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Pittsburgh Steelers All-Pro linebacker T.J. Watt will not play in Sunday’s wild card playoff game against the Buffalo Bills due to a knee injury, head coach Mike Tomlin said Tuesday.

His brother, former player and current CBS analyst J.J. Watt, said that the 2021 NFL Defensive Player of the Year was diagnosed with a Grade 2 MCL sprain and would need a few weeks to recovery from the injury.

The 29-year-old Watt had another excellent season for Pittsburgh, leading the NFL with 19 sacks and also forcing four fumbles, and recording 68 total tackles.

Dolphins’ Van Ginkel, Baker, Goode unlikely to return for playoffs

The Miami Dolphins, coming off a game with major players on offense out, are now preparing for a playoff game against Patrick Mahomes and the Kansas City Chiefs without a huge chunk of their defense.

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The Dolphins will be without linebackers Andrew Van Ginkel, Jerome Baker and Cam Goode on Saturday night in Kansas City, with a strong likelihood the season is over for all three. In addition, the Dolphins are proceeding as if cornerback Xavien Howard, who missed Sunday’s loss to Buffalo, also won’t play against the Chiefs.

It’s also uncertain how effective safety Jevon Holland will be. Holland, coming off injuries to both knees, played only 27 snaps, 35 percent of the defensive plays, vs. Buffalo. Even defensive tackle Christian Wilkins, who had a strip/sack/fumble against Josh Allen, wore a wrap on his right wrist Monday but said it wasn’t anything serious.

Van Ginkel injured his foot against the Bills and is out for the remainder of the postseason, coach Mike McDaniel said Monday. Baker suffered a wrist injury that required surgery. It “appears” he’s done for the year, McDaniel said. And Goode was carted off in the fourth quarter with a knee injury that turned out to be a torn patella, ending his season. — Hal Habib, Palm Beach Post

Eagles’ Jalen Hurts, A.J. Brown ‘hopeful’ against Buccaneers

The good news for the Philadelphia Eagles is quarterback Jalen Hurts did not fracture the middle finger on his throwing hand in the second quarter Sunday, according to an NFL Network report.

That doesn’t mean Hurts’ finger is fine as the Eagles prepare for their wild-card playoff game against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in Tampa on Monday night. Eagles coach Nick Sirianni, without providing details, said he can only imagine what Hurts will go through this week in order to play Monday night.

‘I know he’s going to be sore,’ Sirianni said. ‘There’s no doubt about that. And I know that finger is going to get stiff, and he’s going to have to go through hard work to make sure that he is ready to go. I have no doubt that he’s going to do everything he can do to do that, and that he’ll be able to play through his bumps and bruises because I’ve seen him do it over and over and over again.’

Sirianni said he’s ‘hopeful’ that star wide receiver A.J. Brown (knee) and safety Reed Blankenship (groin) can return against the Buccaneers, in addition to injured players who sat out in wide receiver DeVonta Smith (ankle), cornerback Darius Slay (knee) and running back D’Andre Swift (illness).

Brown was seen in the locker room after the game without a knee brace, and he appeared to be walking without a limp. Brown had 1,456 yards receiving this season, second in franchise history to the 1,496 yards he had last season. Smith, meanwhile, had 1,066 yards receiving. — Delaware Online

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Note: This story contains graphic descriptions of sexual abuse that may be offensive to some readers or painful to survivors of sexual assault.

Canadian Olympic ice dancer Nikolaj Sørensen, under investigation for the alleged sexual assault of an American figure skating coach and former skater, has withdrawn from this week’s Canadian national championships, where he and his partner, Laurence Fournier Beaudry, were the defending champions. 

“Laurence and I have made the difficult decision not to compete in the National Championships in Calgary this week,” Sørensen wrote on Instagram Tuesday afternoon. “While we do not wish to withdraw, we feel that our participation would be distracting, and that sportsmanship must continue to be the focus of the event. I will continue to fully cooperate with OSIC’s investigation. Given OSIC’s Confidentiality Policy, I am unable to comment further.”

Last week, USA TODAY Sports broke the news of the investigation of Sørensen by Canada’s Office of the Sport Integrity Commissioner for the alleged sexual assault that took place near Hartford, Connecticut, on April 21, 2012, according to documents and emails obtained by USA TODAY Sports.

The documents said the woman, then 22, said Sørensen, then 23, held her down against her will on a bed after a party at a condominium. 

“He pinned me down with his left arm over my collarbone,” the woman said in a report made to Canada’s OSIC and the U.S. Center for SafeSport, a copy of which was obtained by USA TODAY Sports. “He pushed down hard on my collarbone, making me gasp for air the moment he inserted his penis into my vagina and covered his right hand over my mouth.”

The report continues: “All sound at that point became virtually inaudible and it felt like I would suffocate under the pressure of his arm on my collarbone and chest. I pushed my arms against his hips to try to get his penis out of me and I was struggling to breathe. At this point, I feared for my life and let my body go limp as I lay there and he raped me.”

