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A border district in Texas is flashing warning signs for Republicans in the midterms

Kraig Pakulski 0 17 Article rating: No rating

By John King, CNN

Brownsville, Texas (CNN) — Daisy Alcazar is a one-issue voter this midterm year: stopping Donald Trump.

“I don’t think we are going to survive if we don’t speak up this election,” Alcazar said. “We are on fire. We are being burned down to the floor. Our businesses. Our economy.”

Alcazar and her husband own La Pale, a traditional Mexican ice cream and fruit bar shop. They have a storefront in Brownsville and sell through a local grocery chain. “Our life savings are on the line,” she said.

Walk-in sales are down 50%. First, it was inflation’s toll on working families.

“The splurge money,” she said. “We are a luxury item right now.”

Then, the fear factor. Alcazar was one of several small-business owners who told CNN many Hispanic families are afraid to go out for ice cream, or burgers or coffee — especially if the business is Latino-owned — due to fears of being detained by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

“We are a target now,” Alcazar said. “And it doesn’t matter if you are documented or undocumented, legal or illegal. … People are afraid to use public transportation because ICE enforcement is literally walking up and down the streets. We cannot normalize this.”

We visited Alcazar and South Texas as part of our “All Over the Map” project, an effort to track elections and major issue debates through the eyes of experiences of everyday Americans. That there is good reason to visit speaks volumes about President Donald Trump’s midterm political troubles. Alcazar lives in the 34th Congressional District, which was among the big targets when, at Trump’s request, Texas Republicans drew new US House maps for the 2026 midterms.

The 34th is one of just 13 districts nationwide that Trump carried in 2024 at the same time voters elected a Democrat to the House. Trump won the 34th by a little more than 4 points in 2024, while Democratic Rep. Vicente Gonzalez won by less than 3 points. Had the new lines been in place then, Trump would have won by 10 points.

Yet what Texas Republicans thought would be a safe new GOP district — and a 2026 pickup — is a tossup. If Republicans can’t win in a Texas district they drew to their advantage, it’s a safe bet the Democrats will win the House and change the trajectory of the Trump presidency.

Four of the five Democratic-held seats targeted by Texas Republicans are majority Latino under the new maps. But Trump’s standing among Latinos has fallen dramatically nationwide since the start of his second term, outpacing his drop in approval overall.

Louis Sorola knows a lot of Latinos who voted for Trump. He predicts a 2026 backlash.

“Because things have changed in the last year,” said Sorola, a Brownsville attorney who cast his first vote more than 40 years ago for Ronald Reagan but has mostly supported Democrats in recent elections. “We didn’t have the economy in the shape that it is. We didn’t have ICE acting like a Gestapo police force. We didn’t have the tariffs hurting us. We didn’t have a lot of things. We didn’t have the Epstein files in front of us.”

Brownsville is home to the southernmost crossing at the US-Mexico border. Illegal crossings are way down — a promise kept that could be a great political asset for the president and his party in the midterms, particularly in a region with thousands of immigration and border agents and their families. But the immigration issue is instead, at the moment anyway, a clear liability.

“There is a whole argument to make abou

¿Qué películas y series del universo de “Juego de Tronos” saldrán en el futuro? Estas son las temporadas y obras confirmadas

Kraig Pakulski 0 15 Article rating: No rating

Por Gonzalo Jiménez, CNN en Español

Tras la criticada temporada final de “Juego de tronos” en 2019, el éxito de la serie “El caballero de los siete reinos”, cuyo final de temporada se emite este domingo en HBO, ha resucitado el interés por la saga de fantasía creada por George R. R. Martin.

La saga “A song of Ice and Fire”, que es la columna vertebral del universo de “Juego de tronos” cuenta con cinco novelas publicadas y están previstas dos entregas más para su conclusión, de la que la esperada novela “The Winds of Winter” está aún en proceso de escritura.

Además, en el mismo universo George R. R. Martin ha escrito tres novelas cortas de lo que ha llamado “Tales of Dunk and Egg” o los cuentos de Dunk y Egg. Del primero de estos libros, “The Hedge Knight” (1998), surge la trama de la primera temporada de “El caballero de los siete reinos”.

