
Super Bowl 59, AG takes on Trump administration, plane crash
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Delaware AG, others file motion to enforce court order to unfreeze federal funding
Delaware Attorney General Kathy Jennings joined a coalition of 23 attorneys general on Friday who say President Donald Trump's administration is not complying with a court order to unfreeze federal funds needed for critical programs and services.
In withholding the nearly $3 trillion that had already been approved by Congress, the coalition says many states could face cash shortfalls, making it difficult to administer basic programs such as funding for health care and food for children.
"These funds are not monopoly money and this is not a game," Jennings said in a statement released in the final minutes of the business week. "Each and every one of these dollars represent promises that the United States made to Americans. Real people are suffering and will continue to suffer incredible damages from the disruption of these vital funds.". Learn more here.
Also worth your time …
Breaking news: Small plane crashes near Cheswold; DSU students uninjured
Government: Delaware Attorney General Kathy Jennings announces reelection bid for third term
Entertainment: 2025 Philadelphia Flower Show will feature University of Delaware students. Here are details
Dining: Delaware culinary site sends cooks ingredients to re-create iconic restaurant dishes at home
News Quiz: What do you recall from a week of Delaware news? Try this week's quiz
Gallery of the day: Sanford dominates Howard in girls basketball
Sports: Blue Hens thwart troublesome William & Mary to end hoops losing streak
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We want to hear your story and learn how the suspension of certain federal refugee programs and support is impacting you. To share, contact Krys'tal Griffin at kgriffin@delawareonline.com kgriffin@delawareonline.com with as much information as you can provide.
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⭐ Get out: Cabin fever? Things to do at the Delaware beaches in the wintertime
🍳 Comfort food: Sick of Starbucks and Dunkin'? Here's where you can get fresh hot chocolate in Delaware
🐕 Just for fun: Puppy Bowl 2025 stars pups that have a lot of dog in them. How to watch the fun
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✈️ Get away: Solo but not alone. Connecting through travel on Valentine's Day, beyond
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🛠️ Problem solved: What to know about bird flu before your Super Bowl party
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Miami Herald
25 minutes ago
- Miami Herald
Forget eggs, beef prices are soaring
Last August, then-candidate and former President Donald Trump promised to reduce the prices on everyday essentials on his first day in the Oval Office. "When I win, I will immediately bring prices down, starting on Day One,"Trump said at the time, according to CNN. Don't miss the move: Subscribe to TheStreet's free daily newsletter While there have been some improvements, the latest data indicated that prices continue to rise, primarily for necessities such as food and housing. Experts agree that the inflation rate in the U.S. over the last few years is the worst in decades. The global pandemic started the surging prices show, due to lockdowns, disruptions in the supply chain, and everything in between. The challenge continues, and it is likely to increase due to new obstacles, such as tariffs. Before the 2024 presidential election, inflation notably dropped but remained above pre-pandemic levels. Related: Major grocery chain confirms closure of five locations The consumer price index (CPI) increased 2.7% in the 12 months through June, while fruit and vegetable prices were 0.9% higher. Goldman Sachs Global Co-head of Fixed Income and Liquidity Solutions Kay Haigh says we are only seeing "some early signs of tariff impact," reports CBS News. Over the last couple of months, egg prices have dropped; however, they were up more than 41% on a year-over-year basis. On July 9, the U.S. Department of Justice filed a lawsuit against the State of California, Governor Gavin Newsom, Attorney General Rob Bonta, and other state officials, arguing that the state's laws on the production of eggs and poultry products nationally violate the U.S. Constitution. Related: FDA says yes to controversial new seafood delicacy The law enacted on January 1, 2022, requires that all eggs produced and sold in California (even though they are produced in another state) must be procured only from hens in cage-free housing. Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins slammed California for hurting consumers by raising egg prices and said, "It is one thing if California passes laws that affect its own State; it is another when those laws affect other States in violation of the U.S. Constitution." The news raised serious concerns and various reactions among consumers. Many agreed that eggs from cage-free hens, which are proven to be healthier by various studies, should be the norm, while others said it is important to have a choice of regular, cheaper eggs. Eggs are among the most nutritious foods on the planet, and 87% of Americans consume them at least weekly. Indispensable in the kitchen as a common ingredient in numerous recipes, eggs are a staple more than four in five Americans always keep in their refrigerators. More on Food and Retail: Another healthy fast-food chain files Chapter 11 bankruptcyCostco quietly pulls popular product, upsets fansStarbucks brings back fan-favorite menu item after 2-year hiatus While high egg prices are frustrating consumers, the rising cost of another food staple is making them even more concerned about being able to afford essential foods. And the Trump administration just made an unexpected move in a desperate effort to reduce prices of this grocery item. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, ground beef was priced at $6.12 a pound in June, which is 12% higher than in June 2024. This is the first time since the Consumer Price Index started to track the data in the 1980s that ground beef price has surpassed $6, according to the Joint Economic Committee's minority arm. Steak prices increased 8% year-over-year, and they will not likely come down anytime soon. KC Cattle Company CEO Patrick Montgomery told Axios that these prices are "just the tip of the iceberg. Prices for beef will continue to be tumultuous for the next two to four years." Related: Taco Bell reveals new menu item with dream partner So what is causing skyrocketing prices? Several factors contribute to higher beef prices across the country. Those include climate, which has reduced cattle herds through a multi-year drought, as well as policy and economics, with global import changes directly impacting the supply chain. The temporary ban on live cattle imports, which started in May because of a parasitic flesh-eating maggot, also contributed to the higher prices. While the USDA recently announced a phased reopening of cattle, bison, and equine imports from Mexico, another challenge for global supply chains is on its way: a new 50% U.S. tariff on Brazilian imports, which starts on August 1. Reuters reported that Brazil, which accounts for about 23% of all U.S. beef imports, is reconsidering shipments due to tariffs. Data from the latest USDA Census of Agriculture report from February 2024 indicated that the number of farms in the U.S. has dropped by more than 141,000 from 2017 to 2022. Demand for beef continues to rise in the U.S., and it is projected that per capita beef consumption will grow 2.7% by 2025, above growth in consumption of broilers (2.3%) and pork (1.7%). Beef is an important food staple in the U.S., providing essential nutrients. According to Beef Cattle Research Council, a 100-gram serving of cooked beef provides 250 calories, 35 grams of protein, 10 grams of fat and 19% of the daily recommended value (DV) of iron, 77% DV of zinc, and 102% DV of B12. Related: Veteran fund manager unveils eye-popping S&P 500 forecast The Arena Media Brands, LLC THESTREET is a registered trademark of TheStreet, Inc.


USA Today
3 hours ago
- USA Today
Trump 'serious' about blocking Washington Commanders relocation to DC, White House says
WASHINGTON ― President Donald Trump isn't kidding around with his threat to the NFL's Washington Commanders, the White House says. 'The president was serious,' White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters July 21 when asked about Trump's new warning to block a proposed stadium deal that would return the Commanders to Washington if the team doesn't adopt its former name, Redskins. Washington retired the name Redskins in July 2020 amid nationwide protests over race, initially becoming the Washington Football Team for two seasons, and then rebranding as the Washington Commanders in 2022. Longtime owner Daniel Snyder in 2023 sold the team to a new ownership group led by billionaire investor Josh Harris, who has elected to keep Commanders as the name and has called the debate settled. Leavitt did not address how Trump has the power to restrict the team's planned