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Everyone’s blaming health insurance company greed for the soaring claims denials and roadblocks to care. That’s naive.  Follow the money to find the real culprits: lying politicians. 

In 2013, before Affordable Care Act regulations kicked in, insurers denied roughly 1.5% of claims, according to the American Medical Association. But under ACA rules, denials increased tenfold. Now nearly 15% of claims are denied, reports Premier, an insurance consultant firm. Some insurers deny a third or more of claims, according to Kaiser Family Foundation research. 

Insurers are also demanding preauthorizations for a wide range of treatments and medications, tying your doctor’s hands and dangerously delaying your care. 

Your doctor has to call the insurer before beginning treatment or ordering medication. Seldom is the person on the other end of the phone a specialist in the disease or treatment in question. It could be an OB-GYN overriding what your neurosurgeon recommends, warns the AMA. 

Dr. Debra Patt prescribed a drug combination for a patient with metastatic breast cancer but had to wait weeks for prior authorization. In the meantime, reports the AMA, she had to settle for standard chemotherapy, to no avail: Her patient died. 

‘You have health plan representatives who have never met the patient, have never been at the bedside or practiced medicine but are now making treatment decisions,’ objects Tina Grant, senior vice president of public policy and advocacy at Trinity Health, a system of 92 Catholic hospitals. 

According to House Committee on Energy and Commerce testimony, 80% of the preapprovals Cigna denied for Medicare Advantage customers were overturned on appeal, a sign that legitimate care is being withheld. Cigna uses an algorithm called PxDx to deny prior authorizations in bulk. 

Denials and prior authorization requirements escalated after the ACA went into effect. But don’t blame profit maximization. The ACA regulates underwriting profits, and if profits go up, insurers have to send customers rebates. 

Giants like United Healthcare have grown into money-making behemoths by buying physicians’ practices, hospitals and pharmacy chains, not by selling health plans, according to IBISWorld industry research. 

The actual reason your health insurance is becoming unreliable is that politicians backing Obamacare knowingly made a promise that was impossible to keep without insurers resorting to predatory practices. 

Obamacare advocates promised everyone would be charged the same regardless of their ‘preexisting conditions.’ 

The math doesn’t work. Every year, 5% of the population uses over 50% of the healthcare. That’s a fact of nature, politics aside. 

Telling insurers to cover the 5% for the same price they charge healthy people is like providing monthly groceries to a skinny fashion model and the winner of Nathan’s Hot Dog Eating Contest for the same price. Ridiculous. 

Five percent more premium payers and 50% more medical needs. 

The federal government should have stepped in with extra payments to cover people with preexisting conditions. Instead, insurers were hit with a mountain of new claims and told to make it work. They adopted Draconian cost-cutting methods. 

The winners? Democratic politicians. Covering preexisting conditions at no extra charge is popular. 

The losers? Everyone else who has to worry that their next treatment will be delayed or their next claim denied. 

The biggest losers, sadly, are the seriously ill who suffer disproportionately from managed care’s tight controls, according to a National Bureau of Economic Research paper on Medicaid managed care. 

More than half of states are now passing laws to limit prior authorization. 

That’s a step in the right direction. But Americans need to reassess managed care. 

Denials and prior authorization requirements escalated after the ACA went into effect. But don’t blame profit maximization. The ACA regulates underwriting profits, and if profits go up, insurers have to send customers rebates. 

There is next to no evidence that it improves health. 

President Joe Biden’s assistant secretary of health policy boasts that the ACA’s coverage expansion — mostly in managed care — reduced ‘morbidity and mortality.’ That’s a blatant lie.  Americans are sicker and living shorter lives than they were before the ACA. 

One alternative is to allow low-cost catastrophic insurance, which kicks in only for the large bills. Healthy people who get coverage at work would benefit from fewer interactions with an insurer and more take-home pay in lieu of a whopping $25,000 plan — the cost this year for family coverage. 

Democrats try to label catastrophic coverage as ‘junk insurance.’ The Biden administration made it almost impossible to buy. But Americans are beginning to see that health plans that turn down claims and make you wait a dangerous amount of time for preauthorization are the real ‘junk.’ 

