McCarthy heads to grueling speaker vote with fate in limbo

“I earned this job. We earned this majority, and God dammit we are going to win it today,” McCarthy said to a standing ovation, according to lawmakers in the room.

After weeks of intense, down-to-the-wire negotiations, McCarthy is out of time to lock down the needed 218 votes. With his yearslong effort to claim the speakership trapped in limbo, the conference meeting Tuesday morning is a sign of the chaos still to come in during votes on the House floor. And after having his speakership aspirations ripped away from him in 2015, his allies say this time he’s prepared to fight until the potentially bitter end.

It wasn’t just the California Republican calling out the conservative hardliners at the conference meeting. Many of McCarthy’s frustrated supporters, too, unloaded on the band of detractors. At one point, Rep. Mike Rogers (R-Ala.), the top Republican on the House Armed Services Committee, pushed the idea that any Republican who opposes McCarthy should be stripped of committee assignments.

One of McCarthy’s chief antagonists, Rep. Chip Roy (R-Texas), spoke up to defend his position — and lashed out against Roger’s remarks about keeping fellow Republicans off committees, shouting profanities at his colleague. Rogers said after the meeting that his warning that the Steering Committee will block McCarthy opponents from getting committee assignments wasn’t just a threat: “I promised it.”

And McCarthy shot back at Roy’s defense of his opposition: “You’re not voting against me, it’s against the conference and the country.”

Roy wasn’t the only Republican vowing to vote against McCarthy to speak up. Reps. Scott Perry (R-Pa.) and Ralph Norman (R-S.C.) both reiterated their stances to the conference. The GOP leader responded to Perry: “What’s left? What do you want?”

Rep. Bob Good (R-Va.), another anti-McCarthy Republican, told members as he left the room: “Nothing’s changed.”

Other anti-McCarthy members, including Perry and Reps. Lauren Boebert (R-Colo.) and Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.), publicly railed against McCarthy after the closed-door meeting, arguing that his allies were resorting to political threats instead of making a deal. Boebert had just announced her public opposition Tuesday morning, along with Rep. Dan Bishop (R-N.C.).

“This [meeting] was about a beat down and a simulated unity in the room that really doesn’t exist,” Perry said.

Republicans left the raucous huddle with deep concerns about the fate of their floor vote, unsure how long or how many speaker ballots to expect.

“Obviously, I think it will go to more than one ballot,” said Rep. Robert Aderholt (R-Ala), one of the most senior members of the House.

McCarthy supporters say they expect him to keep Republicans on the House floor, instead of trying to adjourn for off-the-floor strategy sessions between ballots, as he hopes to grind down his opponents. And while a speakership vote has gone past the first ballot only once since the Civil War, Republicans are mentally preparing not just for multiple ballots, but also multiple days of voting.

“He’s steadfast. He’s in this until hell freezes,” said Rep. Don Bacon (R-Neb.), a McCarthy backer.

McCarthy appeared unbowed Tuesday morning after what he described as an “intense conference.”

“I’m not going anywhere,” he said. “I have the record for the longest speech ever on the floor, I don’t have a problem getting the record for the most votes for speaker, too.”

Even before the explosive meeting, early signs Tuesday didn’t point in McCarthy’s favor. Perry offered blistering criticism of McCarthy just before the meeting, saying conservatives had asked for several concessions like commitments on committee seats that, in turn, would get him to 218 votes, but that the California Republican declined.

“Kevin McCarthy had an opportunity to be Speaker of the House. He rejected it,” said Perry, the chair of the conservative House Freedom Caucus.

McCarthy has worked fervently to lock down support, releasing a long list of concessions he’s prepared to make on rules changes, including making it easier to depose a speaker. But seven conservatives — Good, Norman, Gaetz, Boebert, Bishop and Reps. Andy Biggs of Arizona and Matt Rosendale of Montana — have vowed to oppose the Republican leader, and other members remain publicly undecided.

