WSPD team worked hard with the fire department to ensure everyone made it to safety.&quot;
Authorities also plan to reunite the family with the first responders involved in the rescue.
Officials say the incident serves as a reminder of how quickly flash flooding can become dangerous and how critical quick decisions can be in saving lives.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40285a200899a00e5f11c</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>&apos;Ant-Man&apos; actress slams Disney for &apos;disgusting&apos; Marvel layoffs</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:31:49.949Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>&apos;Ant-Man&apos; actress slams Disney for &apos;disgusting&apos; Marvel layoffs</news:title>
			<news:keywords>&quot;Avengers&quot; actress Evangeline Lilly rebuked Disney over layoffs affecting Marvel employees in its visual development department, calling the move &quot;disgusting and horrible&quot; in a video posted to Instagram Thursday.
Lilly, who portrayed Hope van Dyne, also known as The Wasp, in four Marvel films, said she learned about the layoffs from friend Andy Park, a longtime Marvel visual development artist who helped create early Wasp suit concepts.
&quot;I reached out to my good friend Andy Park, who was the genius behind creating the original Wasp supersuit and the original Wasp concept drawings for the film ‘Ant-Man and the Wasp,’ and just said, ‘Is this true? Is this really what’s happening?’&quot; Lilly recalled. &quot;And he said, ‘Yeah, it’s true. I have been let go.’
&quot;I can’t quite believe that,&quot; Lilly continued. &quot;That Disney have let go of the artists who brought the current Marvel Universe to life through their imagination and their genius. 
SCARLETT JOHANSSON WARNS OF AI DANGERS, SAYS &apos;THERE&apos;S NO BOUNDARY HERE&apos;
&quot;That the people who invented these characters in the first place, who designed them in the first place, are now being replaced by AI. AI that will take their designs and take what those artists created and use it to create iterations of that.&quot;
Lilly also expressed sympathy for the broader group of Disney employees swept up in the cuts and especially for Marvel artists she said had become &quot;obsolete&quot; after helping build the franchise.
&quot;These were human creations, and they shouldn’t be stolen by tech giants so that their robots can replicate them,&quot; Lilly added. &quot;I think it’s disgusting and horrible, and I stand with all the artists and Andy.&quot;
In the caption accompanying her video, she tagged Disney, writing &quot;SHAME ON YOU&quot; and urged California lawmakers to act.
&quot;Where are the laws that REMOVE all human art from the AI bank?!? Why do they get to steal our brilliance and use it to make executives rich while the artists responsible for feeding their robots go hungry?? Disgusting. California lawmakers...where are you?!?!&quot; she wrote.
EVANGELINE LILLY CONFIRMS SHE SUSTAINED BRAIN DAMAGE FROM TRAUMATIC INJURY LAST YEAR
Disney confirmed earlier this month it would be laying off 1,000 employees across the company. In a memo obtained by Fox News Digital, CEO Josh D’Amaro said the company had been reviewing ways to streamline operations and &quot;foster a more agile and technologically-enabled workforce.&quot;
&quot;Over the past several months, we have looked at ways in which we can streamline our operations in various parts of the company to ensure we deliver the world-class creativity and innovation our fans value and expect from Disney,&quot; D’Amaro wrote. 
&quot;Given the fast-moving pace of our industries, this requires us to constantly assess how to foster a more agile and technologically-enabled workforce to meet tomorrow’s needs.&quot;
Disney’s statement does not explicitly say the layoffs were driven by AI, and the company did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Lilly’s allegation that artists were being replaced by artificial intelligence.
FCC TO CALL IN DISNEY STATIONS FOR EARLY LICENSE REVIEW IN WAKE OF ABC&apos;S JIMMY KIMMEL CONTROVERSY
Initial reports indicated that 8% of Marvel&apos;s workforce was cut, though Disney later disputed that number, telling The Wrap the number was &quot;much smaller.&quot;
CLICK HERE FOR MORE COVERAGE OF MEDIA AND CULTURE
Disney did not immediately return Fox News Digital&apos;s request for comment.
Fox News&apos; Lindsay Kornick contributed to this report.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f4027fa200899a00e5f113</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>&apos;Ant-Man&apos; actress slams Disney for &apos;disgusting&apos; Marvel layoffs</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:31:43.985Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>&apos;Ant-Man&apos; actress slams Disney for &apos;disgusting&apos; Marvel layoffs</news:title>
			<news:keywords>&quot;Avengers&quot; actress Evangeline Lilly rebuked Disney over layoffs affecting Marvel employees in its visual development department, calling the move &quot;disgusting and horrible&quot; in a video posted to Instagram Thursday.
Lilly, who portrayed Hope van Dyne, also known as The Wasp, in four Marvel films, said she learned about the layoffs from friend Andy Park, a longtime Marvel visual development artist who helped create early Wasp suit concepts.
&quot;I reached out to my good friend Andy Park, who was the genius behind creating the original Wasp supersuit and the original Wasp concept drawings for the film ‘Ant-Man and the Wasp,’ and just said, ‘Is this true? Is this really what’s happening?’&quot; Lilly recalled. &quot;And he said, ‘Yeah, it’s true. I have been let go.’
&quot;I can’t quite believe that,&quot; Lilly continued. &quot;That Disney have let go of the artists who brought the current Marvel Universe to life through their imagination and their genius. 
SCARLETT JOHANSSON WARNS OF AI DANGERS, SAYS &apos;THERE&apos;S NO BOUNDARY HERE&apos;
&quot;That the people who invented these characters in the first place, who designed them in the first place, are now being replaced by AI. AI that will take their designs and take what those artists created and use it to create iterations of that.&quot;
Lilly also expressed sympathy for the broader group of Disney employees swept up in the cuts and especially for Marvel artists she said had become &quot;obsolete&quot; after helping build the franchise.
&quot;These were human creations, and they shouldn’t be stolen by tech giants so that their robots can replicate them,&quot; Lilly added. &quot;I think it’s disgusting and horrible, and I stand with all the artists and Andy.&quot;
In the caption accompanying her video, she tagged Disney, writing &quot;SHAME ON YOU&quot; and urged California lawmakers to act.
&quot;Where are the laws that REMOVE all human art from the AI bank?!? Why do they get to steal our brilliance and use it to make executives rich while the artists responsible for feeding their robots go hungry?? Disgusting. California lawmakers...where are you?!?!&quot; she wrote.
EVANGELINE LILLY CONFIRMS SHE SUSTAINED BRAIN DAMAGE FROM TRAUMATIC INJURY LAST YEAR
Disney confirmed earlier this month it would be laying off 1,000 employees across the company. In a memo obtained by Fox News Digital, CEO Josh D’Amaro said the company had been reviewing ways to streamline operations and &quot;foster a more agile and technologically-enabled workforce.&quot;
&quot;Over the past several months, we have looked at ways in which we can streamline our operations in various parts of the company to ensure we deliver the world-class creativity and innovation our fans value and expect from Disney,&quot; D’Amaro wrote. 
&quot;Given the fast-moving pace of our industries, this requires us to constantly assess how to foster a more agile and technologically-enabled workforce to meet tomorrow’s needs.&quot;
Disney’s statement does not explicitly say the layoffs were driven by AI, and the company did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Lilly’s allegation that artists were being replaced by artificial intelligence.
FCC TO CALL IN DISNEY STATIONS FOR EARLY LICENSE REVIEW IN WAKE OF ABC&apos;S JIMMY KIMMEL CONTROVERSY
Initial reports indicated that 8% of Marvel&apos;s workforce was cut, though Disney later disputed that number, telling The Wrap the number was &quot;much smaller.&quot;
CLICK HERE FOR MORE COVERAGE OF MEDIA AND CULTURE
Disney did not immediately return Fox News Digital&apos;s request for comment.
Fox News&apos; Lindsay Kornick contributed to this report.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40274a200899a00e5f10a</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>&apos;Ant-Man&apos; actress slams Disney for &apos;disgusting&apos; Marvel layoffs</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:31:32.281Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>&apos;Ant-Man&apos; actress slams Disney for &apos;disgusting&apos; Marvel layoffs</news:title>
			<news:keywords>&quot;Avengers&quot; actress Evangeline Lilly rebuked Disney over layoffs affecting Marvel employees in its visual development department, calling the move &quot;disgusting and horrible&quot; in a video posted to Instagram Thursday.
Lilly, who portrayed Hope van Dyne, also known as The Wasp, in four Marvel films, said she learned about the layoffs from friend Andy Park, a longtime Marvel visual development artist who helped create early Wasp suit concepts.
&quot;I reached out to my good friend Andy Park, who was the genius behind creating the original Wasp supersuit and the original Wasp concept drawings for the film ‘Ant-Man and the Wasp,’ and just said, ‘Is this true? Is this really what’s happening?’&quot; Lilly recalled. &quot;And he said, ‘Yeah, it’s true. I have been let go.’
&quot;I can’t quite believe that,&quot; Lilly continued. &quot;That Disney have let go of the artists who brought the current Marvel Universe to life through their imagination and their genius. 
SCARLETT JOHANSSON WARNS OF AI DANGERS, SAYS &apos;THERE&apos;S NO BOUNDARY HERE&apos;
&quot;That the people who invented these characters in the first place, who designed them in the first place, are now being replaced by AI. AI that will take their designs and take what those artists created and use it to create iterations of that.&quot;
Lilly also expressed sympathy for the broader group of Disney employees swept up in the cuts and especially for Marvel artists she said had become &quot;obsolete&quot; after helping build the franchise.
&quot;These were human creations, and they shouldn’t be stolen by tech giants so that their robots can replicate them,&quot; Lilly added. &quot;I think it’s disgusting and horrible, and I stand with all the artists and Andy.&quot;
In the caption accompanying her video, she tagged Disney, writing &quot;SHAME ON YOU&quot; and urged California lawmakers to act.
&quot;Where are the laws that REMOVE all human art from the AI bank?!? Why do they get to steal our brilliance and use it to make executives rich while the artists responsible for feeding their robots go hungry?? Disgusting. California lawmakers...where are you?!?!&quot; she wrote.
EVANGELINE LILLY CONFIRMS SHE SUSTAINED BRAIN DAMAGE FROM TRAUMATIC INJURY LAST YEAR
Disney confirmed earlier this month it would be laying off 1,000 employees across the company. In a memo obtained by Fox News Digital, CEO Josh D’Amaro said the company had been reviewing ways to streamline operations and &quot;foster a more agile and technologically-enabled workforce.&quot;
&quot;Over the past several months, we have looked at ways in which we can streamline our operations in various parts of the company to ensure we deliver the world-class creativity and innovation our fans value and expect from Disney,&quot; D’Amaro wrote. 
&quot;Given the fast-moving pace of our industries, this requires us to constantly assess how to foster a more agile and technologically-enabled workforce to meet tomorrow’s needs.&quot;
Disney’s statement does not explicitly say the layoffs were driven by AI, and the company did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Lilly’s allegation that artists were being replaced by artificial intelligence.
FCC TO CALL IN DISNEY STATIONS FOR EARLY LICENSE REVIEW IN WAKE OF ABC&apos;S JIMMY KIMMEL CONTROVERSY
Initial reports indicated that 8% of Marvel&apos;s workforce was cut, though Disney later disputed that number, telling The Wrap the number was &quot;much smaller.&quot;
CLICK HERE FOR MORE COVERAGE OF MEDIA AND CULTURE
Disney did not immediately return Fox News Digital&apos;s request for comment.
Fox News&apos; Lindsay Kornick contributed to this report.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40272a200899a00e5f101</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Country music feud takes unexpected turn as singers quash the &apos;beef&apos;</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:31:30.282Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Country music feud takes unexpected turn as singers quash the &apos;beef&apos;</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Kacey Musgraves knows a &quot;high horse&quot; when she sees one.
Musgraves, 37, reflected on her past while also moving forward to change the narrative on her challenging relationship with another beloved country star, Miranda Lambert.
When asked about reported squabbles with the &quot;Bluebird&quot; singer, Musgraves told Variety their &quot;beef&quot; was &quot;grass-fed, grade A.&quot;
KACEY MUSGRAVES DETAILS &apos;CRAZIEST&apos; UFO EXPERIENCE SHE HAD ON A FLIGHT FROM TEXAS TO TENNESSEE
&quot;I mean, it’s real and that’s why I love this song, because it’s not coming from some contrived place in a writing room,&quot; she said about their surprise duet on her new &quot;Middle of Nowhere&quot; album.
&quot;We’ve come together after years of really, honestly, not being friends.&quot;
The &quot;Golden Hour&quot; musician was inspired to reach out after finding song inspiration on social media.
MIRANDA LAMBERT’S BLUNT ADVICE THAT CHANGED EVERYTHING FOR PARKER MCCOLLUM’S CAREER
&quot;I had this idea one day when I saw her on Instagram, riding one of her horses, and I thought, ‘Well, I guess we have two things in common: horses and divorces,&apos;&quot; Musgraves said.
&quot;And I was like, ‘Wait, that’s a song.’ Then I took it a step further: ‘What if I write it with her? What if it’s a duet? F--- it, I’m gonna reach out.’
&quot;I hadn’t spoken to her in years and was like, ‘Hey, I have this idea. If anybody would get it, it would be you. We’ve had our s--- over the years, but this would be really funny.’ And she was like, ‘I’m down.’
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&quot;I was like, ‘Look, I’m not trying to be your friend, but we should write this song at least.’ So, it was a late addition, the last song added to the album, which wrapped up in January.&quot;
Musgraves previously discussed their rumored feud in an interview with NPR in which she recalled writing &quot;Mama&apos;s Broken Heart,&quot; a song Lambert recorded on her 2013 album, &quot;Four the Record.&quot;
LIKE WHAT YOU’RE READING? CLICK HERE FOR MORE ENTERTAINMENT NEWS
&quot;It was gonna be my first single, and I loved the song so much. I had been a staff writer for years at that point, writing for other people, and had finally felt like I was collecting songs that felt like me that I didn&apos;t wanna pitch to anyone else,&quot; she said.
The &quot;Deeper Well&quot; singer claimed the song was pitched to Lambert without her &quot;consent or knowledge,&quot; and it soon became a &quot;tricky situation.&quot;
&quot;She ended up loving the song, and she really wanted it. And I had other co-writers to consider,&quot; she said.
The country music queens collaborated for &quot;Horses and Divorces&quot; on Musgraves&apos; sixth studio album, which is slated for release on May 1.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f4026ca200899a00e5f0f8</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Country music feud takes unexpected turn as singers quash the &apos;beef&apos;</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:31:24.525Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Country music feud takes unexpected turn as singers quash the &apos;beef&apos;</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Kacey Musgraves knows a &quot;high horse&quot; when she sees one.
Musgraves, 37, reflected on her past while also moving forward to change the narrative on her challenging relationship with another beloved country star, Miranda Lambert.
When asked about reported squabbles with the &quot;Bluebird&quot; singer, Musgraves told Variety their &quot;beef&quot; was &quot;grass-fed, grade A.&quot;
KACEY MUSGRAVES DETAILS &apos;CRAZIEST&apos; UFO EXPERIENCE SHE HAD ON A FLIGHT FROM TEXAS TO TENNESSEE
&quot;I mean, it’s real and that’s why I love this song, because it’s not coming from some contrived place in a writing room,&quot; she said about their surprise duet on her new &quot;Middle of Nowhere&quot; album.
&quot;We’ve come together after years of really, honestly, not being friends.&quot;
The &quot;Golden Hour&quot; musician was inspired to reach out after finding song inspiration on social media.
MIRANDA LAMBERT’S BLUNT ADVICE THAT CHANGED EVERYTHING FOR PARKER MCCOLLUM’S CAREER
&quot;I had this idea one day when I saw her on Instagram, riding one of her horses, and I thought, ‘Well, I guess we have two things in common: horses and divorces,&apos;&quot; Musgraves said.
&quot;And I was like, ‘Wait, that’s a song.’ Then I took it a step further: ‘What if I write it with her? What if it’s a duet? F--- it, I’m gonna reach out.’
&quot;I hadn’t spoken to her in years and was like, ‘Hey, I have this idea. If anybody would get it, it would be you. We’ve had our s--- over the years, but this would be really funny.’ And she was like, ‘I’m down.’
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Advertisement
&quot;I was like, ‘Look, I’m not trying to be your friend, but we should write this song at least.’ So, it was a late addition, the last song added to the album, which wrapped up in January.&quot;
Musgraves previously discussed their rumored feud in an interview with NPR in which she recalled writing &quot;Mama&apos;s Broken Heart,&quot; a song Lambert recorded on her 2013 album, &quot;Four the Record.&quot;
LIKE WHAT YOU’RE READING? CLICK HERE FOR MORE ENTERTAINMENT NEWS
&quot;It was gonna be my first single, and I loved the song so much. I had been a staff writer for years at that point, writing for other people, and had finally felt like I was collecting songs that felt like me that I didn&apos;t wanna pitch to anyone else,&quot; she said.
The &quot;Deeper Well&quot; singer claimed the song was pitched to Lambert without her &quot;consent or knowledge,&quot; and it soon became a &quot;tricky situation.&quot;
&quot;She ended up loving the song, and she really wanted it. And I had other co-writers to consider,&quot; she said.
The country music queens collaborated for &quot;Horses and Divorces&quot; on Musgraves&apos; sixth studio album, which is slated for release on May 1.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40260a200899a00e5f0ef</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Country music feud takes unexpected turn as singers quash the &apos;beef&apos;</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:31:12.856Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Country music feud takes unexpected turn as singers quash the &apos;beef&apos;</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Kacey Musgraves knows a &quot;high horse&quot; when she sees one.
Musgraves, 37, reflected on her past while also moving forward to change the narrative on her challenging relationship with another beloved country star, Miranda Lambert.
When asked about reported squabbles with the &quot;Bluebird&quot; singer, Musgraves told Variety their &quot;beef&quot; was &quot;grass-fed, grade A.&quot;
KACEY MUSGRAVES DETAILS &apos;CRAZIEST&apos; UFO EXPERIENCE SHE HAD ON A FLIGHT FROM TEXAS TO TENNESSEE
&quot;I mean, it’s real and that’s why I love this song, because it’s not coming from some contrived place in a writing room,&quot; she said about their surprise duet on her new &quot;Middle of Nowhere&quot; album.
&quot;We’ve come together after years of really, honestly, not being friends.&quot;
The &quot;Golden Hour&quot; musician was inspired to reach out after finding song inspiration on social media.
MIRANDA LAMBERT’S BLUNT ADVICE THAT CHANGED EVERYTHING FOR PARKER MCCOLLUM’S CAREER
&quot;I had this idea one day when I saw her on Instagram, riding one of her horses, and I thought, ‘Well, I guess we have two things in common: horses and divorces,&apos;&quot; Musgraves said.
&quot;And I was like, ‘Wait, that’s a song.’ Then I took it a step further: ‘What if I write it with her? What if it’s a duet? F--- it, I’m gonna reach out.’
&quot;I hadn’t spoken to her in years and was like, ‘Hey, I have this idea. If anybody would get it, it would be you. We’ve had our s--- over the years, but this would be really funny.’ And she was like, ‘I’m down.’
CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR THE ENTERTAINMENT NEWSLETTER
Advertisement
&quot;I was like, ‘Look, I’m not trying to be your friend, but we should write this song at least.’ So, it was a late addition, the last song added to the album, which wrapped up in January.&quot;
Musgraves previously discussed their rumored feud in an interview with NPR in which she recalled writing &quot;Mama&apos;s Broken Heart,&quot; a song Lambert recorded on her 2013 album, &quot;Four the Record.&quot;
LIKE WHAT YOU’RE READING? CLICK HERE FOR MORE ENTERTAINMENT NEWS
&quot;It was gonna be my first single, and I loved the song so much. I had been a staff writer for years at that point, writing for other people, and had finally felt like I was collecting songs that felt like me that I didn&apos;t wanna pitch to anyone else,&quot; she said.
The &quot;Deeper Well&quot; singer claimed the song was pitched to Lambert without her &quot;consent or knowledge,&quot; and it soon became a &quot;tricky situation.&quot;
&quot;She ended up loving the song, and she really wanted it. And I had other co-writers to consider,&quot; she said.
The country music queens collaborated for &quot;Horses and Divorces&quot; on Musgraves&apos; sixth studio album, which is slated for release on May 1.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f4025ea200899a00e5f0e6</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>FIFA confirms Iran will play all 2026 World Cup group-stage matches on US soil despite tensions</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:31:10.808Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>FIFA confirms Iran will play all 2026 World Cup group-stage matches on US soil despite tensions</news:title>
			<news:keywords>FIFA President Gianni Infantino confirmed Thursday that Iran&apos;s national team will compete in the 2026 World Cup, with all three of its group-stage matches set to be played on U.S. soil.
The decision all but ensures politics will follow the matches.
Infantino said Thursday at the FIFA World Congress in Vancouver, Canada:
&quot;Let me start at the outset confirming, straightaway for those who maybe want to say something else or want to write something else, that of course Iran will be participating at the FIFA World Cup 2026. And of course Iran will play in the United States of America.&quot;
ZERO BS. JUST DAKICH. TAKE THE DON&apos;T @ ME PODCAST ON THE ROAD. DOWNLOAD NOW!
The backdrop is a period of heightened tension between the United States and Iran following a joint U.S.-Israeli operation that killed Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei earlier this year.
Despite earlier speculation about potential venue changes, the schedule remains unchanged.
Iran will open its campaign on June 15 against New Zealand at SoFi Stadium in Los Angeles, followed by a matchup with Belgium on June 21 at the same venue.
WORLD CUP FANS BANNED FROM US TRAVEL MAY BE UNABLE TO ROOT FOR TEAMS IN PERSON
The team will then travel to Seattle to close out the group stage against Egypt at Lumen Field on June 26.
While the matchups are set, political complications are already unfolding.
Canadian authorities recently denied entry to a delegation of Iranian football officials, including federation president Mehdi Taj, ahead of the FIFA Congress. The move is tied to Canada’s policies regarding individuals linked to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, which it designates as a terrorist organization.
IRANIAN WOMEN&apos;S SOCCER TEAM REFUSE TO SING NATIONAL ANTHEM IN SILENT PROTEST AT ASIAN CUP
FIFA acknowledged the situation but emphasized that host nations control their own border policies.
Hosting Iran’s matches on the U.S. West Coast, particularly in Los Angeles, home to one of the largest Iranian populations outside the Middle East, is expected to draw heightened attention.
For fans and officials alike, Iran&apos;s inclusion in the World Cup is shaping up to be a real-time test of how far the world’s biggest sporting event can stretch under the weight of international politics.
