[World] Dozens escape Mexican jail in deadly attack

BBC News world 

Image source, Reuters

Image caption,

Relatives gathered outside the prison gates after the shootings

Dozens of inmates have escaped from a prison in northern Mexico after gunmen, suspected to be members of a drug cartel, opened fire on the facility.

The men arrived outside the Chihuahua state prison shortly after 07:00 (14:00 GMT) in armoured vehicles and began firing on the guards, authorities say.

Ten were killed, along with four prisoners, during the audacious and brutal attack in the border city of Ciudad Juarez.

Police say some 24 inmates escaped.

Fighting within the prison, where inmates from differing criminal bands and drug cartels are housed in separate cellblocks, also left 13 people injured. Four of them are being treated in hospital, prison authorities said.

Outside, relatives gathered, hugging each other and crying as they waited for news.

One woman said the attackers were dressed in black, were better armed than the police, and were shooting at any vehicles that passed by.

The army and the national guard have been called in to support local authorities in the aftermath.

The city has seen years of violent clashes between the rival Sinaloa and Juarez drug cartels, killing thousands of people in the past decade.

The prison was also the site of an uprising last August in which a riot inside the jail spilled over into the streets, killing 11 people.

Both incidents underline the strength which the drug cartels still exert on the prison system.

Prosecutors in the city, which is across the border from El Paso, Texas, have promised an investigation into the latest attack.

Minutes before the escape, armed men fired on police on a nearby street, setting off a car chase that ended up with four men being detained.

In a different area of the city, two more drivers died after what officials called armed aggression.

Authorities have not yet said whether the incidents are believed to be linked.

 

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[World] Pope Benedict XVI: Lying in state at the Vatican begins

BBC News world 

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Tens of thousands of people are expected to pay their respects to former Pope Benedict XVI when his lying in state begins at the Vatican later.

He died on New Year’s Eve at the age of 95, almost a decade after he stood down because of ill health.

Pope Francis will preside over Thursday’s funeral – the first time that a Pope will be buried by his successor.

The Vatican says the service will be simple, solemn and sober.

Benedict XVI became the first Pope to resign in 600 years in 2013, citing ailing health.

His body will be displayed for three days in an open casket at St Peter’s Basilica, with people allowed to pay their respects until 7pm each evening.

The funeral will take place in St Peter’s Square, before the Pope Emeritus is laid to rest in the tombs beneath the Basilica.

The Vatican released pictures of the body on Sunday, dressed in red papal mourning robes and wearing a gold-trimmed mitre.

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Watch: Pope Francis expresses thanks for the life and service of Benedict XVI

Tributes have poured in from around the world, and the funeral is expected to draw crowds of thousands.

The last papal funeral, that of Pope John Paul II in 2005, was one of the largest Christian gatherings in history, and drew an estimated four million people to Rome.

Arrangements for the service are not yet clear, as many of the traditions associated with the death of a serving Pope are not required – most notably the election of a successor.

Benedict asked that the funeral be marked by simplicity, Vatican spokesman Matteo Bruni told journalists.

Details of the guest list have not been released, but the Vatican has said that it will include delegations from Italy and Benedict’s native Germany.

US President Joe Biden lauded the former Pope’s “lifetime of devotion to the Church”, while Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni hailed him as “a great man whom history will not forget”.

In Brazil – the largest Catholic nation in the world – incoming President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva said he wished “comfort to the faithful and admirers of the Holy Father”.

Pope Benedict was a controversial figure, and some have criticised him for failing to tackle allegations of clerical sexual abuse.

 

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Kenny Pickett leads Steelers to late rally to defeat rival Ravens, playoff hopes intact

Latest & Breaking News on Fox News 

This Sunday night matchup had playoff implications written all over it. The Pittsburgh Steelers needed to win to stay alive for a wild card, while the Baltimore Ravens, already owning a playoff spot, still has a chance to win the AFC North. 

It was the black and gold that came out on top to save their season. 

The Steelers defeated their division rival, 16-13, thanks to a late touchdown by running back Najee Harris from rookie quarterback Kenny Pickett.

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There wasn’t much offense that came out of this one, as the Ravens especially have been struggling to put points on the board with Lamar Jackson still sidelined. The Steelers have also been going through different quarterbacks all season, and this time it was the rookie first-rounder Pickett getting the nod to play under center. 

However, the end of this game turned out to be a thriller as the Steelers got the ball on their own 20-yard line down four points with a chance to take the lead late in the fourth. 

And Pickett was delivering strikes on this drive, finding Pat Freiermuth for 20 yards to get to midfield after collecting one first down. Then, Pickett threw a seed to Steven Sims across the middle of the field for 28 yards to make things very interesting in Ravens’ territory. 

RAVENS’ ROQUAN SMITH SAYS BEARS GM TOLD HIM THERE WERE NO PLANS TO TRADE HIM

After burrowing under the offensive line for another first down on a quarterback sneak, Pickett would eventually scramble out to his left a few plays later and fire a dot to running back Najee Harris to take the lead, 16-13, with just under a minute left to play.

It was the first touchdown of the game for Pittsburgh, but it couldn’t have come at a more crucial time with their season on the line. 

Having Justin Tucker on the sideline, the Ravens and quarterback Tyler Huntley understood they didn’t have to get far into Steelers’ territory to attempt a game-tying field goal and send it to overtime. Tucker’s leg has hit from beyond 60 yards before. 

