Italian soccer star Gianluca Vialli, 58, dies of cancer

Latest & Breaking News on Fox News 

Former Chelsea and Juventus star Gianluca Vialli died Thursday at age 58 after a second bout with pancreatic cancer, his family announced.

Vialli was first diagnosed in 2017 and again in 2021.

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“Gianluca was a wonderful person and leaves an unfillable void, in the national team and in all those who appreciated his extraordinary human qualities,” said Italian Football Federation president Gabriele Gravina.

Vialli participated in two World Cups: 1986 in Mexico and 1990 on home soil, where Italy won a bronze medal.

In 1992, he was transferred to Juventus for a then-record 12.5 million Euros, where he won the Italian Cup (he won three), the Serie A, the Italian Supercup, the UEFA Champions League and the UEFA Cup. He was a player-manager for Chelsea in 1998 and 1999 and joined Chelsea on a free transfer in 1996. He managed the club for another year before going to Watford for a year.

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His 275 goals in all levels of professional play (both club and international) are the 10th most in Italian history.

He is one of nine players, and the only forward, to have won the three main European club competitions. He also is the only player to have had both first- and second-place finishes in all three main European club competitions.

He was the delegation chief of the Italy national team from October 2019 to December 2021, and retired due to his cancer battle. Italy won the 2020 UEFA Euros over England.

 

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Why Investors Should Care About the House Speaker Fight

TheStreet 

What does that fight say about the GOP’s ability to approve a debt-ceiling increase to stave off a financial default by the government?

House Republicans can’t come up with a speaker after three-plus days of votes and machinations.

So what does that say about their ability to approve a debt-ceiling increase to keep the federal government from defaulting on its debt in coming months? 

Nothing good – the House GOP is clearly in disarray.

Right-wing House members will likely demand extreme spending cuts in exchange for backing a debt-ceiling increase. But those cuts will likely be unacceptable to Democrats, making it difficult to forge an agreement.

If this week is any indication, mainstream Republicans will find it hard to coax their most conservative brethren into accepting a compromise accord on the debt ceiling

It’s unclear exactly when the Treasury will have to default if Congress doesn’t lift the debt ceiling, as the department has several different methods to put off the day of reckoning. But some economists estimate it will be the third quarter.

If the government does default on its debt, all hell could well break loose in financial markets and the economy. Treasury securities would almost certainly plunge, sending interest rates soaring.

Stocks Would Likely Suffer in a Default

That would almost surely be bad for your stock portfolio. Look what rising rates did to stock prices last year. It wasn’t pretty. Higher rates depress economic activity, denting corporate earnings.

Rising rates are particularly bad for growth stocks, including technology shares, because these stocks depend on high earnings growth to maintain their valuations. And again, rising rates stifle earnings.

In addition, rising yields make safe bonds (assuming any bonds are safe at that point) more attractive to investors than growth stocks are because investors now must wait longer for a strong earnings stream from growth companies.

As for fixed-income investments, the plunge in Treasurys would likely be particularly intense among Treasury bills, which have maturities of one year or less. That’s because the bonds with the shortest maturities are the ones that the government has to pay back first.

If you hold a bond fund, its price could plunge. Normally, if you hold individual Treasury bonds until maturity, you’re almost guaranteed to receive full par value when your bonds mature.

Individual Bonds Are Vulnerable, Too

But a default would put your Treasury holdings at risk. And given the importance of the Treasury market, other bonds could get hit as well. It could turn into a feeding frenzy against bonds.

Rising rates would normally make new bonds held to maturity, money-market funds and brokered certificates of deposit more attractive. But given the chaos of a default, all these get thrown into doubt.

Higher yields would also raise mortgage rates, auto-loan and credit-card rates, potentially putting a major crimp in your pocketbook.

The economy too would likely go haywire if the government defaults. Fear could paralyze companies and consumers alike. Soaring interest rates and plunging stock prices obviously won’t help the economy either.

A Treasury default could put the whole financial system at risk, given that all the players in it would have no sense of safety. 

The Treasury is the backbone of our financial system. If it can’t pay its obligations, that’s not much of a backbone.

