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5 things to know for Jan. 16: Minneapolis protests, Greenland takeover, Nobel Peace Prize, Flu season, Iran unrest

Kraig Pakulski 0 22 Article rating: No rating

By Alexandra Banner, CNN

A new CNN poll finds that most Americans view the economy as the country’s top issue. It also suggests that President Donald Trump is struggling to prove that he is addressing the cost of living, with 64% of respondents saying he hasn’t done enough to lower the prices of everyday goods.

Here’s what else you need to know to get up to speed and on with your day.

1⃣ Minneapolis protests

Tensions flared in Minneapolis again on Thursday in the wake of a second shooting by a federal immigration officer in just over a week. President Donald Trump responded by threatening to invoke the centuries-old Insurrection Act that would allow the deployment of US troops to Minnesota. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said it is a “tool at the president’s disposal” and Trump’s warning “spoke very loud and clear to Democrats across this country.” The president previously threatened to invoke the Insurrection Act in response to anti-ICE protests in Portland last fall and, in 2020, he threatened to use the act to quell protests after George Floyd was killed.

2⃣ Greenland takeover

Several European nations are deploying small numbers of military personnel to Greenland to participate in joint exercises with Denmark as President Trump ramps up his threats to forcibly annex the island. Germany, Sweden, France, Norway, the Netherlands, and Finland have confirmed deployments, which analysts say carry more symbolic weight at a time of unprecedented tension within NATO. This comes after Trump said earlier this week that “anything less” than US control of Greenland is “unacceptable.” Officials from Denmark and Greenland also met with Vice President JD Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio on Wednesday, but the talks appeared to yield few tangible results.

3⃣ Nobel Peace Prize

Venezuela’s opposition leader, María Corina Machado, presented President Trump with her Nobel Peace Prize medal during a meeting at the White House on Thursday. Trump has long coveted the award, though the Nobel committee has been clear that it cannot be shared or transferred. In return, Trump apparently gave Machado a gift bag embossed with his signature and issued a broad statement of his support for a “new, genuine electoral process” in Venezuela. Machado is seeking Trump’s endorsement to become Venezuela’s next president following the ouster of Nicolás Maduro, though Trump has publicly expressed doubt about her ability to lead the country.

4⃣ Flu season

While the flu is widespread among adults nationwide, children remain especially vulnerable to severe outcomes, health experts say. At least 17 children in the US have died from the flu this season — a number that will grow as more states report their cases to the CDC. The last flu season, which ran through the winter of 2024 and 2025, set a grim record for the most pediatric deaths in a season, with 289. One mother, whose 4-year-old daughter recently died from flu complications, said the loss has made her reconsider the importance of vaccinations and hopes other parents do the same. “Honestly, just get your flu shots,” she said. “Even if it doesn’t work t

5 things to know for Jan. 16: Minneapolis protests, Greenland takeover, Nobel Peace Prize, Flu season, Iran unrest

Kraig Pakulski 0 18 Article rating: No rating


CNN

By Alexandra Banner, CNN

A new CNN poll finds that most Americans view the economy as the country’s top issue. It also suggests that President Donald Trump is struggling to prove that he is addressing the cost of living, with 64% of respondents saying he hasn’t done enough to lower the prices of everyday goods.

Here’s what else you need to know to get up to speed and on with your day.

1⃣ Minneapolis protests

Tensions flared in Minneapolis again on Thursday in the wake of a second shooting by a federal immigration officer in just over a week. President Donald Trump responded by threatening to invoke the centuries-old Insurrection Act that would allow the deployment of US troops to Minnesota. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said it is a “tool at the president’s disposal” and Trump’s warning “spoke very loud and clear to Democrats across this country.” The president previously threatened to invoke the Insurrection Act in response to anti-ICE protests in Portland last fall and, in 2020, he threatened to use the act to quell protests after George Floyd was killed.

2⃣ Greenland takeover

Several European nations are deploying small numbers of military personnel to Greenland to participate in joint exercises with Denmark as President Trump ramps up his threats to forcibly annex the island. Germany, Sweden, France, Norway, the Netherlands, and Finland have confirmed deployments, which analysts say carry more symbolic weight at a time of unprecedented tension within NATO. This comes after Trump said earlier this week that “anything less” than US control of Greenland is “unacceptable.” Officials from Denmark and Greenland also met with Vice President JD Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio on Wednesday, but the talks appeared to yield few tangible results.

