Longtime Rep. Jerry Nadler will not seek reelection, calls for 'generational change'New Foto - Longtime Rep. Jerry Nadler will not seek reelection, calls for 'generational change'

Rep. Jerrold Nadler, a Democratic lawmaker who has represented parts of New York City in the U.S. House of Representatives for more than 32 years, will retire next year, the New York Times reported Sept. 1. Nadler, the 78-year-old former chair of the House Judiciary Committee,helped lead impeachment proceedingsagainst PresidentDonald Trumpduring his first term in the White House. Nadlertold the Times in an exclusive interview that "watching the Biden thing really said something about the necessity for generational change in the party, and I think I want to respect that." Questions surrounding former PresidentJoe Biden's age swirled during his 2024 reelection bid, and Biden eventually ended his campaign after a disastrous debate against Trump. In July 2024, Nadler wasamong those who said Bidenshould exit the presidential race. The longtime lawmaker,a graduate of Columbia University, first won election to Congress in 1992, after serving eight terms in the New York State Assembly. Although his district has been realigned or renumbered at least three times, Nadler continued to win reelection. New York Attorney General Letitia James took to X on Sept. 1 to say Nadler "dedicated himself to fighting for New Yorkers, Americans and the principles our country was built on, especially justice. His work made our nation better, and as he leaves public service, his legacy will never be forgotten." New York City Councilman Erik Bottcher said in a statement that Nadler is "among the most effective progressive leaders of our time, and his retirment marks the end of an era for New York and the nation." In June, Nadlerdemanded a congressional investigationafter an aide in his Manhattan office was handcuffed and detained by Department of Homeland Security officers. The incident came after the aide saw federal agents detaining migrants outside a courtroom in the same building as Nadler's office. Homeland Security spokeswoman Tricia McLaughlin responded in a statement that the aide "became verbally confrontational and physically blocked access to the office." The race to replace Nadler is likely to draw several contenders. At least one person had already announced plans to challenge him in the next election – Liam Elkind, a Democrat who co-founded the non-profit Invisible Hands Deliver during the COVID-19 pandemic. After news of the resignation broke on Sept. 1, Elkind, 26, shared on X that the first vote he ever cast was for Nadler. "He has led this district and this country with humanity, kindness, and intelligence. We are better for his leadership," Elkind said. "His progressive vision for this country is an inspiration to me, and I'm grateful that I grew up represented by him." This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Jerry Nadler won't seek reelection after decades serving in the House

Longtime Rep. Jerry Nadler will not seek reelection, calls for 'generational change'

Longtime Rep. Jerry Nadler will not seek reelection, calls for 'generational change' Rep. Jerrold Nadler, a Democratic lawmaker who ...
Xi to flaunt China's vision of new global order at military paradeNew Foto - Xi to flaunt China's vision of new global order at military parade

By Laurie Chen BEIJING (Reuters) -Chinese President Xi Jinping will host his country's largest-ever military parade this week, as he seeks to recast Beijing as the custodian of a post-U.S. international order at a time of deep geopolitical uncertainty. More than 20 world leaders including Russia's Vladimir Putin and reclusive North Korean leader Kim Jong Un will gather in Beijing for the September 3 "Victory Day" event marking 80 years since Japan's defeat at the end of World War Two. The highly choreographed spectacle aims to project China's military might and diplomatic clout amid doubts over the United States' global role, as President Donald Trump slashes foreign aid, retreats from international institutions and wages a sweeping trade war on allies and rivals alike. The unprecedented joint appearance of Xi flanked by Putin and Kim overseeing the showcase of cutting-edge equipment like hypersonic missiles and drones, may well be the defining image of the parade, an "Axis of Upheaval" defying the West. For Kim, who crossed into China on his special train early on Tuesday, it will be his first major multilateral event and the first time a North Korean leader has attended a Chinese military parade in 66 years. "The presence of Vladimir Putin, (Iran's) Masoud Pezeshkian, and Kim Jong Un underscores China's role as the world's leading authoritarian power," said Neil Thomas, a Chinese politics expert at the Asia Society Policy Institute's Center for China Analysis. The increase in leaders from Central Asian, West Asian and Southeast Asian countries attending this year's parade compared to the last one in 2015 highlight's Beijing's progress in regional diplomacy, Thomas added. Proceedings will kick off at 9 a.m. (0100GMT), according to China's official Xinhua news agency. Slovakian Prime Minster Robert Fico and Serbia's Aleksandar Vucic, both critical of sanctions on Russia over its war in Ukraine, are the only Western leaders attending. Trump, whose own June military parade drew the largest nationwide protests since his return to power, has repeatedly talked up his close relations with Xi, Putin and Kim but has failed to make any major diplomatic breakthroughs. 'MEMORY WAR' Earlier this week, Xi rallied leaders of developing nations to advocate for a more equal, multipolar world and promote the "correct historical perspective" of World War Two at a regional security forum in the port city of Tianjin. The parade too is part of a "memory war" in which China and Russia offer an alternative history to a Western narrative they believe underplays their role in fighting fascist forces, the Brookings Institution wrote in a paper last week. Xi has cast the war as a major turning point in the "great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation" in which it overcame Japan's invasion to become an economic and geopolitical powerhouse. While some residents have requested patriotic and military-themed haircuts ahead of the parade, such enthusiasm may be not be shared by all ordinary Chinese people. Downtown Beijing has been virtually paralysed by security measures and traffic controls in the weeks leading up to the parade. Nationwide, local governments have mobilised tens of thousands of volunteers and Communist Party members to monitor for any signs of potential unrest ahead of the parade, estimates based on online recruitment notices show. Taiwanese officials on Monday estimated Beijing was spending $5 billion - the equivalent of 2% of its entire defence budget - on the parade. A July post on Zhihu, China's equivalent of Quora, asked users what they looked forward to most about the parade. "I hope they'll spend less money and use it towards improving people's livelihoods," read one viral response which has since been deleted. Others had urged the government to declare a national holiday, a move it didn't take. (Reporting by Laurie Chen; Editing by John Geddie and Lincoln Feast.)

