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TAMPA — After Brett Maher missed his third PAT kick of the night, shortly before halftime, Dak Prescott had a major sideline eruption. The Dallas Cowboys quarterback took off his helmet and slammed it to the ground. Then he began yelling in disgust.

Prescott’s tirade probably expressed the sentiments of the whole Cowboys fan base as Maher went on to miss four PATs – the first time that’s happened since the NFL began tracking the statistic in 1932.

“I’m Money Maher’s biggest fan,” Prescott insisted after the Cowboys advanced to the NFC divisional playoffs with a 31-14 romp over the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

“Obviously, there’s video of me … that’s just emotion,” Prescott added. “That’s part of it.”

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Prescott, who accounted for five TDs against the Bucs in rebounding from a dismal regular-season finale at Washington, made certain to console Maher.

“I talked to him individually after the game and told him, ‘Let that go,’“ Prescott said. “We’re going to need him. I played like (expletive) a week ago. That happens. When you believe in each other and believe in what we’re capable of, knowing what that guy has done and the resiliency he’s shown throughout his career, no doubt he’ll come back next week and help us win.”

The Cowboys will face the San Francisco 49ers on Sunday at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif. – which presents another grass field. Prescott said it was good to see Maher snapped his string of five consecutive missed PATs, dating to the regular-season finale, by converting in the fourth quarter.

“I have no doubt in Brett and what he’s capable of doing,” Prescott said. “Coming off the game I did, it’s important to see things go well. “

No, the Cowboys won’t be bringing in kickers for tryouts this week. Maher tied for third in the NFL this season with 137 points. He missed just three of his NFL-high 53 PAT kicks and converted on 90.6% of his field goal attempts (29-of-32).

As Jerry Jones, the Cowboys owner and GM put it, “he’s done enough good ones.”

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MELBOURNE, Australia — The supportive signs and dozens of Serbian flags and loud chants of Novak Djokovic’s nickname filled Rod Laver Arena, providing a warm welcome marking his return to the Australian Open – a tournament he has dominated in the past but one he could not enter a year ago.

Djokovic acknowledged the greeting with a quick wave of his left hand when he stepped out onto the court at 10:30 p.m. Tuesday, then got down to business by playing quite well and only briefly showing a hint of trouble from the balky left hamstring that was heavily taped.

With his parents and brother in the stands at Melbourne Park for the first time since he won his first Grand Slam title there 15 years ago, Djokovic began the first-round match with an ace at 125 mph. He held at love there, took control of that set with a 12-point run and was on his way to a 6-3, 6-4, 6-0 victory over 75th-ranked Roberto Carballes Baena that finished after midnight.

‘Unbelievable atmosphere. Thank you so much for staying this late, everybody. Also, thank you for giving me such a welcoming and a reception I can only dream of,’ Djokovic told the crowd in an on-court interview. ‘I really feel very happy that I’m back in Australia and I’m back here on the court where I had the biggest success in my career.’

Djokovic’s participation is one of the chief story lines, perhaps the main one, of the first Grand Slam tournament of 2023. That’s because Djokovic never got to play a point last season at the site of nine of his major championships, because his visa was blocked and he was deported from Australia after a legal saga tied to his lack of any vaccination for COVID-19.

He never did get the shots and also missed the U.S. Open because of it. But Australia’s government has since relaxed coronavirus-related restrictions, allowing Djokovic to come to the country, and also waived a rule that could have stopped him from getting in for three years following a visa revocation. He has insisted that whole episode in January 2022 deeply affected him but that he does not hold a grudge; there certainly did not seem to be any hard feelings toward him Tuesday.

Spectators who politely applauded Carballes Baena when he entered the stadium stood and roared for the 35-year-old Djokovic. A sing-song, soccer-style chant of “Olé, olé, olé, olé!’ followed by the two-syllable moniker “Nole!” (pronounced NO-leh) echoed under the arena’s closed retractable roof, and would be repeated over and over: during the warmup period; when Djokovic switched sides of the net after the first game; when he was in the midst of climbing out of a love-40 hole in the first set (the only three break points he would face all night); when he broke to lead 4-3 in the second; etc., etc., etc. There were more of those cheers at the end, and Djokovic smiled broadly.

