Stock Market Live: Stocks Slide As Hawkish Fed Minutes, Jobs Data, Rekindle Inflation Concerns

Updated at 8:50 am EST

U.S. equity futures moved lower Thursday, while the dollar bumped higher against its global peers, as investors sifted through details of the Federal Reserve‘s inflation debate and focused on stronger-than-expected jobs data that has rekindled inflation concerns.

Minutes from the Fed’s December policy meeting, when officials agreed their seventh rate hike of the year, indicated concern that financial markets, as well as the public, would question the central bank’s resolve to fight inflation if it were to signal softer-near term rate hikes.


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US planning to accept up to 30,000 migrants monthly under expanded humanitarian program

Just In | The Hill 

The United States is expanding a border control program that pairs migrant expulsions with a limited number of pre-approved entries per month, according to reports.

Under the program, the United States would take in up to 30,000 Cubans, Nicaraguans, Haitians and Venezuelans each month, while ramping up efforts to detain and expel migrants who show up at the border unauthorized.

The plan was first reported by Reuters.

President Biden is scheduled to address migration later Thursday, ahead of a trip to Mexico City and a border town. Biden will unveil the program at the Roosevelt Room of the White House, Politico reported.

Biden will be in Mexico City for the North American Leaders’ Summit, where he will meet with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador.

The meeting with López Obrador will be especially relevant to the administration’s border plans — the new program is essentially an expansion of an earlier program to manage Venezuelan migrants that required Mexican collaboration.

The program essentially gives pre-approval to a number of foreign nationals, who for the most part must enter the United States by air, while cracking down on land entrants, who are immediately expelled either to Mexico or their home countries.

The expulsions mimic those carried out under Title 42 — the controversial border program that  denies migrants their right to claim asylum on public health grounds related to the pandemic — but include countries like Venezuela, Cuba and Nicaragua that have refused to take in Title 42 expellees.

While Haiti has taken in more than 25,000 of its citizens under Title 42, the Biden administration has come under intense criticism for denying asylum processing to nationals of a near-failed state.

​Latino, News, immigration, Joe Biden, Justin Trudeau, Mexico, Title 42 Read More 

Apple Kicks off 2023 With new Features for Fitness+

TheStreet 

The digital fitness service is getting kickboxing workouts, sleep meditation, a new season of ‘Time to Walk,’ and a Beyoncè artist spotlight series.

Apple currently offers a number of services—Apple Music, Apple Arcade, Apple TV+, iCloud—and is kicking off the new year with a slew of updates to Fitness+.

Yes, Apple’s digital fitness service has had an exciting two years. When it first launched it was exclusive to Apple Watch users as it showcased metrics in real-time, as well as you closing your rings, but in late 2022 it was expanded to anyone with an iPhone.

For 2023, Apple  (AAPL) – Get Free Report is preparing a number of new workouts and features that will all land next week on Jan. 9 2023. Let’s walk through the new workout types, the latest season of Time to Walk, and the arrival of a collection all around Queen B herself.

The Arena Media Brands, LLC and respective content providers may receive compensation for some links to products and services on this website.

Kickboxing Arrives as the 12th Workout Type

Apple

Kicking things off is a whole new category of workouts. Apple is adding Kickboxing to Fitness+ as the twelfth workout type and an exemplary option for a total-body cardio journey. Via a preview clip, it’s safe to say that this workout type will get you moving and is designed for folks with any level of experience.

Aiding in that is the fact that no extra equipment is required, just your body. You’ll be swinging your arms, getting a stance, and getting in the groove. A key differentiator of Fitness+ in the digital fitness space is the various length of workouts, and Kickboxing will arrive in 10-, 20-, and 30-minute lengths. And the classes are complete with a bell–how’s that for fun.

Teaching the kickboxing classes will be Fitness+ trainers Jamie-Ray Hartshorne who you may know from other workout types, and Nez Dally who is a new trainer to the platform. Additionally, joining the Fitness+ team as trainers will be Brian Cochrane and Jenn Lau. You’ll find them teaching HIIT and Strength classes respectively.

Related: Apple Watch SE (2nd Gen) Review

In addition to Kickboxing, the other 11 workout types are HIIT, yoga, core, strength, pilates, dance, cycling, treadmill, rowing, and mindful cooldowns. You can take individual classes or jump into a collection which are curated around specific workout types or a few looped together.

Launching on Jan. 9 will be the first of two new collections, the first of which is “6 Weeks to Restart Your Fitness.” A collection designed to get you into the habit of working out everyday and might be a perfect match for folks looking to kickstart their resolutions. On Jan. 23., “Level Up Your Core Training” will arrive and focus on letting you get the most of dumbbells with a range of 10 and 20 minute workouts.

The new kickboxing classes, as well as those in the collections and the ones dropping weekly, are all shot and are streaming in 4K UHD quality. One of the big appeals of Fitness+ is the honestly TV-like production quality for each episode. From the lighting to clearly see the workout, the different camera angles, and the mixing of music with trainer instruction. Simply the classes look great on a TV through an Apple TV 4K, as well as on an iPhone or iPad.

