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  • Iraqi activists seek to oust Iranian influence, normalize ties with Israel

    Iraqi activists seek to oust Iranian influence, normalize ties with Israel

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    FIRST ON FOX – A group of young Iraqis launched an initiative called “Iraq Only” with the goal of having better relations with the U.S. and eliminating Iranian militia’s hold over Iraq.

    The campaign, which involved posting stickers printed with the Iraqi flag and placed over images of militia leaders in Iraq, was a grassroots initiative started by young people to empower the rule of law and build a democratic and citizen-based state in Iraq, free of Iranian influence.

    Fox News Digital spoke exclusively with one of the activists who spearheaded the recent effort, Muqtada al-Tamimi, about his experience of social activism, their goals for Iraq’s future, and being kidnapped for his activity of sounding the alarm on Iranian influence.

    A WEAKENED IRAN HAS IRAQ LOOKING TO CURB TEHRAN-BACKED EXTREMISTS IN COUNTRY

    A deliveryman drives a motorcycle along a road in Baghdad on Oct. 7, 2024, past billboards showing Iran and Hezbollah leaders. (Ahmad Al-Rubaye/AFP via Getty Images)

    “We as activists suffer the most from Iranian influence over Iraq. Many of us have been kidnapped and taken into illegal detention centers run by Iranian-backed militias. And some were killed,” al-Tamimi, who is a businessman and in his late 20s, told Fox News Digital through his interpreter. 

    Al-Tamimi and some of his fellow activists were kidnapped by Iranian-aligned armed groups and were tortured for five days. They were shackled, abused, tortured and had their phones and personal data confiscated without any legal document or judge’s signature proving they had the right to access these documents.

    “We as activists are persecuted for simply trying to raise our own flag, the Iraqi flag,” al-Tamimi lamented.

    Al-Tamimi said the Iranian militias act with impunity and don’t respect the Iraqi constitution or Iraqis’ rights as citizens.

    Free Iraq from Iran poster

    A poster titled “Iraq and only for Iraq” was issued by a new movement that seeks to rid the country of Iranian influence.

    “The people most harmed by Iranian militias are people like us who call for peace and co-existence in Iraq and with our neighboring countries,” he said.

    Al-Tamimi and his fellow activists want a strong Iraq that has a stable and integrated economy with the West. 

    “We believe that an Iraqi alliance with the West would make Iraq stronger, stable, and more prosperous.”

    Al-Tamimi and his associates’ desire to remove Iranian influence and move Iraq closer to the U.S. and the West is what leaders in Tehran fear most. 

    WHO IS THE IRAN-BACKED COALITION ISLAMIC RESISTANCE IN IRAQ, RESPONSIBLE FOR DEADLY DRONE STRIKE ON US TROOPS?

    The groundwork for the activism was first laid in 2021 when 312 Iraqis from the Shi’a and Sunni communities convened in Erbil in a conference facilitated by the Center for Peace Communications (CPC), and called for peace and normalization with Israel. Once word of the conference spread across international media, the Iran-backed militias issued death threats, and the Iraqi government issued arrest warrants for conference organizers. CPC took measures to protect all participants from jail or being harmed. 

    “The Iraq Only movement speaks to pent-up Iraqi demand for peace, development, and an end to Iranian domination. We wish these young men and women Godspeed in driving change, and hope the U.S. will do everything it can to help them,” CPC’s founder and president Joseph Braude told Fox News Digital.

    Iraq-Israel normalization conference

    More than 300 Iraqis attend a conference to discuss the normalization of relations between Baghdad and Israel, in Arbil, the capital of northern Iraq’s Kurdistan autonomous region, on Sept. 24, 2021. (Safin Hamid/AFP via Getty Images)

    Iraq has become a central battleground for regional dominance between U.S. and coalition forces and Iran. Tehran uses allies in Iraq to exert its regional influence and also undermine Iraqi sovereignty through various proxy forces.

    The Islamic Resistance of Iraq is a group of armed Islamic resistance factions under the umbrella of the Iran-backed “Axis of Resistance.” These groups are the most difficult for the Iraqi government to manage and were responsible for the attack that killed three U.S. service members in Jordan in January 2024. 

    The IRI has been engaging in armed operations against Israel and U.S. coalition forces since Oct. 7. Also operating in Iraq are the Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF), which were formed in 2014 to fight ISIS. 

    Iraq Only is also supportive of U.S. forces on Iraqi soil, even as the status of the 2,500 troops in the country remains uncertain.

    NETANYAHU HAILS ‘HISTORIC’ FALL OF BASHAR ASSAD IN SYRIA, CREDITS ISRAELI ATTACKS ON HEZBOLLAH, IRAN

    Member of the Islamic movement of Iraq holds photos of Iranian leaders.

    A photo of Iranian leaders is held up by a member of the Islamic Movement of Iraq, a faction of the Popular Mobilisation Forces during a rally in Baghdad on April 5, 2024. (Murtaja Lateef/AFP via Getty Images)

    “The American presence in Iraq does not at all contradict a strong Iraq but the opposite. A good relationship with the United States means a strong Iraq.”

