Jill Biden has ‘small lesion’ above right eye, doctor says, will be removed

Latest & Breaking News on Fox News 

First Lady Jill Biden has a “small lesion” above her right eye that was found during a routine appointment, according to the physician to the president.

Dr. Kevin O’Connor, physician to the president, said in a Wednesday evening letter that the lesion was found during a routine skin cancer screening.

O’Connor said that the lesion will be removed on Jan. 11, and the tissue will be examined.

“During a routine skin cancer screening, a small lesion was found above the First Lady’s right eye. In an abundance of caution, doctors have recommended that it be removed,” O’Connor said.

BIDEN’S VISIT TO KENTUCKY BRIDGE HIGHLIGHTS INFRASTRUCTURE PUSH

“On Wednesday, January 11th at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, the First Lady will undergo a common outpatient procedure known as Mohs surgery to remove and definitively examine the tissue. We will offer an update after the procedure is completed and we have more information,” he added.

 

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Cori Bush’s tweet attacking Byron Donalds as a ‘white supremacy’ prop dubbed ‘racist’ and ‘pathetic’

Latest & Breaking News on Fox News 

“Squad” member Rep-elect Cori Bush, D-Mo., was called out as a “racist” for calling Republican Rep-elect Byron Donalds, Fla., a “prop” after GOP lawmakers nominated him to be Speaker of the House vote on Wednesday.

The latest votes for House Speaker included Donalds’ name as well as Democrat Leader Hakeem Jeffries, both being the first two Black candidates nominated for top leadership of both parties.

However, Bush denied that Donalds’ nomination was “historic,” insisting that Donalds as a Republican perpetuates “white supremacy.”

“[For what it’s worth], [Donalds] is not a historic candidate for Speaker. He is a prop,” Bush tweeted. “Despite being Black, he supports a policy agenda intent on upholding and perpetuating white supremacy. His name being in the mix is not progress—it’s pathetic.”

BYRON DONALDS ADDRESSES HOUSE SPEAKER NOMINATION: REPUBLICAN VOTERS ARE ‘NOT HAPPY’ WITH PARTY LEADERSHIP 

Donalds responded to Bush’s tweet, saying that no one asked for her opinion. 

[For what it’s worth], nobody asked @CoriBush her opinion on the matter. Before you judge my agenda, let’s have a debate over the policies and the outcomes. Until then, don’t be a crab in a barrel!,” Donalds tweeted. 

Bush’s tweet received intense backlash as an example of “racism” for considering Donalds as a prop for having conservative views.

“This is racism,” commentator Chad Felix Greene tweeted.

Washington Examiner columnist Tim Carney wrote, “Reminder: When a Democrat pretends something is about race they simply mean it’s about party. A Democratic politician calling someone racist should never ever again carry any weight with honest observers.”

“Guessing @mkraju won’t be strapping on the trainers and chasing down every Democrat in the halls to get their thoughts on this one,” The Spectator contributing editor Stephen Miller joked.

Club for Growth senior analyst Andrew Follett commented, “This just in… Cori Bush is a massive racist who thinks she gets to control how other people vote because of their skin color. That’s pathetic.”

“How dare the uppity black man not be a communist,” X Strategies senior digital analyst Greg Price tweeted.

“This is racist. Pure and simple. Regardless of what you think about the Speaker vote, reducing Byron Donalds, a Black man, to nothing but a “prop” because he’s a Republican is absolutely gross and racist,” Canary CEO Dan Eberhart wrote.

CONSERVATIVE CIVIL WAR RAGES ON TWITTER AS MCCARTHY FAILS TO WIN SPEAKER VOTE 

As a lawmaker, Bush has fought against what she describes as White supremacy, which includes celebrating the Fourth of July.

“When they say that the 4th of July is about American freedom, remember this: the freedom they’re referring to is for White people. This land is stolen land and Black people still aren’t free,” she tweeted in July 2021

More recently, Bush appeared to accuse her Republican colleagues of pushing “White supremacy” during a House Oversight and Reform Committee in December.

“Thank you, madam chair, for convening this important hearing, and let me say to the witnesses, thank you for your testimony. Thank you for staying, and sorry you have to listen to the White supremacy raise its ugly head, you know, throughout this hearing,” Bush said.

