Friday, February 28, 2025

Trump accepts second state visit to UK, reveals letter from King Charles

President Donald Trump accepted an invitation on Thursday from King Charles III for a second state visit to the United Kingdom.

The invite came in a letter presented to Trump by U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer, who is meeting with Trump at the White House regarding ending the war in Ukraine.

"This is really special. This has never happened before. This is unprecedented," Starmer said as he was sitting next to Trump in the Oval Office. 

"I think that just symbolizes the strength of the relationship between us. This is a very special letter. I think the last state visit was a tremendous success," he continued. "His majesty the king wants to make this even better than that." 

UK'S STARMER MEETS TRUMP AT WHITE HOUSE AMID DIVIDE BETWEEN US, EUROPE OVER UKRAINE PEACE DEAL

"What I haven’t got yet is your answer," Starmer then said, drawing laughs. 

"The answer is yes, on behalf our wonderful First Lady Melania and myself, the answer is yes and we look forward to being there and honoring the king and honoring really your country," Trump responded. "Your country is a fantastic country." 

WHAT WE KNOW ABOUT THE US-UKRAINE MINERAL DEAL SO FAR

Trump described Charles "beautiful" and "wonderful man." 

"I’ve gotten to know him very well actually, first term and now, a second term," he added. 

Starmer said he would "happily" take Trump's acceptance of the invite to King Charles III.



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King invites Trump for 'unprecedented' second state visit

Keir Starmer hands the US president an invitation letter as the pair meet at the White House.

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Thursday, February 27, 2025

Travel ban for man who 'tortured' women in Highland dungeon

The first order of its kind to be imposed by a Scottish court prevents Kevin Booth from leaving the UK for five years.

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Wednesday, February 26, 2025

Bristol Palin 'not sure what the future holds' as she battles facial paralysis

Bristol Palin is sharing an update on her facial paralysis.

Palin, daughter of former Alaskan Gov. Sarah Palin, has experienced no muscle movement on the left side of her face since January. The 34-year-old has been trying alternative medicine, such as acupuncture, to help heal the paralysis.

"If I just keep my mouth shut, it's not as noticeable," she told her Instagram followers on Monday. "We are day 35, officially five weeks since the left side of my face went paralyzed. I still have no muscle movement on the left side. I don't really feel much."

"I've done everything imaginable to resolve this. I'm not sure what else I should do. But I've spent the last 35 days doing something every single day to try to fix this, and nothing has helped so far. So I'm not sure what the future holds, but this is the update. Day 35. Still no muscle movement."

JOSH BROLIN CONTRACTED BELL'S PALSY DUE TO EXTREME STRESS

Palin revealed she had been dealing with facial paralysis on Jan. 29.

"I woke up nine days ago with a little weird sensation in my face," Palin told her followers at the time via her Instagram story. "My mouth was pulling this way and it just felt a little off. So I went, looked in the mirror. I’m like ‘Wow. This is looking a little weird.’"

"Within a couple hours the entire left side of my face was numb and just paralyzed," she recalled. "Couldn’t really blink my eye. Definitely had no movement on [the left side] of my face. So crazy."

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Palin had gone to the doctor, who "ran tests" and scans, but "nothing came back in all the results." She had been prescribed "steroids" and "other medications" at the time.

Doctors noted the facial paralysis could have been caused by "a case of Bell’s palsy," which could have been brought on by stress or lack of sleep.

Bell's palsy is a condition that causes "sudden weakness in the muscles on one side of the face," according to the Mayo Clinic. The weakness is typically short-term, and the exact cause is unknown.

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Palin had thought she was getting a little better on day eight as she had gained a little feeling back on the left side of her face.

"I know I look crazy right now, but this has been such an improvement from what I was looking like," she admitted on Instagram stories at the time. "I’m finally starting to get some of the sensation back. It’s been a little painful the last two days, which is a [good] sign. It’s a good indication that it’s getting better. Praise the lord!" 

"But the next time that I look in the mirror and I pick myself apart where it’s like, ‘Oh my nose is long. I want a nose job. I want to do this. I want to do that,’ I am going to remember this and I am just going to be so thankful for a normal functioning face 'cause this has been wild," Palin added.



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American loses UK appeal to become legally non-binary

Lord Justice Singh says the issue is "better suited to resolution in Parliament than the courts".

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Tuesday, February 25, 2025

VA Dem slams DOGE fans, compares job cuts to the Holocaust: ‘First they came for the Jews...’

A Virginia state delegate who compared DOGE cuts to the Holocaust was lambasted by a GOP leader who called the remarks "utterly insensitive and hyperbolic."

State Del. Brandon Cole, D-Fredericksburg, invoked a famous Holocaust-related quote from a reformed German clergyman who once identified with the Nazi Party during a hearing last week.

House Minority Leader Todd Gilbert, R-Woodstock, told Fox News Digital that Cole should apologize to Holocaust survivors and "every citizen of Virginia" after he associated DOGE's targeting of government jobs to the extermination of millions of Jews by the German Nazi regime.

"Comparing the loss of some government jobs to the Holocaust is an insult to the memory of the millions who were slaughtered [by the Nazi regime]," Gilbert said.

During a hearing of an "emergency" panel addressing the effects of DOGE on the Virginia workforce, Cole claimed that his constituents are within the congressional district that has the highest concentration of federal workers in the state.

Cole represents a portion of Rep. Eugene Vindman’s, D-Va., 7th District. Democratic Rep. Don Beyer’s 8th District to the north in Alexandria houses more federal workers, according to the Virginia Public Access Project.

"I must say that I have seen so many different people on social media rather excited about these [DOGE] cuts; rather excited about these job losses," Cole said.

