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Israel will reportedly honor slain conservative activist Charlie Kirk with an award for his efforts battling antisemitism.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office indicated that this recognition will take place at the International Conference on Combating Antisemitism, The Associated Press reported.

Kirk, who founded the conservative organization Turning Point USA, was assassinated while holding an event at Utah Valley University in September.

‘A lion-hearted friend of Israel, he fought the lies and stood tall for Judeo-Christian civilization,’ Netanyahu said in a post on X on the day Kirk was fatally shot.

In the post, the Israeli leader called Kirk ‘an incredible human being’ whose ‘boundless pride in America and his valiant belief in free speech will leave a lasting impact.’

Kirk asserted in a post on X less than a month before he was killed, ‘Jew hate has no place in civil society. It rots the brain, reject it.’ 

Kirk, who was a supporter of Israel, indicated last year on ‘The Megyn Kelly Show’ that some in the pro-Israel camp had unfairly criticized him.

‘The behavior by a lot, both privately and publicly, are pushing people like you and me away. Not like we’re gonna be pro-Hamas,’ he said. ‘But we’re like, honestly, the way you are treating me is so repulsive.’

‘I have text messages, Megyn, calling me an antisemite. I am learning biblical Hebrew and writing a book on the Shabbat. I honor the Shabbat, literally the Jewish sabbath. I visit Israel and fight for it,’ he noted at the time.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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A Senate Republican wants to codify President Donald Trump’s desire to cap credit card interest rates, but it’s an idea that’s already been met with resistance among top Republicans.

Sen. Roger Marshall, R-Kan., plans to introduce legislation that would make good on Trump’s push to cap credit card interest rates at 10% for one year. However, Republican leadership in both chambers has already pushed back against the idea, arguing that it could lead to credit scarcity.

Marshall’s bill, the Consumer Affordability Protection Act, would limit the amount that credit card companies could charge for one year, capping the ceiling at Trump’s desired rate of 10%.

That cap would only apply to banks and financial institutions with over $100 billion in assets, with the idea being that smaller community banks and most credit unions would not be affected.

Marshall said in a statement to Fox News Digital that the legislation was about ‘giving families breathing room, restoring fairness in the marketplace, and making sure the American Dream is still within reach for everyone who works hard and plays by the rules.’

‘Credit cards were meant to be a tool — not a trap,’ Marshall said. ‘Right now, millions of hard-working Americans are getting crushed by outrageous interest rates that make it nearly impossible to pay down debt and get ahead.’

The bill follows Trump’s demand that Americans no longer be ‘‘ripped off’ by credit card companies that are charging interest rates of 20 to 30%, and even more, which festered unimpeded during the Sleepy Joe Biden Administration.’

He set a target date for the cap of Jan. 20, the one-year anniversary of his inauguration to his second term in office.

‘AFFORDABILITY! Effective January 20, 2026, I, as President of the United States, am calling for a one year cap on Credit Card Interest Rates of 10%,’ Trump said on Truth Social.

Marshall’s push isn’t his first foray into the world of credit — he and Senate Minority Whip Dick Durbin, D-Ill., have a long-simmering bill that would boost competition among credit card payment networks. Trump endorsed that legislation earlier this week, and the bipartisan duo reintroduced it in the Senate shortly after.

Durbin and Sen. Peter Welch, D-Vt., are co-sponsors of Marshall’s latest bill. Trump and Marshall also have an unlikely ally in Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass. The progressive lawmaker spoke with the president earlier this week about affordability, and both found middle ground on their desire to cap credit card interest rates. But she was wary that any real action, either from the White House or the GOP-controlled Congress, would come to fruition. 

‘I supported it for years,’ Warren said. ‘And when he first floated the idea over a year ago, I said, ‘I’m all in,’ and so far, Trump hasn’t done anything.’

But despite Trump’s edict and the patchwork of bipartisan support, the top Republicans in Congress aren’t completely sold on the idea.

Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., warned that capping credit card interest rates could ‘probably deprive an awful lot of people of access to credit around the country.’

‘Credit cards will probably become debit cards,’ Thune said. ‘So, yeah, I mean, that’s not something I’m out there advocating for.’

And House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., warned of ‘unintended consequences’ of such a change.

‘One of the things that the president probably had not thought through is the negative secondary effect: they would just stop lending money, and maybe they cap what people are able to borrow at a very low amount,’ Johnson said.

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Tense scenes played out in the House of Representatives on Tuesday night as a group of moderate Republicans took a stand against a trio of GOP-led labor rule bills.