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Bush has also taken heat for her advocacy to “defund the police,” after being caught spending over $500,000 on private security for herself. 

 

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How To Make Time for Actual Self Care When You’re a New Parent

Well+Good 

It’s hardly uncommon for New Year’s resolutions to center self care. Think: resolving to lower your stress levels, pencil me-time into your schedule, or get outside once each day. But while all of such goals are worthy and warranted, being able to actually practice them is often a different story—particularly for new parents who may feel time-strapped to care for their child or children, much less themselves. And yet, paradoxically, that’s one reason why it’s so important for new parents to actively carve out time for self care. Experts say doing so stands to make you better equipped mentally and emotionally to care for a child.

Framing self care in this way can help you see it more clearly for what it is: a necessary and supportive element of daily life, rather than a luxury reserved for people with extra time or resources. “While I think we now understand, on a logical level, that self care isn’t selfish, we have a lifetime of messaging from culture, society, and often our families of origin that told us that self care should come secondary to the needs of our children,” says therapist and parent Kaitlin Soule, LMFT, author of A Little Less of a Hot Mess: The Modern Mom’s Guide to Growth and Evolution. “It takes time for the truth to travel from our heads to our hearts.”

There are also the countless mental and logistical factors of new parenthood that can draw your attention away from self care (despite even the best of intentions to practice it). “Your thoughts are likely occupied with making sure your baby survives, and every waking—and sleeping—hour is filled with feeding, burping, comforting, changing, and cleaning your newborn,” says therapist, children’s book author, and parent Christina Furnival, LPCC. The process can quickly become all-consuming, she adds.

“It can take some time to get grounding around who you are within and outside of your parental role.” —Kaitlin Soule, LMFT, therapist

The onset of parental responsibilities can also contribute to a deemphasis on your pre-parent identity, including interests and passion points. “When your child is born, you are also born anew and different,” says Furnival, of the steep transition to parenthood. And caring for yourself can fall even further by the wayside while you’re in the midst of identity limbo. “It can take some time to get grounding around who you are within and outside of your parental role and, from there, to figure out how to care for yourself with less time and more responsibility, too,” says Soule.

To that end, carving out the time for self care requires first understanding what actually constitutes effective self care for you, as both a person and a new parent, and then collaborating with those in your sphere to make practicing it possible. Below, mental-health practitioners with kids of their own share their best advice for doing just that.

4 ways new parents can make time for effective self care, according to therapists who have children

1. Expand your personal definition of self care

It’s an act of self care, in and of itself, to let go of any strict definition for what self care should or needs to be. “Rigid rules and routines don’t tend to serve new parents well in a season full of sleep deprivation and intense change,” says Soule.

If the things that come to mind when you initially picture “self care” aren’t things you actually want to do, then they certainly don’t need to be part of your personal practice. “When we no longer buy into the notion that self care is just about bubble baths, wine nights with girlfriends, or walks around the block, we’re free to take a deeper look at what it is we actually need to take care of ourselves,” says Soule.

Doing that means asking yourself the deceivingly simple but often skipped question of what makes you feel grounded, satisfied, or at peace, says therapist and parent Dayna Kurtz, LMSW. “The answer could include the same activities as before you had a child, different ones, or a combination of both.” For example, it might be something like taking a yoga class or going for a walk, but it could also be having someone else take over the laundry or being able to listen to a podcast episode start to finish, without interruption, she adds.

There are no wrong answers here—other than “nothing,” that is. And if you’re struggling to come up with something, consider using the question above as a writing prompt rather than just asking yourself in your head, adds Kurtz: “Writing can stimulate a different part of the brain and may offer access to answers of which you were not fully aware.”

Once you land on one or two things you actually look forward to doing for yourself, you’ll be far more motivated to add them to your calendar and make a point of doing them in just the same way you’d knock out any other parental to-do.

2. Find community with other parents who get it

Becoming a parent can be isolating because it distinguishes you from both who you were pre-parenthood and the non-parent people in your world. (Not to mention the literal isolation of safely existing with a newborn in these quasi-pandemic times.) In this frame of mind, former self-care practices may not carry the same soothing benefits they once did.

Connecting virtually or IRL with other new parents who can relate to your new reality—through a mommy-and-me group or similar recurring activity—can alleviate feelings of loneliness and allow you to “feel a sense of community with other parents in the thick of it,” says Furnival.

