Tag: Major

  • Kai Trump, Charlie Woods to golf together at major junior event

    Kai Trump, Charlie Woods to golf together at major junior event

    President Donald Trump’s granddaughter, Kai Trump, is set to compete alongside Tiger Woods’ son, Charlie Woods, at the Junior Invitational golf tournament at Sage Valley, South Carolina in March. 

    Kai Trump and Charlie Woods are among the 60 expected competitors, according to a report from Golf Channel, for the invitation-only tournament that features the nation’s top junior golfers. 

    The announcement comes the same week that Tiger Woods himself was seen walking alongside Kai Trump at Genesis Invitational on Sunday. 

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    Kai Trump recently committed to play women’s golf at the University of Miami. She is also a golf influencer and runs a YouTube channel that has more than 1 million subscribers. It was announced over the weekend that she even signed an endorsement deal with TaylorMade, which is a partner of the Junior Invitational and also counts Tiger Woods as an ambassador.

    Tiger Woods and President Trump recently played a round of golf together at Trump International Golf Club in Mar-a-Lago, Florida on Feb. 9, just hours before Trump became the first sitting president to attend the Super Bowl. 

    GENESIS INVITATIONAL GOLF TOURNAMENT PAYS TRIBUTE TO TIGER WOODS’ LATE MOTHER, KULTIDA WOODS

    Tiger Woods, left, and his son Charlie Woods fist bump after making their putt on the 13th green during the final round of the PNC Championship golf tournament, Sunday, Dec. 22, 2024, in Orlando, Fla.  (AP Photo/Phelan M. Ebenhack)

    Meanwhile, Charlie Woods has most notably played alongside his father in the PNC Championship on several occasions, with two second-place finishes as his best result, including the 2024 event. 

    Charlie is set to play in the Dustin Johnson World Junior Golf Championship in Myrtle Beach, Florida, from Feb. 28 to March 2, and then the Junior Invitational is scheduled to start just weeks after that, on March 19. 

    After Tiger Woods announced the death of his mother Kultida Woods in early February, Trump expressed his condolences in a statement. 

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    Donald Trump and Tiger Woods

    President Donald Trump presents the Presidential Medal of Freedom to Tiger Woods during an event at the White House in the Rose Garden. (Scott Taetsch-USA TODAY Sports)

    “I was just informed that Tiger Woods’ wonderful Mother, Kultida, passed away – She has gone onto greener fairways!” Trump wrote in a post. “Kultida Woods was an amazing influence on Tiger, and gave him much of his strength and brilliance. Melania and I send our love and prayers to Tiger and his incredible family!”

    Kultida Woods was with her son in 2019 when he received the Presidential Medal of Freedom from Trump.

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  • Kathy Hochul does apparent about-face on natural gas as NYC utility signals major rate hikes

    Kathy Hochul does apparent about-face on natural gas as NYC utility signals major rate hikes

    New York Gov. Kathy Hochul has approved permits to expand capacity on a major bi-state pipeline despite years of pushing green policies like bans on natural gas use in new construction.

    The Hochul administration signed off on permits to expand capacity in the Iroquois Pipeline – a crucial 414-mile route from St. Lawrence County — near the border with Cornwall, Ontario, – running down the Adirondacks, through western Connecticut, under Long Island Sound and forking toward Commack, Long Island, or Hunts Point, Bronx.

    That move comes as the state Department of Environmental Conservation admitted the approvals are “inconsistent with” statewide greenhouse gas emissions limits imposed in recent years, according to the New York Post.

    Hochul said this week that just as she is trying to institute $500 “inflation refunds” for middle-to-low income families, that money is going “right out the door” to Consolidated Edison (ConED). 

    REPUBLICANS RIP HOCHUL’S INFLATION REFUNDS: BRIBE TO MAKE NYERS LIKE HER

    ConEd, the main utility provider in New York City and Long Island, is planning to implement 11.5% increases in electric rates and 13% increases in gas rates – amounting to about $500 per year – unless the New York Public Service Commission (PSC) steps in, according to FOX-5.

    The PSC is already under pressure from Hochul to audit the salaries of ConED executives amid chatter about the rate hikes. Hochul’s actions come after years of crackdowns on fossil fuel production and consumption by New York Democrats.