In a significant win for conservatives, McCarthy set the number of Republican backers needed to force a vote on deposing the speaker at five, to the dismay of some rank-and-file members. It’s an about-face from just weeks ago, when the conference set the threshold to prompt such a vote, known as the motion to vacate, at a majority of its members. And some conservatives argue that’s not good enough — they want one member to be able to force such a motion.

“I still think that, at the end of the day, Kevin gets it. And the people that [stand] to lose are the hardliners that have negotiated in bad faith,” said Rep. Guy Reschenthaler (R-Pa.), the current chief deputy whip.

McCarthy and allies like Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) say the latest rules package release has moved votes his way. But other members signaled otherwise.

Nine on-the-fence Republicans issued a letter after the rules package was released to say the proposed changes aren’t yet enough to win them over. More ominously, they warned that his recent commitments come “almost impossibly late to address continued deficiencies ahead of the opening of the 118th Congress on January 3rd.”

It sparked frustration from McCarthy’s supporters, who questioned what else he’d have to offer his opponents in order to secure their votes.

“We’ve gone really, really far on a lot of fronts. … People can’t ask any more from him. He’s done everything he possibly can,” Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick (R-Pa.), the co-chair of the bipartisan Problem Solvers Caucus, said about McCarthy, whom he characterized as “not giving up.”

Still, some Republicans say there are members who have kept quiet but will publicly announce they oppose McCarthy the day of the vote, limiting his opportunities to win their support. Others have questioned whether the anti-McCarthy coalition is arranging to have more members vote against him on a second ballot, in an attempt to make the Californian look weaker.

And there’s speculation that other names besides Biggs, who has acted as a McCarthy opposition figurehead but is not mounting a real bid for the gavel, will emerge to challenge McCarthy.

Democratic leaders, meanwhile, aren’t looking to make it any easier on McCarthy. They’ve told their members not to miss any ballots, which would have lowered the number of votes the GOP leader needed, and to vote for the incoming minority leader, Rep. Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.).

Some Republicans say McCarthy should make a deal to persuade about a dozen Democrats to leave the floor after several ballots, allowing him to skate through despite a handful of opponents among his own conference. Others, like Bacon, have floated that if conservatives block McCarthy, they could work with a band of centrist Democrats to elect a more moderate Republican instead.

But after weeks of behind-the-scenes drama, Republicans say they are ready to take the fight to the floor.

“We’re negotiating with Jell-O,” Armstrong said. ”It’s just time to start voting and keep voting.”

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House GOP Leader Kevin McCarthy appears to lack support to become speaker hours ahead of key vote

US Top News and Analysis 

VIDEO1:5901:59
House GOP Leader Kevin McCarthy addresses speaker vote

WASHINGTON — As the House prepares to usher in the 118th Congress and new Republican majority on Tuesday, GOP Leader Kevin McCarthy is struggling to secure enough support for his bid to be House speaker to avoid a protracted and historic fight on the House floor.

The California congressman has lobbied his fellow Republicans for months and made several concessions to a small but outspoken bloc of conservatives. But the efforts have not yet produced the breakthrough McCarthy needs to be elected House speaker in the first round of voice voting, which is expected to take place shortly after noon ET.

In order to be elected speaker, McCarthy needs support from a majority of the members who vote Tuesday, or 218 of the 434 House members expected to vote. But with only 222 Republicans total, and no Democrats expected to vote for him, McCarthy can afford to lose only four members of his caucus.

Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) talks with reporters after a House Republican caucus meeting on the first day of the 118th Congress at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, January 3, 2023.
Jonathan Ernst | Reuters

As of Tuesday morning, six current Republican members and three members-elect, all conservatives, still publicly opposed McCarthy. McCarthy also faced months of organized opposition from influential conservative outside groups, which have amplified his critics on social media.

McCarthy’s failure to win public support from his entire caucus has already cast a shadow over the new Republican majority, exposing divisions within the party that have existed for decades. The differences were deepened by former President Donald Trump, who emboldened a small band of ultra-conservatives.