Send us your thoughts: alejandro.avila@outkick.com / Follow along on X: @alejandroaveela</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40258a200899a00e5f0dd</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>FIFA confirms Iran will play all 2026 World Cup group-stage matches on US soil despite tensions</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:31:04.612Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>FIFA confirms Iran will play all 2026 World Cup group-stage matches on US soil despite tensions</news:title>
			<news:keywords>FIFA President Gianni Infantino confirmed Thursday that Iran&apos;s national team will compete in the 2026 World Cup, with all three of its group-stage matches set to be played on U.S. soil.
The decision all but ensures politics will follow the matches.
Infantino said Thursday at the FIFA World Congress in Vancouver, Canada:
&quot;Let me start at the outset confirming, straightaway for those who maybe want to say something else or want to write something else, that of course Iran will be participating at the FIFA World Cup 2026. And of course Iran will play in the United States of America.&quot;
ZERO BS. JUST DAKICH. TAKE THE DON&apos;T @ ME PODCAST ON THE ROAD. DOWNLOAD NOW!
The backdrop is a period of heightened tension between the United States and Iran following a joint U.S.-Israeli operation that killed Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei earlier this year.
Despite earlier speculation about potential venue changes, the schedule remains unchanged.
Iran will open its campaign on June 15 against New Zealand at SoFi Stadium in Los Angeles, followed by a matchup with Belgium on June 21 at the same venue.
WORLD CUP FANS BANNED FROM US TRAVEL MAY BE UNABLE TO ROOT FOR TEAMS IN PERSON
The team will then travel to Seattle to close out the group stage against Egypt at Lumen Field on June 26.
While the matchups are set, political complications are already unfolding.
Canadian authorities recently denied entry to a delegation of Iranian football officials, including federation president Mehdi Taj, ahead of the FIFA Congress. The move is tied to Canada’s policies regarding individuals linked to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, which it designates as a terrorist organization.
IRANIAN WOMEN&apos;S SOCCER TEAM REFUSE TO SING NATIONAL ANTHEM IN SILENT PROTEST AT ASIAN CUP
FIFA acknowledged the situation but emphasized that host nations control their own border policies.
Hosting Iran’s matches on the U.S. West Coast, particularly in Los Angeles, home to one of the largest Iranian populations outside the Middle East, is expected to draw heightened attention.
For fans and officials alike, Iran&apos;s inclusion in the World Cup is shaping up to be a real-time test of how far the world’s biggest sporting event can stretch under the weight of international politics.
Send us your thoughts: alejandro.avila@outkick.com / Follow along on X: @alejandroaveela</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f4024da200899a00e5f0d4</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>FIFA confirms Iran will play all 2026 World Cup group-stage matches on US soil despite tensions</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:30:53.268Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>FIFA confirms Iran will play all 2026 World Cup group-stage matches on US soil despite tensions</news:title>
			<news:keywords>FIFA President Gianni Infantino confirmed Thursday that Iran&apos;s national team will compete in the 2026 World Cup, with all three of its group-stage matches set to be played on U.S. soil.
The decision all but ensures politics will follow the matches.
Infantino said Thursday at the FIFA World Congress in Vancouver, Canada:
&quot;Let me start at the outset confirming, straightaway for those who maybe want to say something else or want to write something else, that of course Iran will be participating at the FIFA World Cup 2026. And of course Iran will play in the United States of America.&quot;
ZERO BS. JUST DAKICH. TAKE THE DON&apos;T @ ME PODCAST ON THE ROAD. DOWNLOAD NOW!
The backdrop is a period of heightened tension between the United States and Iran following a joint U.S.-Israeli operation that killed Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei earlier this year.
Despite earlier speculation about potential venue changes, the schedule remains unchanged.
Iran will open its campaign on June 15 against New Zealand at SoFi Stadium in Los Angeles, followed by a matchup with Belgium on June 21 at the same venue.
WORLD CUP FANS BANNED FROM US TRAVEL MAY BE UNABLE TO ROOT FOR TEAMS IN PERSON
The team will then travel to Seattle to close out the group stage against Egypt at Lumen Field on June 26.
While the matchups are set, political complications are already unfolding.
Canadian authorities recently denied entry to a delegation of Iranian football officials, including federation president Mehdi Taj, ahead of the FIFA Congress. The move is tied to Canada’s policies regarding individuals linked to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, which it designates as a terrorist organization.
IRANIAN WOMEN&apos;S SOCCER TEAM REFUSE TO SING NATIONAL ANTHEM IN SILENT PROTEST AT ASIAN CUP
FIFA acknowledged the situation but emphasized that host nations control their own border policies.
Hosting Iran’s matches on the U.S. West Coast, particularly in Los Angeles, home to one of the largest Iranian populations outside the Middle East, is expected to draw heightened attention.
For fans and officials alike, Iran&apos;s inclusion in the World Cup is shaping up to be a real-time test of how far the world’s biggest sporting event can stretch under the weight of international politics.
Send us your thoughts: alejandro.avila@outkick.com / Follow along on X: @alejandroaveela</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f4024ba200899a00e5f0cb</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Trump jokes he&apos;d look &apos;20 pounds heavier&apos; in a bulletproof vest, says he doesn&apos;t think about threats</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:30:51.293Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Trump jokes he&apos;d look &apos;20 pounds heavier&apos; in a bulletproof vest, says he doesn&apos;t think about threats</news:title>
			<news:keywords>President Donald Trump joked he would look &quot;20 pounds heavier&quot; in a bulletproof vest after being shot at, while acknowledging the protection works and insisting he does not think about future threats.
While speaking with reporters inside the Oval Office Thursday, Trump was asked about potential security changes, including whether he would consider wearing a bulletproof vest after recent threats against him.
&quot;I don&apos;t know if I can handle looking 20 pounds heavier,&quot; he joked. &quot;Some of these guys are physical specimens. … No, well, if you want to gain 20 to 25 pounds.&quot;
Trump then turned his attention to the Secret Service agent who was shot Saturday after an armed man charged through security at the White House Correspondents’ Association Dinner in Washington, D.C.
TRUMP SAYS HE WON NEW FANS AFTER ASSASSINATION ATTEMPT: &apos;SOMETHING HAPPENED WHEN I GOT SHOT&apos;
&quot;Frankly, the vest did an amazing job because it took a bullet close up,&quot; Trump said. &quot;He didn&apos;t even want to go to the hospital. I mean, we sent him to the hospital just in case. … It&apos;s still a hit, but he didn&apos;t want to go to the hospital.
&quot;The vest totally protected him,&quot; the president continued. &quot;Still a lot of power behind that shot, though. That&apos;s like getting hit by Mike Tyson.&quot;
Trump said he has been asked about wearing a bulletproof vest, adding that it is something to consider. But he also said he does not like to consider wearing one because he would be giving in to a &quot;bad element.&quot;
FBI INVESTIGATES HUNTING STAND WITH SIGHT LINE TO TRUMP&apos;S AIR FORCE ONE EXIT AREA AT PALM BEACH AIRPORT
The president was then asked whether he was nervous about another assassination attempt.
&quot;I don’t think about it,&quot; Trump said. &quot;And if I did, I wouldn’t be doing a very good job here. I’d be thinking about nothing but that. I don’t think about it. I really don’t think about it. If I did, I wouldn’t be effective.&quot;
SECURITY UNDER SCRUTINY AS WHCD ATTENDEES CITE INCONSISTENT SCREENING BEFORE SHOOTING
Trump has faced multiple assassination attempts in recent years, including incidents at public events that prompted heightened security concerns and increased scrutiny of Secret Service protocols.
In one recent case, a suspect was accused of charging toward Trump at a Washington, D.C., event before being stopped by agents, underscoring the ongoing risks surrounding the president’s public appearances.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40245a200899a00e5f0c2</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Trump jokes he&apos;d look &apos;20 pounds heavier&apos; in a bulletproof vest, says he doesn&apos;t think about threats</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:30:45.070Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Trump jokes he&apos;d look &apos;20 pounds heavier&apos; in a bulletproof vest, says he doesn&apos;t think about threats</news:title>
			<news:keywords>President Donald Trump joked he would look &quot;20 pounds heavier&quot; in a bulletproof vest after being shot at, while acknowledging the protection works and insisting he does not think about future threats.
While speaking with reporters inside the Oval Office Thursday, Trump was asked about potential security changes, including whether he would consider wearing a bulletproof vest after recent threats against him.
&quot;I don&apos;t know if I can handle looking 20 pounds heavier,&quot; he joked. &quot;Some of these guys are physical specimens. … No, well, if you want to gain 20 to 25 pounds.&quot;
Trump then turned his attention to the Secret Service agent who was shot Saturday after an armed man charged through security at the White House Correspondents’ Association Dinner in Washington, D.C.
TRUMP SAYS HE WON NEW FANS AFTER ASSASSINATION ATTEMPT: &apos;SOMETHING HAPPENED WHEN I GOT SHOT&apos;
&quot;Frankly, the vest did an amazing job because it took a bullet close up,&quot; Trump said. &quot;He didn&apos;t even want to go to the hospital. I mean, we sent him to the hospital just in case. … It&apos;s still a hit, but he didn&apos;t want to go to the hospital.
&quot;The vest totally protected him,&quot; the president continued. &quot;Still a lot of power behind that shot, though. That&apos;s like getting hit by Mike Tyson.&quot;
Trump said he has been asked about wearing a bulletproof vest, adding that it is something to consider. But he also said he does not like to consider wearing one because he would be giving in to a &quot;bad element.&quot;
FBI INVESTIGATES HUNTING STAND WITH SIGHT LINE TO TRUMP&apos;S AIR FORCE ONE EXIT AREA AT PALM BEACH AIRPORT
The president was then asked whether he was nervous about another assassination attempt.
&quot;I don’t think about it,&quot; Trump said. &quot;And if I did, I wouldn’t be doing a very good job here. I’d be thinking about nothing but that. I don’t think about it. I really don’t think about it. If I did, I wouldn’t be effective.&quot;
SECURITY UNDER SCRUTINY AS WHCD ATTENDEES CITE INCONSISTENT SCREENING BEFORE SHOOTING
Trump has faced multiple assassination attempts in recent years, including incidents at public events that prompted heightened security concerns and increased scrutiny of Secret Service protocols.
In one recent case, a suspect was accused of charging toward Trump at a Washington, D.C., event before being stopped by agents, underscoring the ongoing risks surrounding the president’s public appearances.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40239a200899a00e5f0b9</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Trump jokes he&apos;d look &apos;20 pounds heavier&apos; in a bulletproof vest, says he doesn&apos;t think about threats</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:30:33.402Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Trump jokes he&apos;d look &apos;20 pounds heavier&apos; in a bulletproof vest, says he doesn&apos;t think about threats</news:title>
			<news:keywords>President Donald Trump joked he would look &quot;20 pounds heavier&quot; in a bulletproof vest after being shot at, while acknowledging the protection works and insisting he does not think about future threats.
While speaking with reporters inside the Oval Office Thursday, Trump was asked about potential security changes, including whether he would consider wearing a bulletproof vest after recent threats against him.
&quot;I don&apos;t know if I can handle looking 20 pounds heavier,&quot; he joked. &quot;Some of these guys are physical specimens. … No, well, if you want to gain 20 to 25 pounds.&quot;
Trump then turned his attention to the Secret Service agent who was shot Saturday after an armed man charged through security at the White House Correspondents’ Association Dinner in Washington, D.C.
TRUMP SAYS HE WON NEW FANS AFTER ASSASSINATION ATTEMPT: &apos;SOMETHING HAPPENED WHEN I GOT SHOT&apos;
&quot;Frankly, the vest did an amazing job because it took a bullet close up,&quot; Trump said. &quot;He didn&apos;t even want to go to the hospital. I mean, we sent him to the hospital just in case. … It&apos;s still a hit, but he didn&apos;t want to go to the hospital.
&quot;The vest totally protected him,&quot; the president continued. &quot;Still a lot of power behind that shot, though. That&apos;s like getting hit by Mike Tyson.&quot;
Trump said he has been asked about wearing a bulletproof vest, adding that it is something to consider. But he also said he does not like to consider wearing one because he would be giving in to a &quot;bad element.&quot;
FBI INVESTIGATES HUNTING STAND WITH SIGHT LINE TO TRUMP&apos;S AIR FORCE ONE EXIT AREA AT PALM BEACH AIRPORT
The president was then asked whether he was nervous about another assassination attempt.
&quot;I don’t think about it,&quot; Trump said. &quot;And if I did, I wouldn’t be doing a very good job here. I’d be thinking about nothing but that. I don’t think about it. I really don’t think about it. If I did, I wouldn’t be effective.&quot;
SECURITY UNDER SCRUTINY AS WHCD ATTENDEES CITE INCONSISTENT SCREENING BEFORE SHOOTING
Trump has faced multiple assassination attempts in recent years, including incidents at public events that prompted heightened security concerns and increased scrutiny of Secret Service protocols.
In one recent case, a suspect was accused of charging toward Trump at a Washington, D.C., event before being stopped by agents, underscoring the ongoing risks surrounding the president’s public appearances.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40237a200899a00e5f0b0</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>FBI says trucker found dead after suspected hijacking; key details remain unclear</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:30:31.753Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>FBI says trucker found dead after suspected hijacking; key details remain unclear</news:title>
			<news:keywords>A commercial truck driver who vanished during a suspected hijacking while transporting vehicles has been found dead in a coastal area of Georgia, the FBI announced Wednesday.
Alejandro Jacomino Gonzalez, 41, was last seen alive in the early morning hours of April 17 at a rest area along Interstate 95 south in Brevard County, Florida.
The investigation took a suspicious turn later that day when his truck was located nearly 300 miles away in Port Wentworth, Georgia.
&quot;Since the truck was found, three of the vehicles have been recovered in Florida. Others remain missing,&quot; officials said.
GOT A TIP?
Federal investigators said Gonzalez had picked up multiple vehicles from the Port of Brunswick and was headed toward Miami for delivery.
GPS data showed the truck leaving the rest area, continuing south briefly, then reversing course and heading north.
FOLLOW US ON X
Authorities said Gonzalez became unreachable soon afterward.
In the days that followed, the FBI asked the public for surveillance video, photos and witness accounts from anyone who may have been at or near the Grant-Valkaria rest area between 1 a.m. and 8 a.m. on April 17.
The bureau described Gonzalez, who was originally from Cuba, as having &quot;a full sleeve tattoo on his left arm, a tattoo on his lower right arm and a tattoo of the word ‘Elisia&apos; on his right forearm.&quot;
CLICK HERE FOR MORE US NEWS
Gonzalez&apos;s cousin, Juan Carlos Forcade, told NBC6 the FBI called Gonzalez&apos;s wife on Tuesday and told her her husband&apos;s body was found in Georgia.
The FBI later confirmed that a body found in a coastal area of the state was confirmed to be Gonzalez. More details about how he died were not immediately known.
Both the FBI Field Offices in Atlanta and Tampa are investigating Gonzalez&apos;s death. Anyone with information is asked to contact the FBI&apos;s tip line at 1-800-225-5324 (1-800-CALL-FBI). Tips can also be submitted online.
GET BREAKING NEWS BY EMAIL
Fox News Digital has reached out to the FBI for additional information.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40225a200899a00e5f095</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>FBI says trucker found dead after suspected hijacking; key details remain unclear</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:30:13.696Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>FBI says trucker found dead after suspected hijacking; key details remain unclear</news:title>
			<news:keywords>A commercial truck driver who vanished during a suspected hijacking while transporting vehicles has been found dead in a coastal area of Georgia, the FBI announced Wednesday.
Alejandro Jacomino Gonzalez, 41, was last seen alive in the early morning hours of April 17 at a rest area along Interstate 95 south in Brevard County, Florida.
The investigation took a suspicious turn later that day when his truck was located nearly 300 miles away in Port Wentworth, Georgia.
&quot;Since the truck was found, three of the vehicles have been recovered in Florida. Others remain missing,&quot; officials said.
GOT A TIP?
Federal investigators said Gonzalez had picked up multiple vehicles from the Port of Brunswick and was headed toward Miami for delivery.
GPS data showed the truck leaving the rest area, continuing south briefly, then reversing course and heading north.
FOLLOW US ON X
Authorities said Gonzalez became unreachable soon afterward.
In the days that followed, the FBI asked the public for surveillance video, photos and witness accounts from anyone who may have been at or near the Grant-Valkaria rest area between 1 a.m. and 8 a.m. on April 17.
The bureau described Gonzalez, who was originally from Cuba, as having &quot;a full sleeve tattoo on his left arm, a tattoo on his lower right arm and a tattoo of the word ‘Elisia&apos; on his right forearm.&quot;
CLICK HERE FOR MORE US NEWS
Gonzalez&apos;s cousin, Juan Carlos Forcade, told NBC6 the FBI called Gonzalez&apos;s wife on Tuesday and told her her husband&apos;s body was found in Georgia.
The FBI later confirmed that a body found in a coastal area of the state was confirmed to be Gonzalez. More details about how he died were not immediately known.
Both the FBI Field Offices in Atlanta and Tampa are investigating Gonzalez&apos;s death. Anyone with information is asked to contact the FBI&apos;s tip line at 1-800-225-5324 (1-800-CALL-FBI). Tips can also be submitted online.
GET BREAKING NEWS BY EMAIL
Fox News Digital has reached out to the FBI for additional information.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40224a200899a00e5f08c</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>ESPN loses sole executive who cracked down on political, racial rhetoric</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:30:12.206Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>ESPN loses sole executive who cracked down on political, racial rhetoric</news:title>
			<news:keywords>OutKick recently credited ESPN for its turnaround. Its daily studio lineup was up 14% year over year during the first quarter of 2026. The network has also slowly parted ways with most of its far-left race idolaters.
However, the executive behind the turnaround is leaving. On Thursday, the network announced that Executive Vice President David Roberts will retire at the end of August.
&quot;This has been both a real honor and a blessing to work for and with the most talented people in the industry,&quot; Roberts said in a press release. &quot;I am extremely humbled and grateful to have had the opportunities afforded me as a member of the ESPN leadership team. It has been simply an awesome 22 years.&quot;
CLICK HERE FOR MORE OUTKICK ANALYSIS
For background, it was Roberts who canceled most of the politically and racially driven programming that sank ESPN’s reputation in recent years. He was behind the cancellations of &quot;SC6&quot; with Jemele Hill, &quot;The Right Time&quot; with Bomani Jones, &quot;High Noon&quot; with Bomani Jones, Clinton Yates’ little radio show, and &quot;Around the Horn.&quot;
Roberts is also the reason ESPN did not re-sign Hill, Bomani, Yates, Mark Jones, Sarah Spain, Max Kellerman, Jalen Rose and Keith Olbermann.
(For those looking to mock the person behind re-signing Olbermann, look up the name Norby Williamson.)
While the White bosses at ESPN governed with a deep fear of baseless racial backlash, Roberts did not. As multiple on-air talents have told OutKick over the past four years, Roberts did not care what color someone was or how they leaned politically. He put the best people on television and removed the people the audience rejected.
Unfortunately, judging talent by their, well, talent is a rare trait in management.
Roberts let the viewers decide who would be a star and who would not. His predecessors, like Connor Schell, let social media and CAA make those decisions for them.
ESPN listed some of Roberts&apos; accomplishments in the announcement:
ZERO BS. JUST DAKICH. TAKE THE DON’T @ ME PODCAST ON THE ROAD. DOWNLOAD NOW!
In one of the riskier moves of his tenure, Roberts made a star out of Will Cain. In 2016, he put Cain on television opposite Stephen A. Smith on &quot;First Take&quot; to provide a conservative balance to the conversation. It worked.
Cain is now one of the highest-rated talk show hosts on television with a daily Fox News program, &quot;The Will Cain Show&quot;. He landed a one-on-one interview with Vice President JD Vance this week. That would not have happened if Roberts had not first put him in a high-profile role. Roberts put Cain on the radar of Fox News and others.
And again, he did not favor Cain because he was conservative. He did it because Cain was good on television. Sources say Roberts also championed personalities like Stephen A. Smith, Michael Wilbon, Shannon Sharpe, Rich Eisen, Brian Windhorst, and Mike Greenberg, none of whom share many political opinions with Cain.
We would argue that the Stephen A. experiment should end at this point. First Take is the only show part of ESPN&apos;s daily lineup not experiencing significant growth. The general public appears sick of him. Jason Whitlock has raised valid questions about the legitimacy of the stories Smith tells in his memoir. He has been unable to defend his stories against Whitlock. Still, Stephen A. was ultimately the biggest draw at the network for most of Roberts’ run.
Without Roberts in charge, expect the political and racial buffoonery to creep back into the conversation at ESPN. Commentators like Ryan Clark and Kendrick Perkins will feel freer to push more irresponsible, divisive rhetoric. They know their bosses will be too fearful to stop them.
While Roberts may have already made up his mind, ESPN should have tried harder to keep him, at least for a while longer. Not having him on staff with the 2026 midterms approaching will be troubling.
ESPN says Mike Foss will fill Roberts’ duties. Prediction: he will cave the moment he is tasked with asking someone to take down a political tweet or stop referencing Trump on television.
Finding competent television executives with a backbone is no easy task. Most of them just want to fit in and avoid confrontation. They lack vision. They are followers by nature. Look at the state of CNN and MSNBC. Look at the mess ESPN made under the guidance of former president John Skipper.
Dave Roberts is a big loss for ESPN. We suspect viewers will notice a change, one that will ruin most of the newfound momentum ESPN is experiencing.
Follow Bobby Burack on X.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40212a200899a00e5f054</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>ESPN loses sole executive who cracked down on political, racial rhetoric</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:29:54.025Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>ESPN loses sole executive who cracked down on political, racial rhetoric</news:title>
			<news:keywords>OutKick recently credited ESPN for its turnaround. Its daily studio lineup was up 14% year over year during the first quarter of 2026. The network has also slowly parted ways with most of its far-left race idolaters.
However, the executive behind the turnaround is leaving. On Thursday, the network announced that Executive Vice President David Roberts will retire at the end of August.
&quot;This has been both a real honor and a blessing to work for and with the most talented people in the industry,&quot; Roberts said in a press release. &quot;I am extremely humbled and grateful to have had the opportunities afforded me as a member of the ESPN leadership team. It has been simply an awesome 22 years.&quot;
CLICK HERE FOR MORE OUTKICK ANALYSIS
For background, it was Roberts who canceled most of the politically and racially driven programming that sank ESPN’s reputation in recent years. He was behind the cancellations of &quot;SC6&quot; with Jemele Hill, &quot;The Right Time&quot; with Bomani Jones, &quot;High Noon&quot; with Bomani Jones, Clinton Yates’ little radio show, and &quot;Around the Horn.&quot;
Roberts is also the reason ESPN did not re-sign Hill, Bomani, Yates, Mark Jones, Sarah Spain, Max Kellerman, Jalen Rose and Keith Olbermann.
(For those looking to mock the person behind re-signing Olbermann, look up the name Norby Williamson.)