But Huntley wasn’t careful with the ball. On 2nd-and-10 from the Baltimore 38-yard line, he decided to throw one deep intended for Demarcus Robinson. Instead, it found the hands of safety Minkah Fitzpatrick, which iced the win for Pittsburgh. 

While the Ravens will hope that the Cincinnati Bengals lose to the Buffalo Bills on Monday night, snapping their seven-game win streak to keep their division title hopes alive, the Steelers can still get in next week if they beat the Cleveland Browns

If that happens, Pittsburgh still needs help from the New York Jets, who must beat the Miami Dolphins and the New England Patriots lose to the Bills. So, yes, we’re saying there’s definitely a chance for Mike Tomlin’s group to get in. 

NFL NETWORK CUTS STEELEERS’ FRANCO HARRIS TRIBUTE TO COMMERCIAL, FANS REACT IN DISGUST

The game started with long, methodic drives from both teams, but they each ended in made field goals. The Steelers’ drive went 15 plays for 73 yards and killed 7:59 of clock, while the Ravens went 61 yards on 15 plays over 7:52 of time, draining out the first quarter with no one getting the upper hand. 

It wasn’t until a missed Chris Boswell field goal prompted a Ravens drive that went 62 yards for a touchdown to rookie tight end Isaiah Likely for seven yards to give Baltimore the lead. 

The second half saw more field goals, most notably Tucker knocking one in from 51 yards out. Solid defensive play on both sides kept it extremely close. 

In the end, Pickett finished with 168 yards on 15 of 27 through the air, while Harris set the tone in the run game with 111 yards on 22 carries. Jaylen Warren also contributed 76 yards on 12 touches. 

For the Ravens, Mark Andrews had 100 yards on nine receptions, while J.K. Dobbins finished with 93 rushing yards on 17 carries. Huntley was 14 of 21 for 130 yards with his passing touchdown and interception.

 

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McCarthy offers concessions to detractors with House Rules package

Just In | The Hill 

House GOP Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) offered some key concessions to his detractors in a House Rules package released by Republicans on Sunday, but it is still far from clear whether the moves will help him lock up the votes necessary to become Speaker on Jan. 3.

The compromises include allowing a move to “vacate the chair” — a move to force a vote on ousting the Speaker — with the approval of five Republican members, rather than a threshold of at least half of the House GOP Conference that Republicans adopted in an internal rule in November. 

The chamber is also set to create a House Judiciary Select Subcommittee on the “Weaponization of the Federal Government,” an apparent recognition of a request to increase scrutiny on the Biden administration and intelligence agencies.

In a letter to GOP colleagues, McCarthy — speaking as “Speaker-Designate” — also addressed a request from conservatives to have more representation on committees.

“I will use my selections on key panels to ensure they more closely reflect the ideological makeup of our conference, and will advocate for the same when it comes to the membership of standing committees. This will facilitate greater scrutiny of bills from the start so they stand a greater chance of passing in the end,” the letter from McCarthy said.

The moves, though, have yet to move any of those whose resistance threatens to keep McCarthy from the gavel.

“I think what he’s trying to do is the bare minimum that he needs to try and get to where he can get the votes. And that’s not indicative of somebody that really wants to embrace new ideas, reject the status quo and unify all members in the conference,” Rep. Scott Perry (R-Pa.), the chair of the House Freedom Caucus who has not committed to voting either for or against the GOP Leader, told The Hill on Sunday.

House Republicans held a New Year’s Day call on the Rules package on Sunday afternoon. After the call, a group of nine hardline conservatives released a letter saying that McCarthy’s response does not adequately meet their standard for the motion to vacate the chair, and said he did not address a request for leadership to not work to defeat conservatives in open primaries.

“At this stage, it cannot be a surprise that expressions of vague hopes reflected in far too many of the crucial points still under debate are insufficient,” the members said in the letter.

But they also added: “The progress made thus far has been helpful and should guide our thinking going forward.”

Members signing the letter included Perry along with Reps. Chip Roy (Texas), Paul Gosar (Ariz.), Dan Bishop (N.C.), Andy Harris (Md.) and Andrew Clyde (Ga.) and Reps.-elect Anna Paulina Luna (Fla.), Andy Ogles (Tenn.) and Eli Crane (Ariz.). That group notably does not include the five members considered to be “Never Kevin” opponents: Reps. Andy Biggs (Ariz.), Matt Gaetz (Fla.), Bob Good (Va.),  Matt Rosendale (Mont.) and Ralph Norman (S.C.).

McCarthy needs a majority of all those voting for a Speaker candidate on Jan. 3 to secure the post, and in a slim 222 to 212 majority, he can afford to lose only four GOP votes. A vote on the Rules package will happen only after the House elects a Speaker.

The Rules package also includes changes to rules regarding fiscal procedures, pandemic-era remote work, a review of ethics procedures and more.

Compromise on Vacate the Chair

A major issue for those withholding support or opposing McCarthy for Speaker of the House has been restoring any member’s ability to make a move to “vacate the chair,” which would force a vote on removing the Speaker. 

The procedural move, which conservatives say is a check on the Speaker’s power, made headlines when then-Rep. Mark Meadows (R-N.C.) made the motion in 2015, contributing to a House Freedom Caucus rebellion that ended in former GOP Speaker John Boehner (Ohio) resigning from Congress later that year. But when House Democrats took the majority, they allowed only the party leaders to make the motion.

