Tag Archives: dismisses

‘Golden Bachelor’ Gerry Turner dismisses ex’s weight-shaming claims: ‘Really don’t have time to think’ about it – Page Six

  1. ‘Golden Bachelor’ Gerry Turner dismisses ex’s weight-shaming claims: ‘Really don’t have time to think’ about it Page Six
  2. ‘Golden Bachelor’ Gerry Turner Says ‘Theresa Knows What the Truth Is’ After Exposé Access Hollywood
  3. After Allegations Rolled Around About Golden Bachelor Gerry Turner, The Contestants Say Not So Fast Yahoo Entertainment
  4. Our “Golden Bachelor” reality check: It’s not the first time a lapse in vetting led to juicier TV Salon
  5. Golden Bachelor Gerry Turner Reacts to That Secret Girlfriend Exposé Hollywood Reporter
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Great American Family Boss Dismisses Candace Cameron Bure’s LGBTQ Christmas Movie Stance: ‘She’s Not Speaking on Behalf’ of Network – TVLine

  1. Great American Family Boss Dismisses Candace Cameron Bure’s LGBTQ Christmas Movie Stance: ‘She’s Not Speaking on Behalf’ of Network TVLine
  2. Candace Cameron Bure Doesn’t Speak for Great American Family, Says CEO Us Weekly
  3. Great American Family’s TV Rise: CEO Bill Abbott on Candace Cameron Bure Backlash and Why His Network Is ‘For All People’ Variety
  4. Candace Cameron Bure doesn’t speak for Great American Family, CEO says Entertainment Weekly News
  5. Great American Boss Breaks Silence on Candace Cameron Bure’s ‘Traditional Marriage’ Comment Parade Magazine
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China dismisses criticism of top diplomat’s comments appearing to push for race-based alliance – ABC News

  1. China dismisses criticism of top diplomat’s comments appearing to push for race-based alliance ABC News
  2. China dismisses criticism of top diplomat’s comments appearing to push for race-based alliance WKRN News 2
  3. China’s top diplomat urges Japan and South Korea to know their ‘roots’ The Japan Times
  4. ‘You can never become a Westerner:’ China’s top diplomat urges Japan and South Korea to align with Beijing and ‘revitalize Asia’ Yahoo News
  5. Remember your ‘roots’, China tells neighbours Bangkok Post
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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China dismisses criticism of top diplomat’s comments appearing to push for race-based alliance – Yahoo News

  1. China dismisses criticism of top diplomat’s comments appearing to push for race-based alliance Yahoo News
  2. China’s top diplomat urges Japan and South Korea to know their ‘roots’ The Japan Times
  3. Remember your ‘roots’, China tells neighbours Bangkok Post
  4. ‘You can never become a Westerner:’ China’s top diplomat urges Japan and South Korea to align with Beijing and ‘revitalize Asia’ Yahoo News
  5. China dismisses criticism of top diplomat’s comments appearing to push for race-based alliance WPRI.com
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Bishop Olson ‘grateful’ after Texas court dismisses nuns’ lawsuit – The Pillar

  1. Bishop Olson ‘grateful’ after Texas court dismisses nuns’ lawsuit The Pillar
  2. Judge decides civil court doesn’t have jurisdiction to hear Arlington nun’s claims against bishop CBS TEXAS
  3. Civil case filed by Arlington monastery against Fort Worth bishop dismissed by courts WFAA
  4. Criminal case filed by nun against Fort Worth bishop closed as ‘unfounded,’ diocese says Fort Worth Star-Telegram
  5. Judge tosses nun’s lawsuit against Fort Worth diocese; Arlington Police close investigation NBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth
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Miami dismisses Josh Gattis as OC after one season

Miami has fired Josh Gattis as offensive coordinator after one season, coach Mario Cristobal announced Friday.

When Gattis was hired a year ago from Michigan, the move was widely applauded. Gattis had just won the Broyles Award as the top assistant coach in the country after helping the Wolverines make the College Football Playoff with a balanced offensive approach.

But in his lone season in Miami, the results were not what was expected. Returning quarterback Tyler Van Dyke struggled in the new scheme even before he missed three games with a shoulder injury, throwing for 1,844 yards, 10 touchdowns and five interceptions — a far cry from the 25 touchdowns he threw in 2021.

Miami ranked No. 86 in the nation in total offense, averaging 367.1 yards per game. That was down from a top 20 offense in 2021 that averaged 448.8 yards per game. Compounding the issues was an inability to run the ball, as the Hurricanes averaged 3.7 yards per carry.