 

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Philadelphia Eagles running back Saquon Barkley has an abundance of NFL fans rooting for him to break Hall of Famer Eric Dickerson’s single-season rushing record.

Just don’t count Dickerson among them.

‘I don’t think he’ll break it. But if he breaks it, he breaks it,’ the former Los Angeles Ram said in an interview with the Los Angeles Times published Thursday. ‘Do I want him to break it? Absolutely not. I don’t pull no punches on that.

‘But I’m not whining about it. He had 17 games to do it? Hey, football is football. That’s the way I look at it. If he’s fortunate to get over 2,000 yards and get the record, it’s a great record to have.’

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Barkley is up to 1,838 rushing yards through 15 games this season. He needs 268 yards in the Eagles’ final two games of the season – against the Dallas Cowboys and New York Giants – to break Dickerson’s single-season mark of 2,105, which he set in 1984.

The Philadelphia running back’s stellar season already ranks 19th all-time in single-season rushing yards, one spot ahead of Dickerson’s league-leading tally of 1,821 in 1986. Barkley is currently on pace for 2,083 rushing yards, which would fall behind both Dickerson’s 1984 record total and the next-highest mark: Adrian Peterson’s 2,097-yard season in 2012.

But Barkley could help his case with a strong outing in Week 17 against the Cowboys. The Eagles have already ruled out quarterback Jalen Hurts, which could mean a heavier workload for the star tailback.

As fortune would have it, if Barkley stays within reach after the first divisional matchup, he could have a chance to break Dickerson’s record against the Giants, his former team.

‘How ironic would it be for him to break the record on them, the team that let him go,’ Dickerson said in the aforementioned interview. ‘A true slap in the face.’

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Referred to by teammates as ‘Barry Bonds,’ Boston Red Sox prospect Kristian Campbell put on a hitting clinic across three levels to earn the 2024 USA TODAY Sports Minor League Player of the Year award.

Campbell, 22, batted .330 for Greenville (Class A), Portland (AA) and Worcester (AAA) in his first full season as a pro after he was selected by the Red Sox in the fourth round of the 2023 Major League Baseball draft.

“I’m just like a fan watching him play,” Red Sox shortstop prospect Marcelo Mayer said about his teammate. ‘He’s just such a unique player, and he’s so athletic, and he’s able to do everything at such a high level that it’s just like, it’s super impressive to watch.”

Campbell split his time pretty evenly between shortstop, second base and center field in 2024, offering him more than one pathway to the big leagues.

‘It’s rare that you get a guy like that who can play so many different premium positions and play it at the level that he plays it at while putting up the numbers that he’s put up,’ Red Sox outfield prospect Roman Anthony said of Campbell.

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Campbell had a .997 OPS in 430 at-bats with 20 home runs, 77 RBI, 24 steals and 32 doubles.

“We call him Barry Bonds just because of how good of a hitter he is,” said Anthony. “He’s a great player. He’s a freak athlete. (He) plays the game the right way, and he’s a great person on and off the field.’

Expected to begin the season together with Triple-A Worcester, Boston’s top three prospects should be knocking on the door by the summer with the Red Sox perhaps in need of upgrades at second base, shortstop and center. But there’s no reason for Boston to rush Campbell, who enters 2025 with only 19 games under his belt in the minors’ highest level.

‘It was a collaboration between our amateur department and our player-development department in terms of the mechanical changes that he needed to impact the ball,’ Red Sox farm director Brian Abraham told MLB.com. ‘We thought there was some low-hanging fruit that could help him. Kristian really embraces change and the challenge of improvement. To see it happen so immediately and dramatically was exciting.’

As James Ramsey, one of Campbell’s coaches at Georgia Tech, told Boston.com: “In some ways, I think he was born to play baseball.’

USA TODAY has been handing out the Minor League Player of the Year award annually since 1988, honoring the year’s top minor league player as voted on by the staff’s MLB writers and editors.

Of 15 winners since 2008, 13 have become All-Stars and that group has combined for three MVP awards, three Cy Young awards and five Rookie of the Year wins.