One of those bills failed to pass, while the other two were quickly scuttled to avoid the same fate — an embarrassing blow to House Republican leadership and the majority of GOP lawmakers who supported them.

It’s an example of a situation that has been growing increasingly common in Congress’ lower chamber as Republicans wrestle with a party-line majority of anywhere between three and one vote, depending on attendance that day.

‘We’ve got simple bills like this that should be a no-brainer, and we’ve got several moderate Rs that are going to kill the bill,’ Rep. Greg Steube, R-Fla., told Fox News Digital on the sidelines just before the first bill failed. ‘What I foresee, and you’re seeing it in appropriations bills, they don’t care about guys like me … they’re just working with the Democrats to pass them.’

Several Republicans who spoke with Fox News Digital this week said there’s growing concern about Democrats growing their number of legislative victories despite Republicans holding the gavel — or potentially using their numbers to take over the agenda.

As Rep. Tim Burchett, R-Tenn., put to reporters last week, ‘We are one flu season away from losing the majority.’

Steube said he did not believe Democrats could actually take the speaker’s gavel but conceded the situation was tenuous. He pointed to the recent sudden death of Rep. Doug LaMalfa, R-Calif., as an example.

‘You’re a heart attack and a car accident away from the majority. There’s people in our conference that are not young people. I mean, you saw what just happened with LaMalfa. In my opinion, he was young, 65. We have people who are much older in the conference,’ he said Tuesday night.

‘Now, Democrats couldn’t take over the gavel, but like, what you’re seeing here, you’ve got attendance issues, you’ve got seven Republicans voting with the Democrats. You lose more than two, you’re toast.’

Despite that, however, Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., denied there was a fight for the agenda on Tuesday night.

‘We’re totally in control of the House,’ he told reporters. 

He added, however, that leaders were watching attendance closely.

‘They’d better be here,’ Johnson said of his members. ‘I told everybody, and not in jest, I said, no adventure sports, no risk-taking, take your vitamins. Stay healthy and be here.’

It comes after several recent incidents that have put their tenuous grasp on the House in perspective for Republicans.

Former Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., abruptly resigned earlier this year after publicly falling out with President Donald Trump. Rep. Jim Baird, R-Ind., returned on Tuesday badly bruised from a car accident that he spent the week prior recovering from.

And just this week, Rep. Greg Murphy, R-N.C., said he is home recovering from major brain surgery. Rep. Derrick Van Orden, R-Wis., is in his district caring for his ill wife.

Beyond conversations about their own mortality, it’s also spurred discussion among some Republicans about what unexpected life events could do to their majority.

‘The margins are really, really close. A few of us were in a car the other day, driving … if that became an accident, that would have tipped the scale. So I think it’s a concern to be vigilant, prudent, and just understand that the consequences of an accident may have, you know, consequences outside of the norm,’ Rep. Ryan Zinke, R-Mont., told Fox News Digital.

He also warned his fellow Republicans, as a former Navy SEAL, to be mindful of unsafe situations.

‘Say some evil mind wants to change the majority in the House — we don’t have the same protection that the president does. And that’s why I say just remain vigilant,’ Zinke said. ‘I have faith that we’ll continue, but I think it should be a concern, because it’s a big deal to change power outside of a normal election cycle.’

One House Republican speaking to Fox News Digital anonymously pointed out that there appeared to be more Democrats than Republicans voting on a slate of bills — albeit, relatively uncontroversial ones — on Monday night.

‘I’d guess they’re terrified,’ the lawmaker said of GOP leaders on Tuesday. ‘Sometimes life happens — look at Derrick Van Orden … car accidents, COVID, or flu. I mean, I don’t think we had the majority last night.’

‘They’re going to have to get smart about the calendar, probably break some arms,’ that GOP lawmaker said. ‘It’s kind of unprecedented. I don’t know how it would work. Say, unfortunately, someone else passed. You can’t fix that. You may have to wait a few months. You might have to strip committees. There’s a whole lot of uncharted waters to deal with.’

There are also more than a dozen GOP lawmakers running for higher office — something that could also spur absences, as South Carolina gubernatorial candidate Rep. Nancy Mace, R-S.C., pointed out.

She dismissed fears of Democrats taking over the agenda, however.

‘Certainly there’s concern with the slim majority. There are many of us that are running for higher office as well, and as the debate season gets underway, there’s going to be members that miss votes to make debates and to be campaigning,’ Mace said.

Rep. Andy Ogles, R-Tenn., told Fox News Digital he was not worried about Democrats taking over the floor but conceded there was tension over the slim margins for Republicans.

