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  • A.J. Brown says winning Super Bowl ‘wasn’t what I thought it would be;’ love for game ‘comes when I dominate’

    A.J. Brown says winning Super Bowl ‘wasn’t what I thought it would be;’ love for game ‘comes when I dominate’

    Winning a Super Bowl is overrated, according to A.J. Brown.

    The Philadelphia Eagles star wide receiver earned his first Lombardi Trophy Sunday, scoring a touchdown in the Birds’ dominant 40-22 win over the Kansas City Chiefs.

    But it seems like Brown is already past the title.

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    Philadelphia Eagles wide receiver A.J. Brown scores a touchdown against the Kansas City Chiefs during the first half of Super Bowl LIX at Caesars Superdome.  (Geoff Burke/Imagn Images)

    In an Instagram post, Brown said his time taking in the Lombardi Trophy win is already over, and he doesn’t exactly seem to be on top of the world.

    “After a few days, I’ve had time to reflect on being a champion. I tried to feel how everyone made it seem to be a champion and unfortunately it was short lived.. two days to be exact lol,” Brown’s caption, attached to a photo of his touchdown from the game, said.

    “I’ve never been a champion at the highest level before but I thought my hard work would be justified by winning it all. It wasn’t. My thrill for this game comes when i dominate,” he added. “It’s the Hunt that does it for me. It’s when the Db drops his head and surrender because he can’t F with me . The Intense battles. Early mornings. Late nights. Sacrifices. I love putting smiles on peoples faces, don’t get me wrong but it just wasn’t what I thought it would be.”

    aj brown and devonta smith

    Philadelphia Eagles wide receiver A.J. Brown (11) congratulates wide receiver DeVonta Smith (6) after Smith scored a touchdown against the Kansas City Chiefs during the second half of Super Bowl LIX at Caesars Superdome. (Bill Streicher-Imagn Images)

    CHIEFS PLAYER SPEAKS OUT AFTER PATRICK MAHOMES SKIPPED HIM WHILE GREETING TEAMMATES DURING SUPER BOWL LOSS

    That portion of the caption raised some eyebrows, but his words seemed to be those of a true competitor.

    “It’s the journey that I love the most. BACK 2 Work!”

    Maybe the on-field party was anticlimactic because the game had been decided so early in the game.

    AJ Brown Super Bowl touchdown

    Philadelphia Eagles wide receiver A.J. Brown scores a touchdown against the Kansas City Chiefs in the second quarter in Super Bowl LIX at Ceasars Superdome.  (Mark J. Rebilas/Imagn Images)

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    But maybe Brown will think differently when the Birds traverse downtown Philly for their parade Friday.

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  • House GOP’s budget impasse thaws just as winter storm sacks Capitol

    House GOP’s budget impasse thaws just as winter storm sacks Capitol

    It is said that talk is cheap. 

    And that’s why House Republicans have done so much of it as they attempted to forge an internal agreement on a budget plan to slash taxes and cut spending. 

    It is now the middle of February. House Republicans struggled to finalize plans for what President Donald Trump terms a “big beautiful bill.” Especially when you consider all of the talking Republicans did – among themselves – since the start of the year.

    MARJORIE TAYLOR GREENE SHARES WHAT’S NEXT FOR HOUSE DOGE PANEL, WHETHER ELON MUSK WOULD TESTIFY

    House Republicans cloistered themselves for not one but two daylong sessions on Saturday, Jan. 4, and Sunday, Jan. 5, at Fort McNair in Washington, D.C. That’s where House Budget Committee Chair Jodey Arrington, R-Texas, and Ways and Means Committee Chair Jason Smith, R-Mo., presented their ideas to slash spending and engineer a budget reconciliation package.

    Keep that term in mind. Budget reconciliation. More on that in a moment.

    Back on Capitol Hill, House Republicans convened multiple large and small meetings to lay out details on their package. That included a three-day session at President Trump’s golf club in Doral, Florida. 

    Republicans returned to Washington with claims of “unity.” But still no agreement.

