West
Trump-endorsed Navy SEAL Tim Sheehy wins Republican nomination in Montana Senate race to unseat Jon Tester
Navy SEAL Tim Sheehy has won the Republican nomination in a field of three candidates in the highly anticipated Montana Senate race to unseat the red state’s Democratic Sen. Jon Tester.
Sheehy secured the nomination during Tuesday’s primary, after strong support from conservative leadership in Congress made him the GOP pick to take on the three-term Democrat.
“America is at a crossroads and we need a new generation of leaders to save our country. Joe Biden and Jon Tester’s reckless agenda has brought us skyrocketing food, housing, and energy prices and an open border allowing illegal immigrants, drugs, and crime to flood into our country,” Sheehy said in a statement after the race was called.
WAPO ‘SMEAR’ OF HIGHLY-DECORATED IRAQ WAR VETERAN, SENATE CANDIDATE OMITS CRITICAL INFO
Republican Montana Senate candidate and former Navy SEAL Tim Sheehy. (Tim Sheehy For Montana)
“As a Navy SEAL, I’ve always put country before self and I’m running for the U.S. Senate to end Joe Biden and Jon Tester’s inflation, seal our border, secure our children’s future, and put America First! I am humbled and honored by all the support and look forward to finally retiring the #1 recipient of lobbyist cash and pro-Biden liberal Jon Tester,” he continued.
The Navy SEAL defeated Montana’s former Secretary of State Brad Johnson in the primary race.
The conservative, a Purple Heart recipient, was also endorsed by GOP presidential nominee and former President Trump, who said he is an “American hero.”
DEM HIT WITH $15 MILLION BORDER-RELATED AD BLITZ IN ‘TOSS-UP’ SENATE RACE
“I LOVE MONTANA!” Trump wrote in a post on his Truth Social account. “Tim Sheehy is an American Hero and highly successful Businessman from the Great State of Montana. He is strongly supported by our incredible Chairman of the NRSC, Steve Daines, and many other patriotic Senators and Republicans who have endorsed our Campaign to, MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!”
Sen. Jon Tester asks questions during a Senate Banking Committee hearing on Capitol Hill, Sept. 12, 2023. (Drew Angerer/Getty Images)
Republicans are eyeing the Big Sky State as one of their best chances at taking back control of the Senate, as Democrat Tester attempts to hold onto his seat in the red state for a fourth term.
Tester paints himself as a moderate in the Senate, but Sheehy has charged that he changes his positions in election years.
“You know this is what he does. Five years out of every six he’s a dyed-in-the-wool liberal, firm progressive. Votes lockstep with Schumer, Biden and every other progressive in the country,” Sheey told Fox in November. “And then, for his election year, he tries to shift back to the center and act like he’s a moderate.”
Tim Sheehy, founder and CEO of Bridger Aerospace, in Bozeman, Montana, on Jan. 18, 2024. (Louise Johns/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
Sheehy quickly became the Senate Republicans’ choice to take on Tester on the November ballot, receiving endorsements from Sens. Steve Daines, R-Mont., Marco Rubio, R-Fla., Tom Cotton, R-Ark., Cindy Hyde-Smith, R-Miss., Ted Budd, R-N.C., Markwayne Mullin, R-Okla., Bill Hagerty, R-Tenn., Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., and John Barrasso, R-Wyo.
The Navy SEAL was also endorsed by Montana’s Republican Gov. Greg Gianforte and Gov. Kristi Noem, R-S.D.
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Colorado
Here’s the latest on fires burning in western Colorado
DENVER (KDVR) — Fast-moving fires in western Colorado, including on the Colorado-Utah border, continue to burn Sunday afternoon.
On the Colorado-Utah border, the Snyder Mesa Fire has burned over 28,000 acres as of Sunday morning, prompting evacuations in Mesa County, officials reported. At that time, the fire was 0% contained.
The Snyder Mesa Fire broke out sometime Friday evening or Saturday morning, according to the Upper Colorado River Interagency Fire Management Unit. Several fires, including the Knowles and Gore fires, combined on Saturday to form the Snyder Mesa Fire.
Three federal firefighters died and two were injured while responding to the Knowles and Gore fires on Saturday.
⬇️ Jump to: Live blog with updates below.
Ouray County has declared a state of emergency due to the Gold Mountain Fire. The fire sparked on Saturday on U.S. Forest Service land, according to the Ouray County Sheriff’s Office. The fire has triggered mandatory evacuation orders and roadway closures.
Ouray County officials reported the Gold Mountain Fire burned 560 acres as of 1:08 p.m.
Live Updates
Hawaii
Journey adds second show to final performance in Hawaii | Honolulu Star-Advertiser
COURTESY MIKE SAVOIA
Journey lead guitarist Neal Schon, an original member of the band that launched in 1973 in San Francisco.
The popular rock band Journey will perform a second show at Neal S. Blaisdell Arena after tickets for its Sept. 8 concert were quickly snatched up when the Hawaii-only presale began Friday.
The newly added Sept. 6 show will give Hawaii fans one more opportunity to experience Journey’s Final Frontier Tour. Concert promoter Rick Bartalini said the Sept. 8 show “will remain Journey’s last-ever performance” in the islands.