Trump eventually backed McCarthy’s bid for speaker, as did other influential conservatives such as Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga.

House Republicans began Tuesday morning with a caucus meeting that was viewed as McCarthy’s final opportunity to make his pitch to members who might be on the fence.

After the meeting but before the vote, McCarthy told reporters that “we may have a battle on the floor, but the battle is for the conference and the country, and that’s fine with me.”

“Look, I have the record for the longest speech ever on the floor, I don’t have a problem getting a record for the most votes for Speaker too,” he added.

Judging from early statements by key Republican holdouts, the conservatives had a long list of demands they believed McCarthy has failed to meet.

House Democrats, meanwhile, openly relished the internal chaos roiling the opposing party.

“We certainly are seeing chaos today in Congress, and this is an extension of the extremism that we have seen from the GOP,” incoming House Minority Whip Katherine Clark, D-Mass., said on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe.”

She accused McCarthy of having “thrown away his moral compass.”

This is a developing story, please check back for updates.

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Idaho murders suspect Bryan Kohberger studied under expert on serial killer BTK; daughter 'sick' at news

The Pennsylvania man accused of killing four University of Idaho college students in November is a criminal justice Ph.D. candidate who studied under a leading expert on serial killer Dennis Rader, known as the BTK Killer.

Bryan Christopher Kohberger, 28, was arrested in the Poconos Friday nearly seven weeks after police claim he snuck into the home of a group of sleeping coeds and attacked four of them in their sleep.

The ambush killed Madison Mogen and Kaylee Goncalves, 21-year-old best friends, as well as their housemate, Xana Kernodle, and her boyfriend, Ethan Chapin, both 20. Two other women on the bottom floor of the three-story, six-bedroom house were not attacked.

As part of his prior studies at DeSales University, Kohberger worked under the tutelage of BTK expert Dr. Katherine Ramsland, a fact that shocked the infamous serial killer’s daughter after news of Kohberger’s arrest broke Friday.

UNIVERSITY OF IDAHO MURDERS TIMELINE

Left: Bryan Kohberger in an anti-suicide smock after his arrest in Pennsylvania Friday, Dec. 30, 2021. Right: Dennis L. Rader, the man known as the BTK serial killer, is escorted into the El Dorado Correctional Facility on Aug. 19, 2005 in El Dorado, Kansas.

Left: Bryan Kohberger in an anti-suicide smock after his arrest in Pennsylvania Friday, Dec. 30, 2021. Right: Dennis L. Rader, the man known as the BTK serial killer, is escorted into the El Dorado Correctional Facility on Aug. 19, 2005 in El Dorado, Kansas.
(Monroe County (Pa.) Correctional Facility via AP, Jeff Tuttle-Pool/Getty Images)

Rader’s daughter Kerri Rawson revealed on Twitter over the weekend that she became sick to her stomach when she learned of the connection.

Ramsland is an expert on serial killers and has, or had, both an academic relationship and friendship with Rader, Rawson says – voicing fears that Kohberger may have been in touch with her father before the crimes.

It’s frustrating to be the daughter of somebody like this and just continually watch this to happen.

— Kerri Rawson

“It’s really common for criminology students in general to write my father,” she said. However, she previously cut off contact with her father and said she has not spoken to Ramsland in several years. “Ramsland would know, but she’s not talking.”

Ethan Chapin, 20, Xana Kernodle, 20, Madison Mogen, 21, and Kaylee Goncalves, 21, along with the women's two other roommates in Kaylee Goncalves' final Instagram post, shared the day before the slayings.

Ethan Chapin, 20, Xana Kernodle, 20, Madison Mogen, 21, and Kaylee Goncalves, 21, along with the women’s two other roommates in Kaylee Goncalves’ final Instagram post, shared the day before the slayings.
(@kayleegoncalves/Instagram)

IDAHO MURDER SUSPECT KOHBERGER’S PENNSYLVANIA CLASSMATES SAY HE WAS ‘BRIGHT,’ AWKWARD, BULLIED IN SCHOOL

Kohberger, after obtaining his master’s degree at DeSales, went on to seek a Ph.D. in the department of criminal justice and criminology at Washington State University, just a few miles from the home near the University of Idaho where police allege he brutally stabbed four coeds on Nov. 13.

