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Arizona Democrat Ruben Gallego announces Senate bid in challenge to Kyrsten Sinema | CNN Politics

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Arizona Democrat Ruben Gallego announces Senate bid in challenge to Kyrsten Sinema | CNN Politics



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Democratic Rep. Ruben Gallego of Arizona on Monday introduced his marketing campaign for US Senate, organising a possible 2024 conflict with Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, who lately switched her occasion affiliation from Democrat to impartial.

Gallego, a Phoenix-area congressman and retired Marine who served in Iraq, released a video of him telling a bunch of fellow veterans about his determination to run.

“You’re the primary group of individuals which can be listening to this moreover my household. I can be difficult Kyrsten Sinema for the USA Senate, and I would like your entire assist,” Gallego, 43, advised the group at a veterans group in Guadalupe, Arizona.

Sinema has confronted fierce criticism from Democrats for opposing parts of President Joe Biden’s agenda. Early final yr, whereas the Arizona senator was nonetheless a Democrat, Gallego stated some Democratic senators had been urging him to run for her seat. Sinema stated in December she was switching events, although she continues to caucus with Senate Democrats and has not stated publicly whether or not she is going to run for reelection.

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“Most households really feel that they’re one or two paychecks away from going below. That’s not the best way that we must be residing on this nation,” Gallego stated in his announcement video. “The wealthy and the highly effective, they don’t want extra advocates. It’s the folks which can be nonetheless attempting to resolve between groceries and utilities that want a fighter for them.”

Gallego, who’s of Colombian and Mexican descent, can be Arizona’s first Latino senator, if elected. He spoke in each English and Spanish in his announcement video and described the hardship and monetary instability his household confronted when he was rising up

Gallego stated his mom, an immigrant, would “cry, like, each night time, being stressed about how she was gonna increase, like, 4 children on a secretary’s wage, you recognize, with an absent father.”

“Fue una experiencia muy dura,” Gallego added in Spanish, which interprets to: “It was a really exhausting expertise.”

Gallego was first elected to the Home in 2014. He’s a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus and likewise chaired the Congressional Hispanic Caucus’ marketing campaign arm, BOLD PAC, throughout the 2022 cycle.

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The Arizona Democrat in his announcement video described affected by post-traumatic stress dysfunction (PTSD) following his deployment to Iraq in 2005.

“Shedding all my associates, constantly being shot at and other people attempting to blow you up on a regular basis – you by no means actually absolutely come again from conflict. You’re not the identical individual,” Gallego stated. “Preventing by way of PTSD, there have been some very low moments in my life. However I nonetheless didn’t surrender. I pushed ahead. I discovered a brand new technique to maintain serving.”

Philip Letsou, a spokesman for the Nationwide Republican Senatorial Committee, responded to Gallego’s announcement in an announcement: “The Democrat civil conflict is on in Arizona. Chuck Schumer has a alternative: stand with open borders radical Ruben Gallego or again his incumbent, Sen. Kyrsten Sinema.”

A number of Republicans are contemplating operating for Sinema’s seat. Defeated Arizona gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake is contemplating a Senate bid, based on a supply near Lake.

Lake misplaced the Arizona governor’s race in November to Democrat Katie Hobbs by lower than 1 level and has not conceded, falsely claiming as lately as Sunday that she received the election. An Arizona choose in December rejected Lake’s lawsuit trying to overturn her defeat, concluding there wasn’t clear or convincing proof of misconduct. Lake, a serial promoter of election lies who denies the result of the 2020 presidential election, has appealed the courtroom’s determination. The supply advised CNN that Lake is not going to make a remaining determination on a Senate run till after her courtroom case is accomplished.

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Republican Blake Masters, who misplaced a problem in November to incumbent Democratic Sen. Mark Kelly by nearly 5 factors, can be “strongly contemplating” operating for Senate in 2024, based on a spokesperson. Masters has additionally denied the result of the 2020 election however, not like Lake, conceded his race to Kelly.

Karrin Taylor Robson, who misplaced to Lake in final yr’s Republican major regardless of being endorsed by the state’s GOP governor on the time, Doug Ducey, additionally indicated she could possibly be open to a Senate bid.

“As a substitute of offering a verify on the novel Biden agenda, our Senators proceed to allow his disastrous insurance policies, which have been horrible for Arizona,” the previous member of the Arizona Board of Regents advised CNN in an announcement. “Whereas I’m nonetheless deciding how I can greatest serve the state that I like, I agree with the various Arizonans who’ve reached out, and who, like me, are hopeful that our occasion will nominate a robust, genuine conservative who is not going to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory.”

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Congress poured billions of dollars into schools. Did it help students learn?

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Congress poured billions of dollars into schools. Did it help students learn?

Two new studies offer a first look at how much more students learned thanks to federal pandemic aid money.

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America’s schools received an unprecedented $190 billion in federal emergency funding during the pandemic. Since then, one big question has loomed over them: Did that historic infusion of federal relief help students make up for the learning they missed?

