New York Democratic Rep. Jerry Nadler says he won't run for reelection in 2026New Foto - New York Democratic Rep. Jerry Nadler says he won't run for reelection in 2026

WASHINGTON (AP) — Democratic Rep.Jerry Nadlerof New York says he will not run for reelection next year, according to an interview published Monday night by The New York Times. Nadler told the Times that watching then-President Joe Biden's truncated reelection campaign last year "really said something about the necessity for generational change in the party, and I think I want to respect that." He suggested a younger Democratic lawmaker in his seat "can maybe do better, can maybe help us more." Nadler, 78, is serving his 17th term in Congress. He was chairman of the House Judiciary Committee from 2019 to 2023, then served as ranking member on the panel after Republicans won House leadership. He stepped down from that role late last year. Nadler'sdecision to relinquish that spotcame a day after fellow Democratic Rep.Jamie Raskinannounced his bid for the job and quickly amassed support from colleagues. "I am also proud that, under my leadership, some of our caucus's most talented rising stars have been given a platform to demonstrate their leadership and their abilities," Nadler wrote then in a letter to Democrats that was obtained by The Associated Press. Without naming names, Nadler suggested to the Times that some of his Democratic colleagues should also consider retirement. "I'm not saying we should change over the entire party," Nadler said in the interview posted Monday. "But I think a certain amount of change is very helpful, especially when we face the challenge of (PresidentDonald) Trump and his incipient fascism."

New York Democratic Rep. Jerry Nadler says he won't run for reelection in 2026

New York Democratic Rep. Jerry Nadler says he won't run for reelection in 2026 WASHINGTON (AP) — Democratic Rep.Jerry Nadlerof New York ...
Opinion - Congress must immediately restore the union rights of federal employeesNew Foto - Opinion - Congress must immediately restore the union rights of federal employees

We celebrate Labor Day this year under the shadow of one of the greatest ongoing attacks on union rights in this nation's history. In March, President Trump signed anexecutive orderintended to strip nearly 1 million federal employees of their union rights at multiple agencies. Over the last month, the Trump administration has started to implement the president's union-busting executive order by unilaterally and unlawfullyterminatingunion contractsat the Environmental Protection Agency, Federal Emergency Management Agency, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services and the Department of Veterans Affairs. Union rights provide federal employees a way to improve their workplaces and report wrongdoing. The loss of union rights, therefore, not only impacts federal employees, but also the American people, who depend on the federal government and the services it provides. That is why, on this Labor Day, we are calling on Congress to immediately pass the Protect America's Workforce Act. TheProtect America's Workforce Actis bipartisan legislation introduced by Reps. Brian Fitzpatrick (R-Pa.) and Jared Golden (D-Maine) and cosponsored by 222 members of Congress. It restores the collective bargaining rights of the union federal employees impacted by President Trump's attempted union-busting. It has the majority support needed to pass if it came to the House floor for a vote today. Members of Congress on both sides of the aisle back the Protect America's Workforce Act because they know that employees with a voice in their workplace have higher morale and are able to better serve the American people. In fact, Republicans supporting the billwrote toPresident Trump emphasizing that collective bargaining in the federal government plays a positive role by providing a structured way for employees and management to communicate and address workplace concerns. Specifically, through collective bargaining, federal employees are able to offer expertise and experience that improves processes, reduces waste and generates efficiencies. Officers at the Transportation Security Administration have beenable to negotiatefor policies that provide for better work-life balance and expanded benefits that have helped performance and retention at the agency. Additionally, collective bargaining at the Department of Veterans Affairs led toan improved promotion process, which is important to ensuring the agency can retain talented staff. At the Social Security Administration, union members secured more time for employeesto attend and complete trainingthat helps them perform their responsibilities more effectively. Union rights also provide federal employees with a voice and protections that allows them to push back against politically motivated requests to compromise professional standards or ignore facts without putting their jobs at risk. For example, EPA staffsecuredscientific integrity provisions and whistleblower protections in their union contract to ensure federal scientists cannot be pressured to alter climate data to align with political agendas. FEMA employees, who support communities that have suffered from natural disasters,negotiated for the rightto refuse unlawful orders. If federal employees' union rights are not restored, we can expect to see a politicized civil service that puts politicians and special interests ahead of the American people. This means that the effectiveness of government services will suffer, which will result in worse outcomes for everyday Americans. Federal employeesfirst gainedcollective bargaining rights over a half-century ago and these rights were expanded over time as Republicans and Democrats realized the utility of having a structured process for federal workers to address workplace issues without disrupting government operations. Historically,presidents from both partieshave upheld federal employees' union rights. President Trump's efforts to eliminate the collective bargaining rights of federal employees are radical and wrong. The AFL-CIO Department for Professional Employees, where I am president, and our allies are determined to see the union rights of these federal employees restored. As Congress comes back from recess, they must prioritize passing the Protect America's Workforce Act. Federal employees go to work every day in service of this nation and the American people. Now Congress needs to go to work and do their job to ensure federal employees have the rights and protections they deserve. Jennifer Dorning is president of the Department for Professional Employees, AFL-CIO. 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.