George R. R. Martin ha publicado dos novelas más de esta serie: “The Sworn Sword” (2003) y “The Mystery Knight” (2010). Según un reporte del sitio web Los siete reinos, Martin ya tiene escrita la cuarta novela corta de esta saga, “The She-Wolves of Winterfell”.

Además, Martin ha escrito tanto novelas cortas y como libros que compendian la historia del continente de Westeros y de la familia Targaryen:

  • “Fire & Blood” (2018): una historia completa de la Casa Targaryen, que abarca desde la Conquista de Aegon hasta el inicio del reinado de Aegon III.
  • “The Princess and The Queen” (2013, novela corta): se centra en la guerra civil Targaryen conocida como la Danza de los Dragones.
  • “The Rogue Prince” (2014, novela corta): detalla la vida del príncipe Daemon Targaryen antes de la Danza de los Dragones.
  • “The Sons of the Dragon” (2017, novela corta): narra los reinados de los hijos de Aegon el Conquistador, Aenys I y Maegor I.
  • “The World of Ice & Fire” (2014, coescrito con Elio M. García Jr. y Linda Antonsson): un libro ilustrado que cubre la historia general de Westeros, incluyendo a los Targaryen.

De tantos materiales literarios, resulta evidente que hay suficientes historias para que HBO siga generando spinoffs, secuelas y precuelas de “Juego de tronos”.

George R. R. Martin dijo a The Hollywood Reporter en enero que “además de ‘A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms’ y ‘House of the Dragon’, hay otros proyectos derivados de ‘Game of Thrones’ en desarrollo. La mayoría son precuelas, y hay varios en desarrollo —quizás cinco o seis series—. Y no los estoy desarrollando solo, estoy trabajando en ellos con otras personas. Y sí, hay una o dos secuelas”.

A continuación, mencionaremos las que han sido confirmadas por HBO. (HBO, al igual que CNN en Español, forma parte de Warner Bros. Discovery).

En el sitio web imdb.com, “El caballero de los siete reinos” tienen un ranking de 9 sobre 10, lo que revela una valoración alta de los usuarios. El episodio final se emite este domingo y su segunda temporada ya está en producción.

La trama de la temporada 2 se basa en la novela corta “The Sworn Sword” (2003), el segundo li

Why Norway is dominating the Winter Olympics and what could US learn

Kraig Pakulski 0 31 Article rating: No rating

By Don Riddell, CNN

(CNN) — Norway’s director of elite sport sounded a little hoarse when he answered the phone to CNN Sports. Tore Øvebrø said he had just caught a cold, but he admitted that his raspy voice might also have something to do with his cheering over the last two weeks.

“It didn’t help,” he chuckled, “I had to cheer just now because we’ve just won another gold in the Nordic Combined. We have 16, that’s the Olympic record, and we hope for a couple more. So, it’s fantastic!”

Of course, the Games weren’t done then. Norway stands on 18 golds – and 40 total medals – coming into the final day of action.

It’s now an indisputable fact: Nobody can touch Norway at the Winter Olympics. From 2018 in Pyeongchang through the Italian Games in 2026, the Norwegians have always come out on top.

A tiny nation of roughly five-and-a-half million people – about the same as the US state of South Carolina – has figured out how to keep beating countries like China (1.4 billion), the US (342 million), Germany (84 million), Italy (59 million) and Canada (40 million). Clearly, they’re doing something right, and perhaps some of their rival nations like the US could learn a thing or two from the Nordic champions.

It might come as no surprise that a Nordic country would excel in winter sports, but the truth is that Norway has been punching well above its weight in many sports for some time. Norway has recently produced Olympic champions in beach volleyball and several in track and field – two quintessentially summer sports.

Their triathlon program is celebrated as the best in the world, Viktor Hovland is one of the top golfers, Casper Ruud made it to world No. 2 in the ATP rankings, Erling Haaland is one of the most feared strikers in the “Beautiful Game” and Ada Hegerberg won the most prestigious individual honor in world soccer, the Ballon D’Or.

