See How Much Car Safety Has Improved With Generational Crash Tests

Carscoops 

It can be hard to see progress as it’s happening but, fortunately, crash testers have been recording their findings, both in print and video, for years now, giving us an opportunity to see exactly how much automotive safety has improved over the years.

YouTube channel The Car Crash has been compiling classic and modern crash test videos from a variety of safety institutions, ranging from the American IIHS (Insurance Institute for Highway Safety) to the Euro NCAP (New Car Assessment Programme) to Germany’s ADAC (Allgemeiner Deutscher Automobil-Club), and beyond to show exactly how much safety features have improved through the years.

Each video takes a single model line and shows footage of crash tests going as far back as the ’70s in some cases, to see how they stack up next to their modern equivalents. When you compare the most recent vehicles to the oldest, it’s almost staggering to think that anyone ever survived a car crash in the last millennium.

Read: The IIHS Has Introduced A Tougher Side-Impact Crash Test And Small SUVs Are Struggling

Take, for instance, the Mercedes-Benz C-Class. In 1993, the W202 model was introduced, featuring such safety equipment as a front seatbelt pre-tensioner, a front airbag, and even a side airbag. Despite that, though, the EURO NCAP found there was much room for improvement, awarding the car just two out of five stars.

Examiners found that the C-Class “suffered excessive intrusion into the footwell area, where stiff structures that came into contact with the driver’s right knee presented serious injury risks to his knee, thigh and pelvis.” And although it had a side airbag, in the side impact test, “the door struck the dummy’s chest before the side airbag had fully inflated.” I’m no expert, but that sounds bad.

Footage of the crash test, meanwhile, paints an equally grim picture. In the front overlap crash test, the roof buckles just over the B-pillar, allowing the A-pillar to rise up, and the passenger compartment to accordion.

By the next generation, though, the results are shockingly different. The 2001 Mercedes-Benz C-Class (W203) looks decidedly more modern in the test than its predecessor. The pillars all remain intact, and, from the video, at least, it appears that the passenger compartment remains unintruded upon.

Indeed, in IIHS testing, the car got the institute’s highest marks almost across the board. Evaluators found that the structure and safety cage were “Good” (its highest rating), and that the car protected the driver’s head, chest, neck, and legs well. Its seats and headrests, though, were considered “Marginal” (the institute’s second-lowest rating) at the time. Today, the C-Class gets a five-star rating from EURO NCAP.

It’s much the same story with the Audi A4. In 1994, the B5-generation sedan crumpled in much the same way as the Mercedes. Despite that, the car earned a higher star rating than its competitor (three out of five) from EURO NCAP, though its third star was flagged “to indicate that the driver faced an unacceptably high risk of chest injury in the side impact.” In the front crash, meanwhile, there was a risk of injury to the knees because of hard surfaces and the crushing of the passenger compartment.

Again, though, just a generation later, the 2001 Audi A4 B6 performed significantly better. Its passenger compartment was deemed “strong” by crash testers, and the airbags worked well to protect the heads of the dummies.

It’s a story that’s repeated frequently through these crash test video compilations, among them BMW’s 3-Series, the VW Golf, the Honda Accord, and others. These tests show that the ’90s were a period of rapid improvements in the field of passive safety technology, with crash test results improving significantly over the course of the decade, thanks, in part, to these independent safety organizations.

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Warriors’ Draymond Green hits back at critique of championship run: ‘Dominating is lame?’

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Golden State Warriors star Draymond Green clapped back at a former top draft pick’s assessment of the organization’s dynasty run during the mid-2010s.

Evan Turner, who was the No. 2 overall pick by the Philadelphia 76ers in 2010, downplayed the Warriors’ championship runs in a recent episode of the “Point Forward” podcast.

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“Y’all won a lot of championships, but it was lame as f—” Turner said.

When his co-host Andre Iguodala – who was on the championship teams – pointed out that Golden State won again last season, Turner responded by saying he was talking about the team winning the title three out of four years between 2014 and 2019. The team made five straight NBA Finals, only losing to LeBron James’ Cleveland Cavaliers and Kawhi Leonard’s Toronto Raptors.

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Green got whiff of the sound bite on social media and posted his reaction on Instagram.