‘I know they’re carefully watching attendance,’ Ogles said. ‘I think the joke is that no two members should travel together at this point.’

But not all House Republicans are agonizing over how the politics of the situation are playing out.

One moderate GOP lawmaker who spoke with Fox News Digital anonymously said the thin majority could save Republicans in the middle from taking politically perilous votes.

‘It gives folks in the center a little more juice on preventing bills from coming to the floor,’ they said.

An example they used is Thursday morning’s expected vote on a bill dealing with the joint-employer labor rule, telling Fox News Digital, ‘There’s an active effort among pro-labor Republicans to block that from coming to the floor, and we can only really get that done in our majority.’

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Indiana and Miami have staunchly different histories in college football, but will nonetheless face off for a national championship on Monday, Jan. 19.

The Hoosiers, one of the losingest programs in college football history, have achieved one of the sport’s greatest turnarounds under second-year coach Curt Cignetti. Indiana is ranked No. 1 and has a 15-0 record only two years after finishing 3-9 in 2023, and is looking to cap off a perfect season with its first national title.

No. 10 Miami, meanwhile, hasn’t been back to the national title game in over two decades, but has one of the most impressive group of alumni of any program. The Hurricanes were a dominant force throughout the late 1980s and into the early 2000s, winning five national championships during a 19-year span from 1983 through 2001.

Perhaps nothing explains the school’s differences than their all-time teams: The Hurricanes have numerous NFL standouts and unanimous All-Americans, with many stars left off the list. Indiana, meanwhile, has eight consensus All-Americans all-time — two of whom are from this season.

Order commemorative book about IU’s epic season

Here’s a look at Indiana and Miami’s all-time teams, according to USA TODAY Sports:

Indiana football all-time team

The biggest decision was what to do at quarterback. Trent Green got consideration, as did Antwaan Randle El, who won Big Ten MVP on a 5-6 team. Randle El was electric running the option and had a nine-year career in the NFL as a receiver. We’ll find room for him as an all-purpose selection, but it’s hard to pick against the school’s only Heisman Trophy winner, Fernando Mendoza. Anthony Thompson was the closest Hoosier to win the trophy prior to this season and gives the Hoosiers some pop in the backfield. Besides QB, the choice between Vaughn Dunbar and Tevin Coleman was probably the toughest left for this roster.

On defense, current Hoosier D’Angelo Ponds (CB) makes the list, joined by NFL vets Adewale Ogunleye, Mike Dumas and Tracy Porter, who broke Indiana hearts with an interception return for a touchdown against Peyton Manning and the Colts in Super Bowl XLIV.

Offense

QB: Fernando Mendoza, 2025
RB: Anthony Thompson, 1986-89
RB: Vaughn Dunbar, 1990-91
WR: James Hardy, 2005-07
WR: Thomas Lewis, 1991-93
FB: Tom Nowatzke, 1962-65
OL: Rodger Saffold, 2006-09
OL: Dan Feeney (2012-16)
OL: John Tavener, 1941-46
OL: Bob Skoronski, 1953-55
OL: Carter Smith, 2022-25
All-purpose: Antwaan Randle El, 1998-2001

Defense

DL: Adewale Ogunleye, 1996-99
DL: Jerome Johnson (2017-19)
DL: Nathan Davis, 1993-96
DL: Jammie Kirlew, 2006-09
LB: Joe Norman, 1975-78
LB: Micah McFadden, 2018-21
LB: Van Waiters, 1983-87
DB: Tracy Porter, 2004-07
DB: D’Angelo Ponds, 2024-25
DB: Tim Wilbur, 1978-80, 1982
DB: Mike Dumas, 1988-90

Special teams

P: Jim DiGuilio, 1991-94
K: Pete Stoyanovich, 1985-88
KR: Marcus Thigpen, 2005-08
PR: Tim Wilbur, 1978-80, 1982

Miami football all-time team

Miami’s defense, particularly its all-time secondary, is virtually unmatched in the history of college football. Ed Reed, considered by many the greatest safeties ever, headlines the group. There’s also Sean Taylor, Antrel Rolle and Bennie Blades, who were top-12 picks to the NFL. Ray Lewis, one of the NFL’s greatest linebackers ever, also patrols the unit.

The offense is no slouch, either. Edgerrin James, Michael Irvin and Jim Otto are all Pro Football Hall of Famers. Fellow Hall of Famers Andre Johnson and Jim Kelly are notable omissions from the list.