The woman is not being identified because USA TODAY Sports does not publish the names of victims of alleged sexual abuse.

Olympic gold medalist Nancy Hogshead, a well-known Title IX attorney who founded Champion Women, a non-profit legal advocacy organization for girls and women in sports, told USA TODAY Sports that she is representing the victim of the alleged sexual abuse. Hogshead confirmed that an investigation of Sørensen is taking place but said she could not comment further due to a confidentiality agreement mandated by the OSIC. 

A day after the story was published, Hogshead called on Skate Canada, the sport’s national governing body, to suspend Sørensen.

“As the survivor’s lawyer, now that these violent and traumatic events have been published in USA TODAY, I’m calling on Skate Canada to suspend Nikolaj Sørensen prior to next week’s Canadian national figure skating championships,” she said. “If he competes, Skate Canada is sending a demoralizing message for survivors of sexual assault. For sport to effectively address athlete abuse, enforcement cannot wait.”

Multiple attempts to reach Sørensen last week via email, social media messages, his coach and the agency that represents him went unanswered. 

In his Instagram post, Sørensen said: “I believe that every person should feel safe and protected on and off the ice. A positive and supportive environment in sport is vital for all of us. I am aware of the allegations made against me. These allegations are false, and I intend to strongly defend myself and my reputation.” 

Sørensen, now 34, competed for his native Denmark earlier in his career, then represented Canada starting in the 2018-19 skating season. He became a Canadian citizen in September 2021. He finished ninth at the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics and fifth at last year’s world championships with Fournier Beaudry. They finished fifth at the 2023 Grand Prix Final in Beijing in early December. 

According to the report, the woman said she remained silent for years and never reached out to the police or sports officials because she feared that she would be blamed and that no one would believe her. 

The report said she sought psychological treatment and considered filing a criminal complaint in Connecticut but discovered the statute of limitations for such action had expired. 

Then, on July 22, 2023, according to the report, she opened an online article that included an interview with Sørensen in which he commented about the importance of keeping women safe in ice dancing. 

“I couldn’t believe the words coming out of the rapist’s mouth,” the report quotes the woman as saying. “It hit me at that moment that mothers would likely be sending their daughters to train with him (as a coach) at some point after he retired from competitive skating, and I could not live with the guilt of knowing I never told any authority figures.”

According to the report, the woman filed her report with the OSIC that same day. 

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The 2023 NFL regular season is in the books.

And that, of course, means that the 2024 coaching carousel is now in full swing.

Three NFL teams fired their head coaches during the season and will now decide whether to move forward with their interims, with Antonio Pierce in Las Vegas ostensibly having the best chance of sticking around. Three others − the Atlanta Falcons, Tennessee Titans and Washington Commanders − made a change shortly after season’s end.

While NFL teams are prohibited from holding in-person interviews with coaches who are employed by another club until after the divisional round of the playoffs, per a rule change approved by owners last fall, candidates for vacancies are already starting to emerge.

Here’s a look at the potential head coaching hires for each team with a vacancy, a brief look at the state of each coaching search and any interviews that are known to have been requested, scheduled or completed so far.

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Atlanta Falcons head coaching search, candidates

Fired:Arthur Smith on Jan. 8

Known candidates: None

The skinny: After a third consecutive 7-10 finish, Falcons owner Arthur Blank decided to go back to the proverbial drawing board, announcing Smith’s ouster in the early hours of Black Monday. The team said in a news release that Blank and CEO Rich McKay will lead the search with general manager Terry Fontenot advising. Prior to hiring an up-and-coming offensive mind in Smith, Blank previously hired a pair of experienced defensive coordinators in Dan Quinn and Mike Smith, so which direction he’ll choose to go with this hire is anyone’s guess.

Carolina Panthers head coaching search, candidates

Fired:Frank Reich on Nov. 27

Known candidates:

Cincinnati Bengals offensive coordinator Brian Callahan: Interview requested (per team)

Tampa Bay Buccaneers offensive coordinator Dave Canales: Interview requested (per team)

Detroit Lions offensive coordinator Ben Johnson: Interview requested (per team)

Baltimore Ravens defensive coordinator Mike Macdonald: Interview requested (per team)

Baltimore Ravens offensive coordinator Todd Monken: Interview requested (per team)

Los Angeles Rams defensive coordinator Raheem Morris: Interview requested (per team)

Dallas Cowboys defensive coordinator Dan Quinn: Interview requested (per team)

Houston Texans offensive coordinator Bobby Slowik: Interview requested (per team)

Miami Dolphins offensive coordinator Frank Smith: Interview requested (per team)

The skinny: It’s déjà vu for Panthers owner David Tepper, who is back on the market for a new head coach after pulling the plug on Reich partway through his first season in Carolina. With interim head coach Chris Tabor unlikely to stick, it will be interesting to see where Tepper turns for what will be his third hire as Panthers owner − and whether his decision to can Reich after just 11 games will scare some of the top candidates away. Keep an eye on Johnson, who has Carolina ties and was pursued by Tepper a year ago.