    Al-Tamimi said he understands and appreciates the heavy price paid by American forces in upholding the stability and security of Iraq since the invasion of 2003. 

    One aspect of their platform that may raise eyebrows is their recognition of Israel’s place in the Middle East and their desire for closer ties with Israel.

    “Israel is a great country and has a great culture. We share with them a lot of the geography and as we are looking at and seeking a strong Iraq, we need to seek a strong partnership with a country like Israel if needed.”

    Al-Tamimi also notes that everyday Iraqis have suffered and paid a high price because of the alliance between Iraq and Iran. Physical infrastructure was destroyed, and Iranian interference undermined state institutions. Eradicating Iranian influence will help Iraq, in their view, ultimately become safer and more prosperous.

    “We think once we have a strong relationship with Israel and the United States, we will have a strong Iraq.” 

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    Al-Tamimi also sees positive signs for Iraq and the Middle East after the fall of longtime dictator Bashar al-Assad in Syria.

    “We believe the removal of the Assad regime is a very good step for undermining Iranian influence in the region and gives us as Iraqis hope for better change in the region.”

  • Heartland lawmakers seek to fix ‘fundamental’ roadblock for farm kids seeking student aid

    Heartland lawmakers seek to fix ‘fundamental’ roadblock for farm kids seeking student aid

    Two bipartisan lawmakers from America’s agricultural heartland are putting forth legislation that would amend the federal student aid provisions to help students in farming families receive the help they need to go to school.

    Sens. Joni Ernst, R-Iowa, and Michael Bennet, D-Colo., along with Rep. Tracey Mann, R-Kan., in the House, are forwarding the Family Farm and Small Business Exemption Act.

    As of late, the household contribution formula for the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) “fundamentally misunderstands” how farming families operate and how agricultural assets differ from the more liquid assets of other U.S. families.

    FAFSA is a form typically accessible to students on Oct. 1 of each year to allow for ample time to submit financial information in advance of both state and school-specific deadlines for aid eligibility. 

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    “No one should have to sell off the farm — or their small business — to afford college,” said Sen. Joni Ernst, R-Iowa. (Getty Images)

    The bipartisan bill would exempt farms and small family businesses from considerations in the Higher Education Act of 1965 and therefore offer a more realistic calculus for students in rural areas seeking federal aid.

    The new act would amend the FAFSA Simplification Act to restore the original exemption of all farmland, machinery, other operational materials and small businesses with fewer than 100 employees from being declared on the application.

    “No one should have to sell off the farm — or their small business — to afford college. As a farm kid myself, I know the enormous impacts grants and financial aid have on rural students’ decision to go to college,” Ernst told Fox News Digital. 

    “I’m fighting for Iowa families, so unfair policies don’t hold them back from investing in their child’s education.”

    In February 2024, Ernst, her Iowa counterpart Sen. Charles Grassley, and other Heartland and Deep South lawmakers like Sens. Cindy Hyde-Smith and Roger Wicker of Mississippi wrote to Biden Education Secretary Miguel Cardona about their concerns, which appeared to go largely unanswered.

    DOGE SENATOR SEEKS TO ENSURE FEDS CAN CONTINUE PURSUING COVID FRAUDSTERS, DEBTORS AS IG SOUNDS ALARM

    Rep. Tracey Mann, R-Kan.

    Rep. Tracey Mann, R-Kan. (Reuters)

    They alleged Question 22 of the FAFSA application asks for the net worth of a family’s business operations, which the letter said wrongly analyzes how revenue streams for crops and livestock work — and how they can vary depending on the year.

    “[A]ssets cannot be cashed out to support a loan in the same capacity as traditional investments,” the letter read. 

    Therefore, Ernst on Thursday signaled she wants to adjust the qualification formula for FAFSA, so that America’s agricultural families are able to have an equal shot at aid based on their conditions.

    Mann, who represents the seventh-largest congressional district in the nation that isn’t an at-large seat, said he has innumerable farm families who are in need of clear, fair FAFSA policy.

    “Across Kansas’ Big First and the country, net farm income has decreased by nearly 25% since 2022,” Mann told Fox News Digital.

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    “Between navigating record-levels of inflation and skyrocketing input costs, our family farmers, ranchers, agricultural producers and small business owners are doing their best to make an honest living.

    “When young people from these families are applying for higher education financial aid, the assets tied up in the family farm or the small business should not count against them. Congress should work to make life easier, not harder, for these dedicated families and students.”

    Mann said he hopes the bill will even the playing field for students while “protecting the American dream for every student regardless of their parents’ career ventures.”

  • Wine spirit: States seek to end shipment bans as local winery customers navigate uneven policies

    Wine spirit: States seek to end shipment bans as local winery customers navigate uneven policies

    Just in time for Valentine’s Day, states that currently prohibit shipping alcoholic beverages to family and friends are working to change one of America’s last remaining “blue laws.”

    Delaware, Mississippi and Utah all prohibit direct shipment of wine, with several other states enforcing varying restrictions.

    Utah is considered a “felony state” in terms of liquor transit, with one of the only loopholes being a one-quart allowance of brandy from a resident returning from abroad.

    In Delaware, the local winery industry is being unduly burdened by similar laws.