    THE CONFIRMATION JUGGERNAUT: HOW TRUMP IS GETTING EVERYTHING HE WANTS IN BUILDING HIS CABINET

    Rep. Jason Smith, Republican from Missouri

    Rep. Jason Smith, R-Mo. (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call via Getty Images/File)

    Arrington hoped to prepare the budget plan in his committee last week. Such a meeting would produce a “budget reconciliation” package. Budget reconciliation is a process where the Senate can bypass a filibuster and approve a bill with a simple majority. But the package must be fiscal in nature, such as addressing spending cuts and taxes. Thus, this plan likely qualifies for reconciliation. Senate Republicans must lean on budget reconciliation because they only have 53 GOP members. Not 60, which are required to break a conventional filibuster. But reconciliation is part of the annual budget process. And the reconciliation option isn’t available unless a budget blueprint is in place. No budget? No reconciliation.

    House Republicans grappled last week to reach a deal. So the House GOP brass set off for the White House for a meeting with the president.

    “He’s going to have to make some decisions,” said one senior House Republican of President Trump, noting he’s the only one who could help the party coalesce around an idea.

    The session lasted for nearly five hours, although President Trump wasn’t in the session the entire time. Meantime, House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., was supposed to meet at the Capitol with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. But Netanyahu was left cooling his heels on Capitol Hill as Republicans debated plans and scribbled figures on whiteboards. 

    Netanyahu speaking to Congress; Rep. Johnson and Sen. Cardin behind him

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu addresses a joint meeting of Congress at the U.S. Capitol on July 24, 2024. (Kent Nishimura/Getty Images)

    “[President Trump] set the tone for us to push through some things that we were stuck on,” said Arrington when he returned to the Capitol. 

    “We made serious progress and have narrowed the gap to where we’re very close to getting ready to bring this to Budget Committee,” said Senate Majority Leader Steve Scalise, R-La. 

    Johnson even predicted the plan may be ready later that evening. Hence, a group of Republicans retreated for another set of meetings until well after midnight.

    “I’d like to see their plan,” complained Rep. Tim Burchett, R-Tenn. “They’re not going to force me into something.” 

    HOUSE AND SENATE REPUBLICANS CLASH OVER MAMMOTH TRUMP BUDGET BILL SEEKING $1.5T IN CUTS 

    Mike Johnson in c loseup shot

    House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La. (Getty Images/File)

    By Friday morning, Johnson was again diminishing expectations.

    “It may not be today,” said Johnson. 

    However, the speaker hinted that the details could be ready later that weekend. 

    “We’ve got a few more people we’ve got to talk with and a couple more boxes to check,” said Johnson. “The expectation is it we’ll be marking up a budget next week, potentially as early as Tuesday.”

    But the weekend optimism died when the speaker appeared on “Fox News Sunday.”

    “We were going to do a Budget Committee markup next week. We might push it a little bit further because the details really matter,” said Johnson on Sunday. “But we’re getting very, very close.”

    Johnson attended the Super Bowl in New Orleans later that day with President Trump. So could there have been a breakthrough amid the confetti, étouffée and Cooper DeJean madness of the Super Bowl?

    “Are we going to have this bill this week, yes or no?” yours truly asked the speaker as he entered the Capitol on Monday afternoon.

    Mike Johnson, left; Donald Trump, right

    Speaker Johnson is working to get a unified GOP effort for a reconciliation budget package for President Trump. (Getty Images)

    Johnson deployed his favorite verbal placeholder.

    “Stay tuned,” said the speaker, who uses this line as frequently as a 1950s radio announcer.

    “You said last week we were going to have it,” I countered.

    “I know,” said Johnson. “I’ve got 220 people that have shared their opinions on this.”

    “Did you overpromise?” I followed up.

    “No. No,” responded Johnson. “The hard work of the negotiation has to be done on the front end so that we can deliver a product that we know everybody will support.”

    Senate Budget Committee Chair Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., tired of the House GOP’s dithering last week, wrote his own budget package, which significantly differs from what the House intends to do. While the House blueprint will focus on taxes and government cuts, Graham’s measure would boost energy production and also call for spending money to tighten the border. The South Carolina Republican has long observed that people voted for border security in the election. He argues that provision should come first.

    SENATE DOGE CHAIR SAYS SHE SPEAKS WITH ELON MUSK ‘EVERY FEW DAYS’ AS TRUMP ADMIN SLASHES SPENDING

    Lindsey Graham closeup shot pointing

    Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik/File)

    Johnson said he talked with Graham at the Super Bowl and “he and I are on the same page.”

    When asked by CNN’s Manu Raju whether Graham’s gambit was “complicating this,” Johnson answered, “Not much.” 