CNN ANALYST REWORDS HOLOCAUST POEM TO WARN ABOUT FBI'S MCCABE REMOVAL

"And that reminds me of a quote from a long time ago that said: 'At first they came for the Jews, and I didn't speak up because I wasn't Jewish. Then they came for the trade unionists, and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a trade unionist. And then when they came for me, there was no one to speak up because everyone had been taken.'"

The quote was a rough translation of a famous 1946 "confession" by Rev. Martin Niemöller, a minister who had reportedly briefly identified with Adolf Hitler’s Nazi Party before he became a high-profile critic in the late 1930s and was thrown into a concentration camp.

Niemöller's confession, "Habe ich geschwiegen" – or "I had remained silent" – described the guilt felt by many German intellectuals as Hitler accumulated more and more power and persecuted more and more people in his rise as kanzler, or chancellor.

In the hearing, Cole said he recalled a similar emergency committee being empaneled to deal with the 2020 onset of the coronavirus pandemic.

"The difference between then and now is we had extra money coming in. We're not going to have extra money coming in. We're actually going to be losing money over this situation," he warned.

"And I'm very much interested in how the loss of that money of federal income is going to impact our communities."

TOWN ONCE POPULATED BY NAZIS RECONCILES WITH ITS PAST

He also expressed concern as to how DOGE would treat the upcoming opening of a Spotsylvania veterans' hospital, noting the once rural but increasingly suburban county receives a large amount of federal funding. About 144,000 Virginians are federal employees, according to the Congressional Research Service.

Fox News Digital reached out to Cole’s offices in Richmond and Fredericksburg for comment. 

Fox News Digital also reached out for reaction from committee chairman David Bulova, D-Fairfax, and vice chairman Robert Bloxom, R-Cape Charles.

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Lt. Gov. Winsome Sears, the current Republican frontrunner in the 2025 governor’s race, slammed Cole’s comments.

"Virginia Dems disgustingly compared cutting wasteful spending to the Holocaust – trivializing the murder of 6 million Jews," Sears wrote on X. 

"Did Josh Cole just compare cutting government waste to the Holocaust?" asked Mason DiPalma, an official with the Republican State Leadership Committee.

"Virginia Dem[ocrats] really have no message and it shows."



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Americanswers... on 5 Live! What's Elon Musk's latest threat to federal workers?

And will the president listen to European leaders this week?

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Monday, February 24, 2025

Mills wins 3,000m indoor title with championship record

George Mills wins the men's 3,000m title at the 2025 British Indoor Championship in a record time for the event.

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Sunday, February 23, 2025

Gunman at Pennsylvania hospital killed after shots fired, officials say

A gunman was killed after shots were fired at a Pennsylvania hospital in York County on Saturday morning, a spokesperson said.

Law enforcement responded to a 911 call at around 10:45 a.m. of an "active threat" at UPMC Memorial, Ted Czech, a public information officer at York County's Office of Emergency Management, told Fox News Digital.

"The threat has now been neutralized and an investigation is underway," Czech said. The hospital is located at 1701 Innovation Dr.

No patients were injured in the incident, hospital spokesperson Susan Manko confirmed.

"We have received confirmed reports of a gunman at UPMC Memorial, and shots fired," Manko told Fox News.

"The gunman has been apprehended, and no patients have been injured. The hospital is now secure," Manko said. "This is a fluid situation; law enforcement is on premises and is managing the situation. We are grateful to all the local law enforcement agencies for their quick response."

Fox News' Brian Powers contributed to this report. 

This is a developing story. Check back for updates.



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Watch: The moment six Israeli hostages are released

Four of the men were kidnapped on 7 October 2023, while the two have been held for a decade.

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Carts, catwalk and carnival: Photos of the week

A selection of news photographs from around the world.

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Saturday, February 22, 2025

Ukraine war 'will end soon' under Trump's leadership, US national security advisor vows

President Donald Trump’s leadership will soon bring an end to the war between Russia and Ukraine, National Security Advisor Mike Waltz vowed, assuring that Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy would sign the deal. 

"Under Trump, this war will end. And it will end soon," Waltz said at the Conservative Political Action Conference near the nation's capital on Friday. "He is the president of peace."

Waltz defended the Trump administration’s decision to come to the negotiating table with Russia during meetings in Saudi Arabia on Tuesday, echoing Thursday's sentiments from Vice President JD Vance. 

"You can’t end a war unless you talk to both sides, and that’s what we’re doing," Waltz said.

TRUMP'S FRUSTRATIONS WITH ZELENKSYY ESCALATE AS US TURNS UP PRESSURE ON UKRAINE TO REACH PEACE DEAL 

Waltz also said that the U.S. was coordinating with Ukraine, Russia and other European allies to determine everyone’s needs in order to secure a peace deal.  

On Thursday, Waltz told reporters at the White House that Trump’s frustration with Zelenskyy was increasing, and that Wednesday's discussions between U.S. Special Envoy for Ukraine and Russia Keith Kellogg and Ukrainian officials were focused on helping Ukraine to "understand" the war must end. 

"It certainly isn't in Russia's interest or in the American people's interest for this war to grind on forever and ever and ever," Waltz said on Thursday. "So a key part of his conversation was helping President Zelenskyy understand this war needs to come to an end."

The increased pressure on Ukraine to agree to a deal comes on the heels of several tense days between Trump and Zelenskyy, as each hurled insults back and forth toward one another after meetings between U.S. and Russian officials. 

Ukraine was absent from the meetings, and Zelenskyy told reporters in Turkey that "nobody decides anything behind our back," after stressing in recent days that Kyiv would not agree to a peace negotiation without Ukraine’s input.