Sleep Meditations Arrive

Apple

In addition to all the workout types above, Fitness+ also features Mediations. These can help you get in a mindset–Renew, Connect, and Grow–and while they have a video component, you can also just listen to the audio.

And joining the existing themes will be Sleep, which was likely a must requested addition. These will focus on helping you get better rest and establishing better habits for falling asleep. For instance, you can also have these types of meditations triggered when your iOS device enables a wind down mode. The sleep-themed mediations will arrive in 5, 10, and 20 minutes intervals.

Unlike other sleep meditations from competing services like Peloton, Apple will conclude selection mediations with five minutes of relaxing music. Fitness+ is also rolling out an “Introduce to Meditations for Sleep” collection that contains four twenty minute long classes.

Beyoncé Lands as the Latest Artist Spotlight

Apple

Joining the likes of Taylor Swift and Bruce Springsteen, Beyoncé will be the next Artist Spotlight series on Fitness+. This will be a set of seven workouts that feature songs from through Beyoncé’s catalog of work, including tracks from her seventh album RENAISSANCE. It’s safe to say that the Fitness+ trainers went all out with these workouts by also wearing custom outfits, engaging mood lighting, and in some cases adding in a disco ball.

Related: Your Midnights Experience can be Elevated by AirPods Pro

The Beyoncé Artist Spotlight series will offer cycling, dance, HIIT, pilates, strength, treadmill, and yoga workouts when it arrives on Jan. 9. Later in the month, a Foo Fighters series will launch on Jan. 16 with a Bad Bunny one arriving on Jan. 23.

Time to Walk Season 5 Debuts With Jamie Lee Curtis

Apple

Beyond video workout classes and mediations, Fitness+ also offers Time to Walk and Time to Run, which are primarily audio focused experiences. Our friends over at SI Lifestyle broke this out in more detail in conversation with Jay Blahnik, Apple’s VP of Fitness, which you can read here.

Time to Walk is back with its fifth season and is debuting an episode on Jan. 9 with Jamie Lee Curtis. The actor, author, and activist will kick things off by sharing stories and focusing on embracing life’s unexpected moments. Arriving in the weeks after will be episodes with Amber Ruffin, Jason Segel, José Andrés, Nina Hoss, Colam Domingo, Nathan Chen, and Sherly Lee Ralph. You can expect a few other episodes in the back half of season five as well.

We’d also recommend listening to Time to Walk via AirPods connected to your Apple Watch. It’s not only an easy connection, but with the adaptive transparency mode of second-generation AirPods Pro, you can clearly hear the episode while also being aware of your surroundings.

Related: Apple AirPods Pro Second-Gen Review

Apple Fitness+: Cost and Which Devices it Works With

Apple

With the arrival of a whole new workout type, new classes for existing categories, two new collections, and additions to fitness-favorites like Time to Walk, Apple’s kicking off Fitness+ with a bang for 2023.

And the service still costs either $9.99 a month or $79.99 for the year, but if you’ve recently purchased an Apple device or are planning too, you will get access to a free subscription.

If you’ve purchased an Apple Watch, iPhone, iPad, or Apple TV 4K since Sept. 2022, you’re eligible for three months of Fitness+ for free. Target Circle Members can also redeem four months of Fitness+ for free.

Additionally, you can get started with Fitness+ with either an iPhone or an Apple Watch. With the latter, your metrics will better sync across the experience and you’ll be able to monitor the progress with your “Activity Rings” on screen during the workout. It can also pull details like your Heart Rate for easy viewing and the experience is mirrored on your wrist. With just an iPhone, you’ll still get full access to the Fitness+ experience and work towards closing your Move ring.

Whether you’re using an iPhone or an Apple Watch, you’ll be able to access the classes via the Fitness app on your iPhone, iPad, or Apple TV. You can also stream Time to Walk or Time to Run directly from your Apple Watch.

Prices are accurate and items in stock at time of publishing.

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Bigger, Rounder 2024 Volkswagen Tiguan Looks Like A Shrunken Touareg

Carscoops 

Volkswagen updated its giant-selling Tiguan for the 2022 model year, but for 2024 the compact SUV is in line for a more serious makeover.

While the last refresh was merely a facelift, this year VW will unveil an all-new third generation iteration of the the high-rise family car that first appeared in 2007 and is now the brand’s most successful vehicle.

These pictures show that Tiguan III will ditch the current car’s angular bodywork and prominent horizontal lines for a softer, curvier look. The front and rear fenders are flared, making the SUV appear bigger and more luxurious, and not unlike its Touareg big brother. And we can bet that the tape measure will also prove that the impression of extra size isn’t an optical illusion.

The wheelbase of the standard five-seat Tiguan will grow slightly over the current car’s 105.6-in (2,681 mm) to liberate a little extra interior space. But that probably won’t be enough to satisfy space-hungry U.S. buyers whose base Tiguan today is the longer wheelbase (109.9-in / 2,791 mm) version, sold as the Tiguan Allspace in other markets, and available with a third row of seats. Unless VW performs a packaging miracle or really stretches out the base car, another two-tier lineup seems likely.