    But when yours truly asked if the Senate moving first would help “increase the sense of urgency” in the House, the speaker responded differently.

    “I wouldn’t say it’s helpful,” said Johnson. 

    An hour later, reporters again peppered Johnson for timing details.

    “I’m not going to give a projected date yet because then you’ll tell me that I overshot,” said Johnson. “So just wait. Everybody relax.”

    This entire imbroglio boils down to one factor: the math. 

    House Republicans currently boast 218 votes in the 433-member House. There are two vacancies. They can barely lose a vote on their side. Getting any bill across the floor is a monster. 

    A major snowstorm was in the forecast for Washington, D.C., on Tuesday afternoon and into the day on Wednesday. House Republican leaders huddled in the Radio/TV Gallery in the Capitol Visitor Center for their weekly press conference Tuesday morning.

    “Ready for snowmageddon?” House Republican Conference Chair Lisa McClain, R-Mich., asked the press corps. “And the question is: Are we going to get it today or not?”

    US Capitol and grounds covered in snow, kids on sleds

    Families enjoy the snow by the Capitol, Wednesday, Feb. 12, 2025, as they sled after a snowstorm in Washington. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

    “Well, you were supposed to get a budget last week, and we didn’t,” observed your trusty reporter, drawing laughter from scribes and lawmakers alike.

    At the press conference, Johnson insisted that the budget was on track. He announced that the Budget Committee would meet Thursday on the package. 

    But what unfolded in the news conference wasn’t nearly as interesting as what happened afterward. 

    Arrington hustled over to the Radio/TV Gallery to privately meet Johnson and other GOP leaders in an adjacent anteroom. Johnson and Arrington had not been on the same page with the budget. Fox is told that Arrington and Johnson had to make sure they were aligned. Arrington had pushed for deeper cuts than Johnson.

    By Wednesday morning, Arrington delivered a budget blueprint. It called for $2 trillion in cuts from what’s called “mandatory spending,” like entitlements. It features $4.5 trillion in tax reductions. And it lifts the debt ceiling by $4 trillion.

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    The question now is whether House Republicans can pry a bill out of committee, let alone pass it on the floor.

    But after weeks of jawboning, House Republicans finally had a budget.

    And, for the record, Washington, D.C., also got snow.

    About 7 inches.

  • Chevron trimming headcount by 15-20% in layoffs

    Chevron trimming headcount by 15-20% in layoffs

    Chevron is seeking to trim its headcount by a sizable amount.

    The energy giant will lay off 15%-20% of its workers in a bid to “simplify our organizational structure, [execute] faster and more efficiently, and position the company for stronger long-term competitiveness,” Chevron Corp. Vice Chair Mark Nelson said in a Wednesday statement.

    Chevron’s global headcount at the end of 2023 consisted of more than 40,200 non-service station employees and nearly 5,400 service station workers, according to its most recent annual report.

    (Jonathan Raa/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

    Nelson said the company will finish “most” of the layoffs, which start this year, before 2026’s year-end. 

    CHEVRON, ENGINE NO 1, GE VERNOVA TEAM UP TO BUILD US DATA CENTERS

    “We do not take these actions lightly and will support our employees through the transition. But responsible leadership requires taking these steps to improve the long-term competitiveness of our company for our people, our shareholders and our communities,” the Chevron vice chair wrote.

    The energy giant aims to shrink its structural costs through layoffs and other actions by $2-$3 billion before 2027, according to Nelson.

    Chevron gas station

    A Chevron gas station in Los Angeles (Mario Tama/Getty Images/File)

    CFO Eimear Bonner said in November, when the company released its third-quarter financial results, that Chevron aimed to achieve that level of savings. She indicated the company would give updates on its efforts “through 2025.”

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    According to Nelson’s statement, the energy giant is “optimizing its portfolio, leveraging technology to enhance productivity, and changing how and where work is performed, including the expanded use of global centers.”

    Ticker Security Last Change Change %
    CVX CHEVRON CORP. 154.93 -2.49 -1.58%

    He said the organization structure changes that Chevron is making will “improve standardization, centralization, efficiency and results, unlocking new growth potential and helping Chevron drive industry-leading performance now and into the future.”

    Chevron

    (REUTERS/Mike Blake/File)

    The news comes nearly two weeks after the energy giant disclosed its fourth-quarter earnings.