Las Vegas Raiders head coaching search, candidates

Fired: Josh McDaniels on Nov. 1

Known candidates: None

The skinny: Antonio Pierce made a strong impression during his time as interim head coach, leading the Raiders to a 5-4 record with a season-ending win over the Denver Broncos. Owner Mark Davis told ESPN that he was ‘really excited’ about the team’s performance under Pierce but noted that he still had to go through the process of setting up interviews for the job, as required by the Rooney Rule. Michigan coach Jim Harbaugh has also gotten some buzz as a possibility for this job, though it’s unclear whether he will entertain a leap back to the NFL.

Los Angeles Chargers head coaching search, candidates

Fired:Brandon Staley on Dec. 15

Known candidates:

Los Angeles Chargers offensive coordinator Kellen Moore: Interviewed on Jan. 9 (per team)

Los Angeles Chargers interim coach Giff Smith: Interviewed on Jan. 9 (per team)

Cincinnati Bengals offensive coordinator Brian Callahan: Interview requested (per NFL Network)

Detroit Lions defensive coordinator Aaron Glenn: Interview requested (per NFL Network)

Las Vegas Raiders defensive coordinator Patrick Graham: Interview requested (per NFL Network)

Detroit Lions offensive coordinator Ben Johnson: Interview requested (per NFL Network)

Baltimore Ravens offensive coordinator Todd Monken: Interview requested (per multiple reports)

Los Angeles Rams defensive coordinator Raheem Morris: Interview requested (per NFL Network)

Dallas Cowboys defensive coordinator Dan Quinn: Interview requested (per NFL Network)

San Francisco 49ers defensive coordinator Steve Wilks: Interview requested (per multiplereports)

The skinny: Staley finished with a winning record in each of his two full seasons as Chargers head coach, but owner Dean Spanos opted to fire him after the team got drubbed by the Raiders in Week 15 of Year 3. Staley’s successor will inherit a franchise quarterback in Justin Herbert but also lofty expectations. This is another vacancy that has been bandied about as a possible landing place for Jim Harbaugh.

Tennessee Titans head coaching search, candidates

Fired:Mike Vrabel on Jan. 9

Known candidates: None

The skinny: Vrabel’s firing came as a shock, in part because he was just two years removed from winning coach of the year honors; Titans controlling owner Amy Adams Strunk called the move ‘as difficult as any I’ve made’ in ownership. The decision to fire Vrabel, rather than look for a potential trading partner, could indicate that Strunk and company plan to move quickly to hire their next coach − though the top candidates for the position were immediately unclear.

Washington Commanders head coaching search, candidates

Fired:Ron Rivera on Jan. 8

Known candidates:

Detroit Lions defensive coordinator Aaron Glenn: Interview requested (per NFL Network)

Detroit Lions offensive coordinator Ben Johnson: Interview requested (permultiplereports)

Baltimore Ravens defensive coordinator Mike Macdonald: Interview requested (per NFL Network)

Los Angeles Rams defensive coordinator Raheem Morris: Interview requested (per multiplereports)

Dallas Cowboys defensive coordinator Dan Quinn: Interview requested (per multiple reports)

Houston Texans offensive coordinator Bobby Slowik: Interview requested (per The Washington Post)

Baltimore Ravens assistant head coach/defensive line coach Anthony Weaver: Interview requested (permultiplereports)

The skinny: New Commanders owner Josh Harris waited until the end of the season to fire Rivera, but it’s evident that he’s been identifying head coach candidates for some time. Within hours of Rivera’s firing, there had been reports that Washington had already requested permission to interview several candidates, including two coaches each from the playoff-bound Lions and Ravens. Harris also indicated that the team’s current offensive coordinator, Eric Bieniemy, will receive consideration as a candidate.

Other NFL coaching moves

Jan. 9: The Jaguars fired running backs coach Bernie Parmalee and didn’t renew assistant offensive line coach Todd Washington’s contract, according to NFL Network.

Jan. 8: The Jaguars fired defensive coordinator Mike Caldwell and seven members of his defensive staff, according to The Florida Times-Union, which is part of the USA TODAY Network.

Jan. 8: Giants defensive coordinator Wink Martindale resigned, according to NorthJersey.com, which is part of the USA TODAY Network.

Jan. 8: The Giants fired special teams coordinator Thomas McGaughey and offensive line coach Bobby Johnson, head coach Brian Daboll announced.

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The Tennessee Titans fired coach Mike Vrabel in a stunning move Tuesday that kicks off what should be a substantial rebuild for the franchise.