    “Delaware is one of three states in the country that still allows no direct shipment of alcohol,” said state Rep. Jeff Spiegelman, R-Townsend. 

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    “This would enhance small business. It would enhance an agricultural product, and it would allow consumers to get the products that they’re demanding. They are demanding the service. And we’re planning on giving it to them,” he said in a video statement.

    Spiegelman pointed to Harvest Ridge Winery in Marydel, Del., which by its name denotes its location on the state line.

    Maryland customers are able to ship their wine, but Delawareans can’t under the law.

    The lawmaker said the misconception with prohibitions like the First State’s is that opening up the shipping market would let bulk amounts of liquor proverbially flow freely around the state via Amazon and other retailers.

    But the 47 other state test-cases show that is not accurate.

    State Rep. Mike Smith, the sponsor of the legislation, said he hopes to put it forward in session very soon – and is encouraged that the “changing of the guard” in Dover will give it a good chance of passing.

    Delaware Gov. Matt Meyer did not respond to a request for comment, but did replace term-limited fellow Democrat John Carney. Additionally, the leadership of Delaware’s Democratic legislative majority changed with the new year.

    UNIFIED OPPOSITION TO PA-BASED US STEEL TAKEOVER ‘MISGUIDED’ SAY ECONOMISTS, LOCAL OFFICIALS

    Wilmington, on the Christiana River, is Delaware’s largest city. (iStock / iStock)

    “I think everybody’s coming at it from ‘This is the best deal we’re going to get. Let’s do it,’” said Smith, R-Hockessin.

    New House Speaker Melissa Minor-Brown, D-New Castle, did not respond to a request for comment.

    Smith’s district abuts Oxford, Pa., and the lawmaker said he sees many customers from the Keystone State able to ship Delaware wine to their homes without issue as well.

    Pennsylvania has had its own stringent liquor laws for decades, since former GOP Gov. Gifford Pinchot set the stage for its state-store system in the early 20th century. 

    Only in 2016 did Harrisburg move to allow wineries to ship limited quantities of wine – so long as they obtain a license and pay excise taxes. All other liquor must be purchased from government-run Fine Wine & Good Spirits stores. 

    Supermarkets in the state also only recently found themselves allowed to sell beer.

    During the coronavirus pandemic shutdown, a Naaman’s Corner, Del., booze superstore saw such a surge in Pennsylvanian customers locked out of their own shuttered state-run alcohol retailers – and slipping the few hundred yards across the state line – to the point that Delaware police began stopping out-of-state vehicles near the shopping center.

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    Northbound traffic enters Delaware on the JFK Turnpike near Newark (Getty)

    The disparity in booze-shipping and -purchasing laws – and movements to change them to mirror the rest of the country – are not unique to the northeast, as Mississippi lawmakers told Fox News Digital on Friday.

    A spokesperson for the Tupelo State’s House Speaker Jason White, R-Kosciusko, said the chamber passed a bill in 2024 similar to Delaware’s planned legislation.

    That effort died in the state Senate, but the spokesperson said the House plans to try again this session. The Mississippi plan would permit the direct shipment of wine – excluding liquor – and cap the amount of units per household. The state Senate reportedly has drafted a similar bill that gives proponents hope.

    Meanwhile, Steve Gross, vice president of state relations for the Wine Institute, said the advocacy group is “very supportive” of efforts to pass “direct-to-consumer wine-shipping law[s]. . . .”

    “We appreciate the work of these legislators to provide this choice to the citizens of Delaware.”

  • Michigan Democratic Senator Gary Peters says he won’t seek re-election

    Michigan Democratic Senator Gary Peters says he won’t seek re-election

    Michigan Democratic Sen. Gary Peters will not seek re-election when his term ends in Jan. 2027, Fox News has confirmed.

    Peters, a two-term senator and former congressman, told the Detroit News in an interview published Tuesday that he will start a “new chapter,” spending more time with family after nearly two decades of public service. 

    “I always thought there would be a time that I would step aside and pass the reins for the next generation. I also never saw service in Congress as something you do your whole life,” Peters told the outlet. 

    “And that goes back to 2008 when I first won that House seat. I thought it would be for a matter of a few terms that I would serve, and then I would go back to private life.” 

    His decision to retire leaves open a senate seat in a key battleground state President Donald Trump won in 2024. But Democrats held a similarly open seat when Sen. Elissa Slotkin, D-Mich., narrowly defeated Republican Mike Rogers. 

    Peters was one of three Democratic senators up for re-election in 2026 that the National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC) was planning on heavily targeting as they aim to expand their current 53-47 majority in the Senate. The other two Democrats are Sens. Jon Ossoff of Georiga and Jeanne Shaheen of New Hampshire.

    “Gary Peters is reading the room. After spending years ignoring illegal immigration and destroying his state’s auto industry, Michigan is better off without him,” NRSC chair Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina argued in a statement.

    Scott emphasized that “we’re committed to giving them a fighter that will stand with President Trump to restore the economic prosperity and security of our country.”

    This is a developing story and will be updated.

    Fox News’s Chad Pergram contributed to this report. This is a breaking news story. Check back for updates.