Related: 2024 VW Tiguans Gives Us Our First Look Inside Revealing Tablet-Style Screen

What we can say with certainty is that the front grille and rear bumper won’t look anything like these pictures would have you believe. This prototype features some clever tape disguise to mimic the grille and bumper design of the current Tiguan, but we know for a fact that the real grille will be much narrower, giving the face a similar look to the Golf Mk8, and the lower bumper will feature more painted surfaces.

The interior will also finally catch up with other VW cars and feature a tablet touchscreen and separate digital instrument cluster, though the freestanding tablet will be bigger and squarer than the one currently fitted to the ID.4, and ID.Buzz. You’ll still need to select an ID model if you want electric power, however. The Tiguan will stick with its familiar mix of gasoline, diesel, and hybrid engines, and there should still be a choice of front- and all-wheel drive transmissions.

Image Credits: Baldauf for CarScoops

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Ring Expands Outside the Home With $249 Car Cam

TheStreet 

The smart home company is expanding beyond the home with its first product for the car.

There is a good chance you’ve at least heard of or have encountered a Ring home security product. We’d hedge that it’s one of the brand’s doorbells, but they’re a known quantity in the home security space.

Ring offers a plethora of doorbells–both wired and wireless–along with indoor or outdoor cameras, various sensors, and a full DIY alarm system. And now they’re moving further outside the home with Ring Car Cam.

Up for preorder now at a discounted price of $199.99 and originally teased back in 2020, this car dashcam features two cameras. One facing forward to view outside the car and one inward to monitor the inside of the vehicle.

Most critically though, it works with almost any car thanks to it getting power from an OBD-II port. Ring is going for mass appeal here, so let’s unpack this car security and monitoring solution.

The Arena Media Brands, LLC and respective content providers may receive compensation for some links to products and services on this website.

Ring Car Cam: What you Need to Know

Ring

In terms of the device itself, the Car Cam slides directly into the front dash of your car or truck. It’s also meant for a seamless self install. You’ll place the dashcam in the front, wire what Ring promises to be a lengthy cable, and then plug it into the vehicle’s OBD-II port. From there, like a Ring Doorbell, you’ll complete the set up in the app for Android or iOS.

The Car Cam itself uses a two-camera system, which differentiates itself from other after-market dash cam solutions. This allows the device to monitor, for instance, outside the car like a fender bender while parked or maybe an attempted break-in over night, but it can also handle instances inside the car. This way, if your vehicle is broken into you can see it in the recorded video or even pull up a live feed.

As you might suspect, built into the Car Cam are sensors which help it detect these events. Be it a car crash, a scratch, or a break-in it uses these to detect and start recording. It will also, when connected, send an alert to the Ring app to let you know something is occurring. Along with video, the Car Cam is also equipped with microphones and speakers to let you hear what is going on. You can even engage in a conversation if you see fit.

Ring also designed a feature that can be very useful for a traffic stop or for when you want to have something be recorded. You can say “Alexa, Record” to have the Car Cam begin recording from both lenses. This way you can have a record of an interaction with police while being pulled over or maybe even a road rage incident.

Ring

All of the video can be viewed from the Ring app for Android or iOS. And yes, that’s the same place you’d go to interact with a Video Doorbell or a Spotlight Cam. The Car Cam shows up like a device where you can adjust the settings, pull up a live look, or view older recorded events. When you’re streaming a video or viewing it from the Ring App, the Car Cam does support end-to-end encryption, which you can turn on in the Ring app. We’d highly recommend engaging this feature as well.

The Car Cam itself does have onboard storage, but you’ll get the most out of it when it’s connected to the internet. This way it can backup footage over Wi-Fi, or with a Ring Protect Go plan–which cost $6 a month or $60 for the year–you get an LTE cellular connection. This way you can receive those alerts of triggered events or access the live view from anywhere. This also allows you to save those moments to the cloud versus just staying on the device itself. With the Protect Go plan, videos can be stored for up to 180-days–you can save these to another device–and events will be uploaded immediately to the cloud.

Since there is a camera on the Car Cam that does face the occupants of the vehicle, there is a privacy shutter. It’s similar to that of an Echo Show, but when you close it the view is blocked and it disengages the video and audio recording. An LED built-in to the car cam will also illuminate to let you know when the front camera is recording as well.

And that about wraps up everything to know about the Ring Car Cam. It’s a one-size fits all solution that aims to work with a breadth of vehicles and it checks off many of the boxes for a car security camera. It’s also a logical step for Ring to take and one that we’re excited to test out.

How to Preorder the Ring Car Cam

Ring’s Car Cam is up for preorder now at Amazon and is available at discounted price of $199.99. Once the Car Cam ships in February 2023, the price will rise to the MSRP of $249.99. 

You can also pair the Car Cam with the Protect Go subscription at $6 per month or $60 for the year.

Prices are accurate and items in stock at time of publishing.