Even if you have your baby in tow, this type of socializing can also double as self care by reminding you that you’re not, in fact, alone, and by introducing you to a network of people on whom you may be able to lean for support in the future. This type of commitment also makes you accountable to others, whether it’s through a formal class or informal gathering, so you may feel more compelled to stick to it than with solo forms of self care.

3. Delegate early and often

The simple truth of combining parenting with self care is that one thing often has to give a little for the other to take. In other words, it’s not just okay, but necessary to delegate some of your parenting responsibilities to a partner, or other willing family member or friend in order to create time for yourself.

“It’s not uncommon for parents, especially first-time parents, to feel that they need to be able to handle everything, but you’re not supposed to handle it all on your own.” —Christina Furnival, therapist

“It’s not uncommon for parents, especially first-time parents, to feel that they need to be able to handle everything, but you’re not supposed to handle it all on your own,” says Furnival. After all, they don’t say, “It takes a village” for nothing.

Accepting offers of help from loved ones isn’t weak; it’s a responsible decision for your own health. And if you feel as though you’re on a parenting island, it’s essential to start the conversation about what kind of support you need from those in your sphere. “It can be hard to have these kinds of conversations with your partner or support system, but when you frame [their support] as an opportunity to better yourself and increase your own capacity for care and connection, people are likely to get on board,” says Soule.

Specifically, you can outline to a partner how they can best help you (for example, planning set times when you will get a shower, a break, or a nap, or when they will take on certain household duties), and you can arrange for understanding family or friends to visit, bring over meals, or take care of an errand, suggests Furnival. If you’re part of a community of new parents (per above), you can also look to them for support, offering to care for a fellow parent’s child on one night in exchange for them doing the same for your child on another. Remember: The more you’re able to delegate in a way that feels right to you, the more time you get back to care for yourself.

4. Tap a mental-health professional with expertise in postpartum care

Though it might feel like something you don’t have time to do, if you can financially afford it, seeking the support of a postpartum doula or a therapist or coach with expertise working with new parents can be worthwhile. Doing so can help you treat self care as something important enough to warrant a regular meeting on your calendar (because it is).

“Therapy can be a designated and reliable time and space each week to sort through many of the challenges inherent in new parenting,” says Kurtz. “In my practice, for example, sessions are sometimes the only time during the week when my clients can put the focus solely on themselves and their own needs.” That’s valuable, in and of itself. But of course, the benefits of an expert’s guidance extend beyond the time you’re devoting to yourself. A practitioner in this space can help you figure out “how to cope with the often mixed and complex feelings that come with being a parent and how to better share the parenting load,” says Soule.

If you aren’t able to hire outside support, Soule suggests seeking the support or advice of loved ones or friends in your life who have older kids, and who have stood before in your shoes. Hearing the ways they managed to create time for themselves while being a new parent can inspire similar or different ideas for how you might do the same.

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You May Both Suffer and Benefit from Fed’s Rate Increases

TheStreet 

The Fed might raise interest rates higher than some investors expected and leave them higher for longer than some anticipated.

Higher for longer. This seemed to be the message from the Federal Reserve’s minutes of its meeting in December.

In other words, it appears that the Fed will raise interest rates higher than some investors expected and leave them higher for longer than some investors anticipated. 

That would mean higher rates on your mortgages, auto loans and credit card bills. On the plus side, it would also mean higher rates on your certificates of deposit and money market funds.

Fed officials forecast last month that they will raise the federal funds rate to 5% to 5.25% this year. The rate currently stands at 4.25% to 4.5%, after the central bank lifted it by 4.25 percentage points last year.

Some investors aren’t so sure the Fed will make it up to the 5%-to-5.25% range, as inflation has begun to ease. Consumer price inflation slipped to 7.7% in November from a 40-year high of 9.1% in June.

In its minutes, the Fed warned investors against challenging the central bank’s effort to quell inflation. “An unwarranted easing in financial conditions, especially if driven by a misperception by the public of the [Fed’s] reaction function, would complicate the [Fed’s] effort to restore price stability,” the minutes said. That scenario could mean higher interest rates for longer.