USA TODAY Sports Minor League Player of the Year winners

2023:Jackson Holliday, Orioles
2022: Corbin Carroll, Diamondbacks (2023 NL Rookie of the Year)
2021: Bobby Witt Jr., Royals
2020No season due to COVID-19
2019: Luis Robert, White Sox
2018: Vladimir Guerrero Jr., Blue Jays
2017: Ronald Acuña Jr., Braves (2018 NL RoY, 2023 NL MVP)
2016: Alex Bregman, Astros
2015: Blake Snell, Rays (2018 AL Cy Young, 2023 NL Cy Young)
2014: Kris Bryant, Cubs (2015 NL RoY, 2016 NL MVP)
2013: Xander Bogaerts, Red Sox
2012: Wil Myers, Royals (2013 AL RoY)
2011: Paul Goldschmidt, Diamondbacks (2022 NL MVP)
2010: Jeremy Hellickson, Rays (2011 AL RoY)
2009: Jason Heyward, Braves
2008: David Price, Rays (2012 AL Cy Young)
2007: Justin Upton, Diamondbacks
2006: Matt Garza, Twins
2005: Francisco Liriano, Twins
2004: Jeff Francis, Rockies
2003: Prince Fielder, Brewers
2002: Jose Reyes, Mets
2001: Josh Beckett, Marlins
2000: Josh Hamilton, Devil Rays (2010 AL MVP)
1999: Rick Ankiel, Cardinals
1998: Gabe Kapler, Tigers
1997: Ben Grieve, Athletics (1998 AL RoY)
1996: Andruw Jones, Braves
1995: Andruw Jones, Braves
1994: Billy Ashley, Dodgers
1993: Cliff Floyd, Expos
1992: Carlos Delgado, Blue Jays
1991: Mark Wohlers, Braves
1990: Tino Martinez, Mariners
1989: Todd Zeile, Cardinals
1988: Mike Harkey, Cubs

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Teoscar Hernández’s infectious grin and prodigous power were huge hits in his one season as a Los Angeles Dodger, culminating in a World Series championship.

So why not run it back?

The answer was easy for both sides, as Hernández agreed to a new three-year, $66 million contract with the Dodgers, a person with knowledge of the deal told USA TODAY Sports.

The person spoke on the condition of anonymity because the team has not yet announced the deal. But Hernández made it pretty close to official, writing ‘I’m back,’ on his Instagram story.

The contract, which takes the preeminent right-handed hitting outfielder off the market, also includes a team option for a fourth season.

All things Dodgers: Latest Los Angeles Dodgers news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

Hernández, 32, did not find free agent offers to his liking one year ago, when he signed a one-year, $23 million deal with the Dodgers that included $8.5 million in deferred money.

And the two-time All-Star produced the greatest season of his career.

Hernández hit a career-high 33 home runs and posted an .840 OPS in helping the Dodgers win the National League West. In the postseason, he hit three more home runs, including a grand slam in the NLDS, and hit an RBI double that drove in the final two runs to erase a 5-0 New York Yankees lead in the decisive World Series Game 5.

OHTANI EXCLUSIVE: MVP recounts historic first year with Dodgers
DODGERS WIN WORLD SERIES: Celebrate with this commemorative coffee table book!

The vibes were almost as good as the production.

Hernández struck up a quick kinship with superstar Shohei Ohtani, who was also in his first year with the club, and won the Home Run Derby at July’s All-Star Game. Now, after playing for three teams in three years, Hernández will no longer be the new guy.

And finally received a deal that made it an easy call to make L.A. his home for years to come.

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Scottie Scheffler is going to miss the first event of 2025 after having surgery on his right hand.

Scheffler, the No. 1-ranked player in the world and the PGA Tour’s 2024 Player of the Year, withdrew Friday from the season opener at the Plantation course at Kapalua.

The Tour announced the news in a statement that was sent out Friday afternoon. It included comments from Scheffler’s manager, who provided background on the incident.

‘On Christmas Day while preparing dinner, Scottie sustained a puncture wound to the palm of his right hand from a broken glass. Small glass fragments remained in the palm which required surgery. He has been told that he should be back to 100 percent in three to four weeks. Unfortunately, he will have to withdraw from The Sentry. His next scheduled tournament is The American Express,’ said Blake Smith in the release.