Ring

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Amazon’s Alexa will soon help EV drivers find a charger

US Top News and Analysis 

In this article

AMZNEVGO

Alexa for EV charging
Source: Amazon

Amazon is betting that Alexa, its voice-activated virtual assistant, can help ease one of electric vehicle drivers’ biggest worries: finding a charging station while on the road.

At CES on Thursday, Amazon announced a new collaboration with EVGo, one of the largest U.S. charging networks, that will soon allow Alexa to navigate EV drivers to public charging spots and pay for the service.

Alexa will draw on data from EVGo’s PlugShare community to help guide EV drivers to nearby charging stations. If the driver chooses an EVGo station, Alexa will be able to initiate and pay for the charge with simple voice commands. Amazon expects the new feature to be available later this year.

“The EV charging experience is a lot more fragmented than for gas customers, who can pretty much stop at any location,” said Anes Hodžić, vice president at Amazon’s Smart Vehicles group.

While Tesla owners can rely on the company’s proprietary “Supercharger” network, drivers of non-Tesla EVs are confronted with a mishmash of competing charging networks, chargers that may not be well maintained, and apps that provide incomplete — and sometimes outdated — information.

Unlike the traditional stop for gas, EV drivers must factor in charging speed, plug type and payment options, Hodžić said, all while using several different apps to find charging stations, and as their vehicle’s range may be dwindling.

“We want Alexa to be useful for customers in their everyday lives, and EV charging is a great example of a task that can be simplified and made more convenient through the power of AI,” Hodžić said.

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Democrats’ big presidential primary changes are still stuck in limbo

Politics, Policy, Political News Top Stories 

President Joe Biden and the Democratic National Committee are pushing for drastic changes to their presidential nominating calendar. But there’s still a big gap between the plan and actually making it a reality in 2024.

Major changes, like dropping Iowa from its influential first-in-the-nation slot and elevating South Carolina, are on track. But others, like pushing Georgia up into the early window or forcing New Hampshire to relinquish its longtime status as the first state with a primary, look far more difficult to achieve despite the fanfare surrounding preliminary approval of the plan last year.

On Thursday, the five new early states — South Carolina, New Hampshire, Nevada, Michigan and Georgia — must submit updates to the DNC about their progress in changing their primary dates or updating voting laws to comply with DNC requirements. It’s the next step in a lengthy effort to redistribute the outsized power that voters in some states have in presidential nominating fights, giving voters of color a bigger voice in the Democratic Party’s process.

Declaring a state eligible for an early primary slot and making it so are two different things, however. Complying with the new calendar is an easy hurdle for South Carolina and Nevada, as state party leadership sets the primary date in South Carolina and Nevada’s primary date complies with current state law. Michigan, too, must change its date, but Democrats are expected to move forward easily with a bill given that they now control the state legislature. All three states submitted letters to that effect to the DNC in recent days.

But it’s more complicated for New Hampshire and Georgia, where there are Republican-controlled state legislatures.

In a letter submitted Thursday morning, New Hampshire Democrats asked the DNC to “reconsider the requirements,” which they argue should reflect the reality of their situation: A state law requires them to hold their primary a week before any other state in the nation, and the Republican-controlled legislature and governor’s mansion will not budge on changing their date or their current voter access laws.

Right now, the DNC wants New Hampshire to hold its primary on the same day as Nevada, four days after the South Carolina primary. That would “run up against New Hampshire law,” state Democratic Party Chairman Ray Buckley said in an interview with POLITICO.

“To punish us for something we have nothing that we can do about only hurts ourselves.” Buckley said. “It’s my hope that after further consideration and discussion that they would look at creating a plan that not only lifts up Black voices … but also recognize New Hampshire’s state law.”

Meanwhile, New Hampshire Republicans rolled out new legislation Wednesday to fortify the state’s first-in-the-nation status, including a state constitutional amendment, because “our historic tradition has been under attack by those looking to maybe repurpose it for their own political gain,” said state Sen. Regina Birdsell, a New Hampshire Republican.

“We will respond aggressively to anyone that attempts, like the DNC, or anyone, who attempts to take that away from us,” Birdsell said.

New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu, a Republican, echoed that commitment, calling any effort to change it “dead on arrival.”

Should New Hampshire Democrats ultimately hold their primary on a date that’s not backed by the DNC, they could face an array of potential sanctions, including automatically losing half their delegates. Candidates who campaign in a state going outside the prescribed order could also face punishment. The DNC broadly empowered the national party chair last year to take any other “appropriate steps” to enforce the new early window.

“If they choose to create any level of sanctions, obviously, we will deal with any that relate to us specifically,” Buckley said.

Democrats face serious hurdles changing the primary date in Georgia, too. The Georgia Secretary of State’s office already ruled out the possibility of splitting the Democratic and Republican primaries into two dates, said Deputy Secretary of State Jordan Fuchs, citing the cost to taxpayers.

Any changes would also need “to be equitable to both political parties,” Fuchs added.