TRUMP AND ZELENSKYY WAR OF WORDS HEATS UP EVEN AS US LOOKS TO WIND DOWN WAR IN UKRAINE 

While Zelenskyy accused Trump of perpetuating Russian "disinformation" on Wednesday, Trump took a jab back and labeled Zelenskyy a "dictator" who has failed his country and suggested Ukraine initiated the war. Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Special Envoy to the Middle East Steve Witkoff and Waltz met in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, on Tuesday with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and President Vladimir Putin’s foreign affairs advisor, Yuri Ushakov, to hash out ways to end the conflict.

U.S. officials also have met with Ukrainian officials about a peace deal, and Kellogg said Wednesday in a post on X that the U.S. remains committed to ending the war and finding ways to establish "sustainable peace."



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Musk wields his Doge chainsaw - but is a backlash brewing?

Facing constituents angry about the impact of sweeping government job cuts, some Republicans are expressing concern.

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Friday, February 21, 2025

Spurs star Victor Wembanyama to miss the remainder of the season over blood clot: report

San Antonio Spurs star Victor Wembanyama will miss the remainder of the season after being diagnosed with deep vein thrombosis in his right shoulder, the team announced on Thursday. 

The news came amid the Spurs’ push for a playoff spot in the Western Conference.

Wembanyama, the reigning Rookie of the Year, was diagnosed after his return from the All-Star weekend in San Francisco, the team said. He is expected to miss the remainder of the regular season. 

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Deep vein thrombosis (DVT) is a condition when blood clots form in one or more of the deep veins in the body, according to the Mayo Clinic. The condition typically affects the legs, and can cause swelling and pain.  

According to ESPN, the team said they believe it is an isolated issue for the young star. 

SPURS TEAMMATES VICTOR WEMBANYAMA, CHRIS PAUL DISQUALIFIED FROM NBA ALL-STAR GAME SKILLS CHALLENGE

Wembanyama was averaging 24.3 points, 11 rebounds, 3.8 blocks and 3.7 assists and is the first NBA player to have taken 403 3-pointers and blocked 176 shots in a season – something he accomplished before the All-Star break. 

He was largely considered the frontrunner for defensive player of the year, but will no longer be eligible after failing to hit the 65-game minimum mark. 

The news marks the second major setback for the Spurs, who have been without head coach Gregg Popovich since November after he suffered a stroke. 

The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.


 



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Mitch McConnell announces he will not run for re-election

The Republican senator has spent 40 years in Congress, but said he has "unfinished business" before he goes.

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Thursday, February 20, 2025

SpaceX rocket debris crashes into Poland

Debris from a Space X Falcon 9 rocket lit up skies across Europe before crashing into Poland.

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Wednesday, February 19, 2025

MAGA loyalists take aim at GOP senator as key Trump defense post sparks controversy: 'Why the opposition?'

A key Republican on the Senate Armed Services Committee is reportedly on the fence about one of President Donald Trump's Defense nominees over his stance on a nuclear Iran - a potential roadblock to his confirmation given the GOP's slim Senate majority. 

Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., is reportedly hesitant about the nomination of former Defense official Elbridge Colby to serve as the under secretary of defense for policy, a key Defense post that remains unmanned amid the ongoing confirmation process.

"Senator Cotton is focused on ensuring all defense nominees commit to supporting President Trump’s position that Iran must not have a nuclear weapon, and Cotton will be addressing this in meetings and hearings with the nominees," a source familiar with the matter told Fox News Digital as they await Colby's paperwork to proceed with the nomination process.

Colby has previously suggested that the U.S. living with a nuclear Iran is more plausible than countering the country's nuclear assets, a position that reportedly is causing concern from the key Senator whose support could determine his confirmation.

MCCONNELL'S MENTAL ACUITY TARGETED BY TRUMP AFTER EX-SENATE LEADER JOINS DEMS AGAINST CABINET NOMINEES

Cotton's potential opposition to the Trump nominee sparked debate among prominent MAGA figures on social media.

RUMP'S KEY TO CABINET CONFIRMATIONS: SENATE-TURNED-VP VANCE'S GIFT OF GAB

"Why the opposition to Bridge? What does he think Bridge will do?" Elon Musk wrote in a post on X of reports that Cotton was not on board with the nomination.

"The effort to undermine President Trump continues in the US Senate @SenTomCotton is working behind the scenes to stop Trump’s pick, Elbridge Colby, from getting confirmed at DOD," Charlie Kirk, founder of Turning Point USA, said on X. "Colby is one of the most important pieces to stop the Bush/Cheney cabal at DOD. Why is Tom Cotton doing this?"

"Is Tom Cotton's resistance to Bridge Colby more about IRI than anything else? As in maybe Cotton's blocking Colby ain't that principled. . ." American Majority CEO Ned Ryun posted on X.

"Cotton has other problems that he doesn’t want exposed. He’ll support Colby," former Trump National Security Advisor Michael Flynn claimed on X.

Vice President JD Vance expressed support for the Trump nominee, writing that "Bridge has consistently been correct about the big foreign policy debates of the last 20 years."

"He was critical of the Iraq War, which made him unemployable in the 2000s era conservative movement. He built a relationship with CNAS when it was one of the few institutions that would even hire a foreign policy realist," Vance said. 

Colby, who worked in the Pentagon during Trump's first term, has also received endorsements from other members of the Senate.

".@ElbridgeColby is a fighter who will execute President Trump’s mandate to end decades of DC foreign policy failures and stop forever wars abroad—The reason the establishment fears him is because he’s 100% aligned with Trump's agenda," Sen. Bernie Moreno, R-Ohio, wrote on X. "Senate Republicans should confirm him ASAP!" 

Colby's Senate confirmation hearing remains unscheduled as the chamber works to confirm more of Trump's cabinet nominees.

Fox News Digital reached out to Colby for comment.



