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Target will soon stop accepting personal checks as a form of payment at checkout.

In a statement to NBC News, the retail giant said it was committed to creating an easy and convenient checkout experience — but that due to ‘extremely low volumes,’ it would no longer take personal checks starting July 15.

It said it has taken several measures to notify guests in advance of the move. It will still accept cash, digital wallet payments like Apple Pay, SNAP/EBT, buy now, pay later services, and credit and debit cards

Rival Walmart will still accept personal checks.

Target has announced several new store policies aimed at streamlining the checkout process, some of which were also aimed at curbing theft. In March, the company said it would be taking steps to limit or eliminate self-checkout options at some stores this year. Last month, Bloomberg News reported Target was allowing employees to stop thefts of $50 or more — lower than the previous $100 threshold.

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The name Davis Thompson is not unfamiliar for those who follow the PGA Tour.

He has been trending in recent weeks, with two runner-up finishes in his past six starts, including last week at the Rocket Mortgage Classic. His worst finish in that stretch, outside of a missed cut at the Canadian Open, was T-27.

And now, Thompson is a PGA Tour winner. He captured the 2024 John Deere Classic on Sunday for his first Tour victory. Thompson blitzed TPC Deere Run in Silvis, Illinois, setting a tournament scoring record of 28-under 256, besting Michael Kim’s 2017 record of 27 under. He won by four shots in his 63rd career start over a group of players at 24 under, including amateur Luke Clanton.

‘I got off to a great start today and was able to just kind of cruise on the back nine,’ Thompson said. ‘Yeah, getting off to a good start was crucial, and I was just able to ride the momentum coming in.’

With the win, Thompson also punched his ticket to the 2024 Open Championship at Royal Troon in two weeks. He finished T-9 at the U.S. Open last month.

2024 JOHN DEERE CLASSIC: Leaderboard | Photos

Thompson earned $1.44 million with the win in addition to 500 FedEx Cup points.

Also in a weird twist, for the third straight year at the John Deere Classic, the winner has stayed at the same house. In 2022, J.T. Poston took home the title while staying at the property. Last year, Sepp Straka was in a group of golfers who rented the house, and he won.

This year, Thompson was in the group who rented the house. And lo and behold, he’s the winner. He even stayed in the same room that Straka did.

‘I think I have to pay for the whole house now, which is unfortunate, but I’ll gladly write the check for that,’ Thompson said.

Thompson is also the 24th golfer to earn his first career win at the John Deere Classic, which is the most of any event in PGA Tour history.

Clanton, a 20-year-old junior at Florida State, became the first amateur since Billy Joe Patton in the 1950s to finish in the top 10 in back-to-back PGA Tour starts. He birdied his last hole to shoot 8-under 63 on Sunday and finish T-2 alongside C.T. Pan and Michael Thorbjornsen, who was making his third start as a PGA Tour member after earning his card via PGA Tour University.

Patton did it in the 1957 U.S. Open and 1958 Masters. Clanton did it in consecutive weeks, and he’s in the field next week at the ISCO Championship, as well.

For Pan, his finish earned him the second spot up for grabs at the 2024 Open Championship.

‘It’s going to be a great trip,’ Pan said. ‘Honestly going to be hectic to arrange all the travel details last minute, but it will be a good problem to have and my wife and I will be looking forward to our trip there.’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

PHOENIX — He watched his 13-year, $350 million contract go up in flames just three hours before his press conference in downtown San Francisco.

Three weeks later, his 12-year, $315 million deal with the New York Mets went belly-up when their officials were also were concerned by his eight-year-old left ankle surgery.

Now, 1 ½ seasons later, losing more than $100 million after signing a six-year, $200 million contract with four option years with the Minnesota Twins, Carlos Correa says he’s never been happier.

The stress, the frustration and the anger have all disappeared, and Correa believes the Twin Cities is where he belonged all along.

“This is the best thing that could have happened to me and my family,’ Correa tells USA TODAY Sports. “I don’t know what the other places would have been like, but this is a great place with a great family environment and great people all around that care about you. These are people that I feel comfortable with that I’ve grown to love.

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“You know, the six years and the options seem a lot better than 13 years with the kids growing so fast and requiring so much attention to them. At some point, I’ve got to make the tough decision of, ‘Hey do I want to keep doing this or do I want to be with my family?’ So, it’s a lot easier with the structure on this contract than it was with a 13- or 12-year contract. This is definitely the best thing that could happen to me and my family.’