There are many reasons for Norway’s success, but there is one common theme: An emphasis on fun and enjoyment that starts at the grassroots level.

Until the age of 12 in Norway, nobody in youth sports is allowed to keep score, and there are no league standings either. As a result, there is far less destructive pressure and no reason to specialize too soon, and young athletes are encouraged to try out multiple sports. If one player gets a trophy, everyone gets a trophy; they want as many children as possible to return the following season.

Keeping top athletes engaged

Such a small country can’t afford to lose athletes whose talent might not be fully revealed until their later teens. Norwegian coaches don’t tend to mistake early bloomers for talented athletes.

“I find that many of the big sporting systems are more occupied with getting rid of people at the young age than develop many,” explained Øvebrø. “Why do I say that? It’s all about selection and selection is another way of getting rid of people. We are few. We have to take care of everybody.”

Haaland played in the same mixed development group of 39 boys and one girl at Bryne FK until he was 16. The group was never broken up into first, second and third teams, nobody dropped out, and a handful of those players ended up turning professional.

Johannes Høsflot Klæbo always thought he’d be a soccer player one day; in fact, he was sure of it . But he would come to realize that his true potential lay elsewhere – in Italy, he won six gold medals in cross-country skiing to become the most successful Winter Olympian of all time, his 11 gold medals surpassing three other athletes who had eight golds to their names.

All are Norwegian, by the way.

The sports development pipeline in Norway is less about tryin

El DHS suspende los programas de viajeros confiables TSA PreCheck y Global Entry mientras el cierre gubernamental se prolonga

Kraig Pakulski 0 30 Article rating: No rating

Por Martin Goillandeau, CNN

El Departamento de Seguridad Nacional está suspendiendo temporalmente TSA PreCheck y Global Entry, dos de los programas de viajeros confiables más utilizados en Estados Unidos, en medio de un cierre parcial del Gobierno.

En una declaración a CNN sobre la suspensión de estos programas, la secretaria del Departamento de Seguridad Nacional (DHS, por sus siglas en inglés), Kristi Noem, dijo que la Administración de Seguridad en el Transporte y la Oficina de Aduanas y Protección Fronteriza “se están enfocando en el público viajero general en nuestros aeropuertos y puntos de entrada y han suspendido los escoltas de cortesía y privilegios especiales”.

“Los cierres tienen consecuencias reales, no solo para los hombres y mujeres del DHS y sus familias que se quedan sin sueldo, sino que ponen en peligro nuestra seguridad nacional”, agregó la declaración. The Washington Post fue el primero en informar sobre las medidas.

La medida marca una escalada significativa en el impacto del cierre del DHS sobre los viajeros, desmantelando efectivamente las filas de seguridad acelerada en aeropuertos y el procesamiento rápido en aduanas del que dependen millones de viajeros frecuentes que son ciudadanos estadounidenses o residentes legales permanentes, así como pasajeros internacionales de más de 20 países.

La suspensión se produce durante un cierre parcial del Gobierno que afecta solo al Departamento de Seguridad Nacional, después de que el Congreso no lograra llegar a un acuerdo de financiación en medio de un enfrentamiento por la política de control migratorio.

Los demócratas han impulsado nuevas restricciones para agencias como Inmigración y Control de Aduanas y CBP tras el tiroteo mortal de dos ciudadanos estadounidenses por agentes federales en Minneapolis a principios de este año. Los republicanos se han opuesto en gran medida a los cambios propuestos, mientras presionan a los demócratas para que acepten medidas como una aplicación más estricta contra las llamadas ciudades santuario.

Mientras tanto, los empleados del DHS considerados esenciales, incluidos unos 63.000 agentes de la TSA, han seguido trabajando sin recibir salario.

“El pueblo estadounidense depende de este departamento todos los días, y estamos tomando decisiones difíciles pero necesarias sobre personal y recursos para mitigar el daño causado por estos políticos”, añadió Noem en el comunicado.