Miami offensive tackle Francis Mauigoa was the lone player from the Hurricanes’ current roster to make the list:

Offense

QB: Ken Dorsey, 1999-2002
RB: Edgerrin James, 1996-98
RB: Willis McGahee, 2001-02
WR: Michael Irvin, 1985-87
WR: Reggie Wayne, 1997-2000
TE: Kellen Winslow II, 2001-03
OL: Francis Mauigoa, 2023-25
OL: Bryant McKinnie, 1999-2001
OL: Brett Romberg, 1999-2002
OL: Leon Searcy, 1988-91
OL: Jim Otto, 1957-59
All-purpose: Santana Moss, 1997-2000

Defense

DL: Warren Sapp, 1991-94
DL: Ted Hendricks, 1966-68
DL: Danny Stubbs, 1983-87
DL: Russell Maryland, 1987-90
LB: Ray Lewis, 1993-95
LB: Dan Morgan, 1997-2000
LB: Jonathan Vilma, 2000-03
DB: Bennie Blades, 1984-87
DB: Antrel Rolle, 2001-04
DB: Sean Taylor, 2001-03
DB: Ed Reed, 1997-2001

Special teams

P: Matt Bosher, 2007-10
K: Carlos Huerta, 1988-91
KR: Devin Hester, 2003-04
PR: Santana Moss, 1997-2000

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

John Harbaugh did not have to wait very long to find a new job.

The New York Giants have offered Harbaugh a five-year deal to become their next head coach, NFL Media’s Ian Rapoport reported Thursday morning. Harbaugh has already accepted the offer, which will make him one of the NFL’s highest-paid coaches, Rapoport reports.

The former Baltimore Ravens head coach spent just over a week out of a job before zeroing in on his expected new landing spot after his previous team fired him on Jan. 6.

The 2019 NFL Coach of the Year had his first in-person meeting with the Giants on Jan. 14 after a full week of virtual meetings with New York and other teams.

Once the deal is finalized, the Giants would become the first of nine teams to fill a head-coaching vacancy this offseason.

Harbaugh, 63, immediately became the top head coaching candidate available after he and the Ravens parted ways. ESPN’s Adam Schefter reported on Jan. 6 that seven teams had reached out to the former Ravens coach’s agent about their vacancies within 45 minutes of Harbaugh’s firing.

By the time the Ravens fired Harbaugh, he had been their head coach for 18 full seasons, compiling a 180-113 record and winning a Super Bowl in that span. His 180 wins make him the 14th-most-winningest coach in NFL history and are the fourth-most among all active coaches. Harbaugh’s 13 playoff wins are tied for seventh-most all time and are the second-most among active coaches, trailing only Chiefs head coach Andy Reid (28).

Harbaugh’s tenure with the Ravens ended following Baltimore’s Week 18 loss to the Pittsburgh Steelers that eliminated it from playoff contention. Ravens rookie kicker Tyler Loop’s go-ahead, 44-yard field goal attempt sailed wide right as time expired to sink the Ravens’ record to 8-9. This season marked the second time in the last eight years that Baltimore missed the playoffs.

In New York, Harbaugh would succeed Brian Daboll, who was fired on Nov. 10 after a 2-8 start. The Giants opted to keep general manager Joe Schoen to conduct the coaching search.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

SACRAMENTO, CA — It’s been over a year since New York Knicks head coach Mike Brown was fired from his role as head coach with the Sacramento Kings. He hadn’t stepped foot in Golden 1 Center since he was let go in December 2024.

On Wednesday, Jan, 14, Brown returned to the place he coached for two seasons – where he became 2023 NBA Coach of the Year with the Kings.

The short reunion ended with Brown’s Knicks suffering a 112-101 loss to the Kings, who now are on a three-game winning streak.

‘I had a great time here (in Sacramento),’ Brown told USA TODAY Sports after the loss. ‘My family had a great time here. … I enjoyed my time here, so it was great to be back.’

For a third consecutive game, Sacramento fans chanted ‘light the beam’ as they were lifted to victory behind a game-high 27 points from DeMar DeRozan.

‘We got our behinds kicked. We talk about the game and we get ready for the next one,’ Brown said to USA TODAY Sports. ‘That’s what this league is about. Got 82 of them, got to take them one at a time. You have to keep trying to coach and get better and then move on to the next one and that’s kind of how it is.’

Zach LaVine added 25 points, while Russell Westbrook had another double-double, 19 points and 11 assists.

The game’s X-factor was Precious Achiuwa, a former Knick, who torched his old team for 20 points, with 14 rebounds, two steals and two blocks.