Two new research studies, conducted separately but both released on Wednesday, offer the first answer to that question: Yes, the money made a meaningful difference. But both studies come with context and caveats that, along with that headline finding, require some unpacking.

How much of a difference did the money make?

$190 billion is an enormous amount of money by any measure. But districts were only required to spend a fraction of the relief on academic recovery, by paying for proven interventions like summer learning and high-quality tutoring. So how much additional student learning did the federal aid actually buy?

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Study #1, a collaboration including Tom Kane at Harvard’s Center for Education Policy Research and Sean Reardon at Stanford’s Educational Opportunity Project, estimates that every $1,000 in federal relief spent per student bought the kind of math test score gains that come with 3% of a school year, or about six school days of learning. That’s during the 2022-23 academic year.

Improvements in reading scores were smaller: roughly three school days of progress per $1,000 in federal relief spending per student.

The federal relief “was worth the investment,” Reardon tells NPR. “It led to significant improvements in children’s academic performance… It wasn’t enough money, or enough recovery, to get students all the way back to where they were in 2019, but it did make a significant difference.”

Study #2, co-authored by researcher Dan Goldhaber at the University of Washington and American Institutes for Research, offers a similar estimate of math gains. The increase in reading scores, according to Goldhaber, appeared comparable to those math gains, though he says they’re less precise and a little less certain.

“It did have an impact,” Goldhaber tells NPR, an impact that’s “in line with estimates from prior research about how much money moves the needle of student achievement.”

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Who benefited the most?

The federal recovery dollars came in three waves, known as ESSER (Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief Fund) I, II and III. The first two waves were relatively small, roughly $68 billion, compared to the $122 billion of ESSER III.

The windfall was distributed to schools based largely on need – specifically, based on the proportion of students living in or near poverty. The assumption being: Districts with higher rates of student poverty would need more help recovering. COVID hit high-poverty communities harder, with higher rates of infection, death, unemployment and remote schooling than in many affluent communities.

“These and other factors likely caused greater learning loss during the pandemic and dampened academic recovery,” Goldhaber writes in Study #2, pointing out that, “the Detroit, MI public school district received about $25,800 per pupil across all waves of ESSER… [while] Grosse Pointe, MI (a nearby suburb) only received about $860 per pupil.”

Here’s where the story of these federal dollars gets complicated, because the learning they appear to have bought wasn’t experienced evenly, according to Goldhaber.

In Study #2, he and co-author Grace Falken, found larger academic benefits from federal spending in districts serving low shares of Black and Hispanic students. Though he tells NPR, these patterns “do not necessarily imply that ESSER’s impacts vary because of student demographics. Rather, the results could reflect other district characteristics that happen to correlate with the student populations the districts serve.”

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Reardon and Kane did not find statistically significant evidence of this kind of variation.

Goldhaber and Falken also found that towns saw more math gains than cities, while rural areas led the way in reading growth. Interestingly, suburban districts generally experienced “smaller, insignificant impacts” from the federal spending in both subjects.

But did the money help enough?

If your standard for “enough” is a full recovery for all students from the learning they missed during the pandemic, then no, the money did not remedy the full problem.

But the researchers behind both studies say that’s an unrealistic and unreasonable yardstick. After all, Congress only required that districts spend at least 20% of ESSER III funds on learning recovery. The rest of the relief came with relatively few strings attached.

Instead, the researchers say, the money’s effectiveness should be judged by a more realistic standard, based on what previous research has shown money can and cannot buy.

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Harvard’s Tom Kane, of Study #1, points out that their results do line up with pre-pandemic research on the impact of school spending, and suggest a clear, long-term return on investment.

“These academic gains will translate into improvements in earnings and other outcomes that will last a lifetime,” Kane tells NPR.

For example, the academic gains associated with every $1,000 in per student spending would be worth $1,238 in future earnings, Kane estimates. Increased academic achievement also comes with valuable social returns, he says, including lower rates of arrest and teen motherhood.

What’s more, Reardon tells NPR, because these federal dollars disproportionately went to lower-income districts, “not only do we find that the federal investment raised test scores, but we also find that it reduced educational inequality.”

But the work’s not over.

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In Study #2, Goldhaber and Falken write, “to recover from these remaining losses, our estimates suggest schools would need between $9,000 and $13,000 in additional funds per pupil, assuming the return on those funds is similar to what we estimated for ESSER III.”

They also warn that middle-income districts could continue to struggle – because they experienced academic losses but got less federal aid.

In a presidential election year, it’s unlikely Congress will agree to send schools more money. And Goldhaber worries, as ESSER funds begin to expire this year, districts will have to cut staff.

“Some districts, particularly high poverty, high minority districts, are going to lose so much money that I think teacher layoffs are inevitable,” Goldhaber tells NPR. “So I’m worried that the funding cliff – there’s a downside that we’re not thinking hard enough about.”

The good news, says Kane, is that ESSER was a massive, “brute force” effort, and a far smaller, state-driven effort could still make a big difference, so long as it’s hyper-focused on academic interventions.