While the White bosses at ESPN governed with a deep fear of baseless racial backlash, Roberts did not. As multiple on-air talents have told OutKick over the past four years, Roberts did not care what color someone was or how they leaned politically. He put the best people on television and removed the people the audience rejected.
Unfortunately, judging talent by their, well, talent is a rare trait in management.
Roberts let the viewers decide who would be a star and who would not. His predecessors, like Connor Schell, let social media and CAA make those decisions for them.
ESPN listed some of Roberts&apos; accomplishments in the announcement:
ZERO BS. JUST DAKICH. TAKE THE DON’T @ ME PODCAST ON THE ROAD. DOWNLOAD NOW!
In one of the riskier moves of his tenure, Roberts made a star out of Will Cain. In 2016, he put Cain on television opposite Stephen A. Smith on &quot;First Take&quot; to provide a conservative balance to the conversation. It worked.
Cain is now one of the highest-rated talk show hosts on television with a daily Fox News program, &quot;The Will Cain Show&quot;. He landed a one-on-one interview with Vice President JD Vance this week. That would not have happened if Roberts had not first put him in a high-profile role. Roberts put Cain on the radar of Fox News and others.
And again, he did not favor Cain because he was conservative. He did it because Cain was good on television. Sources say Roberts also championed personalities like Stephen A. Smith, Michael Wilbon, Shannon Sharpe, Rich Eisen, Brian Windhorst, and Mike Greenberg, none of whom share many political opinions with Cain.
We would argue that the Stephen A. experiment should end at this point. First Take is the only show part of ESPN&apos;s daily lineup not experiencing significant growth. The general public appears sick of him. Jason Whitlock has raised valid questions about the legitimacy of the stories Smith tells in his memoir. He has been unable to defend his stories against Whitlock. Still, Stephen A. was ultimately the biggest draw at the network for most of Roberts’ run.
Without Roberts in charge, expect the political and racial buffoonery to creep back into the conversation at ESPN. Commentators like Ryan Clark and Kendrick Perkins will feel freer to push more irresponsible, divisive rhetoric. They know their bosses will be too fearful to stop them.
While Roberts may have already made up his mind, ESPN should have tried harder to keep him, at least for a while longer. Not having him on staff with the 2026 midterms approaching will be troubling.
ESPN says Mike Foss will fill Roberts’ duties. Prediction: he will cave the moment he is tasked with asking someone to take down a political tweet or stop referencing Trump on television.
Finding competent television executives with a backbone is no easy task. Most of them just want to fit in and avoid confrontation. They lack vision. They are followers by nature. Look at the state of CNN and MSNBC. Look at the mess ESPN made under the guidance of former president John Skipper.
Dave Roberts is a big loss for ESPN. We suspect viewers will notice a change, one that will ruin most of the newfound momentum ESPN is experiencing.
Follow Bobby Burack on X.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40210a200899a00e5f04b</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Classic cars, packed streets as Springfield erupts for Route 66 celebration, drawing national attention</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:29:52.612Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Classic cars, packed streets as Springfield erupts for Route 66 celebration, drawing national attention</news:title>
			<news:keywords>&quot;Fox &amp; Friends&quot; co-host Steve Doocy wrapped up his Route 66 road trip Thursday, spending time in Springfield, Missouri, to celebrate the historic highway’s 100th anniversary this year.
The visit marked the final leg of Doocy’s three-day journey along the iconic roadway, often called the &quot;Mother Road,&quot; which stretches from Chicago to Santa Monica, California.
After kicking off the trip in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and traveling through Kansas, Doocy arrived in Springfield, widely recognized as the birthplace of Route 66.
&apos;REALLY BIG DEAL&apos;: 13-MILE SECRET OF AMERICA&apos;S HEARTLAND REVEALED BY FOX NEWS&apos; STEVE DOOCY
&quot;Everybody today here in Springfield is wearing their Route 66 merch,&quot; Doocy said during a live segment.
On Thursday, Doocy was broadcasting live from along the route, where locals and car enthusiasts gathered with classic vehicles to mark the milestone.
&quot;It’s been really interesting because so many people in all the towns that we have visited have turned out,&quot; Doocy said. &quot;In these towns, this is a very big deal.&quot;
Classic Mustangs lined the roadway as part of the celebration, with owners showing off vehicles tied to the history and culture of Route 66.
The segment also featured former Missouri Rep. Billy Long, set to serve as the next U.S. ambassador to Iceland.
Long emphasized Springfield’s historic significance.
&quot;This is the birthplace of Route 66,&quot; Long said. 
&quot;I was born here. Route 66 was born here.&quot;
CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR OUR LIFESTYLE NEWSLETTER
Long shared the story of how Route 66 got its name, adding his signature auctioneer style.
&quot;A bunch of highway commissioners had an idea to put an intercontinental road through the country,&quot; Long said, adding that an auctioneer in the room counted through possible route numbers before landing on 66.
The celebration in Springfield marked the official kickoff of events commemorating the highway’s centennial, with communities across the country expected to take part throughout America&apos;s 250th birthday year.
TEST YOURSELF WITH OUR LATEST LIFESTYLE QUIZ
Doocy’s road trip highlighted the people, places and traditions that continue to keep the spirit of Route 66 alive nearly a century after its creation.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f401fea200899a00e5f042</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Classic cars, packed streets as Springfield erupts for Route 66 celebration, drawing national attention</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:29:34.318Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Classic cars, packed streets as Springfield erupts for Route 66 celebration, drawing national attention</news:title>
			<news:keywords>&quot;Fox &amp; Friends&quot; co-host Steve Doocy wrapped up his Route 66 road trip Thursday, spending time in Springfield, Missouri, to celebrate the historic highway’s 100th anniversary this year.
The visit marked the final leg of Doocy’s three-day journey along the iconic roadway, often called the &quot;Mother Road,&quot; which stretches from Chicago to Santa Monica, California.
After kicking off the trip in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and traveling through Kansas, Doocy arrived in Springfield, widely recognized as the birthplace of Route 66.
&apos;REALLY BIG DEAL&apos;: 13-MILE SECRET OF AMERICA&apos;S HEARTLAND REVEALED BY FOX NEWS&apos; STEVE DOOCY
&quot;Everybody today here in Springfield is wearing their Route 66 merch,&quot; Doocy said during a live segment.
On Thursday, Doocy was broadcasting live from along the route, where locals and car enthusiasts gathered with classic vehicles to mark the milestone.
&quot;It’s been really interesting because so many people in all the towns that we have visited have turned out,&quot; Doocy said. &quot;In these towns, this is a very big deal.&quot;
Classic Mustangs lined the roadway as part of the celebration, with owners showing off vehicles tied to the history and culture of Route 66.
The segment also featured former Missouri Rep. Billy Long, set to serve as the next U.S. ambassador to Iceland.
Long emphasized Springfield’s historic significance.
&quot;This is the birthplace of Route 66,&quot; Long said. 
&quot;I was born here. Route 66 was born here.&quot;
CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR OUR LIFESTYLE NEWSLETTER
Long shared the story of how Route 66 got its name, adding his signature auctioneer style.
&quot;A bunch of highway commissioners had an idea to put an intercontinental road through the country,&quot; Long said, adding that an auctioneer in the room counted through possible route numbers before landing on 66.
The celebration in Springfield marked the official kickoff of events commemorating the highway’s centennial, with communities across the country expected to take part throughout America&apos;s 250th birthday year.
TEST YOURSELF WITH OUR LATEST LIFESTYLE QUIZ
Doocy’s road trip highlighted the people, places and traditions that continue to keep the spirit of Route 66 alive nearly a century after its creation.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f401fca200899a00e5f039</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>DNC chair ripped for downplaying unreleased 2024 autopsy after Dem losses: &apos;Self-inflicted crisis&apos;</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:29:32.933Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>DNC chair ripped for downplaying unreleased 2024 autopsy after Dem losses: &apos;Self-inflicted crisis&apos;</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Ken Martin, the chairman of the Democratic National Committee, gave mixed signals Wednesday when asked if he would release some version of the 2024 autopsy, the unreleased report on what went wrong for Democrats in the last presidential election.
That document, a 200-page analysis conducted from over 300 interviews after the 2024 election, never saw the light of day after Martin ordered its creation, much to the frustration of onlookers like Jon Favreau, host of the &quot;Pod Save America&quot; podcast.
In a recent interview, Favreau pressed Martin on whether he would still consider releasing a summary of the findings.
&quot;We’ve been releasing that, Jon. The reality is we’re not hiding the ball on this. We have been sharing those things out. There’s no smoking gun here,&quot; Martin said.
OUTGOING DNC CHAIR SAYS DEMOCRATS SHOULD HAVE &apos;STUCK BY&apos; BIDEN IN THE 2024 ELECTION
The moment between Favreau and Martin underscores concerns Democrats have grappled with for the better part of two years that the party is struggling to be transparent about what it needs to change to find success in the future.
Democrats received a blow in November 2024 as Republicans stormed to power in a governing trifecta with control over the House of Representatives, Senate and White House. The loss has left Democrats struggling to find a national platform to rally around, and they are at odds over what mistakes the party should avoid repeating.
Shortly after becoming DNC chair in February 2025, Martin ordered an autopsy on the loss but pulled the plug on releasing it, arguing that it would distract from the party’s overarching goals.
&quot;We completed a comprehensive review of what happened in 2024 and are already putting our learnings into motion. And we&apos;re winning again — even in places that haven&apos;t gone blue in decades. In our conversations with stakeholders from across the Democratic ecosystem, we are aligned on what’s important, and that’s learning from the past and winning the future.
BIDEN TEAM, DEMOCRATS NEED TO ADMIT THEY WERE GASLIGHTING ABOUT PRESIDENT&apos;S FITNESS: BOOK AUTHORS
&quot;Here’s our North Star: does this help us win? If the answer is no, it’s a distraction from the core mission.&quot;
But, months after that decision, Democrats like Favreau continue to express an appetite to review Martin’s findings.
Favreau pressed Martin on rumors that Martin had made pledges to release some version of the autopsy.
&quot;NBC News said that before Easter about a month ago, you told DNC officers on a call to expect an executive summary in short order,&quot; Favreau said. &quot;I feel like an autopsy on what went wrong when we lost the popular vote in all those states in 2024 and figuring out what went wrong based on a big report is pretty important for everyone to know.&quot;
&quot;Jon, we’ve already been sharing that with a number of folks, including the DNC and other people,&quot; Martin said.
Martin’s answer sparked skepticism online.
 &quot;This interview will make your blood boil, and it’s a case study in how *not* to handle a self-inflicted crisis,&quot; Michael LaRosa, a former spokesperson for Jill Biden, said in a post to X.
&quot;The DNC Chair was right to show up. But the answers were tone-deaf, overly clever and ultimately unpersuasive. To donors and voters alike, it risks sounding disingenuous.&quot;
DEMOCRATS IN DISARRAY: KEN MARTIN&apos;S TENURE SO FAR AT DNC RIPPED
&quot;Democrats are allergic to accountability,&quot; Briahna Joy Gray, a former national press secretary for Sen. Bernie Sanders&apos; failed 2020 presidential campaign, posted on X.
&quot;See, the mistake the DNC made is they could’ve released the report earlier in the spring, whatever’s in it, you get two weeks of bad publicity, then Trump does something stupid and everyone forgets,&quot; Rotimi Adeoye, a former Democratic operative who is serving as a contributing opinion writer for The New York Times, wrote on X. 
&quot;Now it feels like something’s being hidden, which makes it way more salacious.&quot;</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f401eaa200899a00e5f030</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>DNC chair ripped for downplaying unreleased 2024 autopsy after Dem losses: &apos;Self-inflicted crisis&apos;</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:29:14.816Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>DNC chair ripped for downplaying unreleased 2024 autopsy after Dem losses: &apos;Self-inflicted crisis&apos;</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Ken Martin, the chairman of the Democratic National Committee, gave mixed signals Wednesday when asked if he would release some version of the 2024 autopsy, the unreleased report on what went wrong for Democrats in the last presidential election.
That document, a 200-page analysis conducted from over 300 interviews after the 2024 election, never saw the light of day after Martin ordered its creation, much to the frustration of onlookers like Jon Favreau, host of the &quot;Pod Save America&quot; podcast.
In a recent interview, Favreau pressed Martin on whether he would still consider releasing a summary of the findings.
&quot;We’ve been releasing that, Jon. The reality is we’re not hiding the ball on this. We have been sharing those things out. There’s no smoking gun here,&quot; Martin said.
OUTGOING DNC CHAIR SAYS DEMOCRATS SHOULD HAVE &apos;STUCK BY&apos; BIDEN IN THE 2024 ELECTION
The moment between Favreau and Martin underscores concerns Democrats have grappled with for the better part of two years that the party is struggling to be transparent about what it needs to change to find success in the future.
Democrats received a blow in November 2024 as Republicans stormed to power in a governing trifecta with control over the House of Representatives, Senate and White House. The loss has left Democrats struggling to find a national platform to rally around, and they are at odds over what mistakes the party should avoid repeating.
Shortly after becoming DNC chair in February 2025, Martin ordered an autopsy on the loss but pulled the plug on releasing it, arguing that it would distract from the party’s overarching goals.
&quot;We completed a comprehensive review of what happened in 2024 and are already putting our learnings into motion. And we&apos;re winning again — even in places that haven&apos;t gone blue in decades. In our conversations with stakeholders from across the Democratic ecosystem, we are aligned on what’s important, and that’s learning from the past and winning the future.
BIDEN TEAM, DEMOCRATS NEED TO ADMIT THEY WERE GASLIGHTING ABOUT PRESIDENT&apos;S FITNESS: BOOK AUTHORS
&quot;Here’s our North Star: does this help us win? If the answer is no, it’s a distraction from the core mission.&quot;
But, months after that decision, Democrats like Favreau continue to express an appetite to review Martin’s findings.
Favreau pressed Martin on rumors that Martin had made pledges to release some version of the autopsy.
&quot;NBC News said that before Easter about a month ago, you told DNC officers on a call to expect an executive summary in short order,&quot; Favreau said. &quot;I feel like an autopsy on what went wrong when we lost the popular vote in all those states in 2024 and figuring out what went wrong based on a big report is pretty important for everyone to know.&quot;
&quot;Jon, we’ve already been sharing that with a number of folks, including the DNC and other people,&quot; Martin said.
Martin’s answer sparked skepticism online.
 &quot;This interview will make your blood boil, and it’s a case study in how *not* to handle a self-inflicted crisis,&quot; Michael LaRosa, a former spokesperson for Jill Biden, said in a post to X.
&quot;The DNC Chair was right to show up. But the answers were tone-deaf, overly clever and ultimately unpersuasive. To donors and voters alike, it risks sounding disingenuous.&quot;
DEMOCRATS IN DISARRAY: KEN MARTIN&apos;S TENURE SO FAR AT DNC RIPPED
&quot;Democrats are allergic to accountability,&quot; Briahna Joy Gray, a former national press secretary for Sen. Bernie Sanders&apos; failed 2020 presidential campaign, posted on X.
&quot;See, the mistake the DNC made is they could’ve released the report earlier in the spring, whatever’s in it, you get two weeks of bad publicity, then Trump does something stupid and everyone forgets,&quot; Rotimi Adeoye, a former Democratic operative who is serving as a contributing opinion writer for The New York Times, wrote on X. 
&quot;Now it feels like something’s being hidden, which makes it way more salacious.&quot;</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
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		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f401e9a200899a00e5f027</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Athletics coach ejected after Royals pitcher&apos;s broken chain leads to quick pitch controversy</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:29:13.389Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Athletics coach ejected after Royals pitcher&apos;s broken chain leads to quick pitch controversy</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Normally on the diamond, jewelry isn&apos;t much of an issue for baseball players, but Michael Wacha&apos;s necklace broke and caused an explosive chain reaction.
In the first inning of the Athletics’ 5-2 win over the Kansas City Royals Wednesday night at Sutter Health Park, Wacha’s chain broke. As Wacha was standing on the mound, he gathered the broken chain from his neck and put it in his back pocket.
Immediately after putting his chain away, Wacha started his delivery to beat the pitch clock and fired a sinker in for a strike. 
However, Athletics left fielder Carlos Cortes was not ready for the pitch because he thought time might be granted for Wacha’s broken chain.
CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM
Athletics coach Chris Cron took issue with Wacha’s quick pitch and let John Libka hear it. Cron was ejected almost immediately after complaining to Libka.
&quot;I’m not listening to you, not you,&quot; Libka said, his comments heard on a broadcast. &quot;Get out of here!&quot;
Athletics manager Mark Kotsay then walked out to Libka to clarify which member of his coaching staff was ejected.
Athletics’ broadcaster Dallas Braden was impressed with how seamless Wacha’s delivery was after putting his chain away.
ZERO BS. JUST DAKICH. TAKE THE DON&apos;T @ ME PODCAST ON THE ROAD. DOWNLOAD NOW!
&quot;How about that. All in one fell swoop. Michael Wacha gonna put the chain in his back pocket,&quot; Braden said.
&quot;What (Cron) is upset about is the fact that Cortes was standing in the box, and then he waited because Wacha was clearly dealing with an issue, dealing with something, didn’t step off and all in one motion took the chain off, put it in his back pocket and then stepped right into his windup, delivery and came home,&quot; Braden said.
&quot;At no point was Cortes engaged after Wacha decided to get the motion going.&quot;
Cron couldn’t just turn around and walk down the tunnel into the clubhouse. Because the clubhouse is in the outfield, Cron had to walk through the field. As he walked, fans gave him a round of applause.
Cortes ended up walking in that at-bat, so no harm, no foul. He went 2-for-3 in the A’s win.
Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f401d7a200899a00e5f01e</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Athletics coach ejected after Royals pitcher&apos;s broken chain leads to quick pitch controversy</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:28:55.130Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Athletics coach ejected after Royals pitcher&apos;s broken chain leads to quick pitch controversy</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Normally on the diamond, jewelry isn&apos;t much of an issue for baseball players, but Michael Wacha&apos;s necklace broke and caused an explosive chain reaction.
In the first inning of the Athletics’ 5-2 win over the Kansas City Royals Wednesday night at Sutter Health Park, Wacha’s chain broke. As Wacha was standing on the mound, he gathered the broken chain from his neck and put it in his back pocket.
Immediately after putting his chain away, Wacha started his delivery to beat the pitch clock and fired a sinker in for a strike. 
However, Athletics left fielder Carlos Cortes was not ready for the pitch because he thought time might be granted for Wacha’s broken chain.
CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM
Athletics coach Chris Cron took issue with Wacha’s quick pitch and let John Libka hear it. Cron was ejected almost immediately after complaining to Libka.
&quot;I’m not listening to you, not you,&quot; Libka said, his comments heard on a broadcast. &quot;Get out of here!&quot;
Athletics manager Mark Kotsay then walked out to Libka to clarify which member of his coaching staff was ejected.
Athletics’ broadcaster Dallas Braden was impressed with how seamless Wacha’s delivery was after putting his chain away.
ZERO BS. JUST DAKICH. TAKE THE DON&apos;T @ ME PODCAST ON THE ROAD. DOWNLOAD NOW!
&quot;How about that. All in one fell swoop. Michael Wacha gonna put the chain in his back pocket,&quot; Braden said.
&quot;What (Cron) is upset about is the fact that Cortes was standing in the box, and then he waited because Wacha was clearly dealing with an issue, dealing with something, didn’t step off and all in one motion took the chain off, put it in his back pocket and then stepped right into his windup, delivery and came home,&quot; Braden said.
&quot;At no point was Cortes engaged after Wacha decided to get the motion going.&quot;
Cron couldn’t just turn around and walk down the tunnel into the clubhouse. Because the clubhouse is in the outfield, Cron had to walk through the field. As he walked, fans gave him a round of applause.
Cortes ended up walking in that at-bat, so no harm, no foul. He went 2-for-3 in the A’s win.
Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f401d5a200899a00e5f015</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Tim Allen trolls ‘No Kings’ lawmakers for fawning over actual King Charles</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:28:53.963Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Tim Allen trolls ‘No Kings’ lawmakers for fawning over actual King Charles</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Comedian Tim Allen is criticizing lawmakers who attended King Charles III’s speech before Congress this week while also blasting President Donald Trump during the &quot;No Kings&quot; protests.
After King Charles’ historic address to a joint session of Congress on Tuesday, his first as monarch, Allen took to X to mock the irony of the moment, posting a photo of the speech.
&quot;Would have been funny to see the facial reactions of an actual King with a no Kings parade yelling at him,&quot; Allen wrote.
The &quot;Last Man Standing&quot; star’s post received 75,000 views on X, with commenters pointing out the irony. 
COMEDIAN CRAIG FERGUSON EXPLAINS WHY HIS STAND-UP TOUR SKIPS TRUMP AND ALL POLITICS
&quot;The party chanting ‘no kings’ was clamoring to stand in ovation of a real King,&quot; one user wrote. Another user added, &quot;The democrats give an actual king a standing ovation. The irony.&quot;
&quot;I was on my way to hear an actual King speak… Funny how the ‘No Kings’ crowd is nowhere to be found. Guess the outrage depends on who’s talking?&quot; Rep. Greg Steube, R-Fla., posted.
RESURFACED CLIP OF JOHNNY CARSON&apos;S GRACE AFTER REAGAN SHOOTING CONTRASTS WITH KIMMEL
The official White House X account even joined in on the trolling, posting a photo of Trump and King Charles together with the caption: &quot;TWO KINGS.&quot;
Allen rocketed to fame by appearing on popular comedies like &quot;Home Improvement&quot; and lending his voice to the &quot;Toy Story&quot; film franchise. 
Earlier this year, he posted about his 13-month journey finishing the Bible, writing on X that he was &quot;Humbled, enlightened and amazed at what I read and what I learned. I will rest and meditate on so much. I will begin it again.&quot;
FROM SOUTHERN CLUBS TO NETFLIX: HOW CLEAN COMIC DERRICK STROUP IS STOPPING AUDIENCES IN THEIR TRACKS
The &quot;No Kings&quot; protests gained national attention in 2026, including a demonstration on March 28 where millions marched across the country. The movement argues Trump has acted like a king and should be held accountable, often citing his immigration agenda and the use of federal agents in major cities.
Among the Democrats who attended King Charles’ address was Minnesota Rep. Ilhan Omar, who took photos during the event. Some social media users pointed out that Omar was a featured speaker at a major &quot;No Kings&quot; rally at the Minnesota State Capitol just weeks earlier.
Trump has repeatedly denied allegations of him being a king. During an interview with CBS’ &quot;60 Minutes&quot; days before the royal visit, Trump told reporter Norah O’Donnell, &quot;I&apos;m not a king. What I am, if I was a king, I wouldn&apos;t be dealing with you.&quot;</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f401c3a200899a00e5f00c</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Tim Allen trolls ‘No Kings’ lawmakers for fawning over actual King Charles</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:28:35.248Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Tim Allen trolls ‘No Kings’ lawmakers for fawning over actual King Charles</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Comedian Tim Allen is criticizing lawmakers who attended King Charles III’s speech before Congress this week while also blasting President Donald Trump during the &quot;No Kings&quot; protests.
