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Even on a weekend when most of the teams in the top were either off or not faced with significant challenges, college football again delivered surprising results that shaped the playoff picture.

And with those results in Week 4, there’s a new look to the CFP field in the latest edition of the USA TODAY Sports bowl projections. There’s two like-for-like swaps among Big Ten and Big 12 teams. Indiana steps in for Illinois after the Hoosiers dominated the Ilini. And Texas Tech assumed Utah’s place after a road win in Salt Lake City.

PATH TO PLAYOFF: Sign up for our college football newsletter

One change that wasn’t made came with the Group of Five representative. Tulane did lose handily at Mississippi and Memphis surprised Arkansas. But the Green Wave still have the edge in the American and already have pocketed two Power Four wins.

This coming weekend will be the last of September and also the first major inflection point of the season. Not much has changed with the top contenders outside the slips of Clemson and Alabama. We’ll know more about Penn State and Oregon and also whether the Crimson Tide can get back into the picture with a defeat of Georgia.

Note: Legacy Pac-12 schools in other conferences will fulfill existing Pac-12 bowl agreements through the 2025 season.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Mitchell’s 34-point performance fueled the Fever to Game 1 victory over the Aces.
Despite being a top-10 scorer in the league since 2020, the Fever missed the playoffs the first six years of her career.
Mitchell got first of three All-Star nods in 2023 and will likely make her first All-WNBA team this season after averaging a career-high 20.2 points, the third-highest in the league.

In a tumultuous season defined by injuries and resilience, Indiana Fever guard Kelsey Mitchell has remained a constant.

Mitchell has, in fact, been a constant for the Fever organization ever since she was drafted No. 2 overall out of Ohio State in 2018. She’s endured ups and downs during her eight-year career in Indiana, including six losing seasons and five different head coaches, enough turmoil to send any top pick packing.

But Mitchell never bailed and the 29-year-old is now leading the Fever’s improbable postseason charge.

‘There have been multiple times this season where (Mitchell) has put us on her back and she’s carried us,’ Indiana head coach Stephanie White said on Sunday after the Fever upset the Las Vegas Aces 89-73 to steal Game 1 of the WNBA playoff semifinals behind Mitchell’s 34-point performance.

WINNERS/LOSERS: Kelsey Mitchell fuels Fever, MVP A’ja Wilson struggles

Despite finishing fifth in voting, Mitchell looked like the MVP while facing off against newly-minted four-time winner A’ja Wilson. In Game 1, Mitchell became the first Fever player to score 30 or more points in the playoffs since Shavonte Zellous in the 2012 WNBA Finals.

It was not only the first semifinal appearance and win in Mitchell’s career, it was also the first time she’d won in Las Vegas.

‘For eight years, I’ve only beat (the Aces) one time (on their home court) and that’s today,’ Mitchell said. ‘That’s the growth. That’s the experience, that’s the being at the bottom of the barrel, that’s the not being on anybody’s radar and being a loser. So I’ve seen that. I know what that looks like.”

Kelsey Mitchell is the ‘face of a franchise’

Mitchell’s ascent from a forgotten superstar to a legitimate MVP contender has been years in the making. Despite being a top-10 scorer in the league since 2020, the Fever missed the playoffs the first six years of her career.

But that changed with a series of draft picks, starting with Lexie Hull in 2022, Aliyah Boston in 2023 and Caitlin Clark in 2024. The arrival of Boston and Clark shined the spotlight on the once desolate organization, allowing Mitchell to showcase her skills. Recognition soon followed. Mitchell got first of three All-Star nods in 2023 and will likely make her first All-WNBA team this season after averaging a career-high 20.2 points, the third-highest in the league.

‘Big shoutout to the organization taking time to rebuild. Our draft picks ended up coming up big,’ Mitchell said on ESPN’s ‘NBA Today’ on Monday, giving a nod to Clark, Boston and Hull. ‘Then you bring in Caitlin (Clark), who changed the world and changed the dynamic of basketball. As a friend and as a player, you better appreciate her, because certain doors have opened because she’s come to the Fever. You have to respect that.”

Mitchell added: ‘When you cumulate that together with my experience in having to go through a couple things before they got there, I think it was just a match made in heaven.’

