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Pro Football Hall of Famer Michael Irvin filed a lawsuit seeking $100 million in damages after claiming that a Phoenix hotel and a female employee wrongfully accused him of misconduct. 

The lawsuit, obtained by USA TODAY Sports, was filed in Collin County, Texas, on Thursday. It lists a ‘Jane Doe’ and Marriott International as defendants.

The complaint stems from an incident at the Renaissance Phoenix Downtown Hotel on Sunday in which Irvin says he only encountered the unknown woman for a minute, shook her hand and then went to his hotel room to sleep. 

In the lawsuit, Irvin says he was “shockingly woken up by a crew of security” and removed from the hotel “without any explanation or questions.” 

Irvin, who was in town to do commentary work for the NFL Network for Sunday’s Super Bowl between the Kansas City Chiefs and Philadelphia Eagles, was then sent home, with network representatives confirming that Irvin would not be part of any telecast this week. 

Super Bowl Central: Super Bowl 57 odds, Eagles-Chiefs matchups, stats and more

‘Evidently, as Plaintiff was sleeping one of the managers of the Hotel reported false information to the NFL about the Plaintiff accusing him of improper behavior towards a hotel employee,’ the lawsuit states. ‘The NFL responded by removing Plaintiff from all scheduled programming surrounding the Super Bowl. Plaintiff’s representatives have reached out to the hotel and even met in person to obtain clarity about this situation and provide witnesses and resolve this matter before Plaintiff’s reputation could be damaged any further—but to no avail.’

Irvin, 56, has said in previous media interviews this week that he did nothing wrong. 

‘Plaintiff was judged guilty without even knowing the accusations. A few days later, Plaintiff was removed from his scheduled programming, and essentially ‘kicked off the air’ and ‘cancelled’ due to these allegations,’ the lawsuit said.

Irvin, who has worked for NFL Network since 2009, said earlier in the week he had been drinking the night of the incident. 

‘It is clear Michael is the latest victim of our cancel culture where all it takes is an accusation to ruin a person’s life. Michael looks forward to clearing his name in court and hopes the court of public opinion will see the truth come out as well,’ Irvin’s lawyer Levi McCathern said in a statement to USA TODAY Sports. 

Attempts to contact Marriott’s attorney for comment were unsuccessful.

“I don’t really recall that conversation, to tell you the truth,” Irvin told the Dallas Morning News. “We were out drinking. It was just a friendly conversation. ‘What’s up?’ I don’t even know. … I am totally perplexed. That’s honestly all that happened.”

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New Mexico State announced Friday night that it has shut down its men’s basketball program until further notice while investigating unspecified ‘potential violations of university policy.’

The school said in a statement that its next game against California Baptist on Saturday will not be played as scheduled and its men’s basketball coaching staff, including first-year head coach Greg Heiar, has been placed on paid administrative leave.

‘New Mexico State University is suspending operations for the men’s basketball program until further notice,’ the school said in its statement, provided by university spokesperson Justin Bannister.

‘NMSU personnel were recently informed of new allegations, separate from the events that took place in Albuquerque late last year, involving potential violations of university policy.’

The statement appears to refer to the shooting in Albuquerque last year involving Aggies forward Mike Peake.

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It is immediately unclear whether the ‘new allegations’ referenced by New Mexico State are criminal in nature.

In a separate statement, the New Mexico State University Board of Regents said only that it ‘supports the action taken by the university leaders and is confident a full and thorough investigation will be conducted.’

Bannister did not immediately reply to a follow-up email from USA TODAY Sports asking whether the decision to suspend the men’s basketball program was made by the athletic department or at the university level. 

A school spokesperson told the Las Cruces Sun-News, which is part of the USA TODAY Network, that the team had already traveled to California by the time the decision to suspend operations was made Friday.

The Aggies reached three of the past four NCAA tournaments under previous coach Chris Jans, who is now the head coach at Mississippi State. But they are 9-15 in their first year under Heiar and are sitting in last place in the Western Athletic Conference. 

WAC spokesperson Tony Jones wrote in an email that the conference was monitoring the situation and had no additional comment.

New Mexico State’s decision to suspend the operations of its entire men’s basketball program is rare, and comes on the heels of a tumultuous few months. 

