Kristi Noem is ‘alert and recovering' after trip to hospital over allergic reaction, official says
'She is alert and recovering,' said the statement from department spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin, who said the hospital treatment was out of an 'abundance of caution.' Noem, 53, heads a sprawling department with roughly 260,000 employees responsible for immigration enforcement, airport security, disaster response and other responsibilities. She has been among the more high-profile members of President Donald Trump's cabinet, traveling extensively and maintaining a robust social media presence.
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Edwards Lifesciences Lifts 2025 Outlook On Strong First Half Performance
Edwards Lifesciences' (NYSE:EW) stock surged Friday following a strong second-quarter 2025 earnings report that saw the medical device innovator surpass revenue and earnings expectations, driven by significant growth across its heart valve therapies. The strong performance prompted the company to raise its full-year sales guidance, signaling renewed momentum in its core markets. The heart devices company reported sales of $1.53 billion on Thursday after hours, beating the consensus of $1.49 billion and within the management guidance of $1.45 billion-$1.53 billion. Sales grew 11.9% or 10.6% adjusted, with strength across all product groups. Edwards Lifesciences reported adjusted earnings of 67 cents, beating the consensus of 62 cents and the management guidance of 59-65 cents per company reported Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement (TAVR) sales of $1.1 billion, marking an increase of 8.9% (or 7.8% on a constant currency basis). The company said that TAVR growth for the quarter surpassed their expectations. Transcatheter Mitral and Tricuspid Therapies (TMTT) segments achieved second-quarter sales of $134.5 million, demonstrating a year-over-year growth of 61.9%, or more than 57.1% on a constant currency basis. In the Surgical segment, second-quarter global sales reached $267 million, an increase of 7.7% over the prior year, or 6.8% on a constant currency basis. Outlook 'We are pleased to report strong second quarter results that delivered double-digit sales growth. Based on our better-than-expected first half performance and the many catalysts across our portfolio, we are confident in our full-year outlook and are raising our sales and EPS guidance,' said Bernard Zovighian, CEO. Edwards Lifesciences raised its 2025 sales guidance from $5.70 billion-$6.10 billion to $5.90 billion-$6.10 billion compared to the consensus of $5.91 billion. The company affirms fiscal 2025 adjusted earnings guidance of $2.40-$2.50 per share compared to the consensus of $2.48. Edwards Lifesciences forecasts third-quarter adjusted earnings of 54-60 cents, compared to the consensus of 60 cents, and sales of $1.46 billion, $1.54 billion versus the consensus of $1.48 billion. View more earnings on EW The company is increasing its underlying growth rate guidance for TAVR to 6% to 7%, driven by strong performance, and its sales guidance range for TAVR to $4.3 billion to $4.5 billion. Sales guidance for TMTT and Surgical product groups remains unchanged. Analyst Insights: Goldman Sachs Goldman Sachs said Friday that the second quarter of 2025 marked a key turning point for the company and reinforced its belief that Edwards is on track to achieve steady double-digit revenue growth again. The firm noted that Edwards' core TAVR business is gaining momentum, even though the quarter only partially reflected the impact of the new asymptomatic indication and included just a small boost from Boston Scientific Corporation's (NYSE:BSX) planned market exit. This gives Goldman confidence that the business will operate at a stronger baseline. Analyst David Roman expects Edwards to get back to its previous strong performance over the next few years, with revenue growing over 10% and operating margins above 30%. With this kind of growth, Goldman Sachs believes the stock deserves a higher valuation, more than 30 times its earnings. The analyst maintains the Buy rating, raising the price forecast from $89 to $101. Other Analysts Several leading financial analysts re-evaluated their outlook on Edwards Lifesciences, with a general trend toward increased price forecasts. Baird has maintained a Neutral rating on the company, slightly increasing its price forecast from $78 to $79. Deutsche Bank, on the other hand, reiterates a Buy rating and has significantly raised its price forecast from $85 to $94. Evercore ISI affirms an In-Line rating, with a modest increase in its price forecast from $77 to $80. Wells Fargo continues to maintain an Overweight rating, raising its price forecast from $80 to $84. Similarly, RBC Capital maintains an Outperform rating, lifting its price forecast from $85 to $89. Piper Sandler also keeps an Overweight rating, increasing its price target from $83 to $90. Barclays maintains an Overweight rating and has raised its price forecast from $90 to $95. Finally, a Stifel analyst has reiterated a Buy rating, also increasing the price forecast from $90 to $95. Price Action: EW stock is trading higher by 4.87% to $79.49 at last check Friday. Read Next:Image via Shutterstock Latest Ratings for EW Date Firm Action From To Feb 2022 UBS Upgrades Neutral Buy Jan 2022 Morgan Stanley Maintains Overweight Jan 2022 Raymond James Maintains Outperform View More Analyst Ratings for EW View the Latest Analyst Ratings UNLOCKED: 5 NEW TRADES EVERY WEEK. Click now to get top trade ideas daily, plus unlimited access to cutting-edge tools and strategies to gain an edge in the markets. Get the latest stock analysis from Benzinga? EDWARDS LIFESCIENCES (EW): Free Stock Analysis Report This article Edwards Lifesciences Lifts 2025 Outlook On Strong First Half Performance originally appeared on © 2025 Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data