Correa, who missed 17 games with an intercostal strain, also happens to be having perhaps his finest season since 2017, when he helped lead the Houston Astros to the World Series title. He’s hitting .305 with 11 homers, 45 RBI and an .882 OPS while playing stellar defense. In the last 26 games, he’s hitting a blistering .402.

In a league filled with sensational young shortstops, led by 23-year-old Gunnar Henderson of the Baltimore Orioles and 24-year-old Bobby Witt of the Kansas City Royals, the All-Star Game should find a place for Correa, 29, too.

Simply, he has been the Twins’ most valuable player on the field and in the clubhouse.

“It’s really good season, but I’d be a lot prouder if I played every game,’ says Correa, who wakes up every morning to look at his WAR rating, which is currently 3.2, 22nd in baseball. “But the three weeks I missed cost me a lot and the teams as well. For me, staying healthy is the main thing. When I’m healthy, I know what I can do. The three weeks I missed, those are a lot of WAR points I missed.

“So, when people ask me what stats register the most, I say, games played. You play games, your WAR is going to be accumulated. The contract is something that doesn’t motivate me anymore, so I’ve got to figure out new ways to keep me motivated. I strive to be the best shortstop I can be and WAR is a great stat to look at when evaluating the overall package. They pay me this mound of money and I want to give back to them in WAR.’

When Correa grew up, there was the historical shortstop class of Derek Jeter, Alex Rodriguez and Nomar Garciaparra. Now, he looks around, there’s the 24-year-and younger kiddie corps of Henderson, Witt, Anthony Volpe, Elly De La Cruz, C.J. Abrams and Masyn Winn.

“The game is in great hands,’ Correa says. “When you look at those guys, those guys are special. Their level skill is insane. I feel like every single generation that goes by keeps getting better. The shortstops are more athletic, more powerful, all of the information we have now. They make me feel like an old guy.

“I’m going to be retired, watching these guys play. It’s fun because there’s a lot of talent out there.’’

Still, Correa isn’t about to pass that baton yet. He helped the Twins to the AL Central title a year ago, and they are now 50-39, sitting in the second wild-card spot.

He has one World Series ring with the Astros.

He’d love to get one for the other hand.

“I’m having a lot of fun here,’ says Correa. “There’s a lot of young guys here, and you have a guy like Royce Lewis, who’s a generational talent. When he’s one the field, he’s unbelievable.

“I’m just trying to push everybody to get better every single day. Sometimes, you got to be the bad guy in order for people to understand how things are meant to be done. But we’re in a good place as a team.

“Hey, everything is working out here just fine.’

Around the basepaths

– Who will be the most aggressive teams at the trade deadline, GMs and baseball executives say?

The Los Angeles Dodgers, New York Yankees, Seattle Mariners, Philadelphia Phillies, San Diego Padres and Atlanta.

The trouble is that the trade inventory is painfully thin with only five teams out of playoff contention. It also lacks star power unless three-time Cy Young winner Max Scherzer is traded by the Texas Rangers, or New York Mets first baseman Pete Alonso or Chicago Cubs center fielder Cody Bellinger are moved.

But Scherzer has a full no-trade clause and can say he’s staying put.

Bellinger is still owed a hefty $52.5 million after this year if he doesn’t opt out of the remaining two years of his three-year, $80 million contract.

And Alonso is staying as long as the Mets remain in the wild-card race.

The hottest commodity will be relievers, GMs say, knowing how valuable bulpen arms are in the postseason being able to pitch every day while starters rarely go deep.

– The Angels are getting bombarded with interest for closer Carlos Estevez, who may be the best reliever available on the market with Oakland A’s strikeout machine Mason Miller likely unavailable. He was the AL reliever of the month in June, yielding just two hits without a walk in 10 shutout appearances. He retired 26 consecutive batters during one stretch, and is 16 for 19 in save opportunities. He’s a free agent after the season with only about $2.2 million remaining on his contract at the trade deadline.

The Angels also are expected to trade reliever Luis Garcia. But unless they receive overwhelming offers, the Angles likely will hang onto starters Tyler Anderson (who gave up 3 hits in 8 shutout innings Saturday against the Cubs) and Griffin Canning, and outfielder Taylor Ward, who still are under team control through at least 2025.