‘Give Precious Achiuwa a lot of credit,’ Brown told reporters. ‘He was with me during the Nigerian national team. He impacts the game in a lot of ways. He had 20 and 14. He’s a guy when you close out on him, we want to be the second jumper. To start the game we ran him off the line three times, so we didn’t do a good job of following our gameplan tonight.’

Brown was greeted with an ovation by the 15,095 fans at Golden 1 Center during the team introduction. The arena as filled by a number of Knicks fans, but mostly Kings fans regarded as Sacramento’s ‘Sixth Man.’

‘The fans were fantastic,’ Brown said to reporters. ‘We enjoyed living here, so I appreciate it. A lot of love from the fans here. But in the same breathe, we’re happy as hell in New York, we enjoy the organization, we enjoy the fans there and we enjoy where we live.’

During warmups, Brown had a brief interaction with Kings owner Vivek Ranadive, who fired Brown.

Brown said they just exchanged pleasantries as Ranadive was just saying ‘hello.’ There was the game to be played, but Brown – and his abrupt December 2024 firing – was the talk of the town. Brown had just finished a post-practice media scrum and started heading to the Sacramento international Airport, when he received the call from Ranadive that he was being fired.

Brown used the time away from basketball to spend time with his family. He traveled different parts of the world with his wife, spent time with his grandson at amusement parks. He stayed away from basketball but his phone was nearby.

‘When it happened you process it real quickly,’ Brown said to reporters. ‘My wife and I went to Australia for UFC 312, Brooklyn, Puerto Vallarta, St Barts. … It’s life, you keep moving forward. You can really beat yourself up if you try to guess or figure what should’ve happened, why it happened, what could’ve happened, all that stuff. Life is short, I try to embrace it. Try to be in the moment, like I said, enjoy what I can enjoy, control what I can control. If I can’t control it, try to find something else to do.’

He got a call from the Knicks in the summer of 2025 and accepted a head coaching role of one of the NBA’s most-storied franchises. So far, he’s coached them to the second-best record in the Eastern Conference at 25-15 and a NBA Cup championship.

That’s not his ultimate goal, nor was beating the Kings.

‘The most positive is being able to hang a banner up in MSG, the most iconic arena in the league,’ Brown said to reporters in December following their NBA Cup championship.

The Knicks sit 3.5 games behind the first-place Detroit Pistons, while the Kings (11-30) are searching for their identity and continue develop a standard of a winning culture.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Former Democratic Attorney General Eric Holder, who served during former President Barack Obama’s tenure, played a key role in vouching for Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz as the Democratic Party’s 2024 pick for vice president before a massive fraud scandal rocked the Gopher State. 

‘There’s nothing that of any substance that was missed by our vetting team,’ Holder told CNN in an October 2024 interview as the federal election came down to its final days. 

Walz is in the midst of facing a sweeping fraud scandal involving alleged money laundering operations related to alleged fraudulent meal and housing programs, daycare centers and Medicaid services that prosecutors say could total as much as $9 billion, Fox News Digital has reported. Dozens of individuals have been charged amid the investigations, most of whom are from the state’s Somali community. 

The scandal led to Walz dropping his re-election bid to serve a third term as Minnesota governor. 

Walz has said he is ‘accountable for’ the scandal as the state’s top elected official, but has accused Republicans and the Trump administration of sensationalizing multibillion-dollar figures of alleged fraud. 

Walz bucked calls to step down as governor, declaring during a press conference Tuesday: ‘Over my dead body will that happen.’

More than a year ago, Walz’s run on the 2024 Democratic ticket catapulted his national name recognition after serving in politics for decades, including in the U.S. Congress from 2007 until 2019, before his election as governor. Ahead of his name being floated as a potential vice presidential contender, Walz was a relatively unknown name to everyday Americans. 

Then-Vice President Kamala Harris tapped Obama’s former attorney general to lead the vetting process of her potential running mates during the 2024 cycle. 

Holder is a longtime Obama ally and was one of the officials tasked with vetting Obama’s potential running mates back in the 2008 election cycle before landing on then-Delaware Sen. Joe Biden. 

Holder told the media in 2004 that Walz was not at the top of his list when vetting 11 candidates for Harris’ running mate, but that he moved up the list of names as Holder reviewed his ‘very impressive’ and ‘significant’ work in Minnesota, including signing a law in 2023 for universal free breakfast and lunch for all K-12 students in the state, KSTP reported in November 2024 ahead of the election. 