Grading his play, Djokovic said he found he was ‘kind of going up and down’ in the second set, but didn’t give his opponent ‘too much chance to breathe’ in the third. As for his hamstring, Djokovic said he was apprehensive about it going into the match, but afterward this was his assessment: ‘The leg is good. It’s not ideal, but it’s getting there.’

This was not necessarily Djokovic at his absolute best, and he appeared to show some frustration early on when he kept glaring and muttering in the direction of coach Goran Ivanisevic and the rest of his entourage in the stands. But Djokovic did not necessarily need to be at his absolute best. He certainly produced strong enough tennis to take the initial step toward what he hopes will be a 22nd Grand Slam title to tie rival Rafael Nadal’s record for the most in tennis history by a man.

Djokovic, who has spent more weeks at No. 1 in the ATP rankings than anyone, also has a chance to return to that spot after the upcoming two weeks; the person presently occupying that perch, Carlos Alcaraz, is sitting out the Australian Open with a leg injury.

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EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. – The New York Giants already know what awaits Saturday night in Philadelphia.

You want high stakes? How about a prime-time playoff game between two bitter NFC East rivals with the winner moving to within one game of the Super Bowl?

Giants vs. Eagles. Eagles vs. Giants.

The dislike runs a lot deeper than the two previous meetings during this regular season, both won by the Eagles.

And when you take into account the heat that will be generated from the stands inside Lincoln Financial Field, given the Giants’ lack of good fortune in the building, let’s just say the City of Brotherly Love won’t be greeting Big Blue with warm hugs and welcome kisses.

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‘I’m sure the atmosphere is going to be insane. Plenty of boos and middle fingers for us,’ Giants wide receiver Darius Slayton said. ‘But we look forward to it.’

The Giants have not won at Lincoln Financial Field in nine seasons, and on that day on which they last did, Josh Brown kicked five field goals, Peyton Hillis was the leading rusher, and Victor Cruz was the leading receiver for Tom Coughlin’s 2013 team

Chip Kelly’s offense with the Eagles was all the NFL could talk about.

Michael Vick was at quarterback in place of an injured Nick Foles.

But it was the first victory for the Giants without a touchdown in 11 years, and Eli Manning passed Phil Simms as the franchise’s all-time leader in yards passing in that game.

There’s been a lot of frustration, agony and despair for the Giants in Philadelphia since

Here’s a look at what Big Blue has endured on the road in what has become a lopsided rivalry, especially at the Linc, where the reception for the visitors is really unlike any other.

Manning said Monday night that he will be at the Linc on Saturday for Giants-Eagles.

“I promised myself I’d never go to another football game in Philly [after his 2020 retirement] … but I’m gonna break that,’ Manning said during ESPN’s ‘ManningCast’ broadcast of the Dallas Cowboys’ victory over the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

‘I can’t wait to see how many double birds I get. Probably will set a record.”

Let’s go back in time and revisit the Giants’ last nine trips to Philadelphia:

2014: Eagles 27, Giants 0

If there was one image to symbolize the Giants’ fate in Philly, it is this one: Victor Cruz, crying and holding his hands to his face in disbelief after he tore the patellar tendon in his right knee while leaping for a pass on fourth down from the Eagles 3 in the third quarter.

The Eagles sacked Eli Manning six times, snapping the Giants’ three-game winning streak in which they had scored more than 30 points in each victory.

Nick Foles threw two touchdown passes and LeSean McCoy had a season-high 149 yards rushing in what was the Eagles’ first shutout in 18 years.

2015: Eagles 27, Giants 7

The Eagles had three takeaways, sacked Manning three times and forced two intentional-grounding penalties. The Giants intercepted Sam Bradford three times, but were unable to get any points off those turnovers. This was Tom Coughlin’s final game in Philadelphia – coincidentally, he played the Eagles in his Giants’ swan song – and he remains the last Big Blue coach to win at the Linc.

2016: Eagles 24, Giants 19

This one was in prime time, and the Giants wore their Color Rush jerseys for the first time.

The Eagles prevented the Giants from clinching a playoff spot and Eli Manning threw a career-high 63 times, completing 38 for 356 yards. He was picked off three times, including two by Malcolm Jenkins, who took one of those back for a Pick 6.