Getty

Fed Seen Trying to Restrain Stocks

Financial conditions include stock market levels, the dollar’s levels, corporate bond spreads and interest-rate levels. So if investors push the stock market much higher, that might mean additional or larger interest-rate hikes.

“The Fed’s awareness of the role that market expectations will play in the success of the mission is clear,” Michael Reisner, co-chief executive at CION Investments, said in a commentary.

“The interest of the Fed in avoiding a ‘misperception’ that its commitment to inflation is flagging can be seen as an attempt to tamp down market enthusiasm and keep asset values lower.”

Some investors have speculated that the Fed will pivot to cutting rates later this year as the economy weakens. But that doesn’t appear to be on the Fed’s to-do list.

“No [Fed officials] anticipated that it would be appropriate to begin reducing the federal funds rate target in 2023,” the minutes said.

“[Fed officials] generally observed that a restrictive policy stance would need to be maintained until the incoming data provided confidence that inflation was on a sustained downward path to 2%, which was likely to take some time.”

The Fed’s favored inflation indicator, the personal consumption expenditures price index, rose 5.5% in the 12 months through November.

Fed Sees Economy Weakening

Fed officials have warned us in recent months that their tightening will hurt the economy and perhaps even lead to a recession. They didn’t back off that message last month.

The economy rebounded moderately in the second half of 2022 after declining somewhat in the first half, Fed officials pointed out.

In December, “economic activity appeared likely to expand in 2023 at a pace well below its trend growth rate,” they said in the minutes.

“With inflation remaining unacceptably high, [Fed officials] expected that a sustained period of below-trend real GDP growth would be needed to bring aggregate supply and aggregate demand into better balance and thereby reduce inflationary pressures.”

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Stephen ‘tWitch’ Boss’ funeral planned for family; ‘larger service for close friends’ to be held at later date

Latest & Breaking News on Fox News 

Family members are mourning Stephen “tWitch” Boss Wednesday afternoon with a small funeral planned for the late television star.

He died by suicide Dec. 13 in Los Angeles at the age of 40.

“The services for the family are today,” a source confirmed to Fox News Digital. 

Boss is survived by wife Allison Holker and their three children.

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“A larger service for close friends that he considered family will be held at a later date,” the source added. 

Boss worked on several films after breaking into the entertainment industry in 2008 on “So You Think You Can Dance,” but he became known for bringing energy to Ellen DeGeneres’ talk show for eight years. 

In 2020, she officially made him one of her co-executive producers of “The Ellen DeGeneres Show.” It’s unclear if Ellen or the “SYTYCD” crew is planning separate memorial services.

Representatives for Ellen DeGeneres did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.

STEPEHEN ‘TWITCH’ BOSS REMEMBERED BY ‘SYTYCD’ JUDGE MARY MURPHY AFTER HIS DEATH AT 40: ‘EVERYBODY LOVED HIM’

“I’m heartbroken. tWitch was pure love and light,” DeGeneres wrote on Instagram at the time of his death. 

“He was my family, and I loved him with all my heart. I will miss him. Please send your love and support to Allison and his beautiful children — Weslie, Maddox, and Zaia.”

Holker broke her social media silence over her husband’s death just before Christmas by sharing a selfie of her and Stephen. 

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“My ONE and ONLY Oh how my heart aches. We miss you so much,” she wrote.

Boss died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head, according to the Los Angeles County Medical Examiner-Coroner. The manner of death was suicide, per the closed report. His place of death was listed as a “hotel/motel.” 

After Boss earned second place on “So You Think You Can Dance,” he appeared in the “Step Up” film series with Channing Tatum and Jenna Dewan and in “Magic Mike XXL,” “Ghostbusters” and “Modern Family.”

“We will always remember Stephen ‘tWitch’ Boss for the light and joy he brought into our lives and into the hearts of so many,” FOX Entertainment, 19 Entertainment and Dick Clark Productions said in a statement. This tragic, painful loss of such a radiant, inimitable talent and beloved friend is immeasurable beyond words, and we grieve alongside his family, loved ones and fans. ‘tWitch,’ we will miss you dearly.”

If you or someone you know is having thoughts of suicide, please contact the Suicide & Crisis Lifeline at 988 or 1-800-273-TALK (8255).

