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Switzerland announced Monday that it has frozen assets held in the country tied to Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and his associates following the U.S. capture of the leader in Caracas. 

‘On 5 January 2026, the Federal Council decided to freeze any assets held in Switzerland by Nicolás Maduro and other persons associated with him with immediate effect,’ the Swiss Federal Department of Foreign Affairs (FDFA) said. 

The decision, which will remain in effect for four years, aims to prevent the transfer of assets amid concerns that the funds were acquired illegally through a regime long accused of widespread corruption, according to the agency. The freeze does not apply to members of the current government, and Reuters reported that the order will affect 37 people. 

Should future legal proceedings ‘reveal that the funds were illicitly acquired, Switzerland will endeavour to use them for the benefit of the Venezuelan people,’ the FDFA said.

The council added that the asset freeze builds on existing sanctions against Venezuela, first imposed in 2018 under the Embargo Act, which includes restrictions on economic resources, travel, and specific goods. 

The new measure, enacted under the Foreign Illicit Assets Act (FIAA), now targets prominent individuals who were not covered in previous Swiss sanctions and are perceived as supporting the Venezuelan regime.

According to the FDFA, the decision was not made based on Maduro’s capture nor the legitimacy of his removal but amid concerns that his home country or others could launch legal action later to recover the potentially illegally acquired assets. 

Freezing the assets now acts as a ‘precautionary measure’ meant to preserve them for potential future proceedings, according to the Swiss authorities. 

‘The reasons behind Mr Maduro’s fall from power do not play a decisive role in asset freezes under the FIAA,’ the Federal Council said in a statement. 

‘Nor does the question of whether the fall from power occurred lawfully or in violation of international law. The decisive factor is that a fall from power has occurred and that it is now possible that the country of origin will initiate legal proceedings in the future with regard to illicitly acquired assets.’

Authorities added that the government is monitoring the situation closely and is calling for the peaceful de-escalation of the ‘volatile’ situation.

‘The situation is volatile, and several scenarios are possible in the coming days and weeks,’ the FDFA said. ‘Switzerland is closely monitoring the situation in Venezuela. It has called for de-escalation, restraint and compliance with international law, including the prohibition of the use of force and the principle of respect for territorial integrity. Switzerland has also repeatedly offered its good offices to all sides in order to find a peaceful solution to the situation.’

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Jonathan Gannon’s time as the Arizona Cardinals’ coach has come to an end after three seasons.

The Cardinals fired Gannon on Jan. 5 after the team finished a 3-14 season, according to multiple reports.

Gannon’s firing comes after the Cardinals failed to build upon the 8-9 record the team generated in 2024. Arizona started the 2025 season with a 2-0 record but dropped 14 of its last 15 games and finished the year on a nine-game losing streak, culminating in a 3-14 campaign.

Gannon’s defense struggled to perform consistently throughout the season, allowing 28.7 points per game – good for the fourth-most in the NFL – while ranking 27th in defensive EPA allowed per play, per the NFL’s Next Gen Stats. It also ranked 25th in pressure rate despite spending significant offseason resources to add Josh Sweat, Calais Campbell and Walter Nolen in the hopes of improving the team’s pass rush.

Gannon acknowledged his team’s shortcomings ahead of its Week 16 game against the Atlanta Falcons. He referenced needing to make changes to the team’s health and player development systems to help it earn better results moving forward.

‘I believe in myself and I believe in our team,’ Gannon told reporters, per the team’s official website. ‘We are at a dip right now. We’re going through some adversity, but I do believe in us and we will get out of the dip.’

At the same time, Gannon also admitted he knew changes could be afoot if the team’s poor results continued.

‘If we keep doing the same thing and getting the same result that’s not good for anybody in my seat,’ Gannon said.

Those changes ultimately came, and Gannon will finish his three-year stint with the Cardinals owning a 15-36 record. Now, Arizona will head into the offseason looking for a new coach to lead it.

The Cardinals will face similar organizational uncertainty at quarterback, as they will need to make a critical decision about how to handle the three remaining seasons of Kyler Murray’s five-year, $230.5 million contract. Murray missed all but five games because of a foot injury in 2025 and was outperformed by 33-year-old journeyman Jacoby Brissett.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Pete Carroll is the NFL’s latest one-and-done coach.