– GMs are skeptical whether any team will meet their high price-tag for oft-injured center fielder Luis Robert Jr., of the White Sox, but believe the market will be robust for starter Erick Fedde (6-3, 3.13 ERA).

– The Cubs are telling teams they still remain undecided whether they will be sellers at the trade deadline, but are preparing for a potential sale, with Bellinger, Jameson Taillon and Nico Hoerner expected to draw interest. It’s hard to believe how things went south on the Northside after their 17-9 start.

– Miami Marlins lefty Jesus Luzardo is on the injured list until at least Aug. 18 with a lumbar stress reaction (back), but it hasn’t stopped teams from inquiring about his availability, believing he’d still make an impact in the pennant stretch and postseason.

– The Philadelphia Phillies are keeping a close eye on Oakland A’s left fielder Brent Rooker. The Phillies rank 26th in OPS among left fielders this season.

– Barring a dramatic turnaround, rival GMs expect the Rangers to make starters Max Scherzer, Michael Lorenzen and Andrew Heaney available, along with relievers David Robertson and Kirby Yates.

– Rangers veteran starter Nathan Eovaldi needs to pitch 76 more innings this year for his $20 million conditional player option to vest in 2025. He has a limited no-trade clause.

– The Boston Red Sox, after losing 8-1 to the Yankees on June 14, were 14 games behind the Yankees in the AL East with a 35-35 record.

They since went 13-5, while the Yankees went 4-14.

The Red Sox are now within 5 ½ games of the Yankees.

– Pardon the Dodgers for openly rooting that Arizona Diamondbacks first baseman Christian Walker signs with an American League team this winter as a free agent, moving far, far away from Dodger Stadium.

He has morphed into Babe Ruth in Chavez Ravine.

He just hit five home runs in a three-game series against the Dodgers this past week, going 8-for-13, and now has hit 19 homers at Dodger Stadium dating back to 2018. He has slugged more home runs than anyone in history in their first 42 games at Dodger Stadium since it opened in 1962, and his seven homers in a five-game span against the Dodgers is tied for most with Willie Mays, Barry Bonds and Todd Helton.

“It’s just one of those things,” Walker told reporters. “There’s not a rhyme or reason to it … I think anytime you play well in a park, there’s a few parks around the league where something feels different about the batter’s box and maybe the lights, maybe just the visuals, but just one of those things, not really one specific thing.”

Considering that Walker is second in the NL with 22 homers, second in slugging percentage (.526), fourth in RBI (62) and seventh in OPS (.871), he deserves to be in the All-Star Game for the first time in his career.

Good news for the Dodgers: The Diamondbacks don’t play another game at Dodger Stadium the rest of the regular season.

– Yankees slugger Aaron Judge is nearly on pace to hit 60 home runs again but as far as breaking Barry Bonds’ HR record of 73 one days, he insists it’s not possible.

“I don’t think anybody’s going to break that,’’ Judge told reporters. “Any time you get up into the 50s and 60s [in homers], people start pitching you differently. They don’t give you as many opportunities to hit. Like with Bonds that year, he would get like one pitch to hit in a series, and he’d hit it out. I don’t think we’ll ever see that again.”

– Strange but true: Atlanta has lost 28 consecutive games when their opponent scores at least four runs.

The last time they won a game giving up at least four runs?

April 17, when they beat the Houston Astros, 5-4.

They also are just 3-28 since May 1 when allowing at least three runs.

– Minnesota Twins talented third baseman Royce Lewis, exasperated by his rash of injuries, says he’s now open to anything to stay healthy.

‘If someone said, ‘Hey, if you smoke cigarettes like Babe Ruth and that’ll work,’ then I’ll do that, too,’’ Lewis told reporters. “I’m open to anything.’

– The NL West could become a juggernaut with all of the injured starting pitchers expected to return in July or August:

The Giants will have Cy Young winners Blake Snell and Robbie Ray, along with Alex Cobb joining the rotation.

The Dodgers will have Cy Young winner Clayton Kershaw, Yoshinobu Yamamoto, Walker Buehler and Dustin May.

The Diamondbacks will have Merrill Kelly and Eduardo Rodriguez.

And the Padres will have Yu Darvish and Joe Musgrove.

– You think the Mariners are desperate for offensive help at the deadline?

They entered Saturday having struck out at least 10 times in 56 games this season, including 14 in a row. They have also scored two or fewer runs in 31 games.