Vrabel led the Titans for six seasons, compiling a 54-45 record during his tenure. He led Tennessee to three consecutive playoff appearances from 2019-21, including a trip to the AFC championship game in the 2019 season.

But after earning the top seed in the conference in 2021 – when Vrabel was named the NFL’s Coach of the Year – the Titans fell in the divisional round to the eventual AFC champion Cincinnati Bengals. From that point on, the team would struggle to find its footing. A 7-10 campaign in 2022 was followed by a 6-11 mark this season. The losing campaigns were the franchise’s first since 2015.

‘Earlier today, I spoke with Mike Vrabel and told him about my decision to make a change at head coach,’ Titans controlling owner Amy Adams Strunk said in a statement. ‘As I told Coach Vrabel, this decision was as difficult as any I’ve made as Controlling Owner. I appreciate Mike’s contributions to the Tennessee Titans both on and off the field. Anyone who has ever met him knows how passionate and genuine he is, and he’s been a strong supporter of the Nashville community. We wish Mike, Jen, and the Vrabel family nothing but the best in the future.’

Strunk pointed to a desire to create more cohesion with general manager Ran Carthon, who the team brought in last year to replace Jon Robinson.

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‘As the NFL continues to innovate and evolve, I believe the teams best positioned for sustained success will be those who empower an aligned and collaborative team across all football functions,’ Strunk said. ‘Last year, we began a shift in our approach to football leadership and made several changes to our personnel to advance that plan. As I continued to assess the state of our team, I arrived at the conclusion that the team would also benefit from the fresh approach and perspective of a new coaching staff.’

Why Titans didn’t trade Mike Vrabel

With an established track record as a head coach, Vrabel immediately becomes an intriguing option for the five other franchises with openings.

In a video interview with the team’s in-house media operation, Adams Strunk acknowledged she did consider attempting to trade Vrabel to another team, but there were several complications that dissuaded her from pursuing a deal.

‘At the end of the day, with league rules the way they are, it would have maybe put us back three weeks,’ Adams Strunk said. ‘To get the right head coach, I was just not willing to go to the back of the line and take a chance of missing out on someone we really wanted.’

Tennessee Titans’ rebuild ahead

Tennessee is poised for more splits from significant figures this offseason under Carthon’s direction. Four-time Pro Bowl running back Derrick Henry thanked fans in the regular-season finale in a possible farewell, as he is headed for free agency and appears unlikely to return. Longtime starting quarterback Ryan Tannehill, who was benched for rookie Will Levis midway through the year, also seems set to move on.

Vrabel’s firing caught Henry by surprise.

‘Wow. Wow. I’m shocked,’ Henry told The Athletic’s Dianna Russini. ‘Coach Vrabel is a leader of men. He is a great coach and teacher. I know he will get another opportunity right away. I look forward to it.’

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Doctors are calling out the Pentagon for calling Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin’s recent medical procedure to treat prostate cancer an ‘elective’ surgery,’ saying that characterization is misleading.

The 70-year-old Defense secretary was hospitalized on Jan. 1 for complications from what officials are still calling an ‘elective’ medical procedure that was later revealed to be related to prostate cancer. The Pentagon chief’s cancer diagnosis was made public Tuesday. The administration had previously only disclosed on Friday that Austin had been hospitalized earlier that week. 

The Biden administration has taken heat for its handling of Austin’s absence, particularly on the issue of transparency, and, now, its facing backlash for telling the public last week when details of Austin’s condition were scarce that he had undergone an ‘elective’ surgery. 

Speaking Tuesday with Fox News Digital, Fox News contributor Dr. Marc Siegel, said Austin’s prostatectomy is ‘technically an elective surgery,’ but that characterization is misleading. 

‘Elective is divided into emergency and non-emergency. We take elective mostly to mean a nose job and so the word elective is misleading. This is prostate cancer,’ Siegel said. ‘Not all prostate cancer is operated on, but they decided to take it out because they thought it was aggressive-probably from the biopsy,’ he said.

Siegel said it is misleading to call Austin’s prostate cancer surgery a minimally invasive surgery.

‘Even though the da Vinci robot is technically considered minimally invasive surgery, it implies that it’s a small operation. It would be better to define Austin’s surgery as robotic prostate surgery.’ 

‘But going under anesthesia and general surgery is not a walk in the park that needs to be taken very seriously, even if our technology has improved greatly,’ Siegel said.

Dr. Nicole Saphier, a Fox News contributor and radiologist, told Fox News Digital that she would not consider a cancer surgery to be elective.

‘Anyone would think that cancer treatment is not elective, but as we learned during COVID, the definition of elective is very different from a physician or even a patient’s perspective, Dr. Saphier said. ‘Cancer surgeries were delayed during the early stages of COVID when all elective cases were put on hold.’ 

 I would not consider a cancer surgery to be elective.

— Dr. Nicole Saphier, Fox News contributor and Radiologist

‘Ultimately, cancer is life-threatening, so it is really arguing semantics whether you want to call cancer treatment, elective or not,’ she said. 