The Republican National Committee, for its part, voted to retain its current early-state lineup: Iowa, New Hampshire, South Carolina and then Nevada. Any state going outside of that order, according to the RNC’s rules, would also face sanctions.

“You have to talk to Republicans if you want to make this work,” said one Georgia operative involved in the calendar process. “Not a single Republican is saying, ‘I want to pick up this gauntlet.’”

Of the move to add Georgia, the operative noted, Democrats “laid no groundwork, no bipartisanship buy-in on it.” Instead, “they surprised everyone.”

The calendar approved in February may not necessarily hold beyond 2024. A number of DNC members privately noted that the review process is already in place to reconsider the 2028 lineup by 2026, meaning that “this is a calendar for 2024, but not necessarily for 2028,” said one Rules and Bylaws committee member.

“There will be a new RBC committee, new DNC leadership, and we hope that we can appeal to them,” Buckley said, when asked about 2024 setting a precedent for future cycles. “I certainly think that the multiple candidates that would be running, or consider running, in 2028 would make their voices clear, too.”

​ Read More 

Ukraine war live updates: Kyiv urges allies to give it tanks to fight Russia; Ukraine's economy shrank by 30.4% in 2022

Putin tells Erdogan the West has ‘destructive role’ in Ukraine war

Russia’s President Vladimir Putin speaks on the phone during a conversation with Agatha Bylkova from the Kurgan region, an 8-year-old participant of a New Year’s and Christmas charity event, in Moscow, Russia, January 3, 2023. 

Mikhail Klimentyev | Sputnik | Via Reuters

Russian President Vladimir Putin claimed once again that the West is playing a “destructive role” in the Ukraine war.

Speaking to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan Thursday, Russia’s leader touched upon economic ties between the two countries, specifically in the energy sector, as well as the conflicts in Syria and Ukraine.

“The situation around Ukraine was touched upon. On the Russian side, the destructive role of Western states is emphasized, pumping up the Kyiv regime with weapons and military equipment, providing it with operational information and target designation,” the Kremlin said on its Telegram channel, according to a Google translation of the comments.

“In the light of Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s readiness for Turkish mediation for a political settlement of the conflict, Vladimir Putin reaffirmed Russia’s openness to a serious dialogue, provided that the Kyiv authorities comply with the well-known and repeatedly voiced demands and take into account new territorial realities,” the Kremlin added, alluding to Russia’s insistence that Kyiv recognize territories it has illegally annexed from Ukraine.

While Russia’s relations with the West and, specifically, NATO, has declined steeply since the war in Ukraine began last February, Turkey has managed to maintain diplomatic and business links with Russia despite being a member of NATO itself. Ankara has helped to broker prisoner swaps and a grain export deal between the warring countries, for example, and has offered to mediate peace talks.

— Holly Ellyatt

Erdogan tells Putin ceasefire needed in Ukraine peace efforts

Russian President Vladimir Putin and Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan arrive for a news conference following their talks in Moscow, Russia March 5, 2020.

Pavel Golovkin | Reuters

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan told Vladimir Putin in a phone call that peace efforts in the Russia-Ukraine war should be supported by a unilateral ceasefire and a “vision for a fair solution”, the Turkish presidency said on Thursday.

It said in a statement the two leaders discussed energy and the Black Sea grains corridor and that Erdogan told Putin concrete steps needed to be taken to clear Kurdish militants from the Syrian border region.

— Reuters

Russians shelling ‘the entire front line’ in Donetsk, official says

A destroyed residential building in the city of Lyman in the Donetsk region of Ukraine on Jan. 4, 2023.

Dimitar Dilkoff | Afp | Getty Images

Intense shelling is taking place along the entire front line in Donetsk in eastern Ukraine, according to one official, who said residential buildings and a hospital had been damaged during the attacks last night and this morning.

“At night and in the morning, the Russians intensely fired along the entire front line,” Pavlo Kyrylenko, head of the Donetsk Regional Military Administration, posted on Telegram Thursday.

Kurakhove, Maryinka and Avdiivka in Donetsk had been targeted, with houses, shops and equipment at an infrastructure facility damaged during the latest round of shelling.

He said two people had been killed around Horlivka and another was injured in Bakhmut, the epicenter of fighting in the Donetsk region. In Chasiv Yar, a high-rise building was destroyed, and four more houses and a hospital building were damaged, he said, while in Soledar a five-story building was damaged, although no one was injured.

In the Lysychansk area in neighboring Luhansk, Kyrylenko said Russian forces had fired an S-300 missile at Lyman.

— Holly Ellyatt

Ukraine’s economy estimated to have shrunk by 30.4% in 2022

Firefighters conduct search and rescue operations after Russian forces hit a cultural center in Chuhuiv, Kharkiv Oblast, Ukraine, on July 25, 2022.

Anadolu Agency | Anadolu Agency | Getty Images

The Ukrainian economy contracted 30.4% in 2022, according to a preliminary estimate from the Ukrainian economy ministry.

Economy Minister Yulia Svyrydenko said in a statement Thursday that Ukraine had suffered its largest economic losses and damage since its independence from the Soviet Union in 1991, as a result of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine that began in February 2022.