2017: Eagles 27, Giants 24

Jake Elliott kicked a 61-yarder as the clock expired to stun the Giants. It was the longest game-winner in NFL history for a rookie and a Philly franchise record.

Eli Manning threw three touchdown passes in the fourth quarter, including a 77-yard score to Sterling Shepard, but the Eagles rallied for two field goals in the final 51 seconds – yes, you read that right – to stun Big Blue.

2018: Eagles 25, Giants 22

 

Jake Elliott did it again.

He kicked a 43-yard field goal with 22 seconds remaining as the Eagles overcame deficits of 12-0 and 19-14 in the fourth quarter.

Eli Manning picked apart a Philadelphia defense that was missing its top four cornerbacks, a starting safety and a starting linebacker. But Manning threw an interception to Malcolm Jenkins at the goal line late in the second quarter, and the game turned.

2019: Eagles 23, Giants 17 (OT)

Eli Manning, starting in place of an injured Daniel Jones, helped the Giants race out to a 14-point lead, and the Eagles were booed off the field, trailing 17-3 at halftime.

The Eagles had lost 19 straight games when trailing by 14 or more points in the second half before rallying. They were down to one healthy wide receiver by the end of the game. Zach Ertz, a Pro Bowl tight end, had to line up at wide receiver, and he caught the game-winning touchdown from Carson Wentz in overtime.

2020: Eagles 22, Giants 21

 

Everything was there for the taking.

The Giants might not have belonged in the NFC East race with just one win in their first six games, but they were 6:17 away from victory with an 11-point lead after Daniel Jones found Sterling Shepard in the back of the end zone for a touchdown.

Yet for the third straight season in Philadelphia, faces new and old, the Giants watched a double-digit lead evaporate, the Eagles celebrate and they were forced to trudge back to the buses for the 90-minute ride back up north to East Rutherford that had to seem a heck of a lot longer after this one.

If not for Evan Engram’s drop of a third-down throw that would have given the Giants the chance to seal the game, maybe the losing streak at the Linc would have ended.

Instead, the Eagles scored the game-winning touchdown when Boston Scott beat Jabrill Peppers to the end zone for the catch. 

2021: Eagles 34, Giants 10

The Giants made the switch at quarterback, starting Jake Fromm instead of Mike Glennon, who had replaced Daniel Jones, whose neck injury cost him the final six games of the 2021 season. Neither Fromm nor Glennon distinguished themselves against the Eagles, and Jalen Hurts led a dominant second half effort to break a 3-3 halftime tie. That performance included some insult for the Giants as Hurts threw a touchdown pass to right tackle Lane Johnson.

2022: Eagles 22, Giants 16

 

Everything was on the line for the Eagles, who needed a win to clinch the NFC East and the No. 1 seed with home field advantage throughout the playoffs. The Giants, on the other hand, decided to play the game with their backups since their playoff fate was already determined.

Surprisingly, the Giants’ junior varsity – no disrespect intended – gave the Eagles’ starters all they could handle, forcing coach Nick Sirianni to keep his guys in for the entire game in order to put Big Blue away late.

Davis Webb started at quarterback for Daniel Jones, while Webb’s touchdown pass to Kenny Golladay – his first as a Giant – came against Eagles star corner Darius Slay in the waning moments.

The Giants did not leave with the victory, but they headed home with a lot more belief in their ability to compete with the Eagles and ultimately end their current losing streak at the Linc than anyone had going into that game.

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IOWA CITY, Iowa  — The men’s basketball game between Iowa and Northwestern scheduled for Wednesday in Iowa City will not be played due to COVID-19 health and safety protocols within the Northwestern program, the Wildcats announced on Tuesday.

The two schools will work with the Big Ten to reschedule the game.

All distributed tickets for the Northwestern-Iowa contest will be valid for the new date and time, if the game is able to be rescheduled.

Northwestern (12-5 overall, 3-3 Big Ten) will have to wait to stop its two-game losing streak. Iowa (12-6, 4-3 Big Ten), on the other hand, is in midst of a four-game win streak. Both trail No. 3 Purdue (17-1, 6-1 Big Ten) in the conference.

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Iowa next plays at Ohio State on Saturday. Northwestern is scheduled to play Wisconsin at home Saturday.