Opinion - Congress must immediately restore the union rights of federal employees

Opinion - Congress must immediately restore the union rights of federal employees We celebrate Labor Day this year under the shadow of one o...
Sarkisian, Manning, preseason No. 1 Texas under microscope after 14-7 loss to Ohio State in openerNew Foto - Sarkisian, Manning, preseason No. 1 Texas under microscope after 14-7 loss to Ohio State in opener

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — Arch Manning and Steve Sarkisian have shared a spotlight, the prodigy quarterback from football's royal family and the coach often complimented for his tutelage of players at that position along with his prowess at designing offense. Now both men are under a microscope after No. 1 Texas' inability to generate sufficient offense during a 14-7 season-opening loss at No. 3 Ohio State on Saturday. Manning, the sophomore grandson of Archie and nephew of Peyton and Eli, made his first start against an elite opponent after taking a redshirt season as a freshman and serving as backup to Quinn Ewers in 2024. Manning completed 10 of 17 passes for 170 yards with a touchdown, an interception and sometimes a look of befuddlement. Manning completed 67.8% of his passes filling in for Ewers. But he wasn't ready to navigate a talented defense directed by Matt Patricia, a three-time Super Bowl winner with the New England Patriots, two of those seasons as defensive coordinator. "There wasn't much to like," Manning said on Monday. "I've got to play better for us to win." Sarkisian, meanwhile, has answered questions about not calling more short passes early in the game so Manning could establish a rhythm. The coach said he probably should have ordered some running plays for Manning before the second half. "I think I didn't call a quarterback run maybe until the start of the second quarter and then incorporated a few more into the second half when it presented itself," Sarkisian said Monday. "I think I could have incorporated that a little bit earlier, just for him to get that first hit out of the way." Manning missed some open receivers, throwing high, low and then behind Ryan Wingo on the Longhorns' final possession, an incompletion as the receiver crossed the middle on third-and-5 at midfield with two minutes left. Wingo had room to run had he caught the pass. In the third quarter, Manning released a pass from the left hashmark to the right sideline that was late and under thrown, resulting in an interception. Wingo was open on the play. Manning at times exhibited issues with mechanics. "There was a couple times where we had some crossing routes where I didn't feel like he brought his feet to where he wanted to throw the ball, which, in turn, forced kind of a little bit more of a side arm delivery, which isn't his style of throwing," Sarkisian said. "I think if he can get his feet aligned and get his shoulders aligned, that can help with some of his accuracy." Manning knows that as well. "You are always trying to get better each week, go back to square one, fundamentals," Manning said. "Obviously I've got to hit Ryan late in the game. I kind of looked back for him." Manning had some deft completions, but he said "there weren't enough good ones." Perhaps his best was a 30-yard completion to tight end Jack Endries along the left sideline with two defenders near him on Texas' final possession. Manning's touchdown pass, 32 yards to Parker Livingstone with 3:28 left in the game, was well thrown. "I think Arch in the second half, I thought we started to see the glimpses of what he's capable of," Sarkisian said. Texas rushed for a 166 yards and an average of 4.5 yards a carry, a strong effort against a top-notch defense. But the Longhorns failed on four of five fourth-down plays, including Manning getting stuffed at the 1-yard line in the third quarter. That play evoked the Longhorns' final possession against Ohio State in a College Football Playoff semifinal game last season. Texas needed just one yard on four plays to tie the game but failed to score. Red zone scoring is an issue for the Longhorns, who ranked 100th nationally in that area last season. Penalties are another issue. They ranked No. 86 last season with 6.4 per game. Texas had six penalties against Ohio State, including two that helped facilitate Ohio State's first touchdown drive. "It wasn't so much the amount of penalties, it was the timing of the penalties," Sarkisian said. Texas gained 257 total yards in the second half, which encouraged Sarkisian, whose Longhorns host San Jose State on Saturday, "I was saying on Saturday, let's not judge this book by chapter one," Sarkisian said. "Let's read the whole book before we make an assessment, a judgment, on this passing game and on (Manning), on what this team can be as the season unfolds."

