Hegseth's Pentagon Pushes Troop Quality Of Life Improvements Up On Priority ListNew Foto - Hegseth's Pentagon Pushes Troop Quality Of Life Improvements Up On Priority List

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth's Pentagon has taken numerous measures to improve quality of life for the rank and file of the armed services. Hegseth has led aslewofoverhaulsaddressing quality of life for service members and their families, including decreasing cumbersome moves for military families, expanding homeschooling options and bumping hazard pay for thousands of Army paratroopers. Hailing from the Army National Guard, the Secretary has longemphasizedhis mission to put more emphasis on the regular "warfighter" in defense policy. "Prioritizing the troops, over woke and weaponized social engineering by Secretaries and senior officers more concerned about their own political jockeying for rank and status, is a welcome change in the [Department of Defense] under Hegseth's leadership and is likely a big part of the reason we are seeing an increase in recruitment," Wade Miller, Marine Corps Veteran and senior advisor at the Center for Renewing America, told the Daily Caller News Foundation.(RELATED: Defense Intelligence Agency Employee Charged With Trying To Send Classified Data To Foreign Government) US Military Academy cadets listen to US President Donald Trump deliver the commencement address at the 2025 graduation ceremony at the US Military Academy West Point on May 24, 2025, in West Point, New York. (Photo by SAUL LOEB/AFP via Getty Images) Hegseth directed the Pentagon to conduct a sweeping review of the current policy on homeschooling for military families to assess the "feasibility" of enacting new policies to support homeschooling,accordingto the memo released Tuesday. Department of Defense Education Activity (DoDEA) schools have developed a reputation, particularly under former President Joe Biden's administration, for imposing left-wing initiatives such as diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) on students while lacking resources to properly teach. "The stay-at-home mom who wanted to homeschool did not have nearly the amount of resources dedicated to her as a mom who, say, worked on base and wanted to send her kids to daycare," William Thibeau, former Army Ranger and director of The American Military Project at the Claremont Institute, told the DCNF. "And I think what Secretary Hegseth was starting to realize is that there's more that the military can do to support families who want to make traditional choices." DoDEA education, while ranking wellaboveregular public schools in testing scores, still provides substandard education for some kids, particularly those with special needs, a DCNF investigation into the Bahrain DoDEA systemrevealedin 2023. As of 2023, there were approximately 65,000 students enrolled in DoDEA schools,accordingto department statistics. Homeschooling is often anattractiveoption to parents that are concerned about the education content of public schools. "Defense Secretary Hegseth is sending a clear message that, unlike the Biden administration, which eagerly worked against the well-being of our service members, the Trump administration is taking swift action to ensure that there is a substantial improvement in the quality of life of the brave men and women of the military," Nicole Kiprilov, executive director at DOD Watch, told the DCNF. "The success of our service members and their families has a direct impact on the success of this country." Additionally, Undersecretary for Personnel and Readiness Jay Hurstmovedto reduce the amount of moves military families have to make in order to promote more geographic stability. All military services will have 120 days to provide an implementation plan to reduce permanent changes of station (PCS) budgets by at least 10% by fiscal year 2027 all the way up to 50% by fiscal year 2030, relative to fiscal year 2026 levels, according to a memoissuedMay 22. On average, military families move every two to three years,accordingto the Pentagon. Acting Deputy Undersecretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness Tim Dill told reporters Wednesday that the feedback they get from the service will determine how aggressive the cuts will be. "So, what we're directing the departments to do is purely to examine potential reductions in things that will be defined as discretionary," Dill told reporters Wednesday. "So if they see that as mandatory, permission need, we're not even asking them to come back with a plan to reduce it." While the 2025 National Defense AuthorizationActgave junior enlisted armed services members a 4.5% pay increase, Hegseth bumped the pay for another vital group of soldiers: the paratroopers. At Fort Bragg in North Carolina, the Defense Secretaryannouncedan increase in hazard pay for actively jumping paratroopers to $200 a month extra, while giving jumpmasters, who train others, an additional $150 monthly bonus on top. "I cannot thank you enough or express our gratitude enough for what you do," Hegseth said to scores of soldiers of the 82nd Airborne Regiment at Fort Bragg. "Like those who came before you, you keep showing the world the stuff you're made of, because we know you are ready for the important work that lies ahead." All content created by the Daily Caller News Foundation, an independent and nonpartisan newswire service, is available without charge to any legitimate news publisher that can provide a large audience. All republished articles must include our logo, our reporter's byline and their DCNF affiliation. For any questions about our guidelines or partnering with us, please contactlicensing@dailycallernewsfoundation.org.