The Las Vegas Raiders on Monday fired Carroll after posting a 3-14 record that tied for the league’s worst in his lone season at the helm, marking the latest reset for a franchise that now will be in search of its fourth full-time hire for the role since 2022.

‘The Las Vegas Raiders have relieved Pete Carroll of his duties as head coach. We appreciate and wish him and his family all the best,’ the team said in a statement. ‘Moving forward, General Manager John Spytek will lead all football operations in close collaboration with Tom Brady, including the search for the club’s next coach. Together, they will guide football decisions with a shared focus on leadership, culture, and alignment with the organization’s long-term vision and goals.’

After a season-ending win against the Kansas City Chiefs on Sunday, Carroll said he hoped to remain with the team and was not contemplating retirement, as some reports had suggested.

“Nobody is talking to me about that,” he said. “I haven’t said a word about that.”

Carroll, who at 74 became the oldest coach in modern NFL history, arrived in Las Vegas last January as the replacement for Antonio Pierce, who also only lasted one season as the organization’s full-time headcoach. The former Seattle Seahawks coach, who spent a year away from coaching after his surprising ouster at the end of the 2023 season, was brought in alongside Spytek to revitalize an organization that stumbled to a four-win season the previous year.

Carroll vowed to ‘build this football team up around the quarterback position,’ and the organization quickly identified an answer behind center with a trade for Geno Smith, the former Seahawks signal-caller who earned Comeback Player of the Year during his tenure with the coach. Drafting running back Ashton Jeanty with the No. 6 overall pick heightened expectations that the Raiders’ new-look backfield would ignite a rapid turnaround.

Instead, Las Vegas was plagued by familiar problems. Smith led the NFL with 17 interceptions, and a rushing offense that ranked as by far the NFL’s worst in 2024 ended up with a lower per-game output on the ground this season.

The team fired Chip Kelly, whom the organization reportedly made the NFL’s highest-paid offensive coordinator, after 11 weeks.

Star defensive end Maxx Crosby was held out of the final two games due to a knee injury, which prompted the five-time Pro Bowler to leave the facility when informed of the team’s decision not to play him down the stretch.

Carroll, who had never won fewer than six games in his previous 18 seasons in the pros, acknowledged multiple times during the season he was taken aback by how difficult the task at hand was.

‘It blows me away that this is the situation that we’re in, because I have no space in my brain for this,’ Carroll said in late December. ‘But maybe it had to be this hard.’

The Raiders will enter the offseason not only with a new-look coaching staff but also considerable resources. With an estimated $100.8 million in cap space, according to Over The Cap, Las Vegas will trail only the Tennessee Titans and Los Angeles Chargers in their spending capacity. With the No. 1 overall pick, the team could target a potential replacement for Smith at quarterback or a key figure elsewhere to fast-track yet another rebuild.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Women’s soccer stars Kristie Mewis and Sam Kerr married in a New Year’s Eve ceremony near Kerr’s hometown of Perth, Australia.

The American Mewis, 34, and Kerr, 32, waited until Australia’s summer before tying the knot, which they did in a ceremony at the Villa Dionysus estate in the Swan Valley region.

The soccer power couple went public with their relationship in 2021 and announced their engagement in November 2023.

Kerr and Mewis welcomed their first child, a son named Jagger, in May, with the seven-month-old in attendance at his parents’ wedding.

Along with Jagger, a plethora of figures from the soccer world were in attendance, including many of Kerr’s Australia teammates. The striker is her country’s all-time leading scorer and returned to the pitch with Chelsea this season after recovering from a torn ACL.

Mewis hasn’t played since she left West Ham in July. The midfielder was limited to just four appearances during her 18 months with the Hammers due to injuries and maternity leave.

Mewis has earned 52 caps with the U.S. women’s national team, scoring seven goals. Her most recent USWNT appearance came at the 2023 World Cup, when she came off the bench in a round-of-16 defeat against Sweden.

Speaking to Vogue Australia, the couple said they wanted the wedding to be “simple and chic.’ They added: “We wanted it to feel warm and fun with lots of good food and comfort. Oh, and it’s New Year’s Eve, so we wanted it to be a great party.”

Mewis wore a wedding dress from designer Berta, while Kerr went with a black tuxedo from Hugo Boss.

“My dress was my dream dress,” Mewis said. “I saw it and knew I couldn’t move forward until I tried it on, and when I did, I knew that was my wedding dress without question.

