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Less than a year after being fired, former FEMA chief is set to be reinstalled by Trump

Kraig Pakulski 0 12 Article rating: No rating

By Gabe Cohen, CNN

(CNN) — President Donald Trump plans to nominate Cameron Hamilton to lead FEMA less than a year after he was unceremoniously fired from the disaster relief agency, three people familiar with the decision told CNN.

Hamilton was first tapped to lead the Federal Emergency Management Agency at the start of Trump’s second term – when the administration was aggressively pursuing plans to eliminate the agency and shift responsibility for disaster response to the states.

But Hamilton soon clashed with then-Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and Corey Lewandowski, the longtime Trump ally helping her run the department, which oversees FEMA. Lewandowski, in particular, believed Hamilton wasn’t moving quickly or forcefully enough, according to sources familiar with the situation.

Hamilton, meanwhile, increasingly balked at the plan to scrap the agency, arguing that while FEMA needed major reforms, preserving it was ultimately in the public’s best interest.

“We have no personnel matters to announce at this time,” a FEMA spokesperson told CNN. The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

A former Navy SEAL who ran a failed bid for Congress in 2024, Hamilton had limited experience managing natural disasters before his first stint at FEMA last year.

He learned he might be fired last May, just hours before he was scheduled to testify on Capitol Hill. Hamilton testified anyway — and, with his potential firing looming, publicly broke with the administration’s stance on FEMA’s future.

“As the senior advisor to the president on disasters and emergency management, and to the secretary of homeland security, I do not believe it is in the best interest the American people to eliminate the Federal Emergency Management Agency,” Hamilton told the committee last year.

Hamilton’s expected return to FEMA highlights a sharp shift in the administration’s posture toward the agency under Noem’s successor, Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin.

Mullin’s team has begun rolling back several Noem-era policies and cuts, while striking a different tone — praising FEMA’s work even as he pushes to cut red tape and speed disaster aid to communities.

Trump was the first to say FEMA should “go away,” floating the idea just days into his presidency and later saying the administration would phase out the agency after last year’s hurricane season.

But Noem’s aggressive overhaul — which hollowed out senior leadership, cut roughly 30% of the workforce, cratered morale and helped create a multibillion-dollar backlog in disaster funding — triggered backlash from state and local officials nationwide, as well as prominent Republican lawmakers.

Now, the administration appears to be pulling back from its most sweeping plans, even as FEMA awaits a final report from the FEMA Review Council, a task force Trump created early in his presidency to overhaul the agency.

Trump is yet to nominate a FEMA administrator during his second term.

Instead, DHS has cycled through three acting leaders over the past year, including Hamilton.

Escorted from the agency

Hamilton’s first tenure was marked by dramatic moments.

In the month before his firing, news leaked about a closed-door policy meeting that included Hamilton about FEMA’s future, including discussions of how the agency could be dismantled. Days later, DHS leaders ordered him to take a lie detector test.

Then, just hours before he was to testify at the congressional hearing, Hamilton was mistakenly tipp

El FMI reanuda sus relaciones con Venezuela tras siete años de suspensión

Kraig Pakulski 0 14 Article rating: No rating

Por EFE

El Fondo Monetario Internacional (FMI) anunció este jueves la reanudación de sus relaciones con Venezuela bajo el Gobierno de la presidenta interina, Delcy Rodríguez, tras haberlas suspendido en 2019 por cuestiones de “reconocimiento del Gobierno”, según informó la directora gerente Kristalina Georgieva.

El FMI anunció este jueves en Washington la reanudación de sus relaciones con Venezuela, una decisión adoptada en consonancia con “las opiniones de los miembros del Fondo Monetario Internacional que representan la mayoría del poder de voto total del FMI”, según el comunicado oficial difundido por el organismo.

La decisión sucede durante las Reuniones de Primavera del FMI y el Banco Mundial que iniciaron el 13 de abril y concluirán el sábado.

Además, la reanudación llega en un momento en el que Caracas ha retomado sus relaciones diplomáticas con Estados Unidos, desde la captura de Nicolás Maduro el pasado 3 de enero y el visto bueno que Rodríguez recibió al aceptar las condiciones económicas y petroleras de Trump y que se han materializado en varias leyes aprobadas en Venezuela para permitir la inversión extranjera en petróleo y minería.

El Fondo recordó además que Venezuela es miembro de la institución desde 1946, pero que las relaciones con el país habían sido suspendidas en marzo de 2019, cuando el organismo decidió pausar sus contactos “debido a cuestiones de reconocimiento del gobierno”.