Xi to flaunt China's vision of new global order at military parade

Xi to flaunt China's vision of new global order at military parade By Laurie Chen BEIJING (Reuters) -Chinese President Xi Jinping will ...
Ranking the Democratic contenders for president in 2028New Foto - Ranking the Democratic contenders for president in 2028

Related video: Democrats recently won an Iowa state Senate district for the first time in 15 years, breaking the Republican supermajority in a race that could signal growing momentum for the party. Democrats are still licking their wounds from then-Vice President Kamala Harris's defeat last November — and grappling with the implications of President Trump's second term. For the moment, they are essentially a leaderless party. But that will change in due course. The 2028 presidential field looks wide open from this distance. But some prominent Democrats have already been making moves that seem plainly geared toward the next presidential cycle. The Hillranked the Republican presidential contendersSunday. Here are The Hill's rankings of where the Democratic contenders stand. The California governor, never a shrinking violet, has ramped up his criticisms of Trump in recent weeks — to his apparent benefit. Gavin Newsom has taken to trolling Trump on social media, often with postings that ape the president's idiosyncratic and hyperbolic language. In recent days, he has launched a line of merchandise in Trump's signature red bearing slogans like "Newsom was right about everything" and declaring in all caps "Many people are saying this is the greatest merchandise ever made." Yet it's not all fun and games. In a public conversation at a Politico forum late last week, he suggested Trump would run for an unconstitutional third term and called the president "simply the most destructive and damaging individual in my lifetime." The no-holds-barred approach appears to be paying off for Newsom. In a new national poll of Democratic primary voters from Emerson College, Newsom was well ahead of his two main rivals, Harris and former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg. Notably he had been third, behind both of them, when the same organization had conducted a poll in June. There are, of course, Newsom skeptics. They question the electability of such a stereotypically Californian candidate in the battleground states of the Rust Belt and Southwest. But for now, Newsom has catapulted himself to front-runner status. If Democratic voters want to supplant their party establishment, make a generational change and shift to the left, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez — "AOC" to fans and detractors alike — is the obvious choice. The New York congresswoman drives plenty of Republican voters to apoplexy, of course. But voters who are even somewhat sympathetic to her policies view her as a charismatic and politically courageous figure who can take the fight to the GOP rather than getting stuck on defense. Still only 35, Ocasio-Cortez is easily the most prominent Democratic politician of her generation, with an enormous social media following. Her policies cast aside the center-leftism that has prevailed among most of the party's upper reaches in recent decades, instead seeking Medicare for All, the Green New Deal, the abolition of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and a federal job guarantee. Is the platform too left-wing for battleground-state America — or the kind of agenda that can conjure up an excitement that has been lacking in Democratic politics since the Obama years? Conservative Americans would be energized to oppose her. But the big crowds she drew alongside Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) at a series of rallies earlier this year demonstrate her appeal to progressives. Harris will soon embark on a book tour to publicize her "107 Days" campaign memoir. The book's title refers to the length of her campaign following then-President Biden's dramatic decision to abandon his quest for reelection last year. The book tour will also be a broad test of how much appeal Harris has among the Democratic base. Despite her prominence — vice president, 2020 presidential candidate and a senator from the nation's most populous state — Harris remains something of an enigma. The 2020 bid launched with massive fanfare but ultimately proved underwhelming. Her performance during her 2024 sprint had striking highs, as when she was widely judged the winner of her sole debate with Trump; and awkward lows, like when she was asked on ABC's "The View" whether she would have done anything differently from Biden and averred that "not a thing comes to mind." If she goes forward with another bid for the presidency, much will depend upon which of two lenses Democratic voters view her through: a candidate who did her best in extremely difficult conditions in 2024 and could do better second time around; or a politician who never quite lives up to her billing, and from whom the party ought to move on. Gov. Wes Moore recently found himself in a bizarre, Trump-related spotlight. The president claimed the Maryland governor had told him, at the Army-Navy football game late last year, that Trump was "the