 

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Florida school district to require students to use restrooms based on biological sex: reports

Latest & Breaking News on Fox News 

A Florida school district plans to implement policy that strictly requires students to use the restrooms based on their biological gender, according to reports.

Fox station WTVT in Tampa reported that Pasco County Schools Superintendent Kurt Browning announced the new policy during a school board meeting on Tuesday night.

“As the board is aware, over winter break, the 11th Circuit United States Court of Appeals…issued its ruling in the case of Drew (Adams) versus the school board of St. Johns County,” Browning said during the meeting. “The full appeals court overturned the trial court’s decision, which has been the controlling law until this newest decision was rendered.”

JUDGE BLOCKS BIDEN ADMIN’S TRANSGENDER SCHOOL BATHROOM RULE, ATHLETES

The policy change comes as the debate over diversity, inclusion, and school bathrooms continues to draw support and opposition from all sides.

Once the announcement was made on Tuesday, LGBTQ advocates swiftly criticized the decision while conservative and church-based groups supported it, WTVT reported.

Up until the announcement, the school district would not adopt a rule requiring students to use bathrooms based on the biological sex.

BIDEN ADMIN HOLDING SCHOOL LUNCH MONEY ‘HOSTAGE’ TO FORCE TRANSGENDER POLICIES, ACTIVIST PARENT SAYS

The Tampa Bay Times reported that Browning said transgender students could still request accommodations of a single-stall private bathroom.

“I’m going to do what I have always said I’ll do, which is follow the law. The 11th Circuit changed the law,” Browning told the Tampa Bay Times. “It would be disingenuous of us to use the St. Johns case for the last five years and not use the 11th Circuit case as the basis of our decision-making.”

Browning told school principals in an email on Tuesday that he planned to update the district’s rules on the matter.

CALIFORNIA HIGH SCHOOL TEACHER BOASTS ‘QUEER LIBRARY’ WITH MATERIAL ON ORGIES AND BDSM/KINK

The school district posts its agendas on its website, and the issue was not listed for discussion. Instead, according to the Tampa Bay Times, Browning brought the rule change up early in the meeting, just before public comment.

Browning did not immediately reply to questions from Fox News Digital regarding the new policy.

As of Wednesday night, the meeting was not published on the district’s website. 

 

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NFL players, communities rally for Bills safety Damar Hamlin

With tears beginning to well, Tennessee Titans linebacker Rashad Weaver shook his head and lowered it to his knees, his body swaying as he tried to express what it was like watching friend and former college teammate Damar Hamlin having to be resuscitated back to life on the football field.

“I don’t know, man,” Weaver said Tuesday after sobbing uncontrollably at his locker. “I missed exactly what happened but like five seconds later, seeing the first replay of it, just kind of like everybody else sitting there and holding your breath and figure out what happened.”

Weaver’s reaction was that of most everyone watching from home and on the field in Cincinnati on Monday night, when Hamlin, the Buffalo Bills safety, collapsed while going into cardiac arrest after making what appeared to be a routine tackle.

As the second-year Bills player lay sedated in a hospital bed with his family by his side at University of Cincinnati Medical Center, where he remained in critical condition, Hamlin’s competitive and giving spirit was not lost on those who know him.

Dorrian Glenn, Hamlin’s uncle, told CNN in a televised interview outside the hospital Tuesday that Hamlin needed to have his heart re-started twice — once on the field, and again after he arrived at the hospital. Glenn also provided those details to other outlets, including ESPN and NFL Network.

“They were resuscitating him on the field before they brought him in the hospital and then resuscitated him a second time when he got to the hospital,” Glenn told CNN. “I just want to show my gratitude for the medical staff that were on hand because if not for them, my nephew probably wouldn’t even be here.”

Glenn said he was watching the game with some relatives in Pittsburgh. He arrived in Cincinnati early Tuesday; the cities are about 300 miles apart.

“I never cried so hard in my life,” Glenn said. “Just to know, like, my nephew basically died on the field and they brought him back to life. I mean, it’s just heartbreaking.”

Glenn said there were some encouraging signs, such as doctors lowering the level of oxygen Hamlin needs from 100% to 50%.

“He’s still sedated right now,” Glenn told CNN. “They just want him to have a better chance of recovering better. So, they feel that if he’s sedated, his body can heal a lot faster than if he was woke and possibly cause other complications.”