Following the Sentry, the Tour’s first signature event of 2025, is the Sony Open in Hawaii, followed by the American Express, Jan. 16-19, at PGA West.

Scheffler was most recently seen alongside Rory McIroy in Las Vegas. They were the winning duo 10 days ago in The Showdown against Brooks Koepka and Bryson DeChambeau.

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The end of the year is a natural time to look back on the previous 12 months, and 2024 was one for the political record books. Having been left for dead politically and survived multiple actual assassination attempts, President-elect Trump completed an unthinkable comeback. He stands on the precipice of re-assuming the presidency in a manner few could have envisioned four years ago. 

While the president-elect is 2024’s obvious winner, he is not the only one. Here are three others.

JD Vance

The ‘Hillbilly Elegy‘ author started the year as a freshman senator from Ohio and ends it as the clear frontrunner for the 2028 presidential nomination. 

Of course, a lot can happen in four years, and serving as second-in-command to Trump can be unpredictable (just ask Mike Pence), but there’s no doubt that the Buckeye State senator’s stock has soared. 

Along the way, Vance demonstrated his political nimbleness and acumen. He overcame his past criticism of Trump to win the coveted veepstakes against a field of formidable opponents. He put to rest lingering questions about his one and only run for Senate in which he ran behind the rest of the ticket in ruby red Ohio.

Vance’s steady, warm and likable presence in the vice-presidential debate, which came on the heels of Trump’s choppy performance against Vice President Kamala Harris, helped give undecided voters the permission structure to pull the lever for the GOP ticket.

At only 40 years old and fluent in the language of the modern GOP, Vance is in the catbird seat for the foreseeable future. 

Dave McCormick

In 2022, McCormick came up a whisker short in the Republican primary for Pennsylvania’s U.S. Senate race. Of more than 1.3 million votes cast in the primary, McCormick was a mere 951 votes behind Dr. Mehmet Oz, who went on to lose to John Fetterman in the general.

Fast-forward two years, McCormick is now the senator-elect from the Keystone State. He didn’t just win a Senate seat and pad the Republican majority. By ousting Democratic Sen. Bob Casey, he ended a political dynasty that stretched back to the 1960s to the outgoing senator’s father, who served as governor and state auditor.

In his campaign, McCormick led the charge against the Democratic opposition to fracking, a process involved in Pennsylvania’s thriving natural gas industry, that became headaches for Democrats everywhere. By Election Day, both Casey and Harris had been forced to renounce their previous opposition to fracking, which just a few years prior had been a rallying cry from Democrats everywhere as part of their extreme and misguided green agenda.

With the oil and gas industry supporting nearly half a million Pennsylvania jobs, Casey’s election year conversion was undermined by his 17-year voting record, but McCormick deserves credit for taking the fight to the incumbent. 

Similar to 2016 and 2020, Pennsylvania was the lynchpin battleground state at the presidential level. With its 19 electoral votes, the commonwealth is poised to remain at the center of the action in the years ahead.

Common Sense & Political Gravity 

During the Biden presidency, voters were routinely told not to believe their lying eyes. Prices weren’t that high, and inflation was transitory. The border was secure and President Biden’s stamina could compete with ‘anyone, on any day of the week.’ Managing to deliver a State of the Union address without falling on his face was held up as an example of Biden’s ability to serve in the most powerful job in the world for another four years.

Then came the jaw-dropping June debate in Atlanta when the façade ended. On the bright lights of the debate stage and away from his handlers, the country saw a diminished commander in chief seemingly unable to deliver a coherent sentence. 

The president tried his best to hold on, but by the next month, even his fellow Democrats had seen enough. Biden was gone from the race, but questions remained about those who orchestrated the cover-up, not just among his staff but the White House press corps responsible for holding the president accountable.

Fittingly, 2024 ends with Annie Linskey and her colleagues at the Wall Street Journal who sounded the alarm on Biden’s condition with their June story headlined ‘Behind Closed Doors, Biden Shows Signs of Slipping,’ publishing a jaw-dropping follow-up expose, titled, ‘How the White House Functioned With a Diminished Biden in Charge.’ Unlike the June story, which was attacked by Democratic partisans like ‘Morning Joe’ as ‘false and biased’ and by the White House as an ‘utter editorial fail,’ the latest installment was greeted with resignation that Biden still has another month at the helm.