‘Sam’s accessories were unstated and simple. She didn’t want anything flashy — just something classic and comfortable.” 

The couple said that the wedding turned out even better than they dreamed.

‘It was exactly what we imagined and more,’ they said. ‘Seeing each other for the first time down the aisle – it was the most special moment.”

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Longtime Boston Celtics and USA Basketball athletic trainer Ed Lacerte has been diagnosed with acute monocytic leukemia.
Lacerte needs a blood stem cell transplant to beat the rare and aggressive form of blood cancer.
The NBA, Celtics, and USA Basketball have partnered with the NMDP registry to find a donor for Lacerte and others.

As Ed Lacerte started to fight for his life, the calls and messages flooded in.  

Magic Johnson reached out. So did Paul Pierce, Isaiah Thomas, Ray Allen and Kevin McHale.

Lacerte, the athletic trainer for USA Basketball who previously worked for the Boston Celtics from 1987-2017, has spent decades patrolling the sidelines and prioritizing the health and safety of basketball players.

So, when Lacerte was diagnosed this fall with acute monocytic leukemia, those athletes let him know they’d take care of him, too.

“Every video coming in is saying how much he’s helped them, and this is their opportunity to give it back and show their love and support for him,” said Arianna Lacerte, one of Ed’s five children. “How friendly and selfless he’s been to them has just been really humbling and remarkable to see.”

To beat cancer, Lacerte needs an act of selflessness: a blood stem cell transplant. The Celtics, the NBA, USA Basketball and the National Basketball Athletic Trainers Association (NBATA) are joining forces with the NMDP blood stem cell registry to encourage people to sign up as donors.

Registering as a donor involves swabbing the inside of your cheeks, a process that takes just 20 seconds – four seconds fewer than an NBA shot clock.

At a Dec. 15 game against the Pistons, the Celtics warmed up in shooting shirts with Lacerte’s name on the back. The front of the shirts read, “20 seconds could save a life.”

More NBA teams are planning to wear the shooting shirts later this season, and the NBATA distributed pins in Lacerte’s honor to athletic training staffs around the league.

The Celtics held registration drives during three home games at TD Garden in December in addition to more at the team office and practice facility. The Indiana Pacers will host a registration drive at their Jan. 31 home game. The NBA league office is hosting one at its corporate headquarters in New York.

Jamie Margolis, NMDP’s senior vice president of member, donor and product operations, said the nonprofit is seeking donors who are “young, diverse and committed.” They look for donors aged 18-35 and, because matches are based on genetics, registering people from a variety of ethnic backgrounds is important.

Lacerte is one of the 18,000 Americans every year who are diagnosed with life-threatening blood cancers or disorders, many of which can only be cured by a stem cell or bone marrow transplant. That’s why the NBA’s platform is vital to spread awareness.

“Ed’s story is a really unique opportunity because when we talk about adding members to the registry, it is that young, diverse, committed individual we want on the registry. That’s the NBA audience, right?” Margolis said. “The greater good here is massive.”

From the Dream Team to the Celtics: Ed Lacerte’s legacy

The first signs that something was wrong didn’t appear until November.

At the beginning of the month, Ed Lacerte was in New York City to watch his son Devin run the NYC Marathon. Lacerte was also in the middle of planning multiple international trips for his job with USA Basketball.

Shortly after that weekend, his health spiraled. On Nov. 21, Lacerte was officially diagnosed with acute monocytic leukemia, a rare and aggressive form of blood cancer.  

The diagnosis was serious enough that Arianna Lacerte, Ed’s daughter, moved up her wedding. Josh Corbeil, the Indiana Pacers head athletic trainer who is Ed’s close friend and mentee, flew into Boston that week to see him.

‘It was just stunning to kind of wrap our heads around it, and the first question was, ‘What can we do? How do we fix this?” Corbeil said.

Doctors told them that the only curative option for leukemia is a stem cell transplant, which removes a patient’s compromised immune system and replaces it with a healthy one from a donor.

In Ed’s hospital room, Arianna Lacerte and Corbeil brainstormed. That led to conversations with the NBATA, the Celtics and the NBA. Soon, Arianna was in touch with NMDP and the campaign was on to find a match for Ed.

“It’s been remarkable, honestly, to see the outpouring of support from not only former players that my dad has worked with over the 30 years that he was with the Celtics, but also the extended NBATA family,” said Devin Lacerte, Ed’s son.

