Brothers skip Pride jerseys; Panthers lose to Maple Leafs 6-2
Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 20:30:31 GMT
SUNRISE, Fla. (AP) — Brothers Eric and Marc Staal of the Florida Panthers declined to wear special Pride-themed warmup jerseys ahead of the team’s 6-2 loss to the Toronto Maple Leafs on Thursday.The jerseys were part of Florida’s Pride night game in support of the area’s LGBTQ community, and the brothers cited their religion as the reason for the decision.“We carry no judgement on how people choose to live their lives, and believe that all people should be welcome in all aspects of the game of hockey,” the Staal brothers said in a statement. “Having said that, we feel that by us wearing a Pride jersey it goes against our Christian beliefs.”After the loss, Eric Staal said he wanted to stick with the brothers’ statement and “try my best to move forward.” Marc Staal was not made available to the media.While the Staal brothers declined to participate, Russian goaltender Sergei Bobrovsky was one of the Panthers who went ahead with the Pride-themed jerseys.The Chicago Blackhaw...Historic building in downtown Miami evacuated after being deemed unsafe
Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 20:30:31 GMT
Fire officials ordered an emergency evacuation after a building in downtown Miami was deemed unsafe.Offices were cleared out on Thursday at the historic Huntington Building, located along the 100 block of Southeast First Street.The order was given after a fire inspection revealed illegal remodeling compromised emergency escape routes.Management for the 13-floor building is working with city officials to determine the necessary repairs before people can safely return to the structure.Meet Rachel Reeves — Britain’s next chancellor?
Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 20:30:31 GMT
Listen on Spotify Apple Music Google Play EN_Google_Podcasts_Badge Created with Sketch. Stitcher .st0{fill:#EB8A23;} .st1{fill:#FAC617;} .st2{fill:#612368;} .st3{fill:#3792C4;} .st4{fill:#C33727;} Acast Westminster Insider profiles the woman who could be running Britain alongside Keir Starmer in a year’s time. Host Ailbhe Rea sits down with Labour Shadow Chancellor Rachel Reeves to explore her backgr...Rachel Reeves: ‘I’m sure I have’ kissed a Tory
Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 20:30:31 GMT
LONDON — Rachel Reeves is “sure” she has kissed a Tory and says she would encourage others to be less “tribal, in politics and in life.”The shadow chancellor joins the Labour leader, Keir Starmer, in dismissing the “never kissed a Tory” badge of honor favoured by some of her more left-wing Labour colleagues. “I’m sure I have,” she tells a new episode of POLITICO’s Westminster Insider podcast. “Unlike maybe some of my colleagues I don’t go around voter ID-ing people.”The debate was rekindled last year when Shadow Culture Secretary Lucy Powell wore a T-shirt emblazoned with “never kissed a Tory” to a Pride event in Manchester. The slogan was popular in some Labour circles, particularly during the leadership of the left-winger Jeremy Corbyn, but is seen by the more centrist Starmer and Reeves as alienating crucial swing voters.“I don’t think we need to be quite so tribal in politics and in life,” Reeves says of the phrase. “It’s good to be challenged p...The toxic legacy Putin is leaving Ukraine
Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 20:30:31 GMT
Jamie Dettmer is opinion editor at POLITICO Europe. Britain has pushed back hard against Russia’s specious accusation that the United Kingdom is engaging in nuclear brinkmanship, after its decision to supply Ukraine with armor-piercing depleted uranium (DU) tank shells, which will be sent alongside the Challenger 2 tanks London is giving Kyiv.Russian President Vladimir Putin and his aides argue the shells have a “nuclear component” and that Britain is, therefore, triggering nuclear escalation with the deployment of the DU rounds, as former Russian President and now National Security Council Deputy Chairman Dmitry Medvedev told reporters the shells increase the odds of nuclear escalation.But as munitions experts point out, DU is incapable of triggering a chain reaction. It is the material left after the enrichment of natural uranium — which is used for nuclear warheads and reactor fuel — and at 1.7 times denser than lead, when rounds are tipped with it, they can penetrate the ar...EU-speak, now brought to you by AI
Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 20:30:31 GMT