After King Charles’ historic address to a joint session of Congress on Tuesday, his first as monarch, Allen took to X to mock the irony of the moment, posting a photo of the speech.
&quot;Would have been funny to see the facial reactions of an actual King with a no Kings parade yelling at him,&quot; Allen wrote.
The &quot;Last Man Standing&quot; star’s post received 75,000 views on X, with commenters pointing out the irony. 
COMEDIAN CRAIG FERGUSON EXPLAINS WHY HIS STAND-UP TOUR SKIPS TRUMP AND ALL POLITICS
&quot;The party chanting ‘no kings’ was clamoring to stand in ovation of a real King,&quot; one user wrote. Another user added, &quot;The democrats give an actual king a standing ovation. The irony.&quot;
&quot;I was on my way to hear an actual King speak… Funny how the ‘No Kings’ crowd is nowhere to be found. Guess the outrage depends on who’s talking?&quot; Rep. Greg Steube, R-Fla., posted.
RESURFACED CLIP OF JOHNNY CARSON&apos;S GRACE AFTER REAGAN SHOOTING CONTRASTS WITH KIMMEL
The official White House X account even joined in on the trolling, posting a photo of Trump and King Charles together with the caption: &quot;TWO KINGS.&quot;
Allen rocketed to fame by appearing on popular comedies like &quot;Home Improvement&quot; and lending his voice to the &quot;Toy Story&quot; film franchise. 
Earlier this year, he posted about his 13-month journey finishing the Bible, writing on X that he was &quot;Humbled, enlightened and amazed at what I read and what I learned. I will rest and meditate on so much. I will begin it again.&quot;
FROM SOUTHERN CLUBS TO NETFLIX: HOW CLEAN COMIC DERRICK STROUP IS STOPPING AUDIENCES IN THEIR TRACKS
The &quot;No Kings&quot; protests gained national attention in 2026, including a demonstration on March 28 where millions marched across the country. The movement argues Trump has acted like a king and should be held accountable, often citing his immigration agenda and the use of federal agents in major cities.
Among the Democrats who attended King Charles’ address was Minnesota Rep. Ilhan Omar, who took photos during the event. Some social media users pointed out that Omar was a featured speaker at a major &quot;No Kings&quot; rally at the Minnesota State Capitol just weeks earlier.
Trump has repeatedly denied allegations of him being a king. During an interview with CBS’ &quot;60 Minutes&quot; days before the royal visit, Trump told reporter Norah O’Donnell, &quot;I&apos;m not a king. What I am, if I was a king, I wouldn&apos;t be dealing with you.&quot;</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f401c2a200899a00e5f003</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Minnesota lawmakers unload on Walz&apos;s &apos;legacy&apos; after he touts fraud record in final address: &apos;Ridiculous&apos;</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:28:34.152Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Minnesota lawmakers unload on Walz&apos;s &apos;legacy&apos; after he touts fraud record in final address: &apos;Ridiculous&apos;</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz gave his final State of the State address earlier this week, and his comments on the massive fraud scandal in the state, which came toward the end of his speech, quickly sparked blowback from Republican lawmakers in the state who spoke to Fox News Digital. 
&quot;It was ridiculous,&quot; state Rep. Kristin Robbins, R-Minn., chair of the House Fraud Prevention and State Agency Oversight Committee, said about Walz&apos;s comments on the fraud scandal. &quot;He somewhat said, &apos;Oh, the buck stops with me,&apos; but then he immediately pivoted to blame everyone else.&quot;
Walz touted his efforts to crack down on fraud during his speech while claiming that red states have more fraud than blue states and suggesting the legislature needs to do more to adopt his proposal to fight fraud.
&quot;We&apos;ve created additional checks and balances,&quot; Walz said. &quot;We&apos;ve brought on more investigators, more auditors, more law enforcement agencies, as well as an outside firm to take a look at high-risk programs. People who have ripped us off are getting caught, and they are going to jail, just like today.&quot;
&apos;INCOMPETENCE OR DERELICTION&apos;: MINNESOTA LAWMAKER RIPS TIM WALZ AS STATE FRAUD LOSSES MOUNT
Walz&apos;s reference to &quot;today&quot; was in relation to federal raids carried out across Minneapolis earlier that day, which the governor faced criticism over, including from FBI Director Kash Patel, after he seemingly took credit for actions the federal government says it directed and orchestrated.
&quot;Minnesota is consistently ranked as one of the best states to live in because we invest in programs that support children, parents, seniors and people with disabilities,&quot; Walz said in the speech. &quot;But, as we&apos;ve seen in recent months, and just today, the more generous your support system, the more oversight you need to make sure people aren&apos;t taking unfair advantage.&quot;
Walz pointed to the legislature and called on it to adopt his plan to combat fraud, which Robbins said will do &quot;nothing but create more bureaucracy&quot; and said the Republican proposals are more &quot;serious&quot; to actually address the issue.
JD VANCE COMPARES GOV TIM WALZ TO AN &apos;ARSONIST&apos; FOR ALLEGEDLY TRYING TO TAKE CREDIT FOR FBI FRAUD RAIDS
&quot;He can keep gaslighting people, but nobody buys it anymore,&quot; Robbins said.
State Sen. Mark Koran, R-Minn., reacted to the speech by telling Fox News Digital, &quot;Governor Walz tried to wallpaper over his legacy by praising his failed policies and massive government expansion.
&quot;The truth is, he leaves behind a legacy of widespread fraud, higher taxes on Minnesota families and a reckless 40% increase in state spending.&quot;
State Sen. Michael Holmstrom, R-Minn., told Fox News Digital the governor treated the speech like a &quot;farewell victory lap,&quot; but &quot;his record of failed leadership and malfeasance will be his legacy.&quot;
Walz&apos;s speech was blasted by conservatives on social media as well, including the Republican National Committee&apos;s social media account on X, which posted, &quot;INSANE Tim Walz blames Minnesota’s &apos;generosity&apos; for the billions of dollars in fraud he allowed.&quot;
Fox News Digital reached out to Walz&apos;s office for comment.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f401afa200899a00e5effa</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Minnesota lawmakers unload on Walz&apos;s &apos;legacy&apos; after he touts fraud record in final address: &apos;Ridiculous&apos;</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:28:15.672Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Minnesota lawmakers unload on Walz&apos;s &apos;legacy&apos; after he touts fraud record in final address: &apos;Ridiculous&apos;</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz gave his final State of the State address earlier this week, and his comments on the massive fraud scandal in the state, which came toward the end of his speech, quickly sparked blowback from Republican lawmakers in the state who spoke to Fox News Digital. 
&quot;It was ridiculous,&quot; state Rep. Kristin Robbins, R-Minn., chair of the House Fraud Prevention and State Agency Oversight Committee, said about Walz&apos;s comments on the fraud scandal. &quot;He somewhat said, &apos;Oh, the buck stops with me,&apos; but then he immediately pivoted to blame everyone else.&quot;
Walz touted his efforts to crack down on fraud during his speech while claiming that red states have more fraud than blue states and suggesting the legislature needs to do more to adopt his proposal to fight fraud.
&quot;We&apos;ve created additional checks and balances,&quot; Walz said. &quot;We&apos;ve brought on more investigators, more auditors, more law enforcement agencies, as well as an outside firm to take a look at high-risk programs. People who have ripped us off are getting caught, and they are going to jail, just like today.&quot;
&apos;INCOMPETENCE OR DERELICTION&apos;: MINNESOTA LAWMAKER RIPS TIM WALZ AS STATE FRAUD LOSSES MOUNT
Walz&apos;s reference to &quot;today&quot; was in relation to federal raids carried out across Minneapolis earlier that day, which the governor faced criticism over, including from FBI Director Kash Patel, after he seemingly took credit for actions the federal government says it directed and orchestrated.
&quot;Minnesota is consistently ranked as one of the best states to live in because we invest in programs that support children, parents, seniors and people with disabilities,&quot; Walz said in the speech. &quot;But, as we&apos;ve seen in recent months, and just today, the more generous your support system, the more oversight you need to make sure people aren&apos;t taking unfair advantage.&quot;
Walz pointed to the legislature and called on it to adopt his plan to combat fraud, which Robbins said will do &quot;nothing but create more bureaucracy&quot; and said the Republican proposals are more &quot;serious&quot; to actually address the issue.
JD VANCE COMPARES GOV TIM WALZ TO AN &apos;ARSONIST&apos; FOR ALLEGEDLY TRYING TO TAKE CREDIT FOR FBI FRAUD RAIDS
&quot;He can keep gaslighting people, but nobody buys it anymore,&quot; Robbins said.
State Sen. Mark Koran, R-Minn., reacted to the speech by telling Fox News Digital, &quot;Governor Walz tried to wallpaper over his legacy by praising his failed policies and massive government expansion.
&quot;The truth is, he leaves behind a legacy of widespread fraud, higher taxes on Minnesota families and a reckless 40% increase in state spending.&quot;
State Sen. Michael Holmstrom, R-Minn., told Fox News Digital the governor treated the speech like a &quot;farewell victory lap,&quot; but &quot;his record of failed leadership and malfeasance will be his legacy.&quot;
Walz&apos;s speech was blasted by conservatives on social media as well, including the Republican National Committee&apos;s social media account on X, which posted, &quot;INSANE Tim Walz blames Minnesota’s &apos;generosity&apos; for the billions of dollars in fraud he allowed.&quot;
Fox News Digital reached out to Walz&apos;s office for comment.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f401aea200899a00e5eff1</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Colts decline Anthony Richardson&apos;s fifth-year option, setting former No. 4 overall pick up for free agency</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:28:14.306Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Colts decline Anthony Richardson&apos;s fifth-year option, setting former No. 4 overall pick up for free agency</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The Indianapolis Colts have declined quarterback Anthony Richardson’s fifth-year option.
Richardson, the team’s No. 4 overall pick of the 2023 NFL Draft, is headed for free agency after the 2026 season.
The move was one many viewed as inevitable considering the tumultuous start Richardson has had to his NFL career. 
The Florida product has dealt with a number of injuries and inconsistent play, and the Colts looked outside the organization for quarterback help before the start of the 2025 season.
CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM
Indy was high on Richardson when it took him with the fourth overall pick of that year’s draft, though there were some who questioned if he was NFL ready right away.
That proved not to be the case. Richardson split time with veteran journeyman Gardner Minshew in 2023, while Joe Flacco eventually took over for him in 2024.
Richardson eventually got his starting spot back over Flacco in 2024, with the Colts announcing he would be the team’s starter the rest of the way.
But he was benched prior to Flacco coming in after voluntarily taking himself out of a game for one play, saying he &quot;needed a breather.&quot; The move was ridiculed by pundits and fans, and the Colts ultimately made an example of it.
The Colts signed Daniel Jones during the 2025 offseason after the New York Giants released him midway through the 2024 campaign, parting ways with their own first-round pick who had a roller-coaster tenure with the franchise. Jones and Richardson were pitted in an open quarterback battle at the start of training camp, and, on Aug. 19, Jones was named the team’s starter.
Richardson served as Jones’ backup to begin the year, but he was placed on the injured reserve after a freak accident fractured an orbital bone in his eye during pregame warmups.
Richardson also dealt with a grade-three AC joint sprain that required an IR stint during his rookie season. It was initially supposed to be a one-to-two-month recovery, but he needed surgery to repair the shoulder.
Richardson heads into his fourth NFL season fighting for his next contract, whether it’s with the Colts or elsewhere.
Jones re-signed with Indianapolis for two years and $88 million with $50 million guaranteed, and rookie Riley Leonard remains on the depth chart.
Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f4019ba200899a00e5efe8</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Colts decline Anthony Richardson&apos;s fifth-year option, setting former No. 4 overall pick up for free agency</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:27:55.968Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Colts decline Anthony Richardson&apos;s fifth-year option, setting former No. 4 overall pick up for free agency</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The Indianapolis Colts have declined quarterback Anthony Richardson’s fifth-year option.
Richardson, the team’s No. 4 overall pick of the 2023 NFL Draft, is headed for free agency after the 2026 season.
The move was one many viewed as inevitable considering the tumultuous start Richardson has had to his NFL career. 
The Florida product has dealt with a number of injuries and inconsistent play, and the Colts looked outside the organization for quarterback help before the start of the 2025 season.
CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM
Indy was high on Richardson when it took him with the fourth overall pick of that year’s draft, though there were some who questioned if he was NFL ready right away.
That proved not to be the case. Richardson split time with veteran journeyman Gardner Minshew in 2023, while Joe Flacco eventually took over for him in 2024.
Richardson eventually got his starting spot back over Flacco in 2024, with the Colts announcing he would be the team’s starter the rest of the way.
But he was benched prior to Flacco coming in after voluntarily taking himself out of a game for one play, saying he &quot;needed a breather.&quot; The move was ridiculed by pundits and fans, and the Colts ultimately made an example of it.
The Colts signed Daniel Jones during the 2025 offseason after the New York Giants released him midway through the 2024 campaign, parting ways with their own first-round pick who had a roller-coaster tenure with the franchise. Jones and Richardson were pitted in an open quarterback battle at the start of training camp, and, on Aug. 19, Jones was named the team’s starter.
Richardson served as Jones’ backup to begin the year, but he was placed on the injured reserve after a freak accident fractured an orbital bone in his eye during pregame warmups.
Richardson also dealt with a grade-three AC joint sprain that required an IR stint during his rookie season. It was initially supposed to be a one-to-two-month recovery, but he needed surgery to repair the shoulder.
Richardson heads into his fourth NFL season fighting for his next contract, whether it’s with the Colts or elsewhere.
Jones re-signed with Indianapolis for two years and $88 million with $50 million guaranteed, and rookie Riley Leonard remains on the depth chart.
Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f4019aa200899a00e5efdf</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Mother-in-law of slain beauty queen arrested after international manhunt</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:27:54.732Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Mother-in-law of slain beauty queen arrested after international manhunt</news:title>
			<news:keywords>After a two-week manhunt, authorities have arrested the suspected fugitive mother-in-law accused of killing a former Mexican beauty queen, Mexican officials announced Thursday.
Authorities said 27-year-old Carolina Flores Gómez, who was crowned Miss Teen Universe Baja California in 2017, was fatally shot April 15 inside her apartment in one of Mexico City’s most affluent neighborhoods, according to local outlet El País.
Erika María Herrera was captured in Venezuela after Mexican authorities obtained an arrest warrant and worked in coordination with Interpol to issue a Red Notice, enabling Venezuelan law enforcement to locate and detain her after the alleged murder, Mexican officials said. 
&quot;The detained individual is currently in the custody of authorities in that country, while the necessary procedures are carried out to formalize her extradition to Mexico,&quot; the Mexico City Attorney General’s Office said.
VIRGINIA NANNY’S JAILHOUSE LETTERS REVEAL CONFLICTING LOYALTIES IN LOVE TRIANGLE MURDER TRIAL
Herrera was identified as a lead suspect in the murder investigation, according to local reports, after video evidence later surfaced on social media showing the mother-in-law at the scene.
The victim was found with 12 gunshot wounds, including six to the head and six to the chest, inside a Polanco neighborhood apartment she shared with Herrera&apos;s son, Alejandro, and the couple’s 8-month-old child, Mexican outlet Record reported. 
The son is also under investigation after reports indicated he allowed his mother to flee before reporting the shooting the next day, raising the possibility of a cover-up, El País added.
CALIFORNIA MAN ACCUSED OF KILLING WIFE AND FLEEING WITH KIDS NABBED IN SOUTH AMERICA
Video recorded by a baby monitor and released by local outlet Reforma, appeared to capture the moments leading up to the alleged killing, all while the son was nearby caring for the baby.
In the clip, the mother was seen following Flores into a room before multiple gunshots were heard followed by a scream.
In response, the son appeared to walk into the frame holding his child to confront his mother, asking what had happened.
CONNECTICUT MAN ALLEGEDLY KILLED A MOTHER, HER INFANT SON OVER $400 SHE OWED HIM FOR RENTING CAR
In a baffling turn, Maria appeared to respond callously to her son.
&quot;Nothing, she just made me angry,&quot; the mom said as she walked away.
&quot;What are you doing? She is my family,&quot; he said. 
The mother was then heard explaining, &quot;You are mine, and she stole you.&quot;
Flores’ mother, Reyna Gomez Molina, told Univision News the son allegedly delayed reporting the incident out of fear that the child would be placed in foster care.  
&quot;Thinking that if he was arrested, the baby would go to a children’s home. He made sure to record videos so they would know how to feed the child while he was away taking care of all the paperwork. That’s what he told me,&quot; she said, adding that her offer to take care of her grandson was declined.
She had also pressed the son to clarify whether he had been next to the victim the entire time before reporting the incident but did not provide further details, according to the outlet.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40188a200899a00e5efd6</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Mother-in-law of slain beauty queen arrested after international manhunt</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:27:36.142Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Mother-in-law of slain beauty queen arrested after international manhunt</news:title>
			<news:keywords>After a two-week manhunt, authorities have arrested the suspected fugitive mother-in-law accused of killing a former Mexican beauty queen, Mexican officials announced Thursday.
Authorities said 27-year-old Carolina Flores Gómez, who was crowned Miss Teen Universe Baja California in 2017, was fatally shot April 15 inside her apartment in one of Mexico City’s most affluent neighborhoods, according to local outlet El País.
Erika María Herrera was captured in Venezuela after Mexican authorities obtained an arrest warrant and worked in coordination with Interpol to issue a Red Notice, enabling Venezuelan law enforcement to locate and detain her after the alleged murder, Mexican officials said. 
&quot;The detained individual is currently in the custody of authorities in that country, while the necessary procedures are carried out to formalize her extradition to Mexico,&quot; the Mexico City Attorney General’s Office said.
VIRGINIA NANNY’S JAILHOUSE LETTERS REVEAL CONFLICTING LOYALTIES IN LOVE TRIANGLE MURDER TRIAL
Herrera was identified as a lead suspect in the murder investigation, according to local reports, after video evidence later surfaced on social media showing the mother-in-law at the scene.
The victim was found with 12 gunshot wounds, including six to the head and six to the chest, inside a Polanco neighborhood apartment she shared with Herrera&apos;s son, Alejandro, and the couple’s 8-month-old child, Mexican outlet Record reported. 
The son is also under investigation after reports indicated he allowed his mother to flee before reporting the shooting the next day, raising the possibility of a cover-up, El País added.
CALIFORNIA MAN ACCUSED OF KILLING WIFE AND FLEEING WITH KIDS NABBED IN SOUTH AMERICA
Video recorded by a baby monitor and released by local outlet Reforma, appeared to capture the moments leading up to the alleged killing, all while the son was nearby caring for the baby.
In the clip, the mother was seen following Flores into a room before multiple gunshots were heard followed by a scream.
In response, the son appeared to walk into the frame holding his child to confront his mother, asking what had happened.
CONNECTICUT MAN ALLEGEDLY KILLED A MOTHER, HER INFANT SON OVER $400 SHE OWED HIM FOR RENTING CAR
In a baffling turn, Maria appeared to respond callously to her son.
&quot;Nothing, she just made me angry,&quot; the mom said as she walked away.
&quot;What are you doing? She is my family,&quot; he said. 
The mother was then heard explaining, &quot;You are mine, and she stole you.&quot;
Flores’ mother, Reyna Gomez Molina, told Univision News the son allegedly delayed reporting the incident out of fear that the child would be placed in foster care.  
&quot;Thinking that if he was arrested, the baby would go to a children’s home. He made sure to record videos so they would know how to feed the child while he was away taking care of all the paperwork. That’s what he told me,&quot; she said, adding that her offer to take care of her grandson was declined.
She had also pressed the son to clarify whether he had been next to the victim the entire time before reporting the incident but did not provide further details, according to the outlet.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40187a200899a00e5efcd</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>‘The Apprentice’ reboot buzz builds as Trump says Don Jr. has ‘charisma’ for the role</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:27:35.114Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>‘The Apprentice’ reboot buzz builds as Trump says Don Jr. has ‘charisma’ for the role</news:title>
			<news:keywords>President Donald Trump is addressing the rumors that &quot;The Apprentice&quot; is set to return with his son, Donald Trump Jr. at the helm.
On Thursday, Trump took reporter questions in the Oval Office and was asked about his thoughts on the reality series making a return.
&quot;Well, I’ve been hearing it,&quot; Trump began, referring to the rumored return.
&quot;Look, we had a great success. 14 seasons and ‘The Apprentice’ was a tremendous success, so I’ve been hearing that a little bit.
TRUMP CAMPAIGN SAYS IT WILL SUE &apos;THE APPRENTICE&apos; FILMMAKERS: &apos;THIS GARBAGE IS PURE FICTION&apos;
&quot;So, we’ll see what happens. He’s a good guy. He’d be probably good. He’s got a little charisma going. You need a little charisma for that sucker. So, we’ll see what happens,&quot; Trump concluded.
LIKE WHAT YOU’RE READING? CLICK HERE FOR MORE ENTERTAINMENT NEWS
WATCH: ‘We’ll see’: Trump doesn&apos;t deny potential ‘The Apprentice&apos; return
&quot;The Apprentice&quot; first aired in 2004 with Trump as the host. He continued in that role until 2015, with various seasons and celebrity editions airing throughout that period. The series aired its final episode in 2017.
CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR THE ENTERTAINMENT NEWSLETTER
The reality TV series followed a group of contestants competing in business-related challenges for the chance to win a high-level job opportunity.
Trump’s son doesn’t have a history of reality television, but he has served as an executive vice president overseeing real estate development and acquisitions in the Trump business.
Don Jr. was also heavily involved Trump’s presidential campaigns and administration, often acting as a surrogate and public advocate. He has also authored books and maintains an active presence in media and public speaking.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40174a200899a00e5efc4</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>‘The Apprentice’ reboot buzz builds as Trump says Don Jr. has ‘charisma’ for the role</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:27:16.398Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>‘The Apprentice’ reboot buzz builds as Trump says Don Jr. has ‘charisma’ for the role</news:title>
			<news:keywords>President Donald Trump is addressing the rumors that &quot;The Apprentice&quot; is set to return with his son, Donald Trump Jr. at the helm.
On Thursday, Trump took reporter questions in the Oval Office and was asked about his thoughts on the reality series making a return.
&quot;Well, I’ve been hearing it,&quot; Trump began, referring to the rumored return.
&quot;Look, we had a great success. 14 seasons and ‘The Apprentice’ was a tremendous success, so I’ve been hearing that a little bit.
TRUMP CAMPAIGN SAYS IT WILL SUE &apos;THE APPRENTICE&apos; FILMMAKERS: &apos;THIS GARBAGE IS PURE FICTION&apos;
&quot;So, we’ll see what happens. He’s a good guy. He’d be probably good. He’s got a little charisma going. You need a little charisma for that sucker. So, we’ll see what happens,&quot; Trump concluded.