    In 2019, then-Gov. Andrew Cuomo signed the Climate Leadership & Community Protection Act from then-Sen. Todd Kaminsky, D-Long Beach, which moved the state away from fossil fuels and established a net-zero goal by 2040.

    Two years later, the state shuttered the massive Indian Point nuclear energy production facility on the Hudson River opposite Haverstraw.

    Cuomo said at the time that he had been concerned for years about the safety of the plant. “It does not belong on the Hudson River and in close proximity to the most densely populated area in the country… This is a victory for the health and safety of New Yorkers, and moves us a big step closer to reaching our aggressive clean energy goals.”

    Albany Democrats, led by Hochul, have since banned furnaces and gas heating in new construction.

    The governor also announced a “cap and invest” program to force Big Oil to invest in green energy by paying for emissions. According to the Post, a report from the PSC also indicated ConED and fellow utility National Grid were also “barely able to provide adequate [energy] supply” during a recent Arctic storm that brought temperatures near 0 degrees Fahrenheit to the Empire State.

    HOCHUL’S CHRISTMASTIME BOAST OF SAFER SUBWAYS CAME AMID STRING OF VIOLENT ATTACKS

    The sun sets on the Empire State Building, One Vanderbilt and the Chrysler Building in New York City on March 14, 2021. (Photo by Gary Hershorn/Getty Images)

    As for Hochul’s efforts to audit ConED, Republicans agreed the rate hikes are and have been outrageous, but that particular move would not help.

    “Natural gas is a proven, reliable source of energy and vital for consumers in the Northeast,” said State Assembly Minority Leader Will Barclay. “The green dreams of environmental extremists are meaningless if people can’t heat their homes in mid-February. It’s incredible to see radical liberals protest a necessary measure that allows New Yorkers to stay warm in the winter. But reliability, affordability, and common sense have never been priorities of New York’s climate cult.”

    Additionally, the state’s natural-gas-rich Southern Tier – a 200-mile area roughly running from Jamestown to Hancock along the Pennsylvania border – has been affected by a statewide ban on fracking, which state lawmakers representing the area have fought yet-unsuccessfully to undo.

    This, even as communities just a few miles southward in Pennsylvania continue to extract natural gas from the same Marcellus Shale Range on their side of the line.

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    Hochul added to the ban by further prohibiting a new, safer form of fracking using carbon dioxide instead of liquids.

    While former Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf enacted a moratorium on state parkland fracking, there has been no fracking activity to speak of along the NY-17 corridor for many years.

    After then-Gov. David Paterson announced the state’s original fracking moratorium in 2008 – later becoming an outright ban under Cuomo – some Southern Tier villages whose economies depended on energy production considered trying to “secede” to Pennsylvania.

    Fox News Digital reached out to Hochul and ConED for comment but did not receive a response by press time. 

  • Rwanda-backed M23 rebels breach second major city in Congo’s mineral-rich east

    Rwanda-backed M23 rebels breach second major city in Congo’s mineral-rich east

    Rwanda-backed rebels have “occupied” a second major city in mineral-rich eastern Congo, Congo’s government said Sunday, as M23 rebels positioned themselves at the governor’s office in Bukavu and pledged to clean up after the “old regime.”

    Associated Press journalists witnessed scores of residents cheering on the rebels after they entered Bukavu following a dayslong march from Goma, a city of 2 million people they seized last month.

    The rebels saw little resistance from government forces against the unprecedented expansion of their reach after their years of fighting. Congo’s government vowed to restore order in Bukavu, a city of 1.3 million people, but there was no sign of soldiers. Many were seen fleeing on Saturday alongside thousands of civilians.

    The M23 are the most prominent of more than 100 armed groups vying for control of eastern Congo’s trillions of dollars in mineral wealth that’s critical for much of the world’s technology. The rebels are supported by about 4,000 troops from neighboring Rwanda, according to the United Nations experts.

    TRUMP FACING 1ST TEST IN AFRICA AMID BLOODY BATTLES ‘OVER ELECTRIC VEHICLE BATTERY MINERALS’ 

    The fighting has displaced more than 6 million people in the region, creating the world’s largest humanitarian crisis.