They ended up playing three quarterbacks after Van Dyke got hurt and finished the season 5-7.

It seemed clear changes would have to be made on offense, especially with Van Dyke returning for a crucial junior season, and Gattis was not the only departure. Earlier this month, quarterbacks coach and passing game coordinator Frank Ponce left Miami to return to his former job as Appalachian State offensive coordinator.

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Ukraine Dismisses Key Officials in Anti-Graft Purge

Kyiv on Tuesday announced the dismissal of a dozen top officials in its biggest political shakeup following the country’s first major corruption scandal linked to the Russian invasion.

Ukraine has long suffered endemic corruption, but Moscow’s nearly year-long full-scale war has overshadowed government efforts to stamp out graft.

Western allies have allocated billions of dollars in financial and military aid to Kyiv to counter Russian troops, often preconditioning the support on anti-corruption reforms.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said in his evening address on Tuesday that the clean-up was necessary and that additional measures would be taken.

“It is fair, it is needed for our defense, and it helps our rapprochement with European institutions,” he said. “We need a strong state, and Ukraine will be just that.”

Presidential aide Mykhaylo Podolyak said Zelensky had focused on “key priorities of the state” in dismissing the officials, who include governors of regions that have seen heavy fighting and deputy cabinet ministers.

“During the war, everyone should understand their responsibility,” Podolyak tweeted.

The shakeup came after a Ukrainian deputy minister of development of communities and territories, Vasyl Lozynskiy, was sacked at the weekend following his arrest on suspicion of embezzlement.

Photographs released by the National Anti-Corruption Bureau showed stashes of cash seized at Lozynskiy’s office.

The 36-year-old was accused of receiving a $400,000 bribe to “facilitate” the purchase of generators at inflated prices, as Ukraine struggles with electricity shortages following Russian strikes on its energy grid.

‘Good deeds’

On Tuesday, key presidential aide Kyrylo Tymoshenko, who has worked with Zelensky since his 2019 election, announced his resignation.

The 33-year-old posted a picture of himself holding a handwritten resignation letter, thanking the president for the “opportunity to do good deeds every day and every minute.”

Tymoshenko was implicated in several scandals, including over the alleged personal use last October of an SUV donated to Ukraine for humanitarian purposes.

He was replaced by Oleksii Kuleba, the former head of the Kyiv region’s military administration.

Oleg Nemchinov, a senior government official, also announced the departure of five regional governors and four deputy ministers.

They include the heads of the central Dnipropetrovsk region, the northeastern Sumy region, the southern regions of Zaporizhzhia and Kherson, as well as the region surrounding the capital Kyiv.

Nemchinov additionally announced the dismissal of two deputy ministers of development of communities and territories, and a deputy minister of social policy.

The defense ministry separately announced the resignation of deputy minister Vyacheslav Shapovalov, who worked on providing logistical support for the army.

It came after the ministry was accused of signing food contracts at prices two to three times higher than current rates for basic foodstuffs.

Spain holiday

The ministry insisted the accusations were “unfounded and baseless” but said Shapovalov’s departure would “preserve the trust of society and international partners.”

Deputy Prosecutor General Oleksiy Symonenko also resigned, following media reports that he had holidayed in Spain, reportedly using a car belonging to a Ukrainian business.

The United States welcomed the dismissals and said that none of the billions of dollars in US war assistance was known to have been involved.

“The Ukrainian people have been very clear about their desire for good governance and transparency,” said State Department spokesman Ned Price.

Despite being vocal about fighting corruption, Zelensky himself has been embroiled in corruption scandals in the past. 

In 2021, the so-called Pandora Papers obtained by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists said Zelensky used a network of offshore companies to buy three upmarket properties in London.

His office said at the time that Zelensky, who is a former actor and comedian, created the offshore companies to protect himself against the “aggressive actions” of the “corrupt” regime of pro-Russian former president Viktor Yanukovych.

Transparency International ranked Ukraine 122 out of 180 in its corruption ranking for 2021.

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Pompeo dismisses Khashoggi as ‘activist’ whose murder was overblown by media

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In a new book, former secretary of state Mike Pompeo derides the idea that Jamal Khashoggi, a Washington Post contributing columnist who was brutally murdered in 2018, was a journalist. Pompeo sympathizes instead with Mohammed bin Salman, the crown prince of Saudi Arabia who was found to have ordered Khashoggi’s assassination, and defends at length the United States’ relationship with Saudi Arabia.