In addition to his status as the longest-tenured athletic trainer in Celtics history, Ed Lacerte served as athletic trainer for the U.S. Olympic gold medal-winning basketball “Dream Team” at the 1992 Olympic Games in Barcelona. He also worked the 1984 Olympics, three U.S. Olympic Sports Festivals, the 1994 World Cup, two Olympic Gymnastic Trials, and three NBA All-Star Games.

Lacerte has worked for USA Basketball since 2018, working with the junior and senior national teams. He most recently served as the head athletic trainer for the February 2020 USA AmeriCup Qualifying Team.

“Growing up, I was a ball boy for the Celtics, I was a ball boy for some All-Star games,” Devin Lacerte said. “I got to do some really cool stuff because of what he did for a living, so I think I always knew in the back of my head that he was this awesome, legendary guy. But to us, it was like, I’m just going to work with dad and he happens to be working with some individuals who are really tall and really good at a particular sport, but they’re just people at the end of the day.”

Corbeil was a physical therapy graduate student at Boston University in the early 2000s when he first met Lacerte, who took him under his wing and hired Corbeil as an intern. Three years later, when Corbeil had been certified and was looking for NBA jobs, Lacerte handed him a sticky note with a phone number written beside the name ‘Larry.’

It was a number for Larry Bird, who at the time was president of basketball operations for the Pacers. Following Lacerte’s recommendation, Bird hired Corbeil to work in Indianapolis.

‘And 22 years later, here I am,’ Corbeil said. ‘So he just set the table for the rest of my life.’

Lacerte continues to mentor students and aspiring physical therapists whenever he can. He served as the NBATA’s treasurer for 29 years and was so indispensable that he remained part of the organization even after he left his job with the Celtics. The NBATA’s most prestigious award, voted on by members and given annually to a trainer who goes above and beyond in service, is named after Lacerte.

‘For years, he’s just been an ally to everybody in the profession and it’s like you’re part of the family,’ Corbeil said. ‘He just would always go out of his way to help everybody, and everybody feels it. So now everybody’s trying to step up for him.’

Lacerte’s ability to connect with people helped him transition from his role with the Celtics to USA Basketball, according to Dave Weiss, NBA executive vice president of Operations & Administration. Weiss, who oversees the league’s health programs and who first met Lacerte more than 10 years ago, said Lacerte is a natural leader who imbues his expertise with a dry sense of humor.

“The field of medicine and sport science and sport performance has evolved and he’s evolved with it, which has been great to see,” Weiss said. “The way he can walk in a room and immediately command the respect of players and their families and the coaching staff, I think that’s the thing that encapsulates him the most.”

Lacerte is that way with his family, too, albeit with a slightly softer side. He’s adored by his grandchildren, who call him “Grandpa Beach” for his love of the seaside. His kids know he will always go above and beyond to help them.

“Early days into dating my now husband, my dad was trying to do a Herculean effort of a favor for us,” Arianna Lacerte recalled. “We were like, ‘We can do that,” and he was like, ‘No, no, you can never do enough for family.’”

Finding a stem cell match and how to donate

The NMDP registry contains more than 9 million donors in the United States and more than 40 million globally. To match blood stem cell donors with patients, doctors look for similarities between unique cell proteins called human leukocyte antigens (HLA). Lacerte’s HLA typing is somewhat rare, which makes finding a match more difficult.

The donation process is typically non-invasive. In 90% of cases, blood stem cells are donated through a blood drawing process called apheresis. The other 10% of donors have bone marrow surgically harvested from their hip. When a match is identified, regardless of the patient’s location, NMDP pays for the donor’s travel to a contribution center (sometimes in their city, sometimes elsewhere) and then transports the donation to the patient.

“Ed’s cells could come from anywhere in the world,” Margolis said. “So anytime that we can get our name out there and have people understand what it is that we do, it’s a huge opportunity for every searching patient – for Ed and for 12,000 others every year who are looking for a match.”

Weiss said the impact is a testament to the power of sports and the relationships Lacerte fostered throughout his decades-long career.

“He’s someone who has built four families,” Weiss said. “He has his family, and then of course he’s part of the NBA family, part of the Celtics family and the USA Basketball family. I think that the threads from the time he was with the Celtics, just how long he was with them and what those teams meant to the league is obviously impactful. … That expertise, that leadership and the way he works with people, just a really high-character person that has been recognized over and over in all these different areas.”