3⃣ Nobel Peace Prize

Venezuela’s opposition leader, María Corina Machado, presented President Trump with her Nobel Peace Prize medal during a meeting at the White House on Thursday. Trump has long coveted the award, though the Nobel committee has been clear that it cannot be shared or transferred. In return, Trump apparently gave Machado a gift bag embossed with his signature and issued a broad statement of his support for a “new, genuine electoral process” in Venezuela. Machado is seeking Trump’s endorsement to become Venezuela’s next president following the ouster of Nicolás Maduro, though Trump has publicly expressed doubt about her ability to lead the country.

4⃣ Flu season

While the flu is widespread among adults nationwide, children remain especially vulnerable to severe outcomes, health experts say. At least 17 children in the US have died from the flu this season — a number that will grow as more states report their cases to the CDC. The last flu season, which ran through the winter of 2024 and 2025, set a grim record for the most pediatric deaths in a season, with 289. One mother, whose

When a credit report can hurt your chances of being hired

Kraig Pakulski 0 17 Article rating: No rating
It is less likely today that a prospective employer will check your credit history before hiring you

By Jeanne Sahadi, CNN

(CNN) — A background check can sink a job offer if prospective employers don’t like what they see. While they can request to have a lot of information about a job candidate’s past included in such a report, increasingly they are no longer allowed to request people’s credit history.

New York just became the 11th state to prohibit employers from using individuals’ credit reports when making employment decisions (eg, hiring and promotion), except for certain types of jobs.

The new law goes into effect on April 18.

The other states with similar (although not identical) laws on the books are: California, Colorado, Connecticut, Hawaii, Illinois, Maryland, Nevada, Oregon, Vermont and Washington. In addition, similar laws exist at the local level in five cities (New York City; the District of Columbia; Chicago; Madison, Wisconsin; and Philadelphia) plus Cook County, Illinois.

Unlike the laws in the other states, the reach of the New York State statute may apply across the country. “As a practical matter, this means an individual who lives in New York but applies for a position in another state whose credit history is obtained for employment purposes may be covered by the New York credit history discrimination law,” attorney Stephen Fuchs, a shareholder at employer-side law firm Littler Mendelson, wrote in a blog post.

As more states restrict the use of credit histories in job decisions, employers pulling them may be going down, even in places that don’t prohibit the practice.

National employers … tend to want to do the same thing nationwide. And as the number of jurisdictions with restrictions has grown, I have seen employers say, ‘Do we really need to check credit history and why?’ and they do away with it,” Fuchs told CNN.

Still, credit reports are used in many cases

That said, even in states that restrict credit report use, employers are still permitted to pull reports for any role that the state statute identifies as an exception.

Those roles typically include law enforcement jobs, roles that would give a person access to intelligence or national security information, and jobs with control of company funds or access to trade secrets, Fuchs said.

In securities and financial institutions, pulling a person’s credit report is permitted for certain types of jobs such as those subject to financial regulatory oversight, he noted.

“There’s a concern that people with debt and bad credit may be more inclined to engage in theft, embezzlement and fraud. That is generally the rationale,” Fuchs said.

Elements that may raise eyebrows

There is no list of red flags on a credit report for which every employer would kill a job offer. And it’s worth remembering a credit report is only one of many factors in a holistic background check.

But, generally speaking, “organizations are looking for volume and recency of potentially negative information,” said Melissa Sorenson, executive director of the Professional Background Screening Association.

That negative information includes long overdue debt.

“Employers … may be concerned by accounts that are seriously delinquent, sent to collections, or written off, because such items

Rightwingers of the world unite to endorse Orbán ahead of Hungary’s election

Kraig Pakulski 0 20 Article rating: No rating
Orbán

By Christian Edwards, CNN

(CNN) — Hard-right and populist leaders from across the globe have appeared in an online video endorsing Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán ahead of an election that polls suggest could end his long premiership.

The campaign video, published by Orbán this week, shows 11 national leaders and hard-right figureheads – including France’s Marine Le Pen, Italy’s Giorgia Meloni and Argentina’s Javier Milei – endorsing the Hungarian leader’s bid for a fifth consecutive term in office. The American actor Rob Schneider also lent his support.

Orbán, who returned to power in 2010 and is Europe’s longest-serving prime minister, has become a lodestar for European populists and the MAGA movement in the United States. Championing national sovereignty, traditional values and hard borders, Orbán has long railed against the European Union, without seeking to leave it.

But while Orbán still commands affection abroad, he is facing a growing backlash at home. Over 16 years in office, his Fidesz party has been criticized for presiding over Hungary’s democratic backsliding, economic stagnation and curbs on press freedom.

Leading the charge against Orbán is Péter Magyar, a former Fidesz loyalist-turned-arch-rival. Magyar’s Tisza party has led Fidesz in the polls for more than a year, campaigning mostly against what it says is government corruption, and promising to boost Hungary’s economy.