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Regulators Are Fighting for Your Right to Work for a Rival

TheStreet 

The Federal Trade Commission has waged a battle against non-compete agreements.

Those who spent some time working in industries such as sales, real estate, media,  or any other field that requires building up a client list or personal brand are likely to have come across a non-compete agreement at some point in their careers.

Whether a clause or a separate contract, the agreement limits the information one can take to a competitor. The limitations can be as obvious as “don’t take private information you learn on the job to our rivals” to as restrictive as not being able to work or start a business in the same industry for years after leaving.

A regular appearance not just in high-paying corporate jobs but also in fields like retail and construction, these contracts have been catching the attention of the Federal Trade Commission (FTC).

The FTC Fights For Your Right To Work For A Rival

The government branch in charge of regulating business and protecting the public from unfair practices moved to block what it called the “exploitative” practice of imposing agreements that prevent workers from leaving for a competitor or starting a competing business after their employment at the company has ended.

According to the FTC, non-compete agreements are costing workers more than $300 billion a year in lost wages and opportunities and affect more than 30 million Americans.

The FTC’s estimate found that between 16% and 18% of the American workforce have had to sign a non-compete at some point in their career. In industries such as tech, over 45% of workers have come across a non-compete in some form.

“The freedom to change jobs is core to economic liberty and to a competitive, thriving economy,” FTC Chair Lina M. Khan said in a statement on the proposal. “Noncompetes block workers from freely switching jobs, depriving them of higher wages and better working conditions, and depriving businesses of a talent pool that they need to build and expand.”

While the FTC proposes banning all non-competes, the proposal would leave other venues for businesses to protect trade secrets.

Shutterstock

The Business World Is Not Happy About This Move

As could be expected, the business world was none too pleased with the FTC’s proposal. Immediately after the announcement, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce called it “blatantly unlawful” and disastrous to a company’s ability to innovate proprietary products. 

Even outside the harm or merit of the proposal, many argue that the FTC lacks the overreach to impose such a sweeping ban.

“Since the agency’s creation over 100 years ago, Congress has never delegated the FTC anything close to the authority it would need to promulgate such a competition rule,” Senior Vice President Sean Heather said in a statement.”The Chamber is confident that this unlawful action will not stand.”

Comments like these represent the usual push-and-pull between business interests and protecting workers. While the FTC’s role is to protect the latter, actually imposing the proposal will almost certainly come with a lengthy legal battle. Even if passed (the public currently has 60 days to comment before the FTC drafts the final proposal), it will likely be challenged in court by business lobbyists.

President Joseph Biden, meanwhile, has repeatedly backed efforts to regulate non-competes — both in a 2021 executive order and in a cabinet meeting this week.

“These agreements block millions of retail workers, construction workers, and other working folks from taking a better job, getting better pay and benefits, in the same field,” Biden said during the meeting.

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[World] Can Biden's new border plan end the migrant crisis?

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Watch: Biden tells migrants ‘don’t just show up at the border’

US President Joe Biden has announced a new plan to accept up to 30,000 migrants each month, while also expanding a Trump-era policy to make it easier to send many back to Mexico. How will this impact the crisis at the border?

Mr Biden believes the new policy – which will apply to asylum seekers from Cuba, Nicaragua, Haiti and Venezuela – will “substantially reduce” the number of people who attempt to cross the US-Mexico border illegally.

“This new process is orderly, it’s safe and it’s humane,” Mr Biden said in a speech at the White House.

While experts and immigration advocates believe it may be effective, many expressed concerns that an increased number of migrants may be sent to unsafe or inhumane conditions in Mexico.

“The administration is shifting its overall policy to a carrot and stick approach,” said Aaron Reichlin-Melnick, of the American Immigration Council. “And the emphasis is on the stick”.

What’s in the new plan?

Citizens from the four countries will be offered an expanded legal pathway to apply to enter the US, where they will be allowed to live and work for up to two years. To be eligible, migrants must have financial sponsors already in the US, and pass security vetting.

Applications can be done through an application, CBP One, which allows would-be asylum seekers to schedule an arrival at a port of entry into the US. Those who are denied or attempt to cross illegally will be ineligible for the programme in the future.