House Republicans adopted a rule that allows the motion to be brought up if half the conference agrees, but McCarthy detractors want the required number to be lower.

After many negotiations, the proposed GOP Rules package lowers the threshold to bring up the move to five GOP members.

Perry, though, expressed disappointment at the proposal.

“Leaders like [former GOP Speakers] Paul Ryan [Wis.] and John Boehner, and everyone before them, were fine to work under those provisions. And now, suddenly, in 2022, the guy that wants to be Speaker wants to double down on what [House Speaker] Nancy Pelosi [D-Calif.] put in place and actually make it less accountable than even she did,” Perry said. “That doesn’t seem to be indicative of unity, and it doesn’t seem to be indicative of a person that’s asking his detractors to trust him.”

Select panels to target Biden administration, COVID origins, China

Republicans will bring a vote to form a select subcommittee on “Weaponization of the Federal Government” under the House Judiciary Committee.

The creation of the select subcommittee is a response to a request from GOP members who have withheld support for McCarthy to form a “Church-style” committee to investigate alleged government abuses, in reference to a 1975 Senate select committee named for former Sen. Frank Church (D-Idaho) that investigated intelligence agencies.

In his letter to colleagues, McCarthy used the same language, praising creation of a “Church-style Select Committee focused exclusively on exposing the weaponization of government against our citizenry, writ large.”

The committee is expected to have the same general structure as typical select committees, which means it has no individual subpoena itself. But the full Judiciary Committee, to be chaired by Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio), does have subpoena authority and is expected to aggressively target the Biden administration.

Republicans are also keeping the select committee on the coronavirus pandemic under the House Oversight panel, but changing its charter to focus on the origins of the virus as well as the impacts of shutdowns. Rep. James Comer (R-Ky.) is set to be chair of the full Oversight Committee.

Republicans are also set to vote in the first two weeks of the Congressional session to create the Select Committee on the Strategic Competition Between the United States and the Chinese Communist Party. McCarthy has announced Rep. Mike Gallagher (R-Wis.) as his pick to chair the panel

Restoration of fiscal measures and new inflation analysis

Republicans are bringing back the Holman Rule, which allows members to propose amendments to appropriations bills that cut the salaries of specific federal workers or funding for specific programs down to $1, effectively defunding them. Some Republicans have suggested using the rule to defund certain investigations and officials in the FBI and Department of Justice or the Department of Homeland Security or officials who were involved in COVID-19 policies. 

The hardline conservative House Freedom Caucus had advocated to bring back the Holman Rule since the summer. It was also in the House Rules the last time there was a GOP majority in the 116th Congress.

In a new move, Republicans will direct the Congressional Budget Office to analyze the inflationary impact of legislation in addition to the budgetary impact — an issue that Republicans repeatedly hammered amid the inflation rate hitting a four-decade high in 2022.

The package also restores some longtime fiscal rules that Democrats removed, such as a three-fifths supermajority threshold to increase federal income taxes.

The Congressional Budget Office and the Joint Committee on Taxation will also be directed to use “dynamic scoring,” a method that considers a bill’s impact on macroeconomic changes in the economy when evaluating its budgetary effect. Republicans previously used dynamic scoring to bolster their argument that tax cuts would not be a detriment to the economy because they would boost economic activity and therefore increase tax revenue.

“PAYGO,” the “pay-as-you-go” rule that requires legislation that would increase mandatory spending to be offset with spending cues or revenue increases, will be replaced with “CUTGO,” a “cut-as-you-go” variation first instituted by Republicans in 2011 that requires increases to be offset with equal or greater mandatory spending decreases. Both parties have frequently waived the rule to pass legislation in the past.

End to pandemic-era remote work rules

Gone are proxy voting and remote work rules instituted due to COVID-19, as well as fines for mask mandates. Members will no longer be able to participate in hearings remotely via videoconference, and only select non-government witnesses will be able to testify to committees remotely if they are unable to travel to Washington.

The House Sergeant at Arms sent a memo to House staff last week announcing a return to pre-pandemic norms of open public access to House office buildings and tours starting on Tuesday.

Procedural and ethics measures

In a blow to efforts from progressive staff to form labor unions in Congressional offices, which were approved in a House resolution in 2022, the Rules packages will “eliminate Democrats’ creation of House staff labor unions so that Congressional staff are accountable to the elected officials they serve,” a highlights summary of the rules said.

It also directs the House Ethics committee to adopt a process to accept complaints directly from the public, rather than having to go through the Office of Congressional Ethics (which will remain in place). The Ethics panel is also directed to conduct a bipartisan “comprehensive review” of House ethics rules and regulations.

The rules also fulfill another request from House conservatives to require at least 72 hours from the release of bill text before a final vote.

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Pete Rose, recipient of lifetime MLB ban for betting, places first legal sports bet in Ohio

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Pete Rose, the all-time Major League Baseball hit king who received a lifetime ban from the sport for betting on games in which he managed, just placed the first legal sports bet in the history of the state of Ohio at Hard Rock Casino.

The Buckeye state’s new sports gambling law took effect on January 1, though Governor Mike DeWine initially signed it back in December 2021. 

According to Spectrum News 1, George Goldhoff, property president of Hard Rock Casino, said: “Ohioans are crazy about their sports, they really love their sports, and we think it’s going to be quite popular.”