No wonder the Mariners lit sage in the clubhouse this past week trying to ward off those evil slumping spirits.

Meanwhile, they are expected to part with at least one of their top prospects five who are ranked among the top 50 in Baseball America’s rankings for an impact bat.

– The Brewers took a flier on starter Aaron Civale by acquiring him from Tampa for a fringe prospect while assuming his $4.9 million salary. Yet, Civale had just a 5.07 ERA in 17 starts with a 1.379 WHIP for the Rays, and gave up four earned runs and three homers against the Dodgers in his Brewers’ debut.

The Brewers have already used 16 different starting pitchers this season, one shy of the franchise record set in 1969.

– Remember when the Cardinals were 15-24 on May 11, looking like the season was already ruined?

Well, here they are, a National League-best 31-17 since that loss.

“It was pretty much a doomsday type of feel for everybody,’ Cardinals manager Oli Marmol told reporters, “but the ones who were in that clubhouse.’

– It certainly appears that Mookie Betts will be moving back to second base, or even right field, when he returns in August from the injured list with his broken hand.

The Dodgers love Miguel Rojas’ defense (he has not made an error at shortstop this season), and believe it would be unfair to count on Betts at shortstop in the playoffs after just learning the new position.

– So, what can a historic 12 consecutive hits do for your batting average?

Twins third baseman Jose Miranda’s batting average rose from .294 to .328 with seven singles, four doubles and a HR.

– Turns out the White Sox made a shrewd move declining Tim Anderson’s $14 million option last winter. He was a bitter disappointment in Miami, hitting just .215 with a major-league worst .463 OPS without a homer, when he was designated for assignment.

– Remember when Yankees pitcher Luis Gil was the runaway leader for the AL Rookie of the Year award when he produced a 2.03 ERA in his first 14 starts?

He since has a 14.90 ERA in his last three starts while the Yankees’ rotation has yielded an MLB-worst 7.76 ERA.

– Has Yankees first baseman Anthony Rizzo become Wally Pipp’d?

Rookie Ben Rice, his replacement at first while he’s on the injured list, became the first Yankees rookie to hit three homers in a game while driving in seven runs, tying Lou Gehrig’s rookie record.

Rice is hitting .294 with a .971 in 51 at-bats since joining the team.

– Atlanta could have three starters make the All-Star team (Chris Sale, Max Fried and Reynaldo Lopez) for the first time since 1997 when they were represented by Greg Maddux, Tom Glavine, and Denny Neagle.

– There were 71 pitchers who won 20 games in an 18-year stretch from 1988-2005. But in the last 18 years, just 31 pitchers have done it.

– Cardinals closer Ryan Helsley’s 31 consecutive save streak ended Friday night when he was thrust into the 10th inning against the Washington Nationals with an automatic baserunner on second base.

His 31 saves are the most in Cardinals’ history in the first half, eclipsing Hall of Famer Lee Smith.

– It will be Diamondbacks second baseman Ketel Marte, and not Shohei Ohtani, who will lead off the All-Star Game for the National League, D-backs and NL manager Torey Lovullo announced.

– Jurickson Profar and Fernando Tatis Jr. would have been the first Padres’ teammates to start an All-Star Game since Tony Gwynn and Ken Caminiti in 1997, but Tatis has a stress reaction in his right femur and won’t be able to play.

– The Rangers are the eighth defending World Series champion to enter July with a losing record since the divisional era in 1969.

None of those teams finished with a .500 record, let alone made the postseason.

– So, just how much did a signed Gunnar Henderson autographed rookie card sell for through Goldin’s auction?

Can you believe $64,660?

A 1952 Topps Mickey Mantle card went for $152,123.

– White Sox veteran starter Mike Clevinger, who missed spring training with his April 4 signing, is returning this week after a six-week stint on the IL. He is 0-3 with a 6.75 ERA in four starts, spanning just 16 innings.

“Missing spring training is just not in the cards for anybody,” Clevinger told reporters. “Highly necessary. As much as we like to say it’s too long, six weeks is the right amount of time.”

Yep, just ask Blake Snell and Jordan Montgomery, who also are on the IL after missing spring training with their late signings.

– Congrats to Pirates closer Aroldis Chapman, who became the all-time leader in strikeouts among left-handed relievers, with his glove and spikes going to Cooperstown.

– How rare is it for the reigning World Series champions to host the All-Star Game?

It last happened in 1939 when the Yankees hosted the All-Star Game after sweeping the Cubs in the 1938 World Series.