A wall of Celtics memorabilia including a Larry Bird jersey and a Shaquille O’Neal sneaker provided the backdrop of a video call that Arianna and Devin Lacerte joined from inside their childhood home in Westford, Mass.

While his family gathered in his home to celebrate the holidays, Ed Lacerte spent Christmas at Massachusetts General Hospital, where he is receiving chemotherapy. Once treatment is finished, he will be eligible to receive a blood stem cell transplant whenever a match is found.  

“Ideally we find a match for my dad,” Arianna Lacerte said, “but I think a legacy that he’d be so proud of, in addition to his incredible career, is the ability to help save so many others’ lives.”

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

It was just one week ago that the Denver Nuggets suffered a massive injury scare when star center Nikola Jokić went down with a left knee injury.

Yet, already, the team is reportedly pleased with the pace of his recovery.

During the Amazon Prime Video broadcast of Denver’s five-point loss Jan. 2 against the Cleveland Cavaliers, sideline reporter Cassidy Hubbarth reported that the franchise has been pleasantly surprised with the progress Jokić has made; per Hubbarth, Jokić has been using an exercise bike and walking up and down stairs.

The Nuggets conducted imaging tests that revealed a diagnosis of a left knee hyperextension Tuesday, Dec. 30 and said the three-time NBA Most Valuable Player would be reevaluated in four weeks. Lately, however, the Nuggets have been listing Jokić as having a left knee bone bruise, which is a common byproduct of hyperextensions.

Here’s everything to know about Nikola Jokić’s status ahead of Monday night’s game against the Philadelphia 76ers:

Is Nikola Jokić playing tonight vs. 76ers?

No. The team has ruled Jokić out as he continues to recover from the injury. The report from the Amazon Prime Video broadcast did provide some much-needed optimism for a team struggling with various injuries, but the Nuggets are expected to be cautious with Jokić, Denver’s franchise player.

Still, it’s an incredibly frustrating stretch for the Nuggets, who are missing all five starters due to injury.

Jamal Murray (left ankle), Aaron Gordon (hamstring), Cameron Johnson (right knee) and Christian Braun (left ankle) are also out, as is backup center Jonas Valančiūnas.

This will mark the fourth game that Jokić will miss since suffering the injury.

Nikola Jokić stats

Over 32 games, Jokić is averaging a triple-double, with 29.6 points, 12.2 rebounds and 11.0 assists per game this season. Widely considered one of the favorites to compete for his fourth MVP, Jokić is shooting 60.5% from the field, 43.5% from 3-point range and 85.3% from the free-throw line.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Lawyers for the Trump administration asked a federal judge for additional time this week to detail its plans to provide due process for nearly 150 Venezuelan migrants that it deported to the Salvadoran CECOT prison in March, citing the removal of Nicolás Maduro, the Venezuelan leader who was captured by U.S. troops during a surprise raid in Caracas. 

In the motion for an extension, submitted to U.S. District Judge James Boasberg, lawyers for the Justice Department cited the ‘substantial changes on the ground in Venezuela’ and the ‘fluid nature of the unfolding situation’ in the wake of the U.S. capture of Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores.

They requested an additional seven days to comply with the court’s order.

Boasberg, in response, told the Justice Department in a minute order that it had not complied with a local court rule requiring defendants in a civil case to first notify opposing counsel before asking the court for a delay – leaving the matter temporarily unresolved.

The update comes after months of tension-filled status hearings between lawyers for the Trump administration and lawyers for the 252 Venezuelan migrants who were deported to El Salvador’s CECOT prison in March under the Alien Enemies Act, a 1798 immigration law, despite an emergency court order that sought to block the administration from immediately using the law to quickly remove certain migrants. 

The status of the migrants, who were removed again to Venezuela from CECOT in July as part of a prisoner exchange, further complicated the case. 

The exchange and U.S. involvement appeared to indicate at least some level of constructive custody of the migrants, as the court observed, prompting additional status hearings in the case. It also made it more difficult for lawyers representing the plaintiffs to track down all 252 CECOT migrants, some of whom had fled Venezuela due to persecution in their home country, and who have since remained in hiding.

The Trump administration proceeded with the deportation flights, kicking off a complex legal fight over the status of the migrants, the U.S. ability to facilitate their return – or at least to provide the migrants with due process protections – and an ability to challenge their alleged gang member status. 