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What does new Jaguars deal mean for Rees-Zammit?

Louis Rees-Zammit has re-signed with the Jacksonville Jaguars, but what does the deal mean for the former Wales rugby star?

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Tuesday, February 18, 2025

Tearful chair of Munich Security Conference expresses 'fear' in farewell address after blistering Vance speech

The outgoing chairman of the Munich Security Conference delivered an emotional farewell speech that ended in tears, after he expressed "fear" over Vice President JD Vance's blistering speech to the annual conference on international security policy.

"This conference started as a trans-Atlantic conference," German diplomat and chair of the conference Christoph Heusgen said Sunday. "After the speech of Vice President Vance on Friday, we have to fear that our common value base is not that common anymore. I'm very grateful to all those European politicians that spoke out and reaffirmed the values and principles that they are defending. No one did this better than President Zelenskyy, who has been fighting for these values – democracy, freedom, rule of law for the past three years." 

Heusgen's speech marked the close to his leadership of the Munich Security Conference, as former Secretary-General of NATO Jens Stoltenberg takes the reins of the international security forum. Heusgen had served as leader of the forum since 2022. 

Social media critics began posting snippets of Heusgen's speech to X Sunday, claiming the German diplomat and longtime advisor to former German Chancellor Angela Merkel broke down in tears over his frustrations with Vance's blistering speech to the international body. The conference clarified on X that the diplomat reportedly broke down due to his speech being his last as chairman of the forum. 

CBS HOST BLASTED FOR 'BONKERS' CLAIM THAT NAZI GERMANY 'WEAPONIZED' FREE SPEECH

"Our former Chair Christoph Heusgen did not shed a few tears out of ‘frustration.’ It was his farewell speech as he was leaving the MSC after this year's conference. He was saying goodbye to the team at this very moment. The video snippet here is edited together," the conference posted to X Monday morning. 

The full video of Heusgen's speech shows him breaking down into tears after warning that "our rules-based international order is under pressure." 

VANCE JOKES ABOUT GRETA THUNBERG AS HE GOES SCORCHED EARTH ON EUROPEAN CENSORSHIP

"It is clear that our rules-based international order is under pressure," he said. "It is my strong belief… that this multipolar world needs to be based on a single set of norms and principles, on the UN Charter and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. This order is easy to disrupt, it's easy to destroy, but it's much harder to rebuild, so let us stick to these values. Let us not reinvent them, but focus on strengthening their consistent application." 

HEGSETH SAYS HE AND VANCE ARE 'ON THE SAME PAGE' DESPITE VP'S REMARK ON US TROOPS IN UKRAINE

President Donald Trump has frequently taken shots at the United Nations since his first administration, and said earlier in February that the U.N. was "not being well run" and needs to get its "act together." 

"Let me conclude. And this becomes difficult," Heusgen said, choking up, before leaving the podium on the stage and hugging various members of the audience. 

A spokesperson for the conference reiterated to Fox News Digital Monday that Heusgen teared up solely due to the fact that he was ending his three-year term leading the forum and that "many long-time participants and friends were in the Conference Hall to say goodbye" to the diplomat. 

"I was truly touched by the warm farewell I received from the entire MSC team and so many friends after my last MSC as chairman," Heusgen added in comment to Fox News Digital. "It was a very emotional moment on stage at the end of my term. A video is circulating on the internet that takes this scene of my departure out of context. Unfortunately, this once again shows how the mechanisms of disinformation work."

VANCE EVISCERATES 'SOVIET'-STYLE EUROPEAN CENSORSHIP IN ADDRESS TO MUNICH SECURITY CONFERENCE

His speech to the assembly followed Vance's on Friday, where the U.S. vice president lambasted "Soviet"-style European censorship, joked about left-wing environmentalist Greta Thunberg, and slammed ongoing immigration woes that have throttled European nations and the U.S. under the Biden administration. 

"Trust me, I say this with all humor," Vance said at one point of his speech. "If American democracy can survive 10 years of Greta Thunberg scolding, you guys can survive a few months of Elon Musk." 

Vance also took issue with current immigration practices across the world, calling them "out-of-control migration" policies that include allowing unvetted migrants into foreign nations. Vance's comments followed a suspect identified as an Afghan migrant ramming a car into pedestrians at a trade union demonstration in Munich Thursday, killing a mother and child and injuring at least 37 others. 

GERMANY ACCUSES ELON MUSK OF TRYING TO INTERFERE IN ITS NATIONAL ELECTIONS

"But why did this happen in the first place?" Vance said in his speech of the Munich car attack. "It's a terrible story, but it's one we've heard way too many times in Europe, and unfortunately, too many times in the United States, as well. An asylum seeker, often a young man in his mid-20s, already known to police, rams a car into a crowd and shatters a community. How many times must we suffer these appalling setbacks before we change course and take our shared civilization in a new direction?" 

Other world leaders seemingly took issue with Vance's speech during the forum, including German Chancellor Olaf Scholz saying the day after Vance's speech that Germany rejects "outsiders intervening in our democracy."

Stateside, conservatives have celebrated Vance's speech as "almost Reaganesque," "pro-American" and pro-free speech on social media and during Fox News interviews.

Fox News Digital reached out to the Munich Security Conference on Monday for additional comment regarding Heusgen's speech and did not immediately receive a reply. 



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Neymar scores first goal after Santos return

Neymar scores a penalty and sets up another goal as Santos beat Agua Santa 3-1 in the Campeonato Paulista, striking for the first time in his second stint at the club.

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Monday, February 17, 2025

What’s up with Gen Z?

A study suggests that less than half of Generation Z are proud to be British.