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Gilbert: Tony Evers' exit makes for a rare, truly open governor's race
Democrat Tony Evers' decision not to seek a third term means Wisconsin voters will experience something unusual in this political era — a truly 'open' race for governor. Nine of the past 10 gubernatorial contests in this state have involved a sitting governor. Now we know that the 2026 election will not. That makes the next campaign for governor more open-ended than it would have been, and harder to handicap. It also means there's a possibility both parties will have costly and hotly contested primaries for the state's highest office. Evers' decision not only alters the nature of the general election contest, but it also means the governor's race could serve as a platform for Democrats to debate their future in the aftermath of the party's momentous national defeat last year to Donald Trump and the GOP. For Democrats, a defeat for governor in 2026 in the nation's closest state would be hugely demoralizing. It also would be a major political failure, given the political advantage typically enjoyed in a midterm election by the party that is out of power in Washington. On the other hand, from a historical perspective, a Democratic victory would be groundbreaking. Coming as it would after Evers' two terms in office, it would produce the Democratic Party's longest hold on the governor's office in Wisconsin's nearly 180-year existence. Incredible as it sounds, Democrats have never occupied the office of governor for more than eight years in a row in Wisconsin. That is a testimony to several things: the dominance of the GOP in the state's first 100 years; the fact that until the 1970s, elections for governor here occurred every two years, not four; and the state's penchant for political swings in the current era of partisan parity and polarization. Let's look a little more closely at the history of governors' races here to put 2026 into some very broad perspective. Democrats have only once won three gubernatorial elections in a row in Wisconsin. It happened in the late 1950s and early 1960s when governors served two-year terms: Gaylord Nelson won in 1958 and 1960 and John Reynolds won in 1962. By contrast, Republicans have a history of longevity in power. There have been eight three-term Republican governors in Wisconsin's history, though only Tommy Thompson has done it since the four-year term was instituted beginning with the 1970 election. Thompson is the state's longest-serving governor (just over 14 years, from 1987 to 2001) and the only one to win four elections in a row. Only one other politician has tried to win three four-year terms, Republican Scott Walker, but he lost his bid for a third term to Evers in 2018. That Walker defeat illustrates some of the challenges a party faces staying in power in the current era. There is voter fatigue, which caught up with Walker after a drama-filled eight years, including a polarizing recall fight in 2014 and the failed bid he launched for the presidency in 2015. There is the cyclical nature of modern politics. Wisconsin has a history in mid-terms of voting against the party of the president, which worked against Republicans in 2002, against Democrats in 2010, and against Republicans in 2018. (Evers broke this pattern in 2022). In other words, America's frequent presidential swings have also produced frequent mid-term swings at the state level here. And finally, there is the state's extreme competitiveness. It was easier for a single party to stay in power when Wisconsin was dominated by one party. Since Wisconsin became a state in 1848, the governor's office has been held by four different parties: Republican, Democratic, Whig, and Progressive. But Republicans have been dominant for most of that history, at one point (between 1857 and 1930) winning 34 out of 37 contests for governor. Republicans have never been shut out of the governor's office for more than eight years in a row (a streak now in jeopardy). And there have been five different periods when Republicans held the office of governor for longer than eight years: ∎ 1987-2001, the Tommy Thompson era. It only ended when Thompson left office halfway through his fourth term to be health secretary under President George W. Bush. His lieutenant governor, Scott McCallum, filled the remainder of that term before losing the 2002 election to Democrat Jim Doyle. ∎ 1943-1959, when four different GOP governors served and Republicans won seven elections in a row for governor (again, these