Hegseth’s Pentagon Pushes Troop Quality Of Life Improvements Up On Priority List

Hegseth's Pentagon Pushes Troop Quality Of Life Improvements Up On Priority List Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth's Pentagon has taken...
As Gabbard eyes revamping Trump's intelligence briefing, one idea is to mimic Fox NewsNew Foto - As Gabbard eyes revamping Trump's intelligence briefing, one idea is to mimic Fox News

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump's intelligence chief is exploring ways to revamp his routine intelligence briefing in order to build his trust in the material and make it more aligned with how he likes to consume information, according to five people with direct knowledge of the discussions. As part of that effort, National Intelligence Director Tulsi Gabbard has solicited ideas from current and former intelligence officials about steps she could take to tailor the briefing, known as the President's Daily Brief, or PDB, to Trump's policy interests and habits. One idea that's been discussed is possibly creating a video version of the PDB that's made to look and feel like a Fox News broadcast, four of the people with direct knowledge of the discussions said. Currently, the PDB is a digital document created daily for the president and key Cabinet members and advisers that includes written text, as well as graphics and images. The material that goes into the classified briefing, and how it's presented, can shape a president's decision-making. According to his public schedule, since his inauguration Trump has taken the PDB 14 times, or on average less than once a week, which is less often than his recent predecessors — including himself during his first term. An analysis of their public schedules during that same timeframe — from their inauguration through May during their first year in office — shows that former President Joe Biden received 90 PDBs; Trump received 55; and former President Barack Obama received 63. The people with direct knowledge of the PDB discussions said Gabbard believes that cadence may be a reflection of Trump's preference for consuming information in a different form than the formal briefing, as well as his distrust of intelligence officials, which stretches back to his first term, when he accused them of spying on his 2016 campaign. They also said that even if the presentation of the PDB changes, the information included would not. Asked for comment, DNI Press Secretary Olivia Coleman said in a statement,"This so-called 'reporting' is laughable, absurd, and flat-out false. In true fake news fashion, NBC is publishing yet another anonymously sourced false story." A source familiar with the DNI's internal deliberations said that during Gabbard's confirmation process in the Senate, "there was bipartisan consensus that the PDB was in need of serious reform. DNI Gabbard is leading that reform and is ensuring the President receives timely, relevant, objective intelligence reporting." In a statement, White House Spokesman Davis Ingle referred to this reporting as "libelous garbage from unnamed sources," and said, "President Trump has assembled a world-class intelligence team who he is constantly communicating with and receiving real time updates on all pressing national security issues. Ensuring the safety and security of the American people is President Trump's number one priority." It is not unusual for the PDB to be tailored to individual presidents. The PDB's presentation was adjusted for Trump in his first term to include less text and more pictures and graphics. Gabbard has discussed more extensive changes, according to the people with direct knowledge of the discussions. It's unclear how far her effort will go, but the people with direct knowledge of it said she has entertained some unconventional ideas. One idea that has been discussed is to transform the PDB so it mirrors a Fox News broadcast, according to four of the people with direct knowledge of the discussions. Under that concept as it has been discussed, the national intelligence director's office could hire a Fox News producer to produce it and one of the network's personalities to present it; Trump, an avid Fox News viewer, could then watch the broadcast PDB whenever he wanted. A new PDB could include not only graphics and pictures but also maps with animated representations of exploding bombs, similar to a video game, another one of the people with knowledge of the discussions said. "The problem with Trump is that he doesn't read," said another person with direct knowledge of the PDB discussions. "He's on broadcast all the time." The people with direct knowledge of the PDB discussions spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the internal