Trump officials had argued that the people deported to CECOT were members of the violent Venezuelan Tren de Aragua gang, though the evidence they used to justify their designations has been disputed in many cases, and in many cases determined to be lacking. 

Since March, Boasberg has attempted to determine the status of the hundreds of CECOT plaintiffs, what ability the U.S. has to facilitate their return, or to provide the class of migrants with due process and habeas protections, including the ability to challenge their alleged gang status.

Last month, Boasberg ordered the Trump administration to submit to the court in writing its plans to provide due process to a class of Venezuelan migrants deported to El Salvador. 

He said the Justice Department must submit to the court by Jan. 5 its plan to provide due process protections to the CECOT class – which he said the Trump administration could do by either returning the migrants to the U.S. to have their cases heard in person – or to otherwise facilitate hearings abroad with members of the class that ‘satisfy the requirements of due process.’

‘On the merits, the Court concludes that this class was denied their due-process rights and will thus require the Government to facilitate their ability to obtain such a hearing,’ Boasberg said at the time. ‘Our law requires no less.’

The Justice Department’s request for a seven-day extension did not challenge the underlying merits of the order. Instead, they cited only the changing circumstances on the ground in Venezuela, which they said necessitate the additional time.

‘Over the weekend, the United States apprehended Nicolás Maduro,’ lawyers for the Justice Department said in their request for additional time. ‘As a result, the situation on the ground in Venezuela has changed dramatically. Defendants thus need additional time to determine the feasibility of various proposals,’ they added. 

‘Defendants therefore request a 7-day extension to evaluate and determine what remedies are possible.’

Boasberg responded in a terse minute order, noting only that the Justice Department’s request ‘fails to comply’ with the local rule in question, which requires parties to first confer with opposing counsel. He ordered the DOJ to file the relevant notice to opposing counsel by the end of the day. 

The update further stalls an ongoing court inquiry that has been on ice for months as the result of appeals court rulings, efforts to shield certain information from the court for national security purposes, and a separate, but related, contempt inquiry.

The CECOT migrants were again moved in July from the Salvadoran prison to Venezuela, as part of a broader prisoner exchange that involved the return of at least 10 Americans detained in Venezuela. 

Their role in the prisoner exchange further complicated efforts to ascertain the status of the CECOT class plaintiffs, including some migrants who had fled Venezuela in the first place due to fears of persecution, including from gangs.

That has made it difficult to contact the migrants from the CECOT class and determine how many of them still wished to proceed with their due process cases, as ACLU attorney Lee Gelernt, the lawyer representing the plaintiffs, previously told Boasberg in court. 

Some of them remain in hiding, Gelernt said, further complicating efforts to make contact.

The ACLU lawyers told the court in December that, of the 252 Venezuelan migrants that were deported in March to CECOT, 137 still wish to move forward with their due process cases.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Democratic Gov. Tim Walz announced on Monday he is scrapping his re-election campaign for another term amid a massive fraud scandal in the state, but Republican lawmakers in Minnesota are calling the move an empty one. 

‘Don’t mistake Gov. Walz’s retirement for accountability,’ Minnesota state Sen. Mark Koran said in a statement to Fox News Digital after Walz’s Monday announcement. 

‘It’s an attempt to avoid it. Republicans will keep holding ALL elected Democrats accountable for Minnesota’s fraud mess, spending every dollar of the $18 billion surplus, and raising taxes by $10 billion.’

Accountability for Walz, according to several Republican lawmakers, involves him resigning as governor, which many have called for in recent months. 

‘The Governor is taking the easy way out, but it’s not good enough,’ state Sen. Michael Holmstrom said in a statement. ‘Minnesotans deserve and demand an IMMEDIATE resignation.’

‘Governor Walz couldn’t take the FRAUD heat so he’s getting out of the kitchen, but I’m going to keep holding ALL Democrats accountable for Minnesota’s fraud mess, blowing through the entire $18 billion surplus, raising taxes by $10 billion, and making life less affordable for all Minnesotans while rejecting Republican efforts to stop fraud. I’ll keep exposing these failures and holding Democrats accountable for what they’ve done to Minnesotans.’

Walz launched his bid for a third four-year term as Minnesota governor in September, but in recent weeks has been facing a barrage of incoming political fire from President Donald Trump and Republicans, and some Democrats, over the large-scale theft in a state that has long prided itself on good governance.