greatest president of my lifetime." Moore responded to that on social mediawith a simple "lol"and told a Maryland radio station Trump was recounting an "imaginary conversation." Video from the game broadcast by Fox News bore out Moore's version of events, with no words close to what Trump had claimed being exchanged. Moore has adopted a kind of Newsom-lite approach recently, tangling with Trump on social media. At 46 years old, he would bring some of the generational change of Ocasio-Cortez without nearly so left-wing a policy agenda. Moore is not that well-known nationwide yet, however — which also means he hasn't really been tested at the highest level. Gov. JB Pritzker is yet another Democratic governor who has locked horns with Trump — most recently over the president's musings that he might deploy the National Guard to Chicago or increase the number of ICE agents in the city. Pritzker last week told The Associated Press that that it was "illegal, unconstitutional, frankly it's un-American" to send troops into a major American city in the absence of an emergency. In an earlier statement, Pritzker accused Trump of trying to "manufacture a crisis" and "abuse his power." The combative Pritzker, a scion of the family that owns the Hyatt hotel chain, is vastly rich. Forbes estimates him to be the wealthiest political officeholder in America, with anet worth of $3.9 billion. That could be a double-edged sword. He doesn't have to worry about raising money from donors for a presidential campaign, but his wealth could make it harder for him to win over working-class Americans. Gov. Gretchen Whitmer has been seen as a rising Democratic star for some time. Of late, she has been less openly antagonistic toward Trump than some of her party colleagues. But that approach has had mixed results. She went viral in April for all the wrong reasons, using a folder to shield her face from photographers when she was in the Oval Office as Trump signed executive orders. Whitmer has tried to laugh that off, and her broader argument is that her chief obligation is to look after the interests of her Michigan electorate. Whitmer's success in winning two terms in a key battleground state recommends her to many Democratic insiders. An authentic and engaging personality helps her too. Whitmer could face a problem not of her own making, however. Would the party be reluctant to nominate a woman after doing so twice in the past three election cycles — and losing both times? Pete Buttigieg is one of the best media performers in the party. He also has a strong appeal to the highly educated and affluent voters who are increasingly well-represented among the Democratic base. Buttigieg was one of the surprises of the 2020 cycle, performing better in the primaries than many people had predicted. But the highest elected office he has held is as mayor of South Bend, Ind. And in 2020, Buttigieg performed abysmally with Black voters, also a key part of the base. One of the big "what ifs" of the 2024 Harris campaign revolves around Shapiro. Would he — the popular governor of a crucial battleground — have been a better choice as vice presidential nominee than her eventual running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz? Shapiro is a polished and ambitious performer. He could, however, fall victim to the party's deep schism over Israel and its conduct in Gaza if that conflict remains salient for primary voters in the 2028 cycle. Shapiro, who is Jewish, is one of the most pro-Israel voices in a party whose voters have shifted markedly toward the Palestinian cause. An Economist/YouGov poll last week asked Americans which side they sympathize with more in the conflict. Just 15 percent of Democrats named Israel while 44 percent aligned with the Palestinians. Shapiro, who had at one stage drew a clumsy comparison between pro-Palestinian protesters and the Ku Klux Klan, is not well-placed to navigate those crosscurrents. The Connecticut senator could, at least in theory, offer a "best of all worlds" approach to Democratic voters. Sen. Chris Murphy has been emphatic in his criticisms of Trump, whom he sees as a danger to democracy, and has made effective use of social media. But he's also a broadly conventional senator who isn't easy to characterize as outside the American mainstream. The challenge for Murphy would be how to outshine some of the bigger names on this list. Gov. Andy Beshear has enjoyed remarkable success for a Democrat in a deep-red state. He won reelection to a second term by 5 points in 2023. That's noteworthy, to say the least, given Trump's 26-point victory in the state in 2020 and his 31-point romp in 2024. Beshear has built that electoral record in part by focusing on comparatively nonpartisan topics like infrastructure investment. But he has held the liberal line on at least one hot-button topic: in March, he vetoed a Republican bill that would have almost completely banned abortion in his state. Could Beshear be a 2028 dark horse? Maybe. But it's just as likely that primary voters want a more fiery and progressive standard-bearer. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. For the latest news, weather, sports, and streaming video, head to The Hill.