Following the team’s 2024 playoff bid their first since 2015 the Fever entered the 2025 season as a championship contender and put the league on notice after hoisting the WNBA Commissioner’s Cup by beating the Minnesota Lynx in July.

Indiana then faced a barrage of injuries, losing five players including Clark. As a revolving door of players entered and exited nine starting lineups, Mitchell remained a constant starting all 44 games. It was third consecutive season she hasn’t missed a game.

‘Kelsey is definitely the head of the snake for us,’ White said. ‘You’ve seen her ability to be a face of a franchise that she’s been through the ebbs and flows of. I’m happy for her and proud for our franchise.’

Fever forward Brianna Turner added, ‘Everyone deserves a Kelsey Mitchell on their team, but they don’t get it because we get her.’

Injuries, adversity and resilience

After Clark (right groin injury) was ruled out for the remainder of the season in September alongside Chloe Bibby (left knee), Sydney Colson (left knee), Sophie Cunningham (right knee) and Aari McDonald (right foot)  many wondered if the Fever would even advance to the postseason.

Mitchell and company have answered that question. Not only did the Fever oust the No. 3 seed Atlanta Dream on the road in the first round of the WNBA playoffs, Indiana has the 2022 and 2023 WNBA champion Aces on their heels with a 1-0 lead in the best-of-five semifinal series.

‘This group is just really special,’ White said. ‘Their selflessness to pull for the ‘we’ over the ‘me,’ the ability to let each teammate be who they are and shine at their best and to lift them up in those moments.

‘You couple that with the resilience, the toughness, the grit, the fight, the scrappiness, and you always give yourself a chance.’ 

Mitchell was borderline unstoppable in Sunday’s Game 1 win. She used her pace to attack the paint White call her ‘probably the fastest player in the league with the ball in her hands,’ while knocking down tough shots and seamlessly facilitating buckets for teammates. She shot an efficient 12-of-23 from the field and 4-of-6 from 3.

‘Clearly we had no answer for (Kelsey) Mitchell. Couldn’t even attempt to slow her down a little bit,’ Aces head coach Becky Hammon said afterward. ‘She made every freaking shot. Long twos, short twos, threes, get to the free throw line … She had 17 at half and continued that into the second half.’

Kelsey Mitchell: Stephanie White ‘believed in me’

Despite national recognition and praise from her peers, Mitchell remains as humble as ever. Maybe a little too humble for her teammates. ‘I’m like, Kelsey, talk your (expletive). You’re one of the best guards in this league,’ Turner joked.

Mitchell attributed her breakout season to White, who’s in her second stint as the Fever head coach (2015-16). Mitchell said White has given her ‘an opportunity to kind of be who I am,’ which Mitchell said she’ll ‘never take for granted.’

‘I’ve had five coaches in eight years. I’ve been on the worst record teams here … so I know where my career started at. I know what I’ve had to go through kind of being this position,’ Mitchell said. ‘I’ve never had a coach that poured into me respectfully like (White) has … And so for the first time in my career, I really feel like I have someone that valued what I bring to the table as a player and a person.’

The Fever will need Mitchell to be every bit of the game-changer she is during their Game 2 matchup against the Aces on Tuesday in Las Vegas (9:30 p.m. ET, ESPN).

“Kelsey Mitchell has been through the worst parts of this franchise, and she deserves to go through the best,” White said Saturday. “She’s rising to the challenge.”

Mitchell wouldn’t have it any other way.

‘Everything that I’ve been through brought me here,’ Mitchell said. ‘Everything I had to go through was big for me because I think I can enjoy this moment a little bit more and be prepared for this moment a little more.’

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Former Vice President Kamala Harris detailed her running mate Tim Walz’s debate performance in her new book and recounted a showdown with then-Sen. JD Vance, which ultimately left her disappointed. 

Harris writes in her new book, ‘107 Days,’ that she needed the Minnesota governor to be the ‘closer’ at the Oct. 1, 2024, debate given that she was not going to have another opportunity to debate Trump. But during the debate, she turned to her husband in frustration.

‘When Tim fell for it and started nodding and smiling at J.D.’s fake bipartisanship, I moaned to Doug, ‘What is happening?” Harris wrote, explaining how she believed Walz was duped by Vance’s ‘mild-mannered aw-shucks’ attitude. 