‘My personal opinion as a cancer specialist and human, I would not consider a cancer surgery to be elective, but the reality is, his prostate cancer was not immediately life-threatening at the moment,’ Dr. Saphier said. ‘Therefore, he was able to be scheduled on an outpatient, non-emergency basis.’

Pentagon press secretary Maj. Gen. Pat Ryder defended the use of ‘elective surgery’ in a Tuesday press briefing, deferring to medical professionals.

‘I’m going to defer to medical officials on this,’ Ryder said. ‘Again, we released this information as soon as we had it. And so, again, I’m going to refer back to the statement and, you know, going forward, we will use that as the baseline in terms of describing it.’

Ryder said that Austin’s doctor previously defined his surgery as elective and the initial statement from the Pentagon was written after consulting his doctors at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center.

‘So to my knowledge, that initial statement was coordinated in consultation with his doctors,’ Ryder said. 

Following Austin’s surgery, he was hospitalized following ‘complications,’ Ryder said on Friday, Jan. 5.

House Armed Services Committee Chairman Mike Rogers on Tuesday announced a formal inquiry into the lack of transparency surrounding Austin’s hospitalization.

‘With wars in Ukraine and Israel, the idea that the White House and even your own Deputy did not understand the nature of your condition is patently unacceptable,’ Rogers wrote in a letter to Austin on Tuesday.

Seigel said that Austin should use this experience as a ‘great teaching moment’ and bring public awareness to prostate cancer. 

‘This should have been a great teaching moment and still could be for Black Americans, given the fact that they have 2.5 times greater risk of prostate cancer and 2.5 greater chances of dying,’ Siegel said.

‘I would have liked to see the defense secretary come out for public awareness rather than hide– and he still could,’ he said.

Austin was admitted to Walter Reed National Military Medical Center on Dec. 22 and underwent surgery to treat the cancer. He developed the infection a week later. 

Biden and other senior administration officials were not told for days about his hospitalization or his cancer.

According to the doctors, the cancer was detected when Austin had a regular screening in early December. 

They said his prostate cancer was detected early, and his prognosis was excellent.

The Pentagon did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.

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The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC) announced a $35 million campaign investment targeting Black, Latino, Asian American and Native Hawaiian-Pacific Islander voters before the elections later this year.

It comes at a time when Democrats, including President Biden, have been bleeding support among this powerful group of voters.

In a press release, the DCCC announced what it called an historic eight-figure investment called P.O.W.E.R. – Persuade. Organize. Welcome. Educate. Reach – The People, aimed at persuading and mobilizing AANHPI, Black and Latino voters. Axios reported that the DCCC’s campaign was a whopping $35 million, up $5 million from what the committee spent during the last election cycle.

The DCCC said it is engaging communities of color to help take back the House of Representatives, which currently has more Republicans than Democrats.

The campaign dollars will go toward research and polling, paid media, in-district organizing, voter protection and education and pushing back against misinformation that may confuse or distract voters of color.

‘Democrats are committed to bringing responsible governance back to the House so that we can continue the important work of lowering costs, protecting and expanding health care, and delivering for our constituents,’ DCCC Chair Suzan DelBene said. ‘We know that voters of color are critical to Democrats’ coalition and the DCCC’s investments highlight our commitment to continuously engaging with communities of color on issues they care about.’

The committee said it will use ‘qualitative and quantitative’ research to connect with communities of color, so it can address their priorities.

One of the ways the committee plans to reach out to the community is through ‘culturally competent and resonant’ media paid for with its funds, which aim to persuade and mobilize the voters through creative and localized messaging across different mediums.

The messages will also be dispersed on a variety of platforms the communities are most responsive to, and will be available in English, Korean, Mandarin, Spanish, Spanglish and Vietnamese.

The DCCC did not immediately respond to inquiries from Fox News Digital about the campaign.

The committee also said it plans to track and counter disinformation spread across social media and traditional media, which could dissuade people of color from voting, through an online hub called, ‘In It Together.’

The group said the hub will provide content and resources that can be shared with family and friends to help push back against ‘false narratives,’ while stressing the accomplishments of House Democrats.

‘The DCCC is making an historic investment to persuade and engage voters of color who are critical for Democrats’ path to taking back the House,’ DCC national Engagement Director Mariafernanda Zacarias said. ‘We know how important it is to have ongoing culturally inclusive and resonate outreach with voters of color including in TV, digital, print, mail, and radio, through in-district organizing staff, and informed by in-depth research and polling. P.O.W.E.R. The People builds on the DCCC’s prior cycles of engagement with communities of color to tell the story of how Democrats are delivering for working people, and the danger Republicans pose to our fundamental rights.’

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Florida GOP Governor Ron DeSantis’ rivals for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination took aim at the populist presidential candidate after his Tuesday town hall event.