After the slayings, Kohberger reportedly continued classes at WSU both in his Ph.D. program and as a teaching assistant.

“The suspect is a criminology student, [and] my father has a degree in criminal justice,” Rawson told Fox News Digital. “And after his first murders, which was of people at the age of 28, he enrolled at Wichita State University in Wichita, Kansas, for criminal justice.”

The victims of the Nov. 13 University of Idaho massacre. 

The victims of the Nov. 13 University of Idaho massacre. 
(Instagram @xanakernodle / @maddiemogen / @kayleegoncalves)

That was the first connection she made, she said.

“And then sometime Friday I put together the Ramsland one, so that really bothered me,” she added. That is the part that made her stomach turn.

WATCH: BTK’s daughter opens up about her father in revealing new documentary 

Ramsland has declined to comment publicly on the case so far.

Her work on serial killers includes several books such as “The Criminal Mind: A Writer’s Guide to Forensic Psychology,” and “Confession of a Serial Killer” co-written with Rader.

Rader’s daughter also said she sympathizes with Kohberger’s relatives who could have been ignorant to the alleged misdeeds of a family member – just as she was.

IDAHO MURDERS: SUSPECT BRYAN CHRISTOPHER KOHBERGER ARRESTED IN KILLINGS OF 4 UNIVERSITY STUDENTS

“It’s hard place to be for Kohberger’s family, for the victims families; it’s just an awful, awful thing,” she told Fox News Digital. “It’s not easy on LE (law enforcement)…It’s frustrating to be the daughter of somebody like this and just continually watch this to happen. Did my dad have a connection to this guy? What was his connection to Ramsland? It’s frustrating.”

Idaho State Police look for clues in Moscow on Monday, Nov. 21, 2022 outside the home where four University of Idaho students were killed.

Idaho State Police look for clues in Moscow on Monday, Nov. 21, 2022 outside the home where four University of Idaho students were killed.
(Derek Shook for Fox News Digital)

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Kohberger was due in a Pennsylvania court Tuesday morning and was expected to waive his extradition to Idaho, where he faces four charges of first-degree murder and a count of felony burglary with intent to kill.

Through his Pennsylvania public defender, he has expressed confidence he will be exonerated.


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[World] Tanzania’s leader lifts ban on political rallies

BBC News world 

Image source, Getty Images

Image caption,

Samia Suluhu Hassan is Tanzania’s first female president

Tanzania’s President Samia Suluhu Hassan has lifted a six-year ban on political rallies imposed by her hard-line predecessor, John Magufuli.

Her decision is part of her 4Rs initiative – Reconciliation, Resilience, Reforms and Rebuilding.

She acknowledged parties had the right to hold rallies but she urged them to be “civil” and not to “trade insults”

Mr Magufuli had banned rallies in between elections in what was seen as an attempt to weaken the opposition.

He dismissed rallies as a waste of time and money, and said they detracted from the key challenge of building the economy.

Mrs Samia announced the reversal of his policy at a meeting with opposition politicians.

“Our duty as a government will be offering protection for the rallies,” she said.

The chairman of the main opposition Chadema party, Freeman Mbowe, said he welcomed the announcement.

“The move is first of all a return to a right guaranteed in the constitution and our laws,” he added.

Mr Mbowe spent seven months in prison, before the prosecution dropped charges of terrorism against him in March 2022.

His arrest had raised doubts about Mrs Samia’s commitment to reforms after she became president following Mr Magufuli’s death in 2021.

Anther opposition politician, Zito Kabwe, told AFP news agency that the president’s decision to lift the ban was a “big move”.

“This is the right that was snatched by the state through an illegal presidential decree,” he added.