On Nov. 19, authorities allege, four University of New Mexico students attempted to ‘lure’ Peake to campus and jump him as retaliation for a previous fight. Peake and one of the UNM students, Brandon Travis, each drew a gun, police said. Travis was killed in the ensuing shootout, while Peake sustained a gunshot wound in his left leg.

The aftermath has drawn further scrutiny. Surveillance video shows that, before police arrived, three of Peake’s teammates came to the scene in a Chevrolet Camaro and Peake put his gun and a tablet in the trunk. Authorities later retrieved the weapon and the tablet from assistant basketball coaches, and an athletic department administrator turned over Peake’s phone. 

New Mexico State has since hired an outside firm to investigate the matter.

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‘Jeff is a great coach,’ Leonard said. ‘Jeff came in with the right mindset that he wasn’t going to sit back and allow bad play. He demanded excellence from everybody. The offensive line got better. He came in and made sure everybody understood what was at stake and what he wanted from out of every player.

‘When we blow a lead, that next meeting was what we needed. He’d call you out and put you on the big screen and let you know this is unacceptable. I hate that he gets a lot of hate. Coming in, not knowing a coach on your coaching staff, how do you expect him to come in and go 8-0? Give him a full offseason, his own coaching staff and we’ll be a great spot.’

Leonard also praised Saturday for shutting down the linebacker after he attempted to play while still recovering from offseason surgery to address a back injury. He played Oct. 2, suffered a concussion, returned again Oct. 30 and Nov. 6 but was not healthy.

Super Bowl Central: Super Bowl 57 odds, Eagles-Chiefs matchups, stats and more

‘I’m happy Jeff Saturday came along,’ Leonard said. ‘He said, ‘It’s not you. Got to figure this out and shut you down.”

Leonard said he had no feeling on his left side when he returned — he made 11 tackles and an interception in limited snaps — but is feeling better and the strength is returning to his leg.

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Three years from the start of a pandemic, henpecked by inflation and kinda-sorta-maybe anticipating a recession is no time for sweeping assertions about ad buys and corporate positioning. But Super Bowl Sunday waits for no economic headwinds, and the lineup of advertisers for the 57th game offers some tells not only for the current conditions but also the future.

One year after the “Crypto Bowl” saw three cryptocurrency spots aim big only to crash, burn and bring shame upon their endorsers, the industry is absent from the national lineup. The beer landscape has opened up to all comers.

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And sports gambling will remain viable and visible, with as large a presence as another testosterone-fueled industry – cars.

A look at who’s in and out, hot or invisible once the station breaks hit after the Chiefs and Eagles kick off Sunday:

Sports gambling: Still a kick

Unlike alcohol, online wagering remains in its semi-Prohibition era: Not every state has approved sports gambling five years after a Supreme Court ruling opened the door. The fight for customers remains real, and the space crowded.

But perhaps a settling in the industry is underway.

One year after DraftKings and Caesars planted the flag for sports gambling in Super Bowl ads, just one of them returned. DraftKings will be joined by FanDuel on the commercial roster, befitting for the two brands industry experts believed would have a huge early advantage due to their previous forays into daily fantasy sports.

DraftKings is live with its mobile gambling product in 20 states, while its daily fantasy offerings remain available in 46 states. It will lean hard on some Super Sunday staples – comedian Kevin Hart, actor/hip-hop artist Ludacris and baseball legend David Ortiz – in its appeal to the masses.

“We have certainly established ourselves as a leading brand in the industry, but sports betting is still growing,” Michael Shonkoff, DraftKings’ vice president of brand and agency, tells USA TODAY. “The Super Bowl is a great chance to reach a large audience and reinforce our leadership position.

“We want to give people a chance to try the product, taking that moment and offering a free bet for those who are eligible.”

Their biggest rival is mixing in an element of chance.

FanDuel has enlisted future Hall of Fame tight end Rob Gronkowski to attempt a field goal between the third and fourth quarters of the game. If Gronk’s 25-yard try is successful, the company says it will unleash $10 million in free bets for its customers.

‘It’s for America,” Gronkowski told USA TODAY Sports. “It’s $10 million in free bets for America.’

And it may represent a turning point in sports gambling’s arc, where fans may know of its availability but haven’t fully established their brand loyalties.

“The awareness-building ads don’t make as much sense anymore,” says Charles Taylor, professor of marketing at Villanova University. “People are more prone to know where to go to do it. It is getting more about trying to distinguish themselves from the other betting places, which isn’t easy to do. It’s a pretty simple service, right? Taking bets.