– Hard to believe, but the Mets still don’t have a shutout victory, their longest drought in franchise history.

– Sure, he’s a rooki and didn’t come up until May, but Pirates sensation Paul Skenes (5-0, 2.12 ERA, 78 strikeouts, 59⅓ innings) would be a great choice to start the All-Star Game. He would also be pitching on regular rest.

The last rookie to start an All-Star Game?

Hideo Nomo of the Los Angeles Dodgers in 1995, the last All-Star Game played in Arlington.

– Prayers to the Aldrete family. A’s hitting coach Mike Aldrete is taking a leave of absence from the tema to be with his wife, Gina, who begins treatment for multiple myeloma.

Follow Nightengale on X: @Bnightengale

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SILVERSTONE, England − Lewis Hamilton shed pent-up tears of joy after ending a 945-day wait for a win with a record ninth British Grand Prix victory in front of his home fans on a fairytale Sunday at Silverstone.

Red Bull’s triple world champion Max Verstappen finished 1.465 seconds behind, extending his overall lead to 84 points, and McLaren’s Lando Norris was third after being passed four laps from the end.

Mercedes’ pole-sitter George Russell, winner of the previous race in Austria, retired with a suspected water system issue at the end of lap 33.

‘Get in there Lewis, you are the man. You are the man. Mate, I have been waiting for this,’ yelled Hamilton’s race engineer Peter Bonnington, who joined the driver on the podium where he was drenched in champagne, over the team radio.

‘Thank you so much guys,’ sobbed Hamilton in reply, his voice faltering as he choked back the flow of tears inside the helmet while the grandstands − and a crowd of 164,000 − erupted on a cold afternoon punctuated by showers.

‘It means a lot. Big thank you to all the fans here.’

The record-extending 104th win of Hamilton’s career set new benchmarks − not least the first F1 driver to win a race in 16 different seasons and first to win nine times at the same circuit.

Hamilton had previously shared the latter record with Ferrari great Michael Schumacher.

He is also the first driver to win a race after reaching the rare milestone of 300 starts. Sunday’s was the 344th race of Hamilton’s F1 career that started with McLaren in 2007.

‘I’m still crying,’ the Briton told 2009 champion and compatriot Jenson Button, doing the pre-podium interviews, with the flag draped around his shoulders after stepping out of the car and hugging his father in a tight embrace.

‘This is my last race here with this team so I wanted to win this so much for them because I love them and I appreciate them so much and all the hard work they’ve been putting in over the years,’ added the Ferrari-bound driver.

McLaren’s Oscar Piastri finished fourth with Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz fifth.

Nico Hulkenberg was sixth for Haas with the Aston Martins of Lance Stroll and Fernando Alonso eighth. Alex Albon took two points for Williams and Yuki Tsunoda was 10th for the Red Bull-owned RB team.

Red Bull are now on 373 points to Ferrari’s 302 and McLaren’s 295, with Mercedes on 221.

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There is a new American tennis star on the rise.

Emma Navarro is on her way to the Wimbledon quarterfinals after she pulled off a major upset in the fourth round, knocking off No. 2-ranked player in the world Coco Gauff in straight sets on Sunday night at centre court.

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It’s been a meteoric rise for Navarro, who started her professional career not too long ago. She had major college success, and 2024 has been a breakout year for her as she chases her first major tournament title as the No. 19 player in the world.

Before she makes her first major quarterfinal appearance, here’s what to know about Emma Navarro:

Where in Emma Navarro from?

Navarro is from New York City, New York.

Emma Navarro age

Navarro, born on May 18, 2001, is 23 years old.

Emma Navarro dad

Navarro’s dad is billionaire Ben Navarro, who is the founder and chief executive officer of Sherman Financial Group. He has investment in tennis; he owns the Charleston Open and in 2022, he became owner of the Cincinnati Open.

Where did Emma Navarro go to college?

Navarro was a prized tennis recruit and she played collegiately at Virginia from 2020-2022. In her freshman season, she was the 2021 NCAA singles champion, which qualified her for the U.S. Open, her first major. She finished her career with the Cavaliers with a 51-3 singles record.

Emma Navarro pro career, major history

Navarro became a full-pro in 2022 but she really started picking up steam in 2023. She started getting deep into tournaments on the WTA Tour and had a win in the 2023 French Open. In January, she won her first title at the 2024 Hobart International and continued to rise up the world rankings.