The chilling scene of Hamlin’s collapse, which played out in front of a North American television audience on ESPN’s “Monday Night Football,” has put the NFL on hold, with the game suspended. That sparked an outpouring of support in placing Hamlin’s life ahead of sports, and pushed to the forefront the generous person he is.

“He has his own clothing brand called Chasing M’s, which is about chasing your dreams and chasing millions,” said Weaver, who spent four years playing alongside Hamlin at the University of Pittsburgh. “And that’s everybody’s goal in life, reaching your dreams.”

Players and fans from across the NFL rallied to Hamlin’s support, with vigils held in Cincinnati and outside the Bills’ home stadium. The shock of what happened also reverberated in Pittsburgh, where the 24-year-old Hamlin grew up and was determined to give back to those in need.

“Damar is a hero to thousands of Pittsburgh kids,” Pitt football coach Pat Narduzzi said in a statement. “Damar, we love you. We are praying for you. Pittsburgh’s always had your back. And now it’s obvious the entire country has your back, too.”

The Bills said Hamlin spent the night in intensive care after his heart stopped when tackling receiver Tee Higgins in the opening quarter against the Bengals. Medical staff restored his heartbeat during frantic moments on the field before he was loaded into an ambulance, where he was joined by his mother, with teary-eyed players and coaches on both teams watching helplessly.

“First and foremost, the Bengals continue to send thoughts and prayers to Damar Hamlin and his family. Our hearts are with everyone in this unprecedented time — what we can do is support one another,” Bengals president Mike Brown said in a statement.

In Buffalo, the Bills changed their social media avatar to that of Hamlin’s No. 3 jersey with the words “Pray For Damar.” The other 31 teams and the NFL quickly followed suit.

While some Bills players stayed in Cincinnati to be with their teammate, the rest returned home early Tuesday, when they were greeted by a handful of fans watching silently from the side of the road outside Buffalo Niagara International Airport.

The Bills took the day off and were unsure when they might resume practicing, putting Hamlin above everything else, including their quest to clinch the AFC’s top seed.

The NFL’s schedule is now in flux after the game between Buffalo (12-3) and Cincinnati (11-4) — a showdown with AFC playoff race implications — was postponed indefinitely.

NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell informed both teams that their game would not resume this week. No decision has been made on whether it will be played at a later date, with the league not making any changes to its Week 18 schedule, a week before the playoffs are set to begin.

Numerous NFL teams canceled their media availabilities, including the New England Patriots, who are scheduled to travel to Buffalo for the teams’ season finales on Sunday.

“Please pray for our brother,” quarterback Josh Allen posted in a tweet.

Added offensive lineman Rodger Saffold: “He is more than an athlete. He is a son and brother. And I pray God gives him mercy and brings him back to us.”

Hamlin is from McKees Rocks, a hardscrabble exurb of Pittsburgh, and was selected by Buffalo in the sixth round of the 2021 draft. He spent his rookie season limited to special teams roles, and took over the starting job in Week 3 in place of veteran Micah Hyde, who remains sidelined by a neck injury.

Overnight, Hamlin went from being a relatively unknown second-year player to receiving an international outpouring of support.

His Chasing M’s Foundation eclipsed its modest goal of raising $2,500, exceeding $5 million by Tuesday evening.

Bills and Bengals fans gathered at the hospital immediately following the postponement of the game, with many returning on Tuesday.

Elena Weiler, 33, from Amelia, Ohio, and Billy Jeffers held a sign that said “Pray for Hamlin 3” with candles in front.

“It don’t matter if you’re a Bengals fan or a Bills fan, we’re here to show our support,” said Jeffers, who was wearing a Bengals sweatshirt.

The Bills now face perhaps their most difficult hurdle in a calendar year filled with on- and off-field adversity. The team has seen its schedule disrupted twice by major snowstorms in the past month, including a blizzard that led to at least 40 deaths in the region over Christmas. The Bills also rallied to support the community in the aftermath of a racist shooting rampage that left 10 dead at a Buffalo supermarket in May.

On Tuesday, it was the region’s turn to rally for the team on both sides of the New York-Ontario border.

The Ontario-based Niagara Parks commission announced it will illuminate Niagara Falls in blue in honor of Hamlin.

“Our collective thoughts are with him, his family, his team and the City of Buffalo,” the commission wrote.