Sarkisian, Manning, preseason No. 1 Texas under microscope after 14-7 loss to Ohio State in opener

Sarkisian, Manning, preseason No. 1 Texas under microscope after 14-7 loss to Ohio State in opener AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — Arch Manning and Ste...
Can Cal Raleigh beat Aaron Judge for AL MVP?New Foto - Can Cal Raleigh beat Aaron Judge for AL MVP?

Neither Aaron Judge nor Cal Raleigh is losing sleep over the American League Most Valuable Player Award. The two superstars have much bigger fish to fry. Individual trophies, for players of this ilk, are nice, but Judge and Raleigh are certainly more fixated on shepherding their clubs into the postseason. Thankfully, the rest of us can still gawk and gab about how their spectacular seasons match up. After all, it has been quite a ride. As Raleigh was clubbing tater after tater during the season's first half, the joyous incredulity that caused was coupled with an understandable skepticism. "He can't possibly keep doing this," neutral ballfansmused to themselves.Judge, despite Raleigh's long-ball outburst, remained a similarly valuable player. And across the 162-game marathon (or so the thinking went), Judge would gradually pull away from Raleigh, with his superheroic offensive impact winning out over the long haul. That hasn't happened. [Join or create a Yahoo Fantasy Football league for the 2025 NFL season] Raleighhasn't stopped crushing big flies, with 50 entering the month of September. Judge, meanwhile,developed an elbow issue in late Julythat sent him to the injured list andhas precluded him from playing the field since his return. As a result, with four weeks remaining in the regular season, the AL MVP race is a coin flip. Entering play Monday, Raleigh has seven more home runs, the defensive advantage and the cooler nickname. Judge has something more boring yet just as alluring: better offensive numbers overall, with a .324 average and 1.117 OPS that both lead the sport. How the two contenders perform in September will determine the outcome in what is shaping up to be the most competitive MVP race, from a voting perspective, in quite a while. Let's dive in. Writers (like me) decide. Each of the 15 American League chapters of the Baseball Writers Association of America nominates two writers to vote on each AL award. Those voters mail in their ballots, marking off a top 10. Points are added up — 14 for a first-place vote, nine for a second-place vote, eight for third place — and a winner is determined. The past four MVPs (Judge and Shohei Ohtani in 2024, Ohtani and Ronald Acuña Jr. in '23) have all been unanimous. In fact, there hasn't been an MVP vote margin within 50 points since Mike Trout edged Alex Bregman by 20 points in 2019. The Judge-Raleigh showdown could be that close. The 185-point gap in OPS between Judge (first in MLB with 1.117) and Raleigh (fourth, .932) is nearly the same as the gap between Raleigh and Rockies outfielder Jordan Beck in 83rd (.763). Judge is not just the best hitter on the planet; he is multiple hemispheres above every other living being. That remains true despite his trailing Raleigh in home runs. The Yankees' captain currently leads all of MLB in batting average (.324) and slugging percentage (.674). If that sustains, Judge would be just the 11th player in MLB history to lead the league in both categories in the same season. In other words, if the MVP award were decided solely on offensive output, Judge would win in a landslide. Year Player Batting average Slugging % MVP finish 1948 Stan Musial .376 .702 1st 1956 Mickey Mantle .353 .705 1st 1957 Ted Williams .388 .731 2nd 1972 Billy Williams .333 .606 2nd 1980 George Brett .390 .664 1st 1999 Larry Walker .379 .710 10th 2000 Todd Helton .372 .698 5th 2002 Barry Bonds .370 .799 1st 2013 Miguel Cabrera .348 .636 1st 2018 Mookie Betts .346 .640 1st 2025 Aaron Judge .324 (on Sept. 1) .674 (on Sept. 1) ??? At the same time — and this is supreme levels of nitpicky — 2025 is undeniably Judge's third-best season. This campaign is squarely behind his home-run-record-breaking 2022 and last year's preposterous 1.159 OPS. This season, Judge is walking slightly less and striking out slightly more. His hard-hit rate and average exit velocity are down as well. To be clear, this is like whining about how the sand at your free Caribbean beach resort feels a bit too grainy between your toes. Judge remains dominant, but he has been, ever so slightly, a worse version of his incredible self in 2025. Will that matter to voters? Maybe. With a month's worth of games remaining on the MLB calendar, Raleigh has alreadybroken the single-season record for home runs by a catcher. On Aug. 24, his 49th jack pushed him past Salvador Pérez's 2021 season and into untrodden ground. That is not an accomplishment that should be taken lightly, particularly in this era of baseball. Throughout MLB history, catchers have never been responsible for so much. The job, physical and otherwise, has always been demanding, but the modern game necessitates that catchers be dialed in on game-planning more than ever before. One front-office person recently described catchers to me as a "tertiary position group." They are neither pitchers nor position players. They are something else entirely. Because of that dynamic, teams nowadays are willing to forgo offensive production from that position. Clubs prioritize skills such as calling games, framing pitches and controlling the running game. All those responsibilities mean less time before and during games to focus on hitting. Quite simply, Raleigh is juggling more — more than Judge, more than all the non-catchers in MLB and more than catchers in the past have ever had to handle. That makes his big-fly barrage all the more impressive. This is why LeBron James, despite being the undisputed best basketball player of the 21st century, has won "only" four MVP awards. Sustained brilliance, to our dopamine-hungry brains, can grow stale. There's evidence across all pro sports that award voters tire of celebrating the same performances year after year after year. And thus far this season, the narrative arc is squarely in Raleigh's favor. He's a breakout star, fresh off his first career All-Star Game, and he has never finished higher than 12th in MVP voting. His victory in the Home Run Derby in Atlanta solidified him as one of the game's more prominent figures. The nickname about his voluptuous caboose helps, too. Raleigh's Mariners have a similar record as Judge's Yankees, but the preseason expectations in the Bronx for a team coming off a World Series were supersonic. The Yanks have not lived up to that hype; whether that will hurt Judge in MVP voting remains to be seen. If the Mariners make the playoffs or even win the division, that can only help Raleigh's case. Since they hit back-to-back for the American League in the All-Star Game, Judge and Raleigh have hit at a pretty similar clip (.222/.384/.481 for Judge vs. .197/.295/.454 for Raleigh), though Judge has had almost 40 fewer plate appearances because of his injury. While Raleigh has continued to crank homers — he has 12 since winning the Derby — the rest of his offensive game has slid a bit (1.011 OPS in the first half, .749 since the break). Some of that is bad batted-ball luck, but the Mariners' backstop is also rocking the seventh-highest strikeout rate in MLB since the break (31.8%). Meanwhile, Judge, who is playing through the elbow issue that makes him unable to throw without pain, homered just six times across 24 games in August. The point is this thing is still up for grabs. Raleigh's power burst opened the door to a real race, then Judge's injury kept it propped open. And because neither player has been at his best over the past six weeks, a hot September could swing the MVP fight in either direction.