    CHEVRON EXEC EXPLAINS HQ MOVE FROM CALIFORNIA TO TEXAS: ‘TOUGH PLACE TO DO BUSINESS’

    Chevron generated $52.2 billion in total revenues and nearly $3.24 billion in net income in the fourth quarter. Over the entirety of 2024, the company saw revenues of $202.79 billion and net income of $17.66 billion, with the latter of the two figures marking a 17.35% drop year over year. 

    The company’s global net oil-equivalent production posted a 7% increase year over year. 

    CEO Mike Wirth said last month the company is “in a strong position today, with near-term catalysts that are expected to drive the company to even better performance in 2025 and 2026.”

  • World Radio Day 2025 Date & Theme: Know History And Significance Of The Day That Highlights The Importance Of Radio

    World Radio Day 2025 Date & Theme: Know History And Significance Of The Day That Highlights The Importance Of Radio

    World Radio Day is an international day celebrated on February 13 every year in several countries around the world. The day was designated by UNESCO on November 3, 2011, during its 36th conference. The annual event highlights the importance of radio as a powerful medium of communication, information, and entertainment. This day recognises radio’s role in connecting communities, promoting free speech, and providing reliable news to people around the world. World Radio Day 2025 falls on Thursday, February 13 and on this day, communities and organisations host a wide range of events. February 2025 Holidays and Festivals Calendar: Get Full List of Major Events in the Second Month of the Year. 

    Each year, World Radio Day follows a specific theme that emphasises radio’s evolving role in society. It serves as a platform to promote diversity in broadcasting, encourage innovation, and recognize the contributions of journalists and broadcasters. In this article, let’s know more about World Radio Day 2025 date, World Radio Day 2025 theme, history and the significance of the annual event.

    World Radio Day 2025 Date

    World Radio Day 2025 falls on Thursday, February 13.

    World Radio Day 2025 Theme

    World Radio Day 2025 theme is ‘Radio and Climate Change’

    World Radio Day History

    Radio is a powerful medium for celebrating humanity in all its diversity. The World Radio Day was proclaimed in 2011 by the Member States of UNESCO. It was adopted by the United Nations General Assembly by resolution (A/RES/67/124) in 2012 as an International Day and has been marked since then on February 13. The 13th of February was recommended as the official day due to it being “the day the United Nations established the whole concept of the United Nations Radio, in 1946”.

    The Board requested that UNESCO’s Director-General bring the resolution to the attention of the Secretary-General of the United Nations so that World Radio Day could be endorsed by the General Assembly and celebrated by the whole system. World Radio Day was thus unanimously proclaimed by all member states of UNESCO in November 2011.

    World Radio Day Significance

    Radio continues to be an important tool for education and disaster response as it reaches millions of people regardless of social or economic background. This makes it a democratic and inclusive medium. On this day, broadcasters, media professionals, and communities come together to appreciate radio’s impact and discuss ways to strengthen its role in the modern world. Various events, such as panel discussions, special radio programs, and community activities, are organised globally to celebrate the occasion.

    (The above story first appeared on LatestLY on Feb 13, 2025 07:00 AM IST. For more news and updates on politics, world, sports, entertainment and lifestyle, log on to our website latestly.com).

  • NFL hit with lawsuit from fans as teams are ‘not allowed to’ join Bluesky: reports

    NFL hit with lawsuit from fans as teams are ‘not allowed to’ join Bluesky: reports

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    The National Football League was hit with an antitrust lawsuit by two fans who claim the league has refused to allow its teams to join Bluesky, according to multiple reports. 

    Patrick Brown, a Chicago Bears fan, and Collin Vincent, who roots for the Seattle Seahawks, filed a 14-page complaint in New York, alleging the league is restraining engagement between teams and players on the social media site. 

    “Where the teams meet their fans on social media is between the teams and the fans,” Thomas Burt, the plaintiffs’ attorney, told Front Office Sports. “The NFL does not have the legal right to inject themselves into that decision.”

    CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM

    The logo of social media platform Bluesky is displayed on a mobile phone and tablet in Paris on Nov. 12, 2024. (Ian Langsdon/AFP via Getty Images)

    Puck first reported the lawsuit.

    The fans feel that they should not be limited to platforms, most notably X, in order to engage with their teams.

    Fred Kirsch, the vice president of content for Kraft Sports & Entertainment, recently said on the “Patriots Unfiltered” podcast that the New England Patriots were “not allowed to” have a Bluesky account and were actually told by the NFL to delete their page.