‘As part of the process, the vetting process, I looked at almost every YouTube he’s ever been on,’ Holder told KSTP of Walz. ‘Everything we could ever find about his media interactions and he’s a genuine nice guy. He’s got that Minnesota Nice thing.’

‘There was a chemistry that I saw, I actually saw that happen with Kamala Harris and with Tim Walz,’ Holder added at the time. ‘So it was a combination, I think, of accomplishments and chemistry that propelled him to the number two spot on the ticket.’

A source with knowledge of Walz’s vetting process told Fox News Digital that the fraud investigation was included in the vetting process, as details had already emerged during the governor’s 2022 re-election race. 

‘Governor Walz’s Department of Education had been in contact with the FBI regarding investigations into organizations diverting funds from child nutrition programs,’ the source explained. ‘This issue was not a factor in the 2024 presidential campaign, nor did Kamala Harris’s vice presidential choice ultimately prove to be a negative factor in the race.’ 

Walz’s emergence as the vice presidential pick quickly drew scrutiny over a string of past controversies, including allegations he exaggerated his military service, repeated misstatements about his presence during China’s Tiananmen Square massacre and questions about his handling of Minnesota’s 2020 riots — issues Republicans seized on as Democrats rushed to elevate him on the national stage. 

The 2024 election cycle was unprecedented for a multitude of reasons, most notably when then-President Biden dropped out of the race on July 21, 2024, amid mounting concerns over his health and a pair of assassination attempts on then-former President Donald Trump’s life. 

Holder joined CNN in October 2024 and defended the vetting process of Walz, calling him an ‘authentic guy, a person with a great record as the governor of Minnesota and who I think will be a superb vice president.’

‘He has resonated with the American people,’ Holder told CNN’s Wolf Blitzer at the time. ‘He has generated enthusiasm for the ticket. And I think that the slight exaggerations, misspeaking that he has done, and, again, for which he has, you know, taken responsibility, is not something that’s going to ultimately hurt him,’ he said of Walz’s past misstatements. 

Holder was pressed if he and ‘your team of lawyers (missed) important information about him during the vetting process,’ considering the previous misstatements. Walz, for example, claimed in 2018 he had carried ‘weapons in war,’ but had not been deployed to an active combat zone across his 24 years in the Army National Guard. 

‘No, I don’t think we did,’ Holder responded about whether his team missed anything on Walz’s record. ‘I mean, I don’t think that we were surprised by any of the things that he has said. And as what he has indicated is that sometimes he misspoke, but he is — unlike Donald Trump, who lies like all the time. Tim Walz has made some misstatements that he has said, you know, I was wrong in saying that, apologized for making the misstatements.’

Walz has been directly implicated in the Minnesota fraud schemes, though the Trump administration has pinned some of the blame on the governor. 

‘I think Tim Walz should resign,’ Vice President JD Vance told the media Thursday during a White House press briefing. ‘Because it’s very clear either that he knew about the fraud in Minneapolis, he knew about the welfare fraud, or at the very least, he looked the other way. I mean, this is not this is not like Lex Luther, right? This is not movie villain fraud. This is the lowest IQ possible fraud.’

Amid the fraud investigations, federal law enforcement converged on Minneapolis in January. A fatal shooting broke out in a residential area Jan. 7 when a woman allegedly attempted to use her car as a weapon against immigration officers in what the Department of Homeland Security called an ‘act of domestic terrorism.’ The woman was shot and killed, sparking fierce condemnation from Democrats and Trump critics, including some lawmakers referring to the incident as a ‘murder.’ 

Fox News Digital also reached out to Walz’s office and Obama’s office regarding the 2024 vetting process considering the fraud investigations, but did not immediately receive replies. 

Fox News Digital’s Andrew Mark Miller contributed to this report. 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

The South Carolina women’s basketball team (17-1, 4-0) will play Texas (18-1, 3-1) for the second time this season on Thursday (7 p.m., ESPN2) in Columbia, South Carolina.

The No. 2 Gamecocks and No. 4 Longhorns know each other well. It will be the sixth time they’ve played since last January. They played twice in the 2024-25 regular season and met in the SEC Championship and Final Four. Then, they faced off at the Player’s Era tournament in Las Vegas in November.

Coach Dawn Staley and South Carolina won three of those five meetings, including the two that mattered the most: for the SEC crown and the national semifinal. Coach Vic Schaefer’s Longhorns were the most recent victors, defeating the Gamecocks behind 19 points from Jordan Lee on Thanksgiving.