relocation back to the site of Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium in D.C., which served as Washington's home stadium from 1961 to 1996, before the team's move to Landover, Maryland. Trump's ability to unilaterally scrap the team's deal for a new stadium to return to the RFK site appears doubtful after Congress passed a law in December that transferred ownership of the RFK stadium site from the National Park Service to the District of Columbia. The $3.7 billion stadium deal, which includes $1.1 billion in local taxpayer funds, is in the hands of the D.C. Council, which is nearing a vote on the project. However, Trump has shown a willingness in other political battles to threaten federal funding from states, cities, colleges and universities to get his way. Another route could be to lobby Republicans in Congress to rescind the land transfer bill they passed last year. More: Trump threatens Washington Commanders' stadium plans if franchise doesn't change name White House doubles down on Trump's threat Leavitt pointed to Trump's reputation as a dealmaker. 'As part of the 'art of the deal,' part of his negotiating skills, as you know, sports is one of the many passions of this president and he wants to see this team's name changed,' she said. When asked to explain Trump's authority to block the Commanders' stadium deal, a White House official directed USA TODAY to Leavitt's remarks. More: DC locals on Trump's attempt to force Commanders' name change: Stay in your 'own lane' The Commanders, which enjoyed its most successful season in decades after making it to the NFC Championship Game last year, have not commented since Trump brought up the team's name in a Truth Social post on Sunday. In the same post, Trump called on another professional sports team that was previously named for native Americans ‒ the Cleveland Guardians, formerly the Indians ‒ to go back to its old name. "The Washington 'Whatever's' should IMMEDIATELY change their name back to the Washington Redskins Football Team. There is a big clamoring for this," Trump wrote. "Times are different now than they were three or four years ago. We are a Country of passion and common sense. OWNERS, GET IT DONE!!!" Trump had previously voiced support for the team's former name, but it marked the first time he has used his position to call for a name change. He followed it up with a subsequent post suggesting he might hold up the team's stadium plans if it doesn't ditch Commanders and go back to its former name. "I may put a restriction on them that if they don't change the name back to the original 'Washington Redskins,' and get rid of the ridiculous moniker, 'Washington Commanders,'" Trump wrote. "I won't make a deal for them to build a Stadium in Washington. The Team would be much more valuable, and the Deal would be more exciting for everyone." DC mayor focuses on council, not Trump Under the Constitution, Congress has authority over the District of Columbia. The District of Columbia Home Rule Act, signed by President Richard Nixon in 1973, gave the city local governance including an elected mayor and city council. However, Congress can still review all legislation passed by the D.C. Council and retains authority over the district's budget. No sign off from Trump is required for approval of the Commanders' stadium deal. Washington Mayor Muriel Bowser, who helped orchestrate the stadium deal, deflected when a reporter asked her Monday whether she believes Trump has the power to block the Commanders' stadium deal. "I think the thing that we should focus on in D.C. is doing our part," Bowser said, adding that the council still needs to approve the stadium deal. "We need to complete our part." Since returning to the White House in January, Trump has often talked about taking over the governance of D.C., a city he has long derided for crime and homelessness. Nevertheless, Trump hosted Bowser and the Commanders' Harris at the White House in May to announce Washington's National Mall would host the 2027 NFL Draft. 'I think you've seen the president gets involved in a lot of things that most presidents have not," Leavitt said when asked why changing the Commanders' name is a priority for Trump. "He's a nontraditional president. He likes to see results on behalf of the American people.' She added that Trump is getting behind something most Americans want. "If you actually poll this issue with sports fans across the country and even in this city, people actually do support the president's position on this and the name change," Leavitt said. Reach Joey Garrison on X @joeygarrison.