    The site has amassed over 30 million new users, with most joining amid Elon Musk’s changes to then-Twitter, now known as X, and the billionaire’s involvement with the Trump administration.

    NFL commissioner Roger Goodell talks to reporters

    NFL commissioner Roger Goodell speaks during a news conference at the Caesars Superdome ahead of Super Bowl LIX in New Orleans on Feb. 3. (AP Photo/Matt York)

    CHIEFS PLAYER SPEAKS OUT AFTER PATRICK MAHOMES SKIPPED HIM WHILE GREETING TEAMMATES DURING SUPER BOWL LOSS

    The lawsuit says the NFL’s decision to bar teams on Bluesky is a “financial matter,” citing “published reports.” The Sports Business Journal reported last month that the league wants a paid partnership with Bluesky if teams were to join.

    The suit also says the NFL announced earlier this month that teams are not allowed on the platform, although no such announcement has been made public or even reported.

    The NFL did not immediately respond to an email for a request for comment.

    Roger Goodell poses with Vince Lombardi trophy

    NFL commissioner Roger Goodell poses with the Vince Lombardi Trophy alongside Philadelphia Eagles and Kansas City Chiefs helmets at a press conference ahead of Super Bowl LIX at the Caesars Superdome in New Orleans on Feb. 3. (Kirby Lee-Imagn Images)

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    No major sports team in North America has an account on the new app.

    Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.

  • LARRY KUDLOW: Trump is the most statesmanlike President in generations

    LARRY KUDLOW: Trump is the most statesmanlike President in generations

    With the passing of each day, President Donald Trump is proving to be the finest international statesman America has produced since Ronald Reagan — and surely harking back to the American and world leaders who defended freedom during World War II.

    Trump critics, hearing his ‘America First’ North Star guiding principle, accuse him of being an isolationist, uninterested in other parts of the world or the complexities of foreign relations. But Trump is proving them all to be very badly wrong.

    In just the few weeks since his inauguration, he has negotiated border-closing and deportation policies with Mexico, Canada, Colombia, Nicaragua, Venezuela, and El Salvador.

    He has focused, laser-like, on the Panama Canal and the importance of preventing China from running it. He is moving rapidly to prevent China from infiltrating Central and South America in violation of the Monroe Doctrine. And he has cast a sharp eye on the strategic value of Greenland to prevent Russia and China from advancing into the Arctic Circle.

    Plus, he has directly engaged with Israel on the hostage release negotiations with the Hamas terrorists. He has offered an outside-the-box solution to the age-old Gaza problem.

    And, now, he has finally broken through the Russia-Ukraine stalemate.

    First, by meeting directly with President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. Then, this morning with an hour-long phone call to President Vladimir Putin of Russia.

    In a lengthy Truth Social post, he laid out a brand-new U.S. strategy to end the war. In his own words:

    I just had a lengthy and highly productive phone call with President Vladimir Putin of Russia. We discussed Ukraine, the Middle East, Energy, Artificial Intelligence, the power of the Dollar, and various other subjects.

    – President Donald Trump, Truth Social, February 12

    Joe Biden never spoke to Putin since the war began. Not once. But Trump is clearly making good on his campaign promise to end the war, and he’s doing it at his usual warp speed.

    Again, in his own words:

    But first, as we both agreed, we want to stop the millions of deaths taking place in the War with Russia/Ukraine. President Putin even used my very strong Campaign motto of “COMMON SENSE.”

    – President Donald Trump, Truth Social, February 12

    Common sense has been a constant Trump theme — on the economy, with the DOGE audit of the out-of-control federal budget, on ending the radical left-wing culture, on closing the border, and cutting taxes.

    And foreign policy must have a strong common-sense theme to it, too.

    Again, in his own words, Trump laid out the strategy and the key American players:

    We will begin by calling President Zelenskyy, of Ukraine, to inform him of the conversation, something which I will be doing right now. I have asked Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Director of the CIA John Ratcliffe, National Security Advisor Michael Waltz, and Ambassador and Special Envoy Steve Witkoff, to lead the negotiations which, I feel strongly, will be successful.

    – President Donald Trump, Truth Social, February 12

    This is a dramatic move by President Trump, not only to break the logjam of war, but to engage directly with the key players — Putin and Zelenskyy. And Mr. Trump is essentially orchestrating what will become a peace conference strategy, which will lead to cease-fire principles, and ultimately an end to the war.