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Sunday, February 16, 2025

Gourley & Nielsen break British records at Keely Klassic

Neil Gourley breaks the men's British indoor 1,000m and Lina Nielsen does the same in the women's 300m at the Keely Klassic in Birmingham.

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Saturday, February 15, 2025

£115m lottery winners invest in bid to take women's football club to the top

The directors hope the investment will lead to the club's promotion to the Women's Super League.

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Friday, February 14, 2025

NHS 'recovery plan' fails to deliver new dentists or more appointments

NHS leaders say the contract for dentists to carry out NHS work needs redrawing.

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Thursday, February 13, 2025

The Neo-Nazi MI5 spy

And how the BBC exposed the lies from MI5

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Elon Musk's 'take your kid to work' day

He brought his son to the Oval Office for a surprise press conference

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Wednesday, February 12, 2025

Armed police in stand-off at Sheffield city apartments

Specialist officers are "negotiating" with a man at a building on Broad Street in Sheffield.

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Tuesday, February 11, 2025

Secretary Duffy tours Helene damage, says residents feel 'forgotten' after historic storm

Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy toured the devastation left by Hurricane Helene in North Carolina and Tennessee, explaining how residents there feel forgotten by the rest of the nation as they continue to rebuild their ravaged communities after the historic storm. 

Duffy spoke with "The Faulkner Focus" exclusively from Pigeon River Gorge, where a section of the major interstate I-40 was destroyed in Helene's floodwaters, to discuss how communities are faring and why many feel forgotten months later. 

‘FEMA IS NOT GOOD:’ TRUMP ANNOUNCES AGENCY OVERHAUL DURING VISIT TO NORTH CAROLINA

"When you live in small town America, like many of the communities here in western North Carolina, they feel forgotten," Duffy told Harris Faulkner on Monday. "They feel like the federal government doesn't care. Their state governments haven't cared about them. And I think with this administration, they understand that they might be from a small town, they might not be the richest people. But you know what? We have not forgotten about them because they're Americans, and they deserve our help and our aid, and we're going to provide it to them."

Duffy pledged to rebuild the stretch of the highway that had collapsed, noting it would be a billion-dollar project and would require a lot of time to completely repair it. 

"This is going to be the most expensive emergency relief project that the Department of Transportation has done in its 50-year history," Duffy said. "That's how big this project is and how important it is to get the rebuild right."

"Donald Trump, he doesn't move at the speed of prior administrations. He moves lightning quick, so we want to go fast," he continued. "We want to go cheap, and we want to go safe."

Meanwhile, Trump has weighed shutting down the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) and giving federal recovery money directly to the states for natural disasters. The agency faces scrutiny over its efficiency and alleged bias. 

He signed an executive order last month aimed at "drastically" improving the agency’s efficacy, priorities and competence after visiting communities impacted by Hurricane Helene. 

TRUMP, GOP LEADERS MEET AT WHITE HOUSE AS PRESIDENT PLANS VISIT TO NC, DEFENDS EXECUTIVE ORDERS

Trump’s executive order establishes the FEMA Review Council, which will be composed of no more than 20 members and co-chaired by the secretaries of Homeland Security and Defense.

The council is being formed after FEMA's response to Hurricane Helene and other recent disasters showed the need to improve "efficacy, priorities, and competence, including evaluating whether FEMA’s bureaucracy in disaster response" hinders its ability to respond successfully.

"Despite obligating nearly $30 billion in disaster aid each of the past three years, FEMA has managed to leave vulnerable Americans without the resources or support they need when they need it most," the executive order reads.

Duffy explained smaller infrastructure projects within local communities will also be looked at, emphasizing the need for community connectivity as residents continue to rebuild. 

"This is a major artery like we talked about, but there are so many small roads and bridges that connect the communities up in the mountains," Duffy said. "Many of them have been partially washed away there. The mudslides and the rockslides that have devastated their homes, their churches, their stores, their coffee shops. And so it's... that infrastructure as well that we're going to look at and figure out how we can help them rebuild."

"Again, sometimes people don't think about this part of our government as being so critical, but if it doesn't work, if you don't have the infrastructure that connects people, again, it affects people's lives in profound ways," he continued. 

More than 100 people died during Hurricane Helene in North Carolina alone, and tens of thousands of homes were damaged or destroyed. 

Despite the traumatic disaster, Duffy explained those who were impacted are adamant about staying where they call home. 

"This is their home. This is where their families have been for generations. They want to stay here," Duffy said. "And that's why our work is so important, to help them continue to stay in the places that they love and the communities that they've enjoyed for so long."

"We're going to do our work to make sure that dream can continue to live on."

Fox News' Greg Wehner contributed to this report.  



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Americanswers... on 5 Live! Why was Taylor Swift booed at the Super Bowl?

And is TikTok blocking anti-Trump content?

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Monday, February 10, 2025

Tom Brady reveals he took 15-minute nap before playing in 1st Super Bowl

Tom Brady won seven Super Bowl championships during his career with the New England Patriots and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

During the 2001 season, Brady had to step up as the starting quarterback for an injured Drew Bledsoe and led the Patriots to their first Super Bowl appearance in several years. At that point, Brady was only in his second season in New England, and he appeared to be as cool as the other side of the pillow.

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He explained to FOX colleagues Erin Andrews and Michael Strahan on "The Madden Cruiser Tour: A Bayou Adventure with Bill Belichick" that he decided to take a quick snooze before Super Bowl XXXVI against the St. Louis Rams. The game was played in the Superdome in New Orleans.

"We had to warm up on the field and then we have 50 minutes before we went back out. So, I took my pads off and I was like, you know, I’m just gonna lay down and rest and I literally took a 15-minute nap before the game," he explained.

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Strahan was stunned and said he would’ve been jittery the entire day.