Politico
3 hours ago
- Politico
Donald Trump's wide world of sports
WHAT'S IN A NAME — Donald Trump's weekend fusillade of social media posts may have fallen short in its aim of diverting attention from the firestorm surrounding the Jeffrey Epstein files. But it succeeded in advancing what's increasingly looking like the central project of his second term: planting himself at the center of American public life. With his call for the Cleveland Guardians to change back to the team's longtime name, the Cleveland Indians, and his threat to withhold a D.C. stadium deal until the Washington Commanders reverts back to its original Washington Redskins name, Trump signaled that dominion over Washington isn't enough. Every other institution — Wall Street, Fortune 500 companies, Big Law, higher ed, the media — must also bend the knee. That list includes professional sports. As a master of the attention economy and a product of popular culture, Trump knows the traditional understanding of the modern bully pulpit is outmoded. To truly command attention — and to speak to those who aren't engaged in the political process — a president must be everything, everywhere, all at once. To Trump, that means railing about quotidian details of life — the kind of sugar used by Coca Cola; the water pressure in toilets and showerheads; T-Mobile's service — but also establishing himself as a constant presence in the sports world. As president-elect, he made much-publicized trips to an Ultimate Fighting Championship fight at Madison Square Garden and the Army-Navy football game. Since returning to the White House, Trump has attended another UFC fight in Las Vegas, the Super Bowl in New Orleans (where he was the first sitting president to attend), the Daytona 500 in Florida and the NCAA college wrestling championship (marking his second appearance there in three years). A week ago, Trump unexpectedly showed up on stage to present the trophy at the Club World Cup at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey, where he stood center stage amid confused foreign players for English soccer giant Chelsea. While sports has always been politicized by the left and right — and a White House visit has long been a reward for championship teams in all sports — Trump has taken it to another level, He has functioned as a sports fan — recently joining the fray with his thoughts on Shadeur Sanders, among other topics — but also as a would-be commissioner eager to wield the power and prestige of the Oval Office in the realm of pro sports. After Trump said in February he'd pardon disgraced baseball great Pete Rose and criticized Major League Baseball, MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred traveled to the White House two months later. Not long after, he reinstated Rose from baseball's ineligible list, making him eligible for the Hall of Fame. Manfred later acknowledged Trump played a role in his decision. Trump has even brought the mighty NFL — one of the world's most lucrative sports leagues and owner of 93 of America's top 100 most watched programs in 2023 — to heel. In May, with NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell at his side in the Oval Office, the president announced that the 2027 NFL draft would be held in Washington, D.C. on the National Mall. It's a redefinition of the presidency for the modern age, one that reflects Trump's populist bent. And it's a stark contrast with Joe Biden, who twice declined the traditional pre-Super Bowl televised interview, giving up the chance to speak to the nation's largest assembled live audience. He was absent from pop culture, except as the butt of jokes, and he paid for it. Carving out a beachhead in pro sports enables Trump to asymmetrically engage in the culture wars — weighing in on the policing of team names, for example — but without the partisan sheen. He understands instinctually that to project leadership across a fragmented media landscape, familiar political set-pieces, bland social media exhortations and the sit-down broadcast network interview aren't nearly enough anymore. Nor is the occasional lions-den podcast appearance. Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. Reach out with news, tips and ideas at nightly@ Or contact tonight's author at cmahtesian@ or on X (formerly know as Twitter) at @PoliticoCharlie. What'd I Miss? — Trump installs new GSA acting administrator, sidelines DOGE leaders: President Donald Trump has appointed Mike Rigas as acting administrator of the General Services Administration, effectively layering DOGE-aligned Stephen Ehikian and Josh Gruenbaum atop the agency. Rigas, a Trump administration veteran who has served as deputy secretary of State for Management and Resources and as acting director of the Office of Personnel Management, announced the move in a message to GSA staff this morning. GSA staffers and people close to the Department of Government Efficiency view this appointment as a strategic move by the White House to rein in Ehikian, the former acting administrator, and Gruenbaum, the commissioner of the Federal Acquisition Service within GSA. — Trump lashes out at federal judge presiding over Harvard case: President Donald Trump attacked the federal judge presiding over Harvard University's lawsuit against his administration in a social media post this afternoon. Harvard is seeking to restore more than $2 billion in funding from the federal government after the Trump administration launched a review of