    Rebels vow to ‘clean up’ disorder

    Bernard Maheshe Byamungu, one of the M23 leaders who has been sanctioned by the U.N. Security Council for rights abuses, stood in front of the South Kivu governor’s office in Bukavu and told residents they have been living in a “jungle.”

    “We are going to clean up the disorder left over from the old regime,” Byamungu said, as some in the small crowd of young men cheered the rebels on to “go all the way to Kinshasa,” Congo’s capital, nearly 1,000 miles away.

    The M23 did not announce any seizure of Bukavu, unlike its announcement when taking Goma, which had brought swift international condemnation. Spokesmen for the M23 didn’t respond to questions Sunday.

    Congo’s communications ministry in a statement on social media acknowledged for the first time that Bukavu had been “occupied” and said the national government was “doing everything possible to restore order and territorial integrity” in the region.

    One Bukavu resident, Blaise Byamungu, said the rebels marched into the city that had been “abandoned by all the authorities and without any loyalist force.”

    “Is the government waiting for them to take over other towns to take action? It’s cowardice,” Byamungu added.

    M23 rebels enter east Congo’s second-largest city, Bukavu, and take control of the South Kivu province administrative office, Sunday.  (AP Photo/Janvier Barhahiga)

    Fears of regional escalation

    Unlike in 2012, when the M23 briefly seized Goma and withdrew after international pressure, analysts have said the rebels this time are eyeing political power.

    The fighting in Congo has connections with a decadeslong ethnic conflict. The M23 says it is defending ethnic Tutsis in Congo. Rwanda has claimed the Tutsis are being persecuted by Hutus and former militias responsible for the 1994 genocide of 800,000 Tutsis and others in Rwanda. Many Hutus fled to Congo after the genocide and founded the Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda militia group.

    Rwanda says the militia group is “fully integrated” into the Congolese military, which denies it.

    But the new face of the M23 in the region — Corneille Nangaa — is not Tutsi, giving the group “a new, more diverse, Congolese face, as M23 has always been seen as a Rwanda-backed armed group defending Tutsi minorities,” according to Christian Moleka, a political scientist at the Congolese think tank Dypol.

    13 UN PEACEKEEPERS, ALLIED SOLDIERS DEAD IN CONGO AS M23 REBELS MAKE GAINS IN KEY CITY

    Congo’s President Felix Tshisekedi, whose government on Saturday asserted that Bukavu remained under its control, has warned of the risk of a regional expansion of the conflict.

    Congo’s forces were being supported in Goma by troops from South Africa and in Bukavu by troops from Burundi. But Burundi’s president, Evariste Ndayishimiye, appeared to suggest on social media his country would not retaliate in the fighting.

    The conflict was high on the African Union summit’s agenda in Ethiopia over the weekend, with U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres warning it risked spiraling into a regional conflagration.

    Still, African leaders and the international community have been reluctant to take decisive action against M23 or Rwanda, which has one of Africa’s most powerful militaries. Most continue to call for a ceasefire and a dialogue between Congo and the rebels.

    The Congo River Alliance, a coalition of rebel groups that includes the M23, has said it was committed to “defending” the people of Bukavu.

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    “We call on the population to remain in control of their city and not give in to panic,” alliance spokesperson Lawrence Kanyuka said in a statement Saturday.

  • Major crafts retailer Joann plans to close hundreds of locations

    Major crafts retailer Joann plans to close hundreds of locations

    Joann Inc., which filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in January for the second time in less than a year, is planning to close hundreds of its stores as it tries to right-size its footprint.   

    The retailer filed a motion this week seeking the court’s authority to begin closing 500 of its stores across the nation as it proceeds with the Chapter 11 process. If approved, the company said going-out-of-business sales will begin at impacted stores as soon as Saturday, and could continue for several months thereafter. 

    A company spokesperson told FOX Business that the closures are part of the company’s strategy in maximizing the value of its business. 

    MAJOR CRAFTS RETAILER FILES FOR BANKRUPTCY

    “A careful analysis of store performance and future strategic fit for the Company determined which stores should remain operating as usual at this time. Right-sizing our store footprint is a critical part of our efforts to ensure the best path forward for Joann,” the spokesperson said. 

    In March 2024, when the company filed for Chapter 11 for the first time after 81 years in business, it became a private company, but didn’t shutter any of its over 800 locations across 49 states. 