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Carlos Beltran exited the game on top. His story wasn’t quite finished, though.

Beltran enjoyed a dynamic 20-year career in Major League Baseball, reaching the postseason with five franchises and showing off a combination of power, speed and defense that puts him on a very short list of all-time five-tool players.

His candidacy for baseball’s Hall of Fame is awfully close to slam-dunk territory. But a post-career revelation will make his path to Cooperstown a bit more difficult than a layup.

Two years after Beltran eased into retirement after helping the Houston Astros win the 2017 World Series, his role as a ringleader in their rules-flouting sign-stealing scheme was revealed, throwing a twist into Hall candidacy that was borderline, but tilting toward induction.

Now, we will find out just how much the final chapter of his career will affect his permanent perch in the game’s lore.

USA TODAY Sports examines Beltran’s case:

HALL OF FAME: Gary Sheffield had a rare combination of power, plate discipline

Why Beltran belongs in the Hall

Statistically or purely from an aesthetic standpoint, Beltran was one of the game’s most talented players, certainly within his era and by some measures of all time. Beltran hit 435 home runs and stole 312 bases, one of just five in the 400-300 club. The others are in the Hall or would be but for concerns of performance-enhancing drug use: Barry Bonds (762-514), Willie Mays (660-338), Andre Dawson (438-314) and Alex Rodriguez (696-329).

Beltran’s trophy case reflects that body of work.

He was a nine-time All-Star and two-time Silver Slugger winner, with two top 10 MVP finishes and three Gold Glove awards. While he started his career amid a woebegone era for the Kansas City Royals (where he won the 1999 AL Rookie of the Year award) Beltran soon became a harbinger of prosperity for several franchises.

A June 2004 trade from the rebuilding Royals to the Astros drove Houston all the way to Game 7 of the NLCS, thanks to Beltran’s eight home runs and 20 for 46 (.435) batting against the Braves and Cardinals. That set the stage for his first stab at free agency, resulting in a seven-year, $119 million contract with the New York Mets.

And he’d return in 2006 to Game 7 of the NLCS, this time getting frozen by an Adam Wainwright curveball as the Cardinals edged the Mets for the pennant. But Beltran hit 41 home runs with a .982 OPS that season, finishing fourth in NL MVP voting, and hit three more NLCS homers in the Mets’ first trip that far in the playoffs since 1988.

October brilliance would be a Beltran hallmark: In 256 playoff plate appearances spanning 2004 to 2017, Beltran posted a 1.021 OPS with 16 homers and 15 doubles. And while he played a limited role as a 40-year-old on the 2017 Astros, he did finally get that championship ring.

Why he doesn’t stack up

The statistical blemishes against Beltran are essentially nitpicking if you’re a “Big Hall” type of voter, but more damning if you prefer a more exclusive group of enshrinees. Beltran never did crack the top five in MVP voting after his best-ever fourth-place finish in 2006, and the back end of his Mets stint was slowed by injuries, playing in 81 and 64 games in 2009 and 2010.

The early part of his career was also in the height of baseball’s so-called steroid era, and while Beltran has never been connected to PEDs, it does make it more challenging to contextualize his peak. From 2001-2004, he averaged 29 homers and 37 steals per season with an .882 OPS, but his adjusted OPS was a decent but not overwhelming 125. His first five seasons in New York coincided with the first season of drug testing with penalties, and were a tribute to his stalwart consistency: An .873 OPS, 127 adjusted.

No, Beltran’s black mark outside the lines would come more than a decade later, when The Athletic reported – and MLB corroborated in an investigation – that Beltran was the player who devised a system that ultimately involved a center field camera intercepting opposing signals, viewed on a monitor behind the dugout and relayed to a hitter by banging on a trash can.

While Beltran was the most senior member of an Astros lineup that largely went along with the scheme, he was also just a player on a club that gave every indication it would seek efficiencies and edges in any manner possible.

“Nobody,” Beltran said in 2022, “said anything to us.”

That likely won’t fly with voters who hew closely to the Hall’s so-called “character clause.”

Voting trends

It appears Beltran will not be a first-ballot Hall of Famer. Beltran is tracking at 57.4% in early balloting on Ryan Thibodaux’s Hall of Fame Tracker, well below the 75% induction plateau and a number that should dip further when ballots not released publicly are tabulated.