“Using Rob Gronkowski is really attention-getting and pretty clever creative.”

Cars: Missing in action

If there’s a holy trinity of Super Bowl advertising, it’s probably beer, snacks and cars. But one of those will be far less visible come gameday.

One year after five auto brands – plus car-buying site Carvana – elbowed into the game lineup, only Jeep, GM and Kia are airing nationally. Yet this may be a very temporary state of affairs.

While gas prices have dropped, the cost and availability of cars has not. Supply-chain issues paralyzed both the new- and used-car markets, and shoppers in both markets now face rising interest rates. It all makes this a less than ideal year to spend $7 million for 30 seconds of airtime.

“I do think that’s related to supply chain and that they haven’t had to work very hard to sell some of the hot models at premiums,” says Villanova’s Taylor. “It’s starting to come back into balance, but I think some are thinking less about needing a short-term boost.

“I don’t think it will be a long-term trend.”

Nostalgia: Still the champion

As brands attempt the impossible – appealing, in some meaningful fashion, to an audience expected to exceed 110 million viewers – an old reliable network of leading men and women will find their way to your screen.

From Hart for DraftKings, to Will Ferrell for GM’s partnership with Netflix (keep an eye out for Ferrell in the iconic green “Squid Game” sweatsuit) to a quartet of mostly aging rockers led by Ozzy Osbourne touting Workday, a smorgasbord of celebrity comfort food will be served.

The cross-generational plays are also evident, from a Steve Martin-Ben Stiller Pepsi alliance to Billie Jean King and popular streamer MrBeast for the NFL.

Ideally, there’s just one celebrity who can hit all age groups and perhaps that’s Dave Grohl, the pleasantly benign Foo Fighters frontman who got his start with Nirvana. He appears in a Crown Royal spot.

“He’s been portrayed as appealing more to millennials but a lot of people older and younger than that like him,” says Taylor. “He himself would be considered Gen X. We’re still seeing Ozzy Osbourne and Ben Stiller and Will Ferrell.

“It’s nostalgia, as long as everybody can remember it.”

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Tom Brady filed paperwork with the NFL and NFL Players Association, signaling his retirement after 23 seasons, reports ESPN.com.

Brady made his retirement announcement on social media on Feb. 1, weeks after the Tampa Bay Buccaneers were routed by the Dallas Cowboys in the Wild Card Round. 

Brady filing retirement paperwork doesn’t mean his playing status is final as he can return at any time and come back to play. Once Brady becomes an official free agent at the beginning of the league year on March 15 at 4 p.m. ET, he can sign any contract with any NFL team. 

Brady would be a no-doubt first-ballot Hall of Famer in the class of 2028 if he stays off the field. Any eligible player must be retired for five consecutive seasons to garner Hall of Fame consideration. 

The 45-year-old seven-time Super Bowl winner leaves Tampa Bay with salary cap issues to work out.  They are currently $55 million over the cap for 2023 and will be on the hook for $35.1 million in salary cap dead money after Brady’s retirement.

Super Bowl Central: Super Bowl 57 odds, Eagles-Chiefs matchups, stats and more

Brady said he will start his analyst job with Fox Sports for the 2024 season, which will reportedly pay him $375 million over his 10-year deal.

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CBS Sports president Sean McManus says there is no truth that executives at the network staged an intervention for lead NFL analyst Tony Romo, amid criticism that the former Dallas Cowboys quarterback was unprepared at times in his role this past year. 

McManus appeared on SiriusXM’s ‘Mad Dog Unleashed’ and commented on a New York Post story that reported that McManus and a lead NFL game producer went to Romo’s home to address the situation.

“The thought that there is some kind of story behind the fact that I sat down with Tony to talk about how he can get better is just inaccurate,’ McManus said, per Sports Illustrated . 

CBS said at the time that the alleged intervention was a ‘complete mischaracterization,’ adding that executives meet regularly with their on-air talent.

“An enormous amount of people have come up to me who have said to me, ‘We really like Tony Romo,’” McManus said on the radio program. “He’s different. He’s not your typical analyst. He is enthusiastic. He sometimes speaks more of a fan than even an analyst, which I think people like. So I think this is being overplayed.’

Since retiring from the NFL, Romo has been the lead analyst on CBS Sports and signed a reported 10-year, $180 million contract in 2020, making him one of the highest-paid analysts on television.