“Stay where you are and apply legally. If your application is approved…you have access,” Mr Biden said on Thursday. “But if your application is denied or you attempt to cross into the United States unlawfully, you will not be allowed to enter.”

US officials say that migrants who do attempt to cross the border illegally will rapidly be sent back to Mexico under Title 42, which gives the government power to automatically expel undocumented migrants seeking entry, with Mexico agreeing to 30,000 more returns each year.

Previously, Mexico’s government only accepted the return of its own citizens under Title 42, along with citizens of Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador. In October, the programme was expanded to include Venezuelans.

US officials said that the previous initiative led to a 90% drop in the number of Venezuelans arriving at the US-Mexico border, and a “dramatic” drop in the number of migrants who choose to risk their lives by using human smugglers.

Migrant in MexicoImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

More than 2.5 million migrants have been expelled under Title 42 since 2020.

Can Biden’s new plan work?

Record number of migrant detentions at the US-Mexico border have presented a growing political headache for Mr Biden. More than two million people were detained at the order in the 2022 fiscal year that ended on 30 September – a 24% jump from the previous year. In December, detentions at the border averaged between 700 and 1,000 each day.

Mr Reichlin-Melnick told the BBC that he believes the creation of alternate pathways is a “positive step” – albeit one that represents a “real return to the Trump-era policies that attempted to deter asylum seekers from getting here in the first place.”

He said there could be a drastic reduction in the number of apprehensions at the border, especially among Cubans and Nicaraguans, but he warned that could be offset by migration flows from elsewhere.

Rebecca Solloa, from the Catholic Charities at the Diocese of Laredo – which operates migrant shelters at the border – told the BBC the new application process would slow the influx of migrants. “If it’s in an orderly manner, it will help them in the long run and it won’t be such a crisis,” she said.

But the process has to be credible to stop migrants considering an illegal border crossing, said Andrew Selee of the nonpartisan Migration Policy Institute.

“If the legal pathways aren’t effective, and the only consequences are being dropped back in a Mexican border town, and you’re a Nicaraguan trying to get out of Nicaragua, there’s still a good incentive to try and cross multiple times until you make it.”

Some advocates are also concerned that the application process may be difficult for some to access in remote or impoverished areas of their home countries, or that potential migrants may not be aware of it before they leave.

Safety concerns in Mexico

The success of the programme ultimately will rest on Mexico’s ability to take care of the migrants it has now agreed to take back.

“Northern Mexico is a dangerous place for migrants,” Mr Reichlin-Melnick said. “We know that this will strand some of the most vulnerable people in the world in Mexico with few good options for ever being able to seek safety in the United States.”

In the short-term, he believes that the border region will see new migrant encampments at the border as migrants already there weigh their options, as well as “potentially significant anger and unrest as migrants wait to see what happens next.”

The announcement comes a day after Mr Biden said he would visit the border next week on his way to Mexico, where he will participate in the North American Leaders’ Summit.

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Watch: No tree or gifts for thousands in this US city this Christmas.

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Ditching noncompete clauses would be a win for workers’ rights and employees in low-wage jobs

Business Insider 

The Federal Trade Commission proposed a new rule that would ban noncompete clauses.

The Federal Trade Commission proposed a rule that would ban noncompete clauses. 
Noncompetes prevent some workers in low-wage jobs from leaving for better opportunities.
Advocates for banning noncompetes say the move would be a win for worker rights.

One way to tell how much an employer cares about treating everyday workers fairly isn’t by what it says, it’s by whether the company makes low-wage workers sign noncompete agreements. 

In theory, noncompetes are meant to protect a company from having a high-level executive with inside info jump to a competitor or start a rival shop. But in practice, things are a lot murkier

The Federal Trade Commission is now challenging the longstanding practice, saying the 109-year law is exploitative and unfair.

If the FTC succeeds in banning noncompete clauses, it could be an important win for low-wage workers and a pivotal moment in the push for workplace equity, advocates for the change say. The proposed rule could, in effect, force more companies to offer up what they boast about in job listings: fair working conditions and competitive pay. 

