North Carolina governor vetoes anti-DEI and transgender rights bills, calling them 'mean-spirited'New Foto - North Carolina governor vetoes anti-DEI and transgender rights bills, calling them 'mean-spirited'

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — North Carolina Democratic Gov. Josh Stein vetoed on Thursday threeanti-DEI billsand another measure that in part would targettransgender rights. His actions set up more showdowns with Republican lawmakers who pitch the legislation as doing away with structured racial bias in government and public education, protecting women and empowering parents. Stein criticized the Republican-controlled legislature for focusing on these measures while they've yet to enact a budget for the fiscal year that started this week. Instead, Stein said in a news release, it "wants to distract us by stoking culture wars that further divide us. These mean-spirited bills would marginalize vulnerable people and also undermine the quality of public services and public education." The measures cutting or eliminating diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives in state and local governments, K-12 public schools and the university system have been a major priority for GOP lawmakers. They argue the programs targeted have overemphasized identity to the detriment of merit and societal unity. The other vetoed bill initially ran as a bipartisan measure curbing sexual exploitation of women and minors by implementing age verification and consent requirements for people who appear on pornography websites. But the final measure was loaded up with several contentious provisions. One would prevent state-funded gender transition procedures or gender-affirming hormone therapy for prisoners. It also affirms the recognition of two sexes and requires the state to officially attach a transgender person's new birth certificate to their old one if they change their sex assigned at birth. The bills align withPresident Donald Trump's agenda todismantle DEI practicesandpress against transgender rights.The legislation is now back at the General Assembly, which could return from a recess later this month to attempt veto overrides and advance other legislation. Republicans are one House seat short of a veto-proof majority. No Democrats voted for the final three anti-DEI measures. However, one House Democrat did vote for the other vetoed bill. By vetoing that measure, House Speaker Destin Hall said in a release, Stein "has sided with radical activists over the overwhelming majority of North Carolinians who believe in parental rights, biological reality, and protecting women and children." The bill also would order local school districts to adopt policies so parents can ask that their child be excused from activities or readings that would "impose a substantial burden on the student's religious beliefs." Stein said in a veto message that he strongly supported the sexual exploitation provisions in the bill, but the final measure went too far. "My faith teaches me that we are all children of God, no matter our differences, and that it is wrong to target vulnerable people, as this bill does," he added. As for the anti-DEI measures, one bill would ban training, staff positions and hiring decisions that incorporate DEI in state agencies. The legislation also would outlaw those agencies or local governments from using state funds for DEI programs. Workers who violate the law could face civil penalties and litigation. The two other bills would bar "divisive concepts" and "discriminatory practices" across public education statewide. A Stein veto message said the bill addressing state and local governments in part "is riddled with vague definitions yet imposes extreme penalties for unknowable violations." As for the education measures, Stein wrote, "we should not whitewash history" and "should ensure our students learn from diverse perspectives and form their own opinions." Stein has now vetoed 11 measures since taking office in January — all of them in the past two weeks. Of the eight bills he signed Friday, one will block certain abuse and neglect charges for parents or caregivers raising transgender children "consistent with the juvenile's biological sex." The bill also says that adoption agencies can't be permitted to deny someone from adopting a child because of their unwillingness to allow the child to transition. Bill sponsors said the restrictions were needed to allow parents and guardians to raise children in line with their family values. But opponents said the measure would harm transgender children and intrude in family matters already governed by other laws. Nine House Democrats voted for the final bill. Stein's office didn't immediately respond Friday to a request for comment.

North Carolina governor vetoes anti-DEI and transgender rights bills, calling them 'mean-spirited'

North Carolina governor vetoes anti-DEI and transgender rights bills, calling them 'mean-spirited' RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — North Caroli...
Trump holds call with Putin after pausing some weapons transfers to UkraineNew Foto - Trump holds call with Putin after pausing some weapons transfers to Ukraine

WASHINGTON — PresidentDonald Trumpsaid he would hold a call with Russian PresidentVladimir Putina day after the U.S. said it would pause the delivery ofsome weaponsto Ukraine as the Pentagon conducts a review of its munition stockpiles. Trump announced the call with Putin in a Truth Social post. A White House official said a call was not scheduled to take place on July 3 with Ukraine's presidentVolodymyr Zelenskyy. Putin is 'misguided' Trump says:Trump says Putin is 'difficult' on Ukraine war, calls Russian leader 'misguided' The U.S. president met with Zelenskyy behind closed doors at the end of last month during a NATO Summit in The Hague. He acknowledged at a news conference after that Putin had been "more difficult"to negotiate with than he once thought. He noted that he'dalso had "some problems"with Zelenskyy. "I consider him a person that's, I think, has been misguided," Trump said of Putin. "I'm very surprised, actually, I thought we would have had that settled easy." He spent an hour on the phone with Putin on June 14. The conversation that fellon Trump's birthdaywas mainly about the conflict with Iran over it's nuclear program, the U.S. president said at the time. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Trump holds call with Putin after pausing some weapons transfers to Ukraine