‘Social media, as you know, tends to be very vitriolic and unkind and it becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy. And then when the mainstream media watches social media, they start ganging. … Can he get better? We can all get better,’ McManus said.

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The men’s basketball game between East Carolina and Tulane was not played Saturday after the death of ECU radio broadcaster Jeff Charles, who called Pirates basketball for three decades.

Charles, 70, had been in New Orleans for Saturday’s game but died after a sudden medical incident Friday, according to WNCT.

The longtime announcer was known as the ‘The Voice of the Pirates’ and called games for the university since 1988. 

Charles called his 1,000th career game with the Pirates Jan. 4. He also called 15 of ECU’s 21 football bowl games, per WNCT.

Tributes poured in after Charles’ death was announced by the university.

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‘We are deeply saddened and shocked by the passing of longtime Voice of the Pirates Jeff Charles,’ ECU athletic director Jon Gilbert said in a statement Saturday. ‘Our thoughts and prayers are with Debby, Britt and all of his family and friends. Jeff was a true professional in every sense of the word who had a unique ability to bring the game to life and connect with listeners.

‘He means as much as anyone to ECU Football, basketball and baseball fans and we know Pirate Nation is mourning together tonight. His iconic, ‘You can paint this one purple’ will remain an integral part of ECU Athletics history.’

Rescheduling information for the game was not announced at the time of publication. 

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Canelo Álvarez is finalizing a title fight against John Ryder for May 6, ESPN reports. The bout will be for the undisputed super middleweight championship and is expected to take place in Álvarez’s hometown of Jalisco, Guadalajara.

The Mexican boxing star’s last match was in September when he defeated Gennadiy Golovkin by unanimous decision in the finale of their fight trilogy. After the win, he said he was going to rest his injured hand and wanted a rematch against Dimitry Bivol.

The Ryder fight would be a year after Álvarez (58-2-2, 39 KOs) lost to Bivol in a light heavyweight title match. This was Álvarez’s first defeat since 2013 when he lost to Floyd Mayweather Jr. by majority decision.

Álvarez, 32, had surgery on his wrist in October. He currently holds all four super middleweight belts.

Álvarez has not fought in Mexico since 2011 when he knocked out Kermit Cintron in Mexico City. His last fight in Guadalajara was a year prior at the age of 19, knocking out Luciano Leonel Cuello to capture the WBC Silver light middleweight title.

Ryder (32-5, 18 KOs) is on a four-fight winning streak after losing a controversial decision to Callum Smith in 2019. The British southpaw, 34, is the owner of the interim WBO super middleweight belt, which he captured in his last match when he knocked out Zach Parker in November.

The London native has never fought in Mexico.

Álvarez will be  the early favorite to win and Ryder knows the implications that the fight holds.

‘It would absolutely be a dream come true, I’m sure there would be a movie made about it at some point down the line because it would be an absolute blockbuster,’ he told Seconds Out last month of the possibility of beating Álvarez. ‘To hand off a belt in this boxing game, no one could have seen this coming four or five years ago. … So the fact that I’ve stuck at it, turned it around and had the belief in myself and the belief of other people in me to carry on is a great thing.’

Outside of the ring, Álvarez is set to appear in ‘Creed 3’ in March and has a cameo in a Michelob ULTRA commercial for Super Bowl 57.

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Vice President Harris this week returned to focusing on targeting what the administration believes are the ‘root causes’ of the migrant crisis at the southern border, announcing $1 billion in additional funding and a new initiative to direct money to Central America.

Harris’ office announced on Monday that an extra $950 million in private sector commitments has been raised from companies, including Nestle and Target, bringing the total amount of Harris’ ‘Call to Action’ launched in 2021 to $4.2 billion.

‘The investments that we have made thus far are on track to meet goals set out by the Partnership for Central America, which include the creation of 1 million new jobs by 2032 and the inclusion of 6 million people in the formal financial system by 2027,’ Harris said at a roundtable at the White House.

In 2021, Harris was put in charge of leading diplomatic talks to tackle ‘root causes’ like poverty, violence, corruption, and climate change which the administration believes are driving the migrant crisis. Republicans ultimately dubbed her the ‘border czar,’ a title the White House has rejected.