    Mr. Trump is essentially driving a process for all three sides — the U.S., Russia, and Ukraine — that will lead to an end to the violence and hostilities and the war. Mr. Trump’s actions are a breathtaking demarche. It is the most statesmanlike effort we have seen in generations.

    Trump should’ve won a Nobel Peace prize for brokering the Abraham Accords during his term. What he’s doing now to end the seemingly intractable Russia-Ukraine war should earn him his second Nobel Prize.

    But for him, it’s just promises made, promises kept.

  • UN halts humanitarian work in Yemen’s Houthi stronghold after staff detentions

    UN halts humanitarian work in Yemen’s Houthi stronghold after staff detentions

    The United Nations said Monday it suspended its humanitarian operations in the stronghold of Yemen’s Houthi rebels after they detained eight more U.N. staffers, affecting the global response to one of the world’s worst humanitarian disasters.

    In a statement, the U.N. said the “extraordinary” decision to pause all operations and programs in northern Saada province was due to the lack of necessary security conditions and guarantees.

    A spokesman for the Houthis didn’t immediately respond to messages seeking comment.

    This is a locator map for Yemen with its capital, Sanaa. (Associated Press)

    UN CHIEF SOUNDS THE ALARM AMID FEARS OVER POSSIBLE DOGE-INSPIRED CUTS AFTER TRUMP’S ORDER

    The rebels in recent months have detained dozens of U.N. staffers, as well as people associated with aid groups, civil society and the once-open U.S. Embassy in Sanaa, Yemen’s capital. None of the U.N. staffers has been released.

    The U.N. statement said the pause in operations is meant to give the Houthis and the world body time to “arrange the release of arbitrarily detained U.N. personnel and ensure that the necessary conditions are in place to deliver critical humanitarian support” in rebel-held areas.

    It said the latest detained U.N. staffers — taken late last month — included six working in Saada, on Yemen’s northern border with Saudi Arabia.

    United Nations facade

    A view of the United Nations Headquarters building in New York City, United States on July 16, 2024. (Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

    US STRIKES UNDERGROUND HOUTHI WEAPONS DEPOTS USED TO HIT AMERICAN SHIPS

    Seven U.N. agencies operate in Saada, including the World Food Program, the World Health Organization and UNICEF, along with several international aid organizations, according to the U.N. humanitarian agency.

    The U.N. late last month suspended all travel into Houthi-held areas.

    The war in Yemen has killed more than 150,000 people, including fighters and civilians. The Iranian-backed Houthis have been fighting Yemen’s internationally recognized government, which is backed by a Saudi-led coalition, since 2014, when they descended from their stronghold in Saada and took control of Sanaa and most of the north.

    The U.N. had projected that over 19 million people across Yemen will need humanitarian assistance this year as many deal with climate shocks, malnutrition, cholera and the economic effects of war.

    Smoke rises from Sana'a Airport in Yemen following reported Israeli airstrikes in the area

    Black smoke rises near Sana’a International Airport in Yemen after reported Israeli airstrikes. (Reuters)

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    The rebels have imprisoned thousands of people during the war. In recent months, they also intensified their crackdown on dissent, including recently sentencing 44 people to death.

    In January, the Houthis unilaterally freed 153 war detainees as one of several overtures to ease tensions after the ceasefire in the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza. Such prisoner releases have been viewed as a means to jump-start talks over permanently ending Yemen’s war.

  • Convicted sex offender wanted for allegedly groping Texas girl

    Convicted sex offender wanted for allegedly groping Texas girl

    A man with a lengthy criminal history who was previously on a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) hold is on the run after being accused of groping a 7-year-old Texas girl as she walked home from school. 

    Carlos Jose Ayala Morales, 43, has been charged with felony attempted indecency with a child, the Houston Police Department said. He is accused of grabbing the girl Jan. 27 while she was on her way home from her elementary school, Fox Houston reported.

    The girl and her mother told the news outlet she was walking behind her older sister and a friend. They said the man ran up, groped her and ran away. The girl didn’t scream because she was in shock and told her older sister when they got home. 

    TOM HOMAN BELIEVES ICE RAID LEAKS ARE ‘COMING FROM INSIDE’ AS AURORA LEAKER CLOSER TO BEING IDENTIFIED

    Carlos Jose Ayala Morales, 43, is accused of groping a young Houston girl.  (Houston Police Department)

    “A man came behind me, and he touched my private parts,” the girl told the station.

