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Defiant Putin visits occupied Mariupol, symbol of Ukrainian resistance | CNN

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Defiant Putin visits occupied Mariupol, symbol of Ukrainian resistance | CNN



CNN
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Vladimir Putin has made a shock go to to Russian-occupied Mariupol, his first go to to territory captured by his forces within the year-long battle.

The go to was an obvious act of defiance, coming simply days after the Worldwide Felony Courtroom issued an arrest warrant for him.

It additionally prompted outrage from Ukraine – the protection ministry in contrast Putin to athief” visiting “beneath the duvet of night time” – with town having been decreased to ruins in Russia’s offensive.

Putin was flown into Mariupol by helicopter and toured districts across the metropolis in a automobile, footage launched by Russian authorities confirmed.

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The Russian president is proven assembly seemingly stunned residents. Putin tells one man “we have to begin attending to know one another higher.”

The Kremlin insisted the go to was “spontaneous.” It isn’t clear when it passed off, though on Saturday Putin visited Crimea to mark the ninth anniversary of its annexation.

All the footage launched of Putin’s go to is after darkish, a potential approach for the authorities to hide injury.

Putin talks with local residents during his visit to Mariupol.

Information of the go to comes after the ICC issued arrest warrants on Friday for Putin and Russian official Maria Lvova-Belova for an alleged scheme to deport Ukrainian kids to Russia. Putin is but to touch upon the warrant.

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The go to is especially provocative to Ukrainians as Mariupol was lengthy a logo of resistance that has witnessed a few of the most intense preventing since Russia launched its invasion.

In the course of the journey, the Kremlin stated Putin additionally examined the shoreline of Mariupol, visiting a yacht membership and theater constructing.

Russian Deputy Prime Minister Marat Khusnullin, who accompanied him, spoke intimately to Putin about “ongoing development and restoration work” within the metropolis.

Within the video, Khusnullin tells Putin: “There’s a plan to reconstruct it by the top of the third 12 months. We plan for it to be a totally purposeful airport able to making flights to all cities of Russia and overseas.”

The Kremlin added that Putin held a gathering on the command publish of the particular navy operation – Russia’s description of its invasion – in Rostov-on-Don.

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An adviser to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, Mykhailo Podolyak, slammed the “cynicism” and “lack of regret” over Putin’s go to.

“The legal at all times returns to the crime scene,” Podolyak stated on Twitter.

Mariupol, a port metropolis on the Sea of Azov, is positioned in Ukraine’s Donetsk Oblast and has been beneath direct Russian management since Might 2022.

It was in Mariupol that Russian forces carried out a few of their most infamous strikes, together with an assault on a maternity ward final March and the bombing of a theater which pressured lots of of civilians to hunt refuge.

Mariupol turned a logo of Ukrainian resistance throughout weeks of relentless Russian assaults final 12 months. Famously, even when a lot of the metropolis had fallen, its defenders held out on the Azovstal metal plant for weeks earlier than the stronghold lastly fell.

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Protection analysts beforehand advised CNN that Russian forces tried to flatten Mariupol to make town “simpler to manage.”

Of the 450,000 individuals who lived within the metropolis earlier than the warfare, greater than a 3rd have already left.

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Live news: Japan stocks gain ground after snap election call

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Live news: Japan stocks gain ground after snap election call

Tony Vinciquerra, the TV industry veteran who revived Sony Pictures Entertainment and established it as an “arms dealer” to streaming services, will step down as chair and chief executive of the group early next year.

Vinciquerra, 70, who joined Sony in 2017, sold off most of Sony’s international cable TV assets as consumers “cut the cord” and signed up for streaming services.

He also decided against launching a streaming service, opting instead to license Sony-produced shows such as The Crown and Better Call Saul. The strategy kept Sony Pictures profitable.

Ravi Ahuja, 53, a former Disney and Fox executive who heads Sony’s television studios, will replace Vinciquerra.

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FAQ: Your house flooded. Now what?

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FAQ: Your house flooded. Now what?

Heavy rains from hurricane Helene caused record flooding and damage in Asheville, North Carolina.

Melissa Sue Gerrits/Getty Images/Getty Images North America


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Melissa Sue Gerrits/Getty Images/Getty Images North America

The biggest threat in a hurricane isn’t the wind, it’s the water. From the mountains of western North Carolina to the Florida coast, communities were inundated by torrential rain and flooding from Hurricane Helene.

There’s still another two months left in hurricane season. It helps to know that flooding from heavy rain can happen just about any time, anywhere, as climate change makes torrential downpours more common. 

As the water recedes, the long, slow process of recovery begins. Here’s what you need to know to prepare for flood waters, and how to start picking up the pieces when the water’s gone.

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My house flooded. What should I do first?