She’s continued to progress at the 2024 majors. She made it to the third round of the 2024 Australian Open and at the 2024 French Open, she advanced to the fourth round of a major for the first time after she beat Madison Keys in the third round. She eventually lost to the No. 2 seed Aryna Sabalenka. Now, she’s in her first major quarterfinal at the 2024 Wimbledon.

Emma Navarro 2024 Wimbledon

First round: Defeated Qiang Wang (6-0, 6-2)
Second round: Defeated Naomi Osaka (6-4, 6-1)
Third round: Defeated Diana Shnaider (2-6, 6-3, 6-4)
Fourth round: Defeated Coco Gauff (6-4, 6-3)

Who will Emma Navarro play next?

Navarro will face Jasmine Paolini is the quaterfinals of the women’s singles.

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France’s parliament is divided among far-left, center and far-right, as no single political faction even neared the majority needed to form a government.

President Emmanuel Macron, who has three years left of his term, anticipated that his decision to call snap elections would give the country a ‘moment of clarification,’ according to The Associated Press, but the results told a different story.

This, less than three weeks before the start of the Summer Olympics in Paris, puts France at the center of international attention.

Second-round results tallied early Monday showed that a leftist coalition surged to take the most seats in parliament, according to The AP. 

Macron’s centrists have the second-largest faction, forcing the president to have to form alliances to run the government. Marine Le Pen’s far-right National Rally, meanwhile, finished in third after political efforts to keep its candidates away from power.

Prime Minister Gabriel Attal said he would offer his resignation Monday, although he could stay on through the Olympics or beyond if needed.

Official results released early Monday showed that all three main blocs fell far short of the 289 seats required to control the 577-seat National Assembly, which is the more powerful of France’s two legislative chambers.

Just over 180 seats will now be held by the New Popular Front leftist coalition, while Macron’s centrist alliance have more than 160 seats and Le Pen’s far-right National Rally and its allies hold more than 140 seats.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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The office of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has announced four principles that it says must be part of any hostage release deal with the Palestinian terrorist group Hamas. 

The declaration comes as the ‘Prime Minister’s steadfast position against the attempt to halt IDF action in Rafah is what has led Hamas to enter negotiations,’ the office says. The city in the southern Gaza Strip has been described as Hamas’ last stronghold following months of fighting in the war-torn territory. 

The principles are: 

‘Any deal will allow Israel to resume fighting until all objectives of the war have been achieved.’ 

Israel has repeatedly said its military campaign against Hamas will not end until the Palestinian terrorist group is eliminated. 

Netanyahu, who made this vow in late June, also said months ago that ‘Israel has no intention of permanently occupying Gaza or displacing its civilian population.’ 

‘Our goal is to rid Gaza of Hamas terrorists and free our hostages. Once this is achieved, Gaza can be demilitarized and deradicalized, thereby creating a possibility for a better future for Israel and Palestinians alike,’ Netanyahu said in a video posted on X in January. 

‘There will be no smuggling of weapons to Hamas from Egypt to the Gaza border.’ 

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) released video footage in June showing tunnels allegedly used by Hamas to smuggle weapons into Gaza from Egypt, according to The Times of Israel. 

At least 20 tunnels crossing from Egypt into Gaza have been detected, the outlet reported.

Throughout the nine-month war, Israeli troops have discovered a labyrinth of tunnels throughout the Gaza Strip that are integral to Hamas’ movements and military operations. 

‘There will be no return of thousands of armed terrorists to the northern Gaza Strip.’ 

The prime minister’s office is vowing that armed terrorists should not be allowed to return to the northern Gaza Strip in its vision for a post-war Gaza. 

The United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East said on Friday that ‘up to 1.9 million people in Gaza are internally displaced, including people who have been displaced nine or 10 times.  

‘Previous estimations were 1.7 million but this was before the operation in Rafah, and since May there have been additional displacements from Rafah and other parts across the Gaza Strip,’ the agency added. 

‘Israel will maximize the number of living hostages who will be released from Hamas captivity.’ 

Approximately 116 hostages are still believed to be held by Hamas since the beginning of the war last Oct. 7. 

Over the past nine months, 109 hostages have been released, seven have been rescued by the IDF, and the bodies of 19 have been recovered by the military from Gaza, including three who were mistakenly killed by troops.