Venezuela atravesó una dura crisis política ese año, cuando Maduro asumió un nuevo mandato que la oposición consideró ilegítimo, llevando a la autoproclamación de Juan Guaidó como presidente encargado, que fue reconocido por decenas de países alrededor del mundo.

The-CNN-Wire
™ & © 2026 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.

The post El FMI reanuda sus relaciones con Venezuela tras siete años de suspensión appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

Trump’s arch gets overwhelmingly negative public feedback but appears poised to move forward

Kraig Pakulski 0 15 Article rating: No rating


CNN

By Betsy Klein, Kaanita Iyer, CNN

(CNN) — President Donald Trump’s proposed triumphal arch project received overwhelmingly negative feedback from preservationist groups and members of the public as plans for the massive structure were presented on Thursday to a key committee for the first time.

But the Commission of Fine Arts still appears poised to approve the project and took a preliminary vote to move ahead with the process. The independent federal agency, which has been stacked with Trump loyalists, advises the president and Congress on design plans for monuments, memorials, coins and federal buildings.

Trump has been deeply involved in the project to build an arch as he takes significant steps to impose his style and taste on the nation’s capital during his second term. He has already added his name to the Kennedy Center and the US Institute of Peace and is overseeing a major ballroom addition to the White House complex.

“This is personal for the president,” Commission of Fine Arts Chairman Rodney Mims Cook, Jr., said at the meeting.

In a sign of its importance to the president, Interior Secretary Doug Burgum unveiled renderings for the 250-foot arch, which would be 165-feet tall and 165-feet wide, with a 25-foot pedestal and a massive 60-foot gilt bronze Lady Liberty sculpture on top, boasting that it would “strengthen the city’s symbolic architectural vocabulary.”

The president has said he wants it to be the biggest arch in the world, modeled after Paris’ Arc de Triomphe — but larger. It would be the equivalent of a 16- to 20-story building, taller than the White House, the Lincoln Memorial and the US Capitol building. The project is already facing a legal challenge from a Vietnam War veterans’ group related to its scale and obstruction of the view of the Arlington National Cemetery.

After the arch presentation from Burgum and lead designer Nicholas Charbonneau, the commission heard broad concerns about the project’s scale, design and placement. It has been pictured in the proposal to sit on a traffic circle between the Arlington National Cemetery’s entrance and the Lincoln Memorial.

“We had just under 1,000 commenters. It’s saying that 100% of the comments were against the project,” Commission Secretary Thomas Luebke said.

Luebke read one letter from an unnamed individual that warned the project “would be profoundly out of scale with its surroundings” and “appears to disregard established norms that prioritize harmony with existing structures, preservation of sight lines and respect for the symbolic hierarchy of the capitals and landmarks.” The arch, the individual added, would set a “troubling precedent.”

Zachary Burt, community outreach and grants manager for the DC Preservation League, shared “serious concerns and strong opposition” to the project, particularly the arch’s proposed placement. The arch would sit atop a traffic circle on Columbia Island, a man-made strip of land between the Lincoln Memorial and Arlington House, which was once home to Confederate leader Robert E. Lee and is now a centerpiece of Arlington National Cemetery.

The “visual connection” between those historic places, Burt said, “is not just a simple view. It … symbolizes the sacrifices our nation has made in pursuit of its highest ideal. The proposal for a 250-foot-tall tri

Trump’s arch gets overwhelmingly negative public feedback but appears poised to move forward

Kraig Pakulski 0 17 Article rating: No rating
This rendering shows the design for President Donald Trump’s proposed “Triumphal Arch” in Washington


CNN

By Betsy Klein, Kaanita Iyer, CNN

(CNN) — President Donald Trump’s proposed triumphal arch project received overwhelmingly negative feedback from preservationist groups and members of the public as plans for the massive structure were presented on Thursday to a key committee for the first time.

But the Commission of Fine Arts still appears poised to approve the project and took a preliminary vote to move ahead with the process. The independent federal agency, which has been stacked with Trump loyalists, advises the president and Congress on design plans for monuments, memorials, coins and federal buildings.

Trump has been deeply involved in the project to build an arch as he takes significant steps to impose his style and taste on the nation’s capital during his second term. He has already added his name to the Kennedy Center and the US Institute of Peace and is overseeing a major ballroom addition to the White House complex.

“This is personal for the president,” Commission of Fine Arts Chairman Rodney Mims Cook, Jr., said at the meeting.