In “Never Give an Inch: Fighting for the America I Love,” published Tuesday, Pompeo said Khashoggi did not deserve to die and called his killing “outrageous, unacceptable, horrific.” However, he then goes on for several more pages mocking the “disproportionate global uproar” over Khashoggi’s death, arguing that Khashoggi was an “activist,” not a journalist, whose death was “hammered” out of proportion by an overly sympathetic media.

“Just as the media spent years trying to drive a wedge between me and President Trump, they spent the ensuing weeks trying to fracture America’s relationship with Saudi Arabia,” Pompeo wrote. “The progressive Left hates MBS, in spite of the fact that he is leading the greatest cultural reform in the kingdom’s history. He will prove to be one of the most important leaders of his time, a truly historic figure on the world stage.”

Khashoggi was killed Oct. 2, 2018, while visiting Saudi Arabia’s consulate in Istanbul to obtain documents that would allow him to marry his fiancee, Hatice Cengiz. Saudi agents dismembered Khashoggi’s body inside the consulate, and his remains have never been found.

In the months that preceded that visit, Khashoggi had been writing columns for The Washington Post that were sharply critical of the crown prince, who effectively rules Saudi Arabia and has carried out a harsh crackdown on rivals and dissidents.

Pompeo, who is reportedly exploring a 2024 presidential run, also pushed the claim in his book that Khashoggi was “cozy with the terrorist-supporting Muslim Brotherhood,” a charge that both Khashoggi’s family — and Khashoggi himself, when he was alive — denied repeatedly.

“Jamal Khashoggi was not a dangerous person in any way possible. To claim otherwise would be ridiculous,” Khashoggi’s family told The Post in 2018.

On Oct. 2, 2018, Saudi agents killed Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi inside the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul. What has been done in the aftermath? (Video: Joyce Lee, Thomas LeGro, Dalton Bennett, John Parks/The Washington Post)

As The Post reported after Khashoggi’s death, that claim was in fact pushed by the crown prince, who spoke by phone with President Donald Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner and then-national security adviser John Bolton in the days after Khashoggi’s disappearance. The crown prince told Kushner and Bolton then that Khashoggi was a dangerous Islamist and urged Kushner and Bolton to preserve the U.S.-Saudi alliance.

The CIA concluded in 2018 that Mohammed had ordered Khashoggi’s killing, contradicting Saudi Arabia’s insistence that the crown prince had no advance knowledge of the plot. However, in his book, Pompeo — who previously served as CIA director — seems to give Mohammed the benefit of the doubt over the United States’ own intelligence agencies.

“First, contrary to what has been reported, there is nearly zero intelligence that directly links MBS to ordering the murder,” Pompeo wrote. “Second, I met with many people who had ordered killings. Were it to be proven that MBS had ordered this one, it would have meant only that he was one more ruthless leader in a pretty damn ruthless part of the world.”

In a statement Tuesday, Fred Ryan, publisher and CEO of The Washington Post, said it was “shocking and disappointing” to see Pompeo’s book “so outrageously misrepresent” Khashoggi’s life and work.

“His only offense was exposing corruption and oppression among those in power — work that good journalists around the world do every day,” Ryan wrote. “Jamal dedicated himself to the values of free speech and a free press and held himself to the highest professional standards. For this devotion, he paid the ultimate price.”

“It is shameful that Pompeo would spread vile falsehoods to dishonor a courageous man’s life and service — and his commitment to principles Americans hold dear — as a ploy to sell books,” Ryan added.

In November, the Biden administration determined that Mohammed, as a “sitting head of government,” was immune from a civil lawsuit filed in the United States by Khashoggi’s fiancee and a human rights organization he founded.

In a letter accompanying the submission, State Department acting legal adviser Richard C. Visek said the decision was a legal one and that the department “takes no view on the merits of the present suit and reiterates its unequivocal condemnation of the heinous murder of Jamal Khashoggi.”

Karen DeYoung, Missy Ryan, John Hudson, Souad Mekhennet and Carol D. Leonnig contributed to this report.

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Federal judge finds DeSantis violated Florida Constitution but dismisses lawsuit

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A federal judge ruled Friday that Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis violated the state’s Constitution when he suspended an elected, progressive-minded state prosecutor but concluded that the law ultimately allows the decision to oust him to stand.