The economy ministry noted that the estimated contraction in 2022 was smaller than previously forecast, noting “this is objectively the worst result since independence, but better than most experts expected at the start of the full-scale invasion, when estimates ranged from 40-50% drop in GDP and beyond.”

Svyrydenko said Ukraine’s successes on the battlefield, the coordinated work of government and business as well as “the indomitable spirit of the population” and the speed of restoration of destroyed or damaged critical infrastructure as well as financial support from international partners had enable Ukraine to maintain the economic front during wartime.

Last September, the Ukrainian government, European Commission and World Bank, in cooperation with partners, estimated that the cost of reconstruction and recovery in Ukraine amounted to $349 billion; that figure is now likely much higher as the war continues.

— Holly Ellyatt

Kyiv given more light combat vehicles — but it wants heavy tanks

Ukraine is continuing to press its international partners to provide it with heavier tanks to fight Russia, having been offered more armored fighting vehicles by its allies this week.

On Wednesday, France announced that it was giving Kyiv light tanks, AMX-10 RCs, and President Joe Biden hinted that the U.S. could provide Ukraine with Bradley Fighting Vehicles (armored troop carriers) — but both still fall short of the modern, heavy tanks that Ukraine has been seeking, such as the U.S.’ M1 Abrams battle tanks and Germany’s Leopard 2s.

A U.S. soldier near a Bradley Fighting Vehicle.

Delil Souleiman | Afp | Getty Images

Ukraine’s President Zelenskyy on Wednesday thanked President Emmanuel Macron “for the decision to transfer light tanks and Bastion APCs [armored personnel carriers] to Ukraine,” but in his nightly address, Zelenskyy again questioned why its allies have been reluctant to supply Ukraine with modern Western armored vehicles and tanks.

“We will receive more armored vehicles, in particular wheeled tanks of French production. This is what sends a clear signal to all our other partners: there is no rational reason why Ukraine has not yet been supplied with Western-type tanks,” Zelenskyy said.

An AMX-10 RC tank deployed in Bosnia in 1995.

Gabriel Bouys | Afp | Getty Images

“This is very important in order to restore security for all Ukrainians and peace for all Europeans,” he added.

Zelenskyy said Ukraine’s allies should “not delay any of those defense opportunities that can speed up the defeat” of Russia, adding that “modern Western armored vehicles, Western-style tanks are just one of these key opportunities.”

— Holly Ellyatt

Biden says Bradley Fighting Vehicles are on the table for Ukraine

U.S. President Joe Biden speaks prior to signing railroad legislation into law, providing a resoluton to avert a nationwide rail shutdown, during a signing ceremony in the Roosevelt Room at the White House in Washington, U.S., December 2, 2022. 

Kevin Lamarque | Reuters

U.S. President Joe Biden said that sending Bradley Fighting Vehicles to Ukraine was being considered to help the Ukrainians in combating Russia’s invasion.

“Yes,” Biden said when asked if the option was on the table.

— Reuters

Claims that war pits Russia against NATO are ‘a bunch of BS,’ White House spokesman says

White House National Security Council Strategic Communications Coordinator John Kirby speaks during a press briefing at the White House in Washington, November 28, 2022.

Kevin Lamarque | Reuters

Russian claims that Moscow’s war in Ukraine is really a fight against NATO and Western countries are “a bunch of BS,” a Biden administration spokesman said.

“This is about a Russian invasion of Ukraine,” said U.S. National Security Council spokesman John Kirby. “And Russia is the one who started it. Russia is the one who’s visited violence on the Ukrainian people at a scale.”

Kirby added that the U.S. will “continue to provide [Ukraine] the kinds of systems and assistance they need to defend themselves,” including the coveted High Mobility Artillery Rocket System.

— Jacob Pramuk

Heavy fighting likely to persist in Ukrainian-held Bakhmut, U.S. official says

Ukrainian soldiers with the 43rd Heavy Artillery Brigade sit atop 2S7 Pion self propelled cannon on the battlefield, as Russia’s attack on Ukraine continues, during intense shelling on the front line in Bakhmut, Ukraine, December 26, 2022.

Clodagh Kilcoyne | Reuters

Heavy fighting around the largely ruined, Ukrainian-held city of Bakhmut is likely to persist for the foreseeable future, with the outcome uncertain as Russians have made incremental progress, according to a senior U.S. administration official.

— Reuters

Russian torture chambers uncovered in Kherson, Ukraine

Kherson police said local residents were held in cells and rooms for days, tortured with electricity and batons and forced to write Russian patriotic texts. Kherson was the only regional capital captured by Russia since the invasion, and Ukraine liberated it late last year.