"The difference is, when you’re young, you don’t realize the enormity of what you’re going through because I had not really been in the league that long. Eighteen years later, when I was playing in the Super Bowl, I couldn’t sleep the night before the game," Brady said.

Brady will be coming back to where he won his first Super Bowl.

He will be on the FOX broadcast to call Super Bowl LIX with Kevin Burkhardt. Pregame coverage is ongoing on FOX with kickoff set for 6:30 p.m. ET. The coverage can be streamed on Tubi for free.

Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.



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Motor neurone disease campaigner Sam Perkins dies

The sportsman raised hundreds of thousands of pounds after being diagnosed with the disease.

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Sunday, February 9, 2025

Newcastle score controversial goal against Birmingham

Watch as Joe Willock brings Newcastle United level against Birmingham City after a "very, very tight" goal-line decision in the FA Cup fourth round.

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Saturday, February 8, 2025

Senate moves full steam ahead on massive Trump budget bill after GOP divisions derail House

Senate Republicans are moving full steam ahead with their plans for a massive conservative policy overhaul through the budget reconciliation process, despite House GOP leaders still insisting their chamber is set to go first. 

Senate Budget Committee Chairman Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., unveiled a 61-page resolution that would fund President Donald Trump's priorities for border security, fossil fuel energy and national defense.

It would fund completion of Trump's border wall, as well as provide dollars for more beds in detention centers at the border. The bill would also include funds to hire more Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents, hire more personnel patrolling the border and increase the number of immigration judges in order to process the backlog of existing asylum cases.

On energy, the bill is aimed at ramping up offshore drilling leases and stopping the Biden administration's methane emissions fee.

SCOOP: KEY CONSERVATIVE CAUCUS DRAWS RED LINE ON HOUSE BUDGET PLAN

The legislation would also fund increased military readiness, grow the U.S. Navy and build an "integrated air and missile defense to counter threats," according to a summary provided by Graham's office.

Graham also signaled the bill would be deficit-neutral, with his press release stating that its $342 billion in new spending will be offset by the same amount of money in savings.

Per the Senate's plan to split Trump's reconciliation priorities into two bills, it is expected that extensions to Trump's Tax Cuts and Jobs Act – as well as other key Trump proposals, such as eliminating taxes on tipped and overtime wages – will be in a second plan released at a later date.

Republicans plan to use their majorities in the House and Senate to pass a wide swath of Trump policy initiatives, from extending the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act to funneling more cash to operations at the U.S.-Mexico border.

The budget reconciliation process makes that possible by lowering the threshold for Senate passage from 60 votes to a simple 51-seat majority. Because the House already operates on a simple majority threshold, it will allow Republicans to skirt Democratic opposition to pass their agenda – provided the measures included involve budgetary or other fiscal matters, as reconciliation rules call for.

The first step in reconciliation is advancing a resolution through the House and Senate budget committees, which will then give instructions to other committees of jurisdiction that will eventually form a final bill.

The Senate's plan differs significantly from the House's intended approach.

While both sides agree on what should be passed via reconciliation, House GOP leaders and Republicans on the Ways & Means Committee are concerned that the intense political maneuvering the process takes will mean they run out of time before passing a second bill with Trump's tax cuts at the end of this year.

BLACK CAUCUS CHAIR ACCUSES TRUMP OF 'PURGE' OF 'MINORITY' FEDERAL WORKERS

A Ways & Means Committee memo sent earlier this year projected the average American household could see taxes rise by over 20% if those provisions expire at the end of 2025.

Trump himself has repeatedly called for "one big, beautiful bill" but said he ultimately was not concerned about the packaging as long as all of his priorities were passed.

House Republicans had intended to move one bill through their budget panel this week, but the process was stalled as spending hawks pushed for deeper funding cuts than what GOP leaders initially proposed.

Conservatives have insisted that any plan Republicans pass must be deficit-reducing or deficit-neutral.

House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., told reporters on Friday morning that he was playing "phone tag" with Graham due to their schedules but signaled he still intended for the House to move ahead with their plan next week.

"I sent him a text message early this morning and explained where we are in the process and how it's moving aggressively," Johnson said.

He told reporters he hoped for a House Budget Committee markup of the bill as early as Tuesday. 

Graham, meanwhile, intends to advance his bill through committee on Wednesday and Thursday.

Senate Republicans are meeting with Trump at Mar-a-Lago on Friday night.

Fox News' Daniel Scully contributed to this report.



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Repairs under way after car plunges onto rail line

Passengers are told the main line will not reopen until at least 22:00 GMT, after a day of rail chaos.

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Friday, February 7, 2025

'Damn right': Liz Cheney's past USAID employment faces backlash after lashing out at Elon Musk

Former GOP Congresswoman Liz Cheney was ripped by conservatives on social media after she defended her previous work at USAID, which became the most prominent target of DOGE in recent days, in an exchange on X that drew the attention of DOGE’s leader, Elon Musk.

"Damn right, @Elon," Cheney said on X in response to Musk, tagging an account that does not belong to Musk, on Wednesday. "I’m proud of what America did to win the Cold War, defeat Soviet communism, and defend democracy. Our nation stood for freedom. You may be unfamiliar with that part of our history since you weren’t yet an American citizen."

Musk had written "interesting" in response to a post from Foundation For Freedom Online Executive Director Mike Benz, who had written that Cheney was "spawned" out of USAID, citing her previous position as an officer for the embattled and now seemingly shuttered agency.

Cheney spent time at USAID working within embassies related to efforts in Poland, Hungary, Russia and Ukraine.

MEET THE YOUNG TEAM OF SOFTWARE ENGINEERS SLASHING GOVERNMENT WASTE AT DOGE: REPORT

Several conservatives on social media took issue with Cheney’s comment and defended Musk against any implication that he is "unfamiliar" with U.S. history.