Welcome to Declassified, a weekly humor column.In the words of a former boss: “We could automate your job.”That is of course nonsense. There’s no way even the most sophisticated software could come up with a list of offensive nicknames for Donald Trump — including “mangled apricot hell beast” — in a little under a week, so I’m safe. But such programs are now playing a bigger and bigger — and dumber and dumber — role in society and politics.You may have seen this week what is perhaps the low point of European politics (with the high point being that Hungarian MEP caught fleeing a lockdown-breaking gay orgy, which will one day be commemorated with a massive statue in Brussels’ Grand Place), when Green MEP Daniel Freund and Hungarian government spokesperson Zoltán Kovács wrote raps (yes, raps) slamming each other using the chatbot ChatGPT. The exchange was every bit as terrible as you would imagine. Freund’s rap about Hungarian Prime...The age of impunity
Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 20:30:31 GMT
Ivo Daalder, former U.S. ambassador to NATO, is president of the Chicago Council on Global Affairs and host of the weekly podcast “World Review with Ivo Daalder.”Russian President Vladimir Putin is now wanted for war crimes, with the International Criminal Court issuing a warrant for the his arrest for the illegal abduction of children from war-torn Ukraine to Russia.Putin isn’t about to face trial in the Hague — nor is he likely to be arrested when he travels abroad. But his face has now been indelibly plastered on wanted posters around the world. And much like Charles Taylor of Sierra Leone and Slobodan Milošević of Serbia, Putin faces the risk of one day being caught and held to account for his crimes.Accountability lies at the core of the rule of law. Those accused of committing crimes are arrested, prosecuted and tried, with those found guilty punished for their deeds — at least that’s the theory. In practice, however, accountability is hard, especially in international setting...For Boris Johnson, every option looks bleak
Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 20:30:31 GMT
LONDON — In a different era, it had the makings of a good day for Boris Johnson. TV cameras pointed in his direction, the world’s media hanging off his every word — and the scene set in the House of Commons chamber for a new Brexit purity test. But the world has moved on since 2019, and things did not go according to plan. Delivering his defense on Wednesday afternoon at the Commons privileges committee hearing on Partygate, Johnson seemed impatient and tetchy. His pleas of innocence rang hollow in the eyes of his interrogators. Behind him, his lawyer sighed and rolled his eyes.Along the corridor that same afternoon, in the House of Commons chamber for the vote on the “Stormont brake” — a central part of Rishi Sunak’s new Brexit deal — only 21 of Johnson’s 355 fellow Tory MPs followed him through the “no”0 lobby to reject the deal outright. Johnson has always been one of the party’s most transactional politicians, able to embrace endless contradiction...Barricades and stinking bin bags: Welcome to France, your majesty!
Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 20:30:31 GMT
PARIS — When King Charles III sets foot on French soil this weekend on his first overseas visit as monarch, he may not get quite the red carpet welcome he was expecting.The last few days in Paris have been marked by rioting in trash-strewn streets, turmoil in parliament and an embattled Emmanuel Macron trying to save his second presidential term from disaster. Scenes in the French capital at times have been reminiscent of “Les Misérables,” with almost nightly protests, barricades of rotting bin bags and a spirit bordering on revolutionary. That the cause of the chaos is Macron’s wildly unpopular decision to raise the pension age —rather than any animosity to Charles himself — will come as little comfort to the British. “A state visit has an element of splendor, with a gala dinner, and it’s not compatible with what’s happening — the demonstrations across Paris, the bins spilling out on the street,” said Pierre-Henri Dumont, an opposition MP for the conservative Les Républic...‘It’s 50-50’: Erdoğan risks defeat in Turkey’s knife-edge election
Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 20:30:31 GMT
ANKARA — If civil servants in Ankara are an accurate barometer of shifting fronts in Turkey’s national politics, then the country’s longest serving leader, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, really could be in trouble in May’s election.The main opposition, the Republican People’s Party (CHP), says bureaucrats are already sending in their resumes in preparation for a new order, sensing that this could be the end of Erdoğan’s more-than-two-decade dominance over the state.That would be a relief to many in the West, who are increasingly frustrated by the Islamist populist’s confrontational statesmanship in a strategic heavyweight of 85 million people. In the past months alone, Turkey has quietly provided Russia with clandestine trade routes to beat sanctions, imposed a veto on Sweden’s entry into NATO and engaged Greece in high-risk brinkmanship with fighter jets over the Aegean.But is the CHP reading too much into the flurry of CVs? Are the functionaries simply hedging their bets?Possibly, bu...Latest news
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