‘I told the television screen: ‘You’re not there to make friends with the guy who is attacking your running mate.’’

Harris, who lamented that there was ‘more riding on Tim’s debate than there should have been,’ said that being the ‘closer’ and debating on such a large scale was ‘not a comfortable role’ for Walz. 

‘He had fretted from the outset that he wasn’t a good debater,’ Harris wrote. ‘I’d discounted his concerns. He was so quick and pithy in front of the crowds at our rallies, I thought he’d bring those qualities to the podium.’

Harris referred to Vance as a ‘shape-shifter’ and said he ‘complained petulantly,’ along with more critiques of Walz. 

‘Tim fell into a pattern of defending his record as a governor,’ Harris wrote. ‘Then he fumbled his answer when the moderator, predictably, questioned why he had claimed to be in Hong Kong during the democracy protests in Tiananmen Square.’

‘Tim had been on his way to teach in China that summer but hadn’t yet left the United States on the date of the massacre. Instead of simply stating that he’d gotten his dates mixed up, but that being in China during a period of human rights oppression had profoundly influenced him, he talked about biking in Nebraska.’

Harris mentioned a ‘Saturday Night Live’ skit after the debate that depicted Harris and her husband Doug watching the debate and spitting out wine in shock. Harris wrote that while she did not actually spit out wine while watching, ‘it was otherwise uncanny in its portrait of our evening.’

‘Tim felt bad that he hadn’t done better,’ Harris wrote. 

‘I reassured him that the election would not be won or lost on account of that debate, and in fact it had a negligible effect on our polling. In choosing Tim, I thought that as a second-term governor and twelve-year congressman he would know what he was getting into. In hindsight, how could anyone?’

Harris wrote that she encouraged Walz to be ‘resilient’ during the campaign and suggested that he struggled with the ‘unfair’ attacks on his record and that it took a toll on his family. 

‘For the candidate, the family that is your source of strength can become your weakness in a presidential campaign,’ Harris wrote, adding that Tim was ‘outraged by the unfairness.’

‘When I was a newly elected DA, an elderly gentleman in Atlanta pulled me aside with a bit of advice: ‘Baby, you be sure and don’t make it look too easy,’’ Harris wrote. ‘He knew it was not. And the higher you rise in the political food chain, the harder it gets. This is not a genteel profession. You must be ready to brawl.’

Harris also detailed in her book the decision process she used to ultimately choose Walz over Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro, Arizona Sen. Mark Kelly and former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg.

Harris made a point of noting that her senior staff ‘strongly favored Tim’ and that her godson, along with her sister and brother-in-law, also preferred Walz.

‘Doug and I went back and forth,’ Harris wrote. ‘He had known Josh longer and leaned that way. It was always going to have to be my decision. I told my staff and family that I didn’t want any more input, and I went to do something practical: I made a tasty rub and seasoned a pork roast. By the time I went to bed, I’d decided on Walz.’

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Bruce Pearl retires from college basketball with a complex legacy — and the chops for political office.
Retiring Auburn coach says he’s not running for U.S. Senate, but he would have made for an interesting candidate.
U.S. Senate seat in Alabama will come open as Tommy Tuberville pursues governor spot.

What’s the difference between a college coach and a politician? One works longer hours and holds a clipboard.

Seriously, how many times did you look at basketball coach Bruce Pearl and think, “That guy is such a politician.”

Only every Saturday throughout the winter.

That’s not a biting criticism, by the way.

If you drew a Venn diagram of the skills needed to be a successful politician and a good college coach, there’d be a giant overlap in the middle of the diagram.

Because of those overlapping skillsets, and because of Pearl’s interest in politics, it’s hardly surprising Pearl, 65, considered running for the U.S. Senate seat in Alabama that Tommy Tuberville is vacating to pursue the governorship.

Wouldn’t it have been so fitting, for a state like Alabama that’s crazy about college sports, if one former coach had replaced another in a Republican senate seat?

It won’t happen.

Pearl announced Monday he’s not running for Senate. He’s just retiring as Auburn’s basketball coach.

Pearl’s son, Steven, will be elevated to replace his dad as Auburn’s coach. Pearl will become a special assistant to Auburn athletic director John Cohen.