Trump holds call with Putin after pausing some weapons transfers to Ukraine

Trump holds call with Putin after pausing some weapons transfers to Ukraine WASHINGTON — PresidentDonald Trumpsaid he would hold a call with...
A slider, a milestone and a heartfelt thank you: Kershaw's 3,000th strikeoutNew Foto - A slider, a milestone and a heartfelt thank you: Kershaw's 3,000th strikeout

Clayton Kershawwas laboring in pursuit of his 3,000th strikeout. His pitch count soaring, he was down to the last batter he would face, needing one more swing and miss to become the 20th pitcher to reach the milestone. "It's a little bit harder when you're actually trying to strike people out," he said, smiling. "I never really had to do that before." Kershaw accomplished the feat when Vinny Capra of the Chicago White Sox took a slider for a called third strike for the final out of the sixth inning on Wednesday night. "I made it interesting. Made it take too long," Kershaw said. "Honestly, I didn't pitch that great tonight. The slider was so bad." In his 18th season in Los Angeles, Kershaw joined Walter Johnson of the Washington Senators and Bob Gibson of the St. Louis Cardinals as the only pitchers with 3,000 or more strikeouts all for one team. Freddie Freeman capped a three-run ninth by singling in Shohei Ohtani,giving the Dodgers a 5-4 win. Kershaw didn't get a decision. The sellout crowd of 53,536 was on its feet roaring as the 37-year-old left-hander walked off the mound to end the sixth. Kershaw paused and doffed his cap, with teammates briefly holding off hugging him to allow him to soak in the cheers. Kershaw waved to his wife Ellen and four children in the stands and then patted his chest and mouthed, "Thank you." "I feel bad for Ellen. I know she was nervous," he said. "I made her last six innings out there just stressed out that I wasn't going to get it and have to go to Milwaukee to do it." Kershaw shared a clubhouse toast with his teammates, coaches, training staff and front office executives. "Just super thankful for tonight, super thankful for my teammates," he said. "I told my teammates individual awards are great, but if you don't have anybody to celebrate with it doesn't matter." The game was delayed for nearly six minutes between pitches, a gap that included a tribute video. Kershaw joined Justin Verlander of San Francisco (3,468) and Max Scherzer of Toronto (3,412) as the only active pitchers with that many. Kershaw is just the fourth left-hander in the club. "It's an incredible list," he said. "It's special to finally be in that group." Capra, hitting ninth, was retired on four pitches, with plate umpire Jim Wolf calling the third strike on a slider, Kershaw's season-high 100th pitch of the night. Wolf is the brother of retired pitcher Randy Wolf, once a teammate of Kershaw's. "I wanted it to come easy," Kershaw said. "I would much rather have got it done in the first." Manager Dave Roberts had said before the game that he would manage the three-time Cy Young Award winner differently with the milestone within reach. That was apparent when Kershaw jogged out for the sixth to an ovation, having already tossed a season-high 92 pitches with just two strikeouts. He came into the game needing three to make history. "I was going to give him every opportunity to do it at home," Roberts said. "You could see the emotion he had trying to get that third strike. It just happened the way it was supposed to happen." Kershaw retired Lenyn Sosa on three pitches for No. 2,999 in the fifth. Sosa fouled off Kershaw's first two pitches before ending the inning by striking out on a 72 mph curveball. In the third, Miguel Vargas took called strikes on his first two pitches before he swung and missed on another 72 mph curveball from his former Dodgers teammate. Chicago swung aggressively against Kershaw, who gave up a two-run homer to Austin Slater and two more runs as the White Sox led 4-2 after six innings. "You could just feel it. They wanted it for me so bad," he said of the crowd. "You could feel the tension. They were trying to will me to do it." Kershaw made history one batter after Dodgers third basemanMax Muncy was injuredin tagging out Michael A. Taylor on a steal attempt. Muncy had to be helped off the field, barely able to put any weight on his left leg. Kershaw has provided much-needed stability for the Dodgers' pitching staff, which has been decimated by injuries. "It's just again a reminder for me, for anyone, to never bet against that guy," Roberts said before the game. "It doesn't matter – health, stuff – he's going to will himself to doing whatever the team needs." Kershaw allowed five runs over four innings in his first start after returning from knee and foot surgeries last offseason. Since then, he has held opposing batters to a .222 average. "The first three months of the season, we've needed some length from the starter," Roberts said. "Once he kind of got his footing after the first few, he's done everything and more that we've needed. That doesn't go unnoticed." In his prime from 2010-15, Kershaw led the National League in ERA five times, in strikeouts three times and wins twice. Kershaw had one of the best seasons ever in 2014, when he finished with a 21-3 record, 1.77 ERA and 233 strikeouts to win both the Cy Young and Most Valuable Player in the National League. Age and less dominant stuff has changed the way Kershaw does his job. He knows his consistency isn't the same but with the depth of the team's staff, he doesn't need to be perfect every outing. Kershaw no longer overpowers hitters the way he did during the height of his career, but he remains stubbornly determined and possesses a craftiness honed over two decades as well as a slider that still can fool. "I've seen him grow more than any player," Roberts said. "Hasn't lost the compete, but I think that the world is not as black and white as he used to see it. I think that his edges are softer, I think that fatherhood, Father Time, does that to a person." For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

