Tkachuk scores as Panthers beat Sabres for 4th straight win
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 07:15:09 GMT
SUNRISE, Fla. (AP) — Matthew Tkachuk snapped a tie in the opening minute of the third period, and the Florida Panthers topped the Buffalo Sabres 2-1 on Tuesday night for their fourth consecutive victory.Aaron Ekblad also scored for Florida, and Alex Lyon made 40 saves for his fourth straight win.It’s the longest win streak of the season for the Panthers (40-31-7), who moved into a tie with the New York Islanders for the top spot in the Eastern Conference wild-card standings. Florida owns the first tiebreaker because of its regulations wins.Pittsburgh is one point behind Florida and New York with four games left for each team.Dylan Cozens scored for Buffalo, which had won four of five. Devon Levi, a seventh-round pick by Florida in the 2020 draft, made 34 saves in his first loss in two NHL starts.The Sabres (37-32-7) are six points behind the Panthers and Islanders. The Sabres have six games left.Cozens scored on a Buffalo power play 8:58 into the first period. It was his 29th ...The new revelations — and key questions — in the Trump indictment
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 07:15:09 GMT
The 16-page indictment against Donald Trump accuses him of 34 felonies for allegedly falsifying business records in a bid to violate campaign finance laws — a bevy of charges setting in motion the first criminal prosecution of a former president in American history.Manhattan prosecutors allege that Trump concealed hush money payments by falsely labeling related transactions as legal expenses and by arranging for a tabloid publisher to bottle up the story of a woman who said she had a sexual relationship with Trump.In doing so, the prosecutors say, Trump repeatedly violated a New York corporate record-keeping law and agreed to break campaign finance laws.All 34 felony charges against Trump are identical, with each carrying the possibility of up to four years in prison, although judges rarely sentence defendants to jail for such offenses.The indictment is a bare-bones document that simply recites the alleged offenses in boiler-plate language. However, Manhattan District Attorney Alvin...Trump decries charges against him as an ‘insult to our country’
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 07:15:09 GMT
Former President Donald Trump struck a defiant note Tuesday evening, declaring that felony charges made against him were erroneous, politically motivated and “an insult to our country.”“The only crime that I have committed is to fearlessly defend our nation from those who seek to destroy it,” he said while addressing his supporters at his Mar-a-Lago estate just hours after being arraigned in New York.The remarks were Trump’s first since the details of the indictment were unveiled Tuesday afternoon in Manhattan. The former president pleaded not guilty to 34 felony charges of filing false business records related to an alleged scheme to bury allegations about extramarital affairs ahead of the 2016 presidential election.Trump went after Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, describing him as a “criminal,” a “radical left” prosecutor and a “failed district attorney,” while calling for him to be prosecuted.“The criminal is the district attorney, because he illegally leaked massive amo...Foreign business community in China beware
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 07:15:09 GMT
Peter Humphrey is a former Reuters correspondent and spent over a decade as a fraud investigator in China for Western firms. He is currently an external research affiliate of Harvard University’s Fairbank Center for Chinese Studies and a mentor to families of foreigners wrongfully detained in China.The recent raid against American due diligence firm Mintz in Beijing, and the arrest of all five of its Chinese employees there, carries echoes of the past.Reminiscent of the raid against my own due diligence firm ChinaWhys almost 10 years ago, which led to my wrongful imprisonment for two years on cooked-up charges of illegal information gathering, the latest raid has sent a chilling warning to all foreign businesses operating in China — gather information at your own peril; you can become a target at any time.Mintz is a respected United States-based global due diligence firm, and as an American firm, it is, of course, an obvious target for proxy reprisals over Washington’s growing pushb...Do French trade unions still hold sway over the street?