In a sign of its importance to the president, Interior Secretary Doug Burgum unveiled renderings for the 250-foot arch, which would be 165-feet tall and 165-feet wide, with a 25-foot pedestal and a massive 60-foot gilt bronze Lady Liberty sculpture on top, boasting that it would “strengthen the city’s symbolic architectural vocabulary.”

The president has said he wants it to be the biggest arch in the world, modeled after Paris’ Arc de Triomphe — but larger. It would be the equivalent of a 16- to 20-story building, taller than the White House, the Lincoln Memorial and the US Capitol building. The project is already facing a legal challenge from a Vietnam War veterans’ group related to its scale and obstruction of the view of the Arlington National Cemetery.

After the arch presentation from Burgum and lead designer Nicholas Charbonneau, the commission heard broad concerns about the project’s scale, design and placement. It has been pictured in the proposal to sit on a traffic circle between the Arlington National Cemetery’s entrance and the Lincoln Memorial.

“We had just under 1,000 commenters. It’s saying that 100% of the comments were against the project,” Commission Secretary Thomas Luebke said.

Luebke read one letter from an unnamed individual that warned the project “would be profoundly out of scale with its surroundings” and “appears to disregard established norms that prioritize harmony with existing structures, preservation of sight lines and respect for the symbolic hierarchy of the capitals and landmarks.” The arch, the individual added, would set a “troubling precedent.”

Zachary Burt, community outreach and grants manager for the DC Preservation League, shared “serious concerns and strong opposition” to the project, particularly the arch’s proposed placement. The arch would sit atop

Los cuatro entrenadores que van por la Champions y la curiosidad que comparten con Guardiola tres de ellos

Kraig Pakulski 0 14 Article rating: No rating

Por Edgar Aviles, CNN en Español

Las semifinales de la UEFA Champions League 2025/2026 ya están definidas. Y si bien hubo suspenso en casi todas las series, no hubo sorpresas: clasificaron los cuatro equipos que habían ganado el juego de ida.

Una de las semifinales tendrá lo que para muchos es una final adelantada, entre el Paris Saint-Germain, vigente campeón del torneo, y el Bayern Munich, uno de los equipos que mejor están jugando en la actualidad. En el otro cruce, el Atlético de Madrid, que eliminó a uno de los favoritos, el FC Barcelona, se enfrentará al Arsenal, que a pesar de haber sido el mejor de la fase de liga (ocho victorias en ocho partidos) sufrió de más para dejar en el camino al Sporting CP de Portugal.

De los cuatro directores técnicos que alcanzaron las semifinales, hay dos que cuentan con una larga experiencia en este torneo.

Uno de ellos es el español Luis Enrique, quien ya ganó dos títulos con dos clubes distintos, el FC Barcelona y el PSG, además de los dos tripletes y otro sinfín de campeonatos que guarda en su vitrina.

El otro es el argentino Diego Simeone, quien, si bien nunca ha sido campeón de la Champions League, ya fue dos veces finalista. Sí ha levantado trofeos: LaLiga, la Copa del Rey, la Supercopa de España, la Europa League y hasta la Supercopa de la UEFA.

Los otros dos entrenadores ya tienen cierto recorrido en la competición, pero no cuentan con el bagaje de Luis Enrique y Simeone. Uno es el belga Vincent Kompany, quien ya presume en su currículum un título de liga con el Bayern Munich, y el otro es Mikel Arteta, quien ha levantado con el Arsenal una FA Cup y dos títulos de la Community Shield.

Un dato curioso del cuarteto de DT que va por la “Orejona” es que tres de ellos han compartido vestuario con Josep Guardiola durante la carrera como futbolista o como entrenador del español. Luis Enrique fue compañero de “Pep” en el FC Barcelona durante la etapa de ambos como futbolistas, mientras que Vincent Kompany fue dirigido por él en su paso por el Manchester City y Mikel Arteta fue su asistente en el club inglés.

En el estilo de juego y la forma de concebir el fútbol, Luis Enrique es el más parecido a Guardiola, mientras que Arteta posee un estilo más apegado a la visión de Simeone. Kompany, por su parte, cuenta con un estilo mixto entre lo que propone el entrenador del Paris Saint-Germain y lo que busca el “Cholo”.

The-CNN-Wire
™ & © 2026 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.

The post Los cuatro entrenadores que van por la Champions y la curiosidad que comparten con Guardiola tres de ellos appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

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