Los demócratas del Comité de Seguridad Nacional de la Cámara han condenado en redes sociales la suspensión de estos programas, acusando a la dirección del DHS de “castigar a los viajeros” y “arruinar sus viajes a propósito”.

Hasta ahora, el DHS no ha respondido a más solicitudes de detalles sobre cuándo entrarán en vigor estos cambios. Un portavoz del DHS dijo a The Washington Post que la suspensión de TSA PreCheck y Global Entry comenzará este domingo a las 6:00 a.m. hora de Miami debido al cierre de gran parte de la agencia.

La suspensión de las filas TSA PreCheck en los aeropuertos de EE.UU. obligaría a los viajeros inscritos a usar el control de seguridad estándar. No está claro cómo se verán afectados los pasajeros internacionales que regresan o ingresan a EE.UU. a través de Global Entry, ya que la mayor parte de este proceso se realiza en quioscos automatizados. Es probable que las interrupciones aumenten los tiempos de espera en aduana

Trump virtually eliminated emissions regulations. Here’s what happens to your next car now

Kraig Pakulski 0 34 Article rating: No rating

By Julian Torres, CNN

New York (CNN) — With the Trump administration effectively dismantling automotive emissions regulations, cars on dealership lots could see some changes. Your next car could be bigger, with fewer fully electric options – but it also might be a hybrid.

The repeal of the Environmental Protection Agency’s 2009 endangerment finding effectively terminates the greenhouse gas standards that governed automakers for more than a decade and a half.

The repeal followed Congress’s zeroing out of penalties for violating Corporate Average Fuel Economy (CAFE) targets as part of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act.

The results of the drastic shift fall into two main categories: affecting the kinds of vehicles offered, as well as the technology inside them.

Changes on the dealer lot

“I definitely think the stop/start technology, stuff like that, will probably go away,” said Stephanie Valdez Streaty, director of industry insights at Cox Automotive, referring to technology that turns engines off when they’re idle in traffic and back on when it’s time to move.

Other technologies that could be phased out include waste heat recovery systems that pull heat from the car’s engine to the interior, solar reflective surface coating and high efficacy exterior lights.

But those technologies aren’t going away instantly.

Technologies like start-stop systems “will continue to vary by vehicle and market as the company evaluates consumer preferences, regulatory requirements, and vehicle design,” Ann Marie Fortunate, a spokesperson for Stellantis, told CNN.

Americans could see a priority shift on dealership lots, too. Automakers could churn out the vehicles that aren’t just in demand, but those with the highest profit margins, such as big SUVs.

“(Deregulation) gives the manufacturer some breathing room to really produce more of those more profitable vehicles.” Valdez Streaty said in reference to higher-margin combustion engine and hybrid options, as well as bigger trucks and SUVs that are historically favored by Americans. “I think we’ll start to see more of those on the dealer lots.”

According to Cox Automotive data, full-size trucks are up 14% year over year, full-size SUVs are up 23.9%, and midsize trucks are up 21.2%.

Even before the repeal, many automakers were scaling back their hybrid and EV ambitions over the last few years. Stellantis cancelled its line of Jeep plug-in hybrids earlier this year, and companies including Nissan and Tesla have halted or ended some EV models entirely.

But the regulatory changes do not mean a wave of radically different vehicles will hit dealerships overnight.

The long-term impact is likely to show up gradually in the types of vehicles that will be produced, rather than a complete abandonment of voluntary emissions standards, complete with redesigns.

“The reality is that politics can move much faster than the auto industry. Policy changes tend to influence vehicle production gradually, over multiple model years, rather than triggering sudden price resets,” Valdez Streaty said.

And when policy changes happen, car companies need time to figure out their plans for future products.

“Ford is still evaluating the impacts of (repealing the EPA’s endangerment finding) on our business,” Benjamin Khoshbin, a spokesperson for Ford told CNN.

Electric cars aren’t going away entirely

Automakers have also become wary of diving headfirst into major product line shifts, after electric car sales proved disappointing once the Trump administration eliminated federal tax credits for zero-emissions vehicles.

Detroit’s big three automakers — Stellantis,

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