U.S. District Judge Robert L. Hinkle also found that DeSantis (R) infringed on the First Amendment by considering Andrew Warren’s public remarks on controversial topics such as abortion and transgender care as “motivating factors” in the decision to suspend him.

But neither offered grounds to reinstate Warren, offering DeSantis a legal victory.

DeSantis communications director Taryn Fenske called it “a win for the governor and a win for the people of Florida.” Nonetheless, Hinkle’s 59-page order finds fault with the actions of DeSantis and his staff, as well as with the case and facts they brought to trial.

“The record includes not a hint of misconduct by Mr. Warren,” Hinkle wrote. “So far as this record reflects, he was diligently and competently performing the job he was elected to perform, very much in the way he told voters he would perform it … the assertion that Mr. Warren neglected his duty or was incompetent is incorrect.”

Although Hinkle found no wrongdoing on Warren’s part, he concluded it was a state matter.

DeSantis’s decision to suspend the twice-elected prosecutor in August alarmed many who saw it as an overreach by the governor. One of Warren’s attorneys called it “a political hit job.”

The popular Florida governor — who sailed to reelection in November and is widely considered a potential 2024 presidential candidate — justified the suspension by saying Warren didn’t have the right to “refuse to enforce Florida law.”

The Tampa area prosecutor said he was being punished for exercising his right to free speech. Earlier in the year, he signed two pledges written by Fair and Just Prosecution, an organization that advocates for reform-minded prosecutors. In one pledge, prosecutors vowed not to “criminalize reproductive health decisions.” The second statement made similar vows regarding people seeking transgender health care.

Warren, who was the first witness in the five-day nonjury trial in late November in Tallahassee, said the issue went beyond him.

“As I’ve said from the beginning, there’s so much more at stake than my job,” Warren said at a news conference the morning the trial began. “We’re not just fighting to do the job that I was elected to do, I’m fighting for the rights of voters across Florida to have the elected officials of their choice.”

In his testimony at the trial, Warren said the pledges he signed were never put into action or adopted as official policy. Two assistant state attorneys in Warren’s office backed up that assertion, testifying that they did not consider the statements a reflection of actual policy. But Warren’s chief of staff said he thought the pledge upholding abortion rights was tantamount to a policy directive.

In announcing the suspension, DeSantis also pointed to Warren’s decision not to prosecute 67 protesters arrested for unlawful assembly during demonstrations over the murder of George Floyd by Minneapolis police in 2020.

Warren was also instrumental in helping formerly incarcerated people regain their voting rights after DeSantis signed into law restrictions to a voter-approved constitutional amendment allowing them to register to vote. The prosecutor also created a conviction review office to examine innocence claims.

DeSantis blasted such actions as those of a “woke” prosecutor.

The trial provided a rare look inside the inner workings of DeSantis and his staff. Evidence and public records showed that the governor’s office was excited about the “totally free earned media” that resulted from the news conference where he announced the suspension. Careful staff tabulations estimated that the governor, who was running for reelection at the time, earned media coverage worth $2.4 million.

Testimony also showed that while DeSantis said he had asked his staff for a report of any prosecutors deemed to be “taking the law into their own hands,” the focus was on Warren from the start.

Larry Keefe, a former U.S. attorney in Florida whom DeSantis named as the state’s “safety czar,” testified that he consulted with a few Republican state attorneys and sheriffs, as well as Tampa area GOP donors, but did not conduct an extensive investigation.

During the trial, Warren’s attorneys asked members of DeSantis’s staff what the governor means when he calls people “woke.”

“To me, it means someone who believes that there are systemic injustices in the criminal justice system and on that basis they can decline to fully enforce and uphold the law,” said Ryan Newman, DeSantis’s general counsel.

Newman added that “it would be the belief there are systemic injustices in American society and the need to address them.”

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Donald Trump news today: White House visitor logs uncovered in Jan 6 probe as Trump dismisses DeSantis

‘Meet the Press’ anchor reveals the ‘most powerful person’ shaping the 2024 election

Donald Trump has issued a warning to Ron DeSantis if the Florida Governor decides to run against him in the 2024 presidential race.

Speaking on conservative podcast “The Water Cooler” on Monday, Mr Trump said he had heard Mr DeSantis “might want to run” against him.

“We’ll handle that the way I handle things,” he said, without divulging what exactly he meant.