The task has proved a politically tricky assignment for Harris at a time when migrant numbers at the southern border were skyrocketing. They have stayed at record number since, with over 1.7 million encounters in FY 21, more than 2.3 million encounters in FY 22 and so far every month of FY23 outpacing the prior year.

Harris was initially hammered for failing to visit the border. She eventually did so in the summer of 2021, but has not returned. She has intermittently held events related to migration, but has continued to be dogged by questions about what work she is doing related to the beat and how effective that work has been.

‘If you were given a job 2 years ago with the explicit goal of reducing illegal immigration, and then you sit around and do nothing while illegal immigration explodes to levels never seen before, you should be fired and replaced,’ the National Border Patrol Council said last month. ‘Period.’

But Harris has attempted to counteract that her strategy is a long-term one that needs time to develop. Aides have also emphasized that the beat is migration causes, not border security.

At the core of this push is the public-private partnership known as the Call to Action. The funding is targeted to aim at specific goals: a reform agenda; digital and financial inclusion; food security and climate-smart agriculture; climate adaptation and clean energy; education and workforce development; and public health access; strengthening democratic governance, combating corruption, and improving security.

Despite the historic border numbers overwhelming the U.S. southern border, Harris has sought to claim that the measures are working.

‘These investments have created jobs. These investments have increased access to the financial system, including to the Internet. These investments have allowed small businesses which have the potential not only in the United States but around the world, and in particular in this region, have the potential to really thrive if they have access to financing,’ she said.

She also linked the effort to a decline in migration from Northern Triangle countries of El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras.

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‘Our root causes strategy and these investments represent a long term development effort, but we are already beginning to see positive trends,’ she said on Monday.

The administration also announced that it would not only be continuing with the program but expanding it. The ‘Central America Forward’ program was announced by Harris as a ‘new phase’ of the partnership that will add good governance and labor rights as priorities into the partnership.

It will also include additional government commitments to support investments in the region, with Harris touting a program to identify clean energy projects as well as workforce development programs. Additionally private sector partners are committing to goals to combat corruption and protect labor rights — known as the ‘Good Governance, Good Jobs’ declaration.

The administration has been attempting to show that it is turning the corner on the crisis, particularly with the announcement this week of new border numbers, which officials say show that new border measures are working.

Those numbers for January show that there were approximately 156,000 migrant encounters in January. While still the highest January on record, it is a sharp drop from the 251,000 encountered in December — and officials said the number of migrants caught by Border Patrol crossing illegally is the lowest since Feb. 2021.

Officials have linked the drop to a new parole program for 30,000 migrants from Venezuela, Nicaragua, Haiti and Cuba, combined with expanded Title 42 expulsions for those nationalities.

But the administration has also been attempting to put the blame on Congress for failing to pass an immigration reform bill with extra border funding. So far, Republicans have balked at the inclusion of a pathway to citizenship for millions of illegal immigrants included in the White House’s framework.

‘Ultimately, we need Congress to pass legislation that both enhances border security but fixes our broken immigration system. We are a nation of immigrants,’ Harris said.

But Republican opposition is unlikely to slow down any time soon. Republicans have pledged to investigate the Biden administration’s handling of the crisis now they have taken control of the House. Meanwhile, multiple articles of impeachment against Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas have been introduced in the chamber.

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FIRST ON FOX: Four House Republicans, all military veterans, are warning that the Biden administration’s handling of incidents like the Chinese spy balloon and Afghanistan withdrawal will further hamper military recruiting efforts.

While a number of factors have contributed to the military recruitment crisis in recent years – including COVID-19 and President Biden’s decision to evacuate Afghanistan — fiscal year 2022 was the worst year for military recruiting since the services switched to an all-volunteer force in 1973.

‘According to a recent Heritage foundation poll, 68% of active-duty service members shared that the politicization of our military — particularly this administration’s focus on climate and gender issues as top national security priorities — would negatively impact their decision to encourage their children to join,’ Florida GOP Rep. Michael Waltz told Fox News Digital.

Waltz, an Army veteran, described the recruitment struggle as ‘alarming’ and said ‘the disastrous Afghanistan withdrawal, failure to deter the invasion of Ukraine, and now lack of action to take out the Chinese spy balloon over the Pacific Ocean [are] key examples of a White House that is projecting weakness rather than strength to our adversaries and dissuading young Americans from signing up.’

The coronavirus pandemic cut away at U.S. military readiness among both recruits and service members, with President Biden’s administration imposing a service-wide vaccine mandate.