“Let me start by saying this is the only soundbite of this whole episode that I’ve heared. … So I have no context,” he wrote. “Dominating is lame? This sounds like someone who got they a– kicked often! Good work fellas.”

Green has been a key component in each of the Warriors’ championships.

He’s a seven-time All-Defensive First Team member, four-time All-Star, two-time All-NBA First Team selection and the 2017 Defensive Player of the Year.

Injuries have hit the Warriors this season. Regardless, Green is averaging 8 points, 6.6 rebounds, 6.6 assists and nearly 1 block per game.

 

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Iowa star’s grandfather killed in vehicle-pedestrian incident before Music City Bowl

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The grandfather of Iowa star linebacker Jack Campbell tragically died in a car crash in Nashville on Friday after traveling to Tennessee to see his grandson play in what will likely be his final college football game. 

William Smith Jr., 76, was pronounced dead at Vanderbilt University Medical Center after being involved in a single vehicle-pedestrian incident late Friday evening, the university said in a statement on Saturday.

“Our hearts are with Jack and his entire family as they grieve the tragic death of their grandfather and father, William Smith, Jr.,” coach Kirk Ferentz said in a statement provided by the school. 

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“We know Mr. Smith was a strong influence on his grandson and a faithful Hawkeye football supporter. All of us – players, coaches and staff members – will keep the Campbell family in our thoughts and prayers during this profoundly difficult time.”

According to The Tennessean, Smith was hit by a van after stepping into the road just after 10 p.m. Police told the outlet that Smith did not hear a family member’s warning not to step into the road. 

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Campbell had a dominant performance in Saturday’s shutout of Kentucky in the Music City Bowl, leading the Hawkeyes with 10 tackles. He also registered a sack and two tackles for loss.

According to the university, his parents did not tell him about his grandfather’s passing so he could “have one last time to play with his Iowa Hawkeye teammates.”

“Jack’s parents told him about his grandfather’s passing after the Music City Bowl game ended,” the news releases read. “His parents made the decision to wait to share this devastating news so that Jack would have one last time to play with his Iowa Hawkeye teammates.”

 

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[World] Ancient Egyptian ‘Green Coffin’ returned to Cairo by US

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Image source, EPA

Image caption,

The 2.9m (9.5ft) long “Green Coffin” belonged to an ancient Egyptian priest called Ankhenmaat

A looted ancient Egyptian sarcophagus that was on display at a US museum has been returned to Egypt.

The 2.9m (9.5ft) long “Green Coffin” dates back to the Late Dynastic Period, which spanned 664BC to 332BC, and belonged to a priest called Ankhenmaat.

A collector loaned it to the Houston Museum of Natural Science in 2013.

The sarcophagus was repatriated after an investigation that lasted several years and was formally handed over by US diplomats at a ceremony in Cairo on Monday. The event was attended by Egypt’s Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry and Tourism and Antiquities Minister Ahmed Issa.

Image source, EPA

Image caption,

Mostafa Waziri, the top official at the Supreme Council of Antiquities, inspected the sarcophagus

“Today’s ceremony is emblematic of the long history of co-operation between the United States and Egypt on antiquities protection and cultural heritage preservation,” said US chargé d’affaires in Egypt, Daniel Rubinstein.

Mr Issa said the return of the sarcophagus showed Egypt’s strenuous efforts to recover smuggled artefacts.

In September, Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg said the Green Coffin, which was valued at over $1m (£830,000), was illegally trafficked out of Egypt by a multinational network of antiquities smugglers.

The network was also responsible for trafficking the “Gold Coffin”, which was which was returned to Egypt in 2019, the Stele of Pa-di-Sena, which is also from the Late Dynastic Period and was handed over in 2020, and five pieces seized from New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art last year.

The US is not the only country to have returned antiquities to Egypt recently.

In 2021, Israel handed over 95 relics which had been smuggled into the country or found for sale in Jerusalem.

Last month, a university in the Republic of Ireland said it was planning to repatriate a sarcophagus, mummified human remains and canopic jars.

 

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Suspected gas explosion destroys 2 homes in Pennsylvania neighborhood

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A suspected gas explosion destroyed two homes and injured multiple people in Pennsylvania just hours after ringing in the New Year on Sunday.

Two homes were completely destroyed in the blast, while others nearby suffered shattered windows, footage from the scene shows. The blast sent at least five people to the hospital, including a 65-year-old man with critical injuries, a 60-year-old woman with critical burns, and three others, according to WTXF.

