logo
LA28 organizers confident Trump's latest travel ban won't affect Los Angeles Olympics

LA28 organizers confident Trump's latest travel ban won't affect Los Angeles Olympics

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Planning and preparation for the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics has made 'significant progress' and organizers on Thursday expressed confidence that President Donald Trump's latest travel ban won't prevent games participants from entering the U.S.
'It was very clear in the directive that the Olympics require special consideration and I actually want to thank the federal government for recognizing that,' LA28 chairman and president Casey Wasserman said during a news conference at the Los Angeles Convention Center.
'It's very clear that the federal government understands that that's an environment that they will be accommodating and provide for,' he said. 'We have great confidence that that will only continue. It has been the case to date and it will certainly be the case going forward through the games.'
International Olympic Committee member Nicole Hoevertsz, who is chair of the Coordination Commission for LA28, anticipates the U.S. government will cooperate, as it did in hosting previous Olympics.
'That is something that we will be definitely looking at and making sure that it is guaranteed as well,' she said. 'We are very confident that this is going to be accomplished. I'm sure this is going to be executed well.'
Sixteen IOC members wrapped up a three-day visit Thursday, having inspected multiple venue locations, including Dodger Stadium where they attended a Major League Baseball game between the New York Mets and the Dodgers.
The IOC's Coordination Commission was last in the city in November.
'We've seen significant progress,' Hoevertsz said. 'We leave the city very confident with the road ahead.'
Noting the games are 1,135 days from opening on July 14, 2028, Wasserman said, "We are in delivery mode now.'
Saturday marks the six-month anniversary of the start of the deadly wildfires that devastated Pacific Palisades on the city's west side and the community of Altadena, northeast of downtown.
'In California, there are some obvious things you should be prepared for — earthquakes, wildfires,' Wasserman said. 'You certainly hope that they never happen, but shame on us if we're not prepared for any and every kind of eventuality because that is our job.'
Reynold Hoover, who runs the day-to-day work of LA28 as its CEO, said contingency planning is ongoing.
'The wildfires gave us an opportunity within the organization to think a little bit differently about how we're structured and how we impact the community and how we think about sustainability,' he said.
From a financial standpoint, Wasserman said he's 'incredibly confident' the games will turn a profit.
'Frankly, losing money is not really an option for us. We understand that while there is a backstop from the city, that is not something we ever intend to get close to,' he said. 'We have built our entire delivery to be tracked against the revenue we create, which is why we are being so aggressive, and have been for a long time, on generating as much revenue as possible.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump Envoy Says Putin Agreed to US, Europe Offering NATO-Style Security Assurances for Ukraine
Trump Envoy Says Putin Agreed to US, Europe Offering NATO-Style Security Assurances for Ukraine

Epoch Times

time5 minutes ago

  • Epoch Times

Trump Envoy Says Putin Agreed to US, Europe Offering NATO-Style Security Assurances for Ukraine

U.S. President Donald Trump's special envoy Steve Witkoff on Aug. 17 said that Russian President Vladimir Putin agreed at Friday's Alaska peace summit to allow U.S. and European allies to grant Ukraine security protections similar to NATO's collective defense mandate as part of an impending deal to end the war. 'We were able to win the following concession: That the United States could offer Article 5-like protection, which is one of the real reasons why Ukraine wants to be in NATO,' Witkoff said on CNN's 'State of the Union.'

Jeanine Pirro says current DC justice system 'isn't cutting it' as Trump takes federal control
Jeanine Pirro says current DC justice system 'isn't cutting it' as Trump takes federal control

Fox News

time24 minutes ago

  • Fox News

Jeanine Pirro says current DC justice system 'isn't cutting it' as Trump takes federal control

At the center of President Donald Trump's takeover of Washington, D.C.'s policing stands a familiar face: Jeanine Pirro. Once a regular fixture on "The Five," Pirro is now wielding federal power as the U.S. attorney for D.C., tasked with turning Trump's promise of "Liberation Day" into reality. In her words, "the first order of government is the protection of its people," and she intends to make D.C. that shining city on a hill once again. "[President Trump] wants to make D.C. safe and beautiful and part of my appointment here by the president was to follow through on that initiative, and the federalization of the Metropolitan PD is something that I think is a great thing and the agenda is very clear," she shared on 'My View with Lara Trump' over the weekend. "We want to make D.C. safe again." Pirro defended Trump's measure, stressing that it protects citizens' rights rather than eroding them — a direct rebuttal to critics on the left. She pointed to juvenile crime as a major pillar of reform, arguing that too many serious offenses are shuffled into family courts. In her words, the current system of rehabilitation, including "yoga" and "ice cream socials," simply "isn't cutting it" when violent teens are walking free. "If I have a 17-year-old who shoots someone with a gun, but he doesn't kill that person, I cannot... prosecute them, investigate them. It goes to the family court. The mission there is rehabilitation… and that just isn't cutting it with me or anyone else who's a law enforcement professional," she said. "For 30 years, I have fought the fight to make sure that we make criminals accountable and that we protect the victim. We are not doing enough to protect the victims in D.C." She argued that the crisis is hitting minority communities the hardest, noting that dozens of young African-American lives have been cut short in the past year and a half, with most cases unsolved. "We haven't arrested them, we haven't taken the guns from them, and that's what the president understands, and that is my mission." Pirro, on Sunday, pointed to the early results of Trump's initiative, which she says are already measurable: hundreds of arrests, dozens of illegal firearms seized, and fentanyl taken off the streets, in just the first week. At the same time, she dismissed protests erupting outside the White House as little more than political theater. "They should kiss the ground at this point that you've got someone who wants to make this city safe again, who wants to make it clean again," she told "Fox & Friends Weekend," warning that demonstrations disguised as "music festivals" were little more than a re-branding of crime. "But here's what the president's going to do: he's going to make a difference. We're going to change the laws," she added.

US may not be able to create scenario to end war in Ukraine, Rubio says
US may not be able to create scenario to end war in Ukraine, Rubio says

Yahoo

time27 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

US may not be able to create scenario to end war in Ukraine, Rubio says

(Reuters) -The United States will keep trying to create a scenario to help end Russia's war in Ukraine, but that might not be possible, U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio told CBS on Sunday. "If peace is not going to be possible here and this is just going to continue on as a war, people will continue to die by the thousands ... we may unfortunately wind up there, but we don't want to wind up there," Rubio said in an interview with "Face the Nation." European leaders will accompany Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy to meet Donald Trump in Washington on Monday, seeking to bolster him as the U.S. president presses Ukraine to accept a quick peace deal after Trump's meeting with Russian leader Vladimir Putin on Friday. "There are things that were discussed as part of this meeting that are potentials for breakthroughs, that are potential for progress," said Rubio, adding that topics for discussion would include security guarantees for Ukraine. According to sources, Trump and Putin discussed proposals for Russia to relinquish tiny pockets of occupied Ukraine in exchange for Ukraine ceding a swathe of fortified land in the east and freezing the front lines elsewhere. Rubio said both sides would need to make concessions if a peace deal were to be concluded.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store