USA TODAY Sports staffers Meghan Hall, Cydney Henderson and Mitchell Northam break down the matchup:

South Carolina has won 10 straight since losing to Texas in November. What’s different about the Gamecocks now?

Hall: The Gamecocks have five players averaging double-figure scoring that anchor their fifth-ranked offense (89.7 points per game), including center Madina Okot, who has become a critical glue player. Okot often helps dictate South Carolina’s interior presence and overall rim protection. She’s currently in a three-way tie with Oklahoma’s Raegan Beers and Murray State’s Sharnecce Currie-Jelks for the most double-doubles in the country (13) and has nine games with 10 points or more since the Gamecock’s November matchup with Texas, including 23 points and 13 rebounds vs. then-ranked No. 22 Louisville. If the Gamecocks need a critical basket or timely play, they count on Okot to answer the call. 

Henderson: The seat belt gang lives on at South Carolina. The Gamecocks’ 10-game win streak has been spurred by their defense. South Carolina ranks third in the nation in opponent field goal percentage (31.9%), fourth in blocks per game (6.8) and 13th in points allowed (53.6 per game). The Gamecocks have struggled with injuries and availability early on they’ve only had their full squad available for six games this season but should have a full roster against Texas, including senior guard Ta’Niya Latson, who’s missed several games with a sprained ankle. The Florida State transfer is averaging 16.3 points and a career-best 50.9% field-goal percentage. 

Northam: Raven Johnson has always been an incredibly talented guard, but it feels like she’s grown more comfortable this season in asserting herself as a scorer. In previous seasons, Johnson could dictate the flow of the game with her passing and ball handling, allowing South Carolina’s other weapons to score most of the points. But this season, the Gamecocks need her to get buckets too. Since scoring seven points against Texas, Johnson has netted double-figure scoring totals in eight of her last 10 games. She’s averaging a career-best 10.2 points per game. A few crucial baskets from Johnson could be the difference against Texas.

Texas is looking for a bounce-back victory after falling to LSU. Who will be the X-factor for the Longhorns?

Hall: It has to be Texas guard Rori Harmon, who was benched in the fourth quarter during the Longhorns’ loss to LSU. She was 1-of-7 from the field during the game. That cannot happen in back-to-back matchups, let alone during SEC play against No. 2 South Carolina. Harmon didn’t have a great shooting day when these two teams played on Nov. 27, but she did have the game-winning basket and nine assists. If her shot isn’t falling, she’s got to find other ways to contribute.

Henderson: Jordan Lee finished with a team-high 19 points in Texas’ first meeting against South Carolina in November and the Longhorns will need similar production, especially if South Carolina zeros in defensively on Madison Booker and Rori Harmon. Lee has reached double-digit points in 16 of 19 games this season, including a career-high 23 points against Missouri on Jan. 1. She’s averaging a career-best 14.8 points this season, nearly a 10-point jump from her freshman campaign. Lee went 1-of-6 from the 3-point line in Texas’ first matchup against South Carolina, the only person on her team to attempt a shot from beyond the arc. If she can get going from long distance, look out. 

Northam: In the first meeting with South Carolina, Texas center Kyla Oldacre tallied four points and seven rebounds. Recently, she’s played a lot better, notching double-doubles in back-to-back games, including a performance where she scored 23 points in 20 minutes against Auburn. These games between the Gamecocks and the Longhorns are often decided in the paint, and Oldacre having a great outing could be what gets Texas its second straight win in the series.

What else are you watching for in this game? What’s going to be the key to a victory?

Hall: Texas is hard to beat when forward Madison Booker and Rori Harmon get their two-person game going early. Booker also anchors the Longhorns defensively; I’d like to see her cause disruption early and get her teammates involved. For South Carolina, it has to be utilizing defensive pressure to dictate how fast the team wants to play in transition. The Gamecocks excel at forcing turnovers and turning it into quick points on the other end.

Henderson: Texas must limit their turnovers if they want to avoid a second consecutive loss. The Longhorns surrendered a season-high 17 turnovers against LSU — Madison Booker had six — which led to 14 points for the Tigers. The sloppiness was uncharacteristic for Texas, which has the highest turnover margin in the nation (13.79) and records the second-fewest turnovers in the country (10.5 per game). The Longhorns must avoid self-inflicted wounds against South Carolina’s stout defense. Meanwhile, the Gamecocks need to find production from its bench. South Carolina’s bench was limited to two points in their loss to Texas on Nov. 27.