“We were very fortunate from what we know now not to have a loss of life, because it’s the middle of the night and everyone is sleeping,” Assistant Fire Chief Charles Walker told WTXF. “And if it’s confirmed to be a gas leak, it’s very rare to have the magnitude of this type of damage occur to not have loss of life, truly a blessing.”

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Walker went on to say the smell of gas still lingered in the area and that fire department officials had identified gas leaks.

Walker stated that two of those injured had pulled themselves out of the rubble while a third had to be dug out.

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One local father told the station that his son had woken him up around 2:30 AM to say that the houses behind theirs had blown up and “were gone.”

No deaths have been reported from the explosion.

 

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What life was like 50 years ago in America, compared to now in 2023

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Life is very different compared to 50 years ago. 

From popular music, movies and haircuts to monumental political moments, notable economic statistics and scientific advancements, here are 10 examples of how the U.S. has changed from 1973 to 2023. 

At the start of 1973, the top song in the U.S. was “You’re So Vain” by Carly Simon, according to Billboard’s Hot 100 list, which was released on Saturday, Jan. 6, 1973.

In the last week of 2022, Mariah Carey’s holiday hit “All I Want for Christmas Is You” dominated the Billboard Hot 100 once again. The song was originally released in 1987.

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Shag haircuts, a layered style with varying lengths of hair, was a popular hairstyle for men and women in the 1970s, according to the Hair & Makeup Artist Handbook, an online resource that provides media hair and makeup training.

In an overview of 1970s hairstyles, the hair and makeup website wrote that shag haircuts are “a unisex, no frills cut that involved evenly-progressing layers with graduated sides and a full fringe.”

Celebrity hairdresser Paul McGregor reportedly created the style for Jane Fonda’s character Bree Daniels in the film “Klute” (1971).

Other celebrities who donned the shag haircut throughout the ’70s included rock ‘n’ roll star Joan Jett, singer Suzi Quatro, the pop boyband Bay City Rollers and “The Partridge Family” actor David Cassidy, according to the Hair & Makeup Artist Handbook’s overview.

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Shag haircuts have reportedly made a comeback in pop culture, according to multiple fashion and beauty magazines.

Skylab, America’s first space station and first crewed research lab in space, was launched on May 14, 1973, according to the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA).

The Skylab reportedly evolved out of the Apollo Applications Program of the late 1960s, which sought to recycle unused hardware from the Apollo Moon landing program, NASA wrote on the Skylab’s 45th anniversary.

The Skylab disintegrated on July 11, 1979, and debris fell into the Indian Ocean and Western Australia, according to History.com.

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NASA’s International Space Station launched 19 years after the Skylab’s crash. It continues to operate and is set to decommission and deorbit by 2031, according to the agency’s transition plan. 

The 45th Academy Awards, hosted at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion in the Los Angeles Music Center on March 27, 1973, honored films that were released in 1972, according to the Oscars website.

The film that won the Best Picture award was “The Godfather,” directed by Francis Ford Coppola and produced by Albert S. Ruddy.

Nominees for the 95th Academy Awards, which is scheduled for March 12, 2023, have yet to be officially announced. 

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The Hollywood Reporter named several Best Picture contenders for 2023 in a recent report, including: “Elvis,” “Emancipation,” “Till,” “The Woman King,” “Lady Chatterley’s Lover,” “The Wonder,” “She Said,” “Tár,” “Women Talking,” “Pinocchio,” “Bones and All” “Avatar: The Way of Water,” “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever,” “Everything Everywhere All at Once,” “Nope” and “Top Gun: Maverick.”

The Academy Awards will announce their nominees on Tuesday, Jan. 24, 2023, according to Entertainment Weekly.

On average, the cost of gas in the U.S. in 1973 was 39 cents per gallon, according to data from the Office of Energy Efficiency & Renewable Energy. That average was up three cents from the previous year.

Now national gasoline retail prices average around $3.99 per gallon, according to an updated Short-Term Energy Outlook forecast from the Energy Information Administration.

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The agency predicts retail gas prices will go down to an average price of $3.51 per gallon in 2023. 