Just as the year 2024 will be studied by political science classes for years to come, these three winners are poised to remain major players well into the future.

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In much of the English-speaking world, but not America, the day after Christmas is called Boxing Day. For reasons that are entirely unclear, DOGE bros Vivek Ramaswamy and Elon Musk decided to take the occasion to don boxing gloves and throw haymakers at native-born American workers.

What started off with Musk saying on his social media platform X, and not for the first time, that he needs more foreign-born geniuses to work for him quickly morphed into Ramasawamy dressing down American families for indulging their children with sleepovers and trips to the mall.

Apparently, big tech needs foreign workers because we raise our kids the wrong way.

Ramaswamy insisted on X that native-born families need ‘more math tutoring, fewer sleepovers. More weekend science competitions, fewer Saturday morning cartoons. More books, less TV. More creating, less ‘chillin.’ More extracurriculars, less ‘hanging out at the mall.’’

The former presidential candidate says he is just telling us ‘hard truths’ by suggesting every family should emulate some South Asians, who he points to as a shining example.

But guess what? The United States of America is a nation, not simply a farm system for big tech. And by the way, the very reason that China steals innovation from us, not the other way around, is that our backward, hayseed attitudes create free thinkers, not drones. At least when we aren’t playing the banjo on the porch. 

Every native-born American kid applying to college this year is going to compete against students from foreign lands, including communist China, who will be extended a red carpet to use the American educational system. And when those American kids graduate, they may find themselves passed over for entry-level jobs because of foreign competition.

Musk says that American tech workers aren’t good enough. Well, then maybe we need to stop giving away thousands and thousands of spots at top schools and do a better job of teaching our own.

When I went to Springfield, Ohio, in September, I heard factory owners there claim they need 15,000 Haitian migrants because, unlike Americans, they show up on time, pass their drug tests, and willingly work overtime. It was downright insulting to American workers, but no more so than Musk and Ramaswamy mocking the native born and their cultural traditions.

And, not for nothing, big tech has the added advantage that workers brought in with H-1B visas lose their immigration status if they lose their job. That’s a lot of leverage that the tech bosses don’t have over American workers.

Now, it seems like MAGA has its first, full-blown civil war since Trump won the election almost two months ago, but looks can be deceiving. In fact, both Ramaswamy and Musk are, thankfully, walking back their ill-advised duet.

That’s because outside of nouveau-right sushi hotspots in Palo Alto, nobody in the America First Trump coalition thinks replacing American workers is a boffo concept.

This unfortunate moment was an unforced error, but no serious damage was done. Sometimes the math guys need a dose of the humanities, or at least a trip around the block.

The Department of Government Efficiency, with which President-elect Donald Trump has entrusted Musk and Ramaswamy, has to understand that our country is not a corporation, or as Musk put it, an NBA team looking to win. 

The role of the government of the United States is to ensure the right of Americans to live as they see fit, not to fit as a cog into the machinations of billionaire geniuses, domestic or foreign. And Americans have a right to ensure that the institutions they pay for are actually advancing Americans. 

This is a learnable moment for two bright, brilliant and brash stars who embrace freedom to understand that life and liberty are a pulsing heart rate, not a bottom line.

This unfortunate moment was an unforced error, but no serious damage was done. Sometimes the math guys need a dose of the humanities, or at least a trip around the block.

American college grads deserve a fair shake; They shouldn’t have to compete with H-1B visa competition, and no American should be training their cheaper H-1B replacement.

The first order of business for the Trump administration is to close the border and deport criminals. After that, the nuanced negotiations over legal immigration can begin.

But there must be one important caveat. The American worker has to be treated with respect. Because without him or her, we have no country.

Americans don’t celebrate Boxing Day, and we don’t celebrate rich people knocking the working man. Hopefully, for Vivek Ramaswammy and Elon Musk, this unforced error is a lesson learned.