DeSantis joined Fox News for a town hall event in the Hawkeye State ahead of the famous Iowa Caucus, where the governor spoke on inflation and government accountability and took questions from the audience.

Following DeSantis’ town hall discussion with Fox News’ Bret Baier and Martha MacCallum, though, the Florida governor’s GOP rivals fired off their thoughts on his performance.

Former President Trump’s campaign went off during the town hall event, attacking DeSantis’ record on the COVID-19 pandemic and claiming in one post that the Florida governor ‘issued some of the most draconian Covid restrictions of anywhere in the United States.’

In another post, the Trump campaign wrote, ‘Ron DeSanctimonious PRAISES Trump’s COVID Task Force, says Fauci and Birx were doing a good job,’ with a clip of DeSantis from during the COVID-19 pandemic.

‘Ron DeSantis and his allies have set him up for devastating failure,’ the Trump campaign tweeted. ‘Everything he does is one giant astroturf that will be exposed in just a few short days.’

Trump’s campaign also shared a CNN clip that the campaign said ‘exposed’ the governor as a ‘massive COVID hypocrite.’

‘MUST WATCH: DeSantis EXPOSED as MASSIVE COVID HYPOCRITE, repeatedly praised Fauci and his policies during the pandemic,’ Trump wrote.

Former South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley’s campaign chirped at DeSantis during his town hall, too, slamming the governor over his answers to various questions, from inflation to his polling numbers against President Biden.

‘RON DESANTIS on inflation: ‘This was created by Washington,’’ Haley’s campaign tweeted on Tuesday. ‘Uh, Ron, you were in Washington and you voted to increase the debt limit.’

‘Tonight, Iowa voters saw a desperate, flailing Ron DeSantis trying to cover up his record of banning fracking and drilling in Florida, and voting to increase the debt limit in Congress. The more DeSantis loses, the more he lies,’ AnnMarie Graham-Barnes, Haley campaign spokesperson, told Fox News Digital following the town hall.

‘FUN FACT: Ron DeSantis performs the worst against Biden,’ Haley’s campaign wrote in another tweet. ‘LOL.’

‘Question from voter: Why is it so hard for you to win over conservatives?’ another tweet from Haley’s camp read. ‘Ron DeSantis: Word [salad emoji].’

When asked for comment, DeSantis’ campaign pointed to a tweet by the governor slamming Haley and Trump and sharing a clip of his comments from his Fox News town hall.

‘Donald Trump’s running for his issues. Nikki Haley’s running for her donors’ issues,’ DeSantis wrote.

‘I’m running for your issues, your family’s issues, and to turn this country around,’ he added.

DeSantis was the second GOP presidential candidate this week to hold a Fox News town hall ahead of the Iowa Caucus next week.

The Florida governor is vying for the GOP nomination to take on President Biden for the White House in November. 

However, the battle for the nomination is far from over: DeSantis will have to get through Haley and Trump to get the Republican Party’s coveted nod.

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House Republicans will consider a resolution Wednesday morning that, if passed, would set up a full House vote on whether to hold Hunter Biden in contempt of Congress for defying a congressional subpoena as part of the House impeachment inquiry against President Biden.

The House Oversight Committee will meet for a markup Wednesday at 10 a.m. to consider the resolution that recommends contempt proceedings against the first son after he refused to comply with a subpoena compelling him to appear for a closed-door deposition before the House Oversight and Judiciary committees.

The House Judiciary Committee will hold a similar markup at 10 a.m. on a measure recommending Hunter Biden be held in contempt of Congress. 

‘Our investigation has produced significant evidence suggesting President Biden knew of, participated in and benefited from his family cashing in on the Biden name,’ House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer is expected to say in his opening statement, obtained by Fox News Digital. 

‘We planned to question Hunter Biden about this record of evidence during our deposition, but he blatantly defied two lawful subpoenas.’ 

Comer will say, ‘Hunter Biden’s willful refusal to comply with the committees’ subpoenas is a criminal act’ that ‘constitutes contempt of Congress and warrants referral to the appropriate United States Attorney’s Office for prosecution as prescribed by law.’

‘We will not provide Hunter Biden with special treatment because of his last name,’ Comer is expected to say. ‘All Americans must be treated equally under the law. And that includes the Bidens.’ 

Hunter Biden, ahead of his subpoenaed deposition, had offered to testify publicly. House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer and Judiciary Committee Chairman Jim Jordan rejected his request, stressing that the first son would not have special treatment and pointed to the dozens of other witnesses that have appeared, as compelled, for their interviews and depositions. Comer and Jordan vowed to release the transcript of Hunter Biden’s deposition.

The first son, though, defied the subpoena, ignored the offer and delivered a public statement outside the Capitol.