He added, “The money that was being bet by Ohioans, whether it was in Michigan or Indiana, is all going to stay here in the state and the taxpayers are gonna benefit.”

PHILLIES SIGN TREA TURNER TO MASSIVE DEAL AS NL EAST CONTINUES TO MOVE FREE AGENT MARKET: REPORT

After placing the bet, Rose said, “I don’t know a d–n thing about odds. Go Reds! Go Bengals!”

Back in August 1989, an investigation into Rose’s alleged gambling was completed. 

It was found that Rose bet on baseball games, and had bet specifically on at least 50 Reds games in 1987, at a minimum of $10,000 per day, according to Bleacher Report.

HOW AARON JUDGE’S GAMBLE ON HIMSELF TURNED INTO HISTORIC YEAR ON AND OFF THE FIELD

For nearly 20 years, Rose then denied ever having bet on the sport. In 2004, however, he did finally reveal that he placed wagers.

A one-time MVP award-winner, Rose holds the MLB record for most career hits (4,256), which he amassed over his 24-year big league career. 

Nicknamed “Charlie Hustle” for his ferocious style of play, Rose spent the bulk of his career (19 years) playing for the Reds, with stops along the way for the Philadelphia Phillies and Montreal Expos. 

Rose also holds the MLB all-time records for games played (3,562), plate appearances (15,890) and at-bats (14,053). 

 

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Biden begins 2023 with a stronger hand to play and an inclination to play it

There are challenges still on the horizon, from an economy threatening to slow down, to the war in Europe, to an incoming Republican House majority threatening gridlock and investigations. But those in the president’s circle believe there is a strong and growing likelihood that he will run again and that an announcement could potentially come earlier than had been expected, possibly as soon as mid-February, around the expected date of the State of the Union, according to those people.

That potentially accelerated time is owed, in part, to a sense inside the White House and among Biden allies, that the new year dawns on a note of revival, one marked by an unlikely comeback that has reassured fellow Democrats.

Revamping the primary calendar to put Biden-friendly South Carolina first was another sign of intention to run again. First Lady Jill Biden has signaled that she is onboard with another bid, even as some close Biden worry about the toll of a campaign on the 80-year-old president. Advisors privately acknowledge that Biden benefitted in 2020 by being spared the full rigors of a campaign due to the pandemic and some close to him harbor anxieties as to how he will handle a punishing, full-blown itinerary this time around.

Though some Democrats still express worry about Biden’s age, their public doubts were largely silenced by the party’s strong November showing, in which Democrats grew their Senate lead and prevented a red wave in the House. There are still worries, chief among them, per White House aides, is the economy.

Though inflation has somewhat cooled, it remains high in most sectors and there are fears that gas prices could rise again next year. Moreover, there is a quiet concern in the West Wing that the nation’s economy will slow for at least the first quarter of 2023, according to administration officials, even if the United States manages to technically avoid a recession.

Europe, meanwhile, seems poised for a possibly significant setback, having been battered by inflation and an energy crisis exacerbated by the war in Ukraine. That could cause residual effects in the U.S. as could a lingering Covid crisis in China, which has sparked worries in Washington about supply line challenges as well as the possible birth of a new virus variant that could spread throughout the globe.

China looms as another concern for other reasons. Though Biden’s November summit with Xi Jinping in Bali helped cool some tensions between the two superpowers, Beijing has continued to send menacing signals toward Taiwan and has not fully abandoned its Russian allies. And while Kyiv has shown remarkable resilience in repelling Russia’s forces, Moscow has shown no signs of abandoning its invasion and has resorted to terror strikes against Ukraine’s civilian infrastructure to plunge much of the nation into darkness during a cold winter.

Closer to home, while the Republicans’ majority in the House will be slim and unruly, the newly empowered GOP lawmakers will be able to exact a price on the West Wing. After two years of unified Democratic control, Biden will now see much of his agenda stall. And armed with the power of subpoena, Republicans are vowing to open a slew of investigations into the president’s policies and family. Already, there are frictions between the two sides over document production and records requests.

But the Biden White House points to its success in 2022 as proof that its strategy has been working. Rewarded by voters, the West Wing sees no reason to change course.

The president’s aides believe that the Republican agenda on many issues — from entitlements to abortion — is out of step with a majority of the public. Biden took office promising an alternative to the extremist elements in the Republican Party and pledged to work across the aisle. He managed to achieve some bipartisan victories in 2022, including on a semiconductor chips bill and a modest gun control package.

“The American people were clear in the best midterms for a new President in 60 years that they want leaders to focus on improving their lives — not partisan divisiveness — and President Biden’s hand is outstretched to his Republican colleagues in an offer to make bipartisan progress for the country,” said White House spokesperson Andrew Bates.

While many GOP election deniers were defeated in November, the extreme right will wield power in the new Congress and has all but pledged obstruction. Biden has steadfastly promised to find areas of compromise, and his aides believe that he’ll be cheered by voters for the effort even if the results are scarce. The West Wing also believes the planned congressional investigations could backfire on the new GOP House majority, considering some of the likely areas of inquiry.

Republicans have vowed to look into the administration’s handling of the Afghanistan withdrawal and the migrant crisis at the border. But they’ve also pledged to investigate the business dealings of the president’s son, Hunter Biden. Rep. James Comer (R-Ky.), expected to be a loud voice in the new Congress, recently declared “We are going to make it very clear that this is now an investigation of President Biden.”