Still, landing north of 50% would not be a totally discouraging first-time outcome.

Will Beltran ultimately get in?

The odds are certainly in his favor. Beltran’s resume should age nicely, and punitive votes against him for his sign-stealing role figure to recede as time goes on.

Perhaps Beltran’s biggest ally are the players remaining from that era. As Alex Bregman and Jose Altuve participate in additional World Series for the Astros, and vie for MVP consideration and batting titles, it may feel more dissonant to penalize Beltran for a final-year transgression as others move forward with their careers and reshape their legacies.

A first-ballot setback may be his true punishment. But the ultimate goal very much remains in reach.

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LAS VEGAS (AP) — Vegas Golden Knights goaltender Robin Lehner and his wife have filed for bankruptcy in Nevada, citing up to $50 million in debts to dozens of creditors.

The Chapter 7 bankruptcy filing offers a glimpse into the couple’s financial problems, including money owed to no fewer than 50 people and companies, the Las Vegas Review-Journal reported.

They filed for bankruptcy Dec. 30, months after a Wisconsin company sued Lehner for $4 million, claiming the NHL player and his father failed to make any payments last year on a business loan.

Both Lehner and his father, Michael, are listed as principal members in a Nevada business license filing for Solarcode, a limited liability corporation doing business in multiple states, including Nevada and Arizona.

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Solarcode in January 2022 agreed to a four-year repayment plan with Eclipse Service but missed its first five payments, leading the Wisconsin company in late June 2022 to sue in U.S. District Court in Milwaukee.

An attorney for Lehner did not immediately respond Monday to a request for comment from The Associated Press.

Lehner’s debts also included missed payments for a collection of rare snakes he purchased for $1.2 million in 2017, according to the bankruptcy filing. Lehner keeps the snakes at his reptile farm in Plato, Missouri.

He and his wife, Donya, estimate their assets are worth up to $10 million.

Lehner, 31, signed a five-year, $25 million contract with the Knights in 2020, but the Swedish hockey player has spent the 2022-23 season recovering from hip surgery.

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The Department of Justice debated whether to allow the FBI to monitor the search for classified documents in President Joe Biden’s home but eventually decided against it, according to a Tuesday report in the Wall Street Journal.

Three batches of classified documents were found on Biden’s property in recent months: one at the Penn Biden Center in Washington, D.C., and two at his Wilmington, Delaware, property. But the FBI was not present as documents were recovered, and no raids have been conducted, which sources familiar with the matter told the Journal was because Biden’s lawyers turned over the documents quickly and continued to cooperate with the Justice Department in the investigation.

The sources added that the DOJ wanted to leave open the possibility of using the FBI if Biden’s lawyers did not cooperate as the investigation continued.

The Justice Department was reportedly concerned that the FBI’s involvement in the process of turning over classified material could complicate its ability to execute search warrants or subpoena documents if needed later in the investigation. The documents were instead turned over by Biden’s senior counsel, Richard Sauber, who has a security clearance.

The Justice Department began its investigation into Biden after a batch of classified documents was discovered at the Penn Biden Center in November, which was later revealed in January through media reports. Attorney General Merrick Garland launched a special counsel investigation after it was revealed in January that additional classified documents from Biden were recovered.

Robert Hur, a former prosecutor in the Trump administration, will head the investigation, which is set to begin by the end of the month.

The special counsel investigation into Biden was launched just months after a similar one into former President Donald Trump, who kept classified documents at his Mar-a-Lago property in Florida. In that case, the FBI raided Trump’s property after the agency suspected there were more documents than previously believed based on interviews and failed negotiations to hand them over. Trump has claimed he did no wrong in the matter.

The Justice Department has worked to keep both investigations separate, the Journal reported.

The White House has emphasized that Biden’s case is different because his team cooperated with the DOJ and National Archives while Trump’s team resisted requests to turn over the classified documents. The White House did not disclose that additional batches of classified documents were recovered at Biden’s property after news of the first recovery broke.

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More than a dozen House Republicans introduced legislation declaring that the COVID-19 pandemic is over.

The Pandemic Is Over Act, from Rep. Brett Guthrie, R-Ky., simply states that the public health emergency declared by the secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS) in 2020 in response to COVID ‘shall terminate on the date of enactment of this Act.’