More than 90 people — most from Minnesota’s large Somali community — have been charged since 2022 in what has been described as the nation’s largest COVID-era scheme. How much money has been stolen through alleged money laundering operations involving fraudulent meal and housing programs, daycare centers, and Medicaid services is still being tabulated. But the U.S. attorney in Minnesota said the scope of the fraud could exceed $1 billion and rise to as high as $9 billion.

GOP state Sen. Rich Draheim accused Walz in a statement of simply ‘passing the buck’ with his ‘retirement’ announcement while ‘blaming Republicans for his failures.’

Minnesota Republican Sen. Andrew Lang echoed the messaging from his state party in a statement concluding that ‘retirement isn’t accountability.’

‘It’s him trying to wipe his hands clean of the fraud mess. But ALL elected Democrats own this. They fought Republican efforts to stop the fraud, failed to hold Walz’s agencies accountable, and let Minnesotans’ tax dollars get siphoned off by fraudsters.’

Walz met Sunday with Democratic Sen. Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota to discuss his decision to drop his re-election bid, a source familiar confirmed to Fox News’ Alexis McAdams.

Word of their meeting comes amid speculation that Klobuchar, a former Hennepin County attorney who’s been elected and re-elected four times to the U.S. Senate, may now run to succeed Walz.

‘Make no mistake, I don’t want Tim Walz to be our governor,’ Minnesota Republican state Sen. Andrew Mathews said in a statement to Fox News Digital. ‘But rather than swapping Democrat governor candidates, I want to FIX the damage Gov. Walz has done: Blew through an $18 billion surplus, Raised taxes by $10 billion, Oversaw one of the largest fraud scandals in the country, Left Minnesota for months chasing a failed VP bid, Now decides to leave office.’

‘This isn’t accountability. It’s avoiding it.’

Fox News Digital’s Paul Steinhauser contributed to this report.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

President Donald Trump flipped the script on Democrats’ ‘no one is above the law’ mantra after years of hearing it aimed at him, invoking the phrase after news broke Minnesota Democratic Gov. Tim Walz would not seek re-election as a sweeping fraud scandal rocks his state.

‘Governor Walz has destroyed the State of Minnesota, but others, like Governor Gavin Newscum, JB Pritzker, and Kathy Hochul, have done, in my opinion, an even more dishonest and incompetent job. NO ONE IS ABOVE THE LAW!’ Trump posted to Truth Social Monday afternoon. 

The message followed Walz announcing Monday that he was withdrawing his re-election effort to continue serving as governor. Walz was first elected the state’s top leader in 2018 in a political career that also included him campaigning coast-to-coast in 2024 as former Vice President Kamala Harris’ running mate. 

‘As I reflected on this moment with my family and my team over the holidays, I came to the conclusion that I can’t give a political campaign my all,’ Walz wrote in a statement. ‘Every minute I spend defending my own political interests would be a minute I can’t spend defending the people of Minnesota against the criminals who prey on our generosity and the cynics who prey on our differences.’

Minnesota has come under fierce scrutiny in recent weeks as a sprawling fraud scandal that has led to dozens of arrests, mostly from the state’s large Somali community, since 2022 comes to light. Minnesota was allegedly home to a massive COVID-era scheme that allegedly involved money laundering operations related to fraudulent meal and housing programs, daycare centers and Medicaid services, according to investigators. 

The Minnesota fraud is still being tabulated, with local officials speculating it could exceed $1 billion and rise to as high as $9 billion.

Trump’s use of the phrase ‘no one is above the law’ follows years of Democrats employing the same rhetoric against him as he faced a barrage of charges and court cases in between his first and second administrations. 

‘No one is above the law,’ President Joe Biden said after Trump was found guilty on 34 counts of falsified business records in a Manhattan court in May 2024. 

Trump faced four criminal indictments, which resulted in accusations of ‘lawfare’ on the national stage as Trump maintained his innocence and slammed the cases as efforts by the Democratic Party to hurt his political chances for re-election in 2024. 

‘As I’ve said before, no one is above the law, including Donald Trump,’ then-Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said in 2023 after the Biden administration’s Department of Justice announced Trump had been indicted on 37 counts related to his alleged mishandling of classified documents.