Fox News’ Yonat Friling and Michael Dorgan contributed to this report. 

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President Biden’s staffers reportedly prepare him with meticulous details on how to enter and exit fundraiser event spaces. 

According to a copy of the instructions obtained by Axios, Biden’s aides created a document that read in bold letters, ‘Walk to podium.’ With the White House insignia, it included photos showing a clear pathway to the podium. 

Axios cited some Democrats who attended or helped set up events for Biden in recent months as wondering whether the meticulous attention to detail is more of a reflection of the 81-year-old president’s limitations. 

‘I staffed a simple fundraiser at a private residence, but they treated it like it was a NATO summit with his movements,’ one person, who reportedly staffed a Biden event in the past 18 months, told Axios. 

Axios obtained a copy of a five-page document template that the White House reportedly sends to staffers to prepare the president. 

The document reportedly also usually included a large picture of the event space on each page. The messages ‘View from podium,’ and ‘View from audience’ are written. 

Biden’s disastrous debate performance against former President Trump in Atlanta has prompted serious concerns from within the Democratic Party about the president’s viability to run for a second term. The White House insists that these detailed instructions for the 81-year-old president are nothing out of the ordinary.

‘High levels of detail and precision are critical to presidential advance work – regardless of who is president – and these are basic approaches that are used by any modern advance team, including the Vice President’s office and agencies,’ White House senior deputy press secretary and deputy assistant to the president Andrew Bates said in a statement to Fox News Digital, reacting to the report. ‘And then-Vice President Biden’s team did the same, as did other principals, during the second term of the Obama-Biden Administration.’

‘These documents are standard logistical briefing materials and photos for any principal including the Vice President,’ Vice President Harris’ communications director Kirsten Allen added. 

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A House Democrat backing President Biden is blasting members of his own party for speaking out against Biden’s 2024 candidacy in public, arguing it is putting the president in a worse position amid the fallout from the 81-year-old’s disastrous debate performance last month.

Congress is back in session on Monday for the first time since the immediate fallout of Biden’s debate performance, and it is expected to bring a heap of scrutiny on Democratic lawmakers.

Rep. Ritchie Torres, D-N.Y., who has signaled he is backing Biden, called his fellow Democrats out for the public disarray.

‘Regardless of where one stands on the question of President Biden’s political future, the intra-party mixed messaging strikes me as deeply self-destructive,’ Torres said Monday. ‘Those publicly calling on President Biden to withdraw should ask themselves a simple question: ‘what if the President becomes the Democratic nominee?’ The drip, drip, drip of public statements of no confidence only serve to weaken a president who has been weakened not only by the debate but also by the debate about the debate.’

‘Weakening a weakened nominee seems like a losing strategy for a presidential election. The piling-on is not so much solving a problem as much as it is creating and compounding one. The process by which we decide how to move forward matters as much as the decision itself.’

The debate has led to more intra-party fractures within the House Democratic caucus as members are split on calls for Biden to drop out of the race. 

Over the past week, five House Democrats have publicly urged Biden to step aside ahead of his November rematch with former President Trump. 

A senior House Democratic aide told Fox News Digital on Friday that they anticipate more people to join the list this week.

However, Rep. Frederica Wilson, D-Fla., a Biden ally, took a shot at her colleagues on Sunday for criticizing the president.

‘Any ‘leader’ calling for President Biden to drop out needs to get their priorities straight and stop undermining this incredible actual leader who has delivered real results for our country,’ she said in a statement. ‘What Democrats need to be doing is stop listening to these political pundits and focus on what’s at stake this election: our democracy. End of story.’

It is part of the political minefield the Biden campaign has been navigating since last month’s CNN Presidential Debate. The 81-year-old president’s hoarse voice and sometimes aimless answers exacerbated concerns that he is not a viable candidate to face Trump in November and spurred questions over whether he is fit to lead in a second term.

This week will be the longest time House Democrats have had to face each other and the Capitol Hill media since that debate. 

House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., has said very little about Biden’s debate performance, only telling reporters on Friday that he was dedicated to making sure Democrats win in November. 

‘Until he articulates a way forward in terms of his vision for America at this moment, I’m going to reserve comment about anything relative to where we are at this moment, other than to say I stand behind the ticket,’ Jeffries told reporters on Friday.