KHERSON, UKRAINE – JANUARY 04: Officers of the War Crimes Prosecutor office and police officers investigate war crimes committed by the Russian occupying forces on the local civilian population in the basements and rooms of Ukrainian penitentiary buildings on January 4, 2023 in Kherson, Ukraine. According to the Kherson police, local residents were held in cells and rooms for days, tortured with electricity, batons and forced to write Russian patriotic texts. Kherson was the only regional capital captured by Russia since the invasion and it was liberated by Ukraine late last year. (Photo by Pierre Crom/Getty Images)

Pierre Crom | Getty Images

A burnt bed within a room as officers of the War Crimes Prosecutor office and police officers investigate war crimes committed by the Russian occupying forces on the local civilian population in the basements and rooms of Ukrainian penitentiary buildings on January 4, 2023 in Kherson, Ukraine. 

Pierre Crom | Getty Images

A general view of the basement and rooms as officers of the War Crimes Prosecutor office and police officers investigate war crimes committed by the Russian occupying forces on the local civilian population in the Ukrainian penitentiary buildings on January 4, 2023 in Kherson, Ukraine. 

Pierre Crom | Getty Images

KHERSON, UKRAINE – JANUARY 04: Russian patriotic written letters as officers of the War Crimes Prosecutor office and police officers investigate war crimes committed by the Russian occupying forces on the local civilian population in the basements and rooms of Ukrainian penitentiary buildings on January 4, 2023 in Kherson, Ukraine. According to the Kherson police, local residents were held in cells and rooms for days, tortured with electricity, batons and forced to write Russian patriotic texts. Kherson was the only regional capital captured by Russia since the invasion and it was liberated by Ukraine late last year. (Photo by Pierre Crom/Getty Images)

Pierre Crom | Getty Images

Walls are marked with the Russian war symbol Z as officers of the War Crimes Prosecutor office and police officers investigate war crimes committed by the Russian occupying forces on the local civilian population in the basements and rooms of Ukrainian penitentiary buildings on January 4, 2023 in Kherson, Ukraine.

Pierre Crom | Getty Images

A general view of the basement and rooms as officers of the War Crimes Prosecutor office and police officers investigate war crimes committed by the Russian occupying forces on the local civilian population in the Ukrainian penitentiary buildings on January 4, 2023 in Kherson, Ukraine.

Pierre Crom | Getty Images News | Getty Images

A calendar marked on a wall in a cell as officers of the War Crimes Prosecutor office and police officers investigate war crimes committed by the Russian occupying forces on the local civilian population in the basements and rooms of Ukrainian penitentiary buildings on January 4, 2023 in Kherson, Ukraine.

Pierre Crom | Getty Images

— Pierre Crom | Getty Images

Zelenskyy and Macron discussed aid to boost Ukraine’s air defenses

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy shakes hands with French President Emmanuel Macron during a news briefing following their talks in Kyiv, Ukraine on February 8, 2022.

Gleb Garanich | Reuters

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and French President Emmanuel Macron had a “long and detailed conversation” about efforts to boost Ukraine’s defenses against Russian attacks.

“We agreed on further cooperation to significantly strengthen our air defense and other defense capabilities,” Zelenskyy said in a post on his Telegram channel.

France and other European nations have funneled aid to Ukraine since Russia invaded its neighbor last year. Zelenskyy has pleaded for air defenses in particular as Russia pummels his country with missile strikes.

— Jacob Pramuk

Russia blames use of mobile phones for deadly Makiivka attack

Russia has been left reeling as the death toll rises following a Ukrainian strike on newly conscripted soldiers in Makiivka, a town in the partially Russian-occupied eastern Donetsk region in east Ukraine.

Russia’s Defense Ministry said Tuesday night that the death toll from the attack, which took place on New Year’s Eve, had risen to 89, according to reports by Russian state news agencies.

It had previously said 63 soldiers had died in the attack, which struck a college for conscripts in Makiivka, in a rare admission of multiple losses.

It blamed the unauthorized use of cellphones for the strike, saying their use had allowed Ukraine to locate and strike its personnel.

“This factor allowed the enemy to locate and determine the coordinates of the location of military personnel for a missile strike,” the ministry said in a statement, reported by RIA Novosti.

Mourners gather to lay flowers in memory of Russian soldiers who were killed in a Ukrainian strike on a college for newly conscripted Russian soldiers in the occupied city of Makiivka in eastern Ukraine on New Year’s Eve.

Arden Arkman | Afp | Getty Images

The ministry said Ukraine had struck the building in Makiivka using missiles from a HIMARS rocket system and claimed that Russian forces had intercepted four of six rockets. It claimed it had destroyed the HIMARS rocket system from which the attack was carried out. CNBC was unable to verify the defense ministry’s claims.

The attack has caused consternation in Russia, with mourners gathering in Samara, the region where the majority of the mobilized soldiers reportedly came from.

— Holly Ellyatt

Read CNBC’s previous live coverage here:

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[World] Anjali Singh: The woman who was dragged to death in Delhi's Kanjhawala

Anjali Singh
Image caption,

Anjali Singh died in the early hours of New Year’s Day

Family members of Anjali Singh, the 20-year-old whose death in a horrific hit-and-run case has sparked protests in India, remember her as a cheerful person who loved making Instagram Reels and playing with children. BBC Hindi’s Dilnawaz Pasha pieces together a portrait of the woman whose dreams came to a violent end on a cold winter night.