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The presidential election generated numerous high-profile political gaffes this year, including President Biden’s widely-panned debate performance and him calling Trump supporters ‘garbage’ in the closing days of Vice President Kamala Harris’ campaign. 

Here are six of the biggest political gaffes of 2024: 

Biden’s debate debacle: Hoarse voice, rambling answers spark panic from Democrats 

A disastrous performance by President Biden during his debate with former President Trump on June 27 appeared to be the beginning of the end for Biden’s 2024 re-election campaign. 

He struggled with a raspy voice and delivered rambling answers during the debate in Atlanta, sparking doubts about his viability at the top of the Democratic Party’s presidential ticket. 

Biden’s campaign blamed the hoarse voice on a cold and the 81-year-old admitted a week later that he ‘screwed up’ and ‘had a bad night,’ yet that didn’t stop a chorus of Democrats from making calls for him to drop out of the race. 

In a shocking move, Biden then pulled the plug on his campaign on July 21 and endorsed Harris, who would go on to lose to Trump in November. 

Biden calls Trump supporters ‘garbage’ 

Biden appeared to galvanize Republicans when he called Trump supporters ‘garbage’ less than a week before Election Day. 

Trump’s rally in Madison Square Garden in New York City on Oct. 27 made headlines when a comedian mocked different ethnic groups, calling Puerto Rico a ‘floating island of garbage.’ 

Then, during a conference call with the Voto Latino group on Oct. 30, Biden said, ‘The only garbage I see floating out there is his supporters.’  

Biden and the White House then tried to clean up his words in the days afterward. However, the remark was quickly likened to Hillary Clinton’s labeling of half of Trump supporters as belonging in ‘a basket of deplorables’ in 2016, a comment that was widely seen as undermining her campaign. 

Harris says ‘not a thing… comes to mind’ on what she would do differently than Biden 

Vice President Kamala Harris’ answer to a question during an Oct. 8 appearance on ‘The View’ may have been a turning point in the 2024 presidential election. 

Co-host Sunny Hostin asked Harris, ‘If anything, would you have done something differently than President Biden during the past four years?’ Harris paused for a moment and then said, ‘There is not a thing that comes to mind in terms of — and I’ve been a part of most of the decisions that have had impact.’ 

Hostin had given Harris a clear opportunity to differentiate herself from Biden, but Harris instead effectively cut an ad for Trump’s campaign by allowing it to tie her directly to an unpopular administration. 

Tim Walz, during VP debate, says he is ‘friends with school shooters’

Harris’ running mate Tim Walz raised eyebrows during his vice presidential debate with Sen. JD Vance, R-Ohio, on Oct. 1, when he declared he had ‘become friends with school shooters.’ 

The poorly timed mishap occurred when the Minnesota governor was asked about changing positions on banning assault weapons.

‘I sat in that office with those Sandy Hook parents. I’ve become friends with school shooters. I’ve seen it,’ Walz said. 

Walz presumably meant he had become friendly with parents who lost children during horrific school shootings. 

Trump mixes up Nikki Haley with Nancy Pelosi at New Hampshire rally 

Trump appeared to confuse then-Republican presidential primary opponent Nikki Haley with former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi during a rally in New Hampshire on Jan. 20.

Speaking in Concord, Trump said that Haley, his former ambassador to the United Nations, had been responsible for the collapse of Capitol Hill security during the Jan. 6, 2021, riot. Trump has previously blamed Pelosi for turning down National Guard support before the riot. 

‘You know, by the way, they never report the crowd on January 6, you know, Nikki Haley. Nikki Haley, Nikki Haley, you know, they — did you know they destroyed all the information and all of the evidence. Everything. Deleted and destroyed all of it, all of it, because of lots of things, like Nikki Haley is in charge of security. We offered 10,000 people, soldiers, National Guard. So whatever they want, they turned it down. They don’t want to talk about that. These are very dishonest people,’ Trump said. 

Harris’ word salads confuse audiences 

Harris found herself in the headlines repeatedly this year for making confusing verbal statements. 

‘I grew up understanding the children of the community are the children of the community, and we should all have a vested interest in ensuring that children can go grow up with the resources that they need to achieve their God-given potential,’ the vice president once said in September. 