Becoming a Senator “would have required leaving Auburn,” Pearl said in his retirement announcement. “Instead, the university has given me the opportunity to stay here and be Auburn’s senator.”

In other words, he’s becoming an ambassador for Auburn and a cheerleader for his son. So, no politics for now, anyway.

Nonetheless, Pearl’s flirtation with running for office points to the threads between coaching and politics. Pearl’s not the only former coach in Alabama who would make a fascinating politician, either. A certain former Alabama football coach comes to mind. If Nick Saban announced his candidacy, he’d clear the field.

Either Pearl or Saban has more charisma than Tuberville, a professional weasel and boot licker who once misidentified the three branches of government, and who infamously declared the only way he was ever leaving Ole Miss was ‘in a pine box.’ Days later, Tuberville left, in a private jet, to become Auburn’s coach.

Bruce Pearl has chops for politics, even if he’s not running

Would enough Alabamians have supported Pearl in a crowded GOP primary? I’ll leave that to the political pundits. Pearl is Jewish, and his strongest political position is a staunch support for Israel. I’m unsure the degree to which that would help him with Alabama voters.

I am sure Pearl is a tremendous showman. That’s a feature, not a bug, when running for office. I mean, consider the showman who resides at the White House.

The more I think about it, the more I think Pearl is a born politician who just so happened to be an excellent coach, too.

Both jobs require the officeholder to effectively fundraise and schmooze with donors. Pearl knows how to fundraise and glad-hand. Both jobs demand tremendous recruiting. Politicians recruit voters. Coaches recruit prospects. Both jobs come more easily to those who can turn a phrase and thrive in the media spotlight. In both arenas, you might need to get your hands a little dirty while navigating in the gray.

Knowing how to horse trade helps, too. Consider Pearl’s tenure at Tennessee, where he built a friendship with Pat Summitt. Pearl once painted his bare chest and cheered on the Lady Vols for a game against No. 1 Duke. Summitt returned the favor for Pearl later that season, donning a cheerleading outfit and hyping the crowd as Pearl’s team hosted rival Florida.

Bruce Pearl exits college basketball with complex legacy

Pearl had his detractors. More than a few. He became public enemy No. 1 at Illinois for many years after trying to sic the NCAA’s hounds on the Illini while an Iowa assistant coach.

While Pearl evoked strong emotions in his enemies, he built passionate fan bases, too. Heck, he turned Auburn into a basketball school. Talk about a feat. Persistent winning helped, but he’s also got plenty of personality, a sense of humor, and an aura about him. He transformed Auburn from a cratering program into an SEC monster, and sleepy Neville Arena erupted into ‘The Jungle,’ with Pearl acting as Pied Piper.

At Tennessee, Pearl ignited the program, but the school fired him after he hosted an illicit barbecue that ran afoul of NCAA recruiting rules, and then he lied to NCAA investigators. In Washington, soirées and lying are known as politics.

Pearl’s basketball coaching legacy is that of a tremendous winner and a sometimes rule-flouter. Before his retirement, Pearl ranked among the nation’s best active coaches to never win a national championship. He enlivened repressed programs and galvanized fans. He commanded the spotlight. His supporters loved him. His rivals found him odious.

Sounds a lot like a politician — if not now, perhaps later.

Blake Toppmeyer is the USA TODAY Network’s senior national college football columnist. Email him at BToppmeyer@gannett.com and follow him on X @btoppmeyer.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Even on a weekend when most of the teams in the top were either off or not faced with significant challenges, college football again delivered surprising results that shaped the playoff picture.

And with those results in Week 4, there’s a new look to the CFP field in the latest edition of the USA TODAY Sports bowl projections. There’s two like-for-like swaps among Big Ten and Big 12 teams. Indiana steps in for Illinois after the Hoosiers dominated the Ilini. And Texas Tech assumed Utah’s place after a road win in Salt Lake City.

PATH TO PLAYOFF: Sign up for our college football newsletter

One change that wasn’t made came with the Group of Five representative. Tulane did lose handily at Mississippi and Memphis surprised Arkansas. But the Green Wave still have the edge in the American and already have pocketed two Power Four wins.