House Democrats held a caucus-wide call on Sunday afternoon to discuss the path forward in the election. Four senior Democratic lawmakers – Reps. Jerry Nadler, D-N.Y., Mark Takano, D-Calif., Adam Smith, D-Wash., and Joe Morelle, D-N.Y. – reportedly said Biden should step aside.

There was more confusion on the left after the call, however, when Rep. Don Beyer, D-Va., responded to reports that he too criticized Biden with a statement declaring: ‘I support President Biden. I support the Biden-Harris ticket, and look forward to helping defeat Donald Trump in November. I was proud to host an event this week in Northern Virginia with the President, and will continue doing all I can to support the Biden-Harris campaign in Virginia and across the country.’

Fox News Digital reached out to the four lawmakers mentioned on the call for comment.

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The economy added 206,000 jobs last month, according to fresh government data, but unemployment inched above 4% for the first time in over two years.

The June jobs report, released Friday morning by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, showed somewhat hotter hiring than the 200,000 nonfarm job gains economists had expected. That marked a slowdown since May, whose level was revised down to 218,000 from 272,000. April’s job gains were also revised sharply lower, showing 111,000 fewer roles added during those previous two months than earlier thought.

‘The June rise in nonfarm payroll was slightly higher than expectations, but the big downward revisions to April and May are the story,’ Kathy Jones, chief fixed income strategist at Charles Schwab, posted Friday on X. ‘Job market is slowing down.’

The U.S. labor market has for months defied long-running forecasts of a sharper pullback. Instead, prospects for workers have generally remained robust even as employers ease up on hiring. The latest report shows conditions are gradually tightening.

Workers’ pay continues to rise, with average hourly earnings up 3.9% in June from the year before. That’s still higher than before the pandemic — and still outpacing inflation, at 3.3% as of May — but it is the smallest annual increase since May 2021.

And for the first time since November 2021, the unemployment rate ticked above 4%, hitting 4.1% in June. That remains a historically low level, and the uptick coincides with a slight rise in the labor force participation rate. That measure of working-age people who are employed or actively job-hunting hit 62.6% in June, up from 62.5% in May.

Slowing job growth combined with slowing inflation reinforces widespread hopes that the Federal Reserve could begin cutting interest rates in September, which would bring some relief to credit card users and people with loans and mortgages.

‘If the job market continues to cool and inflation allows, the central bank will shift some of its attention away from the stable prices part of its mandate to increasingly focus on the other issue which is maximum employment,’ Bankrate Senior Economic Analyst Mark Hamrick said in a statement Friday.

Last week, the Fed’s preferred gauge of price growth, the Personal Consumption Expenditures price index, climbed 2.6% from a year ago in May. That was the lowest annual rate since March 2021.

In remarks this week, Fed Chair Jerome Powell said risks to its inflation and employment goals ‘have come back much closer to balance.’ In other words, the odds the Fed won’t act aggressively enough to wrestle inflation back down to its 2% target are now closer to even with the odds that unemployment will increase as a result.

‘The longer the Fed maintains its high interest rate strategy, the greater the risk that it throttles the economy back too far,’ Moody’s Chief Economist Mark Zandi told NBC News ahead of Friday’s jobs report. ‘We’re starting to see higher claims and layoffs and job market pullbacks. That’s an increasing concern.’

Shoppers at an outlet mall in Commerce, Calif., on June 27.Eric Thayer / Bloomberg via Getty Images

On Wednesday, the Labor Department reported initial claims for unemployment benefits continued to rise, while ongoing unemployment claims hit their highest level since November 2021.

Firing rates remain low, ING global financial group Chief Economist James Knightley pointed out in a note to clients this week, but ‘if you do unfortunately lose your job it is becoming much harder to find a new position,’ he said.

Still, many analysts have been encouraged by the pace and direction of recent labor market trends.

‘That 206K is what full employment looks like in an economy that is cooling back towards trend,’ RSM Chief Economist Joe Brusuelas wrote on X following the June report, adding that a potential September rate cut remains in focus.

Nela Richardson, chief economist of payroll processor ADP, told reporters this week: ‘Right now we’re seeing a job market that is experiencing what I like to call a modulated cooldown. It’s striking the right note at the right time.’

ADP’s own data on private-sector hiring showed Wednesday that just 150,000 roles were added in June, fewer than expected, driven largely by leisure and hospitality.

‘This is a gradual cooldown that we all expected,’ Richardson reiterated Friday on CNBC after the report, adding, ‘I’d like to see the hiring be more broad-based than it is now.’

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