Facing his first credible challenger in years, Orbán has tried to paint Magyar as a political novice and seems to have called on his ideological allies to rally to his defense ahead of parliamentary elections on April 12.

“Security cannot be taken for granted. It must be won,” Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in the campaign video. “I think Victor Orbán has all those qualities. He has the tenacity, the courage, the wisdom to protect his country.”

French far-right leader Marine Le Pen said Orbán was responsible for “the camp of patriots, and defenders of nations and sovereign peoples,” for achieving “ever greater success in Europe.” Le Pen was convicted last year for embezzling EU funds and received a five-year ban on running for political office, which would disqualify her from the French presidential election next year. She is appealing the decision.

Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni said she and Orbán are partners in a political project: “Together, we stand for a Europe that respects national sovereignty, (and) is proud of its cultural and religious roots.” Orbán’s Central European allies – including Czech President Andrej Babiš and former Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki – also voiced their support.

The video also included several references to Russia’s war in Ukraine, with which Hungary shares a border. Orbán, who met Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow in November, has repeatedly obstructed EU efforts to fund Ukraine’s defense. On Thursday, he said he would launch a “national petition” seeking backing for his policy of rejecting the EU’s latest financial support package for Ukraine.

“He is fighting for peace in Ukraine, and for peace in Europe,” Alice Weidel, the co-leader of the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party, said in the video. “Europe needs Viktor

El alcalde de Minneapolis “tomó el megáfono” y le dijo a ICE que abandonara su ciudad. Trump, en cambio, redobló la apuesta

Kraig Pakulski 0 13 Article rating: No rating

Por Eric Bradner y Jeremy Herb, CNN

El alcalde de Minneapolis, Jacob Frey, envió un severo mensaje hace una semana a los agentes federales tras el tiroteo mortal de una mujer de Minnesota que protestaba contra los esfuerzos para detener a los inmigrantes en el estado. “Lárguense de Minneapolis”, expresó Frey.

El comentario colocó inmediatamente a Frey en el centro de la atención nacional y en el centro de la batalla más feroz hasta el momento contra la represión federal del presidente Donald Trump en ciudades de todo el país.

La tensión entre manifestantes locales y agentes federales del Servicio de Inmigración y Control de Aduanas (ICE) no ha hecho más que aumentar, después de que un agente federal disparara e hiriera a un hombre el miércoles por la noche, quien presuntamente lo había agredido.

Para calmar la situación, Frey instó después a los manifestantes a regresar a casa.

“No podemos contrarrestar el caos de Donald Trump con nuestro propio caos”, declaró el miércoles por la noche, después de que la policía local informara que los manifestantes disparaban fuegos artificiales a los agentes.

“Aplaudo a quienes han protestado pacíficamente. Quienes están mordiendo el anzuelo, no están ayudando, ni a los inmigrantes indocumentados de nuestra ciudad ni a quienes consideran este lugar su hogar”, señaló.

Los esfuerzos de la ciudad durante la última semana para responder a la ofensiva de ICE —y la decisión de la administración Trump de intensificar los operativos inmigratorios en Minneapolis— demuestran la difícil situación que enfrentan Frey y otros demócratas estatales y locales.

Enfrentarse a la administración Trump le ganó el respeto de Frey en su ciudad, mayoritariamente demócrata, pero también lo convirtió en blanco de la Casa Blanca y sus aliados republicanos.

Las encuestas muestran que la opinión pública ha cambiado rápidamente en contra de las medidas de control inmigratorio de la administración Trump. Una encuesta de CNN realizada por SSRS reveló que el 56 % de los estadounidenses cree que la muerte de Renee Good fue un uso inapropiado de la fuerza, mientras que solo el 26 % lo considera apropiado.

Los estadounidenses afirman, con un 51 % frente a un 31 %, que las medidas de control del ICE están haciendo que las ciudades sean menos seguras en lugar de más.

Pero Trump, quien en su campaña prometió liderar una campaña de deportación masiva, se ha aferrado a su postura, poniendo especial énfasis en Minnesota, un estado gobernado por los demócratas que, erróneamente, afirmó creer haber ganado en tres elecciones presidenciales consecutivas.

Su administración planea enviar otros 1.000 agentes de inmigración al estado.

Trump amenazó este jueves con invocar la Ley de Insurrección, una norma centenaria, para desplegar tropas estadounidenses en Minnesota si los líderes políticos locales “no impiden que los agitadores e insurrectos profesionales ataquen” a los agentes de inmigración.

Frey y otros líderes de Minnesota han respondido con una demanda acusando a los funcionarios federales de realizar arrestos sin orden judicial y de usar fuerza ex

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