"He is an American by choice instead of by birth, which is a weird thing to insult someone over, but more importantly, he didn't commit so many crimes against the country that he had to be pardoned by Joe Biden, so he's got that going for him," Federalist Editor-in-Chief Mollie Hemingway posted on X.

"You care more about illegals coming to this country stealing from this country than @elon giving to this country," former Georgia state Rep. Vernon Jones posted on X.

"Ya, but he was around when your daddy was making the military industrial complex billions sending me and my buddies to die chasing the ghosts of WMDs in Iraq," Fox News contributor Joey Jones posted on X. 

WHO IS SAMANTHA POWER? MEET THE BIDEN-ERA USAID LEADER FACING BACKLASH AMID MUSK'S DOGE CRACKDOWN

"Love the anti-immigrant sentiment from Liz," Right Turn Strategies President Chris Barron posted on X. "Funny how they always end up being everything they claim their opponents are."

"The fact Elon said a single word and was able to set you off tells me a lot, Liz," Twitchy.com editor Samantha Janney posted on X. "What’s also revealing is your connection to USAID. Damn proud of WY for firing you."

"What a xenophobe," Breitbart senior editor Joel Pollak posted on X. "Pure bigotry."

"From Liz Cheney to Barack Obama, a lot of people still don’t appreciate how much of America’s political aristocracy class grew up in USAID families," Benz posted on X earlier this week.

The online debate about Cheney's time at USAID comes after Musk's DOGE efforts have resulted in the agency being effectively shut down over what the Trump administration argues is wasteful spending. 

"For decades, the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) has been unaccountable to taxpayers as it funnels massive sums of money to the ridiculous — and, in many cases, malicious — pet projects of entrenched bureaucrats, with next-to-no oversight," the White House said Monday. 

The future of USAID remains unclear, though the doors to its headquarters were closed Monday, and thousands of employees across the globe sat waiting to hear whether they still had jobs after the apparent Musk takeover.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio has been named the acting director, and he agreed Monday with the White House that the agency needed an overhaul.

"The president made me the acting administrator," he told Fox News. "I’ve delegated that power to someone who is there full time, and we’re going to go through the same process at USAID as we’re going through now at the State Department."

Fox News Digital's Caitlin McFall contributed to this report



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Judge halts Trump's government worker buyout plan

The resignation package offered by the White House is part of its plan to cut down on the number of federal employees.

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Thursday, February 6, 2025

Trump to sign order banning transgender women from female sports

He says the move, which covers non-elite levels, restores fairness but human rights advocates have condemned it.

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Wednesday, February 5, 2025

NFL to remove 'End Racism' phrase from end zones for Super Bowl LIX

The words "End Racism" will not be featured in the back of end zones during Super Bowl LIX between the Kansas City Chiefs and Philadelphia Eagles on Sunday.

Instead, the phrases "Choose Love" and "It Takes All of Us" will be emblazoned in the end zones at the Caesars Superdome. NFL spokesman Brian McCarthy told The Athletic on Tuesday the decision came amid the recent tragedies that have occurred in the U.S. since the start of 2025, including the terror attack in New Orleans, wildfires in the Los Angeles area and the deadly plane crash near a Washington, D.C., airport.

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"We felt it was an appropriate statement for what the country has collectively endured, given recent tragedies, and can serve as an inspiration," he told the outlet.

McCarthy added that "End Racism" was only seen during the Eagles’ NFC Championship win against the Washington Commanders. The AFC Championship, in which the Chiefs topped the Buffalo Bills, included the aforementioned phrases.

The "End Racism" stencil debuted in 2020 after a summer of racial turmoil in the U.S. The phrase was featured in the Chiefs' end zone in last year's Super Bowl. The San Francisco 49ers had "It Takes All of Us."

The NFL’s move to remove it for the Super Bowl came as NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell defended the league’s diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) policies.

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"We got into diversity efforts because we felt like it was the right thing for the National Football League, and we’re going to continue those efforts because we’ve not only convinced ourselves, we’ve proven ourselves, that it does make the NFL better," Goodell said. "We’re not in this because it’s a trend to get in or a trend to get out of it. 

"Our efforts are fundamental in trying to attract the best possible talent in the National Football League, both on and off the field, as I said previously. We see that. We see how it benefits the National Football League, and so I think we’ll continue those efforts."

Goodell said the league’s DEI efforts were a reflection of the foundation of the league.

"I think it’s also clearly a reflection on our fan base and our communities and our players. People talk a lot about the Rooney Rule… for us there’s no requirement to hire a particular individual on the basis of race or gender. It’s simply on the basis of looking at a campus of candidates that reflect our communities and to look at the kind of talent that exists there, and then you make the best decision on who is hired," he added.

"So many of us, including the National Football League at our office, are doing that voluntarily at all levels because it has benefited us. And I hear that from companies on a global basis. That’s a very strong hiring practice we’re adopting also."

Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.



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Illegal meat on most UK High Streets, official says

Post-Brexit checks are undermining efforts to keep out potentially disease-ridden meat, official says.

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Tuesday, February 4, 2025

Aston Villa sign PSG midfielder Asensio on loan

Aston Villa sign Spain midfielder Marco Asensio on loan from Paris St-Germain until the end of the season.

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Monday, February 3, 2025

'The perfect batter for his time' - meet India's latest record-breaker

Meet India's latest batting superstar Abhishek Sharma, who struck a record-breaking 135 in their T20 win over England.

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New DNC vice chair previously called for ICE to be abolished

Newly elected Democratic National Committee Vice Chair David Hogg has previously called on U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement to be abolished and for the defunding of police.