Mrs Samia also promised to look into opposition demands for changes to the constitution.

Opposition parties say the constitution gives too much power to the president. They also want changes to safeguard the independence of the electoral commission and the courts.

Mrs Samiah is the leader of the ruling party, Chama Cha Mapinduzi (CCM), which has been in power for more than half a century.

It has often been accused of rigging elections, and of harassing and intimidating the opposition. It denies the allegations.

 

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It’s time to boost 401(k) contributions for 2023: ‘You’re smart to jump on this,’ says advisor

US Top News and Analysis 

Designer491 | Istock | Getty Images

If you’re eager to boost your retirement savings, there’s good news for 2023: higher 401(k) contribution limits. And now is the time to adjust your deferrals, financial experts say.

You can funnel $22,500 into your 401(k), 403(b) and other such plans for 2023, up from the $20,500 limit in 2022. Employees 50 and older can contribute an extra $7,500, up from $6,500 in 2022.

In 2021, roughly 14% of investors maxed out employee deferrals, according to 2022 estimates from Vanguard, based on 1,700 plans and nearly 5 million participants.

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“You’re smart to jump on this,” said certified financial planner Catherine Valega, founder of Green Bee Advisory in Boston. “Most people set [401(k) contributions] once and never look back.”

If you aim to max out 401(k) contributions for 2023, it may pay off to start early, as spreading it out may be easier than contributing more later in the year.

And more time in the market may offer more growth potential, said Marguerita Cheng, a Gaithersburg, Maryland-based CFP and CEO of Blue Ocean Global Wealth.

“The sooner you can increase your contributions, the sooner you can have your money working for you,” said Cheng, who is also a member of CNBC’s Advisor Council.

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From quiet quitting to loud layoffs: Here are the career trends that generated buzz in 2022

Get to know your 401(k) match before front-loading

Higher earners may also consider front-loading 401(k) contributions to reach the deferral limit before year-end.

For example, if you receive an October bonus, you may front-load 401(k) contributions to max out the plan, freeing up more take-home pay for November and December.

Before maxing out the plan early, however, you need to know how your 401(k) match works, Valega said. Many companies only kick in matching funds when you defer part of your paycheck.

The sooner you can increase your contributions, the sooner you can have your money working for you.
Marguerita Cheng
CEO and co-founder of Blue Ocean Global Wealth

In that case, you won’t receive the full employer match unless you make 401(k) contributions every pay period.

However, other plans have what’s known as a “true-up,” meaning the company calculates the 401(k) match on an annual basis rather than every pay period.

“It means they don’t really care when you put in your money,” Valega explained. “They will make sure that you get the full match at the end of the year.”

You can learn more about your match by checking your 401(k) summary plan description, which covers how the account works, or reviewing the document with a financial advisor.

When to limit 401(k) contributions 

While maxing out 401(k) contributions is a lofty goal, there are reasons why you may decide to limit deferrals after receiving the full company match.

“This, of course, may vary depending on goals,” said Marianela Collado, a CFP and CPA at Tobias Financial Advisors in Plantation, Florida.

For example, if you’re saving a down payment for a home, you may temporarily re-route funds to meet your short-term goal, she said.

Likewise, if you’re sitting on high-interest credit card debt or don’t have an emergency fund, you may allocate money elsewhere before increasing 401(k) deferrals.

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[World] Foreigners now banned from buying homes in Canada

BBC News world-us_and_canada 

Image source, Getty Images

Image caption,

Canada’s largest cities – Toronto and Vancouver – rank among the most unaffordable housing markets in the world

A two-year ban on some foreigners buying homes in Canada has come into effect.

The ban aims to help ease one of the most unaffordable housing markets in the world.

As of this summer, the average home price in Canada is C$777,200 ($568,000; £473,700) – more than 11 times the median household income after taxes.

Some have been critical of the ban, saying it is unclear what impact it will have on Canada’s housing market.