Jimmy O’Donnell, a former researcher with the Economic Innovation Group, a bipartisan public policy research organization, said that noncompetes “strip workers of their autonomy.” 

“Banning the use of non-compete agreements would go a long way in raising wages for workers and empowering more would-be entrepreneurs to start new companies,” he wrote in a 2021 blog post.  

Many low-wage workers are forced to abide by noncompetes 

Noncompetes cost workers almost $300 billion a year in lost income by preventing people from taking their skills to another employer for more money, according to the FTC.

Critics point out that many workers subject to noncompete language aren’t high-profile executives who’ve amassed trade secrets, they’re average workers. 

In 2015, The Verge reported on Amazon’s use of noncompete agreements for warehouse workers. After criticism, the retail giant removed the clause from contracts for US hourly workers, per reports. The next year, Jimmy John’s, the sandwich chain, dropped its use of noncompetes after a settlement. And in 2017, an employee at a McDonald’s  franchise sued her employer over such rules.

“Noncompetes are being used systematically, even for workers who have no access to trade secrets or less than a college education,” Evan Starr, an assistant professor at the University of Maryland, told The Baltimore Sun in 2017. 

Charlotte Garden, a law professor at the Seattle University School of Law, told The Verge that employers know they can prey on people with limited power to negotiate their employment terms.  

“When you have a more vulnerable workforce applying for jobs,” Garden said, “they’re not going to attempt to negotiate the terms of the contract they’re handed.”

That lowers wages for all workers, the FTC notes

“One of the key ways workers get raises in our economy is they change jobs,” Heidi Shierholz, the Economic Policy Institute’s policy director, told CBS in 2019. “If you take away that avenue, it hurts wage growth.”

Noncompetes cost workers almost $300 billion a year in lost income by preventing people from taking their skills to another employer for more money or better conditions, according to the FTC. 

There are other ways employers can protect their secrets

There are alternatives to noncompetes that can shield employers from losing important intellectual property when a skilled employee leaves for a competitor or to start a company. Businesses can have employees sign nonsolicitation agreements that prevent workers from wooing colleagues or customers to a competing company. Bosses can also have employees sign nondisclosure agreements relating to trade secrets, a lawyer at the firm Morgan & Westfield noted

Paul Constant, editor at Civic Ventures, a progressive advocacy group, and cohost of the “Pitchfork Economics” podcast, wrote an op-ed challenging the fairness of noncompetes in 2021. 

“Noncompete agreements help artificially stifle competition in the labor market, allowing employers to keep wages low by limiting workers’ employment options,” Constant wrote. “They eliminate the only real leverage American employees have left — the threat that they can leave and find work somewhere else for better pay, benefits, and workplace standards.”

Read the original article on Business Insider

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Homeland Security develops new portable gunshot detection system

Latest & Breaking News on Fox News 

The Department of Homeland Security said its Science and Technology Directorate has developed a portable gunshot detection system in collaboration with the Massachusetts-based Shooter Detection Systems company. 

The department said that the system, known as SDS Outdoor, could provide “critical information about outdoor shooting incidents almost instantaneously to first responders.”

The new system is reportedly an enhancement to the commercial, off-the-shelf Guardian Indoor Active Shooter Detection System. 

The department said SDS Outdoor uses both the sound and flash of the gunshot to detect and validate each gunshot, in order to drastically reduce false positives. 

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It can also be deployed for temporary events in locations where infrastructure support is not available, such as open-field concerts or pop-up rallies.

Furthermore, the agency noted that most other systems rely principally on sound, which can have higher false-positive rates. 

Following nearly two years of development, prototype testing started in January of last year, and a real-time demonstration to a user advisory group was provided in May. 

The system was then tested by the Science and Technology Directorate’s National Urban Security Technology Laboratory and the First Responder Technology Program team in an Operational Field Assessment at Fort Dix, New Jersey, in November. 

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Homeland Security said that feedback from participating law enforcement agencies helped to make the system more effective in detecting and alerting responders to gunshots.

SDS Outdoor also complements other Science and Technology Directorate-developed detection and tracking technologies, such as MappedIn Response and Detection of Presence of Life through Walls.