    “I hope he’s caught and put away much longer, so he can’t hurt other children,” her mother said. 

    Morales has a lengthy criminal history. In 2017, he was charged with four counts of indecency with a child and evading arrest. 

    At the time, police believed Morales, who they called Ayala, was linked to “at least 10 sexual assault incidents in the northeast Houston and Harris County areas.” 

    Authorities were investigating a string of “sexual assaults of school-aged juvenile females, 7-15 years of age, as they traveled to and from school,” according to the news outlet. 

    FEDERAL COURT BLOCKS TRUMP ADMIN FROM SENDING DETAINED VENEZUELAN IMMIGRANTS TO GUANTÁNAMO BAY

    Carlos Jose Ayala Morales allegedly on security video

    Carlos Jose Ayala Morales, 43, was captured on surveillance video before groping a young Texas girl, police said.  (Houston Police Department )

    “Ayala would come up behind the victims and inappropriately touch them through their clothing,” a police news release states.  

    In one incident, Ayala attempted to abduct one of the victims, a 7 year-old female, as she walked home from school with her 9-year-old brother,” police said. 

    “Reading that made me so scared, because that could have been [my child],” the victim’s mother said. 

    When he was arrested in 2017, ICE filed a detainer request for Morales, a Honduran citizen, which was lifted when he was convicted. 

    The Texas Department of Criminal Justice told FOX 26 Ayala was transferred to prison to serve concurrent seven-year sentences for indecency with a child by exposure, three counts of indecency with a child, evading arrest, detention with a vehicle and burglary.

    Carlos Jose Ayala Morales seen allegedly following a young girl he grabbed, police said.

    Carlos Jose Ayala Morales was seen following a young girl he grabbed, police said.  (Houston Police Department)

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    In February 2024, he was released into ICE custody.

    Fox News Digital has reached out to ICE.

  • Pro boxing match could take place at Alcatraz this summer: report

    Pro boxing match could take place at Alcatraz this summer: report

    A historic landmark may host a professional boxing match this summer.

    According to Ring, WBO junior welterweight champion Teofimo Lopez is close to an agreement to get into the ring on Alcatraz Island.

    Ring notes that Riyadh Season promoter Turki Alalshikh recently told ESPN he was hoping to host a fight at the former prison turned museum one day. Lopez will fight for the brand.

    CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM

    Alcatraz Island could host a championship boxing match this summer. (Brandon Sloter/Getty Images)

    “You know, sometimes I get in my mind I want different places to do [fights]. Sometimes in mountains, maybe someday in the Pyramids in Mexico, someday in [the] Eiffel Tower in France, [the] Colosseum in Italy,” Alalshikh said.

    It’s unclear whether the title would be up for grabs, but considering Lopez defended his title twice last year, it seems likely.

    The prison opened in 1934, but it didn’t even last 30 years.

    Considering its 1.25-mile distance to shore, the Bay Area island was considered practically escape-proof, although there were 14 documented attempted escapes.

    The most notorious one was the June 11, 1962, escape by John and Clarence Anglin and Frank Morris, which inspired “Escape from Alcatraz.”

    Teofimo Lopez

    Teofimo Lopez celebrates after defeating Jamaine Ortiz in their WBO junior welterweight world title bout at Michelob Ultra Arena.  (Joe Camporeale/USA Today Sports)

    It remains a mystery whether the three reached shore and survived. The FBI concluded the escapees drowned due to harsh conditions.

    The three prisoners chiseled an escape route from their own jail cells and built makeshift, papier mâché heads.

    The final attempted escape from the prison, almost six months later, inspired what has become the swimming route of the “Escape from Alcatraz” triathlon.

    Both Al Capone and George “Machine Gun” Kelly served time at the prison.

    Alcatraz Island

    Low fog swirls around Alcatraz and the Golden Gate Bridge under clear skies as boats sail on the San Francisco Bay Sept. 16, 2020, in Berkeley, Calif. (Lea Suzuki/San Francisco Chronicle via Getty Images)

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    Lopez is 21-1 with 13 knockouts but has not fought since June, a 12-round unanimous decision victory over Steve Claggett.