Guthrie proposed the bill less than a week after HHS extended the COVID emergency until mid-April. HHS has now maintained the emergency declaration for three years and said last week that a public health emergency exists as a result of the ‘continued consequences’ of COVID.

That decision came more than three months after President Joe Biden declared in an interview that ‘the pandemic is over.’ He also added, however, that America still has a ‘problem with COVID’ and that the administration is ‘doing a lot of work on it.’

Practically, the extension of the public health emergency (PHE) gives the government leeway in how it operates federal health programs and limits the liability of medical practitioners who treat patients with COVID. But politically, Republicans argue that the U.S. is well past the state of emergency that existed in early 2020, and Guthrie said the point of his bill is to make sure the Biden administration heard what Biden said in September.

‘The COVID-19 pandemic is over,’ Guthrie said. ‘Despite President Biden admitting this in September, his administration just authorized the 12th extension of the COVID-19 public health emergency. It is long overdue for President Biden to end the COVID-19 public health emergency and relinquish the emergency powers that he just renewed again.’

‘President Biden’s inaction and lack of transparency on this are unacceptable,’ he added. ‘I introduced the Pandemic Is Over Act to prevent any more delays by forcing the Biden administration to finally release and execute a plan that my House Republican colleagues and I have been repeatedly pressing for to unwind the PHE.’

Guthrie and other Republicans urged the Biden administration nearly a year ago to start unwinding the public health emergency measures in place, including lifting all vaccine and mask mandates and finding ways to make sure seniors’ access to telehealth services does not dissipate.

Guthrie’s bill is cosponsored by 14 other House Republicans.

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Former President Trump’s campaign announced Tuesday that the former president will head to South Carolina Saturday, Jan. 28, to hold the first public campaign for his recently launched 2024 White House run.

Trump’s campaign highlighted that the former president will be joined by the crucial early voting state’s Republican Gov. Henry McMaster and senior Sen. Lindsey Graham as he unveils his South Carolina leadership team in an event at the state capitol building in Columbia.

Trump’s campaign last week confirmed to Fox News the event in South Carolina, which holds the third contest in the GOP’s presidential nominating calendar, but hadn’t provided specific details.

The event will mark a more public phase of Trump’s bid to regain the White House and his first campaign-style event since declaring his candidacy with a speech in mid-November at his Mar-a-Lago club in Palm Beach, Florida. Additionally, it comes as the former president has faced criticism over his campaign launch and controversial comments and actions the past two months.

A rival and vocal critic of Trump during the 2016 Republican nomination race, Graham quickly became one of the former president’s closest allies in the Senate. While he hasn’t officially endorsed Trump for the 2024 nomination, he’s said the former president ‘will be hard to beat’ in the primary race.

McMaster, who was one of Trump’s earliest backers in 2016, has long been a major supporter of the former president.

Trump’s trip to South Carolina comes as two of the state’s leading Republicans are mulling White House runs of their own.

Former two-term Gov. Nikki Haley, who served as ambassador to the United Nations during the Trump administration, has said she’s considering a presidential campaign. And she’s made numerous visits to Iowa and New Hampshire, the two states that kick off the GOP nominating calendar.

So has Sen. Tim Scott, a rising star in the party and the only Black Republican in the Senate whom pundits view as another potential Republican presidential contender.

Senior Trump campaign adviser Chris LaCavitia told Fox News last week, ‘The campaign’s been very deliberate and methodical building out an operation that can sustain a long-term effort and also being mindful of the fact that it is a long-term effort. 

‘The campaign is not about making news every single day. It’s about getting the job done and putting the campaign in the best position to succeed.’

Part of getting that job done is expanding the operation, both nationally and in the early voting presidential nominating states.

A source in the Trump campaign told Fox News ‘early voting state teams are being built out, and leadership teams are being built out.’

Additionally, a Republican in New Hampshire who is part of Trump’s wider orbit told Fox News the campaign’s ‘starting to put the machine together. … It’s ramping up and decision-making time.’

Steven Cheung, a veteran of the 2016 and 2020 Trump campaigns who is serving as spokesman of the 2024 campaign, emphasized that ‘the focus of what we’ve been doing is to build out an operation that’s second to none and a lot of that isn’t necessarily public facing, but it’s what’s required.’