“Many U.S. gunshot detection technologies are not easily deployed in the field or at temporary locations,” Dimitri Kusnezov, DHS Under Secretary for Science and Technology, said in a statement. “This new system can be moved by one or two officers without the need for technicians to transport and set up. This mobile capability will help responders approach gun violence incidents with greater awareness, reducing response times and increasing responder safety.”

Critics have questioned the effectiveness of gunshot detection systems, and some say that past efforts have wasted taxpayer dollars.

 

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FTC proposes rule that would ban employee noncompete clauses

The Federal Trade Commission proposed a rule Thursday that would ban U.S. employers from imposing noncompete clauses on workers, a sweeping measure that could make it easier for people to switch jobs and deepen competition for labor across a wide range of industries.

The proposed rule would prevent employers from imposing contract clauses that prohibit their employees from joining a competitor, typically for a period of time, after they leave the company.

Advocates of the new rule argue that noncompete agreements contribute to wage stagnation because one of the most effective ways to secure higher pay is switching companies. They argue that the clauses have become so commonplace that they have swept up even low-wage workers.

Opponents argue that by facilitating retention, noncompete clauses have encouraged companies to promote workers and invest in training, especially in a tight labor market. The public has 60 days to submit commentary on the rule before it takes effect.

During a Cabinet meeting, President Joe Biden called the FTC action “a huge step forward in banning non-compete agreements that are designed simply to lower people’s wages.”

“These agreements block millions of retail workers, construction workers and other working folks from taking better jobs and getting better pay and benefits in the same field,” Biden said.

The FTC has moved aggressively to curb the power of major corporations under Chair Lina Khan, a legal scholar and Washington outsider whose appointment by Biden signaled a tough antitrust stance.

The agency estimates that the new rule could boost wages by nearly $300 billion a year and expand career opportunities for about 30 million Americans.

“Noncompetes block workers from freely switching jobs, depriving them of higher wages and better working conditions, and depriving businesses of a talent pool that they need to build and expand,” Khan said in a prepared statement.

The FTC’s proposal comes amid an already competitive job market, particularly in industries that suffered mass layoffs during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic and have since struggled to recall their workers. Many workers remain on the sidelines, holding out for better pay, coping with lingering childcare or health issues, or opting for early retirement.

“There is a potential that it will contribute to the ‘great resignation’ that everyone is talking about to some degree, but employers are simply losing one of the tools in their toolbox and there are other ways to retain top talent,” said Vanessa Matsis-McCready, associate general counsel and director of human resources for Engage PEO, which provides HR services for small- and medium-sized companies. “You will see a lot of business trying to retain top talent via raises or other fringe benefits.”

Employers nationwide are still hiring and layoffs are historically low, despite high-profile job cut announcements from companies such as software provider Salesforce, Facebook’s parent company Meta, and Amazon. The government is expected to announce Friday that employers added a solid 200,000 jobs last month, and that unemployment remained 3.7%, near a half-century low.

A 2019 analysis by the liberal Economic Policy Institute estimated that 36 million to 60 million workers could be subject to noncompete agreements, which the group said companies have increasingly adopted in recent years.

While such agreements are most common among higher-paid workers, the study found that a significant number of low-wage workers were subjected to them. The study found that more than a quarter of responding establishments where the average wage is less than $13 an hour use noncompetes for all their workers.

On Wednesday, for example, the FTC took action against three companies for unlawfully imposing noncompete clauses against workers, including low-wage security guards who were threatened with a $100,000 fine if they violated the agreement.

The EPI study found that many companies still impose noncompete clauses in several states that already ban or restrict them, including in California, where the practice has been prohibited for a century.

The proposed FTC rule would require companies to scrap existing noncompete causes and actively inform workers that they are no longer in effect, as well as prohibiting the imposition of new ones.

The proposal is based on a preliminary finding that noncompete clauses quash competition in violation of Section 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act. It would not generally apply to other types of employment restrictions, like non-disclosure agreements.

But Emily Dickens, chief of staff and head of public affairs for the Society for Human Resource Management, said the proposed FTC rule is overly broad and could potentially harm businesses that depend on them to thrive. She cited very small, emerging industries where crucial know-how cannot be safeguarded through non-disclosure agreements alone.