This coming weekend will be the last of September and also the first major inflection point of the season. Not much has changed with the top contenders outside the slips of Clemson and Alabama. We’ll know more about Penn State and Oregon and also whether the Crimson Tide can get back into the picture with a defeat of Georgia.

Note: Legacy Pac-12 schools in other conferences will fulfill existing Pac-12 bowl agreements through the 2025 season.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

President Donald Trump slammed the United Nations for not aiding his administration’s peace push and for ‘creating new problems’ for the U.S. and member nations, while questioning its purpose and also offering ‘the hand of American leadership and friendship’ to all countries in the body.

The president, during his first address of his second administration to the United Nations General Assembly Tuesday, highlighted renewed American strength while slamming the international body.

‘Not only is the U.N. not solving the problems it should, it, too often, is actually creating new problems for us to solve,’ the president said. ‘The best example is the number one political issue of our time: the crisis of uncontrolled migration. It is uncontrolled. Your countries are being ruined.’

The president said the U.N. is ‘funding an assault on Western countries and their borders.’

‘The U.N. is supporting people that are illegally coming into the United States, and we have to get them out,’ Trump said. ‘The U.N. also provided food, shelter, transportation and debit cards to illegal aliens.’

He added: ‘The UN is supposed to stop invasions — not create them and not finance them.’

Trump said illegal immigrants are also ‘pouring into Europe.’

‘It is not sustainable and, because they choose to be politically correct, they are doing absolutely nothing about it,’ Trump said, later adding: ‘Your countries are going to hell. In America, we’ve taken bold action to swiftly shut down uncontrolled migration.’

‘Once we started detaining and deporting everyone who crossed the border and removing illegal aliens from the United States, they simply stop coming. They’re not coming anymore,’ Trump said, while thanking El Salvador for ‘receiving and jailing criminals’ that entered the United States.

During his address, the president highlighted his successful efforts to negotiate peace around the world —specifically Armenia and Azerbaijan, Thailand and Cambodia, Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo, among others.

‘I ended seven wars, and in all cases they were raging with countless, thousands of people being killed,’ he said. ‘This includes Cambodia, India, and Thailand, Kosovo and Serbia, the Congo and Rwanda, a vicious violent war that was Pakistan and India, Israel and Iran, Egypt and Ethiopia, and Armenia and Azerbaijan.’

He added: ‘No president or prime minister, and for that matter, no other country has ever done anything close to that. And I did it in just seven months. It’s never happened before. There’s never been anything like that.’

The president then took another swipe at the U.N.

‘I’m very honored to have done it. It’s too bad that I had to do these things instead of the United Nations doing them. And sadly, in all cases, the United Nations did not even try to help in any of them,’ Trump continued. ‘I ended seven wars, dealt with the leaders of each and every one of these countries, and never even received a phone call from the United Nations offering to help in finalizing the deal.’

‘I didn’t think of it at the time because I was too busy working to save millions of lives — that is, saving and stopping of these wars,’ Trump said. ‘But later, I realized that the United Nations wasn’t there for us. They weren’t there.’

‘That being the case, what is the purpose of the United Nations?’ Trump asked. ‘The U.N. has such tremendous potential … But it’s not even coming close to living up to that potential. All they seem to do is write a really strongly worded letter and then never follow that letter up — it’s empty words.’

Trump added: ‘Empty words don’t solve war. The only thing that solves war and wars is action.’

Meanwhile, the president touted America under his leadership as having ‘the strongest economy, the strongest borders, the strongest military, the strongest friendships and the strongest spirit of any nation on the face of the earth.’

‘This is indeed the golden age of America,’ Trump said.

The president added that the United States is ‘once again the best country on earth to do business.’

‘And many people in this room are investing in America, and it’s turned out to be an awfully good investment during this eight-month period,’ he said.

The president touted his visit to the Middle East in May to ‘rebuild our partnerships’ in Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates. 

‘My administration has negotiated one historic trade deal after another, including with the United Kingdom, the European Union, Japan, South Korea, Vietnam, Indonesia, the Philippines, Malaysia, and many, many others,’ Trump said.

The president also said that under his leadership, America is ‘respected again, like it has never been respected before.’

‘At the NATO summit in June, virtually all NATO members formally committed to increased defense spending, at my request, from 2% to 5% of GDP, making our alliance far stronger and more powerful than it was ever before,’ the president said.