‘We are here because we are fighting for a democracy. Fighting for a democracy. And understand the difference here, understand the difference here, moving forward, moving forward, understand the difference here,’ she then said at a campaign event in November. 

The remarks drew criticism and ridicule from conservatives online. 

Biden introduces Ukraine’s Zelenskyy as ‘President Putin’ during NATO conference 

President Biden mistakenly introduced Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy as ‘President Putin’ during a NATO conference in Washington, D.C., in July.

‘And now I want to hand it over to the president of Ukraine, who has as much courage as he has determination,’ Biden said, before starting to leave the podium. ‘Ladies and gentlemen, President Putin.’ 

‘He’s going to beat President Putin. President Zelenskyy. I’m so focused on beating Putin,’ Biden then said, appearing to realize the verbal stumble. ‘We got to worry about it. Anyway, Mr. President.’ 

Fox News’ Paul Steinhauser, Joseph A. Wulfsohn, Jacqui Heinrich, Sarah Rumpf-Whitten, David Rutz, Brian Flood and Chris Pandolfo contributed to this report. 

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The White House said Friday that a ninth U.S. telecommunications company has been hacked as part of a Chinese espionage campaign that gave the country’s officials access to private texts and phone conversations of Americans.

The Biden administration said earlier this month that at least eight telecommunications companies and dozens of nations had been impacted by the Chinese hacking operation known as Salt Typhoon.

On Friday, deputy national security adviser Anne Neuberger told reporters that a ninth victim had been identified after the administration released guidance to companies about how to locate Chinese hackers in their networks.

The hackers compromised the networks of telecommunications companies to gather customer call records and access the private communications of a limited number of people, officials said.

The FBI has not publicly identified any of the victims, but officials believe senior U.S. government officials and prominent political figures are among the victims whose communications were accessed.

Neuberger said officials did not yet have a precise sense of how many Americans overall were targeted by Salt Typhoon, in part because the hackers were careful about their methods, but she said that a ‘large number’ of the victims were in Washington, D.C., and Virginia.

Officials said they believe the hackers wanted to identify who owned the devices and spy on their texts and phone calls if they were ‘government targets of interest,’ Neuberger said.

Most of the victims are ‘primarily involved in government or political activity,’ the FBI said.

Neuberger said the hacking showed the need for required cybersecurity practices in the telecommunications industry, which the Federal Communications Commission is set to look at during a meeting next month.

She also said, without offering details, that the government was planning further action in the coming weeks in response to the hacking campaign, though she did not say what they were.

‘We know that voluntary cybersecurity practices are inadequate to protect against China, Russia and Iran hacking of our critical infrastructure,’ she said.

The Chinese government has denied responsibility for the hacking campaign.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Southern California roared back from a 17-point deficit in the third quarter to defeat Texas A&M 35-31 Friday night in the Las Vegas Bowl.

What was a sleepy game for most of three quarters turned into a high-octane thriller, with USC scoring the game-winning touchdown with just 8 seconds to go.

The Trojans trailed 24-7 with just 20 minutes and 12 seconds left to play. But Jayden Maiava and Co. came alive, scoring 28 points in the final 18:42.

Maiava had completed just six of his 19 pass attempts for 69 yards with a touchdown and two interceptions when USC got the ball back down 24-7. He finished 22-for-39 for 295 yards with four touchdowns and three picks. His first three touchdowns went to Ja’Kobi Lane, who finished with a game-high 127 yards. Kyle Ford caught the game-winner.

USC vs. Texas A&M highlights

Final: USC 35, Texas A&M 31

Trojans win it with 8 seconds to go

USC had crawled all the way back just to see Texas A&M retake the lead with 1:49 to go.

No matter.

The Trojans went 75 yards in 10 plays, quarterback Jayden Maiava throwing the game-winning touchdown pass to Kyle Ford with just 8 seconds to go.

Texas A&M 31, USC 28: Aggies jump back in front

After three straight fruitless drives, Texas A&M came up big when it needed to.

Marcel Reed’s 19-yard run capped a seven-play, 75-yard drive that puts the Aggies back in front.