deliberations. U.S. intelligence officials have created videos in the past to present information to presidents, including profiles of world leaders, for instance. Hollywood legend Charlton Hestonnarrated instructional films about highly classified topics for the Energy Departmentand the U.S. intelligence and military community. The films included information about nuclear weapons, requiring Heston to hold the highest relevant security clearance possible for at least six years. Former intelligence officials who worked in the first Trump administrationsaid Trump preferred to be briefed verbally and to ask questions but would not read memos or other lengthy written material. During Trump's first term, the PDB evolved into a one-page outline of topics with a set of graphics, presented verbally by an intelligence officer about twice a week, according to a history of presidential briefings by John Helgerson. To accommodate Trump's style and preferences, Vice President Mike Pence told the briefers to "lean forward on maps," according to Helgerson's book. But there has not been a broadcast or cable news-style PDB presentation. While the PDB has gone through various transformations under different presidents since it was created in 1946, it has largely been in a written format that was then briefed to the president verbally. Gabbard has also discussed tailoring some of the content in the PDB to Trump's interests, such as including more information on economic and trade issues and less routine focus on the war in Ukraine, according to three of the people with direct knowledge of the PDB discussions. Including intelligence on issues the president particularly cares about is not unusual. The PDB for Biden included gender and climate change issues, one of those three people said. "You shift with the priorities of the administration," that person said, adding that because of Trump's distrust of the intelligence community, getting him to embrace the PDB "is a very uphill fight." As director of national intelligence, Gabbard oversees and approves the PDB. A large staff of analysts and other employees at the CIA compiles the PDB, creating detailed text, graphics and videos based on the latest intelligence gathered by America's spy agencies. NBC News has reported that Gabbard plans to move the office that prepares the PDB from the CIA's headquarters in Langley, Virginia, to the national intelligence director's office a few miles away in McLean — apparently to bolster her office's role in presenting intelligence to the president. The ODNI would need to expand its staff and acquire digital tools and other infrastructure to assemble the PDB, one of the five people familiar with the discussions said. If the PDB were to be converted to a video for Trump, it would still most likely be provided in something like its current form to other top administration officials who receive it, that person said. Because he has been taking the PDB a little less than once a week on average, Trump currently receives a product that one of the people familiar with the PDB discussions described as the "best of" highlights from the past week, in addition to anything new that day. Discussions about potential changes to the PDB come amid questions about whether Gabbard may politicize the intelligence process, especially after her chief of staff, Joe Kent, asked analysts to revise an assessment on a Venezuelan criminal gang that appeared to undermine Trump's immigration policy, according to two sources with knowledge of the matter. Two senior officials who led the National Intelligence Council were recently fired after the initial intelligence assessment contradicted Trump's assertions that the Tren de Aragua cartel was operating under the direction of Venezuela's regime, led by Nicolás Maduro. Trump cited claims about the regime's purported relationship with the cartel as his rationale for invoking a rarely used 1798 law, the Alien Enemies Act, to deport people suspected of being gang members without standard due process. It's common for intelligence leaders to put their own staffs in place, but the move concerned congressional Democrats who already questioned some of Gabbard's efforts to have tighter control over what intelligence reaches Trump. "Absent evidence to justify the firings, the workforce can only conclude that their jobs are contingent on producing analysis that is aligned with the president's political agenda, rather than truthful and apolitical," Rep. Jim Himes of Connecticut, the top Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, said in a statement. An administration official previously told NBC News that the two officials were fired "because they were unable to provide unbiased intelligence."