The president returned to his criticisms of the United Nations, questioning if the U.N. can ‘play a productive role’ in peace around the world.

‘I’ve come here today to offer the hand of American leadership and friendship to any nation in this assembly that is willing to join us in forging a safer, more prosperous world,’ Trump said. ‘And it’s a world that will be much happier with a dramatically better future within our reach. But to get there, we must reject the failed approaches of the past and work together to confront some of the greatest threats in history.’

Trump said there is ‘no more serious danger to our planet today than the most powerful and destructive of weapons ever devised by man, of which the United States, as you know, has many.’

‘Just as I did in my first term, I’ve made containing these threats a top priority, starting with the nation of Iran. My position is very simple: The world’s number one sponsor of terror can never be allowed to possess the most dangerous weapon,’ Trump said. ‘That’s why, shortly after taking office, I sent the so-called Supreme Leader a letter making a generous offer — I extended a pledge of full cooperation in exchange for a suspension of Iran’s nuclear program.’

Trump added: ‘The regime’s answer was to continue their constant threats to their neighbors and U.S. interest throughout the region and some great countries that are right nearby.’

But Trump touted his decisiveness, and said: ‘Today, many of Iran’s former military commanders, in fact, I can say almost all of them, are no longer with us. They’re dead.’

The president highlighted his Operation Midnight Hammer, which marked the largest B-2 operational strike in history and represented the United States’ move to deliver a decisive blow against Iran’s nuclear program back in June.

The president said that he then ‘immediately brokered an end to the 12-day war, as it’s called, between Israel and Iran with both sides agreeing to fight, fight no longer.’

‘As everyone knows, I have also been deeply engaged in seeking a ceasefire in Gaza. We have to get that done — have to get it done,’ Trump said. ‘Unfortunately, Hamas has repeatedly rejected reasonable offers to make peace. We can’t forget Oct. 7, can we?’

‘Now, as if to encourage continued conflict, some of this body is seeking to unilaterally recognize a Palestinian state,’ Trump continued. ‘The rewards would be too great for Hamas terrorists for their atrocities. This would be a reward for these horrible atrocities, including Oct. 7, even while they refuse to release the hostages or accept the ceasefire.’

Trump demanded that nations not give in to Hamas.

‘Instead of giving in to Hamas’s ransom demands, those who want peace should be united with one message: Release the hostages now,’ Trump said. ‘Just release the hostages now. We have to get it done.’

This is a developing story. Please check back for updates.

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President Donald Trump sharply criticized a wave of European nations that recently recognized a Palestinian state, warning that such moves reward Hamas and encourage continued conflict in Gaza.

‘As everyone knows, I have also been deeply engaged in seeking a cease-fire in Gaza. Have to get that done. You have to get it done,’ Trump said. 

‘Unfortunately, Hamas has repeatedly rejected reasonable offers to make peace. We can’t forget Oct. 7, can we? Now, as if to encourage continued conflict, some of this body is seeking to unilaterally recognize a Palestinian state… this would be a reward for these horrible atrocities, including Oct. 7.’

His remarks came one day after French President Emmanuel Macron announced his nation would recognize a Palestinian state, hosting a meeting at the United Nations General Assembly along with Saudi Arabia on a two-state solution. 

Several other longtime Israeli allies — the United Kingdom, Australia and Canada — did the same on Sunday, citing the ongoing humanitarian crisis in Gaza and expanding settlements and violence by settlers in the West Bank.

The U.S. remains squarely on the side of Israel, and Trump said such recognition undermines efforts to free hostages held in Gaza and risks emboldening Hamas.

‘Even while they refuse to release the hostages or accept the cease-fire, instead of giving to Hamas and giving so much because they’ve taken so much, they have taken so much. This could have been solved so long ago,’ Trump said. ‘Instead of giving in to Hamas as ransom demands, those who want peace should be united with one message: release the hostages now. Just release the hostages.’

Trump said he always knew the last 20 remaining hostages would be ‘the hardest’ to get back — but said the bodies of the deceased were just as important to reclaim.

‘Those parents came to me and they want them back… as though they were alive. They want them every bit as much as if their son or daughter were alive.’