The Federal Emergency Management Agency says the first thing you should do is check for things like damaged power and gas lines and cracks in the foundation to make sure it’s safe to go inside.

If it is, and there’s no standing water in the house, go to the circuit breaker box and turn off the electricity. If you smell natural gas or propane, or hear a hissing sound, FEMA says to contact the fire department immediately. And put distance between you and the house.

Then you’ll want to check to see how high the water rose. If it got above your house’s electrical sockets, you should call an electrician to make sure the system is safe to use, says Brad Hubbard, president of National Flood Experts, an engineering firm.

“You don’t want to, obviously, put live electricity through a wet situation,” Hubbard says.

What if I couldn’t evacuate and I’m stuck on the upper floor of my house? Should I wade through the water to get out or wait for help?

Flood water is dangerous. It can electrocute you, and there’s often debris, sewage and toxic chemicals in it. So, if you can wait for the water to recede or for help to come, that’s your best bet, says Jennifer Horney, a professor at the University of Delaware who studies the public-health impacts of disasters.

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If you have to enter a flooded area, Horney says you should take precautions, like wearing sturdy shoes to protect your feet and trying to keep open wounds from coming into contact with the water.

“People die in storms all the time from taking a risk that they don’t need to,” Hubbard says. “If you’re trying to save a person, go for it. If you’re trying to save your car or a piece of property, it is not worth it.”

Janice Whitley wipes her face while working to find valuables from her 93-year-old mother's bedroom in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene in Old Fort, North Carolina.

Janice Whitley wipes her face while working to find valuables from her 93-year-old mother’s bedroom in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene in Old Fort, North Carolina.

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It’s safe to go back inside my house. Now what?

Use your cell phone to take a ton of pictures of the outside and the inside of your house. You’re documenting the damage and trying to show how high the water got. That’s important for making an insurance claim or applying for federal assistance. The more pictures, the better, Hubbard says.

If you have flood insurance, file a claim as soon as possible. “Get your name on the list,” Hubbard says. “There are tens of thousands of people who are dealing with this right now, and [insurers are] just going to go down the list. So, the quicker you get on the list, the quicker that this is all going to be resolved for you.”

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Then you need to dry your house as fast as possible. That means ripping up carpets, removing furniture and cutting out drywall starting a foot above the water line.

Keep in mind that after disasters, electricians, contractors and other people who help with recovery are in short supply. Hubbard says be patient with them. “We all live in these areas that we serve,” he says, “and it means that when there’s a storm, the people who are trying to help you are also dealing with their own problems.”

What about next time?

Take precautions beforehand if possible. Photograph your home, possessions and valuables before an extreme weather event hits, to use for insurance claims. If there’s a flood threat, put valuables on top of kitchen counters or on a second floor if you have one. You can also put important items inside of a dishwasher, which is watertight, Hubbard says.

Preparation also includes taking stock of the risks you face. Only about 4% of homeowners nationwide have flood insurance. When disasters like Helene happen, people without flood insurance are often left to shoulder the costs themselves, which can have profound consequences.

“This will be a material financial event for them and could change the course of their life,” says Matthew Eby, chief executive of First Street, which models climate risk.

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You can go to FirstStreet.org, type in your address and see what kinds of risk your property faces. “You can discover that I do have flood risk when I may not have known that,” Eby says, “and I can look at what solutions might exist.”

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Tester’s Senate Fate Could Make or Break a Harris Presidency

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Tester’s Senate Fate Could Make or Break a Harris Presidency

On the day Barack Obama took over the White House on Jan. 20, 2009, six of his cabinet nominees were immediately confirmed by the Senate. He signed his first piece of legislation — a major bill guaranteeing equal pay for women — into law just nine days later.

Should Vice President Kamala Harris win the presidency, she could not count on such cooperation from the chamber where she, like Mr. Obama, once served. Mr. Obama benefited from a big Democratic majority in the Senate. But Democrats are in control now by only the slimmest of margins, and their chances of keeping that majority most likely hang on the fate of Senator Jon Tester of Montana, who is currently trailing in his re-election race in his solidly red state.

If he should lose and Democrats fail to score any upsets in a handful of races they are not favored to win, Republicans would take over the Senate, putting Ms. Harris at loggerheads from the start with a newly empowered G.O.P. bent on stymying her at every turn.

“It is night and day,” Senator Richard Blumenthal, Democrat of Connecticut, said about the difference between his party hanging on and Republicans winning the Senate. “It’s loss of control, putting the agenda very much in peril.”

At the moment, most analysts lean toward Republicans capturing the Senate, given a political map that was stacked against Democrats from the start and has only gotten tougher for them. The G.O.P. is all but certain to win the West Virginia seat being vacated by Senator Joe Manchin III. And Mr. Tester is lagging in a state expected to vote overwhelmingly for former President Donald J. Trump.