As Gabbard eyes revamping Trump's intelligence briefing, one idea is to mimic Fox News

As Gabbard eyes revamping Trump's intelligence briefing, one idea is to mimic Fox News WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump's intelli...
Universities quietly negotiating with White House aide to try to avoid Harvard's fate, source saysNew Foto - Universities quietly negotiating with White House aide to try to avoid Harvard's fate, source says

College and university leaders have been privately negotiating with a deputy to top Trump aide Stephen Miller in hopes of avoiding the same aggressive targeting of Harvard University, a person familiar with the matter said, as the administration looks to escalate its attacks on the Ivy League institution and other schools. The higher education leaders, who have had granular conversations with senior White House policy strategist May Mailman in recent weeks, are asking what signals they need to send to stay out of the administration's crosshairs, the person said. Mailman works closely with Miller –an architect of the administration's strategyto target colleges over concerns they are not sufficiently policing alleged antisemitism on their campuses. In turn, a White House official said the administration is relaying to the leaders that "the money simply cannot and will not flow unabated as it has been – and that the universities are incubators of discrimination and the taxpayer cannot support that." These conversations come as the administration is investigating dozens of other schools, and as some school leadership comes to Washington. The White House is looking to strike a deal with a high-profile school, said the first source, who is involved in the higher education response. "They want a name-brand university to make a deal like the law firms made a deal that covers not just antisemitism and protests, but DEI and intellectual diversity," this person said. "They want Trump to be able to stand up and say he made a deal with so-and-so – an Ivy League school, some sort of name-brand school that gives them cover so they can say, 'We don't want to destroy higher education.'" Asked if any of the schools are inclined to make such a deal, the source said, "Nobody wants to be the first, but the financial pressures are getting real." Many schools have already experienced significant federal funding cuts, and there is mounting uncertainty about the future of visas forinternational students, who are more likely to pay full tuition compared to their American counterparts. The conversations, the source said, are continuing. "The President is always willing to make a deal that benefits America, and this has been true for any higher education institution willing to embrace common sense, stop violating the law, and commit to restoring civil rights and order on their campuses," the White House official said. They added, "The administration is only willing to work with entities that operate in good faith and are not merely paying lip service without tangible actions. Many schools want to make a deal, and the President is willing to work with them." Officials at some other schools are waiting for the White House to turn its attention away from Harvard. A board member at a major university targeted by the task force, who was granted anonymity to speak freely, described communications as "irregular," but said there have been repeated efforts by the task force to get the school's leadership to come to Washington for a meeting. "There is very little enthusiasm for that," the board member said. "We do not have any interest in being their 'model school' or whatever." They added, "At this point, we feel very comfortable with the steps we've taken, and we don't have any need to fight the administration, per se – unless they decide to mess with our core values. When it comes, we will be ready to fight them. But that doesn't mean we need to provoke them." Some universities across the country have hired political consultants and experts to respond to some of the administration's demands, while Harvard has launched an aggressive legal strategy and is organizing its alumni networks. Efforts to target Harvard began evenbeforePresident Donald Trump returned to office, with Trump allies arguing they're cracking down on antisemitism on campus amid the Israel-Hamas war. But the administration's actions extend to a broader agenda – setting up a major clash over academic freedom, federal funding and campus oversight – and abeliefinside the White House that it's a winning political issue for Trump. The crackdown is led by the Task Force to Combat Anti-Semitism, an interagency group that meets at least weekly, the White House official said, and is in regular communication about where to train its focus. At the helm is former Fox News personality and civil rights lawyer-turned-senior Justice Department official Leo Terrell. Miller and Mailman are also driving forces behind decision making, sources said. The administration has been happy with steps taken by some schools, praising some of its initial targets for complying with demands, including efforts to dismantle diversity, equity, and inclusion programs and crack down on campus protests. And which schools the administration could go after next appears to be a moving target. But Terrell suggested this week that "massive lawsuits" are coming and would take aim at the University of California system, among others. "Expect massive lawsuits against UC system. … On the East Coast, on the West Coast, in the Midwest, expect hate crime charges filed by the federal government. Expect Title VII lawsuits against those individuals who are not being protected simply because they're Jewish," he told Fox News. Asked for comment on Terrell's threats, Rachel Zaentz, a spokesperson for the University of California, said that the school system is cooperating with the Trump administration. "The University of California abhors antisemitism and is diligently working to address, counter and eradicate it in all its forms across the system. We