"Defund the police not USPS," Hogg, who first entered the national spotlight after surviving the 2018 Parkland, Florida, school shooting, said in an X post on Aug. 15, 2020.

"Abolish ICE," Hogg said in a different post two weeks earlier.

DAVID HOGG SAYS HE RECEIVED 'AN ENORMOUS AMOUNT OF VITRIOL' FOR ASKING ABOUT DEM OUTREACH TO YOUNG MEN

The posts, which were made more than two years after Hogg survived the Florida school shooting, came as he became increasingly involved in political activism, most notably by his staunch advocacy for stricter gun laws.

Hogg has also made controversial posts on other topics, including a January 2021 call to declare the NRA a "terrorist organization."

"The NRA needs to be designated a terrorist organization for the role their supporters played in staging an insurrectionist coup," Hogg said in the post.

Hogg also made posts about climate change and incorrectly predicted the outcome of the 2024 election.

"Unlike Covid there is no vaccine for climate change once we start feeling the impacts we can just implement and survive. There is only one solution – prevention," Hogg said in in one post.

"If this election is a match up between Taylor Swift and Ted Nugent I think it's safe to say I've seen enough – Biden wins the 2024 election," Hogg said before former President Joe Biden made the decision to drop out of the 2024 race.

Now just 24 years old, Hogg took to social media early Sunday to celebrate his election to leadership within the DNC.

DEMOCRATS CONSIDER REBRAND AFTER TRUMP WIN, WANT TO AVOID ‘FREAK SHOW’ PARTY LABEL: REPORT

"I’ve just been elected as a Vice Chair of the DNC. I’m deeply grateful to the members for their trust and belief in me and I don’t take it lightly. Now it’s time to get to work," Hogg said in a post on X, going on to promise a "Democratic Party that is authentic, relatable, earns people's trust, and wins again."

"It’s time we stop surrendering, go on offense, and take the fight to Donald Trump and every single Republican who is gutting our rights, attacking workers, and rigging the system for the wealthy and well-connected," Hogg said.

But the elevation of Hogg to vice chair of the DNC also comes at a time of deep soul-searching for the Democratic Party, with many analysts blaming the party’s poor 2024 showing on its seemingly soft stances on crime and illegal immigration.

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Nevertheless, Hogg called on the party to "rethink the way we've been doing things" in his post on X, arguing that it is vital "to rid our party of its judgmental attitudes, and do the work to win back every group we lost this year, from the working class to young people."

The DNC did not immediately respond to a Fox News Digital request for comment.



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Sunday, February 2, 2025

Ryan O'Neil's son fears his family may be priced out of rebuilding 'legendary' Malibu home after LA fires

Weeks after Ryan O'Neil's home was destroyed in the LA fires, his son, Patrick O'Neil, is reminiscing about the sentimental memories made at the beachfront home in Malibu. 

Patrick, the son of the late Academy Award nominee, spoke with Fox Business Network about how the sudden loss of the home — which Ryan shared with longtime partner Farrah Fawcett — has impacted his family and explained why they may not be able to rebuild the "legendary' house. 

"The house that my dad bought and built from 1972 on created so many wonderful memories for me and my family," Patrick said. "My sister Tatum, my brother Griffin, my younger brother Redmond, my dad, Ryan and Farrah. I mean, we're talking about, I met Steve McQueen in that house. Van Morrison walked up the house. Brad Pitt, beat him in pool in that house. I mean, it was legendary. We had some great times playing frisbee with my dad on the beach. I'm going to keep all these memories. I lost a lot of mementos. Those are just things. But I'm going to keep the memories. And I pray for all these people that are suffering right now. I really do."

LA FIRES DESTROYED RYAN O'NEAL'S MALIBU HOME HE ONCE SHARED WITH FARRAH FAWCETT

O'Neal and Fawcett lived together in the Malibu home for several years before the actress died in 2009. The "Paper Moon" actor died from congestive heart failure in 2023.

While Patrick's memories are forever with him, he's unsure if he'll be able to rebuild the family home. 

"I'm not sure I'll be able to afford to live here," he admitted. "I don't know about insurance. How much is it going to cost to rebuild a house there? … We had two, you know, original houses that were smaller next to us. Are they going to build giant big houses? And it's just, you know, I just don't see how, I don't see that I have the means and the ability to rebuild and live in Malibu anymore, sadly."

L.A. FIRES: ESSENTIAL PHONE NUMBERS FOR LOS ANGELES-AREA RESIDENTS AND HOW YOU CAN HELP THEM


Despite the unfortunate circumstances, Patrick said his dad would have most likely used humor to push through. 

"My dad had a wicked sense of humor, so he might have made a joke to find a way to get a laugh out of the most tragic situation," he admitted. "He was very, very strong. He probably would have been one of those that wanted to stay in the house. And, you know, we would have had to drag him out, literally."

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"He was very strong. He would have been resilient. He would have found a way to rebuild for sure," he added. 

Ryan's daughter, Tatum O'Neal, confirmed the home had burned down via a social media post last month. 

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"It’s the saddest ever so sad I could cry," she wrote on Threads. "My father’s house is gone Malibu gone."

Fox Business Network correspondent Max Gorden contributed to this post. 



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Holders Ireland seal bonus-point win over England

Ireland score three second-half tries to launch their bid for a third successive Six Nations title with a bonus-point victory over England in Dublin.

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Saturday, February 1, 2025

Girl 'took knife to school every day' before stabbing

The 14-year-old tells a court "I suppose I'm sorry" but denies three counts of attempted murder.

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Joy Behar hopes to 'actually influence people's thinking' with her criticism of the Trump administration

"The View" co-host Joy Behar said she felt an obligation to speak out about President Donald Trump's administration on Wednes...