“Journey’s relationship with Hawaiʻi is unlike anything we have seen with a mainland-based artist or group,” Bartalini said in a news release. “These songs have been part of people’s lives here for generations, and the response to this final Hawaiʻi return has been incredible. The added September 6 show gives local fans another chance to be part of this historic final chapter before Journey’s last-ever Hawaiʻi performance on September 8.”
Tickets for both concerts are available at Ticketmaster.com through an exclusive presale for Hawaii residents. The Hawaii presale, which is online only, with no code required, gives local residents the chance to purchase tickets through 9 a.m. Friday before mainland access and general ticket sales begins an hour later.
Bartalini “strongly urged” fans to purchase tickets only through Ticketmaster, the official ticketing provider, and “to avoid inflated or speculative listings on resale sites.”
A dollar from every ticket sold will support the Hawaiian Council’s local flood recovery efforts for families and communities impacted by the recent Kona-low storms.
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Journey has sold more than 100 million albums worldwide. The band’s music spans more than five decades and includes chart-topping hits and rock anthems, including “Don’t Stop Believin’,” “Any Way You Want It,” “Faithfully,” “Wheel in the Sky,” “Lovin’, Touchin’, Squeezin’,” “Open Arms” and “Lights.”
The band’s last Hawaii shows were Oct. 5 and 6, 2022, at Blaisdell Arena.
“Fans in Hawai‘i hold a special place in Journey’s heart,” Bartalini said, noting that after the band’s first public show at the Winterland Ballroom in San Francisco on New Year’s Eve 1973, the group flew to Hawaii the very next day, Jan. 1, 1974, to perform at the Sixth Annual Sunshine Festival, commonly referred to as the Diamond Head Crater Festival, for an audience of over 100,000.
From there, Journey became a recurring part of Hawaii’s concert history, performing live 34 times across the islands, including 30 confirmed appearances on Oahu and 26 shows at the Neal S. Blaisdell Arena, as well as performances at UH, the Maui Arts & Cultural Center, and the Queen’s Marketplace Amphitheatre in Waikoloa on the Big Island.
“Journey’s relationship with Hawai‘i is unlike anything we have seen with a mainland-based artist or group,” Bartalini said. “For more than 50 years, they have returned to these islands again and again, from Diamond Head Crater to this final stop at the Neal S. Blaisdell Arena, creating memories that span generations of local fans.
“Journey’s music has been woven into so many of our lives for generations. These are the songs people grew up with, fell in love to, drove around the island listening to, sang with their families, and carried through some of the most meaningful moments of their lives. That is what makes this Final Frontier Tour so powerful,” he added.
Idaho
Torrential thunderstorms, hail flood suburban streets with ice floats on first full summer weekend in Idaho
Parts of Idaho looked like the Arctic on the first full weekend of summer when torrential thunderstorms and hail flooded the streets with ice floats, according to dramatic social-media footage.
In a wild scene Saturday outside the state’s capital of Boise, a resident was caught on Instagram footage paddling a bright green kayak through the ice-covered floodwaters rushing down a suburban road — while a rural county near Nevada was hammered with a staggering 553 lightning strikes.
“It was small hail, but there was an awful lot of it,” said Josh Smith, the Boise-based National Weather Service’s lead meteorologist, to the Idaho Statesman.
Cars parked along local streets were nearly swallowed by surging water from the relentless rains – with some vehicles submerged up to their windows – while trash bins floated through the makeshift river, the surreal footage shows.
The widespread storm damage across the Gem State’s Treasure Valley region – a heavily-populated area that encompasses parts of Ada and Canyon counties – was also fueled by winds topping 50 mph, the Statesman said.
As for the hail, “Even some of our employees that were in northwest Meridian said they had several inches of small hail on the ground,” Smith said.
“That probably led to some of the flooding issues with some of those neighborhoods because all that melted off quickly, and the drains weren’t able to handle it – in addition to the inch-plus rain that we received,” Smith explained.
Lightning was also relentless throughout the storm, with rural Owyhee County – located about 150 miles south of Boise, near the Nevada border – recording a mind-boggling 553 lightning strikes.
Ada County had 100 strikes in one day – the second-most ever recorded on a single day in June since 2000, according to Smith and the National Weather Service.
Officials in Canyon County declared a countywide disaster emergency as crews scrambled to respond to the damage, while employees with the Ada County Highway District worked overnight clearing flooded roads and addressing other hazards, the Statesman reported.
The Boise Police Department shared photos of the river-like road conditions on Facebook, urging drivers to use “extreme caution.”
In neighboring Payette County, mudslides triggered by severe flooding caused many highway and street closures Friday, according to the sheriff’s office.
It was not immediately clear whether anyone was injured.
The dangerous weather was expected to continue through the weekend, forecasters warned.
The NWS issued a winter storm warning Saturday for parts of eastern Idaho, where elevations above 6,500 feet were expected to be battered with as much as 8 inches of snow.
“Plan on cold and wet backcountry conditions with a heightened hypothermia risk for those not properly dressed. Wet snow may down trees and block access to forest roadways,” the advisory warned, according to the East Idaho News.
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