The U.S. Census Bureau, the median family income was $12,050 in 1973, which was calculated from about 55.1 million American families. The 1973 median was approximately an 8.4% increase from what the agency reported as the national median household income in 1972 ($11,120).

The national household median income has risen to $70,784, according to the Census Bureau’s Current Population Survey of 2021 and its Annual Social and Economic Supplements report of 2022, which both contain the most up-to-date income data the statistical agency has.

In 2020, the national median family income was $67,521, but the Census Bureau says the amount isn’t “statistically different” when comparing 2020 and 2021.

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In January 1973, the median sales price of a new home sold in the U.S. was $29,900, according to data published by the U.S. Census Bureau. By the end of the year, median home prices rose to $35,700.

The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development’s Office of Policy Development and Research claims that 35,500 new single-family homes were “actually sold” in 1973, according to figures published in its U.S. Housing Market Conditions Historical Data report.

More up-to-date figures from 2022 state the median sales price of a new home is around $471,200, according to Monthly New Residential Sales data the Census Bureau released on Friday, Dec. 23. 

The agency will reveal the December 2022 median sales price on Jan. 26, 2023.

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The Census Bureau’s latest Monthly New Residential Sales report says more than 7.1 million new homes were sold from January 2022 to November 2022.

The U.S. Supreme Court shared its ruling on Roe v. Wade – a landmark case on abortion rights – on Jan. 22, 1973.

The 7-to-2 decision deemed the U.S. Constitution protected a woman’s right to seek an abortion during her first trimester, according to the Library of Congress. Read more about the history of Roe v. Wade here.

Roe v. Wade was overturned on June 24, 2022, after the Supreme Court issued its opinion on Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, a case that centered on the constitutionality of a Mississippi law (HB 1510, the Gestational Age Act) that banned abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy.

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The Supreme Court’s latest ruling leaves abortion legislation in the hands of U.S. states, according to American University, Washington, D.C., a private federally chartered research university.

The Watergate trial began on Jan. 10, 1973, according to the U.S. Senate website. The five men who broke into the Democratic National Committee headquarters at The Watergate Hotel in Washington, D.C., on June 17, 1972, pleaded guilty and two were convicted by a jury.

“Chief Federal District Judge John Sirica expressed skepticism that all the facts in the case had been revealed,” the U.S. Senate website says. “Judge Sirica urged those awaiting sentencing to cooperate with the soon-to-be-established Senate select committee.”

In February 1973, the Select Committee on Presidential Campaign Activities was established to investigate the campaign activities related to the presidential election of 1972.

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The committee submitted its final report in 1974. The Watergate scandal ultimately led to President Richard Nixon’s resignation that year. Read more about the Watergate scandal’s timeline here.

The Senate’s website says the Watergate investigation “remains one of the most significant congressional inquiries in U.S. history.”

The U.S. ended its involvement in the Vietnam War after signing the Paris Peace Accords on Jan. 27, 1973, according to the United States of American Vietnam War Commemoration, an awareness campaign started by the Department of Defense.

Before the signing, the U.S. withdrew its last ground troops from South Vietnam on Aug. 11, 1972.

The war was officially declared over in the summer of 1975, and a year later, North and South Vietnam unified under the Socialist Republic of Vietnam, according to History.com. Vietnam has remained a one-party Communist state in Southeast Asia.

 

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You’ll Need At Least $3.5 Million To Afford This Ferrari Enzo

Carscoops 

The Ferrari Enzo is a true supercar great and this one is pristine enough to be a highlight of even the most remarkable car collection.

This Ferrari will be sold by Mecum Auctions at its Kissimmee event on January 14 and is expected to sell for between $3.5 million and $3.7 million. Immediately making this Enzo stand out from most others is the custom-order Argento Nurburging paint that is beautifully complemented by a set of silver-finished center-locking alloy wheels.

The original owner also ordered the Italian great with Scuderia Shields on the front fenders and yellow center caps.

Found in the cabin are carbon fiber bucket seats clad in Nero leather and complete with stitched Cavallino emblems on the headrests. Plenty of interior parts are finished in naked carbon fiber and while the 18-year-old car is lacking many of the amenities of modern-day supercars, it does still have air conditioning.