A slider, a milestone and a heartfelt thank you: Kershaw’s 3,000th strikeout

A slider, a milestone and a heartfelt thank you: Kershaw's 3,000th strikeout Clayton Kershawwas laboring in pursuit of his 3,000th strik...
Guardians pitcher Luis Ortiz under MLB investigation for gambling, placed on leaveNew Foto - Guardians pitcher Luis Ortiz under MLB investigation for gambling, placed on leave

Cleveland GuardianspitcherLuis Ortizwas placed on leave and is under Major League Baseball investigation for gambling, according to a person with knowledge of the situation. The person spoke to USA TODAY Sports on the condition of anonymity due to the ongoing investigation. Ortiz was originally scheduled to pitch Thursday, June 3 against the Cubs, the same day the league and club announced the investigation and his leave. The league did not specify what the investigation was about, but said in a statement Ortiz "has been placed on non-disciplinary paid leave through the end of the All-Star break." TheGuardians also issued a statementdeclining to comment on specifics, saying only the club "will respect the league's confidential investigative process." Ortiz, 26, is in his first season with the Guardians after being acquired from the Pittsburgh Pirates over the winter. In 16 starts with Cleveland, Ortiz has a 4-9 record and 4.36 ERA. The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fast.Download for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Luis Ortiz MLB gambling investigation: Guardians pitcher on leave

Guardians pitcher Luis Ortiz under MLB investigation for gambling, placed on leave

Guardians pitcher Luis Ortiz under MLB investigation for gambling, placed on leave Cleveland GuardianspitcherLuis Ortizwas placed on leave a...
Trump speaks with GOP holdouts blocking his megabill in early-morning callNew Foto - Trump speaks with GOP holdouts blocking his megabill in early-morning call

President Trump spoke on the phone with a handful of Republican lawmakers blocking his "big, beautiful bill" in the early hours of Thursday morning, The Hill has learned, as GOP leaders race to coalesce the conference around the sprawling package. The phone call — which took place around 1 a.m. as holdouts huddled in a room off the House floor — came as a key procedural vote for the megabill remained open for almost four hours, with hardline conservatives and one moderate Republicanhampering the legislation from movingforward. As of 2 a.m. on Thursday, the vote was 207 to 217, with five Republicans having voted "no" and eight withholding their support. The combination has threatened to tank the rule, since Democrats are united against it, and a vote on the final package can't proceed without that rule. Trump spoke to some of those holdouts, including Reps. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.), Victoria Spartz (R-Ind.) and Tim Burchett (R-Tenn.), who were seen entering the room shortly before the call began. Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) and House Majority Leader Steve Scalise (R-La.) were seen leaving the room after the call. Massie and Spartz voted against the rule, while Burchett had been withholding support. Massie initially voted to adopt the rule, before switching his vote to "no." During the conversation, Massie — who has been at odds with Trump over the megabill for weeks — suggested he was ready to drop his opposition and support the rule if Trump stops attacking him, The Hill has learned. Trump and those in his orbit have gone after Massie in recent months after the Kentucky Republican voted against the House version of the megabill in May, and said the president's strikes on three Iranian nuclear facilities were "not Constitutional." A Trump-aligned super PAC, led by the president's 2024 co-campaign manager, has rolled out ads bashing Massie as those in Trump world vow a primary challenger. Live updates: Republicans hold open critical vote on Trump megabill in dramatic scene Trump also tore into Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.), who voted against the megabill in the upper chamber earlier this week, and as the discussion touched on Paul, Trump said Massie was a better politician. During an interview with Fox News's Sean Hannity late Wednesday night, Johnson said Trump was willing to speak to Republican holdouts. "He has been, in fact, he called me most recently about an hour ago and said who else needs to have a discussion, I'm ready to get on the phone. And I said, 'Mr. President, you've done your job and we'll do ours here,'" Johnson told Hannity. The president had also fired off a series of late-night Truth Social posts, urging the GOP holdouts to drop their opposition to a procedural rule needed to advance the core of his domestic agenda, including tax cuts, tougher immigration rules and a boost in energy production. Rather than gaveling the vote closed, Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) has opted to leave it open as he and his leadership team race to convince the holdouts to support the rule. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. For the latest news, weather, sports, and streaming video, head to The Hill.

Trump speaks with GOP holdouts blocking his megabill in early-morning call

Trump speaks with GOP holdouts blocking his megabill in early-morning call President Trump spoke on the phone with a handful of Republican l...

 

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