Non-Canadian residents make up less than 6% of homeowners in Ontario and British Columbia, where national statistics indicate home prices are the highest.

As of 1 January, the ban prohibits people who are not Canadian citizens or permanent residents from buying residential properties, and imposes a C$10,000 fine on those who breach it.

In late December – 11 days before the ban came into effect – the Canadian government announced some exemptions to the regulation, including for international students who have been in the country for at least five years, refugee claimants and people with temporary work permits.

In a statement, federal housing minister Ahmed Hussen said the ban is meant to discourage buyers from looking at homes as commodities instead of a place to live and grow a family.

“Through this legislation, we’re taking action to ensure that housing is owned by Canadians, for the benefit of everyone who lives in this country,” Mr Hussen said.

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Media caption,

Why it takes 30 years to buy a house in Canada

While housing prices in Canada dipped slightly in 2022, they remain much higher than a decade ago.

Housing prices were up 48% last year compared to 2013, when the average price of a home was C$522,951.

Meanwhile, the average household income for Canadians has struggled to keep pace to rising home prices. The latest data indicates the median after-tax household income grew 9.8% from 2015 to 2020.

These numbers set Canada’s housing market up as one of the most unaffordable in the world, ranking the country higher than New Zealand, the US and the UK, according to a Statista analysis of house-price-to-income ratios.

The average home price in two of Canada’s largest cities – Toronto and Vancouver – has topped the C$1m mark, often putting them at the list of top 10 most unaffordable cities in the world.

New Zealand passed a similar legislation banning foreign homebuyers in 2018 as the country grappled with its own housing affordability crisis.

However, inflation-adjusted home prices have continued to rise since the ban came into effect.

Other countries have enacted different measures to curb foreign homeownership, including by implementing designated restricted zones where non-residents are barred from purchasing homes, or bringing in specific fees on foreign buyers.

 

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McConnell still ‘pulling’ for McCarthy amid speaker struggles

Politics, Policy, Political News Top Stories 

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said Tuesday “of course” he wants House Republican Leader Kevin McCarthy to become speaker, shortly before the California Republican came up short in the first vote.

“I have no idea. I don’t know any more than I read from what you guys write. I’m just pulling for him,” McConnell said in an interview Tuesday before the first vote.

The Senate Republican leader previously voiced support for McCarthy in late December, even as the House Republican criticized how Senate GOP lawmakers handled year-end government spending negotiations.

“I’m pulling for Kevin. I hope he makes it,” McConnell said at the time.

Other Senate Republicans slammed the protracted floor fight over the speakership as ultimately harmful for their party.

“I think they’ll eventually elect a speaker but this is not a good start,” Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) said. “Bottom line is, what’s the end game here? 85 percent of the body wants Kevin, OK, and I voted against Mitch as a protest vote more than anything else. But I accept he’s the leader and I want to work with him. So this idea that 85 percent are going to be told what to do by five percent is not a good formula. And I think Kevin’s already given away too much.”

More counsel for McCarthy came from Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.), a crucial vote for Democrats over the last two years in an evenly split Senate, who urged McCarthy not to cave to all the demands of the conservatives.

“It just looks like a hostage standoff over there,” he said in an interview Tuesday. “I just hope he doesn’t surrender to the hostage takers. Don’t pay a ransom.”

McConnell became the longest-serving Senate party leader in history on Tuesday as McCarthy struggles to lock down sufficient support to become speaker of the House.

The two Republican leaders meet regularly to talk strategy, but have frequently found themselves voting differently during the first two years of President Joe Biden’s administration.

McConnell is due to appear alongside Biden at an event Wednesday in Kentucky, as McCarthy faces the prospect of a protracted speakership bid in the House.

Marianne LeVine contributed to this report.

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Southwest Airlines schedule stabilizes after holiday meltdown but costs are still piling up

US Top News and Analysis 

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Pristine Floyde searches for a friend’s suitcase in a baggage holding area for Southwest Airlines at Denver International Airport on December 28, 2022 in Denver, Colorado.
Michael Ciaglo | Getty Images

Southwest Airlines stabilized its schedule over the weekend after about 16,000 cancellations, but its systemwide holiday meltdown could cost it hundreds of millions of dollars.