    A customer enters a Joann store in El Cerrito, California, on Jan. 8, 2025. Joann Inc. (David Paul Morris/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    In January, the company filed for bankruptcy protection in U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware with the hopes of selling itself to another company after contending with a challenging retail environment, coupled with sagging sales and constrained inventory levels. 

    LEASES FOR NEARLY 700 PARTY CITY LOCATIONS TO BE AUCTIONED OFF

    “After carefully reviewing all available strategic paths, we have determined that initiating a court-supervised sale process is the best course of action to maximize the value of the business,” interim CEO Michael Prendergast said when the company filed for the second time. “We hope that this process enables us to find a path that would allow Joann to continue operating as a going concern.”

    inside a joann's store

    The retailer filed a motion seeking the court’s authority to begin closing 500 of its stores across the nation as it proceeds with the Chapter 11 process. (Tim Leedy/MediaNews Group/Reading Eagle via Getty Images / Getty Images)

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    The company sought court approval last month to start a process for the sale of substantially all of its assets to Gordon Brothers Retail Partners LLC. Gordon would serve as the “stalking horse” bidder, which is a party that agrees to make an initial bid for the assets of the bankrupt company, often before a formal auction process begins.  

    Gordon Brothers has indicated that it intends to pursue a liquidation of the company and conduct going out-of-business sales at all store locations, according to Joann, which is continuing to actively solicit alternate bids. 

    It said it has received inquiries from parties potentially interested in continuing to operate the stores and online businesses on an ongoing basis.

    If other qualified bids are submitted during the court-supervised sale processes, Joann plans to conduct an auction or auctions, with the stalking horse bid setting the floor for the auction processes.

    Here are the stores closing in each state: 

  • Major crafts retailer Joann plans to close hundreds of locations

    Major craft retailer Joann plans to close hundreds of locations

    Joann Inc., which filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in January for the second time in less than a year, is planning to close hundreds of its stores as it tries to right-size its footprint.   

    The retailer filed a motion this week seeking the court’s authority to begin closing 500 of its stores across the nation as it proceeds with the Chapter 11 process. If approved, the company said going-out-of-business sales will begin at impacted stores as soon as Saturday, and could continue for several months thereafter. 

    A company spokesperson told FOX Business that the closures are part of the company’s strategy in maximizing the value of its business. 

    MAJOR CRAFTS RETAILER FILES FOR BANKRUPTCY

    “A careful analysis of store performance and future strategic fit for the Company determined which stores should remain operating as usual at this time. Right-sizing our store footprint is a critical part of our efforts to ensure the best path forward for Joann,” the spokesperson said. 

    In March 2024, when the company filed for Chapter 11 for the first time after 81 years in business, it became a private company, but didn’t shutter any of its over 800 locations across 49 states. 

    A customer enters a Joann store in El Cerrito, California, on Jan. 8, 2025. Joann Inc. (David Paul Morris/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    In January, the company filed for bankruptcy protection in U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware with the hopes of selling itself to another company after contending with a challenging retail environment, coupled with sagging sales and constrained inventory levels. 

    LEASES FOR NEARLY 700 PARTY CITY LOCATIONS TO BE AUCTIONED OFF

    “After carefully reviewing all available strategic paths, we have determined that initiating a court-supervised sale process is the best course of action to maximize the value of the business,” interim CEO Michael Prendergast said when the company filed for the second time. “We hope that this process enables us to find a path that would allow Joann to continue operating as a going concern.”

    inside a joann's store

    The retailer filed a motion seeking the court’s authority to begin closing 500 of its stores across the nation as it proceeds with the Chapter 11 process. (Tim Leedy/MediaNews Group/Reading Eagle via Getty Images / Getty Images)

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    The company sought court approval last month to start a process for the sale of substantially all of its assets to Gordon Brothers Retail Partners LLC. Gordon would serve as the “stalking horse” bidder, which is a party that agrees to make an initial bid for the assets of the bankrupt company, often before a formal auction process begins.  

    Gordon Brothers has indicated that it intends to pursue a liquidation of the company and conduct going out-of-business sales at all store locations, according to Joann, which is continuing to actively solicit alternate bids. 

    It said it has received inquiries from parties potentially interested in continuing to operate the stores and online businesses on an ongoing basis.