While a newly empowered GOP majority in the House will block most chances of significant policy action, White House aides believe that some previous legislative wins will more fully take effect next year and prove popular with voters, furthering their momentum. Biden’s inflation reduction act will lock in key priorities on climate funding and prescription drug prices. The transportation law will continue to fund projects across the country. And his final piece of legislation for the year, a $1.7 trillion bipartisan spending package, includes an overhaul of the law his predecessor cited in the lead up to the January 6 riot.

“There were questions about whether or not Biden would run again but not only are those questions muted, there is more energy and enthusiasm to run again,” said Basil Smikle, a Democratic strategist. “He got elected to bring the pendulum back to the middle, to create some sort of normalcy, and he’s done that. He’s also cast a light on Republicans to make their candidates less desirable.”

But 2023 will also be a year of war. Perhaps Biden’s signature accomplishment over the past 12 months was his ability to hold an alliance together to support Ukraine in its rebellion against Russia, framing the fight as one for democracies around the globe. The conflict appears nowhere close to abating: neither side will entertain peace negotiations, and there are worries about how long European solidarity will last in the face of a growing economic crisis.

The war has become a vital test of Biden’s governing principle: that this century would be a battle between democracies and autocracies and the free world would win if it proved it could deliver for its people. So far, Biden believes it has.

“The American people know that if we stand by in the face of such blatant attacks on liberty and democracy and the core principles of sovereignty and territorial integrity, the world would surely face worse consequences,” said Biden as he stood alongside Ukraine’s president at the White House. “American people are prepared to have us stand up to bullies, stand up for freedom. That’s who we are as Americans. And that’s exactly what we’ve done.”

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House conservatives say McCarthy’s efforts to address demands ‘insufficient’ ahead of speaker election

Just In | The Hill 

Nine House conservatives expressed doubts about electing Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) as the next speaker of the House, calling for a “radical departure from the status quo” ahead of the Tuesday floor vote.

In a Sunday letter obtained by The Hill, Reps. Scott Perry (R-Pa.) and Chip Roy (R-Texas) led seven other hardline Republican House members and members-elect in calling McCarthy’s responses to their pre-election demands “insufficient.”

“The times call for radical departure from the status quo — not a continuation of past and ongoing Republican failures,” they wrote. “For someone with a 14-year presence in senior House Republican leadership, Mr. McCarthy bears squarely the burden to correct the dysfunction he now explicitly admits across that long tenure.”

Besides Perry and Roy, the GOP lawmakers who signed the letter are Dan Bishop (N.C.), Andrew Clyde (Ga.), Paul Gosar (Ariz.) and Andy Harris (Md.).

GOP Reps.-elect Anna Paulina Luna (Fla.), Eli Crane (Ariz.) and Andy Ogles (Tenn.) also signed.

The letter was released after McCarthy on New Year’s Eve submitted a written response to the conservatives, seven of whom in early December demanded several changes to House rules and policies from speaker candidates. They did not name McCarthy in that letter, but it came as other House Republicans expressed opposition to the minority leader becoming speaker.

In his response, entitled, “Restoring the People’s House and Ending Business as Usual,” the group said McCarthy detailed dysfunction in the House and vowed to set it right once he takes up the speaker’s gavel.

But the Republicans said it came “almost impossibly late to address continued deficiencies ahead of the opening of the 118th Congress on January 3rd.”

“There continue to be missing specific commitments with respect to virtually every component of our entreaties, and thus, no means to measure whether promises are kept or broken,” the group wrote.

One of the demands the group made was for a mechanism that would allow lawmakers to more easily call a motion to remove the House speaker.

But McCarthy pushed to maintain restrictions on that ability in his formal response, according to the letter writers, who said they will “not accept” the next speaker without that mechanism.

McCarthy won a Republican Conference vote for the speakership last month but must garner the support of a majority of the House on the floor Tuesday to secure the position.

McCarthy will need 218 votes to win, and with Republicans holding on to just 222 seats in the next Congress, he can’t afford to lose many GOP voters.

Only one opponent, Rep. Andy Biggs (R-Ariz.), has mounted an official challenge against the GOP leader for the role.

In addition to Biggs, at least four far-right Republicans have already said they will vote against McCarthy. None of those five lawmakers are among the signatories of Sunday’s letter.

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Major Tuddy makes Commanders debut but potential lawsuit could be looming

The Washington Commanders might have a lawsuit on their hands after unveiling their new mascot, Major Tuddy, during Sunday’s loss to the Cleveland Browns. 

Major Tuddy, a hog in Commanders gear, was running around FedExField trying to pump up the Washington fans in attendance. But a certain group of former Washington players weren’t so pleased. 

According to Front Office Sports, the choices for the mascot came down to a dog or the hog. However, the hog was trademarked in July by O-Line Entertainment, which is an LCC formed by the original “Hogs” Joe Jacoby, Mark May, John Riggins, Fred Dean, and Doc Walker. 

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Russ Grimm (front), Joe Jacoby, George Starke, Fred Dean, Mark May and Jeff Bostic formed the 1980s Washington Redskins unit known as the Hogs.