have been, and plan to continue, cooperating with the Administration. Antisemitism has no place at UC or anywhere else in society. The University remains entirely focused on strengthening our programs and policies to root out antisemitism and all forms of discrimination," Zaentz said. The White House official told CNN last month that the task force was having discussions with Harvard and Columbia, as well as Northwestern University, Cornell University and the University of Michigan. A February Justice Departmentnews releasealso identified George Washington University; Johns Hopkins University; New York University; the University of California, Berkeley; the University of Minnesota; and the University of Southern California as "campuses that have experienced antisemitic incidents since October 2023" that the task force planned to visit. University leaders have been coming to DC to meet with administration officials, so no campus visits have been necessary, according to a senior administration official. CNN has reached out to each of the schools named by the Trump administration for comment. Statements from the University of Southern California and the University of Minnesota both denounced antisemitism and said the schools would engage with the task force on efforts to combat it. Pressed on how the task force is making determinations about funding for Harvard and other schools, the White House official said that their investigations often begin with complaints. "The relevant agency or department will conduct an investigation into violations to federal law, whether Title IV and Title IX, Title VI, Title XI, Title XII, and, based on those investigations, there can be immediate action to pause funding and wait for a resolution to the investigation, or, in more egregious examples, like Harvard, there could just be a blanket removal of all federal funds because of their lack of cooperation in an investigation or their blatant disregard for their violations to federal law and their unwillingness to change policy," the official said. And the senior administration official indicated this week that any school with an open Title VI investigation could be subject to government action. Title VI is part of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 prohibiting discrimination based on race, color or national origin in programs or activities receiving federal funding. There are more than 70 colleges and universities currently under active Title VI investigations as of Wednesday, according to a CNN analysis of dataprovidedby the Department of Education. (A vast majority of those investigations were launched during the Biden administration.) And even as it looks at other schools, the administration hasn't taken its eye off Harvard, with which it's engaged inmultiple legal battles. The administration has also launched an investigation into its foreign funding sources through a provision of the Higher Education Act requiring reporting of foreign gifts and contracts called Section 117. A prior Section 117 investigation into Harvard wasrecently closed. "As standard practice, Harvard has filed Section 117 reports for decades as part of its ongoing compliance with the law. As is required, Harvard's reports include information on gifts and contracts from foreign sources exceeding $250K annually. This includes contracts to provide executive education, other training, and academic publications," Jason Newton, a spokesperson for Harvard University, said in a statement, noting that Harvard's filings reflect "diverse sources" of support for the school. And a tax provision in Trump's "one big, beautiful bill," whichpassedthe House of Representatives last week but still has to get through the Senate, could have significant impact on Harvard and other institutions with large endowments. In its current form, it would implement a new "tiered system" of taxes on private colleges and universities' investment income. The endowment tax is currently a flat 1.4% rate but could become as high as 21% for schools like Harvard with large endowments. The administration believes there's political support for that provision, with Education Secretary Linda McMahon telling Fox News on Wednesday, "That's something that the American public could wrap its head around." Trump administration messengers have offered mixed signals about how the process moves forward. The source familiar with the higher education response questioned the appetite to proceed at an aggressive pace. "If you go after Harvard, how hard can you keep going? The universities are being played like a yo-yo for weeks and weeks and weeks. My guess is, at some point, the White House will lose interest in that. Once you've taken down Harvard, where are you going to go – Emory? They're just as conscious of the brands as anybody else," the source said. Ultimately, the source added, the market rules: "What's going to happen to Harvard or Columbia? Record applicants, record yield. I would bet you that if you talked to MAGA voters at Charlotte Country Day School or The Westminster Schools – they may have voted for Trump, but are they turning away from the Ivy League? Hell no. The schools are having record demand." Meanwhile, McMahon has suggested there is still hope for negotiations with Harvard, with whom the senior administration official said the administration is not currently in talks. "We really hope that we will be back at the table, negotiating, talking about the things that are good for Harvard and for the students that are on campus," McMahon said. Terrell has struck a different tone. "We are going to go after them where it hurts them financially, and there's numerous ways – I hope you can read between the lines – there's numerous ways to hurt them financially," he warned on Fox News. Asked when it would end, Terrell said, "We can't speculate. We have to bring these universities to their knees." For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Universities quietly negotiating with White House aide to try to avoid Harvard’s fate, source says