Read: The Only Factory Matte Black Ferrari Enzo Will Make You Go Hamana-Hamana

At the heart of the Ferrari is a 6.0-liter naturally-aspirated V12 churning out 660 hp at 7,800 rpm and 485 lb-ft (657 Nm) of torque. Working alongside this engine is an F1 automatic transmission with paddle shifters that sends power to the rear wheels through a limited-slip differential. The seller notes that the car has just 7,334 miles (11,802 km) under its belt.

Ferrari only ever built 400 examples of the Enzo, the last of which was commissioned for Pope John Paul II and auctioned to help the victims of the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami. Just 70 examples of the Enzo were produced for the U.S.

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Rising political stars on the right and left: 12 people to watch in 2023

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The new year and new Congress add up-and-coming political figures, as well as familiar faces with changing roles, to the list of those who have the potential to shape the future of politics.

In no particular order, here are a dozen Republican and Democratic rising political stars to watch in 2023.

Combat veteran Wes Moore made history in the 2022 midterms as the first Black governor elected in Maryland. 

Before breaking onto the political scene, Moore was a best-selling author and CEO of Robin Hood Foundation, an anti-poverty nonprofit organization. Following his election, Moore was nominated as finance chair of the Democratic Governors Association.

Endorsed by Oprah Winfrey and President Joe Biden, the Democrat made a splash last cycle, winning his first ever bid for political office and remaining a clear rising figure in his party.

Elected as the third black governor in U.S. history, Moore was compared to former President Barack Obama throughout his campaign and has been championed for a future White House run.

At 44 years old, Moore could have a long career in politics, potentially in Congress and beyond.

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Republican Sen. Steve Daines has represented Montana in the Senate since 2014 and is currently serving his second term. 

After years of legislative success, pushing for stricter border security and advocating for Second Amendment rights, Daines was elected as chairman of the National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC) in the new Congress. 

As NRSC chair, the fifth-generation Montanan will be in charge of unseating his own state’s current Democratic senator, Jon Tester, who is up for re-election next cycle. Senate Republicans have a favorable map in 2024 and Daines declared he will do “whatever it takes to makes sure we have a Republican majority.”

With experience under his belt and the new leadership role, Daines will be at the forefront of GOP decision-making, elections and overall shaping of the party.

Maxwell Frost recently entered the political scene, becoming the first Gen Z congressman at only 25 years old. 

Frost is one of the survivors of the horrific mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglass School in Parkland, Florida, and has since been a vocal supporter of stricter gun control measures.

Frost was elected to represent Florida’s 10th Congressional District and is making a name for himself as one of the newest recruits of the progressive group known as “The Squad.” 

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The young Democrat is expected to work closely with well-known Squad members Reps. Alexandra Ocasio Cortez, D-N.Y., and Cori Bush, D-Mo., and given his age, will likely be a strong voice among young voters.

The incoming Republican congressman wants to reach across the aisle, and after a huge upset victory in the Empire State, he appears to have the Democratic Party’s attention.

In a surprise victory, Mike Lawler unseated DCCC Chair Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney, D-N.Y., in the midterm race to represent New York’s 17th Congressional District. The defeat marked the first time the chair of a House campaign committee was unseated since the 1990s. 

Lawler, a former New York assemblyman, vowed to take a bipartisan approach in his new role and was endorsed by House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, D-Calif.

Throughout his campaign, Lawler supported a gas tax holiday and a 10% property tax exemption for volunteer firefighters and EMS personnel, pushed back against age-inappropriate curriculum within school districts, and backed securing the southern border. 

Sen.-elect John Fetterman served as mayor of Braddock, Pennsylvania, for 13 years before exiting the steel town to become the state’s lieutenant governor.

His midterm election was one of the most closely watched races of the 2022 cycle. Despite suffering a stroke in May, which caused Fetterman to have severe auditory processing issues and little public engagement for the closing months of his campaign, the Democrat ultimately prevailed and defeated his Republican challenger in the race.

Following his election, the hoodie-wearing Harvard graduate was named one of The New York Times 2022 “Most Stylish” individuals.

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Born and raised in Houston, Congressman-elect Wesley Hunt flipped Texas’ 38th Congressional District red in the 2022 midterms.

Hunt served one combat deployment to Iraq and as a diplomatic liaison officer during two deployments to Saudi Arabia.