were two-year terms). ∎ 1895-1933. This was the longest period of Republican governance. Ten different Republican governors served, including both Fighting Bob La Follette and his son Philip. The GOP won 19 consecutive elections for governor. ∎ 1876-1891. ∎ 1856-1874. That history of lopsided control is long gone in Wisconsin, replaced not only by frequent partisan swings but also by routinely close elections. The past two races for governor have been the two closest of the past 60 years. The fact that this is now an open-seat race, without a sitting governor on the ballot, adds to the suspense. The last time this happened was 2010, when Walker was first elected. But the last time before that was more than 40 years ago in 1982. Evers would have been a formidable candidate for re-election as the most popular politician in the state, according to polling by the Marquette Law School. At the same time, his age (73) and the challenges of winning a third term were potential election wild cards. Without Evers on the ballot, this race will still be hugely influenced by the national political climate next year and by public opinion toward Trump. Democrats will still go into this race with the historic advantage of running against the party of the president. But historical patterns don't dictate the outcomes of elections; they just put them in context. Candidate quality matters. And in 2026, that is now a big unknown for both sides. Craig Gilbert provides Wisconsin political analysis as a fellow with Marquette University Law School's Lubar Center for Public Policy Research and Civic Education. Prior to the fellowship, Gilbert reported on politics for 35 years at the Journal Sentinel, the last 25 in its Washington Bureau. His column continues that independent reporting tradition and goes through the established Journal Sentinel editing him on Twitter: @Wisvoter. This article originally appeared on Milwaukee Journal Sentinel: Gilbert: Tony Evers' exit makes for a rare, truly open governor's race
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Dozens sickened after eating THC-contaminated food at Wisconsin pizzeria
Dozens of people were accidentally dosed with THC, the primary psychoactive compound in cannabis, after consuming food served by a pizzeria in Wisconsin, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said in a report shared Thursday. Famous Yeti's Pizza, a pizzeria in Stoughton, Wisconsin, is located in a building with a shared kitchen used by a state-licensed vendor who produced edible THC products, the CDC said. While preparing food in October 2024, the pizzeria ran out of cooking oil and used what employees believed was plain canola oil from the shared kitchen, the CDC said. In reality, they had used "THC-infused oil" to prepare dough that was used in pizza, garlic bread, cheese bread and some sandwiches. The contaminated food was sold between Oct. 22 and Oct. 24, Madison and Dane County public health officials said at the time. Officials became aware of the situation when emergency services reported taking seven people to local hospitals for symptoms including dizziness, sleepiness and anxiety. All seven people reported eating food from the pizzeria. One person reported receiving a positive THC test result without having knowingly consumed the substance, the CDC said. Public health officials began an investigation and shared a news release highlighting the situation, asking anyone who had eaten in the restaurant recently to fill out a questionnaire. Of 107 valid responses, 85 people said they had eaten the contaminated products and reported at least one symptom of THC intoxication that began within five hours of eating the food. Public health officials also put out a news release telling people not to eat leftover food purchased at the pizzeria between Oct. 22 and 24. THC intoxication symptoms include dizziness, sleepiness, anxiety, time distortion, increased heart rate, nausea, paranoia, panic attacks, increased blood pressure, vomiting and hallucinations, the CDC said. A person's short-term memory could also be affected by THC intoxication. The people who had experienced THC intoxication ranged in age from 1 to 91, according to the CDC. Thirty-three of them said they contacted a health care provider because of their symptoms. Fifteen people said they received a positive result for THC. The CDC said that when the restaurant owner was contacted by local public health officials, they agreed to close the restaurant immediately. The restaurant owner also informed health officials that the restaurant had used oil from the shared kitchen, and said they later realized that the oil might have been infused with THC. The CDC did not say when the restaurant owner realized the restaurant might have used THC oil. The oil tested positive for THC. Police were informed and investigated the incident, but no charges were filed because the investigation found the situation was unintentional, the CDC said. The restaurant reopened on Oct. 26. Bryan Kohberger sentenced to life in prison for murders of Idaho students Johnson says Jeffrey Epstein files controversy is not a hoax Idaho murders documents released after Bryan Kohberger is sentenced to life in prison Solve the daily Crossword