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The swing of those two seats alone would be enough to knock Democrats out of their 51-to-49 majority and fundamentally alter the governing landscape if they cannot secure an upset win elsewhere. Polls show that other Democratic incumbents in battleground states, including Sherrod Brown in Ohio and Jacky Rosen in Nevada, continue to run ahead of their Republican opponents.

The prospect of a new Democratic president and a Republican Senate is a rare scenario. The winner of the White House historically has had coattails that brought Congress into line — at least at the start. Presidents of both parties elected in recent decades have consistently been sworn in with their allies controlling both the House and the Senate. Not since Grover Cleveland in 1884 has a Democrat been elected to a first presidential term with a Republican Senate.

The potential for winning the White House and losing the Senate is a chief reason that Democrats are so determined to re-elect Mr. Tester, promising to stick with him to the finish whatever the polls say. Democrats say they have confidence that Mr. Tester can pull out a victory.

“There’s no world that you can conceive of that I’m not going to be in Montana until the end,” Senator Gary Peters, Democrat of Michigan and the chairman of the party’s Senate campaign operation, said during a recent speech at the National Press Club. “Jon Tester will have everything he needs to win.”

Yet Democrats are also beginning to allocate resources to the Republican-dominated states of Texas and Florida, where Senators Ted Cruz and Rick Scott have shown some weakness, as alternative paths to a Senate majority should Mr. Tester be unable to prevail. And in a surprise, Dan Osborn, an independent, is mounting a strong bid against Senator Deb Fischer, a Republican, in Nebraska. An upset there could deny Republicans a majority.

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The stakes are enormous, particularly since the old notion of a honeymoon for a newly elected president is out the window. These days, many voters from the losing party expect their representatives to put up a fight, not rally around the winner.

Should they lose their Senate majority, Democrats would give up their all-important committee chairmanships. With Republicans in control, Ms. Harris would have to think about her cabinet choices in an entirely different way. The idea that presidents are entitled to their chosen nominees is a quaint one these days, and any picks would have to pass intense G.O.P. scrutiny.

Instead of making selections that could pass muster with a Democratic majority, Ms. Harris would need to choose candidates who could appeal to enough Republicans to win confirmation should they even clear committee and reach the floor for a vote. There would be no flurry of approvals on her first day in office.

“Obviously we would be in a position to negotiate nominations from everything from the Supreme Court to the Department of Homeland Security and everything in between,” said Senator John Cornyn, Republican of Texas and one of the men vying to replace Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky as party leader beginning in 2025. “It will be a different role.”

Mr. Cornyn also noted that a Republican Senate would be able to block Democrats from gutting the filibuster to pass new nationwide protections for abortion rights, a move that Ms. Harris has said she would support.

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Things could get even more difficult when it comes to lifetime appointments to the federal courts. Democrats have so far placed 213 judges on the bench during the Biden administration. Republicans would want to slow that momentum and screen Ms. Harris’s choices extremely carefully after the confirmations of scores of judges they opposed.

As for the Supreme Court, it is not certain that a Democratic president could even get a nominee through a Republican-controlled Senate should a vacancy occur. At minimum, any Supreme Court nominee would need to be much more centrist than the person a Democratic president might select if her own party held the Senate majority.

“Particularly with the judiciary, because we have the power of confirmation, I think they’re going to have to think long and hard about who they submit and whether or not they think they could get them cleared through the Senate,” said Senator John Thune, Republican of South Dakota and another candidate for party leader. “But that’s a bridge we’ll cross if and when we come to it. Certainly we’re hoping we have all the reins of power next year.”

Depending on the final Senate margin, having Ms. Harris in the White House and the G.O.P. controlling the Senate could empower the dwindling band of more moderate Republicans like Senators Susan Collins of Maine and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, who might team up with Democrats on select issues and be persuaded to back some Democratic nominees. They would still have to find ways to force legislation to the floor and overcome the 60-vote filibuster.

Of course, a Democratic White House and a Republican Senate is just one possible scenario from the election, and nothing is locked in at this point. But a Trump presidency and a Democratic Senate seems a far more unlikely outcome while both parties still have a chance at securing the coveted trifecta of controlling the House, the Senate and the White House.

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Under virtually any predicted outcome of the voting in November, the partisan margins in both the House and the Senate are going to be tight as they have been the past two years, making legislating precarious.

Democrats say they have shown they can make progress in a divided Congress by striking spending and legislative deals with Republicans while advancing executive branch and judicial nominees. They would relish a chance to do so again — but they would need to hang on in the Senate.

“Over the last four years,” said Senator Chuck Schumer, Democrat of New York and the majority leader, “we have shown what can get done with a Democratic president and a Democratic majority in the Senate.”

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