In recent weeks, the Trump campaign has also launched a series of policy initiatives and statements through video rollouts.

‘The campaign is putting out substantive policy from the president in a video format. That’s not been done on this level before,’ LaCavita said.

And two weeks ago, the campaign launched its official website, although it came with little fanfare.

More than two years after his 2020 election defeat at the hands of President Biden, Trump remains the most influential politician and ferocious fundraiser in the Republican Party. Until recently, he was the clear and overwhelming front-runner in the early 2024 GOP presidential nomination polls. 

However, his latest campaign launch was considered anything but spectacular. Trump’s candidacy kickoff event was criticized not only by Democrats, but also by fellow Republicans. Some in Trump’s political orbit told Fox News the early announcement was intended in part to clear the field of potential rivals and help the former president avoid a growing net of legal entanglements. But it appears to have failed on both accounts.

Trump also appears to be the victim of self-inflicted wounds from his heavily criticized dinner at Mar-a-Lago over the Thanksgiving holiday with the rapper Ye, formerly known as Kanye West, and White nationalist and Holocaust denier Nick Fuentes, to a widely panned social media post that appeared to suggest the ‘termination’ of the U.S. Constitution.

He also had a profitable but mocked rollout of digital trading cards portraying Trump as a superhero, and his controversial abortion comments earlier this month received pushback from some social conservatives in the party’s base.

Trump has also faced plenty of incoming fire over the midterm election losses of GOP nominees handpicked and supported by the former president, which was a contributing factor to the lackluster results for Republicans in November in what many had hoped would be a red wave year.

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The crisis at the southern border is bringing renewed attention to the violence and poverty in Latin America, from which some migrants are trying to escape.

The Biden administration recently expanded an initiative to allow up to 30,000 individuals per month from four Latin American countries to receive work authorization in the United States. The countries are Venezuela, Nicaragua, Haiti and Cuba. The program expands on the parole process that was first in place for Venezuela, a country that has struggled to address corruption under a dictator who refuses to give up his power.

In 2019, a group of opposition lawmakers in Venezuela voted to stop recognizing President Nicolás Maduro as the country’s leader. They appointed Juan Guaidó as interim president. The United States was the first country to recognize Guaidó as Venezuela’s president, and more than 50 other nations quickly followed suit.

Elliott Abrams served as special representative for Venezuela during the Trump administration. He said he was hopeful in the early part of 2019 that the U.S. was going to be able to push Maduro out.

‘I think what I at least underestimated was the difference between this regime and many other governments, non-democratic governments we’d worked with in Latin America,’ said Abrams. ‘This isn’t a criminal regime. This is a criminal gang.’

Protests erupted with opposition supporters calling for Maduro to step down. They were met with often violent responses from the government’s military. Since then, demonstrations have dwindled, millions have left the country and Maduro remains in power.

The opposition was looking for a reset. On Jan. 5, they officially voted to oust Guaidó and replace him with new leadership. Guaidó appeared on CNN en Español and reacted to the decision by saying, ‘I respect the vision of the majorities, it does not mean that I accompany them.’

Dinorah Figuera was picked to serve as the new face of the movement, alongside vice president Marianela Fernández and second vice president Auristela Vásquez. All three women currently live in exile.

‘We were not served by a scenario of the interim government. Now we are taking another path,’ Figuera said in an interview with the Associated Press. ‘Sometimes changes are not well received by some people, who are either more radical or no longer believe in the opposition. But we have to do something to regain that trust.’

Figuera left Venezuela for Spain in 2018 after the death of a close friend. She suspected Maduro’s government was involved and began receiving threats when she spoke about her concerns. The risk of returning to her home country may force her to try to appeal to supporters from more than 4,000 miles away.

‘It’s a mistake,’ said Abrams. ‘One of the great things about Guaidó was that this whole time he stayed in Caracas fighting the good fight and trying to do it now from Spain. … It’s not the same.’

Maduro’s government called for the three lawmakers to be arrested and accused them of treason, money laundering and impersonating public officials. They claim the group is living in a fantasy and causing undue suffering to the Venezuelan people by supporting U.S. sanctions.