Russ Grimm (front), Joe Jacoby, George Starke, Fred Dean, Mark May and Jeff Bostic formed the 1980s Washington Redskins unit known as the Hogs.
(John McDonnell/The Washington Post via Getty Images)

O-Line Entertainment filed two trademarks: Hogs and Original Hogs. 

“If they go forward on Sunday and make the hog their mascot and try to trademark it, we are going to be forced into trademark infringement litigation,” O-Line Entertainment attorney Seth Berenzweig told Front Office Sports. 

COMMANDERS’ CARSON WENTZ FACES BOOS AS HE THROWS TWO INTERCEPTIONS IN FIRST HALF

“We’ve made it very clear to them that we believe they’d be infringing on the trademark, and they need to arrange a licensing deal with the players. They have refused to do that.”

The debut of Major Tuddy came on the day of the Commanders’ celebration of the Hogs’ 40th anniversary. 

Joe Jacoby #66 of the Washington Redskins in action against the New York Giants during an NFL football game September 16, 1984 at RFK Memorial Stadium in Washington, D.C.. Jacoby played for the Redskins from 1981-93.

Joe Jacoby #66 of the Washington Redskins in action against the New York Giants during an NFL football game September 16, 1984 at RFK Memorial Stadium in Washington, D.C.. Jacoby played for the Redskins from 1981-93.
(Focus on Sport/Getty Images)

“The Hogs are a key part of our franchise’s history and we want to keep their legacy alive with the next generation of fans,” the Commanders said in an official statement about their famous offensive line grouping. “We have been working with the Hogs on this event for six months and look forward to welcoming them and Coach Gibbs back.”

The Commanders abandoned the Hogs trademark they had in 1991, but Zak Kurtz, a trademark attorney, told FOS the team could argue that it had the trademark first if faced with legal challenge. 

BROWNS’ DESHAUN WATSON THROWS 3 TOUCHDOWNS TO WIPE OUT COMMANDERS ON THE ROAD

As of now, the team hasn’t challenged the trademark by O-Line Entertainment. 

Things didn’t go well for Washington in the game Sunday, as they fell 24-10 to Deshaun Watson and the Browns. Carson Wentz, who was back in the saddle as the Commanders’ starter, threw three interceptions and heard boos from fans in the stands. 

Jan 1, 2023; Landover, Maryland, USA; Washington Commanders fans cheer against the Cleveland Browns during the first half at FedExField. 

Jan 1, 2023; Landover, Maryland, USA; Washington Commanders fans cheer against the Cleveland Browns during the first half at FedExField. 
(Brad Mills-USA TODAY Sports)

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With the Green Bay Packers routing the Minnesota Vikings at home, the Commanders are officially out of the playoff hunt as well. 

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North Korea's Kim orders 'exponential' expansion of nuke arsenal

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un ordered the “exponential” expansion of his country’s nuclear arsenal and the development of a more powerful intercontinental ballistic missile, state media reported Sunday, after he entered 2023 with another weapons launch following a record number of testing activities last year.

Kim’s moves are in line with the broad direction of his nuclear program. He has repeatedly vowed to boost both the quality and quantity of his arsenal to cope with what he calls U.S. hostility. Some experts say Kim’s push to produce more nuclear and other weapons signals his intention to continue a run of weapons tests and ultimately solidify his future negotiating power and win greater outside concessions.

“They are now keen on isolating and stifling (North Korea), unprecedented in human history,” Kim said at a recently ended key ruling party meeting, according to the official Korean Central News Agency. “The prevailing situation calls for making redoubled efforts to overwhelmingly beef up the military muscle.”

During the six-day meeting meant to determine new state objectives, Kim called for “an exponential increase of the country’s nuclear arsenal” to mass produce battlefield tactical nuclear weapons targeting South Korea. He also presented a task to develop a new ICBM missioned with a “quick nuclear counterstrike” capability — a weapon he needs to strike the mainland U.S. He said the North’s first military reconnaissance satellite will be launched “at the earliest date possible,” KCNA said.

“Kim’s comments from the party meeting reads like an ambitious — but perhaps achievable — New Year’s resolution list,” said Soo Kim, a security analyst at the California-based RAND Corporation. “It’s ambitious in that Kim consciously chose to spell out what he hopes to accomplish as we head into 2023, but it also suggests a dose of confidence on Kim’s part.”

Last month, North Korea claimed to have performed key tests needed for the development of a new strategic weapon, a likely reference to a solid-fueled ICBM, and a spy satellite.

Kim’s identification of South Korea as an enemy and the mention of hostile U.S. and South Korean policies is “a reliable pretext for the regime to produce more missiles and weapons to solidify Kim’s negotiating position and concretize North Korea’s status as a nuclear weapons power,” Soo Kim said.

Later Sunday, South Korea’s Defense Ministry reiterated a warning that any attempt to use nuclear weapons by North Korea “will lead to the end of the Kim Jong Un government.” The U.S. military has previously made similar warnings.

“The new year started but our security situation is still very grave,” South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol told top military officers during a video conference. “Our military must resolutely punish any provocation by the enemy with a firm determination that we dare to risk fighting a battle.”

Senior diplomats from South Korea, the U.S. and Japan spoke by phone and agreed that provocations by North Korea would only deepen its international isolation and prompt their trilateral security cooperation. They still reaffirmed that the door to dialogue with North Korea remains open, according to the South Korean Foreign Ministry.