USC 28, Texas A&M 24: Trojans take the lead

USC looked dead in the water after Texas A&M went up 24-7 following Jayden Maiava’s second interception of the game. But it’s been nearly all USC since.

The Trojans forced another Texas A&M three-and-out, then weathered another Maiava interception on the first play of their ensuing drive when Randy Bond missed a 39-yard field goal.

USC put together a great drive, going 79 yards in 10 plays over 5:32, getting into the end zone on a third-and-8 play when Maiava found Ja’Kobi Lane again.

Texas A&M 24, USC 21: Trojans get closer early in fourth

We really spoke too soon.

USC forced a Texas A&M three-and-out then immediately rolled down the field again, covering 66 yards in just 2:51. The eight-play drive ended with a Bryan Jackson touchdown run.

The Trojans are right back in this game and we could be set up for a thrilling finish.

Texas A&M 24, USC 14: Trojans respond

We spoke too soon!

Aided by 30 yards worth of Texas A&M penalties, USC ripped down the field, needing just 1:30 to score. Jayden Maiava connected with Ja’Kobi Lane on a 17-yard touchdown USC just had to have.

Texas A&M turns interception into more points

This one might be close to over.

Marcel Reed threw his third touchdown of the game to put the Aggies up 24-7 just three plays after Cashius Howell’s spectacular interception set up a short field.

While it was a great play by Howell, USC QB Jayden Maiava is really struggling; he’s just 6-for-19 for 69 yards with a touchdown and two interceptions.

Texas A&M scores, up 14-7 over USC 

Texas A&M is back in front. The Aggies marched down the field to open the second half of the Las Vegas Bowl with an eight-play, 76-yard drive that was capped by receiver Noah Thomas’ 5-yard touchdown. It marked Thomas’ second score of the game. 

Halftime: USC 7, Texas A&M 7

It’s all tied up at halftime, 7-7. USC had the opportunity to head into the locker room with its first lead of the game, but Trojans kicker Michael Lantz missed a 39-yard field goal with 13 seconds remaining in the first half.

Texas A&M quarterback Marcel Reed completed 11 of 21 passes for 99 yards, one touchdown and two interceptions. He also had four carries for 14 yards. Receiver Jahdae Walker has three catches for 49 yards.

USC quarterback Jayden Maiava completed six of 14 passes for 69 yards, one touchdown and one interception. Running back Bryan Johnson has nine carries for 43 yards. USC has only been able to convert 1-of-6 third downs.

USC picks off Marcel Reed, ties it up 7-7

Texas A&M appeared to have all the momentum on its side after quarterback Marcel Reed threw a 40-yard completion to receiver Jahdae Walker to set up the Aggies at USC’s 37-yard line. Three plays later — all runs— the Aggies were on the Trojans’ 13-yard line. Reed attempted a pass to receiver Noah Thomas, but the ball was tipped and intercepted in the end zone by USC safety Akili Arnold, marking Reed’s second interception of the night. 

USC was able to convert the takeaway into points to tie the game 7-7. Trojans receiver Ja’Kobi Lane caught a 30-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Jayden Maiava, making a defender miss en route to the end zone.

Texas A&M on the board, leads 7-0

USC and Texas A&M’s opening drives in the Las Vegas Bowl were on opposite ends of the spectrum. While the Trojans had a quick three-and-out on their first possession of the game, the Aggies marched all the way down the field on their opening drive to score. The 16-play drive took a little over seven minutes off the clock. 

Texas A&M quarterback Marcel Reed connected with receiver Noah Thomas for a 7-yard touchdown. The Aggies kept their drive alive with a key fourth down conversion at USC’s 20-yard line to get into the red zone. 

When is the Las Vegas Bowl between Texas A&M and USC?

The Las Vegas Bowl game between the Texas A&M Aggies and the Southern California Trojans kicks off at 10:30 p.m. ET (7:30 p.m. PT) at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas.

How to watch Texas A&M and USC in the Las Vegas Bowl

The Las Vegas Bowl game between the Texas A&M Aggies and the Southern California Trojans will be televised nationally on ESPN.

Live streaming is available on Fubo, which has a free trial.

Catch college football bowl games on Fubo

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