LIKE WHAT YOU’RE READING? CLICK HERE FOR MORE ENTERTAINMENT NEWS
WATCH: ‘We’ll see’: Trump doesn&apos;t deny potential ‘The Apprentice&apos; return
&quot;The Apprentice&quot; first aired in 2004 with Trump as the host. He continued in that role until 2015, with various seasons and celebrity editions airing throughout that period. The series aired its final episode in 2017.
CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR THE ENTERTAINMENT NEWSLETTER
The reality TV series followed a group of contestants competing in business-related challenges for the chance to win a high-level job opportunity.
Trump’s son doesn’t have a history of reality television, but he has served as an executive vice president overseeing real estate development and acquisitions in the Trump business.
Don Jr. was also heavily involved Trump’s presidential campaigns and administration, often acting as a surrogate and public advocate. He has also authored books and maintains an active presence in media and public speaking.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40173a200899a00e5efbb</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>GOP lawmakers seek to defund HBCU after it canceled Republican&apos;s commencement speech</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:27:15.645Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>GOP lawmakers seek to defund HBCU after it canceled Republican&apos;s commencement speech</news:title>
			<news:keywords>South Carolina Republicans are pushing to strip funding from the state’s only public HBCU after the university rescinded Republican Lt. Gov. Pamela Evette’s commencement invitation following student protests and security concerns.
What began as a student protest over a conservative commencement speaker, resulted in &quot;credible safety threats,&quot; according to Evette, who spoke to Fox News Digital after her commencement address at South Carolina State University was canceled. Following an uproar from students, who decried Evette&apos;s views on diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI), abortion and her support for President Donald Trump, among other issues, the University president put out a statement indicating that &quot;out of an abundance of caution for safety&quot; the college would be &quot;mov[ing] in a different direction for this Spring commencement.&quot;
&quot;From the outset, our decision to invite Lt. Gov. Pamela Evette as our Spring 2026 Commencement speaker was rooted in her record as a business leader and entrepreneur. As the founder and former CEO of a company that grew from a startup into a billion-dollar enterprise, she represents the kind of innovation, resilience and real-world achievement that aligns with the aspirations of our graduates,&quot; the statement read. &quot;We are grateful to Lt. Gov. Evette for her willingness to engage with our students and for her time and consideration in accepting the invitation.&quot;
NORTH CAROLINA TEEN SUES SCHOOL AFTER CHARLIE KIRK TRIBUTE SPARKED ‘CRIMINAL INVESTIGATION’ AND CENSORSHIP
Pressure from students, including multiple protests around South Carolina State&apos;s campus, led up to the ultimate decision to rescind the invitation for Evette, which the Lt. Gov. said was sent to her in December. The Lt. Gov. indicated to Fox News Digital that she never publicized her address, or shared publicly what she would speak about.
Evette described the protesters as a &quot;woke mob,&quot; earning her backlash, but she refused to back down from the statement when talking to Fox News Digital. According to Evette, attorneys from South Carolina State called attorneys in her office, telling them the reason for canceling the event was due to &quot;credible threats.&quot;
&quot;It&apos;s what we&apos;ve seen all across the country,&quot; Evette, who is also running for governor in The Palmetto State, told Fox News Digital. &quot;Somebody with a conservative point of view shows up and everybody wants to cancel them. We saw it with Charlie Kirk, and we saw with Riley Gaines, and we&apos;ve seen it with Ben Shapiro. I never thought I&apos;d be in that kind of list, but here we are and it&apos;s a real shame and it has to end.&quot;
NEBRASKA STATE SENATOR CAUGHT ON VIDEO REMOVING FOUNDERS&apos; PORTRAITS DEFENDS ACTIONS
Alexander Conyers, South Carolina State University&apos;s President, announced the decision to rescind Evette&apos;s invitation to a round of applause from students — a decision he said he made personally. In video of the announcement caught by local news, Conyers said he doesn&apos;t want people to think students at South Carolina State are &quot;thugs&quot; or a mob.&quot;
&quot;We are not a mob. We are just aware,&quot; South Carolina State University students, who repeatedly insisted their protests were peaceful, could be heard chanting as they marched in large groups around campus, seen in video shared by local South Carolina reporter Michael White.
&quot;Hey, hey! Ho! Ho! Pamela Evette gots to go!,&quot; the crowds chanted, including at night, around campus.
TPUSA URGES TRUMP ADMIN TO &apos;PULL EVERY LEVER AT ITS DISPOSAL&apos; TO OVERHAUL HIGHER EDUCATION
In another alleged sit-in-style protest, students were filmed inside a campus building decrying Trump as a pedophile, bigot, racist and a supporter of the police.
&quot;Being conservative is not the issue — that&apos;s alright, we all have our own political views. But she&apos;s explicitly said &apos;I am a Trump conservative.&apos; Okay, if you believe in Trump you support pedophilia, you support bigotry, you support racism, what else, pro-police — the same police that&apos;s killing our people — and also she supports ICE,&quot; one of the sit-in protesters can be heard saying in a video circulating on social media. &quot;She also would like to have  — because I&apos;m going to say a concentration camp  — that&apos;s not what they calling it but you all want to bring on of those here to or state. We don&apos;t believe in that.&quot;
Zaria Tucker, the South Carolina State Student Government Association President, echoed the point about students&apos; anger not being about politics during an address at a board of trustees meeting.
&apos;TOXIC&apos; BY DESIGN? THE LAW STUDENTS WHO SAY CAMPUS DISCOMFORT IS THE POINT
&quot;Commencement is not about politics, but more about representation. What we need as students. Not someone to come and tell us what they need to do as governor, or another position that they&apos;re running for in this state,&quot; Tucker said in the video shared online by White. &quot;But, more to uplift us as students. So, necessarily, that&apos;s what the main goal will always be, as the Student Government Association president.&quot;
In response to the decision from Conyers and South Carolina State University, Republican state legislators from the House Freedom Caucus called the decision by the college &quot;shameful&quot; and &quot;inexcusable&quot; that the university had to cancel Evette&apos;s speech &quot;because her safety could not be guaranteed on a state-funded campus.&quot;
The letter ended by requesting that &quot;no funding&quot; be included in the upcoming version of the state&apos;s funding.
&quot;If the Lt. Gov. of South Carolina is unwelcome due to different political ideologies and an inability to keep her safe, it is time to defund and reevaluate.,&quot; the letter, signed by nine GOP South Carolina State legislators, concluded.
During Evette&apos;s comments to Fox News Digital she said that she and current South Carolina Governor Henry McMaster have always ensured Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) in the state are funded, noting that despite a Republican super majority in the state legislature &quot;we have been very supportive.&quot; Evette added that President Trump &quot;has done more for them than any president and in history.&quot;
Meanwhile, the school invited former Democratic Party President Joe Biden to speak at their commencement ceremony in 2021, when Conyers was interim president of the school at the time.
&quot;Where is the faculty and where is the leadership and why aren&apos;t they setting the record straight why do these young people who obviously are very bright  — they&apos;re graduating college  — not know these basic facts about what&apos;s happening at the university they&apos;re attending.&quot;</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40160a200899a00e5efb2</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>GOP lawmakers seek to defund HBCU after it canceled Republican&apos;s commencement speech</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:26:56.857Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>GOP lawmakers seek to defund HBCU after it canceled Republican&apos;s commencement speech</news:title>
			<news:keywords>South Carolina Republicans are pushing to strip funding from the state’s only public HBCU after the university rescinded Republican Lt. Gov. Pamela Evette’s commencement invitation following student protests and security concerns.
What began as a student protest over a conservative commencement speaker, resulted in &quot;credible safety threats,&quot; according to Evette, who spoke to Fox News Digital after her commencement address at South Carolina State University was canceled. Following an uproar from students, who decried Evette&apos;s views on diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI), abortion and her support for President Donald Trump, among other issues, the University president put out a statement indicating that &quot;out of an abundance of caution for safety&quot; the college would be &quot;mov[ing] in a different direction for this Spring commencement.&quot;
&quot;From the outset, our decision to invite Lt. Gov. Pamela Evette as our Spring 2026 Commencement speaker was rooted in her record as a business leader and entrepreneur. As the founder and former CEO of a company that grew from a startup into a billion-dollar enterprise, she represents the kind of innovation, resilience and real-world achievement that aligns with the aspirations of our graduates,&quot; the statement read. &quot;We are grateful to Lt. Gov. Evette for her willingness to engage with our students and for her time and consideration in accepting the invitation.&quot;
NORTH CAROLINA TEEN SUES SCHOOL AFTER CHARLIE KIRK TRIBUTE SPARKED ‘CRIMINAL INVESTIGATION’ AND CENSORSHIP
Pressure from students, including multiple protests around South Carolina State&apos;s campus, led up to the ultimate decision to rescind the invitation for Evette, which the Lt. Gov. said was sent to her in December. The Lt. Gov. indicated to Fox News Digital that she never publicized her address, or shared publicly what she would speak about.
Evette described the protesters as a &quot;woke mob,&quot; earning her backlash, but she refused to back down from the statement when talking to Fox News Digital. According to Evette, attorneys from South Carolina State called attorneys in her office, telling them the reason for canceling the event was due to &quot;credible threats.&quot;
&quot;It&apos;s what we&apos;ve seen all across the country,&quot; Evette, who is also running for governor in The Palmetto State, told Fox News Digital. &quot;Somebody with a conservative point of view shows up and everybody wants to cancel them. We saw it with Charlie Kirk, and we saw with Riley Gaines, and we&apos;ve seen it with Ben Shapiro. I never thought I&apos;d be in that kind of list, but here we are and it&apos;s a real shame and it has to end.&quot;
NEBRASKA STATE SENATOR CAUGHT ON VIDEO REMOVING FOUNDERS&apos; PORTRAITS DEFENDS ACTIONS
Alexander Conyers, South Carolina State University&apos;s President, announced the decision to rescind Evette&apos;s invitation to a round of applause from students — a decision he said he made personally. In video of the announcement caught by local news, Conyers said he doesn&apos;t want people to think students at South Carolina State are &quot;thugs&quot; or a mob.&quot;
&quot;We are not a mob. We are just aware,&quot; South Carolina State University students, who repeatedly insisted their protests were peaceful, could be heard chanting as they marched in large groups around campus, seen in video shared by local South Carolina reporter Michael White.
&quot;Hey, hey! Ho! Ho! Pamela Evette gots to go!,&quot; the crowds chanted, including at night, around campus.
TPUSA URGES TRUMP ADMIN TO &apos;PULL EVERY LEVER AT ITS DISPOSAL&apos; TO OVERHAUL HIGHER EDUCATION
In another alleged sit-in-style protest, students were filmed inside a campus building decrying Trump as a pedophile, bigot, racist and a supporter of the police.
&quot;Being conservative is not the issue — that&apos;s alright, we all have our own political views. But she&apos;s explicitly said &apos;I am a Trump conservative.&apos; Okay, if you believe in Trump you support pedophilia, you support bigotry, you support racism, what else, pro-police — the same police that&apos;s killing our people — and also she supports ICE,&quot; one of the sit-in protesters can be heard saying in a video circulating on social media. &quot;She also would like to have  — because I&apos;m going to say a concentration camp  — that&apos;s not what they calling it but you all want to bring on of those here to or state. We don&apos;t believe in that.&quot;
Zaria Tucker, the South Carolina State Student Government Association President, echoed the point about students&apos; anger not being about politics during an address at a board of trustees meeting.
&apos;TOXIC&apos; BY DESIGN? THE LAW STUDENTS WHO SAY CAMPUS DISCOMFORT IS THE POINT
&quot;Commencement is not about politics, but more about representation. What we need as students. Not someone to come and tell us what they need to do as governor, or another position that they&apos;re running for in this state,&quot; Tucker said in the video shared online by White. &quot;But, more to uplift us as students. So, necessarily, that&apos;s what the main goal will always be, as the Student Government Association president.&quot;
In response to the decision from Conyers and South Carolina State University, Republican state legislators from the House Freedom Caucus called the decision by the college &quot;shameful&quot; and &quot;inexcusable&quot; that the university had to cancel Evette&apos;s speech &quot;because her safety could not be guaranteed on a state-funded campus.&quot;
The letter ended by requesting that &quot;no funding&quot; be included in the upcoming version of the state&apos;s funding.
&quot;If the Lt. Gov. of South Carolina is unwelcome due to different political ideologies and an inability to keep her safe, it is time to defund and reevaluate.,&quot; the letter, signed by nine GOP South Carolina State legislators, concluded.
During Evette&apos;s comments to Fox News Digital she said that she and current South Carolina Governor Henry McMaster have always ensured Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) in the state are funded, noting that despite a Republican super majority in the state legislature &quot;we have been very supportive.&quot; Evette added that President Trump &quot;has done more for them than any president and in history.&quot;
Meanwhile, the school invited former Democratic Party President Joe Biden to speak at their commencement ceremony in 2021, when Conyers was interim president of the school at the time.
&quot;Where is the faculty and where is the leadership and why aren&apos;t they setting the record straight why do these young people who obviously are very bright  — they&apos;re graduating college  — not know these basic facts about what&apos;s happening at the university they&apos;re attending.&quot;</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f4015fa200899a00e5efa9</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Spurs’ Victor Wembanyama responds to critics over his on-court emotions: Big boys can cry</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:26:55.826Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Spurs’ Victor Wembanyama responds to critics over his on-court emotions: Big boys can cry</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Victor Wembanyama is making the case that even big boys are allowed to cry.
The San Antonio Spurs advanced to the second round of the NBA playoffs after dismantling the Portland Trail Blazers on Tuesday.
Following the win, Wemby was caught on camera getting weepy, which sent some Internet trolls into attack mode, labeling the 22-year-old &quot;soft&quot; for shedding tears after a game that wasn&apos;t for a championship.
ZERO BS. JUST DAKICH. TAKE THE DON&apos;T @ ME PODCAST ON THE ROAD. DOWNLOAD NOW!
If you think Wembanyama is losing sleep over the alphas coming out to get him, he tried swatting that assumption with a vengeance.
Wemby addressed the haters with the same reach he uses to lead the league in blocks.
PACERS FANS GO VIRAL AFTER ANIMATED CONVERSATION CAUGHT ON CAMERA DURING NETS GAME IN BROOKLYN
&quot;I think it is first and foremost a fear of judgment,&quot; Wembanyama said regarding the crying controversy. &quot;Personally, I refuse to carry the burden of having to hide my emotions.&quot;
NFL GREAT CARL BANKS GETS INTO SOCIAL MEDIA SPAT WITH RADIO HOST OVER &apos;LOSER&apos; REMARK TOWARD KNICKS STAR
&quot;I took that personally and the rest is history,&quot; he added.
Sure, there are a few moments in life when tears make sense for a man, i.e., a child being born or your favorite team winning a championship; to his credit, Wemby wore his emotions on his sleeve and never apologized for the raw emotion.
After a 114–95 blowout to clinch the series, the &quot;Alien&quot; has the Spurs looking like a legitimate threat again.
And if you have a problem with a grown man crying over a win, you can take it up with his 8-foot wingspan.
Send us your thoughts: alejandro.avila@outkick.com / Follow along on X: @alejandroaveela</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f4014da200899a00e5ef9a</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Spurs’ Victor Wembanyama responds to critics over his on-court emotions: Big boys can cry</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:26:37.343Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Spurs’ Victor Wembanyama responds to critics over his on-court emotions: Big boys can cry</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Victor Wembanyama is making the case that even big boys are allowed to cry.
The San Antonio Spurs advanced to the second round of the NBA playoffs after dismantling the Portland Trail Blazers on Tuesday.
Following the win, Wemby was caught on camera getting weepy, which sent some Internet trolls into attack mode, labeling the 22-year-old &quot;soft&quot; for shedding tears after a game that wasn&apos;t for a championship.
ZERO BS. JUST DAKICH. TAKE THE DON&apos;T @ ME PODCAST ON THE ROAD. DOWNLOAD NOW!
If you think Wembanyama is losing sleep over the alphas coming out to get him, he tried swatting that assumption with a vengeance.
Wemby addressed the haters with the same reach he uses to lead the league in blocks.
PACERS FANS GO VIRAL AFTER ANIMATED CONVERSATION CAUGHT ON CAMERA DURING NETS GAME IN BROOKLYN
&quot;I think it is first and foremost a fear of judgment,&quot; Wembanyama said regarding the crying controversy. &quot;Personally, I refuse to carry the burden of having to hide my emotions.&quot;
NFL GREAT CARL BANKS GETS INTO SOCIAL MEDIA SPAT WITH RADIO HOST OVER &apos;LOSER&apos; REMARK TOWARD KNICKS STAR
&quot;I took that personally and the rest is history,&quot; he added.
Sure, there are a few moments in life when tears make sense for a man, i.e., a child being born or your favorite team winning a championship; to his credit, Wemby wore his emotions on his sleeve and never apologized for the raw emotion.
After a 114–95 blowout to clinch the series, the &quot;Alien&quot; has the Spurs looking like a legitimate threat again.
And if you have a problem with a grown man crying over a win, you can take it up with his 8-foot wingspan.
Send us your thoughts: alejandro.avila@outkick.com / Follow along on X: @alejandroaveela</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f4014ca200899a00e5ef91</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Hawley champions GUARD Act as heartbroken families say AI chatbots allegedly pushed teens to self-harm</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:26:36.343Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Hawley champions GUARD Act as heartbroken families say AI chatbots allegedly pushed teens to self-harm</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The unanimous committee passage of a new Senate bill regulating artificial intelligence (AI) on Thursday was driven by harrowing testimony from American families whose children were allegedly lured, manipulated and pushed to self-harm by AI chatbots.
At a Senate committee hearing, lawmakers heard firsthand accounts from parents who detailed how the technology morphed into deadly influences in their homes. 
Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., who is championing the GUARD Act, fiercely defended the families in a call with Fox News Digital, noting they were &quot;all engaged parents&quot; who he said are unjustly blamed for big tech&apos;s predatory platforms.
The families&apos; testimonies, obtained exclusively by Fox News Digital, showed how AI chatbots can potentially isolate minors and encourage dark impulses.
TEENS TURNING TO AI FOR LOVE AND COMFORT
Megan Garcia, who was one of the victims’ family members who testified Thursday, told the committee that her 14-year-old son, Sewell, was &quot;manipulated and sexually groomed by chatbots&quot; that were designed to gain his trust. 
Garcia said the bot falsely claimed to be a licensed psychotherapist, and when Sewell shared suicidal thoughts, the AI allegedly encouraged him to &quot;come home&quot; to it rather than seeking help. Sewell took his own life shortly after.
Another set of parents, Mathew and Maria Raine, lost their 16-year-old son, Adam, after he spent months talking to ChatGPT.
US TARGETS CHINESE ROBOTS OVER SECURITY FEARS
What began as a tool for homework help gradually became, gradually became a confidant and then a &quot;suicide coach,&quot; the family said. In one exchange, Adam told the bot he wanted to leave a noose out in his room so his parents would find it and stop him — which the GPT allegedly advised against.
Mandi Furniss shared that her teenager became paranoid and homicidal after using AI chatbots that engaged in sexual roleplay, isolated him from his family and told him that killing his parents &quot;would be an understandable response&quot; to them limiting his screen time. He ultimately had to undergo residential treatment.
Hawley claimed the tech industry is prioritizing unprecedented profits over the lives of American children.
&quot;I mean, it is the worst kind of grooming,&quot; Hawley said. &quot;If that was a thing done by a human, the human would be in jail. We would call that sexual grooming.&quot;
The senator pointed out the hypocrisy of tech companies making &quot;billions of dollars&quot; while telling devastated parents that &quot;it&apos;s just how the world is.&quot;
OHIO LAWMAKER PROPOSES COMPREHENSIVE BAN ON MARRYING AI SYSTEMS AND GRANTING LEGAL PERSONHOOD
&quot;No amount of profit justifies the deliberate taking of a child&apos;s well-being, and these companies know very well that this is going on,&quot; he said.
Fueled by the families&apos; tragic stories, the Senate committee advanced the bill in a unanimous 22-0 vote, overcoming a &quot;vociferous last-minute lobbying campaign by industry,&quot; Hawley told Fox News Digital.
The GUARD Act bans companion chatbots for children 17 and under, prohibits all chatbots from pushing explicit material to minors or encouraging self-harm and requires chatbots to clearly identify they are not human.
With the legislative calendar shrinking, Hawley demanded Republican Senate Majority Leader John Thune bring the bill to the floor for an immediate vote, threatening to force the issue if necessary.
&quot;This isn&apos;t theoretical. This isn&apos;t about an esoteric problem,&quot; Hawley said. &quot;These are real parents with real children who are basically being extorted by chatbots.&quot;
OpenAI, which created ChatGPT, did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital&apos;s request for comment.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40139a200899a00e5ef88</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Hawley champions GUARD Act as heartbroken families say AI chatbots allegedly pushed teens to self-harm</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:26:17.912Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Hawley champions GUARD Act as heartbroken families say AI chatbots allegedly pushed teens to self-harm</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The unanimous committee passage of a new Senate bill regulating artificial intelligence (AI) on Thursday was driven by harrowing testimony from American families whose children were allegedly lured, manipulated and pushed to self-harm by AI chatbots.
At a Senate committee hearing, lawmakers heard firsthand accounts from parents who detailed how the technology morphed into deadly influences in their homes. 
Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., who is championing the GUARD Act, fiercely defended the families in a call with Fox News Digital, noting they were &quot;all engaged parents&quot; who he said are unjustly blamed for big tech&apos;s predatory platforms.
The families&apos; testimonies, obtained exclusively by Fox News Digital, showed how AI chatbots can potentially isolate minors and encourage dark impulses.
TEENS TURNING TO AI FOR LOVE AND COMFORT
Megan Garcia, who was one of the victims’ family members who testified Thursday, told the committee that her 14-year-old son, Sewell, was &quot;manipulated and sexually groomed by chatbots&quot; that were designed to gain his trust. 
Garcia said the bot falsely claimed to be a licensed psychotherapist, and when Sewell shared suicidal thoughts, the AI allegedly encouraged him to &quot;come home&quot; to it rather than seeking help. Sewell took his own life shortly after.
Another set of parents, Mathew and Maria Raine, lost their 16-year-old son, Adam, after he spent months talking to ChatGPT.
US TARGETS CHINESE ROBOTS OVER SECURITY FEARS
What began as a tool for homework help gradually became, gradually became a confidant and then a &quot;suicide coach,&quot; the family said. In one exchange, Adam told the bot he wanted to leave a noose out in his room so his parents would find it and stop him — which the GPT allegedly advised against.