Since his high-stakes summitry with then-President Donald Trump collapsed in 2019 due to wrangling over U.S.-led sanctions, Kim Jong Un has refused to return to talks with Washington and taken steps to enlarge his arsenal. Some observers say Kim would eventually want to make North Korea a legitimate nuclear power so as to win the lifting of international sanctions and the end of the regular U.S.-South Korean military drills that he views as a major security threat.

“It was during his 2018 New Year’s speech that (Kim) first ordered the mass production of warheads and ballistic missiles, and he’s doubling down on that quantitative expansion goal in the coming year,” said Ankit Panda, an expert with the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

Panda said the reference to a new ICBM appears to concern a solid-propellant system, which could be tested soon. He said a satellite launch could take place in April, a month that includes a key state anniversary.

Worries about North Korea’s nuclear program have grown since the North last year approved a new law that authorized the preemptive use of nuclear weapons in a broad range of situations and openly threatened to use its nuclear weapons first. During last week’s party meeting, Kim reiterated that threat.

Earlier Sunday, South Korea’s military detected a short-range ballistic missile launched from the North’s capital region. It said the weapon traveled about 400 kilometers (250 miles) before falling into the water between the Korean Peninsula and Japan. The U.S. Indo-Pacific Command said that the U.S. commitments to defend South Korea and Japan “remain ironclad.”

North Korea test-fired more than 70 missiles last year, including three short-range ballistic missiles detected by South Korea on Saturday. The testing spree indicates the country is likely emboldened by its advancing nuclear program. Observers say the North was also able to continue its banned missile tests because China and Russia have blocked the U.S. and others from toughening U.N. sanctions at the Security Council.

KCNA confirmed Sunday that the country conducted the test-firings of its super-large multiple rocket launcher on Saturday and Sunday. Kim Jong Un said the rocket launcher puts all of South Korea within striking distance and is capable of carrying a tactical nuclear warhead, according to KCNA.

“Its recent missile launches were not technically impressive. Instead, the high volume of tests at unusual times and from various locations demonstrate that North Korea could launch different types of attack, anytime, and from many directions,” said Leif-Eric Easley, a professor at Ewha University in Seoul.

Animosities between the rival Koreas have further deepened since early last week, when South Korea accused North Korea of flying drones across their heavily fortified border for the first time in five years and responded by sending its own drones toward the North.

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Lula da Silva sworn in as Brazil's president amid fears of violence from Bolsonaro supporters



CNN
 — 

Luiz Inácio “Lula” da Silva was sworn in as Brazil’s president for the third time on Sunday, as threats of violence loomed from supporters of his predecessor, Jair Bolsonaro.

“I promise to maintain, defend and fulfill the constitution, observe the laws, promote the general good of the Brazilian people, support the unity, integrity and independence of Brazil,” Lula said.

The 76-year-old politician, returning to the presidency after a 12 year hiatus, arrived with his wife, Rosângela da Silva, at the Metropolitan Cathedral in Brasília at 12:20 p.m. local time before heading to congress where a formal congressional session took place.

Parliamentarians applauded Lula before breaking into a chant of “ole, ole ola, Lula, Lula.”

Brazil's new President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva gestures as he is sworn in at the National Congress, in Brasilia, Brazil, January 1, 2023.

The Senate president opened the ceremony by paying respects to Pelé and Pope Benedict with a minute of silence.

During the ceremony, Lula broke with traditional protocol to tell a short story about the pen he used to sign congressional documents.

“In 1989 was in a rally in Piaui, then we walked until the San Benedict church, and a citizen gave me this pen and asked me to use this to sign in if I win the election in ’89. I didn’t win the election in ‘89, didn’t win in ‘94, didn’t win ‘98. In 2002 I won, but when I arrived here I had forgotten the pen and signed with a senator pen. In 2006, I signed with the Senate pen, and now I found the pen, and I do in honor of the people of Piaui state,” he said.

The newly inaugurated president and the first lady then traveled in an open car parade to attend a military honors ceremony outside the presidential palace.

Looming over the ceremony was the notable absence of Bolsonaro, who left Brazil for Florida on Friday and did not specify his return date.

His trip to the United States breaks with Brazilian convention of outgoing leaders being present at their successors’ inauguration ceremony. It came as Brazil’s government issued an ordinance on Friday authorizing five civil servants to accompany “future ex-president” Bolsonaro to Miami, Florida, between January 1 and 30, 2023.

Lula supporters gather to attend his inauguration as new president, in Brasilia, Brazil, Sunday, Jan. 1, 2023.

Lula won a tight run-off race on October 30, in a stunning comeback that marked the return of the left in power in Brazil following four years of Bolsonaro’s far-right administration.

Lula accomplished a remarkable return to power after a series of corruption allegations that led to his imprisonment for 580 days. The Supreme Court later ruled it a mistrial, clearing his path to run for reelection.

After previously governing Brazil for two consecutive terms between 2003 and 2010, Lula will inherit a country with crippling debt and much higher levels of poverty than when he left office.

Bolsonaro’s former vice president, Hamilton Mourao, addressed the nation in a speech on national television this Saturday on the last day of his government and criticized leaders whose silence created “an atmosphere of chaos.”

“Leaders that should reassure and unite the nation around a project for the country allowed that silence to create an atmosphere of chaos and social division,” said Mourao, who added that the armed forces had to pay the bill. Since the election results, Bolsonaro had addressed the public only three times. He did not accept election results in those addresses, fomenting his radical base into believing the result could be reversed.