On her now-deactivated Instagram profile, Anjali uploaded videos of herself wearing glossy clothes while dancing and lip-syncing to popular Bollywood songs, like she didn’t have a care in the world.

Her real life was starkly different.

Anjali was the sole breadwinner of a family that depended on free food distributed by the government to economically disadvantaged Indians. She earned a living by offering make-up services to women in her neighbourhood and doing small jobs at weddings and other events.

It was a hard life, but they never gave up hope, says her mother Rekha. Until now.

Anjali died in the early hours of New Year’s Day after her scooter and a car collided in India’s capital Delhi. Police say that the five occupants of the car panicked after the collision and kept going for miles, dragging her body along. They have been arrested.

According to the post-mortem report, the provisional cause of Anjali’s death was “shock and haemorrhage due to injury to the head, spine, left femur and both lower limbs”.

Anjali's mother Rekha
Image caption,

Anjali’s mother Rekha says her daughter was devoted to her family

Anjali’s family had alleged that she was sexually assaulted because her body was naked when it was recovered, but police have said that the post-mortem exam showed no signs of this.

While the investigation continues, Anjali’s relatives are struggling to come to terms with what has happened.

The responsible daughter

Anjali belonged to the Dalit (formerly untouchable) community, which is at the bottom of a harsh, unforgiving caste hierarchy in India. She lived in a small house, with one room and a kitchen, in north-west Delhi’s Mangolpuri area.

She was the second of six siblings and had dropped out of school as a teenager to support her family.

Rekha, whose husband had died eight years ago, worked as a low-paid assistant in a school but lost her job during the Covid lockdown. That was around the time she developed chronic kidney disease which made it impossible for her to work.

“Anjali then took on all the responsibility for the family,” her mother says.

Grieving family members of a 20-year-old girl who had dragged by the car and killed on the night of 31 December, at their home at Sultanpuri, on January 2, 2023 in New Delhi, India.Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Anjali lived in a small house in north-west Delhi

She learnt how to do make-up at a local beauty parlour and soon began helping neighbours who wanted to dress up for weddings and other functions. She would also earn some money by working at weddings, where she was usually part of a group of women who welcomed guests.

Two of her sisters, including a younger sibling, were married. But Anjali said she would settle down after her younger brothers, who are studying at a local government school, finished their education.

“She said she would only marry if her partner agreed to stay with us so she could continue taking care of us,” Rekha says.

Though life was hard, Anjali remained cheerful and optimistic.

“She was always smiling. She loved making Reels and videos, and dressing up,” her mother says.

Anjali was also well-known in her neighbourhood – Rekha says her daughter’s complaints to local politicians had ensured that the potholes on their street were fixed. Around the time of her death, she had been trying to get a proper drain built in the area.

“Our neighbours even asked her to contest municipal elections, and she promised them she would do so in the future,” Rekha says.

Five years ago, Anjali took out a loan and bought a scooter to help her travel around. She was close to paying it off when she died – while riding the same scooter.

Presentational grey line

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Presentational grey line

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‘Housewife’ talks exploring sexuality after failed marriages to Joe Biden’s nephew, baseball star

Latest & Breaking News on Fox News 

Meghan King is making some life changes after a tumultuous 2022.

After an annulment from President Biden’s nephew Cuffe Biden Owens last spring and a contentious and legal-embattled relationship with ex-husband and former baseball player Jim Edmonds whom she shares three children, the former “Real Housewives of Orange County” is refocusing.

“This year my personal life was ravaged with more of the same. The family court system is broken as hell and 2022 was another glaring reminder. But in 2023 things will change,” she wrote to her blog.

“I’m living authentically this year. I will be inspired to persevere by those brightly lit individuals around me,” she explained.

PRESIDENT JOE BIDEN, JILL BIDEN ATTEND NEPHEW’S WEDDING TO REALITY TV STAR

King also opened up about eliminating certain medications from her life, sharing “I have eliminated all antidepressants and hormonal supplements. I am present. I am enforcing boundaries and angering people because I’m standing up for myself in new ways that weren’t expected before. I am present.”

In a revealing twist, the blogger and influencer revealed she was willing to explore another path if she so wishes – her sexuality. 

“I will explore my sexuality if I want to, and I will honor plutonic and non-traditional relationships in ways Western society has done the disservice of making us believe are unimportant.”

King married Owens in October 2021 in a ceremony that was attended by the President and First Lady, however, the couple separated two months later. King admitted that her decision to get an annulment was “rushed.”

The 38-year-old was married to second husband Edmonds from 2014 to 2019 and Brad McDill from 2007 to 2011.

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In her detailed blog post, King also added, “I will delete trolls and negativity, you will come to my page with love or you will not come at all. No bad vibes. I will stand for something even if people hate it, I will work for truth and justice because I have a voice and a platform, and I will make rumblings in grassroots efforts in order to effect change for women, my children, and the future. After all, well-behaved women rarely make history.”

 

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