Dickens said SHRM, a group of more than 300,000 human resources professionals and executives around the world, will encourage its members to present specific situations that could justify noncompete clauses during the FTC’s commentary period.

Although “there are jobs where it makes no sense to have noncompete,” Dickens said, “this kind of blanket ban is going to stifle innovation.”

While defenders of non-compete clauses argue they help start-ups and small business retain talent, opponents say they hinder recruitment at those same entities.

The Economic Innovation Group, a Washington-based public policy research group, applauded the rule and called on Congress to pass proposed legislation that would impose a similar ban with more permanency.

“Restricting the use of non-compete agreements is fundamentally good policy that will boost wages, improve workforce mobility, and encourage entrepreneurship and innovation throughout the economy,” said John Lettieri, EIG’s president and CEO.

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Associated Press writers Chris Rugaber and Nancy Benac in Washington contributed to this report.

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This story was first published on January 5, 2023. It was updated on January 6, 2023 to correct a quote from Vanessa Matsis-McCready of Engage PEO.

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This story was first published on January 5, 2023. It was updated on January 6, 2023 to correct the name of the Society for Human Resource Management. It also clarifies that the study by the Economic Policy Institute was based on a survey of responding companies.

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U.S. House adjourns for third night without a speaker as McCarthy scrambles to find deal with far-right Republicans

WASHINGTON — The U.S. House adjourned for a third night without a speaker — the longest the chamber has gone leaderless in generations — after GOP leader Kevin McCarthy lost an 11th vote for the gavel and scrambled to work out a deal with far-right Republicans to back his bid.

The House plans to reconvene at noon ET on Friday, as McCarthy and his allies try to iron out a rough offer that would give hardline conservatives more power in the new GOP majority.

Ahead of Thursday’s final speaker vote, two members of the bloc of 20 Republican holdouts opposing McCarthy’s speakership nominated alternative candidates to McCarthy: The first pick was GOP Rep. Kevin Hern of Oklahoma, who leads the influential Republican Study Committee. The second nominee was former President Donald Trump, who was put forward by his longtime ally, Florida GOP Rep. Matt Gaetz.

Hern has consistently voted for McCarthy for speaker, but he has not said outright that he would reject the job if McCarthy withdraws his name.

The emergence of another potential alternative to McCarthy was the latest setback in a frustrating day for the longtime GOP leader. Meanwhile, Democrats appeared to revel in the repeated GOP failures, enthusiastically shouting down a proposed voice vote to adjourn just before 8 p.m. ET on Thursday. Republicans then voted to end proceedings for the night in a recorded vote.

“We should stay here all night … all weekend until we get a speaker,” Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., told CNN.

McCarthy lost 20 Republicans on the 11th vote, with one GOP member-elect voting “present.” With 222 Republicans in the newly elected House, he could afford to lose only four of them to reach the 218 needed to win the speakership.

The speaker election is now guaranteed to go at least 12 votes. It has gone longer than a dozen ballots only four times in U.S. history.

Earlier in the day, McCarthy sounded optimistic about talks between his top lieutenants and a group of holdouts.

“I think everyone in the conversation wants to find a solution,” McCarthy said on his way into the House chamber for the day’s first vote.

But less than two hours after votes began, another influential McCarthy holdout, Rep. Scott Perry, Pa., posted an angry tweet accusing McCarthy of leaking details of internal negotiations.

The continued absence of a speaker has left the House in disarray, largely due to the fact that rank-and-file members can’t be sworn into office until a speaker is elected and cannot set up their local or Washington offices. This leaves all 434 members of the House technically still members-elect, not official voting representatives. 

Ahead of Thursday’s votes, Democratic Party leaders berated Republicans for the party’s dysfunction, and emphasized the harm that going days without a House speaker was inflicting on the legislative branch and the nation.

“We cannot organize our district offices, get our new members doing that political work of our constituent services, helping serve the people who sent us here on their behalf,” incoming Democratic Whip Katherine Clark, D-Mass., told reporters in the Capitol Thursday morning. “Kevin McCarthy’s ego in his pursuit of the speakership at all costs is drowning out the voices and the needs of the American people.”