“Changing Washington won’t be easy, but graduating from West Point and serving in the United States Army, being deployed to combat zones, and flying Apache helicopters over Iraq has prepared me for tough fights and big challenges. I truly believe nothing is more worth fighting for than our great country and our way of life in the Houston area,” Hunt states on his election website.

The City of Angels has a lot of cleaning up to do, and Democratic Mayor-elect Karen Bass was elected to take on the job.

In November, Bass was elected as the first female mayor of Los Angeles, California, after representing California’s 33rd and 37th Congressional Districts in Congress for several years. She was also on a short list to be President Biden’s vice presidential nominee in the 2020 election.

Born and raised in the city, Bass jumped into the activism scene early, founding the Community Coalition and the Los Angeles-based National Foster Youth Institute.

Aside from her social work, Bass has a long history of representative experience, serving as chair of the Congressional Black Caucus and chair of the Crime Subcommittee of the House Judiciary Committee.

Over the next few years, Bass will take on the challenge of reshaping the famous California city that currently faces high rates of homelessness and rising crime, while remaining one of America’s most popular tourist destinations.

In November, Attorney General Merrick Garland appointed Jack Smith as the special counsel to the Justice Department. 

Smith was named to oversee the criminal investigation into documents obtained during a raid on former President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago residence.

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Before being named to oversee investigations into Trump, Smith was the chief prosecutor for the special court in The Hague, assigned with investigating war crimes committed during the Kosovo War during the late 1990s.

“I will exercise independent judgment and will move the investigations forward expeditiously and thoroughly to whatever outcome the facts and the law dictate,” Smith said after being appointed.

Smith will be at the center of deciding the fate of the former president, as the ongoing investigations into Trump continue.

Incoming Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries selected DelBene to become chair of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee to lead the attempt to win the Democrats control of the House in the 2024 election.

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DelBene has served in Congress since 2012 and is the current vice chair of the House Ways and Means Committee, as well as chair of the New Democrat Coalition.

Rep. DelBene was one of the three House members who supported the rule change to allow the House leader to nominate someone as chair. 

If confirmed by the Democratic Caucus, her vote for the rule change could be one the smartest decisions of her political career.

Majorie Dannenfelser is leading the charge in post-Roe politics. Dannenfelser is currently the president of pro-life group Susan B. Anothony Pro-Life America, which worked diligently to elect pro-life candidates up and down the ballot in the 2022 midterm elections, and will continue their fight into 2023 and beyond.

In June, after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade and returned the power to place bans on abortion back to the states, many conservatives sought stricter bans on abortion while the GOP also defended letting states decide abortion rules without federal intervention. 

Dannenfelser will be at the center of the abortion debate in future local and national elections, and will likely play an influential role in the 2024 presidential election.

After accepting the position to become president of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), one of the most popular governors in America will step into a landmine of unresolved issues that will test his executive skills. 

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Though Baker’s term as governor ends in January, the Republican will continue to shape the future of American sports.

Transgender athletes, legalized gambling on college sports, and students being allowed to market themselves and be paid for their performance in amateur sports are just a few of the complex controversies waiting for him when he takes over the NCAA on March 1.

“As governor of Massachusetts and a successful private sector CEO, Charlie Baker has demonstrated the type of results-oriented, bipartisan approach that we will need to bolster the well-being of student-athletes, realize the opportunities and overcome the challenges facing the NCAA,” Grant Hill, an independent member of the NCAA Board of Governors, said of Baker’s new role.

Sheriff Joe Lombardo unseated Nevada’s Democratic Gov. Steve Sisolak in the 2022 midterm elections, the only gubernatorial pickup for Republicans.

After serving more than two decades in the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department, Lombardo was elected as Clark County sheriff in 2014.

Despite being endorsed by Trump, Lombardo later backed off his support of the former president’s repeated claims that his 2020 was “stolen.”

“After four years of Steve Sisolak’s small business and job-killing policies, Gov.-elect Lombardo’s unique perspective as a seasoned law enforcement officer and fiscal conservative will get the state moving in the right direction on behalf of all Nevada families,” Republican Gubernatorial Association co-chairs Govs. Doug Ducey and Pete Ricketts said after Lombardo’s successful election.

 

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Elon Musk and Donald Trump Finally Agree On Something

TheStreet 

The billionaire entrepreneur and the former president clashed numerous times in 2022.