‘On December 13, 2023, Robert Hunter Biden failed to comply with deposition subpoenas issued by the Committees on Oversight and Accountability and the Judiciary for testimony relevant to the House of Representatives’ impeachment inquiry and the Committees’ oversight investigations,’ the House Oversight report, first reported by Fox News Digital on Monday, says. 

‘Instead, Mr. Biden opted to read a short, prepared statement in front of the Capitol. Accordingly, Mr. Biden has violated federal law and must be held in contempt of Congress.’

Meanwhile, the House Oversight report identifies Hunter Biden’s testimony as ‘a critical component of the impeachment inquiry into, among other things, whether Joseph R. Biden, Jr., as Vice President and/or President: (1) took any official action or effected any change in government policy because of money or other things of value provided to himself or his family; (2) abused his office of public trust by providing foreign interests with access to him and his office in exchange for payments to his family or him; or (3) abused his office of public trust by knowingly participating in a scheme to enrich himself or his family by giving foreign interests the impression that they would receive access to him and his office in exchange for payments to his family or him.’

The report states that Hunter Biden’s ‘flagrant defiance of the Committees’ deposition subpoenas — while choosing to appear nearby on the Capitol grounds to read a prepared statement on the same matters — is contemptuous, and he must be held accountable for his unlawful actions.’

The report says House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer ‘recommends that Congress find Robert Hunter Biden in contempt for his failure to comply with the Committee subpoena issued to him.’

Committee ranking member Jamie Raskin, D-Md., blasted the move, saying there ‘is no precedent for the U.S. House of Representatives holding a private citizen in contempt of Congress who has offered to testify in public, under oath and on a day of the committee’s choosing. Chairman Comer repeatedly urged Hunter Biden to appear at a committee hearing, and Hunter Biden agreed.’ 

If the resolution advances out of committees Wednesday, sources said a full contempt of Congress vote on the House floor could take place in the coming days. 

Last month, Comer and Jordan expanded their investigation to probe whether President Biden was involved in his son’s ‘scheme’ to defy his subpoena for deposition earlier this month, conduct, they say, ‘could constitute an impeachable offense.’ 

Hunter Biden, when making his public statement last month, said his ‘father was not financially involved in my business.’ 

‘No evidence to support that my father was financially involved in my business because it did not happen,’ he said. 

The House impeachment inquiry against President Biden was formalized by the full House last month. The inquiry is being led by Comer, Jordan and House Ways & Means Committee Chairman Jason Smith, R-Mo.

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Hundreds of Alaska Airlines and United Airlines flights remained canceled Monday in the wake of the Federal Aviation Administration’s decision to ground all Boeing 737 Max 9 aircraft.

According to data from tracking site FlightAware, 220 United flights are affected. About 140 Alaska Airlines flights — 20% of the Seattle-based carrier’s routes — have been affected, as of 9:55 a.m. ET Monday morning.

The cancellations are concentrated at Alaska’s Seattle-Tacoma International Airport hub; other airports seeing outsized cancelations include Newark-Liberty International Airport, Denver International Airport, and Chicago-O’Hare International Airport.

Alaska Airlines aircraft grounded at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport on Jan. 6, 2024.David Ryder / Bloomberg via Getty Images

In a statement on its website late Sunday, Alaska said the FAA’s grounding order had ‘significantly impacted our operation’ and that cancellations would continue through the first half of the week. Already, the 170 flights it canceled Sunday had affected roughly 25,000 travelers, it said.

Both Alaska and United said affected passengers would be rerouted to their destinations.

The decision to ground the Boeing aircraft came after a panel blew out of an Alaska plane’s fuselage with 171 passengers and six crew members onboard Friday, forcing the aircraft to make an emergency landing.

Late Sunday, the National Transportation Safety Board reported it had recovered the panel in question. It continues to probe whether other Max 9’s could be prone to the same issue.

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Boeing’s plan to get back on solid footing after a series of quality flaws in its bestselling jet suffered a near disaster when a plane panel blew out during an Alaska Airlines flight, leaving a gaping hole in row 26.

The Federal Aviation Administration on Saturday, less than a day after the accident, ordered a grounding of most 737 Max 9 planes, affecting some 171 aircraft worldwide, so they can be inspected. On Sunday, the agency said, “they will remain grounded until the FAA is satisfied that they are safe.”

Several factors onboard Alaska Airlines Flight 1282 that turned back Portland, Oregon, minutes into the flight to Ontario, California, on Friday afternoon — including its lower-than-cruising altitude and unoccupied seats where it mattered most — helped avoid serious injury, or worse, for the flight’s 171 passengers and six crew.

The force from the event was so violent it ripped some headrests and seatbacks out of the cabin, blew open the cockpit door, and ripped off the first officer’s headset, according to early details of the federal investigation.

A schoolteacher in the Portland area found the door plug in his backyard, the National Transportation Safety Board said late Sunday.

The terrifying incident means renewed scrutiny for Boeing, which has been working to get its 737 Max program back on track after two fatal crashes, the Covid-19 pandemic’s supply chain havoc and a series of smaller but troubling quality issues in recent months.