The former president also continued to sound off on his Truth Social platform on Monday about the parallel investigations into the discovery of a large trove classified materials at his Mar-a-Lago home and the discovery of a small number of classified documents from President Joe Biden’s time as vice president at his home and an office he once used.

In his latest rant, he hit out at what he called the “BOXES HOAX” and described the probe into him holding onto classified documents – as well as a probe into his role in the January 6 Capitol riot – a “Gestapo type operation”.

Meanwhile, former New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani has spoken out to reveal that Mr Trump once advised him to take secret documents home with him.

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Trump admin visitor logs show who was at White House in run-up to Jan 6

White House visitor logs from the Trump administration were purposely hidden from view by the former president while in office. However, now a selection covering key dates leading up to the Capitol riot has come to light among the supporting documents relating to the House select committee’s investigation of January 6.

The spreadsheet of entries covers seven full days of White House visitor manifests — 12,14, 18, 21 December 2020, and 3, 4, 5 January 2021.

While not exhaustive, the logs reveal who visited 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, where they went in the building (the West Wing, Oval Office, the residence), and whether they met with then-president Donald Trump.

It’s an eclectic mix of political and non-political figures, Fox New personalities, donors, governors, and people familiar from the probe into the Capitol riot.

Oliver O’Connell17 January 2023 16:00

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Newly revealed visitor logs show who was visiting Trump ahead before Capitol riot

John Bowden reports from Washington, DC.

Oliver O’Connell18 January 2023 08:45

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Trump to be joined by Graham, McMaster at first public campaign event

Former President Donald Trump will be joined by two of his highest-profile South Carolina supporters — U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham and Gov. Henry McMaster — at the first public campaign event of his 2024 White House bid later this month in the early voting state.

Oliver O’Connell18 January 2023 06:45

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Boebert and Greene got into heated fight in the bathroom during speaker vote

Representatives Lauren Boebert and Marjorie Taylor Greene reportedly feuded in the restroom during the protracted speaker vote earlier this month.

The Republican congresswomen were on opposite ends of the GOP fight over the speakership. Ms Greene steadfastly supported Kevin McCarthy, who ultimately won the gavel, while Ms Boebert opposed him.

Multiple sources told The Daily Beast that on 3 January, the first day of the new Congress, Ms Greene and Ms Boebert engaged in a screaming match in the ladies’ bathroom in the Speaker’s lobby.

Eric Garcia has the story.

Oliver O’Connell18 January 2023 04:45

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Ivana Trump gifted former nanny $1m condo in her will

Ivana Trump, the former wife of Donald Trump, left behind an estate worth an estimated $34m when she died last July, willing her children Ivanka, Eric, and Donald Trump, Jr, a $26.5m townhouse in New York City, and giving a Florida condo worth over $1m to her former nanny.

The former president, meanwhile, got nothing, according to Forbes, which reported on the contents of the probate documents.

The reported snub is not entirely a surprise.

Oliver O’Connell18 January 2023 03:45

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Hacker Guccifer who infiltrated Clinton and Bush emails slams DC ‘hypocrisy’

The infamous Romanian hacker known as Guccifer, who managed to break into the online correspondence of the Bush and Clinton political dynasties, fueling years of right-wing conspiracies, declared his project a “failure,” according to his first US interview since getting out of prison in 2021.

Oliver O’Connell18 January 2023 02:45

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Sarah Huckabee Sanders dodges Trump 2024 endorsement

In an interview on Fox News on Sunday, Ms Sanders was questioned by Shannon Bream on whether she plans to support Mr Trump, who she served as White House Press Secretary before 2020.

Stuti Mishra has the story.

Oliver O’Connell18 January 2023 01:45

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Schiff calls for threat assessment of Biden’s handling of classified papers

Longtime Trump foe Adam Schiff says that the handling of classified documents discovered at President Joe Biden’s home and former office must be assessed to see if it endangered US national security.

Oliver O’Connell18 January 2023 00:45

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Who is the most powerful person going into 2024 election cycle?

Both the political fate of President Joe Biden and his predecessor Donald Trump depend on special counsel investigations headed by people appointed by Mr Garland.

Oliver O’Connell17 January 2023 23:45

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Graham and McMaster to join Trump at first public campaign event

Former President Donald Trump will be joined by two of his highest-profile South Carolina supporters — US Senator Lindsey Graham and Governor Henry McMaster — at the first public campaign event of his 2024 White House bid later this month in the early-voting state.

Oliver O’Connell17 January 2023 22:45

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