On Monday, France became the first major Western nuclear power and a permanent member of the U.N. Security Council from the G7 to formally recognize Palestine.

Macron said: ‘The time has come to no longer talk about the existence of Israel — it’s self-evident. The time has come to do justice to the Palestinians, to recognize the state of Palestine.’

‘We must do this to save lives.’

Meanwhile, Israeli Ambassador to the U.N. Danny Danon warned there will be ‘consequences’ for nations that recognize Palestine. 

On Tuesday, Trump will hold a closed-door meeting with Arab leaders who are expected to implore him to urge Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to do more to end the war in Gaza.

Trump is expected to present his Middle Eastern counterparts with the U.S. outlook for peace and post-war governance in Gaza.

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Jurors in Fort Pierce, Florida, began deliberations Tuesday in the federal criminal trial of Ryan Routh, the man accused of attempting to assassinate then-presidential candidate Donald Trump at his Palm Beach golf course last year.

Routh, 59, faces five federal charges, including attempting to assassinate a major presidential candidate, assaulting a federal officer, and multiple firearms offenses. He has pleaded not guilty to all charges. If convicted, he could face life in prison.

Prosecutors used their closing arguments Tuesday to emphasize both the digital and forensic evidence presented at trial and what they described as Routh’s clear intent: to kill Trump. 

‘This was not a publicity stunt,’ Assistant U.S. Attorney Christopher Browne told the jury. ‘The evidence has shown one thing and one thing only — the defendant wanted Donald Trump dead,’ Browne said, adding that the worst part was that he ‘almost got away’ with it.

Browne told jurors that Routh ‘excessively’ stalked Trump’s locations and whereabouts in the weeks before the alleged assassination attempt on Sept. 15, 2024. 

He noted that Routh allegedly traveled on 17 separate occasions to scope out the Trump International Golf Club in West Palm Beach. These were ‘reconnaissance’ missions, Browne argued.

Browne reminded jurors that there were 19 rounds found in the magazine of the SKS rifle recovered at the scene, including one in the chamber. 

There is ‘no doubt, no reasonable doubt, no doubt whatsoever that it was the man,’ Browne said, pointing at Routh, ‘who was hiding’ in the sniper’s nest. 

Browne told jurors that his motives were also on clear display, pointing to lyrics from a rap song Routh wrote about killing Trump with a sniper rifle — one he penned after he was caught and arrested by the FBI. 

‘It’s not every case where the defendant writes down his intent on a piece of paper,’ Browne said.

The prosecution spent most of its time Tuesday focusing on count one of the five federal criminal charges Routh is facing: Attempting to assassinate a major presidential candidate. 

The contrast between Routh’s defense and federal prosecutors is a dynamic that has been on stark display throughout the trial. 

Federal prosecutors spent roughly two weeks walking jurors through hundreds of exhibits and testimony from 38 witnesses to make their case against Routh.

Prosecutors methodically built their case with cellphone data placing Routh at Trump International Golf Club in West Palm Beach, where they said he created a ‘sniper’s nest’ near the sixth hole. They also introduced bank records, burner phone purchases, and DNA evidence linking him to the SKS rifle recovered at the scene.

Routh confirmed he understood and told Cannon he would not testify on his own behalf, despite her repeated offers for him to reconsider and consult with standby counsel.

Fox News’ Samantha Daigle and Jennifer Johnson contributed to this report.

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The House Oversight Committee is setting its sights on insurance companies that may have discriminated against entities with right-wing views.

The panel is also looking into whether retirees’ pension accounts were being used to invest in progressive policies they may not necessarily agree with, Fox News Digital has learned.

‘The Committee on Oversight and Government Reform is investigating improper restrictions on access to capital and capital markets of individuals and entities based on political viewpoints or involvement in certain industries (such as cryptocurrency, energy, and firearms),’ Committee Chairman James Comer, R-Ky., wrote to the National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC).

‘The Committee has engaged with whistleblowers who had their insurance policies cancelled for widely-held political positions or for operating legal businesses considered out of favor by progressive activists.’

The move is an expansion of the House Oversight Committee’s ongoing investigation into whether public financial institutions engaged in debanking against people and entities with right-wing views.