Democrats also emphasized that the absence of a speaker was threatening U.S. national security by keeping members of Congress from accessing classified intelligence that is available to lawmakers only after they have taken the oath of office, which none of them can take without a speaker.

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“At the end of the day, all we are asking Republicans to do is to figure out a way for themselves to organize so the Congress can get together and do the business of the American people,” Democratic Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries said at a news conference with Clark.

Clark accused McCarthy of being “held hostage to his own ambitions.”

“This is about your responsibility to organize government. It is fundamental to who we are as members of Congress,” she said.

Democrats, meanwhile, have remained in lockstep throughout all the votes, casting their 212 ballots for Jeffries.

Incoming Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY), incoming Democratic Whip Katherine Clark (D-MA) and incoming Democratic Caucus Chair Pete Aguilar (D-CA) hold a press conference on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., December 13, 2022. 

Elizabeth Frantz | Reuters

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WWE Stock Surges As Former CEO Vince McMahon Returns As Executive Chairman

Updated at 12:47 pm EST

World Wrestling Entertainment  (WWE) – Get Free Report shares surged higher Friday after founder Vince McMahon said he would return to the media and entertainment group following his retirement last year following a probe into so-called ‘hush money’ payments to a former employee.

McMahon will serve as executive chairman of WWE upon his return, the 76 year old said in a statement late Thursday, and steward the group’s media rights negotiations while leading its review of strategic alternatives. Former WWE co-Presidents Michelle Wilson and George Barrios were also named to the WWE board alongside McMahon’s return, the company said.


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Biden’s Labor Secretary says workers still have options in this tight labor market — and that’s a ‘beautiful thing’

Business Insider 

President Joe Biden shakes hands with Labor Secretary Marty Walsh during an event in the Rose Garden of the White House September 15, 2022 in Washington, DC.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics said Friday that 223,000 jobs were added in December, beating expectations.
That strong job growth is combined with workers’ continued willingness to quit amid a high level of job openings.
Labor Secretary Marty Walsh says workers still have options right now.

Even with fears of a recession on many Americans’ minds, workers are still quitting, getting hired, and getting raises — and it shows that the tight labor market is going strong.

“I think workers still have options, and I think that that’s a beautiful thing,” Labor Secretary Marty Walsh told Insider.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics released its monthly report on employment on Friday, showing that the country added 223,000 payrolls in December 2022. That’s well above the 200,000 economists surveyed by Bloomberg estimated. The cherry on top: The unemployment rate came down to a historically low 3.5% from its prior 3.6%.

At the same time, another report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics showed that quitting remained near-record highs in November, while hiring and job openings stayed robust. Taken together — alongside structural labor shortages that have kept employers raising wages and vying for workers — the labor market is still looking strong for Americans. 

“We’re seeing more people get back into the job market,” Walsh said, noting that workers without college degrees are seeing more opportunity. In December, Americans who graduated from high school, but did not attend college, saw noticeable gains across multiple labor market metrics. Their labor force participation, which measures the number of people working or actively working, went up. At the same time, their unemployment rate went down — suggesting that the high school graduates coming back into the labor force were getting hired.

“Because you don’t have a college degree doesn’t mean you’re limited to what you should be able to make as an employee. You should be able to have access to good paying jobs,” Walsh said. 

They’re not the only ones enjoying the fruits of a tight jobs market.

“People who have been laid off are finding new jobs pretty quickly,” Aaron Terrazas, chief economist at Glassdoor, told Insider. “We are starting to see some retirees dip back into the labor market.”

Of course, gains still remain uneven. The Black unemployment rate is still elevated, and, while more Black women joined the labor force in December, their unemployment rate went up. And while wages went up again in December, it was at a more muted rate than prior months. That could mean good news for the Federal Reserve in fending off a recession, but, with inflation still high, it’s not as much money in workers’ pockets.

“We certainly have work to do around food and getting food prices down. There’s no question about it,” Walsh said, adding: “We’re not going to take our foot off the pedal until we see those pressures come down on inflation.”

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