Elon Musk and Donald Trump both want win the hearts of Republicans.

The first has become in the past year one of the most influential voices in Republican and conservative circles, which applaud his determination to make Twitter a platform where conservative voices dominate after nearly two years marked by safeguards on the social network to limit xenophobic messages, abuse and the spread of false information.

Like many conservatives, Musk railed against Twitter 1.0’s content policy, which went so far as to banish former President Donald Trump after his supporters stormed Congress on Jan. 6, 2021 to block certification of Joe Biden’s victory. 

Twitter had also deactivated the accounts of members of the far right and accounts violating its policy about transgender people for example. 

But no sooner had the Twitter deal been finalized on Oct. 27 than Musk instituted a laissez-faire approach in the name of free speech. He reactivated most of the blocked accounts, including Trump’s. 

Musk Has a Growing Influence

The CEO of Tesla and SpaceX, who describes himself as a “free Speech absolutist,” has also made it his mission to rebalance, according to him, the balance of power between conservatives and progressives on social networks and in the media. This mission has earned him the support of many conservatives, who see in him a sort of new hero. 

His popularity has continued to grow in recent months to the point where Musk has more than 124 million followers on Twitter. That’s more than the nearly 88 million followers Trump had amassed on his personal Twitter account — @RealDonaldTrump — before it was suspended after the January 2021 events at the Capitol.

Musk receives unparalleled media coverage, reminiscent of Trump’s when he was in the White House. This influence of the Techno King, as he’s known at Tesla, thus overshadows Trump, who launched his campaign for the 2024 presidential election last November. 

The former president sees Musk as an adversary because the latter has announced that he would support Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis should he decide to run. The entrepreneur also asked Trump to retire because he was too old.

“Trump would be 82 at end of term, which is too old to be chief executive of anything, let alone the United States of America,” Musk said for example last July. “If DeSantis runs against Biden in 2024, then DeSantis will easily win – he doesn’t even need to campaign.”

“I don’t hate the man, but it’s time for Trump to hang up his hat & sail into the sunset,” Musk also said the same day.

Musk has pledged to personally spend $20 million to $25 million to support his candidate. 

But Trump, who is as abrasive as Musk, responded to the attacks by calling the tech mogul a “bullshit artist.”

“Elon, Elon is not going to buy Twitter,” Trump said on July 9 at a rally in Anchorage, Alaska. “Where did you hear that before? From me.” And then he went on the attack. 

“You know, he said the other day ‘Oh, I’ve never voted for a Republican’. I said I didn’t know that. He told me he voted for me. So he’s another bullshit artist.”

An Unexpected Topic of Agreement

There have been more spades between the two men. Recently, Musk did not hesitate to remind Trump, who continues to contest the results of the 2020 elections, that the Constitution is above all men.

“The Constitution is greater than any President. End of story” Musk posted on Twitter on Dec. 5, after the former President called for the suspension of the US Constitution, due, he said, to the alleged “massive and widespread fraud” in the 2020 presidential election. 

The two men have therefore had more subjects of dissension between them in recent months than subjects of agreement. It should also be remembered that despite the reactivation of his Twitter account by Musk, Trump has still not posted a single message. 

But things have just changed as Musk seems to share Trump’s analysis of one of the main reasons for the absence of a red wave during the midterm elections last November.

According to Trump, the mixed results and defeats of some Republican candidates are not his fault but are due to the fact that many conservatives did not go to the polls because the Supreme Court gave them an unexpected victory by making abortion illegal at the federal level.

The Supreme Court indeed overturned Roe V. Wade on June 24. 

“It wasn’t my fault that the Republicans didn’t live up to expectations in the MidTerms. I was 233-20!” Trump lamented on Truth Social, his social media on Jan. 1. “It was the ‘abortion issue,’ poorly handled by many Republicans, especially those that firmly insisted on No Exceptions, even in the case of Rape, Incest, or Life of the Mother, that lost large numbers of Voters.”

He continued: “Also, the people that pushed so hard, for decades, against abortion, got their wish from the U.S. Supreme Court, & just plain disappeared, not to be seen again. Plus, Mitch stupid $’s!”

The former president’s analysis was brought to Musk’s attention by a Twitter user. The billionaire did not hesitate to let it be known that he shared it in the vast majority.

“Mostly accurate tbh,” Musk commented.

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