Universities quietly negotiating with White House aide to try to avoid Harvard's fate, source says College and university leaders have b...
Redemption for Yates on epic mountain climb as he closes in on Giro d'Italia titleNew Foto - Redemption for Yates on epic mountain climb as he closes in on Giro d'Italia title

SESTRIERE, Italy (AP) — Simon Yates produced one of the greatest rides of his career on one of cycling's most grueling climbs to all but win the Giro d'Italia on Saturday. Yates started the penultimate stage in third, one minute, 21 seconds behind previous leader Isaac Del Toro, but the British cyclist launched a solo attack on the beyond-category climb to Colle delle Finestre — the same mountain that spelled heartbreak for him seven years ago — to ride clear of his overall rivals. Yates was openly sobbing after he crossed the line more than five minutes ahead of Del Toro. "When the route was released I always had in the back of my mind to try and do something here and close the chapter, let's say," an emotional Yates said, as he was trying to hold back tears. "I maybe look relaxed but I also had doubts this morning, if I could really do something, but the guys they encouraged me and believed in me, so yeah, thanks to them." With just the mostly ceremonial finish in Rome left on Sunday, Yates moved into the lead of the three-week race and is all but certain to lift the Trofeo Senza Fine (Trophy With No End) for the first time. Yates, who won the 2018 Spanish Vuelta, is 3 minutes, 56 seconds ahead of Mexico's Del Toro and 4:43 ahead of Ecuador's Richard Carapaz. "I was close, and this is a thing, but at the end I didn't win," said Del Toro, who was nevertheless smiling as he saluted at the finish. "I will just keep working and I will come back for sure. "You need to be a great winner, you need to be a great loser, and I think I am a good loser, and chapeau for them. Congrats." Redemption for Yates Yates' attack had echoes ofChris Froome's audacious moveon the Finestre in 2018 that earned him the trophy. It was also redemption for Yates, who had been leading the Giro at that point in 2018 having worn the pink jersey for 13 days, before cracking on that climb. It is the first time he has donned the maglia rosa since then. This time around, Yates made his move on the early slopes of the Finestre and had about 45 seconds on Del Toro and Carapaz when he hit the white gravel roads. The duo didn't collaborate behind him. "We could have been the strongest but we were not the cleverest," said Carapaz, the 2019 champion. "In the end he (Del Toro) lost the Giro, he didn't know how to race well and the most clever rider won." Yates crested the climb with a lead of 1:41 on the pair and caught up to Visma–Lease a Bike teammate Wout van Aert, who helped him pull farther away on the descent. Australian cyclist Chris Harper claimed his first individual victory in a Grand Tour on Saturday's 20th stage, a 205-kilometer (127-mile) leg from Verres to Sestriere. Yates was third, behind Alessandro Verre. "It's the peak of my career, I don't think anything will top this," Yates said. "I'm not getting any younger as well and to win these, especially the Giro, something that I've really targeted for many, many years … I think it's the best it will be." It brought an end to a spell of bad luck at the Giro for Yates, who also had to withdraw from the Italian Grand Tour in 2020 and 2022 — because of coronavirus and a knee injury. "I really have invested a lot of my career, my life, targeting this race," he said. "And yeah, a lot of setbacks. It's been hard to deal with." Del Toro:'No regrets' Del Toro is at the other end of his career and the 21-year-old Mexican rider — who has sparked cycling fever in his home country — has a glittering future after bursting onto the scene at the Giro, far surpassing expectations of him when the race started in Albania. "I cannot be more happy, because in the beginning, before in Albania, for sure a lot of people cannot believe that I can be here," Del Toro said. "The team always is having confidence in me in this type of things. The problem is me, trying to believe it. "I lose and I feel super disappointment but I don't want to cry in camera ... is like this, cycling. I have no regrets and for sure I will come back really, really strong from this." ___ AP cycling:https://apnews.com/hub/cycling

Redemption for Yates on epic mountain climb as he closes in on Giro d'Italia title