    If other qualified bids are submitted during the court-supervised sale processes, Joann plans to conduct an auction or auctions, with the stalking horse bid setting the floor for the auction processes.

    Here are the stores closing in each state: 

  • NBA player Dennis Schroder included in reported major deal after wild ‘modern slavery’ claim

    NBA player Dennis Schroder included in reported major deal after wild ‘modern slavery’ claim

    NBA guard Dennis Schroder was included in a blockbuster trade on Wednesday night that saw Jimmy Butler go from the Miami Heat to the Golden State Warriors, according to multiple reports.

    Schroder will reportedly be moved to the Utah Jazz as part of a multi-team trade that also included the Detroit Pistons. The guard’s inclusion of the deal came after he compared the trade deadline to “modern slavery.”

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    Golden State Warriors guard Dennis Schroder, #71, brings the ball up the court against the Utah Jazz during the first half of an NBA basketball game in San Francisco on Tuesday, Jan. 28, 2025. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu)

    He made the eyebrow-raising remarks in an interview with NBC Sports Bay Area, lamenting the lack of the control a player has on where they’re going in such deals.

    “It’s like modern slavery,” he told the network. “It’s modern slavery at the end of the day. Everybody can decide where you’re going, even if you have a contract. Yeah, of course, we make a lot of money and we can feed our families, but at the end of the day if they say, ‘You’re not coming to work tomorrow, you’re going over there,’ they can decide that. They got to change that a little bit.

    “But still grateful that we’re here and that we can live this every single day. I think everybody who’s in here is blessed. But if you really think about it, it is kind of crazy that the organization can tell you, ‘We want you to be team-first, but you’re going over there.’ It’s a lot.”

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    Dennis Schroder goes up for a shot

    Golden State Warriors guard Dennis Schroder, #71, shoots against Utah Jazz forward Brice Sensabaugh, #28, during the first half of an NBA basketball game in San Francisco on Tuesday, Jan. 28, 2025. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu)

    Schroder added that control being out of the players’ hands and left to the NBA owners is something the guard wanted the league to eventually figure out. The veteran was already traded earlier in the season from the Brooklyn Nets to the Warriors. The latest reported trade would be the sixth time he’s been traded in his career.

    Warriors head coach Steve Kerr suggested the trade deadline be moved to the All-Star break as his rotations were thrown off with the trade before their game.

    “I think the league should consider making the trade deadline at the All-Star break just so you don’t have to face these games where guys are getting traded half an hour before a game and you’re trying to process the emotions and trying to win a game,” Kerr said. “I don’t know if it’s possible.”

    Steve Kerr points

    Golden State Warriors head coach Steve Kerr gestures during the first half of an NBA basketball game against the Miami Heat on Tuesday, Jan. 7, 2025 in San Francisco. (AP Photo/Godofredo A. Vásquez)

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    The trade deadline is at 3 p.m. ET on Thursday.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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  • Major California Democrat predicts Kamala Harris would be ‘field-clearing’ if former VP runs for governor

    Major California Democrat predicts Kamala Harris would be ‘field-clearing’ if former VP runs for governor

    California Attorney General Rob Bonta says he will support former Vice President Kamala Harris if she decides to run for Golden State governor in 2026.

    Bonta, a former state lawmaker who has served as California attorney general since 2021, says he will run for re-election next year rather than launch a gubernatorial campaign, putting to rest speculation about his next political moves.

    “Kamala Harris would be a great governor,” Bonta said in an interview with Politico.

    THESE DEMOCRATS MAY RUN FOR THE WHITE HOUSE IN 2028

    California Attorney General Rob Bonta announced he would seek re-election in 2026 rather than run for governor. (Loren Elliott/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

    “I would support her if she ran. I’ve always supported her in everything she’s done. She would be field-clearing,” he said as he added that he had not spoken directly with Harris about any potential run for governor.

    WHY CALIFORNIA GOVERNOR GAVIN NEWSOM IS MEETING WITH PRESIDENT TRUMP AT THE WHITE HOUSE

    Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom is term-limited and cannot run for re-election again in 2026. 

    Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom speaks with Fox News Digital at the Donald Trump-Joe Biden presidential debate on June 27, 2024 in Atlanta.

    Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom speaks with Fox News Digital at the Donald Trump-Joe Biden presidential debate on June 27, 2024 in Atlanta. (Fox News – Paul Steinhauser)

    Harris served as San Francisco district attorney, California attorney general and represented the Golden State in the U.S. Senate before becoming vice president.

    There has been plenty of speculation since her election defeat last November to President Donald Trump regarding Harris’ next political move, with the two potential options likely being launching a 2026 gubernatorial run in her home state or seeking the presidency again, in 2028.

    VANCE IN ‘CATBIRD SEAT,’ BUT HERE ARE THE OTHER REPUBLICANS WHO MAY ALSO RUN IN 2028 

    Sources in the former vice president’s political orbit say no decisions have been made about any next steps.

    However, Harris, in a video message to the Democratic National Committee, as it huddled for its winter meeting last weekend, pledged to be with the party “every step of the way,” which appeared to be a signal she still has political ambitions.

    Then-Vice President Kamala Harris delivers her remarks at the Democratic National Committee's Holiday Reception at Willard Hotel in Washington, D.C., on Sunday, Dec. 15, 2024.

    Then-Vice President Kamala Harris delivers her remarks at the Democratic National Committee’s Holiday Reception at Willard Hotel in Washington, D.C., on Sunday, Dec. 15, 2024. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana)

    The Democrats’ field for governor in the heavily blue-leaning state is already crowded.

    Among the more than half-dozen candidates already running for governor are Lt. Gov. Eleni Kounalakis – a Harris ally – and former Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa.

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    Former Rep. Katie Porter, who unsuccessfully ran for the Democratic Senate nomination last year, has expressed interest in launching a campaign.

    Additionally, former Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra, who served in Congress and as California attorney general before joining the Biden administration, is also seen as a potential contender.

  • Biden signs with major Hollywood agency after leaving office

    Biden signs with major Hollywood agency after leaving office

    Former President Joe Biden landed himself representation with a big Hollywood agency just weeks after leaving office.

    Biden has signed with Creative Artists Agency (CAA), which previously represented him from 2017-2020.

    “President Biden is one of America’s most respected and influential voices in national and global affairs,” CAA co-chairman Richard Lovett said in a statement. “His lifelong commitment to public service is one of unity, optimism, dignity, and possibility. We are profoundly honored to partner with him again.”

    PRESIDENT BIDEN’S FAREWELL LETTER: READ HERE

    Former President Joe Biden signed a representation deal with big-time Hollywood agency CAA. (HUM Images/ Universal Images Group via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Under his previous stint with CAA, Biden released his memoir “Promise Me, Dad” in 2017, as well as his post-vice presidency “American Promise” speaking tour, which sold “more than 85,000 tickets nationwide,” according to CAA’s press release. 

    CAA also represents former President Barack Obama and former first lady Michelle Obama. 

    BIDEN WON’T ENFORCE TIKTOK BAN AFTER SIGNING LAW LAST YEAR, LEAVING FATE TO TRUMP: OFFICIAL

    It has been two weeks since Biden left office, leaving President Trump the keys to the White House and telling his successor and predecessor, “Welcome home.” 

    Joe Biden speaking closeup

    It has been two weeks since former President Joe Biden left office. (Ron Sachs / Getty Images)

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    Several Hollywood celebrities were influential in Biden being pushed out of the 2024 presidential race, particularly George Clooney, who wrote an op-ed in the New York Times detailing his decline. 

    Other stars who called for Biden to step down included Ashley Judd, John Cusack, Rob Reiner, Stephen King, Mia Farrow and Michael Douglas.

  • Former MLB Commissioner Fay Vincent, who played major role in Pete Rose, George Steinbrenner bans, dead at 86

    Former MLB Commissioner Fay Vincent, who played major role in Pete Rose, George Steinbrenner bans, dead at 86

    Former Major League Baseball Commissioner Fay Vincent died on Saturday at the age of 86 due to bladder cancer.

    Vincent was baseball’s commissioner from 1989 to 1992, taking over for Bart Giamatti after his sudden death just eight days after he banned Pete Rose from baseball.

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    Vincent played a major role in Rose’s punishment, having been the deputy commissioner to Giamatti.