Even during Trump’s first administration, Democrats championed the phrase as they combated MAGA Republicans and Trump policies. 

‘Everybody wants the president to be held accountable in the most serious way,’ House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said of Trump in 2019 amid a discussion at the Commonwealth Club in San Francisco, underscoring that Democrats believe ‘no one is above the law.’ ‘And everybody believes, now I’m talking on the Democratic side, that no one is above the law, especially the president of the United States.’

‘We must be clear: no one, not even the president, is above the law,’ Rep. Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y., said in a statement in 2019 when introducing articles of impeachment against Trump. 

Upon his victory over the Harris–Walz presidential ticket in 2024, Trump has taken a victory lap for allegedly snuffing out the weaponization of government. 

‘We have ended weaponized government, where, as an example, a sitting president is allowed to viciously prosecute his political opponent, like me. How did that work out?’ he said during his joint address to Congress in 2025. ‘Not too good. Not too good.’ 

Trump added in his Monday Truth Social post that ‘Minnesota’s Corrupt Governor will possibly leave office before his Term is up,’ and that he’s confident the fraud investigations ‘will reveal a seriously unscrupulous, and rich, group of ‘SLIMEBALLS.”

White House spokeswoman Abigail Jackson added in comment to Fox Digital on Monday afternoon when asked about the Truth Social post: ‘It shouldn’t take an education from the Quality Learing Center for Democrats to understand this: Tim Walz and his Somali friends have been caught ripping off hardworking Minnesota taxpayers and now they will face the consequences. President Trump is right, no one is above the law.’

Walz has taken ownership of correcting the fraud. He said his administration had been taking action to stop some suspected fraudulent payments over the summer and that his office referred some for prosecution. The governor, however, has said that multibillion figures were ‘sensationalized’ by Republicans.

‘This is on my watch, I am accountable for this and, more importantly, I am the one that will fix it,’ Walz told reporters in December. 

Fox Digital reached out to Walz’s office for a response to Trump’s Truth Social but did not immediately receive a reply. 

Fox News Digital’s Amanda Macias contributed to this report. 

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A Florida Republican is arguing that Democrats’ largely negative response to the U.S. government’s operation in Venezuela is the ‘definition of Trump Derangement Syndrome.’

Rep. Mike Haridopolos, R-Fla., represents a part of Florida that includes a significant chunk of the state’s central coastline.

‘It doesn’t take much research to find speech after speech of Democrat House members and Senate members who said that this guy is a bad guy, he should be taken out of power,’ Haridopolos told Fox News Digital.

‘Sometimes in politics, you’ve just got to say to the other side, politically, ‘Hey, we’re all Americans. This is in the best interest, clearly, of the United States.’ But they’re in a position where they’re so afraid of a Democrat primary that they will say anything to avoid having the extreme left attack them.’

He pointed out that it was the previous Democratic commander-in-chief, President Joe Biden, who raised the federal government’s bounty for Maduro’s capture to $25 million.

‘What did they expect was then going to happen? You think this guy was just going to voluntarily give up? He clearly was not. He was getting into bed with the Cubans, the Russians, the Chinese, the Iranians, even Hezbollah, as I understand. I mean, this guy was trying to create a group of enemies in an oil-rich state at our footstep,’ Haridopolos said.

Democrats and Republicans have been largely divided in their responses to the strikes in Venezuela.

Lawmakers on the left have mostly criticized the president and his officials, accusing them of illegal actions that ran afoul of the U.S. Constitution. Some progressives have even said Trump could be guilty of impeachable offenses.

The majority of GOP lawmakers praised Trump’s move as a necessary law enforcement action to get rid of a hostile actor threatening both the U.S. and the region writ large.

Haridopolos is no different, pointing out that the operation was carried out with no U.S. fatalities and relatively few among Maduro supporters in Venezuela.

He said his district is home to a number of Venezuelan refugees who were elated by President Donald Trump’s decision to strike Caracas and capture Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro.

‘I have a large population of Venezuelans within my community, and they are absolutely overjoyed,’ the congressman said. ‘They were in essence kicked out of their own country or fled through fear … because they lost their ability to make a living, or they were being terrorized by the government because they were anti-Maduro.’

Following the U.S. strikes, Maduro and his wife were both taken to New York City, where they will be prosecuted by the U.S. Attorney’s Office in the Southern District of New York.

Maduro pleaded not guilty during his first court appearance on Monday.

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