Southwest had canceled 304 flights since Friday, 2% of its schedule, most of them on Monday when U.S. airlines faced bad weather and ground stops in Florida tied to a Federal Aviation Administration equipment outage. For comparison, from Dec. 21 through Dec. 29 Southwest had scrubbed about 45% of its operation, a far bigger share than other major airlines, according to FlightAware.

Now come two more difficult tasks for Southwest: going through thousands of passenger reimbursement receipts and improving the internal technology that contributed to the meltdown.

“We have plans to invest in tools and technology and processes, but there will be immediate work to understand what lessons are learned here and how we keep this from ever happening again, because it cannot happen again,” Southwest CEO Bob Jordan, who took the helm in February, told staff on Friday.

Bad weather kicked off the issues, impacting flights throughout the U.S. But Southwest crews struggled to get reassigned automatically after all of the changes and were forced to wait on hold for hours with crew scheduling services. Hundreds of thousands of passengers were impacted, and Southwest is still working through a backlog of misplaced luggage.

The carrier had canceled about two-thirds of its flights for much of the last week in an attempt to get crews and planes where they needed to go, before operating close to normally on Friday.

The chaos could cost Southwest between $600 million and $700 million, according to estimates from Bank of America airline stock analyst Andrew Didora on Tuesday. That includes both lost revenue from refunds and the reimbursements to affected passengers, which could include expenses like hotels and rental cars.

Didora cut his fourth-quarter adjusted earnings forecast for Southwest to 37 cents a share from 85 cents.

Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg vowed to hold Southwest accountable if it didn’t provide Southwest customers with refunds and reimbursements, though such fines associated with a failure to pay back customers can take months if not years.

Southwest shares were down more than 3% on Tuesday, while rivals were little changed. The Dallas-based airline is scheduled to report results on Jan. 26 but is likely to preview the meltdown’s costs before then.

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Damar Hamlin family spokesperson says Bills player is ‘fighting’ after suffering cardiac arrest

Just In | The Hill 

A spokesperson for the family of Buffalo Bills player Damar Hamlin said Tuesday he is “fighting” after suffering cardiac arrest early in the Monday Night Football contest against the Cincinnati Bengals. 

During an appearance on ABC’s “Good Morning America, family representative and close friend Jordon Rooney told “GMA” anchor Robin Roberts that Hamlin, a second-year safety out of the University of Pittsburgh, is currently sedated.

“So I can’t speak specifically on his medical condition. I will say is that, you know, he’s fighting he’s a fighter,” Rooney told Roberts. “You know, I felt like in the moment there needed to be some clarity that you know, he was he was awake at that time. 

“And now he’s sedated. So, you know, the family is in good spirits,” he added. “We’re honestly just taking it minute by minute, hour by hour.” 

Rooney, who met Hamlin through an athlete marketing agency internship, also said that Hamlin’s family been “remarkable” in this trying time.

“I mean, they…they are a tremendous group of people,” he said. “They’re strong. I mean, they’re supportive. They’re obviously … worried — Damar was very close with his family.” 

Hamlin, who was drafted in the sixth round of the 2021 NFL Draft, collapsed after tackling Bengals wide receiver Tee Higgins during the first quarter of Monday’s contest.

The 24-year-old safety stood up after the play was over, only to fall to the ground a few seconds later.

The game was postponed, and medical authorities administrated CPR on the field before he was taken to a local medical facility by ambulance. Players and coaches on both teams were visibly shaken by the incident. 

In a tweet, the Bills tweeted that Hamlin is “currently sedated and listed in critical condition” while undergoing further testing and treatment. 

In response to the incident, fans have raised more than $3.8 million for Hamlin’s charitable foundation, the Chasing M’s Foundation Community Toy Drive, through the foundation’s GoFundMe page.

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