Lula, his wife Rosangela Silva, Vice President-elect Geraldo Alckmin, right, and his wife, Maria Lucia Ribeiro, ride to Congress for their swearing-in ceremony, in Brasilia, Brazil, Sunday, Jan. 1, 2023.

Lula vowed to rebuild the country, after thanking the “vow of trust given by the Brazilian people” during a speech addressing Congress.

“Today our message to Brazil is of hope and reconstruction,” Lula said. “If we are here today, it is thanks to the political conscience of Brazilian society, and the democratic coalition that we built during the campaign.”

Lula said that democracy was the biggest winner of the Brazilian election after his campaign was able to overcome a series of obstacles.

“Despite everything, the decision in the ballots prevails, thanks to an electoral system internationally recognized for its efficacy. It was fundamental the courageous attitude of the Judiciary, mostly from the Supreme Electoral Court,” Lula continued.

Lula proceeded his speech by criticizing the government of Bolsonaro, accusing the former president of using Brazil’s resources to further increase his power.

“The diagnosis we received from the transition cabinet is appalling. They emptied the resources for health, dismantled education, culture, science, they destroyed the environmental protections, haven’t left resources to school meals, vaccines, public security, forest protection and social assistance,” Lula said.

Lula revoked measures of the Bolsonaro government on his first day as president, reversing Bolsonaro’s loosening of controls for firearms and ammunition and his strong commitment to expand gun ownership in Brazil.

The president also reestablished the Amazon Fund, which uses foreign funds for projects that fight deforestation and preserve the environment in the Amazon. Germany and Norway have been the main sponsors of the Amazon Fund thus far. Under Bolsonaro, the fund was left untouched while then-environmental minister Ricardo Salles dissolved committees responsible for managing the resources.

Lula approved the reconstruction of Brazil’s main environmental agency, Ibama, which had seen staff cuts after Bolsonaro severely cut its budget.

Lula signed a decree establishing the a federal 600 reais monthly benefit for low-income families. The program’s original name, Bolsa Família, was also reinstated. Bolsonaro had changed the name to Auxilio Brasil during his administration.

Lula also extended the tax cuts on fuels, a measure introduced by Bolsonaro in 2022 that brought down prices at petrol pumps that expired at the end of the year. Lula extended it for 60 days. The measure is seen by many as populist and controversial as it deprived the federal administration of resources.

These last two acts are “provisional measures,” meaning they are instituted for 60 days to give time for discussion and votes by Congress.

Protests led by Bolsonaro supporters have rocked Brazil, following the incumbent's election defeat in October.

Violence has taken grip of the country with Bolsonaro yet to explicitly concede his election loss, despite his administration saying it is cooperating with the transition of power.

Security presence at Lula’s inauguration was high, as approximately 8,000 security agents from several security forces were mobilized Sunday, according to the Federal District’s security department.

Earlier on Sunday, a man was arrested in Brasilia after he was caught trying to get into the inauguration party carrying a knife and fireworks, the State Police of the Federal District said in a statement. The suspect traveled from Rio de Janeiro.

A Brazilian Supreme Court judge on Wednesday ordered a four-day ban on carrying firearms in the capital that will run through the end of Sunday, as a precautionary measure ahead of the ceremony.

It will not apply to active members of the armed forces, policemen and private security guards, Judge Alexandre de Moraes wrote.

Lula da Silva’s team had requested the ban on firearms at the inauguration days after police arrested a man on suspicion of planting and possessing explosive devices at Brasilia International Airport.

The suspect, identified as 54-year-old gas station manager George Washington de Oliveira Sousa, is a Bolsonaro supporter and told police in a statement, seen by CNN, that he intended to “create chaos” so as to prevent Lula from taking office again in January.

Moraes’ ban came into force as thousands of Bolsonaro supporters have gathered at military barracks across the country in protest of the election result, asking the army to step in as they claim, with no evidence, that the election was stolen.

Bolsonaro condemned Sousa’s bombing attempt on Friday, saying “there is no justification” for a “terrorist act.”

“Brazil will not end on January 1, you can be sure about that,” the outgoing president said in reference to Lula’s inauguration date.

“Today we have a mass of people who know more about politics,” he added. “They understand they are at risk. Good will win. We have leaders all over Brazil. New politicians or reelected politicians, they will make a difference.”

Lula praised Brazil’s natural resources and promised a U-turn to his predecessor’s deforestation policy in the Amazon while aiming to maximize the country’s potential.

“No other country has the conditions Brazil has to become an environmental power. Having creativity, the bioeconomy and socio biodiversity enterprises as starting points, we will start the energy and ecology transition towards sustainable agriculture and mining activities, family agriculture and green industry. Our goal is zero deforestation in the Amazon, zero greenhouse gasses emissions,” Lula said during his address to Congress.

“We will not tolerate (…) the environmental degradation and deforestation that harmed the country so greatly. This is one of the reasons, albeit not the only one, for the creation of the indigenous people’s ministry,” Lula continued.

The new Brazilian president promised to address the inequality inflicted on minorities in the country by creating “the ministry of racial equality promotion to expand the affirmative action policy in universities and public service, as well as resuming policies for Black and brown people in the health, education and culture areas.”

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