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Kane says, “It falls to states to complete the recovery.”

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Atos crisis deepens as biggest shareholder ditches rescue plan

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Atos crisis deepens as biggest shareholder ditches rescue plan

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A rescue bid for French IT services group Atos led by its largest shareholder has collapsed, casting the future of the troubled group into doubt once again.

Atos said on Wednesday that the consortium led by Onepoint, an IT consultancy founded by David Layani, had withdrawn a proposal that would have converted €2.9bn of Atos debt into equity and injected €250mn of fresh funds into the struggling company.

“The conditions were not met to conclude an agreement paving the way for a lasting solution for financial restructuring,” Onepoint said in a statement on Wednesday.

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The decision by Onepoint comes less than a month after Atos had picked its restructuring proposal over a competing plan from Czech billionaire Daniel Křetínsky. Atos said on Wednesday that Křetínsky had already indicated he wanted to restart talks.

Once a star of France’s tech scene, Atos is racing to strike a restructuring deal by next month as it struggles under its €4.8bn debt burden. It has cycled through multiple chief executives over the past three years and its shares have collapsed. They were down 12 per cent in early trading on Wednesday.

Atos also said it had received a revised restructuring proposal from a group of its bondholders.

“Discussions are continuing with the representative committee of creditors and certain banks on the basis of this proposal with a view to reaching an agreement as soon as possible,” the company said. 

Jean-Pierre Mustier, former chief executive of Italian lender UniCredit, was installed as chair in October 2023 and given the task of putting Atos on a stable footing for the future. Since his appointment, several efforts to stabilise Atos through asset sales have fallen apart.

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If talks with Křetínsky do restart, it will mark the Czech businessman’s third attempt to do a deal with Atos after an earlier plan to buy its lossmaking legacy business unravelled.

One of the people close to the talks said creditors had not necessarily become more receptive to Kretinsky’s plan given it cutting a larger chunk of the group’s debt.

The crisis at Atos has prompted the French government to intervene. It is currently seeking to acquire three parts of Atos that are deemed of importance to national security for up to €1bn.

Atos said on Wednesday it had concluded a deal with the French state that would give it so-called “golden shares” in a key Atos subsidiary, Bull SA. The agreement also gives the government the right to acquire “sensitive sovereign activities” in the event a third party acquired 10 per cent of the shares — or a multiple thereof — in either Atos or Bull.

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New Jersey gamer flew to Florida and beat fellow player with hammer, say police

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New Jersey gamer flew to Florida and beat fellow player with hammer, say police

An online gamer from New Jersey recently flew to Florida, broke into the home of a fellow player with whom he had feuded digitally but never met in person, and tried to beat him to death with a hammer, according to authorities.

The allegations leveled by the Nassau county, Florida, sheriff’s office against 20-year-old Edward Kang constitute an extreme example of a phenomenon that academics call “internet banging” – which involves online arguments, often between young people, that escalate into physical violence.

As Bill Leeper, the local sheriff, told it, Kang and the man he is suspected of attacking became familiar with each other playing the massively multiplayer online role-playing game ArcheAge.

The Korean game is supposed to no longer be available beginning Thursday, its publisher announced in April, citing a “declining number of active players”, as ABC News reported. But prior to the cancellation, Kang and the other player became locked in some sort of “online altercation”, Leeper said at a news briefing Monday.

Kang then informed his family that he was headed out of town to meet a friend he had made through gaming, Leeper recounted. The sheriff said Kang flew from Newark, New Jersey, to Jacksonville, Florida, and booked himself into a hotel near his fellow gamer’s home early Friday morning.

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He had allegedly bought a hammer and a flashlight at a local hardware store, receipts for which deputies later found in Kang’s hotel room.

By early Sunday, Kang purportedly had put on black clothes, gloves and a mask, and he went into his target’s home through an unlocked door. He waited for the victim to get up to take a bathroom break from gaming – and then battered him with the hammer, Leeper said.

The alleged victim managed to wrestle Kang to the ground while screaming for help. The victim’s stepfather woke up after hearing the screams, rushed to his stepson’s side, helped take Kang’s hammer away and restrained him until deputies were called and they arrived, according to Leeper.

Deputies found blood at the home’s entrance and in the bedroom of the victim, Leeper added. The sheriff said the victim was brought to a hospital to be treated for “severe” head wounds while deputies jailed Kang on counts of attempted second-degree murder and armed burglary.

Leeper accused Kang of telling deputies that he carried out the violent home invasion because he believed the target to be “a bad person online”. Kang also allegedly asked investigators how much prison time was associated with breaking and entering as well as assault.

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Attempted second-degree murder alone can carry up to 15 years. Leeper quipped that his only answer to Kang was: “It will be a long time before you play video games.”

Striking a more serious tone, Leeper urged people to be vigilant about and report to authorities any suspicious online behavior aimed at them. He also mentioned the importance of locking one’s home.

“This … serves as a stark reminder of the potential real-world consequences of online interaction,” Leeper said.

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