___

AP Pro Football Writers Rob Maaddi, Mark Long and Teresa M. Walker, and AP Sports Writers Tim Reynolds, Mitch Stacy and Will Graves contributed to this report.

___

AP NFL: https://apnews.com/hub/nfl and https://twitter.com/AP_NFL


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No speaker yet, but a lot of speaking

Politics, Policy, Political News Top Stories 

The dayslong process to pick a speaker of the House has left politicians noticeably quippy.

Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.), nominated by his majority party to lead the chamber, has failed in six votes across two days to earn the majority of votes needed to become speaker. He doesn’t have the votes, as 20 far-right holdouts have voted for other members — but at the same time, no other viable candidate has yet emerged to overtake him.

With frustrations mounting, here were some of the most quotable moments from two days of struggle to elect a House speaker.

GOP lawmaker accuses Democrats of drinking and gets booed

Rep. Kat Cammack (R-Fla.), who nominated McCarthy for speaker, accused Democrats of drinking on the job as they headed into Wednesday’s third round of votes for the speaker’s office.

“They want us to fight each other. That much has been made clear by the popcorn and blankets and alcohol that has come in over there,” Cammack said, referring to Democrats.

Without a speaker in place to set rules, protesting members had no mechanism to deal with the remark, POLITICO previously noted.

Cammack had another quotable moment in her nomination of McCarthy for the sixth ballot: “It’s Groundhog Day. Again.”

“Maybe even a GREAT JOB.”

Former President Donald Trump’s endorsement of McCarthy characteristically had caps-lock on, but the actual words seemed less upbeat.

“REPUBLICANS, DO NOT TURN A GREAT TRIUMPH INTO A GIANT & EMBARRASSING DEFEAT,” Trump posted on his own social media, Truth Social. “IT’S TIME TO CELEBRATE, YOU DESERVE IT. Kevin McCarthy will do a good job, and maybe even a GREAT JOB.”

The post did not appear to have an effect on House lawmakers, as McCarthy did not earn any additional votes after it went online.

A fake Trump endorsement of Rep. Byron Donalds (R-Fla.) for speaker circulated online Wednesday afternoon, and Trump confirmed in a separate post that it was a “forgery.”

Boebert appeals to Trump: Tell McCarthy to withdraw

Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-Colo.), a longtime proponent of Trumpism, asked on Wednesday that the former president tell McCarthy to leave the race for speaker entirely.

“The president needs to tell Kevin McCarthy that, sir, you do not have the votes and it’s time to withdraw,” Boebert said Wednesday on Capitol Hill.

The comment was indicative of a rift between Trump and some of the farthest-right members of the House, caused by the battle for the speakership.

“I’d like to report a squatter.”

Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) on Twitter accused McCarthy of improperly occupying the speaker’s office, after McCarthy moved in possessions without holding the position.

Gaetz’s post quote-tweeted a message on his own letterhead to the Architect of the Capitol, questioning why McCarthy was allowed to occupy the office. Online, he and Rep. Andy Biggs (R-Ariz.) — another McCarthy opponent — repeatedly called McCarthy a “squatter.”

“It seems Mr. McCarthy can no longer be considered Speaker-Designate following today’s balloting,” Gaetz wrote in the letter.

“Santos. Santos.”

Rep.-elect George Santos (R-N.Y.), the embattled Long Island representative who is reported to have falsified much of his biography, appeared to not hear his name during the fifth roll call vote for speaker.

After his name was said twice and the next name had also been called, Santos raised his hand and called out for McCarthy.

“In chaos, anything is possible.”

An alliance between anti-McCarthy Republicans and Democrats is unlikely, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) said on Tuesday night on MSNBC. But she didn’t rule it out entirely.

“In chaos, anything is possible, especially in this era,” Ocasio-Cortez told host Alex Wagner.

The progressive lawmaker was spotted speaking to McCarthy’s opponents, including Gaetz, during votes. In the MSNBC interview, she characterized Gaetz’s questions as fact-checks of claims from Republican Party leadership.

“To be able to fact-check some of the claims that McCarthy is making, whether Democrats are going to defect or not, et cetera, is important in order to keep him honest,” Ocasio-Cortez said.