roughly $9 billion in grants and contracts with the university over accusations that Harvard violated the rights of Jewish students, including during demonstrations against the Israel-Hamas war. U.S. District Judge Allison Burroughs, who was appointed to the federal bench by former President Barack Obama in 2014, heard arguments this morning in the case, the latest in a series of standoffs between the university and the White House. — ICE will 'flood the zone' in NYC: The Department of Homeland Security will 'flood the zone' with Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents in New York City after the City Council blocked federal law enforcement agencies from opening an office in the city jails, President Donald Trump's border czar Tom Homan said this morning. Homan joined DHS Secretary Kristi Noem and other Trump administration officials to deliver that message at One World Trade Center after an off-duty federal customs officer was shot by an undocumented immigrant in an attempted robbery Saturday night, Noem said. — U.S. senators visit Canada to build bridges as trade deadline looms: With the clock ticking to an Aug. 1 deadline to strike a new Canada-U.S. trade and security deal, four U.S. senators met Prime Minister Mark Carney in search of common ground on some of the thorniest cross-border trade irritants: lumber, digital services taxes and metals tariffs. 'We are bridge builders, not people who throw wrenches,' Sen. Ron Wyden (R-Ore.) told reporters today following a 45-minute meeting on Parliament Hill. Top of mind for the visiting Americans was the successful renegotiation of the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement that President Donald Trump once called the 'largest, most significant, modern, and balanced trade agreement in history.' — Judge gives ex-officer nearly 3 years in Breonna Taylor raid, rebuffs DOJ call for no prison time: A federal judge sentenced a former Kentucky police officer to nearly three years in prison today for using excessive force during the 2020 deadly Breonna Taylor raid, declining a U.S. Department of Justice recommendation that he be given no prison time. Brett Hankison, who fired 10 shots during the raid but didn't hit anyone, was the only officer on the scene charged in the Black woman's death. He is the first person sentenced to prison in the case that rocked the city of Louisville and spawned weeks of street protests over police brutality five years ago. U.S. District Judge Rebecca Grady Jennings sentenced Hankison at a hearing this afternoon in which she said no prison time 'is not appropriate' for Hankison. She also said she was 'startled' that there weren't more people injured in the raid. — White House removes Wall Street Journal from Scotland press pool over Epstein bombshell: The White House is removing the Wall Street Journal from the pool of reporters covering the president's weekend trip to Scotland, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told POLITICO. The move follows the Journal's report alleging that President Donald Trump sent a sexually suggestive message to Jeffrey Epstein in has denied the existence of the letter and POLITICO has not verified it. Tarini Parti, a White House reporter for the Wall Street Journal, had been scheduled to serve as the print pooler for the final two days of Trump's four-day trip to his golf courses in Turnberry and Aberdeen, Scotland. But the White House removed her from the trip manifest, Leavitt said. AROUND THE WORLD FARAGE MIMICS TRUMP — Nigel Farage announced today that any future Reform UK government would try to send prisoners overseas to complete their sentences — including to El Salvador. The Reform UK leader said the plan, which echoes one of President Donald Trump's own hardline policies, would see up to 10,000 'serious' prisoners serve their time abroad in countries like Kosovo or Estonia. The governing Labour Party dismissed it as mere 'headline-chasing.' Farage's right-wing party — which is leading the government in the polls — promised 'dynamic' prison places abroad, with the British government renting cells in third countries. Reform argues that pulling Britain out of the European Convention on Human Rights would remove a key barrier to this plan. SEARCHING FOR SPIES — Ukraine's SBU state security service launched a series of raids on the country's National Anti-Corruption Bureau today as part of a sweeping investigation into suspected collusion with Russian spies. The SBU alleges that one of the top detectives at the anti-corruption agency, Ruslan Magamedrasulov, and another elite officer at the bureau were working as Russian moles. Both were detained. In total, more than 70 searches were conducted. Nightly Number RADAR SWEEP THE BIGGER PICTURE — Between 1907 and 1935, most color photographs were taken using the autochrome process, which used colored potato starch, silver emulsion and glass plates to capture still images. Now, a century later, many of those photos are punctured with tiny holes or stained with purple and orange blotches as they deteriorate from light and heat exposure and their silver bases oxidize. While the original versions are gone, archivists are not mourning the damage done. Instead, they're celebrating the opportunity to study the pictures and learn about the science behind their decay. Katy Kelleher reports for National Geographic. Parting Image Jacqueline Munis contributed to this newsletter. Did someone forward this email to you? Sign up here.