Redemption for Yates on epic mountain climb as he closes in on Giro d'Italia title SESTRIERE, Italy (AP) — Simon Yates produced one of t...
Piastri earns pole position at Spanish GP ahead of McLaren teammate NorrisNew Foto - Piastri earns pole position at Spanish GP ahead of McLaren teammate Norris

BARCELONA, Spain (AP) — Max Verstappen has his work cut out to keep hisSpanish Grand Prixstreak going after Oscar Piastri claimed pole position ahead of McLaren teammate Lando Norris on Saturday. The McLaren lockout of the front row gives the papaya-colored cars a big advantage over Verstappen, whose Red Bull will start Sunday's race from third on the grid. New rules for stiffer front wings in the race appeared to have zero impact on McLaren's speed over a single lap. Verstappen was never at the top of the time charts in the final session of qualifying, which turned into anotherduel between the McLarens. Points leader Piastri was behind Norris until he peeled off a blistering final effort and grabbed the edge on the starting grid. The race promises to be an equally scintillating fight between the teammates who have won six of the first eight races of the season and putVerstappen's grip on F1 in jeopardy. Piastri leads Norris by three points in the standings through the first third of the season. "It is going to be tough tomorrow," Verstappen said. "That doesn't mean we are not going to try." It was the Australian's fourth pole of the season. Piastri leads the field with four race victories, although Verstappen and Norris have topped the last two grands prix. Piastri won from pole position in China and Bahrain, while he also pipped a pole-sitting Verstappen to win in Saudi Arabia and Miami. His only blemish was losing to Verstappen after taking pole in Imola two rounds ago. The sensation of the F1 season blazed to a pace-setting lap in Spain that was two-tenths faster than Norris. Now he must make good on that by protecting his advantage on the long run from the starting grid to the first right-hand corner. "It has been a good weekend so far. The car has been mega, and glad to put in some good laps as well," Piastri said. "It is a long way to Turn 1 so I got to make sure I make a good start." Norris knows how difficult that can be. He took the pole last year, only forVerstappen to sweep past himat the start and hold on to win the race for a fourth time overall. "It is normally interesting, and we have a lot of quick guys behind us," Norris. Right behind Verstappen, Mercedes' George Russell and Ferrari's Lewis Hamilton start from fourth and fifth. 'Squeezing everything out of the car' Verstappen, who is 25 points off Piastri's lead, has won at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya for the past three years. But when asked if he hoped to be closer to his McLaren rivals during qualifying, Verstappen responded with a terse "No." "We were lacking all weekend compared to them," Verstappen said. "I'm here, squeezing everything out of the car. We had a decent Friday, made some final changes to the car but it wasn't enough to challenge for the pole." Verstappen had pointed to Barcelona as another race in which he hoped to challenge the McLarens following his win in Italy two rounds ago, and Red Bull boss Christian Horner said his team needed to stay close to the front-runners to have a chance to make gains later in the season. The four-time world champion now has to get by both McLarens and hold them off if he wants to cut into their leads. Yuki Tsunoda bottomed out for Red Bull and had the slowest time in the opening segment of qualifying. The Japanese driver will start from last place in a big blow for Verstappen's new teammate. Carlos Sainz also got culled early and will start from 18th in his Williams. That was the Spaniard's worst qualifying result of the season. Mercedes rookie Kimi Antonelli clocked the sixth best time, followed by Ferrari's Charles Leclerc, Alpine's Pierre Gasly, and Racing Bulls rookie Isack Hadjar. Home favoriteFernando Alonsoclosed out the top 10 for Aston Martin. Less flex, little impact There was a lot of talk in the paddock this week ahead of F1 reducing the flexibility of the car's front wings, which at high speed can reduce the effect of drag on a car. But the change didn't lead to any shakeup of the pecking order — and earned the scorn of seven-time world champion Hamilton. "It's just wasted everyone's money," Hamilton said. "It's literally changed nothing. Everyone's wings still bend." ___ AP auto racing:https://apnews.com/hub/auto-racing

Piastri earns pole position at Spanish GP ahead of McLaren teammate Norris

Piastri earns pole position at Spanish GP ahead of McLaren teammate Norris BARCELONA, Spain (AP) — Max Verstappen has his work cut out to ke...

 

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