The 737 Max 9 flown by Alaska Airlines on Friday was delivered less than three months ago.

“The fact that it was a practically brand-new aircraft is a cause for concern,” said Jim Hall, a former chairman of the National Transportation Safety Board.

United Airlines and Alaska Airlines, the largest operators of the 737 Max 9, on Saturday said they suspended flights with those planes, forcing the carriers to cancel more than 400 flights.

Boeing’s leadership has spent roughly five years regrouping after the 2018 and 2019 fatal crashes of its smaller and more popular Boeing 737 Max 8, which prompted a worldwide grounding of both the Max 8 and Max 9, the two types flying commercially.

Regulators began clearing the planes to fly again in late 2020, and Boeing has won hundreds of new orders for the planes as airlines trip over each other to secure new jets, which are sold out for most of this decade at Boeing and rival Airbus.

Boeing has been trying to ramp up production of the workhorse jet while simultaneously stamping out quality issues such as rudder system bolts that were possibly loose and holes that were incorrectly drilled on certain aircraft. Those defects prompted additional inspections and in some cases slowed down deliveries to airlines.

Boeing still hasn’t won regulator approval for carriers to start flying the smallest Max 7 and largest Max 10 models.

“I’ve heard from a few of you wondering if we’ve lost a step in this recovery,” Boeing CEO Dave Calhoun told Wall Street analysts on an earnings call in October. “You might not be surprised to hear that I view it as exactly the opposite. Over the last several years, we’ve added rigor around our quality processes.”

Calhoun said last month in a statement announcing a new COO that 2024 would be a “significant transitional year in our performance as we continue to restore our operational and financial strength.”

Wall Street analysts expect Boeing to post its sixth consecutive quarterly net loss when it reports results on Jan. 31, according to FactSet estimates. They also anticipate the manufacturer to be profitable this year, starting in the first quarter.

Shares of Boeing climbed close to 37% in 2023, the stock’s best percentage gain since 2017 and its first annual advance since a modest rise in 2019. The company’s shares tumbled more than 8% in premarket trading on Monday, the first trading day since the incident.

Calhoun told employees on Sunday that he’s canceled a leadership summit early this week and will instead hold an all-employee meeting on Tuesday to discuss safety.

“While we’ve made progress in strengthening our safety management and quality control systems and processes in the last few years, situations like this are a reminder that we must remain focused on continuing to improve every day,” Calhoun said in a staff memo Sunday.

Jennifer Homendy, chair of the National Transportation Safety Board, which is leading the investigation into Friday’s accident, said at a press briefing Saturday night in Portland that the probe is centered around the Alaska Airlines flight and that specific aircraft, not the entire fleet of Boeing 737 Maxes.

There will be big questions to answer about how exactly the panel blew out at 16,000 feet, putting a plane full of passengers at risk.

Fuselage supplier Spirit Aerosystems said it installed the plug door, an emergency exit door that’s cut into the plane but not intended for use under certain plane configurations, like those on United and Alaska, and is therefore sealed off. A Boeing spokeswoman declined to comment on whether Boeing is the last to seal the door before the planes are delivered to airlines, citing the ongoing investigation.

John Goglia, a former member of the NTSB and a transportation safety consultant, said that the Alaska Airlines incident will likely be a “blip” for Boeing but argued federal regulators should further scrutinize Boeing as it gears up to produce even more 737 Maxes.

“If I was the FAA, I’d say, ‘Show me six months where you don’t have any assembly problems,’” he said. “The FAA needs to slow Boeing down.”

According to Jefferies, the 737 Max 9 represents just 2% of Boeing’s backlog of more than 4,500 Max planes. It’s far less popular than the Max 8, which accounts for around 68% of the Maxes that customers have ordered from Boeing.

And while the planes will remain grounded for the time being, some safety experts don’t expect the same level of impact on the company as it saw after the 2018 and 2019 Max crashes, in which a piece of flight-control software was implicated.

Richard Aboulafia, managing director at aviation consulting firm Aerodynamic Advisory, said the problem on the Alaska Airlines plane appears to be a manufacturing defect, not an inherent design flaw.

That should make the investigation and recovery easier for Boeing, he said.

And, of course, there’s the fact that no one died following Friday’s flight in contrast to the 346 people who were killed in the 2018 and 2019 crashes.

No serious injuries were reported after the Alaska Airlines flight.

No one was seated in 26A and 26B, the window and middle seats next to the panel that blew out. The plane hadn’t yet reached cruising altitude — which can be double the 16,000 feet where the incident occurred — also helping matters, because passengers and flight attendants weren’t walking around the cabin.

“We don’t often talk about psychological injury, but I’m sure that happened here,” Homendy, the NTSB chair said Saturday night.

“We are very, very fortunate that this didn’t end up as something more tragic,” she said.

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