Northam: These two teams combined for 3-of-13 shooting from 3-point land in the first meeting. While strong interior play has led the Gamecocks and Longhorns to a lot of victories, if someone gets hot from behind the arc, it could determine who wins. Jordan Lee of Texas is shooting 38% from deep in her last five games, while Tessa Johnson and Ta’Niya Latson are both making north of 40% of their 3-pointers on the season.

What other clash will you have an eye on Thursday?

Hall: The No. 7 Kentucky Wildcats are currently without starter Teonni Key, due to an elbow injury. The Wildcats dropped a game against unranked Alabama, 64-51, and then won a Jan. 11 matchup to beat No. 12 Oklahoma, 63-57. Kentucky’s up-and-down play bears watching as they host guard Liv McGill, fifth in scoring in the nation (23.4 points a game), and the Florida Gators.

Henderson: I also have my eyes on the SEC matchup between No. 6 LSU and No. 12 Oklahoma. The Sooners are looking to bounce back from back-to-back conference losses to Ole Miss and Kentucky. LSU has been there and done that. The Tigers dropped two consecutive SEC matchups to Kentucky and Vanderbilt, before getting back in the win column with wins against Georgia and an undefeated Texas team. Oklahoma coach Jennie Baranczyk said Sunday’s matchup against LSU will be a “fork in the road”  and called out her team’s “energy, toughness and togetherness.” That approach worked for Kim Mulkey. It remains to be seen if Baranczyk’s rallying cry will work for Oklahoma.

Northam: Louisville is going for its 10th consecutive win when it travels to South Bend to face Notre Dame. Meanwhile, the Irish are coming off an impressive double-digit home victory over North Carolina. A win for Hannah Hidalgo and her squad could signal Notre Dame is indeed a contender for the ACC title. A road victory for Louisville would solidify their place atop the conference standings.

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There’s been some good news for the ’49ers Faithful’ regarding the availability of All-Pro linebacker Fred Warner.

He’s back … kind of.

San Francisco 49ers head coach Kyle Shanahan told reporters Tuesday that Warner’s practice window has officially opened. Warner dislocated his right ankle in Week 6 against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

‘We’re opening his window so he can do some stuff,’ Shanahan said. ‘But again, we’re not doing much, so he’ll walk-through out there with us today and things like that. But, hoping he can be ready for next week.’

Shanahan is looking at a possible Warner return in the NFC championship game or Super Bowl.

But Warner didn’t rule out a possible return in the NFC divisional round game against the division-rival Seattle Seahawks.

‘We’re taking it day by day,’ Warner told reporters Wednesday. ‘I think they said last week they weren’t going to open my window, and then my window is now open. So, we’re just taking it day by day.’

Warner said that they’re still deciding if he’ll travel with the team to Seattle.

He was a participant at practice dressed in pads and a helmet and took part in individual drills.

‘I feel amazing,’ Warner told reporters after Wednesday’s practice. ‘Just so grateful, blessed to be back. I think, obviously, when all this happened, I didn’t really think about the possibility of returning in-season. But the way things progressed and being able to have this opportunity to be back with my teammates, have a chance at helping them win this week and so on and so forth, that’s my only goal moving forward.’

Warner made 53 total tackles ― 28 solo, 23 assisted ― in six games before missing the majority of the season with an ankle fracture. He added two forced fumbles and one recovery.

The eight-year, All-Pro linebacker has spent all of his career with San Francisco after the 49ers selected him 70th overall in the third round of the 2018 NFL Draft.

Warner is currently third all-time in 49ers history with 597 tackles, behind Ronnie Lott and Patrick Willis. Warner is the 49ers’ all-time leader in assisted tackles with 351, according to Pro Football Reference.

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Katie Ledecky continues to prove she’s the greatest female swimmer ever whenever she steps foot into a pool.

She finished in 15 minutes and 23.21 seconds, placing first in the Austin championship. Ledecky holds the record time at 15:20.48, which she set back in 2018, per Olympics.com.

‘I’m really happy with that, it was faster than I was all last year,’ Ledecky said after the race. ‘It was my second-best ever. I had pretty low expectations coming into today, so that definitely blew it out of the water.’

Finishing second and third were Brinkleigh Hansen of St. Petersburg, Florida, who finished in 16:31.31 and Becca Mann of Homer Glen, Illinois, who finished in 16:35.09.

Ledecky praised her training staff for pushing her to her limits and preparing her for the competition.

‘Training has been incredible,’ Ledecky said. ‘I have a really great group of distance swimmers at Florida and it’s been really hard the last month. That hard training gives me a lot of good confidence, which always helps.’

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