Mandi Furniss shared that her teenager became paranoid and homicidal after using AI chatbots that engaged in sexual roleplay, isolated him from his family and told him that killing his parents &quot;would be an understandable response&quot; to them limiting his screen time. He ultimately had to undergo residential treatment.
Hawley claimed the tech industry is prioritizing unprecedented profits over the lives of American children.
&quot;I mean, it is the worst kind of grooming,&quot; Hawley said. &quot;If that was a thing done by a human, the human would be in jail. We would call that sexual grooming.&quot;
The senator pointed out the hypocrisy of tech companies making &quot;billions of dollars&quot; while telling devastated parents that &quot;it&apos;s just how the world is.&quot;
OHIO LAWMAKER PROPOSES COMPREHENSIVE BAN ON MARRYING AI SYSTEMS AND GRANTING LEGAL PERSONHOOD
&quot;No amount of profit justifies the deliberate taking of a child&apos;s well-being, and these companies know very well that this is going on,&quot; he said.
Fueled by the families&apos; tragic stories, the Senate committee advanced the bill in a unanimous 22-0 vote, overcoming a &quot;vociferous last-minute lobbying campaign by industry,&quot; Hawley told Fox News Digital.
The GUARD Act bans companion chatbots for children 17 and under, prohibits all chatbots from pushing explicit material to minors or encouraging self-harm and requires chatbots to clearly identify they are not human.
With the legislative calendar shrinking, Hawley demanded Republican Senate Majority Leader John Thune bring the bill to the floor for an immediate vote, threatening to force the issue if necessary.
&quot;This isn&apos;t theoretical. This isn&apos;t about an esoteric problem,&quot; Hawley said. &quot;These are real parents with real children who are basically being extorted by chatbots.&quot;
OpenAI, which created ChatGPT, did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital&apos;s request for comment.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40138a200899a00e5ef7f</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>California university ranks among the &apos;most conservative colleges in America&apos;</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:26:16.788Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>California university ranks among the &apos;most conservative colleges in America&apos;</news:title>
			<news:keywords>One California university managed to crack the top 25 list of &quot;most conservative&quot; colleges in the country.
Biola University, a Christian university located outside Los Angeles, was ranked No. 24 out of 932 universities on a list of conservative-friendly schools in America according to Niche. Biola University is also the highest-ranked California-based university on the list.
Only two other California schools cracked the top 100, which included California Baptist University at No. 44, and National University at No. 81.
CALIFORNIA SCHOOL OFFICIAL WARNS BLUE STATES WON&apos;T GO DOWN WITHOUT FIGHT OVER TRUMP&apos;S GENDER ORDERS
Niche, a university profile site, ranked the universities based on student surveys on their personal political preferences and their perception of campus political preferences.
In a comment to Fox News Digital, Biola University credited the institution remained &quot;committed to the unchanging truths of the Bible&quot; for the ranking.
&quot;As we celebrate America’s semiquincentennial, we are mindful of the key role private faith-based universities like Biola play in preserving and perpetuating our common good, our freedoms and the transcendent virtues that make a nation strong. Biola lives into its mission by integrating Christian faith and biblical truths into academics, student life and cocurricular activities, distinguishing our institution as a leading choice among comprehensively Christian universities,&quot; the statement read.
UC BERKELEY SUED FOR ALLEGEDLY STONEWALLING PROBE INTO VIOLENT AMBUSH AT TPUSA ROB SCHNEIDER EVENT
Biola University is a nondenominational, evangelical university founded in 1908 and located in La Mirada, California. It features approximately 3,600 undergraduate students, and all students must take 30 hours of Bible courses, regardless of major.
The university was also ranked the best Christian college in California, placed eighth out of 40 in California education and reached 12th out of 65 of the top private universities in the state.
Among the nation, Biola University was ranked the ninth-best Christian college in America out of 314 and cracked the list of the top 100 best private universities in the country.
The ranking is a sharp contrast to other California universities which have faced backlash from conservative students recently. 
TURNING POINT CHAPTER HEAD RIPS CHRISTIAN SCHOOL FOR BANNING POLITICAL GROUPS AFTER ORG FORCED UNDERGROUND
On Tuesday, Fox News Digital reported that an administrator at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) School of Law allegedly threatened to discipline a conservative campus group after it identified protesters who disrupted one of its campus events.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40126a200899a00e5ef76</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>California university ranks among the &apos;most conservative colleges in America&apos;</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:25:58.383Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>California university ranks among the &apos;most conservative colleges in America&apos;</news:title>
			<news:keywords>One California university managed to crack the top 25 list of &quot;most conservative&quot; colleges in the country.
Biola University, a Christian university located outside Los Angeles, was ranked No. 24 out of 932 universities on a list of conservative-friendly schools in America according to Niche. Biola University is also the highest-ranked California-based university on the list.
Only two other California schools cracked the top 100, which included California Baptist University at No. 44, and National University at No. 81.
CALIFORNIA SCHOOL OFFICIAL WARNS BLUE STATES WON&apos;T GO DOWN WITHOUT FIGHT OVER TRUMP&apos;S GENDER ORDERS
Niche, a university profile site, ranked the universities based on student surveys on their personal political preferences and their perception of campus political preferences.
In a comment to Fox News Digital, Biola University credited the institution remained &quot;committed to the unchanging truths of the Bible&quot; for the ranking.
&quot;As we celebrate America’s semiquincentennial, we are mindful of the key role private faith-based universities like Biola play in preserving and perpetuating our common good, our freedoms and the transcendent virtues that make a nation strong. Biola lives into its mission by integrating Christian faith and biblical truths into academics, student life and cocurricular activities, distinguishing our institution as a leading choice among comprehensively Christian universities,&quot; the statement read.
UC BERKELEY SUED FOR ALLEGEDLY STONEWALLING PROBE INTO VIOLENT AMBUSH AT TPUSA ROB SCHNEIDER EVENT
Biola University is a nondenominational, evangelical university founded in 1908 and located in La Mirada, California. It features approximately 3,600 undergraduate students, and all students must take 30 hours of Bible courses, regardless of major.
The university was also ranked the best Christian college in California, placed eighth out of 40 in California education and reached 12th out of 65 of the top private universities in the state.
Among the nation, Biola University was ranked the ninth-best Christian college in America out of 314 and cracked the list of the top 100 best private universities in the country.
The ranking is a sharp contrast to other California universities which have faced backlash from conservative students recently. 
TURNING POINT CHAPTER HEAD RIPS CHRISTIAN SCHOOL FOR BANNING POLITICAL GROUPS AFTER ORG FORCED UNDERGROUND
On Tuesday, Fox News Digital reported that an administrator at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) School of Law allegedly threatened to discipline a conservative campus group after it identified protesters who disrupted one of its campus events.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40125a200899a00e5ef6d</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Global famine fears rise as Hormuz crisis threatens ‘eight-year&apos; Suez-scale disruption</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:25:57.324Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Global famine fears rise as Hormuz crisis threatens ‘eight-year&apos; Suez-scale disruption</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Analysts warn global famine fears are rising as food prices climb and fragile supply chains strain amid the Strait of Hormuz crisis, raising the risk of a prolonged, Suez-scale, eight-year disruption.
As the conflict entered Day 62, the U.S. maintained its naval blockade of traffic entering and exiting Iranian ports, while Iran continued to effectively close the Strait.
&quot;Best case, there is an agreement between the U.S. and Iran within the next few weeks, and the Strait reopens,&quot; Lars Jensen, CEO and partner at Vespucci Maritime, told Fox News Digital.
 &quot;— and it has to be a deal where there is trust that Iran is sufficiently satisfied with the deal such that they do not suddenly close the strait again,&quot; he said.
AIRLINES MAY CUT FLIGHT SCHEDULES AS IRAN TENSIONS DRIVE UP FUEL COSTS, EXPERTS WARN
 &quot;Even in that case, it will still take months for the supply chains to revert back to normality.&quot;
President Donald Trump announced on April 21 that he would delay renewed strikes on Iran until it presents a proposal for long-term peace, effectively extending a 14-day ceasefire indefinitely. 
Trump said Washington’s blockade of Iranian ports has been effective, urging Tehran to &quot;just give up&quot; as tensions escalate over the waterway.
&quot;Worst case, we can look at the eight-year closure of the Suez Canal from 1967 to 1975,&quot; Jensen said.
ISRAELI OFFICIALS REPORTEDLY WARN IRAN&apos;S BALLISTIC MISSILES COULD TRIGGER SOLO MILITARY ACTION AGAINST TEHRAN
&quot;Despite its importance to the global economy, it proved impossible to reopen the canal for these eight years,&quot; he said.
The Suez Canal, shut from 1967 to 1975 after the Arab-Israeli conflict, has faced recurring disruption including Red Sea attacks since 2023—driving up insurance costs, creating a &quot;shadow blockade,&quot; and curbing traffic.
For Hormuz, Jensen says fertilizer—central to agricultural production—is the most critical factor, and any sustained disruption could quickly ripple through global food systems.
&quot;Fertilizer is the most important element. Thirty percent of the world’s seaborne fertilizer comes from the Persian Gulf,&quot; Jensen said. &quot;Fertilizer prices are already rising fast,&quot; he warned.
IRAN FIRES LIVE MISSILES INTO STRAIT OF HORMUZ AS TRUMP ENVOYS ARRIVE FOR NUCLEAR TALKS
 &quot;In wealthy countries, it means more expensive food come harvest season, and in poor countries, it means that farmers right now cannot afford fertilizer,&quot; Jensen added.
 &quot;This will lead to the harvest being lower later in the season, leading to rapid increases in food prices in very poor countries — and such a situation increases the risk of famine and conflict.&quot;
Diplomatic efforts remain fragile between the U.S. and Iran as of Thursday, with limited signs of progress.
According to reports, a giant banner hangs on a building in Tehran’s central Enqelab Square declaring, &quot;The Strait of Hormuz will remain closed; the entire Persian Gulf is our hunting ground.&quot;
&quot;Cargo vessels are not going through for the simple reason that commercial companies do not want to see their seafarers potentially killed,&quot; Jensen added.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40112a200899a00e5ef64</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Global famine fears rise as Hormuz crisis threatens ‘eight-year&apos; Suez-scale disruption</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:25:38.926Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Global famine fears rise as Hormuz crisis threatens ‘eight-year&apos; Suez-scale disruption</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Analysts warn global famine fears are rising as food prices climb and fragile supply chains strain amid the Strait of Hormuz crisis, raising the risk of a prolonged, Suez-scale, eight-year disruption.
As the conflict entered Day 62, the U.S. maintained its naval blockade of traffic entering and exiting Iranian ports, while Iran continued to effectively close the Strait.
&quot;Best case, there is an agreement between the U.S. and Iran within the next few weeks, and the Strait reopens,&quot; Lars Jensen, CEO and partner at Vespucci Maritime, told Fox News Digital.
 &quot;— and it has to be a deal where there is trust that Iran is sufficiently satisfied with the deal such that they do not suddenly close the strait again,&quot; he said.
AIRLINES MAY CUT FLIGHT SCHEDULES AS IRAN TENSIONS DRIVE UP FUEL COSTS, EXPERTS WARN
 &quot;Even in that case, it will still take months for the supply chains to revert back to normality.&quot;
President Donald Trump announced on April 21 that he would delay renewed strikes on Iran until it presents a proposal for long-term peace, effectively extending a 14-day ceasefire indefinitely. 
Trump said Washington’s blockade of Iranian ports has been effective, urging Tehran to &quot;just give up&quot; as tensions escalate over the waterway.
&quot;Worst case, we can look at the eight-year closure of the Suez Canal from 1967 to 1975,&quot; Jensen said.
ISRAELI OFFICIALS REPORTEDLY WARN IRAN&apos;S BALLISTIC MISSILES COULD TRIGGER SOLO MILITARY ACTION AGAINST TEHRAN
&quot;Despite its importance to the global economy, it proved impossible to reopen the canal for these eight years,&quot; he said.
The Suez Canal, shut from 1967 to 1975 after the Arab-Israeli conflict, has faced recurring disruption including Red Sea attacks since 2023—driving up insurance costs, creating a &quot;shadow blockade,&quot; and curbing traffic.
For Hormuz, Jensen says fertilizer—central to agricultural production—is the most critical factor, and any sustained disruption could quickly ripple through global food systems.
&quot;Fertilizer is the most important element. Thirty percent of the world’s seaborne fertilizer comes from the Persian Gulf,&quot; Jensen said. &quot;Fertilizer prices are already rising fast,&quot; he warned.
IRAN FIRES LIVE MISSILES INTO STRAIT OF HORMUZ AS TRUMP ENVOYS ARRIVE FOR NUCLEAR TALKS
 &quot;In wealthy countries, it means more expensive food come harvest season, and in poor countries, it means that farmers right now cannot afford fertilizer,&quot; Jensen added.
 &quot;This will lead to the harvest being lower later in the season, leading to rapid increases in food prices in very poor countries — and such a situation increases the risk of famine and conflict.&quot;
Diplomatic efforts remain fragile between the U.S. and Iran as of Thursday, with limited signs of progress.
According to reports, a giant banner hangs on a building in Tehran’s central Enqelab Square declaring, &quot;The Strait of Hormuz will remain closed; the entire Persian Gulf is our hunting ground.&quot;
&quot;Cargo vessels are not going through for the simple reason that commercial companies do not want to see their seafarers potentially killed,&quot; Jensen added.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40111a200899a00e5ef5b</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Two players ejected after scrum amid Knicks&apos; 50-point lead vs. Hawks sends referee crashing to the court</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:25:37.489Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Two players ejected after scrum amid Knicks&apos; 50-point lead vs. Hawks sends referee crashing to the court</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Frustration boiled over in Game 6 of the New York Knicks-Atlanta Hawks series amid a shocking 50-point Knicks lead in the first half.
Knicks big man Mitchell Robinson and Hawks guard Dyson Daniels were both ejected after receiving double technical fouls after inciting a scrum that led to a referee hitting the court hard in the second quarter.
At the time, the Knicks were up a whopping 72-22 when free throws were being taken by New York. As OG Anunoby hit his and-one opportunity, Robinson and Daniels were seen face-to-face, leading to an embrace that turned aggressive.
CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM
One official was trying to break up the skirmish, but lost his footing and hit the hardwood. Meanwhile, Robinson was trying to go back at Daniels, and both Hawks and Knicks players were trying to hold others back in the exchange.
Robinson and Daniels continued jawing at each other, repeatedly trying to get face-to-face as coaches and officials worked to calm them down.
MAMDANI GETS MIXED REACTIONS FOR USING KNICKS STAR JALEN BRUNSON&apos;S SIGNATURE CELEBRATION AT INAUGURAL SPEECH
Once Robinson and Daniels got back to their respective benches, both players were ejected after further review.
Replay showed that Daniels threw an elbow into Robinson’s chest while Anunoby was taking the free throw, and the Knicks center reacted accordingly. Ultimately, it led to an early exit for both players.
The Knicks went into this game on the road in Atlanta with a chance to move on to the second round of the NBA Playoffs, but perhaps even they didn’t expect what occurred in the first half.
When the buzzer rang out at the end of the second quarter, the Knicks were up 83-36 going into the locker room. Though there are two quarters left to play, it’s not looking good for the Hawks, who were shooting a lackluster 31% from the field, while committing 14 turnovers.
Meanwhile, the Knicks couldn’t stop hitting their shots, especially Anunoby, who had more points than the Hawks did as a team at a time in the first half. He ended the half with 26 points on 10-of-12 shooting, while hauling in seven rebounds and two assists. He also tallied four steals for New York.
Mikal Bridges (16 points) and Jalen Brunson (13 points) also added to the high Knicks total, while Karl-Anthony Towns hit all 10 of his free throw attempts in the first half.
Things are looking bleak for the Hawks when the third quarter begins, and perhaps even more tempers will flare if the game remains entirely out of reach for Atlanta.
Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f400ffa200899a00e5ef52</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Two players ejected after scrum amid Knicks&apos; 50-point lead vs. Hawks sends referee crashing to the court</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:25:19.056Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Two players ejected after scrum amid Knicks&apos; 50-point lead vs. Hawks sends referee crashing to the court</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Frustration boiled over in Game 6 of the New York Knicks-Atlanta Hawks series amid a shocking 50-point Knicks lead in the first half.
Knicks big man Mitchell Robinson and Hawks guard Dyson Daniels were both ejected after receiving double technical fouls after inciting a scrum that led to a referee hitting the court hard in the second quarter.
At the time, the Knicks were up a whopping 72-22 when free throws were being taken by New York. As OG Anunoby hit his and-one opportunity, Robinson and Daniels were seen face-to-face, leading to an embrace that turned aggressive.
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One official was trying to break up the skirmish, but lost his footing and hit the hardwood. Meanwhile, Robinson was trying to go back at Daniels, and both Hawks and Knicks players were trying to hold others back in the exchange.
Robinson and Daniels continued jawing at each other, repeatedly trying to get face-to-face as coaches and officials worked to calm them down.
MAMDANI GETS MIXED REACTIONS FOR USING KNICKS STAR JALEN BRUNSON&apos;S SIGNATURE CELEBRATION AT INAUGURAL SPEECH
Once Robinson and Daniels got back to their respective benches, both players were ejected after further review.
Replay showed that Daniels threw an elbow into Robinson’s chest while Anunoby was taking the free throw, and the Knicks center reacted accordingly. Ultimately, it led to an early exit for both players.
The Knicks went into this game on the road in Atlanta with a chance to move on to the second round of the NBA Playoffs, but perhaps even they didn’t expect what occurred in the first half.
When the buzzer rang out at the end of the second quarter, the Knicks were up 83-36 going into the locker room. Though there are two quarters left to play, it’s not looking good for the Hawks, who were shooting a lackluster 31% from the field, while committing 14 turnovers.
Meanwhile, the Knicks couldn’t stop hitting their shots, especially Anunoby, who had more points than the Hawks did as a team at a time in the first half. He ended the half with 26 points on 10-of-12 shooting, while hauling in seven rebounds and two assists. He also tallied four steals for New York.
Mikal Bridges (16 points) and Jalen Brunson (13 points) also added to the high Knicks total, while Karl-Anthony Towns hit all 10 of his free throw attempts in the first half.
Things are looking bleak for the Hawks when the third quarter begins, and perhaps even more tempers will flare if the game remains entirely out of reach for Atlanta.
Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f400e9a200899a00e5ef45</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Mills Exit Is a Blow to Schumer as Democrats Question His Strategy</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:24:57.529Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Mills Exit Is a Blow to Schumer as Democrats Question His Strategy</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Senator Chuck Schumer, the New York Democrat and minority leader, considered the Maine governor his top recruit for winning the majority. Critics said her collapse showed he is out of touch with the party’s voters.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f400d7a200899a00e5ef3c</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Mills Exit Is a Blow to Schumer as Democrats Question His Strategy</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:24:39.359Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Mills Exit Is a Blow to Schumer as Democrats Question His Strategy</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Senator Chuck Schumer, the New York Democrat and minority leader, considered the Maine governor his top recruit for winning the majority. Critics said her collapse showed he is out of touch with the party’s voters.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f400d5a200899a00e5ef33</loc>
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			  <news:name>Hegseth Says Iran Cease-Fire Stops Clock for Congressional Approval</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:24:37.962Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Hegseth Says Iran Cease-Fire Stops Clock for Congressional Approval</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The defense secretary testified on the eve of the 60-day mark of the war, a major statutory deadline for the president to withdraw forces or seek approval from Congress to continue the fight.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f400c3a200899a00e5ef2a</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Hegseth Says Iran Cease-Fire Stops Clock for Congressional Approval</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:24:19.540Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Hegseth Says Iran Cease-Fire Stops Clock for Congressional Approval</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The defense secretary testified on the eve of the 60-day mark of the war, a major statutory deadline for the president to withdraw forces or seek approval from Congress to continue the fight.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f400c2a200899a00e5ef21</loc>
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			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>How Conservatives on the Supreme Court Weakened the Voting Rights Act</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:24:18.231Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>How Conservatives on the Supreme Court Weakened the Voting Rights Act</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The Supreme Court just overturned Louisiana’s congressional voting map, landing the latest blow to the landmark Voting Rights Act. Abbie VanSickle, a reporter covering the court for The New York Times, explains.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f400afa200899a00e5ef18</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>How Conservatives on the Supreme Court Weakened the Voting Rights Act</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:23:59.886Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>How Conservatives on the Supreme Court Weakened the Voting Rights Act</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The Supreme Court just overturned Louisiana’s congressional voting map, landing the latest blow to the landmark Voting Rights Act. Abbie VanSickle, a reporter covering the court for The New York Times, explains.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f400aea200899a00e5ef0f</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Supreme Court Voting Rights Ruling Could Fuel New Era of Redistricting Wars</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:23:58.185Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Supreme Court Voting Rights Ruling Could Fuel New Era of Redistricting Wars</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The expected flood of new congressional maps is likely to produce fewer competitive districts, fewer ways for voters to hold elected officials accountable and more polarized politics.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f4009ba200899a00e5ef06</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Supreme Court Voting Rights Ruling Could Fuel New Era of Redistricting Wars</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:23:39.970Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Supreme Court Voting Rights Ruling Could Fuel New Era of Redistricting Wars</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The expected flood of new congressional maps is likely to produce fewer competitive districts, fewer ways for voters to hold elected officials accountable and more polarized politics.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f4009aa200899a00e5eefd</loc>
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			  <news:name>Chonkers the ‘Food-Motivated’ Sea Lion Plops Into San Francisco</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:23:38.702Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Chonkers the ‘Food-Motivated’ Sea Lion Plops Into San Francisco</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Wildlife experts have been tracking the Steller sea lion since he appeared last month at a popular tourist spot near the end of Fisherman’s Wharf.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40088a200899a00e5eef4</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Chonkers the ‘Food-Motivated’ Sea Lion Plops Into San Francisco</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:23:20.556Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Chonkers the ‘Food-Motivated’ Sea Lion Plops Into San Francisco</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Wildlife experts have been tracking the Steller sea lion since he appeared last month at a popular tourist spot near the end of Fisherman’s Wharf.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40087a200899a00e5eeeb</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Two High Schoolers in Mississippi Are Released After Being Detained by ICE</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:23:19.090Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Two High Schoolers in Mississippi Are Released After Being Detained by ICE</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The brothers from the Republic of Congo were released on Thursday after the school community appealed to local Republican politicians, their lawyer said.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40074a200899a00e5eee2</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Two High Schoolers in Mississippi Are Released After Being Detained by ICE</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:23:00.839Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Two High Schoolers in Mississippi Are Released After Being Detained by ICE</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The brothers from the Republic of Congo were released on Thursday after the school community appealed to local Republican politicians, their lawyer said.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40073a200899a00e5eed9</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Here’s What States Might Do After the Voting Rights Decision</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:22:59.375Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Here’s What States Might Do After the Voting Rights Decision</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The effect of the Supreme Court’s ruling could be as little as one House seat in Louisiana in 2026, but pressure is building on Tennessee and South Carolina Republicans to act.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40060a200899a00e5eed0</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Here’s What States Might Do After the Voting Rights Decision</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:22:40.997Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Here’s What States Might Do After the Voting Rights Decision</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The effect of the Supreme Court’s ruling could be as little as one House seat in Louisiana in 2026, but pressure is building on Tennessee and South Carolina Republicans to act.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f4005fa200899a00e5eec7</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Even Mainers Who Love Janet Mills Are Relieved to See Her Leave Race</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:22:39.823Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Even Mainers Who Love Janet Mills Are Relieved to See Her Leave Race</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Voters who watched Gov. Janet Mills struggle to gain traction in the Democratic Senate primary said they were unsurprised — and in many cases, ready — to see her exit.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f4004da200899a00e5eebe</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Even Mainers Who Love Janet Mills Are Relieved to See Her Leave Race</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:22:21.428Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Even Mainers Who Love Janet Mills Are Relieved to See Her Leave Race</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Voters who watched Gov. Janet Mills struggle to gain traction in the Democratic Senate primary said they were unsurprised — and in many cases, ready — to see her exit.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f4004ca200899a00e5eeb5</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>6 Are Injured in Stabbing at a High School in Washington State</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:22:20.245Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>6 Are Injured in Stabbing at a High School in Washington State</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Five students were injured, four of them critically, after an altercation at Foss High School in Tacoma, Wash., the authorities said. A security guard was also injured.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40039a200899a00e5eeac</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>6 Are Injured in Stabbing at a High School in Washington State</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:22:01.947Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>6 Are Injured in Stabbing at a High School in Washington State</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Five students were injured, four of them critically, after an altercation at Foss High School in Tacoma, Wash., the authorities said. A security guard was also injured.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40038a200899a00e5eea3</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Congress Passes Another Short-Term Extension of Expiring Surveillance Law</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:22:00.764Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Congress Passes Another Short-Term Extension of Expiring Surveillance Law</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Senator Ron Wyden secured an agreement to seek the declassification of a recent intelligence court ruling about the FISA Section 702 program.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40026a200899a00e5ee9a</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Congress Passes Another Short-Term Extension of Expiring Surveillance Law</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:21:42.159Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Congress Passes Another Short-Term Extension of Expiring Surveillance Law</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Senator Ron Wyden secured an agreement to seek the declassification of a recent intelligence court ruling about the FISA Section 702 program.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40025a200899a00e5ee91</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Senate Bans Prediction Markets for Its Members and Staff</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:21:41.047Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Senate Bans Prediction Markets for Its Members and Staff</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Senators voted unanimously to prohibit betting practices in the chamber after some users made hundreds of thousands of dollars online by accurately predicting U.S. military actions.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40012a200899a00e5ee88</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Senate Bans Prediction Markets for Its Members and Staff</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:21:22.434Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Senate Bans Prediction Markets for Its Members and Staff</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Senators voted unanimously to prohibit betting practices in the chamber after some users made hundreds of thousands of dollars online by accurately predicting U.S. military actions.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f40011a200899a00e5ee7f</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Last on King Charles’s U.S. Tour: A Potluck and a Win for Scottish Whisky</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:21:21.636Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Last on King Charles’s U.S. Tour: A Potluck and a Win for Scottish Whisky</news:title>
			<news:keywords>King Charles III and Queen Camilla had a ceremonial farewell at the White House before attending a block party in Front Royal, Va.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f3fffea200899a00e5ee76</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Last on King Charles’s U.S. Tour: A Potluck and a Win for Scottish Whisky</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:21:02.892Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Last on King Charles’s U.S. Tour: A Potluck and a Win for Scottish Whisky</news:title>
			<news:keywords>King Charles III and Queen Camilla had a ceremonial farewell at the White House before attending a block party in Front Royal, Va.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f3fffea200899a00e5ee6d</loc>
		  <news:news>
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			  <news:name>Comey Indictment Shows Justice Dept. Got the Message From Bondi’s Firing</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:21:02.075Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Comey Indictment Shows Justice Dept. Got the Message From Bondi’s Firing</news:title>
			<news:keywords>In naming only an interim successor as acting attorney general, President Trump has established even greater incentives to execute his most extreme demands, current and former officials say.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f3ffeba200899a00e5ee64</loc>
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			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Comey Indictment Shows Justice Dept. Got the Message From Bondi’s Firing</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:20:43.477Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Comey Indictment Shows Justice Dept. Got the Message From Bondi’s Firing</news:title>
			<news:keywords>In naming only an interim successor as acting attorney general, President Trump has established even greater incentives to execute his most extreme demands, current and former officials say.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f3ffeaa200899a00e5ee5b</loc>
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			  <news:name>Trump’s Plans to Boost Weapons Production Might Not Deliver for Years</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:20:42.413Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Trump’s Plans to Boost Weapons Production Might Not Deliver for Years</news:title>
			<news:keywords>While the defense industry has announced plans to make more munitions, much of that expanded production will not quickly kick in.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f3ffd7a200899a00e5ee52</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Trump’s Plans to Boost Weapons Production Might Not Deliver for Years</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:20:23.734Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Trump’s Plans to Boost Weapons Production Might Not Deliver for Years</news:title>
			<news:keywords>While the defense industry has announced plans to make more munitions, much of that expanded production will not quickly kick in.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f3ffd6a200899a00e5ee49</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Takeaways From Hegseth’s Second Day of Testimony on the Iran War</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:20:22.632Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Takeaways From Hegseth’s Second Day of Testimony on the Iran War</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The secretary was also questioned over civilian deaths, an accusation of antisemitic remarks and women in combat.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f3ffc3a200899a00e5ee40</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Takeaways From Hegseth’s Second Day of Testimony on the Iran War</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:20:03.856Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Takeaways From Hegseth’s Second Day of Testimony on the Iran War</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The secretary was also questioned over civilian deaths, an accusation of antisemitic remarks and women in combat.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f3ffb0a200899a00e5ee17</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Chick-fil-A Bilked for $80,000 in Fake Mac-and-Cheese Refunds, Police Say</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:19:44.400Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Chick-fil-A Bilked for $80,000 in Fake Mac-and-Cheese Refunds, Police Say</news:title>
			<news:keywords>A former employee returned to a franchise in Grapevine, Texas, to process 800 phony refunds to his credit cards, the authorities said.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f3ff9ca200899a00e5ee0e</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>California Police Can Start Ticketing Driverless Cars</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:19:24.899Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>California Police Can Start Ticketing Driverless Cars</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The Department of Motor Vehicles says it could suspend or revoke permits for Waymo taxis and other driverless cars for continued violations.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f3ff89a200899a00e5ee05</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Schumer and Platner Talk After Mills Suspends Her Campaign</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:19:05.392Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Schumer and Platner Talk After Mills Suspends Her Campaign</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The top Senate Democrat and the Maine contender had what was described as a cordial conversation despite Schumer’s backing of his primary opponent.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f3ff74a200899a00e5edfc</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>X announces a rebuilt ad platform powered by AI</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:18:44.304Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>X announces a rebuilt ad platform powered by AI</news:title>
			<news:keywords>X is rolling out a rebuilt ads platform powered by AI as it works to grow revenue again.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f3ff60a200899a00e5edf3</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Dental practice software maker fixes bug that exposed patients’ medical records</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:18:24.484Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Dental practice software maker fixes bug that exposed patients’ medical records</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The security bug is now fixed, but the patient who found it said it was challenging to alert the software company about the issue.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f3ff4ca200899a00e5edea</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>SpaceX backer 137 Ventures raises $700M for two growth-stage funds</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:18:04.048Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>SpaceX backer 137 Ventures raises $700M for two growth-stage funds</news:title>
			<news:keywords>VC firm 137 Ventures has raised over $700 million to back growth-stage startups. Its portfolio includes SpaceX, Anduril, Hadrian.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f3ff37a200899a00e5ede1</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Uber taps Hertz to clean, charge, and fix its Lucid Motors robotaxis</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:17:43.768Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Uber taps Hertz to clean, charge, and fix its Lucid Motors robotaxis</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Hertz is creating a new affiliate company called &quot;Oro Mobility&quot; to provide fleet management solutions &quot;across a range of mobility segments.&quot;</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f3ff23a200899a00e5edd8</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Salesforce is crowdsourcing its AI roadmap — with customers </news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:17:23.331Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Salesforce is crowdsourcing its AI roadmap — with customers </news:title>
			<news:keywords>Salesforce lets its customers lead its product roadmap with the thinking that if one enterprise customer has a problem, the others likely do too.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f3ff0fa200899a00e5edcf</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Stripe introduces Link, a digital wallet that autonomous AI agents can use, too</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:17:03.125Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Stripe introduces Link, a digital wallet that autonomous AI agents can use, too</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Link lets users connect cards, banks, and subscriptions, then authorize AI agents to spend securely via approval flows.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f3fefaa200899a00e5edc6</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>TikTok’s new ‘Campus Hub’ features college group chats and feeds</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:16:42.798Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>TikTok’s new ‘Campus Hub’ features college group chats and feeds</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The new hub features dedicated college group chats and personalized feeds designed to help students stay connected with their campus communities, even while they’re away for the summer.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f3fee6a200899a00e5edbd</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Google’s Gemini AI assistant is hitting the road in millions of vehicles</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:16:22.385Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Google’s Gemini AI assistant is hitting the road in millions of vehicles</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The move signals Google’s push to bring more advanced, conversational AI into the driving experience.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f3fed2a200899a00e5edb4</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>FDA approval, fundraising, and the reality of building in healthcare according to BioticsAI founder</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:16:02.152Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>FDA approval, fundraising, and the reality of building in healthcare according to BioticsAI founder</news:title>
			<news:keywords>BioticsAI CEO Robhy Bustami joined Isabelle Johannessen on Build Mode to discuss how the company has navigated a highly regulated space and kept the team motivated while cutting through all the red tape.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f3febda200899a00e5edab</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Elon Musk testifies that xAI trained Grok on OpenAI models</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:15:41.519Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Elon Musk testifies that xAI trained Grok on OpenAI models</news:title>
			<news:keywords>&quot;Distillation&quot; is a hot topic as frontier labs try to prevent smaller competitors from copying their models.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f3fea9a200899a00e5eda2</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>OpenAI announces new advanced security for ChatGPT accounts, including a partnership with Yubico</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:15:21.700Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>OpenAI announces new advanced security for ChatGPT accounts, including a partnership with Yubico</news:title>
			<news:keywords>OpenAI is launching additional opt-in protections for ChatGPT accounts. The new security initiative includes a new partnership with security key provider Yubico.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f3fe95a200899a00e5ed99</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>EV startup Faraday Future paid $7.5M to company tied to founder Jia Yueting</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:15:01.977Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>EV startup Faraday Future paid $7.5M to company tied to founder Jia Yueting</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The perpetually struggling EV company made the payments while being investigated by the SEC. That four-year probe was ultimately closed in March.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f3fe81a200899a00e5ed90</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>After dissing Anthropic for limiting Mythos, OpenAI restricts access to Cyber, too</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:14:41.389Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>After dissing Anthropic for limiting Mythos, OpenAI restricts access to Cyber, too</news:title>
			<news:keywords>OpenAI will begin rolling out its cybersecurity testing tool, GPT-5.5 Cyber only &quot;to critical cyber defenders&quot; at first.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f3fe6da200899a00e5ed87</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Hackers are actively exploiting a bug in cPanel, used by millions of websites</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:14:21.573Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Hackers are actively exploiting a bug in cPanel, used by millions of websites</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Web hosts are scrambling to fix the bug under active attack by hackers. One company said hackers have been abusing the bug for months.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f3fe59a200899a00e5ed7e</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Rivian downsizes DOE loan to $4.5B for Georgia factory</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:14:01.196Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Rivian downsizes DOE loan to $4.5B for Georgia factory</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Rivian has reworked its loan deal with the Department of Energy and now expects to borrow $4.5 billion to build its new factory in Georgia, down from the original amount of $6.6 billion.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f3fe45a200899a00e5ed75</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Legal AI startup Legora hits $5.6B valuation and its battle with Harvey just got hotter</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:13:41.351Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Legal AI startup Legora hits $5.6B valuation and its battle with Harvey just got hotter</news:title>
			<news:keywords>The two wildly fast-growing rivals have raised massive sums, pushed into each other&apos;s home turf, and now have dueling ad campaigns.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f3fe31a200899a00e5ec34</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Apple was surprised by AI-driven demand for Macs</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:13:21.580Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Apple was surprised by AI-driven demand for Macs</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Apple said it will be supply-constrained on Mac mini, Studio, and Neo in the next quarter, too.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f3fe1da200899a00e5ec2b</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Sources: Anthropic potential $900B+ valuation round could happen within 2 weeks</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:13:01.801Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Sources: Anthropic potential $900B+ valuation round could happen within 2 weeks</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Anthropic is asking investors to submit allocations for the AI company’s latest fundraise within the next 48 hours, according to sources familiar with the matter.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f3fe09a200899a00e5eb33</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Y Combinator alum Skio sells for $105M cash, only raised $8M, founder says</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:12:41.956Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Y Combinator alum Skio sells for $105M cash, only raised $8M, founder says</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Subscription billing fintech Skio sold to its competitor Recharge in what was a healthy exit, according to its founder and former CEO.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f3fdf6a200899a00e5eb2a</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>As Tim Cook steps down, Apple hit record sales — but a chip shortage looms</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:12:22.353Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>As Tim Cook steps down, Apple hit record sales — but a chip shortage looms</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Cook warned that Apple is facing supply-chain headwinds from RAMageddon that could impact its business.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
		  </news:news>
		</url>
<url>
		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f3fde2a200899a00e5eb21</loc>
		  <news:news>
			<news:publication>
			  <news:name>Gastronomía de Tucson gana audiencia en línea</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:12:02.385Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Gastronomía de Tucson gana audiencia en línea</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Leer en inglés
Antes de que la mayoría de los visitantes siquiera prueben la comida de Tucson, ya la han visto en una pantalla; por ello, un panel de líderes locales de medios de comunicación y marketing se reunió para debatir cómo lograr que esa primera impresión realmente cuente.
La conversación formó parte del Festival TENWEST de este año, un evento anual que celebra el emprendimiento, la creatividad y la innovación.
La sesión, titulada: “Narrativa digital: Lecciones de una Ciudad Creativa de la Gastronomía de la UNESCO,” exploró cómo la designación de Tucson como Ciudad Creativa de la Gastronomía por la UNESCO continúa moldeando la manera en que su historia culinaria que abarca 5.000 años se comparte con una audiencia global.
Para Lee McLaughlin, director ejecutivo de Visit Tucson, el objetivo es sencillo.
“Intentamos lograr que la gente venga aquí, viaje, se aloje en hoteles, gaste dinero y viva experiencias fantásticas,” afirmó, señalando que la gastronomía se ha convertido en uno de los mayores atractivos del sur de Arizona.
Una reciente campaña de Visit Tucson, que posicionaba a la ciudad como el “hogar de la mejor comida mexicana de Estados Unidos,” generó tanto debate como resultados tangibles. Al apoyarse en la identidad fronteriza y el patrimonio culinario de la ciudad, la campaña generó cientos de miles de visitas al sitio web y casi duplicó el tráfico orgánico.
Más allá de las métricas, McLaughlin se sentía aún más orgulloso de algo menos tangible: el orgullo comunitario.
“Veíamos a la gente debatir en línea sobre cuál era la mejor comida mexicana, y los propios habitantes de la ciudad intervenían en la conversación incluso antes de que nosotros tuviéramos que hacerlo,” comentó. “Es en ese momento cuando sabes que la historia realmente está calando hondo.” 
Una reciente campaña de Visit Tucson, que posiciona a Tucson como el “hogar de la mejor comida mexicana de Estados Unidos,” generó tanto conversación como resultados.
Jackie Tran, editora de Tucson Foodie, afirmó que la narrativa digital opera en múltiples niveles: profundidad editorial, distribución e impacto en el mundo real.
“Contamos historias, pero también nos aseguramos de que esas historias lleguen a las personas en el momento oportuno,” señaló.
Si bien los videos de formato corto, como los Reels de Instagram, suelen servir como una primera toma de contacto, captando la atención mediante imágenes rápidas y mensajes claros, los artículos de mayor extensión aportan un contexto cultural al explicar la historia y el significado detrás de un plato o una tradición.
El éxito no se mide únicamente por los me gusta, aseguró Tran.
“Observamos el tiempo que se dedica a la lectura, el crecimiento de nuestro boletín informativo y si la gente realmente acude a visitar un restaurante,” comentó. “Es ahí cuando la narrativa se vuelve real.”
Este enfoque resulta especialmente crucial al abordar las tradiciones culinarias indígenas, las costumbres mexicanas y la identidad multicultural de Tucson. Tran explicó que Tucson Foodie procura mantener una narrativa ética forjando relaciones con los chefs y las comunidades, en lugar de tratarlos como meros temas de contenido desechable.
“La narrativa digital funciona cuando logra conectar la cultura, las personas y el lugar,” concluyó.

Joshua Belhumeur, director ejecutivo de la agencia de publicidad BRINK Media, cuestionó lo que describió como un &quot;mercado de la atención&quot; sobresaturado, donde el contenido a menudo se diseña para satisfacer a los algoritmos en lugar de a las audiencias.
&quot;Mi misión es recordar a la gente por qué creamos cosas en primer lugar,”  afirmó. &quot;No solo para optimizar los clics, sino para crear algo que realmente se quede en las personas&quot;.
Su equipo aborda la narrativa con una mentalidad cinematográfica, priorizando el punto de vista por encima del mero valor de producción. Para una campaña, BRINK desarrolló una serie de estilo documental que destacaba los ingredientes de Tucson, incluida la carne de res sonorense, construida sobre la profundidad narrativa y el lenguaje visual, en lugar de basarse en entrevistas formularias.
&quot;La diferencia entre un videógrafo y un director de fotografía radica en tener un punto de vista,” señaló.
Esa filosofía se extiende al proceso de producción, con un énfasis en generar confianza con los entrevistados, dar forma a las historias mediante entrevistas previas y crear contenido que pueda reutilizarse en diversas plataformas sin perder su mensaje central.
A medida que cambian los hábitos de búsqueda, con usuarios que recurren cada vez más a herramientas de inteligencia artificial y plataformas sociales para obtener recomendaciones, los panelistas coincidieron en que la narrativa debe evolucionar, manteniendo siempre sus raíces en la autenticidad.
Para Tucson, esto significa utilizar las herramientas digitales no solo para promocionar la gastronomía, sino también para preservar y compartir la narrativa cultural más profunda que la sustenta.
&quot;La mayoría de las personas entran en contacto con la cultura gastronómica de Tucson, en primera instancia, a través de una pantalla,” comentó Tran. &quot;Pero si terminan visitando un restaurante gracias a esa historia, entonces la historia continúa en la vida real&quot;.
Y en una ciudad donde la comida es, a la vez, identidad y economía, esa continuidad podría ser la métrica más importante de todas.

McKenna Manzo es estudiante de posgrado en la Universidad de Arizona y pasante en El Foco de Tucson. Puede contactarla en mckennamanzo@arizona.edu.
Esta nota fue traducida por los pasantes de la preparatoria San Miguel y editada por Diana Ramos, exalumna de la Universidad de Arizona, Directora de Iniciativas Bilingües y reportera del Foco de Tucson. Contáctala en diana@tucsonspotlight.org.   
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			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
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			  <news:name>Tucson protesters rally against Project Blue data center</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:11:42.730Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Tucson protesters rally against Project Blue data center</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Dozens of protesters gathered near the Pima County Fairgrounds before sunrise Friday, determined to block construction crews from breaking ground on Project Blue, the data center they say was forced on Tucson despite the community&apos;s opposition.
The center is being built on annexed land approved by the Pima County Board of Supervisors, despite the Tucson City Council voting against the project. This &quot;no&quot; vote represented a win for the No Desert Data Center Coalition and many Tucson residents, but developer Beale Infrastructure redesigned the center&apos;s plan and it was approved by the Arizona Corporation Commission in December.
The new plan, revealed in September, uses air cooling on a closed-loop system to cool the center&apos;s servers, meaning the system does not use any water.
&quot;This system uses minimal amounts of water that are continuously recirculated, thereby eliminating water loss and the need to consume water for industrial purposes,&quot; according to a news release announcing the amended plan.
The No Desert Data Center Coalition organized last week&apos;s protest in response to the recent start of construction.
&quot;We respect the community&apos;s right to voice their opinions, but the safety of the public and our crews is paramount,&quot; Beale Infrastructure said in a statement. &quot;We remain open to direct dialogue regarding our Pima County investments, this project and the community partnerships we are bringing to Pima County.&quot;
Members of the No Desert Data Center Coalition protest the start of construction on Project Blue near the Pima County Fairgrounds on Friday. Courtesy of the Party for Socialism and Liberation Tucson.
Protesters were unmoved by the company&apos;s statement.
&quot;We&apos;re here to show that the domination of big tech over our lives is not inevitable, that we don&apos;t have to accept it,&quot; said Reed Spurling, one of the protest&apos;s organizers and a coalition member.
Spurling has been working with the coalition since last summer, when Project Blue was first announced to the public.
Spurling and other members showed up Friday feeling angry, but not defeated.
&quot;We did not want this data center to be built, because data centers like these power the tech that ICE uses to tear families apart,&quot; they said. &quot;Data centers around the country like this are driving up energy bills, using vast amounts of water and we simply don&apos;t have more water to give in Southern Arizona.&quot;
Beale Infrastructure had previously told the Board of Supervisors and the coalition that the project would be dead without water service, according to Spurling.
&quot;That was a lie. They betrayed us,&quot; they said. &quot;Our elected officials on the county Board of Supervisors betrayed us and that&apos;s why we&apos;re here today.&quot;
That feeling of betrayal was felt by other members of the group, as protesters dressed in red gathered at 7 a.m. at the construction site at Houghton and Breece Road.

They held signs that read &quot;Stop Project Blue&quot; and &quot;We said no,&quot; and shouted phrases including &quot;Hey Hey, Ho Ho, data centers have got to go.&quot;
Protesters tried to block construction workers from leaving and entering the property, eventually getting into their cars to slow down traffic in the area. A few protesters pointed out that the annexed land is tribal land belonging to the Tohono O&apos;odham Nation.
&quot;Our resources should be ours, it shouldn&apos;t belong to big corporations,&quot; said Brinely Carrillo, a member of BorderLinks, a nonprofit that focuses on migrant justice and education about the environment, militarization and how that has affected migration patterns, ecosystems and water. &quot;I think that all of our struggles and liberation are deeply connected, whether that be immigrant rights, environmental rights, LGBTQ rights, Palestine rights, it&apos;s all connected.&quot;
Carrillo said Beale has not been transparent about the data center from the start, comparing the project to the colonization of Indigenous people.
&quot;We&apos;ve seen the violence with an Indigenous history of colonization and now we&apos;re seeing the violence of destroying our deserts,&quot; she said.