‘They lent themselves to build a farce of a parallel government with the sole objective of legitimizing the biggest robbery that has been done in this land since the Spanish conquest,’ Maduro said in a speech to his congress.

On whether the U.S. had plans to negotiate an option to live in exile, Abrams noted, ‘We would have made a deal,’ and he continued, ‘His view was and still is: If I leave power, I’m going to end up in jail.’

Former Colombian President Ivan Duque appeared on ‘Special Report’ in June and said cartels and drug trafficking had helped keep Maduro in power.

‘He’s protected by all his cronies who are taking money out of narco trafficking,’ Duque said. ‘I think Juan Guaidó has been a strong voice. But he’s a guy who’s fighting the most criminal regime in the Western Hemisphere. For one man to defeat such a cronyism regime is very hard.’

He also called on countries to continue applying pressure.

‘I am disappointed as a Latin American that we haven’t been able to make Maduro step out.’

Colombia recently elected a new leftist president in Gustavo Petro. New leaders like those in Colombia and Brazil have worked to reestablish relations with their Latin neighbor. Petro recently traveled to Caracas to meet with Maduro for discussions on trade, reopening bridges between the two countries, and a possible peace deal. Spain also appears to be easing its stance toward Venezuela and appointed a new ambassador. Madrid had vacated the post two years ago in protest over how elections were handled.

Venezuela’s embassy in the United States, which had been run by Guaidó’s government, announced in January it would cease operations. Its designated ambassador, Carlos Vecchio, stepped aside from his role. An employee there tells Fox News there is no timeline for resuming functions at the embassy.

‘The National Assembly will designate a person of contact of the parliament in countries of interest, but they didn’t communicate anything about it,’ said the employee.

Video

Vecchio released a video statement in which he thanked Guaidó and embassy staff.

‘Together we achieved the protection of Venezuela’s assets in the United States,’ Vecchio said. ‘We control all diplomatic headquarters and buildings, destroyed by the dictatorship. We protected Citgo, gave it back its independence and productivity.’

Abrams was asked if he was caught by surprise following Guaidó being replaced and the eroding opposition.

‘I’d seen it coming because the opposition was falling apart largely, I would argue, because of us,’ Abrams said. ‘I think it was a big mistake because Guaidó, as you’re saying, was known all around the world, and dozens of countries viewed him as the legitimate interim president.’

President Joe Biden is facing criticism over actions taken to ease oil sanctions in Venezuela. Last November, the Treasury Department allowed Chevron to resume limited energy production in the country. The administration said the move was part of an effort to encourage political dialogue toward a presidential election. But some Republicans argue that easing oil sanctions only benefits Maduro.

‘It’s a complete failure. You’re not supporting freedom and democracy,’ said House Foreign Affairs Chairman Michael McCaul, R-Texas. ‘Now we’re allowing them to produce more energy that will send more money into a dictatorship that’s funded by Russia, by Iran, by China. They are in this hemisphere right now. And so the actions of this administration have given a lifeblood to a dictator.’

Abrams called the end of Guaidó’s government a major disappointment.

‘It’s certainly a major disappointment. We wanted to help Venezuela get back to democracy. We failed now under two presidents,’ Abrams said. ‘I [talk] to the Venezuelan opposition people all the time. They just feel as if the administration has given up.’

The U.S. has continued to allocate millions in aid for humanitarian assistance and efforts to strengthen democracy. The amount has been steadily increasing under former President Donald Trump and now Biden. The current administration also reaffirmed its commitment to supporting Venezuela’s opposition, even without Guaidó as the face of the movement.

‘We continue to recognize what is the only remaining democratically elected institution in Venezuela,’ State Department spokesman Ned Price said. ‘We respect and will respect the decisions that the 2015 National Assembly makes.’

The opposition party plans to hold primaries sometime this year, and Guaidó is expected to be involved. The winner would face Maduro in 2024. However, experts believe Maduro could move up the general election to this year in an effort to catch the opposition off guard and create further disarray.

Abrams said any chance for the opposition to take out Maduro the diplomatic way appears unlikely.

‘Maduro could never win a free election and is not going to have a free election for that reason. So, my problem is that I just don’t see Maduro walking away from power again because of fear of going to jail. Nobody knows the crimes he’s committed better than he does.’

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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