The U.S. Army cut roughly 60,000 National Guard and Reserves members from pay and benefits for refusing to take the COVID-19 vaccine at the beginning of July 2022, as more than 30% of its recruitment slots sat unfilled.

‘As a retired major in the Army Reserve with combat deployments to Iraq and Afghanistan, I assure you that President Biden’s lackluster response to the Chinese spy balloon made America look weak on the world stage,’ Texas GOP Rep. Troy Nehls told Fox. ‘We know the COVID-19 vaccine mandate hurt recruitment, but this latest instance will be a serious blow to our numbers.’

Nehls, who has represented the Lone Star State’s 22nd Congressional District since 2021, added: ‘President Trump showed peace through strength, and that is why we had the strongest and most feared fighting force in the world.’

In agreement, GOP Rep. Don Bacon of Nebraska, a veteran of the Air Force, told Fox that the cause of military recruitment issues ‘is multiple,’ but that he believes the ‘Chinese balloon incident will reinforce the belief by some that the President is not a good commander in chief.’

‘This will be seen by some as a continuation of what they saw with the Afghanistan withdrawal,’ Bacon continued. ‘The President should have more vigorously defended our sovereignty.’

‘Some question if they want to serve during the Biden administration after the Afghanistan debacle. Some also see the Administration pushing woke policies on the military and taking an eye off developing the best warfighting force in the world,’ Bacon said. ‘There’s also some economic reasons that are disincentives. Private-sector pay is up, and more companies are offering tuition assistance.’

With a focus on providing better pay and necessities for those who serve in the military, Bacon will chair a quality-of-life panel under the Armed Services Committee in an effort to get to the ‘issues that Congress and the military need to address.’

‘Junior enlisted pay has not kept up with the needs, and military housing needs to be improved, for example,’ Bacon added.

Montana GOP Rep. Ryan Zinke, a former SEAL instructor and commander at SEAL Team 6, also spoke with Fox about the recruitment issues faced by the nation, saying, ‘There’s a gap in what the Pentagon is saying and, I think, what’s happening on the ground.’

Zinke said there are a ‘number of reasons’ in which the Pentagon pushes blame for the recruitment problems, pointing to ‘obesity’ and the dwindling number of students graduating from high school who are ‘physically qualified and can pass the test.’

To a degree, Zinke said, the claims of obesity and lack of physical preparedness being causes of recruitment struggles are true, but that there’s also a ‘perception that the services are emphasizing diversity [and] inclusion within the force.’

‘They’re not only accepting it, they’re emphasizing it,’ he said, further describing the ‘woke movement’ of the military.

Zinke said that President Biden’s fumbling of the Afghanistan withdrawal, which resulted in the deaths of 13 U.S. service members, dealt a ‘large blow’ to the service and that it impacted those who served ‘because it was embarrassing.’

‘Yes, military service is not as desirable, but there’s a reason why,’ he continued. ‘It’s not because we don’t love America. We do. We’re just not comfortable with this administration.’

‘Rather than address the problem of what the military is, they’re gonna lower the bar,’ Zinke said in regard to the administration’s outlook on recruitment efforts. ‘[Lowering] the bar in most locations puts the force further at risk, and we won’t be as capable as force.’

The Army recently expanded a pre-basic training course that allows candidates to enlist who do not meet the weight and aptitude requirements, in an effort to fight a recruiting crisis plaguing every branch of the military.

In a statement, the White House defended Biden’s foreign policy achievements and said the Chinese spying incidents of recent weeks showed that the president ‘will never hesitate to take action to defend our country.’

‘Under President Biden’s leadership, we’ve restored America’s place on the world stage, revitalized our alliances that the previous administration had disrespected, and NATO has never been stronger. He has rallied the world to stand up to Russia’s brutal invasion of Ukraine and strengthened our position in the Indo-Pacific amid competition with China,’ a White House spokesperson said. 

‘President Biden secured record funding to strengthen our military and boost research and development of the advanced capabilities we need to address challenges posed by Russia and China. And he has shown we will never hesitate to take action to defend our country — whether that’s taking out the leaders of Al Qaeda and ISIS or protecting American sovereignty when our airspace was violated this past week,’ the spokesperson said.

Fox News’ Anders Hagstrom and Michael Lee contributed to this article. This story has been updated to include the response from the White House.

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