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[World] Why this congressman is using Superman comic for swearing-in

BBC News world 

Image source, Getty Images

Image caption,

Representative-elect Robert Garcia speaks at an event.

Incoming US congressman Robert Garcia will be sworn in using the US Constitution – and a Superman comic.

In a tweet on Tuesday, he said it is one of three items he will use that “mean a lot to me personally”.

The other two are a photo of his parents, who he said were lost to Covid-19, and his citizenship certificate.

Mr Garcia is still waiting to take the oath of office, however, after Republicans failed to elect a speaker.

A Democrat from Long Beach, California, and the city’s former mayor before being elected to the House of Representatives, he has a record of sharing his graphic novel fandom on Twitter.

“Anyone who understands comics knows that comics are an essential part of American fiction,” he tweeted in November. “And the lessons learned are invaluable.”

Mr Garcia – who will take the oath using a vintage Superman comic from 1939 – cites lessons that are distinctive to his upbringing as both an immigrant and a member of the LGBT community.

The congressman-elect was brought to the US from Peru by his mother when he was five years old. He is openly gay and married.

In 2021, after DC Comics announced the new Superman would be bisexual, Mr Garcia tweeted: “I became a Superman fan as a kid because I related to him. An immigrant, a sense of justice, and a secret identity.”

Although using the Superman comic may be a bit unorthodox when taking the oath of office, technically it’s not illegal, per Article VI of the US Constitution. The Article states, in part, that “no religious Test shall ever be required as a Qualification to any Office or public Trust under the United States”.

As a result, “there is no required text upon which an incoming officeholder must take their oath”, said Jane Campbell, president of the United States Capitol Historical Society.

Throughout history, Ms Campbell said, newly elected members of Congress have used different texts, including Hebrew Scripture, Jewish religious texts, copies of the Quran and the Bhagavad Gita (the Hindu sacred text).

In 2007, Democrat Keith Ellison from Minnesota, the first Muslim elected to Congress, took the oath using a Quran once owned by Thomas Jefferson.

Many of the mementos, like Jefferson’s Quran and the Superman comic, are loaned by the Library of Congress for this occasion. Other props loaned by the Library for a ceremonial swearing-in include Rosa Park’s pocket Bible and the Biblia Hebraica, the first complete Hebrew Bible published in America.

But no comic books, yet.

As the vote for speaker of the House concludes its sixth fruitless round, the world may have to wait a little longer before Superman and Mr Garcia can break the congressional record books.

 

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Kennedy passes on Louisiana gubernatorial bid

Politics, Policy, Political News Top Stories 

Republican Sen. John Kennedy told supporters Wednesday he will forgo this year’s Louisiana governor race and stay in the U.S. Senate.

Fresh off winning a second term as senator, Kennedy said that he decided after deliberating that “at this juncture, I just think I can help my state and my country more in the Senate.”

“I have passed more bills as the lead author than any first-term senator in Louisiana’s history, but, to be an effective senator, killing bad ideas is just as important as advancing good ones. I’m going to be very busy doing both,” Kennedy said in the message.

Kennedy’s decision marks the second Republican senator to pass on the race, which is a top Republican pick-up opportunity as Gov. John Bel Edwards, a Democrat, is term-limited. Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.) also considered the race but decided to stay in the Senate, citing his new role as top Republican on the Senate’s Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee.

Kennedy is generally more conservative than Cassidy and known for his clever quips on Capitol Hill, whereas Cassidy voted to convict Donald Trump in his impeachment trial and emerged as a key Republican negotiator in the Senate. Kennedy is a bit of a thorn in the side of GOP leaders, never holding back if he’s feeling frustrated with his party’s strategy.

Kennedy would have been a formidable entrant. He just won re-election by more than 40 percentage points, avoiding a runoff.

He also previously looked at the 2019 governors race, which Edwards won. Former Sen. David Vitter, who previously held Kennedy’s seat, lost to Edwards in 2015 and retired from the Senate.

Now with an open seat, Attorney General Jeff Landry is the top declared GOP candidate in the race, though more candidates may be on the way. Republicans are bullish about their chances to flip the otherwise red-leaning state, with the anti-abortion Edwards leaving office.

Louisiana is one of three states that is holding an election for governor in 2023, along with Kentucky and Mississippi.

Zach Montellaro contributed to this report.

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