    MLB Commissioner Fay Vincent before a game between the Detroit Tigers and White Sox at Comiskey Park in Chicago circa 1990. (Jonathan Daniel/Getty Images)

    He became the commissioner on Sept. 1, 1989, and presided over the league during that year’s World Series between the Giants and Athletics that was halted due to the deadly earthquake in the Bay Area.

    Vincent was commissioner during the owners’ lockout of 1990, and he handed down a permanent suspension to New York Yankees owner George Steinbrenner, who was reinstated by Vincent’s successor, Bud Selig.

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    Fay Vincent press conference

    Commissioner Fay Vincent was commissioner during the owners’ lockout of 1990, and he handed down a permanent suspension to New York Yankees owner George Steinbrenner. (Phil Huber/Sports Illustrated via Getty Images)

    WHAT ARE THE 100 BEST ATHLETE NICKNAMES OF ALL TIME?

    As baseball commissioner, Vincent angered owners by becoming the first management official to admit the collusion among teams against free agents following the 1985, ‘86 and ’87 seasons. He also divided expansion fees among both leagues and attempted to force National League realignment, changing the divisions of four teams.

    “Mr. Vincent served the game during a time of many challenges, and he remained proud of his association with our national pastime throughout his life,” the current commissioner, Rob Manfred, said in a statement.

    Fay Vincent with trophy

    Baseball Commissioner Fay Vincent presents the World Series trophy to Athletics owner Walter A. Haas after Oakland defeated the Giants to win the World Series, Oct. 28, 1989, at Candlestick Park in San Francisco. (Focus on Sport/Getty Images)

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    In one of his lasting acts as commissioner, he chaired an eight-member committee for statistical accuracy, which removed the asterisk that had been next to Roger Maris’ entry as the season home run leader and deleted 50 no-hitters. The group defined a no-hitter as games of nine innings or more that ended with no hits.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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  • Canada punches back against Trump with major tariffs of its own as trade war set to begin on Tuesday

    Canada punches back against Trump with major tariffs of its own as trade war set to begin on Tuesday

    OTTAWA – Canada is responding to President Donald Trump’s 25% tariffs imposed on Saturday against its northern neighbor with its own major retaliatory measures, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced late Saturday night.

    As of Tuesday, when the U.S. tariffs take effect, Canada will impose 25% duties on about $21 billion of American goods with a further $86 billion to follow within 21 days to allow Canadian companies and supply chains to find alternatives, Trudeau told reporters at a news conference on Parliament Hill in Ottawa, surrounded by his foreign affairs, finance and public safety ministers.

    He said the Canadian tariffs on U.S. imports will cover a “far-reaching” range of products, including American beer, wine, bourbon, fruits and fruit juices, vegetables, clothing, shoes, household appliances, furniture, sports equipment, lumber, plastics, “along with much, much more.”

    In Trump’s executive order issued on Saturday, Canadian energy resources will face a lower 10% tariff.

    TRUMP IMPOSES TARIFFS ON IMPORTS FROM CANADA, MEXICO AND CHINA: ‘NATIONAL EMERGENCY’

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaks during a press conference while responding to President Donald Trump’s orders to impose 25% tariffs on Canadian imports, in Ottawa, Feb. 1, 2025. (Reuters/Patrick Doyle)

    Trudeau said several non-tariff measures are also on the table, such as exports on critical minerals, energy and government procurement, and added that “now is also the time to choose Canada,” such as buying Canadian-made products “and “opting for Canadian rye over Kentucky bourbon, or foregoing Florida orange juice all together.”

    “The actions taken today by the Trump White House split us apart instead of bringing us together,” said Trudeau, who noted that he has not talked with Trump since his inauguration as president.

    However, the president’s executive order cautioned that “should Canada retaliate” with its own import duties on U.S. exports, Trump “may increase or expand in scope the duties imposed” on Canadian exports. 

    In a fact sheet released by the White House on Saturday, the U.S. is implementing tariffs against Canada, Mexico and China to hold them accountable “to their promises of halting illegal immigration and stopping poisonous fentanyl and other drugs from flowing into our country.” This “extraordinary threat,” the White House said, “constitutes a national emergency under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act.” 

    However, Trudeau claimed that “less than 1% of fentanyl and less than one% illegal crossings into the United States come from Canada.”