Can Cal Raleigh beat Aaron Judge for AL MVP?

Can Cal Raleigh beat Aaron Judge for AL MVP? Neither Aaron Judge nor Cal Raleigh is losing sleep over the American League Most Valuable Play...
House committee withdraws Robert Mueller subpoena over health issuesNew Foto - House committee withdraws Robert Mueller subpoena over health issues

Washington —The House Oversight Committee has withdrawn a request for testimony from Robert Mueller about the case involving convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein due to new information on the former special counsel's health, a committee aide told CBS News. "We've learned that Mr. Mueller has health issues that preclude him from being able to testify. The Committee has withdrawn its subpoena," the aide said in a statement. Mueller, who led the investigation into Russian meddling in the 2016 presidential election and delivered the long-anticipated report in March 2019, served as director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation for 12 years. The New York TimesreportedSunday that the 81-year-old has Parkinson's disease, according to his family, who told the paper that he was diagnosed in 2021. The committeeissued the subpoenato Mueller last month amid a slew of subpoenas seeking depositions from former Justice Department officials, among others. Mueller served as FBI director from 2001 to 2013. "Because you were FBI Director during the time when Mr. Epstein was under investigation by the FBI, the Committee believes that you possess knowledge and information relevant to its investigation," committee chairman James Comer wrote in an Aug. 5letterto Mueller, directing him to appear for deposition on Sept. 2.The development comes as controversy has swirled around the Epstein files in recent months, following the Justice Department's issuing of the findings of an internal review, which found no "client list" or evidence that Epstein had blackmailed prominent figures. But the issue has spurred calls for greater transparency, while dividing President Trump's base. Late last month, the administration released transcripts of a two-day interview with Epstein's longtime associate, Ghislaine Maxwell. And the House Oversight Committee plans to make some files it received from the DOJ related to Epstein public after redactions have been made. "Portrait of a person who's not there": Documenting the bedrooms of school shooting victims Passage: In memoriam Dr. Sanjay Gupta on the mysteries of chronic pain

House committee withdraws Robert Mueller subpoena over health issues

House committee withdraws Robert Mueller subpoena over health issues Washington —The House Oversight Committee has withdrawn a request for t...

 

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