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 07:15:09 GMT
French trades unions have fought President Emmanuel Macron to a near standstill on pension reform. They have disrupted the country for more than two months. After a long standoff, trade union leaders are meeting Macron’s chief lieutenant Elisabeth Borne today to discuss the pensions affair.The union leaders enjoy popularity ratings that politicians — both government and opposition — can only dream about. The French unions appear strong, popular and united — for now. They brought out protesting crowds of over 1 million nationwide on three occasions since mid-January. And yet the ferocity of their opposition to a relatively modest reform can be explained partly by their fundamental weakness.Unions are a French paradox — one of many. In Germany or the Netherlands, or even in Britain, the unions have more members and fewer internal divisions. They are more willing to consider arguments about long-term prosperity and the stability of the welfare system. In France, the unions are s...A wartime NATO struggles to replace its chief
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 07:15:09 GMT
It’s the rumor inflating the Brussels bubble: The EU’s top executive, Ursula von der Leyen, could be crossing town to run NATO. The rationale makes sense. She has a good working relationship with Washington. She is a former defense minister. And as European Commission president, she has experience working with most NATO heads of government. Plus, if chosen, she would become the alliance’s first-ever female leader. The conversation has crested in recent weeks, as people eye current NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg’s pending exit at the end of September.Yet according to those inside NATO and at the Commission, the murmurings are more wish-casting than hints of a pending job switch. There is no evidence von der Leyen is interested in the role, and those in Brussels don’t expect her to quit before her first presidential term ends in 2024.The chatter is similar to the rumblings around Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte, a long-serving leader who checks every box but in...Japanese FM: It’s time to deepen cooperation
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 07:15:09 GMT
Yoshimasa Hayashi is the minister for foreign affairs of Japan.The security of Europe and that of the Indo-Pacific region can no longer be discussed separately — that was my main message when I attended the NATO ministerial meeting last year for the first time as Japanese foreign minister.Today’s complex and severe international security environment requires like-minded partners to intensify cooperation. This perception is widely shared among NATO members and partner countries, and cooperation has remarkably deepened throughout the past year.NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg visited Japan this January, where we shared views on the security environment in the Indo-Pacific and reaffirmed the need for like-minded countries to take united action — this includes our response to Russia’s aggression against Ukraine, the most deplorable example of a unilateral attempt to change the status quo by force. We also discussed the future of Japan-NATO cooperation, and expressed our strong de...UK MPs are again pushing to tighten rules around backbench groups
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 07:15:09 GMT
LONDON — The British parliament’s controversial backbench groups have been back in the spotlight for all the wrong reasons. Now some MPs want to tighten the rules that govern them.A new report from the U.K. parliament’s Committee on Standards has probed the membership and financial affairs of so-called All-Party Parliamentary Groups, and is now recommending a cap on the number of backbench groups in which an MP can hold an role, and a ban on secretariats which are “either provided or funded by a foreign government.” The groups are subject to less stringent rules than the House of Commons’ better-known select committees, but are still able to use parliamentary premises for their meetingsNew proposals include mandatory annual reports for groups that receive over £1,500 a year, while MPs will be banned from acting as an officer for more than six APPGs at once. The plan for toughening the rules comes almost a year after a previous report identified improper ...The politics of poo: How sewage-strewn beaches became Britain’s new election battleground
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 07:15:09 GMT
LONDON — British politics has long been seen as a shitshow. It’s taken on a more literal meaning of late.Rishi Sunak’s government is scrambling to manage rising public anger over the dumping of untreated sewage into Britain’s rivers and oceans by privately-owned water firms. The unpalatable results are often visible to the naked eye, enraging locals and holidaymakers and rendering once-proud British beaches unusable for days at a time.Under mounting pressure — three separate national newspapers now have “clean water” campaigns running — Environment Secretary Thérèse Coffey pushed out a raft of measures Tuesday aimed at improving water quality, including the threat of unlimited fines for water companies that break the rules. The announcement — the government’s second such action plan in seven months — is unlikely to quell public discontent. Britain’s waterways have become the focus of toxic claims and counter-claims since a viral social media campaign two...Same trip, different plans: EU’s von der Leyen dances around Macron in China
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 07:15:09 GMT
Ursula von der Leyen’s plate-spinning in China is going to be tricky.As the European Commission president heads to China this week, she’ll need extra room for all the agendas she’s carrying: The differing views of the 27 countries she represents, constant background pressure from the U.S. — and a French president traveling alongside her, but not fully in conjunction with her. The result will be a delicate diplomatic dance playing out over the next three days, as von der Leyen and French President Emmanuel Macron seek to present a united European face despite differing plans while on the ground. Commission officials have stressed that von der Leyen is pursuing an entirely different program than the French president, who is visiting regional parts of China and bringing a large delegation of business leaders with him.Instead, they will share just one formal meeting — the three-way pow-wow with Chinese President Xi Jinping on Thursday. Von der Leyen will also conduct her own m...Latest news
- EU closer to ending US trade spat, moves on Green Deal funds
- Circor: Q4 Earnings Snapshot
- Here's when you can buy tickets for concerts at Cheyenne Frontier Days
- Immigrant detention bill advancing in Colorado legislature
- Shots fired in NW Miami-Dade leave bullet holes in Chase Bank
- Chicago man suing Buffalo Wild Wings over boneless wings
- Honda recalling 500,000 vehicles to fix seat belt problem
- MDPD officers’ bodycam footage shows dramatic rescue of 3-year-old from canal after car plunges in
- UK to swerve recession this year as Jeremy Hunt unveils budget
- Serbia’s far right seizes on Putin’s war to push retaking Kosovo