    During the 2024 fiscal year – from Oct. 1, 2023, to Sept. 30, 2024 – U.S. Customs and Border Protection reported that it seized just 43 pounds of fentanyl at the northern border with Canada compared to 21,100 pounds of the opioid seized at the southwestern border with Mexico.

    Trump’s executive order acknowledged that “much less fentanyl [flowed] from Canada than from Mexico last year, but “the amount that crossed the northern border could kill 9.5 million Americans.”

    TRUMP’S TARIFFS TAKE EFFECT SATURDAY: WHAT TO KNOW

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    President Donald Trump and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau attend the NATO summit on Dec. 4, 2019, in Watford, England. (Dan Kitwood / Getty Images)

    Last December, the Canadian government unveiled an $895 million plan to strengthen border security, including a strategy to “detecting and disrupting the fentanyl trade.”

    Canadian conservative leaders joined Trudeau in calling for a swift and severe response to the tariffs.

    In a statement released on Saturday, Official Opposition Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre “condemn[ed] President Trump’s massive, unjust and unjustified tariffs” and said that Canada should “retaliate with dollar-for-dollar tariffs carefully aimed at maximizing impact on American companies while minimizing impact on Canadian consumers.” 

    “That means targeting U.S. products that we can make ourselves, buy elsewhere or do without,” said Poilievre, whose Conservatives are leading in public-opinion polls and are poised to form the next Canadian government in a general election expected as early as this spring.

    Doug Ford is in his own election campaign to keep his Progressive Conservatives in power in Canada’s most populous province, Ontario, and has made the fight against the Trump tariffs a central theme.

    “President Trump has chosen to move forward with tariffs that will only hurt America and make Americans poorer. Canada now has no choice but to hit back and hit back hard,” said Ontario’s premier in an X post on Saturday.

    The Canadian government needs to “pursue every legal route to challenge these unfair, unjustified and illegal tariffs,” said Ford. “The coming days and weeks will be incredibly difficult.”

    CANADA READY FOR TRUMP TARIFF FIGHT AS COUNTRY’S LEADERS THREATEN RETALIATION: ‘DOLLAR-FOR-DOLLAR’

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    Vehicles cross the Blue Water Bridge over the St. Claire River to Port Huron, Michigan from Sarnia, Canada, on March 18, 2020. (Jeff Kowalsky/AFP via / Getty Images)

    David Eby, premier of British Columbia, announced on Saturday that he directed B.C.’s liquor distribution agency to stop buying liquor from red Republican states and “remove the top-selling ‘red-state’ brands from the shelves of public liquor stores.”

    Reaction to the Trump tariffs extended beyond politicians.

    Hockey fans at the Ottawa Senators’ home game against the Minnesota Wild Saturday night booed the singing of “The Star-Spangled Banner” to express their displeasure.

    Charlie Angus, a member of Parliament who represents a northern Ontario district – larger in geographic size than the United Kingdom – in the House of Commons for the progressive New Democratic Party, told FOX Business that the Trudeau Liberal government can expect from Canadians to have “pretty strong backing to go the whole distance” in countering the Trump tariffs.

    “People are seriously p—ed,” said Angus, co-founder of Pledge for Canada, a nonpartisan group of leaders from politics, labor and the arts strongly opposed to “threats of economic coercion” and “serious risks” to Canadian sovereignty in response to the U.S. tariffs and the president’s musings about annexing Canada

    “He’s actually unifying us across a whole whack of different groups that would normally be fighting among ourselves,” he said.

    “We’re dealing with not only the threat of tariffs but vicious insults against our right to even exist as a nation. This is not anything we’ve ever seen before.”

    Angus said the U.S. duties against Canada will have a “brutally devastating impact” on both sides of the border.

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    A view of Toronto skyline from Riverdale Park during sunset in Ontario, Canada, on March 28, 2024. (Mert Alper Dervis/Anadolu via / Getty Images)

    During the first three quarters of 2024, $683 billion in goods and services crossed the Canada-U.S. border, according to a recent report from TD Economics.

    In an analysis released last November on Trump’s 25% tariff threat against Canada, the Canadian Chamber of Commerce said the economic fallout would result in the shrinking of the U.S. gross domestic product (GDP) by 1.6%, or about $467 billion, and a reduction in Canada’s GDP by 2.6%, or about $54 billion.