Ranking the Democratic contenders for president in 2028

Ranking the Democratic contenders for president in 2028 Related video: Democrats recently won an Iowa state Senate district for the first ti...
ACC fines Florida State $50K for storming the field after upsetting No. 8 AlabamaNew Foto - ACC fines Florida State $50K for storming the field after upsetting No. 8 Alabama

Florida State is getting a slap on the wrist, barely after its massive upset win over No. 8 Alabama on Saturday. The ACC fined Florida State $50,000 on Monday after its fans stormed the field at Doak Campbell Stadium in Tallahassee on Saturday. Thecelebration came in the wake of the Seminoles' 31-17 upset winover the Crimson Tide. [Join or create a Yahoo Fantasy Football league for the 2025 NFL season] While it's meant as a deterrent for fans, the ACC's fine is merely a fraction of what the SEC hands out. Had the roles been reversed and it was Alabama fans who rushed the field in Tuscaloosa, the SEC would have dished out a $500,000 fine. The ACC instead starts at $50,000, and then will increase to $100,000 upon a second offense in the same season. If there is a third, it will double again to $200,000. WATCH: Florida State fans storm the field after stunning #8 Alabama 31-17 in Tallahassee.pic.twitter.com/O3L3O3oP2Z — Resist Times (@resistupdates)August 31, 2025 Still, it's hard to imagine that anyone in the Florida State athletic department is too upset by the fine. The Seminoles, after a brutal season last year where they went just 2-10 and only beat a single FBS-level opponent, entered Saturday's contest as 14-point underdogs. They undoubtedly looked like the better team against Alabama, and even broke open a 24-7 lead after their opening drive after halftime. Quarterback Tommy Castellanos went 9-of-14 passing for 152 yards, and was also their leading rusher with 78 yards and a touchdown on 16 carries. The Seminoles had 230 total rushing yards as a group, and all four of their touchdowns came on the ground. The loss will onlyincrease pressure on Kalen DeBoer in Tuscaloosa. DeBoer went 9-4 last season, his first after replacing Nick Saban, and has now led Alabama to its first Week 1 loss since 2001. The Crimson Tide will return home to take on Louisiana Monroe on Saturday night, while Florida State will host East Texas A&M.

ACC fines Florida State $50K for storming the field after upsetting No. 8 Alabama

ACC fines Florida State $50K for storming the field after upsetting No. 8 Alabama Florida State is getting a slap on the wrist, barely after...
Bizarre Trevor Story home run that looked like foul ball is shortest of the MLB season and one for Fenway Park history bookNew Foto - Bizarre Trevor Story home run that looked like foul ball is shortest of the MLB season and one for Fenway Park history book

Fenway Park produces home runs like no other ballpark. And they don't get more Fenway than this. During the sixth inning of Monday's game between the Red Sox and Cleveland Guardians, Boston shortstop Trevor Story hit a fly ball down the right-field line. Guardians right fielder Jhonkensy Noel made a play on the ball near the foul pole. At first glance, the ball bounced off his glove and onto the top of the low-standing outfield wall. It appeared to be a foul ball. Noel gathered the ball and casually threw it back to the infield, believing it was a foul, as it was called in real time. [Join or create a Yahoo Fantasy Football league for the 2025 NFL season] But replay told another story. Boston challenged the call on the field, and it was changed upon review. The ball actually glanced off Noel's glove and directly into the foul pole, affectionately known in Boston as the Pesky Pole for former Red Sox shortstop Johnny Pesky. Trevor Story just hit one of the strangest home runs everpic.twitter.com/ZWLUHgrTNF — Jomboy Media (@JomboyMedia)September 1, 2025 This was no foul ball. Instead, it was a solo home run that extended Boston's lead to 6-3, much to the delight of the Fenway faithful. The Red Sox went on to securea 6-4 win. Officially, Pesky Pole sits 302 feet from home plate, making it the shortest distance needed for a home run in MLB. Fenway is home to the shortest home runs of MLB's Statcast era, and Story's home run Monday is now part of that list. Per MLB's Sarah Langs, Story's is the shortest home run of the 2025 season and the second-shortest in the history of the Statcast era, which started in 2015. Shortest over-the-wall (non-inside-the-park) home runs under Statcast (2015):7/29/17 Lorenzo Cain: 302 ftToday Trevor Story: 306 ft9/18/19 Stephen Vogt: 307 ft6/4/25 Ceddanne Rafaela: 308 ftAll Pesky Pole homershttps://t.co/GWy4UlkCrg — Sarah Langs (@SlangsOnSports)September 1, 2025 Story's fly ball didn't go far. It didn't have to. Surely he will gladly accept his entry into the Pesky Pole history book.

Bizarre Trevor Story home run that looked like foul ball is shortest of the MLB season and one for Fenway Park history book

Bizarre Trevor Story home run that looked like foul ball is shortest of the MLB season and one for Fenway Park history book Fenway Park prod...

 

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