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  • Tariffs could factor into Fed’s rate-cut plans amid inflation concerns, experts say

    Tariffs could factor into Fed’s rate-cut plans amid inflation concerns, experts say

    A hotter-than-expected inflation report from January and uncertainty over the impact of President Donald Trump’s tariff plans on consumer prices could factor into the Federal Reserve’s rate-cut decision, expert economists said.

    The Labor Department on Wednesday released the consumer price index (CPI) for January, which showed that inflation was 3% on an annual basis, up from 2.9% a month ago, after a larger than anticipated 0.5% monthly increase.

    The uptick in inflation comes after the Fed opted against a fourth consecutive interest rate cut at its meeting last month. Uncertainty surrounding Trump’s plans for tariffs, which are taxes on imported products, and their implementation timelines could lead to a longer wait for more rate cuts than anticipated.

    “Today’s data reaffirms Powell’s decision to put rate cuts on the back burner for an extended period of time,” said Charlie Ripley, senior investment strategist for Allianz Investment Management. “Overall, today’s inflation data should force market participants to re-think the Fed’s ability to cut rates this year, especially considering the rise in prices is likely unrelated to any tariff activity from the White House.”

    INFLATION RISES 3% IN JANUARY, HOTTER THAN EXPECTED

    Bill Adams, chief economist of Comerica Bank, said that the hot inflation pressure serves as “confirmation that price pressures continue to bubble beneath the economy’s surface” and will “reinforce the Fed’s inclination to at least slow and possibly even end rate cuts in 2025.”

    “The Fed is also watching the impact of higher tariffs, more restrictive immigration policies and tax cut plans,” Adams added. “These policies could all add to inflation as their effects ripple through the economy, causing the Fed to keep interest rates higher than they would have been under the status quo.”

    TRUMP CALLS FOR LOWER INTEREST RATES TO GO ‘HAND-IN-HAND’ WITH TARIFFS: ‘LETS ROCK AND ROLL, AMERICA’

    Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said the Fed is waiting to see how tariff policies are implemented before accounting for any inflationary impact. (Mandel Ngan/AFP via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Seema Shah, chief global strategist for Principal Asset Management, said the inflation report “will make for very uncomfortable reading for the Fed” given the price growth and noted that the “government’s policy agenda threatens to raise inflation expectations” — a dynamic that could lead to inflation risks becoming “too heavily weighted to the upside to permit the Fed to cut rates at all this year.”

    EY chief economist Gregory Daco said that his firm’s view is that the Fed “will maintain a wait-and-see approach over the coming months” and that he currently sees only two Fed rate cuts in June and December. “The risk is tilted toward less easing if the administration’s policy mix fuels inflation and inflation expectations,” Daco explained.

    TRUMP BLASTS FED FOR NOT CUTTING INTEREST RATES

    Trump signs tariff executive order

    President Donald Trump has imposed new tariffs on China and has threatened tariffs on Canada and Mexico, as well as reciprocal tariffs on other trading partners. (Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Ryan Sweet, chief U.S. economist at Oxford Economics, noted that the additional tariffs on China and other threatened tariffs have “yet to make their way into the inflation data.”

    “The Fed’s response to tariffs isn’t straightforward, but we don’t believe tighter monetary policy is likely as it would magnify the drag on the economy from tariffs,” Sweet said. “The Fed needs time to gauge how the tariffs are affecting both sides of its dual mandate, keeping it paralyzed until December, when we think its attention will shift from inflation to its full employment mandate, leading to aggressive easing in 2026.”

    “The monetary policy implications are clear but it’s unclear whether the January CPI will give some in the Trump administration pause about moving forward quickly with some of the proposed tariffs. Tariffs can still be used as a bargaining tool to get some concessions from other countries, but the political optics of putting even a little upward pressure on consumer prices via tariffs wouldn’t be great for the Trump administration,” he explained.

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    Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell testified before the House Financial Services Committee on Wednesday and was asked about the impact of tariffs on Americans’ cost of living and the central bank’s efforts to tame inflation, and the chairman noted that the Fed doesn’t comment on policy decisions it doesn’t have discretion over.

    “The Fed has no role in setting tariffs and, you know, we don’t comment on decisions made by those who do have that authority,” Powell said. “We try to stick to our own knitting. In this particular case, it’s possible that the economy would evolve in ways that because of tariffs, or partly because of tariffs, that we would need to do something with our policy rate. But we can’t know what that is until we actually know what policies are enacted.”