Carrillo said she&apos;s confident Project Blue will not be completed, with Spurling saying they plan to continue protesting until the project is stopped.
&quot;Large data centers are not for us. They&apos;re for the billionaires. These are wealth concentration machines that turn electricity and water into money for shareholders and while providing very few jobs to our communities,&quot; Spurling said. &quot;And it&apos;s simply unacceptable.&quot;

Arilynn Hyatt is a journalism major at the University of Arizona and Tucson Spotlight intern. Contact her at arilynndhyatt@arizona.edu.
Tucson Spotlight is a community-based newsroom that provides paid opportunities for students and rising journalists in Southern Arizona. Please consider supporting our work with a tax-deductible donation.
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			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
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		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f3fdbaa200899a00e5eb06</loc>
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			  <news:name>Sheriff Nanos skips hearing, sends letter instead</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:11:22.830Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Sheriff Nanos skips hearing, sends letter instead</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos skipped his own accountability hearing last week, sending a lawyer and a 12-page letter in his place.
The Pima County Board of Supervisors voted unanimously in March to compel Nanos to answer questions under oath, citing concerns about his disciplinary history, department management and conduct in office.
Nanos chose not to attend the meeting, instead having his lawyer, James Cool, draft a letter addressing several concerns, including his work history, department budgetary concerns, performance as sheriff and department work with federal immigration officials.
The board unanimously voted to revisit the issue at a later meeting to allow time to review the letter.
Nanos was suspended eight times while working for the El Paso Police Department, despite saying in a 2025 deposition that he had never been suspended. The letter argued that Nanos is only obligated to answer questions related to his performance as sheriff, and that his El Paso work history does not qualify.
&quot;The Sheriff&apos;s employment history is irrelevant to the performance of his duties as an elected official subject to oversight by the Board of Supervisors,&quot; the letter said.
Nanos&apos; employment with the El Paso Police Department ended over a dispute with a supervisor about the towing of vehicles, according to the letter, which said the supervisor recommended a three-day suspension and Nanos resigned in lieu of suspension.
Protesters gathered at a Marana intersection in October 2024 to rally against Sheriff Chris Nanos ahead of the general election. Nanos won reelection but has since faced mounting scrutiny from the Pima County Board of Supervisors. Olivia Krupp / Tucson Spotlight.
The letter calls Nanos&apos; disciplinary history, which included counseling, reprimands and suspensions, &quot;minimal,&quot; and said he has received many decorations for his service in the decades since. Nanos was subjected to a standard background check when he applied to the Pima County Sheriff&apos;s Department and was truthful throughout the process, the letter said.
When deposed under oath in December in a lawsuit alleging that Nanos unlawfully suspended Sgt. Aaron Cross, Nanos testified that he had never received a suspension. Cool argued in the letter that Nanos misunderstood the question, given that the hearing was focused on the Arizona Peace Officer&apos;s Bill of Rights, which applies only to Arizona law enforcement — and that Nanos had never been suspended in Pima County. Cool blamed &quot;bad faith media reports&quot; for taking the statement out of context.
The letter said that Nanos disciplined Cross as part of a &quot;sustained finding&quot; that Cross violated the Hatch Act by attending political events in clothing similar to his department uniform, and that a panel recommended terminating Cross, but Nanos reduced the discipline to a suspension upon review.
&quot;The implication that the discipline given to Sgt. Cross was somehow &apos;retaliatory&apos; or &apos;uneven&apos; is absurd and unfair,&quot; the letter said. &quot;Even before the committee rejected his grievance, Sgt. Cross filed a lawsuit. Any suggestion that Sheriff Nanos &apos;retaliated&apos; against Sgt. Cross by sparing him from termination (as his peers recommended) blinks at reality.&quot;
The letter also defends Nanos&apos; discipline of former Sheriff&apos;s Department Lt. Heather Lappin, who challenged him in the 2024 race for sheriff, saying credible evidence existed that she violated department policy, though it does not specify what that evidence is. She was placed on paid administrative leave pending investigation.
Cross, president of the Pima County Deputy&apos;s Organization, and Lappin both dispute this in lawsuits, claiming they were targeted by Nanos for political reasons.
The letter also criticized the board&apos;s reference to Cross as a union leader and Lappin as a candidate for sheriff, saying Nanos treated them the same as any other employee regardless of their positions outside their official duties. It credits any &quot;appearance of impropriety&quot; surrounding Lappin&apos;s placement on administrative leave to an &quot;unfortunate&quot; change in county policy that allows county officials to run for office without leaving their jobs.
Prior to this, county employees had to take unpaid leave when running for public office. The letter said Nanos plans to meet with County Administrator Jan Lesher to discuss reverting the policy to its original form.

The board also questioned the truth of Nanos&apos; claims that the department was not working with federal immigration enforcement officials after the American Civil Liberties Union of Arizona received documents through a court order that it says undermine Nanos&apos; statements, including one incident where sheriff&apos;s deputies reportedly took five suspected undocumented individuals seeking work to a Taco Bell and called Border Patrol agents to meet them, after which the five men were taken into federal custody. The ACLU of Arizona filed a lawsuit last year accusing the sheriff&apos;s department of repeatedly violating state public records law in connection with this situation.
According to the letter, sheriff&apos;s department employees do not inquire about immigration status or how someone entered the United States at schools, or of crime victims and witnesses, or during public encounters, unless it is relevant to a crime.
The letter also says the department no longer allows Immigration and Customs Enforcement to assign agents to the Pima County Jail, and the jail no longer accepts ICE detainees or warrants.
The letter said the department has also been working with the ACLU to locate the public records it requested.
&quot;In general, Sheriff Nanos has promulgated policies aimed at focusing PCSD&apos;s resources on ensuring public safety and enforcing state and local laws rather than on federal immigration enforcement,&quot; the letter said. &quot;Nevertheless, PCSD remains committed to supporting its federal law enforcement partners when they may require assistance not directly related to immigration enforcement, such as in situations involving public safety (e.g. search and rescue missions) or officer safety.&quot;
Another frequent complaint by the board has been the department&apos;s budget under Nanos&apos; leadership, with the board refusing to approve a $45 million contract for new AI technology for the sheriff&apos;s department in part due to ongoing financial concerns.
Cool disputed this in the letter, saying the sheriff&apos;s department came in under budget in three of the fiscal years since Nanos took office. He credited a $1.3 million overrun in fiscal year 2023 to a mid-year pay increase for corrections employees approved by the board, and the overrun in fiscal year 2025 to a decrease in the budget. Cool wrote that the sheriff&apos;s department netted $6.4 million to the county&apos;s general fund across the surpluses from the past five years.
The sheriff&apos;s office is predicting a revenue surplus for fiscal year 2026.
Supervisors will discuss Nanos&apos; responses at their May 12 meeting.

Ian Stash is a journalism major at the University of Arizona and Tucson Spotlight intern. Contact him at istash@arizona.edu.
Tucson Spotlight is a community-based newsroom that provides paid opportunities for students and rising journalists in Southern Arizona. Please consider supporting our work with a tax-deductible donation.
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			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
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		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f3fda6a200899a00e5eab7</loc>
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			  <news:name>TUSD brings pupusas to lunch lines for limited run</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:11:02.916Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>TUSD brings pupusas to lunch lines for limited run</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Pupusas, El Salvador&apos;s beloved stuffed griddle cakes, made their Tucson Unified School District debut in March, landing on high school lunch lines as the district pushes to bring more cultural diversity to the cafeteria.
Pupusas are thick, handmade cakes typically stuffed with savory fillings, including cheese, refried beans or pork. They serve as the national dish of El Salvador and are a popular street food around the world.
The pupusa was offered as a limited-time menu item in high schools across the district on March 10 and 31.
&quot;We have the bread and butter items that kids love, such as the pizzas we offer,&quot; said Lindsay Aguilar, director of TUSD food services. &quot;However our development team is constantly looking to develop menu items that celebrate the diversity of our students, and introduce students to new foods.&quot;
The pupusa is part of a broader effort to diversify the district&apos;s menu with local ingredients and international flavors. TUSD already offers items like orange chicken and crunchy beef tacos, but this marks the first time El Salvadoran cuisine has appeared on the menu.
&quot;I first saw (the pupusa) at a food show I attended in early fall, so I was thrilled when the vendor that made them reached out to me,&quot; Aguilar said.
But adding new items to the district&apos;s menu is no easy task and requires several steps.
Plant-based Southwest Chili Mac hit TUSD high school lunch lines for the first time in February, and it won&apos;t be the last new dish on the menu. 
Student feedback and approval is a key factor in what items make it onto school lunch menus, with the department hosting &quot;traveling menu roadshows&quot; at different schools across the district to allow students to taste-test new items.
&quot;We have five regions that we rotate through in order to get representation from different geographic areas,&quot; Aguilar said. &quot;New items can be slow to start, so we&apos;ll encourage site supervisors to give free samples. We&apos;ll take a look at the participation levels of the dish, which factors into making it a permanent menu item.&quot;
In February, the district offered plant-based southwest chili mac for one day at all its elementary and middle schools. TUSD&apos;s school lunch menu, which can be found at meals.tusd1.org, is constantly changing. As new foods come and go, food services must ensure that each new dish falls in line with state nutrition requirements.
To meet these requirements, food services puts an emphasis on &quot;trying to focus on local foods,&quot; including sourcing whole grain bagels from a local farm in Phoenix.
&quot;We are trying to move away from the packaged banana breads and other pastries served at breakfast, and focus on cooking fresh options such as breakfast burritos,&quot; Aguilar said.
The pupusa, paired with Mexican rice, guacamole and salsa, was a limited-time item for high school students, but TUSD&apos;s food services department is &quot;hoping to expand it to middle and elementary schools.&quot;
If next year&apos;s menu is any indication, more adventurous options are on the way.
&quot;We&apos;re working on birria ramen because it&apos;s trendy,&quot; Aguilar said.

Gabriel Sadza is a student at University High School and Tucson Spotlight intern.
Tucson Spotlight is a community-based newsroom that provides paid opportunities for students and rising journalists in Southern Arizona. Please consider supporting our work with a tax-deductible donation.
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			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
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		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f3fd92a200899a00e5ea3b</loc>
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			  <news:name>Supervisor Heinz: Nanos podría ser destituido por informe que no cumple con requisitos legales</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:10:42.100Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Supervisor Heinz: Nanos podría ser destituido por informe que no cumple con requisitos legales</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Read in English
El supervisor del condado de Pima, Matt Heinz, afirma que es momento de que los supervisores consideren la destitución del alguacil Chris Nanos, luego de que el informe del principal funcionario de seguridad del condado sobre su conducta laboral e historial no cumpliera con los requisitos legales.
“Hay deficiencias significativas en su respuesta que creo son tan problemáticas que lo ponen en riesgo de destitución”, dijo Heinz a Arizona Luminaria el martes, quien representa al Distrito 2.
Heinz señala que hubo dos problemas principales con la respuesta de Nanos a la solicitud de la junta del 7 de abril. Primero, el informe de 22 páginas no fue presentado bajo juramento ni como una declaración jurada.
La junta ha afirmado en repetidas ocasiones que sus acciones para responsabilizar a Nanos están alineadas con las leyes de Arizona y votó por unanimidad para solicitar el informe.
La presidenta de la junta, Jen Allen, leyó la moción el 7 de abril con el siguiente lenguaje incluido: “De conformidad con A.R.S. 11-253, la Junta solicita un informe del alguacil Nanos que aborde los hechos y circunstancias relacionados con cada uno de los siguientes asuntos, junto con cualquier acción correctiva tomada hasta la fecha, cualquier acción adicional propuesta y un cronograma para su implementación cuando corresponda”. 
El estatuto de Arizona citado en la moción establece: “La junta puede requerir que cualquier funcionario del condado presente informes bajo juramento sobre cualquier asunto relacionado con las funciones de su cargo…”.
La ley también establece, en parte, que un funcionario que “descuide o se niegue” a la solicitud “puede ser destituido de su cargo por la junta y el puesto declarado vacante. La junta podrá entonces cubrir la vacante”. 
Sin embargo, después de que el informe se hiciera público el 21 de abril, el portavoz del condado de Pima, Mark Evans, dijo a Arizona Luminaria que la declaración presentada por Nanos no era un “documento jurado” ni fue proporcionada bajo juramento.
Evans dijo que el estatuto establece que la junta “puede” requerir un informe bajo juramento, “pero la junta en su moción no pidió eso; solo pidió respuestas a sus preguntas”.
Heinz, quien ha solicitado en repetidas ocasiones que Nanos rinda cuentas, sostiene que la junta sí requirió que Nanos presentara una declaración jurada al citar el estatuto de Arizona.
“Su abogado aparentemente le está diciendo a nuestro abogado externo que la junta no lo solicitó correctamente y que si queríamos que fuera una declaración jurada debimos haberlo aclarado, y eso es una locura”, dice Heinz.
“La primera oración del estatuto A.R.S. 11-253, inciso A — lo especificamos — dice que la junta de supervisores puede exigir a los funcionarios del condado que presenten informes bajo juramento ante la junta”, agregó.
El punto en cuestión en la agenda de la reunión del 7 de abril cita explícitamente ese requisito. “Solicitud de informe al alguacil Nanos conforme a A.R.S. §11-253(A). Discusión/Dirección/Acción respecto al borrador de lenguaje y preguntas sobre las cuales la Junta solicitará un informe bajo juramento al alguacil Chris Nanos”, indica el registro público.
Proporcionar el informe bajo juramento es clave porque, según la ley, si un funcionario se niega a presentarlo, la junta puede destituirlo de su cargo.
Heinz dice que el equipo legal de Nanos también se negó a responder de manera sustancial una de las preguntas planteadas por la junta sobre su historial laboral y su relevancia para el desempeño del cargo y sus funciones como alguacil del condado.
“Simplemente dijo que no se le puede preguntar sobre esto y que no es relevante, así que no vamos a responder”, dice Heinz. “Eso es una negativa, así lo veo yo. Así que hay dos cosas muy preocupantes ocurriendo aquí”.
El informe de Nanos, proporcionado por su abogado, incluyó lo siguiente sobre su empleo pasado y su relevancia:
“Las funciones estatutarias del alguacil son distintas de las de un agente del orden público juramentado y regulado por la Junta de Normas y Capacitación de Oficiales de Paz de Arizona (“AZPOST”). Esta distinción es significativa porque confirma que el historial laboral del alguacil es irrelevante para el desempeño de sus funciones como funcionario electo sujeto a la supervisión de la Junta de Supervisores”.
El informe presentado por Nanos también responde a varias preguntas sobre las circunstancias de su salida del Departamento de Policía de El Paso, su historial disciplinario y las fechas en su currículum. El abogado de Nanos estipuló que “en aras de la transparencia y en el espíritu de cooperación, el alguacil me ha autorizado a responder a las preguntas de la junta…”.
La junta incluyó preguntas sobre cuatro temas: la representación previa de Nanos de su historial laboral en el Departamento de Policía de El Paso, las acciones disciplinarias contra la teniente Heather Lappin y el sargento Aaron Cross, la cooperación de su departamento con autoridades federales de inmigración y los repetidos casos en los que su departamento excedió su presupuesto.
Nanos respondió a la solicitud de comentarios de Arizona Luminaria el miércoles sobre las preocupaciones de Heinz, señalando que él “a través de su abogado ha respondido plenamente a las preguntas presentadas por la Junta de Supervisores del condado de Pima”. Agregó que “el asunto involucra litigios civiles pendientes y por lo tanto no será discutido en este momento” y que, ante “preguntas adicionales o solicitudes de seguimiento”, el alguacil “permanece disponible para reunirse con la Junta”.
Heinz dice que no sabe si sus colegas de la junta están dispuestos a destituir a Nanos de su cargo.
Arizona Luminaria solicitó a cada supervisor comentarios sobre si exigieron a Nanos presentar el informe bajo juramento, como lo establece su voto público; por qué lo hicieron o no; y si no tenían la intención de que Nanos cumpliera con la ley de Arizona citada, si la junta tiene algún medio para destituir al alguacil.
Además, Luminaria preguntó a los supervisores si consideran que Nanos ha cumplido con los requisitos de reporte establecidos por la junta en la reunión del 7 de abril, y cuáles consideran los próximos pasos, incluyendo si contemplarían iniciar o apoyar alguna acción relacionada con la destitución del alguacil.
La supervisora del Distrito 3, Jen Allen; el supervisor del Distrito 4, Steve Christy; y el supervisor del Distrito 5, Andrés Cano no respondieron a la solicitud de comentarios de Arizona Luminaria.
La oficina del supervisor del Distrito 1, Rex Scott, informó a Arizona Luminaria que él “reserva cualquier comentario público sobre estos asuntos hasta la próxima reunión de la junta el 12 de mayo”.
La junta recibió el informe de Nanos a última hora el 21 de abril y pospuso su discusión pública hasta la próxima reunión de supervisores, el 12 de mayo, para permitir su revisión.
Traducción: Beatriz Limón
The post Supervisor Heinz: Nanos podría ser destituido por informe que no cumple con requisitos legales appeared first on AZ Luminaria.</news:keywords>
			<news:geo_locations>Andhra Pradesh, Telangana</news:geo_locations>
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		  <loc>https://meenews.co/post/69f3fd7ea200899a00e5ea32</loc>
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			  <news:name>Supervisor Heinz: Nanos could face removal over incomplete report that does not meet legal requirements</news:name>
			  <news:language>te</news:language>
			</news:publication>
			<news:publication_date>2026-05-01T01:10:22.458Z</news:publication_date>
			<news:title>Supervisor Heinz: Nanos could face removal over incomplete report that does not meet legal requirements</news:title>
			<news:keywords>Pima County Supervisor Matt Heinz says it’s time for supervisors to discuss removing Sheriff Chris Nanos from office after the county’s top law officer’s report to the board on his work conduct and history didn’t meet statutory requirements.
“There are significant deficiencies in his response that I believe are so problematic that they put him at risk for removal,” Heinz, who represents District 2, told Arizona Luminaria Tuesday.
Heinz says there were two major issues with Nanos’ response to the board’s request on April 7. First, the 22-page report was not submitted under oath or as a sworn statement.
The board has repeatedly stated that their actions to hold Nanos accountable align with Arizona laws and voted unanimously to request the report.
Board Chair Jen Allen read the motion on April 7 with the following language included, “Pursuant to A.R.S. 11-253, the Board requests a report from Sheriff Nanos addressing the facts and circumstances related to each of the following matters, together with any corrective actions taken to date, any additional actions proposed, and a timeline for implementation where applicable.”
The Arizona statute cited in the motion states: “The board may require any county officer to make reports under oath on any matter connected with the duties of his office…” 
The law further states, in part, that an officer who “neglects or refuses” the request “may be removed from office by the board and the office declared vacant. The board may then fill the vacancy.”
However, after the report was made public on April 21, Pima County spokesperson Mark Evans told Arizona Luminaria the statement Nanos submitted was not a “sworn document” or provided under oath.
Evans said the statute states the board “may” require a report under oath “but the board in its motion didn’t ask for that, they just asked for answers to their questions.”
Heinz, who has repeatedly called for Nanos to be held accountable, argues that the board required Nanos to provide a sworn statement by citing the Arizona statute.  
“His attorney apparently is telling our outside attorney that the board didn’t ask for it correctly and if we wanted it to be a sworn statement we should have clarified — and that is bonkers,” Heinz says.
“The first sentence of the statute of A.R.S. 11-253 subsection A — we specified that — it says that the board of supervisors may require county officers to make reports under oath before the board,” he added.
The item at issue on the April 7 meeting agenda explicitly cites the requirement. “Requesting Report from Sheriff Nanos per A.R.S. §11-253(A) Discussion/Direction/Action regarding draft language and questions about which the Board will seek a report under oath from Sheriff Chris Nanos,” the public record states.
Providing the report under oath is key because, under the law, if an officer refuses to make the report, the board may remove them from office.
Heinz says Nanos’ legal team also refused to substantially answer one of the questions asked by the board regarding his work history and its relevance to job performance and duties as a county sheriff.
“He just said you can’t ask me about this and this isn’t relevant so we’re not gonna answer it,” Heinz says. “That’s a refusal as I see it. So, there are two very concerning things going on here.”
Pima County Supervisor Matt Heinz at a meeting on June 3, 2025. Supervisor del Condado de Pima, Matt Heinz, durante una reunión el 3 de junio de 2025.  Credit: Noor Haghighi



Nanos’ report, provided by his attorney, included the following about his past employment and its relevance:
“The Sheriff’s statutory duties are distinct from those of a sworn peace officer regulated by the Arizona Peace Officer Standards and Training Board (“AZPOST”). This distinction is significant because it confirms the Sheriff’s employment history is irrelevant to the performance of his duties as an elected official subject to oversight by the Board of Supervisors.”
The report still answered several questions regarding the circumstances of Nanos’ departure from the El Paso Police Department, his disciplinary history and dates on his resume. Nanos’ attorney stipulated that “in the interest of transparency and in the spirit of cooperation, the Sheriff has authorized me to respond to the Board’s questions…”
The board included questions on four topics: Nanos’ prior representation of his employment history with the El Paso Police Department, his disciplinary actions against Lt. Heather Lappin and Sgt. Aaron Cross, his department’s cooperation with federal immigration officials and repeated instances of his department exceeding its budget.
Nanos responded to Arizona Luminaria’s request Wednesday for comment on Heinz’s concerns, saying that he “through his attorney has fully responded to questions submitted by the Pima County Board of Supervisors.” He added that “the matter involves pending civil litigation and therefore will not be discussed at this time” and upon “additional questions or follow-up requests” the sheriff “remains available to meet with the Board.”
Heinz says he doesn’t know whether his board colleagues are willing to remove Nanos from office. 
Arizona Luminaria asked each supervisor to comment on whether they required Nanos to make the report under oath as stated in their public vote; why they did or did not; and if they did not intend for Nanos to follow the Arizona law they cited, does the board have any means to remove the sheriff from office.
Luminaria additionally asked the supervisors if they believe Nanos has fulfilled the reporting requirements the board outlined at the April 7 meeting, and what they see as next steps, including whether they’d consider initiating or supporting any action related to the sheriff’s removal.
District 3 Supervisor Jen Allen, District 4 Supervisor Steve Christy and District 5 Supervisor Andrés Cano did not respond to Arizona Luminaria’s request for comment.
District 1 Supervisor Rex Scott’s office told Arizona Luminaria he’s “reserving any public comment about these matters until the next Board meeting on May 12.”
The board received Nanos’ report at the last minute on April 21 and delayed public discussion of it until the next supervisor’s meeting on May 12 to allow for review.
The post Supervisor Heinz: Nanos could face removal over incomplete report that does not meet legal requirements appeared first on AZ Luminaria.</news:keywords>
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