Comer is also probing whether companies implementing progressive policies are doing so at the expense of millions of retired Americans’ personal investments.

He wrote to Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, in his capacity as acting commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), that his panel ‘is investigating the prolific use of proxy proposals and other activism targeting corporate boards of directors by activists pursuing political agendas at the expense of the retirement and personal savings of Americans.’

‘Specifically, the Committee seeks to understand how giant investment managers and pension fund managers, aided by proxy advisory firms, sidestepped or abandoned their fiduciary duties to beneficiaries to pursue a political agenda and whether new legislation is needed to protect investors,’ Comer stated.

‘At a minimum, Americans deserve to fully know if their hard-earned savings are being used in a progressive playbook.’

The letter accused certain large asset management firms like BlackRock of putting clients’ money into green energy initiatives, for example, rather than more profitable areas, in order to promote a left-wing agenda.

BlackRock pushed back on such accusations in a public statement on its website, however.

‘One of the most critical tasks of an asset manager is to provide clients with insights on short- and long-term trends in the global economy that can impact their portfolios. We do this across all sectors – from healthcare to technology to energy,’ the company wrote.

‘Climate risk is one such trend given its implications for the economy. We believe that companies that better manage their exposure to climate risk and capitalize on opportunities will generate better long term financial outcomes.’

BlackRock’s website also asserted that the ‘choice of where to invest ultimately rests with our clients.’

‘We are bound to adhere to their investment guidelines and objectives. We do not dictate particular investment strategies,’ it said.

And on a broader scale, the committee looking into whether publicly-traded companies are running afoul of President Donald Trump’s executive order outlawing diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) practices by simply listing it under another name.

‘[T]he Committee remains concerned following reports of publicly traded companies intentionally camouflaging or rebranding diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) and environmental, social, and governance (ESG) policies to hide such discrimination from ‘the Trump Administration, courts or influential activists,” Comer wrote to several organizations opposing corporate discrimination, including the Alliance Defending Freedom. 

‘At minimum, shareholders and retirement plan beneficiaries deserve transparency around discriminatory practices employed by corporate directors and officers as such behavior is rebranded. Replacing DEI and ESG titles with ’employee engagement’ or ‘inclusion and impact’ represents yet another deceptive practice.’

Trump’s order, signed in January 2025, barred financial institutions, major corporations, colleges and universities, law enforcement agencies and specific industries like medicine and commercial airlines from promoting or implementing DEI standards.

Comer accused the previous White House of promoting discriminatory practices, however, in a statement to Fox News Digital.

‘The Oversight Committee is investigating discriminatory practices in the American financial system and the Biden Administration’s role in supporting them,’ he wrote. ‘Whether it is using the boardroom to achieve what the political left could not accomplish at the ballot box, or canceling Americans’ insurance policies and debanking them for their political views, these actions are wrong and deprive Americans of their constitutional rights.’

Fox News Digital reached out to the IRS and NAIC for comment but did not immediately hear back.

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President Donald Trump drew laughs from world leaders within moments of taking the stage at the United Nations General Assembly on Tuesday.

Trump joked about a broken escalator in the UN building as well as the broken teleprompters right in front of him.

‘Thank you very much, I very much appreciate it,’ he said to the applause as he took the stage.

‘And I don’t mind making this speech without a teleprompter because the teleprompter is not working,’ he said as the leaders laughed.

‘I feel very happy to be up here with you nevertheless, and that way you speak more from the heart. I can only say that whoever’s operating this teleprompter is in big trouble,’ he added, drawing more laughter.

Trump again drew laughs later on by recounting his dissatisfaction with the UN’s assistance in global conflicts.

‘I ended seven wars, dealt with the leaders of these countries and never even received a phone call from the United Nations offering to help in finalizing the deal,’ Trump said. ‘All I got from the United Nations was an escalator that on the way up stopped right in the middle.’

‘If the first lady wasn’t in great shape she would’ve fallen. But she’s in great shape, we’re both in good shape. We both stood,’ he added, drawing more laughter.

‘These are the two things I got from the United Nations: a bad escalator and a bad teleprompter,’ he said.

Throughout his speech, Trump hailed efforts for peace and warned European nations against continuing to tolerate illegal immigration. Trump also blasted the global climate change agenda as a ‘con job.’

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