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Cambridge names three finalists for district superintendent Monday

Cambridge names three finalists for district superintendent Monday

Boston Globe20 hours ago
Mayor Denise Simmons, who serves as School Committee chair, did not respond to requests for comment Monday.
Cambridge has been without a permanent schools leader since May 2024, when the School Committee voted
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Murphy, an attorney who had been serving as the district's chief operations officer, was named the interim superintendent that June.
None of the finalists immediately responded to a request for comment Monday afternoon.
The district will hold listening sessions during the week of Aug. 20, and School Committee members will conduct site visits to the finalists' school districts the week of Sept. 15, according to a schedule posted by the district.
There will also be opportunities to meet each of the finalists during the week of Sept. 22, according to the district.
The School Committee will interview the finalists on Sept. 30 and Oct. 1, and a vote to select the next superintendent is expected Oct. 6, according to the district.
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Finalist interviews will be broadcast live and will be open to the public, the district said in its announcement. Public comment will not be included, it said.
Cambridge's public school district is home to about 7,000 students, according to state data, and more diverse than the state as a whole. Black students make up more than one-fifth of the district, while Asian and Latino students each count for about 15 percent, the state reported. Around a tenth of Cambridge's students are multi-race, and roughly a third are white, state data showed.
Students and Cambridge district staff represent more than 109 countries, 89 languages are spoken in the schools, and about 30 percent of students speak a first language other than English, according to an online description for the superintendent's job.
The superintendent oversees a district with more than 2,000 employees, including educators, and a proposed budget of $280 million for fiscal 2026.
Greer, the previous Cambridge superintendent, had
Smith drew complaints from teachers and parents over her decision-making on issues like the assignments of some assistant teachers in classrooms and a police presence at the school.
Cambridge Public Schools hired an outside law firm to review Smith's leadership of the school early in 2024, which determined the allegations against Smith were unsubstantiated.
Greer was placed on paid leave until her final day in early August 2024.
Greer, whose tenure as superintendent ended a year early, received more
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Greer earned $260,000 in fiscal 2023, the first year of her three-year contract, which also included a 2.5 percent bump in pay in each of the remaining two years.
'I am saddened to leave,' Greer
This is a developing story. Check back for updates.
John Hilliard can be reached at
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US, China extend tariff truce by 90 days, staving off surge in duties
US, China extend tariff truce by 90 days, staving off surge in duties

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

US, China extend tariff truce by 90 days, staving off surge in duties

By Trevor Hunnicutt, Andrea Shalal and Joe Cash WASHINGTON/BEIJING (Reuters) -The United States and China have extended a tariff truce for another 90 days, staving off triple-digit duties on each other's goods as U.S. retailers get ready to ramp up inventories ahead of the critical end-of-year holiday season. U.S. President Donald Trump announced on his Truth Social platform on Monday that he had signed an executive order suspending the imposition of higher tariffs until 12:01 a.m. EST (0501 GMT) on November 10, with all other elements of the truce to remain in place. China's Commerce Ministry issued a parallel pause on extra tariffs early on Tuesday, also postponing for 90 days the addition of U.S. firms it had targeted in April to trade and investment restriction lists. "The United States continues to have discussions with the PRC to address the lack of trade reciprocity in our economic relationship and our resulting national and economic security concerns," Trump's executive order stated, using the acronym for the People's Republic of China. The tariff truce between Beijing and Washington had been due to expire on Tuesday at 12:01 a.m. EDT (0401 GMT). The extension until early November buys crucial time for the seasonal autumn surge of imports for the Christmas season, including electronics, apparel and toys at lower tariff rates. The new order prevents U.S. tariffs on Chinese goods from shooting up to 145%, while Chinese tariffs on U.S. goods were set to hit 125% - rates that would have resulted in a virtual trade embargo between the two countries. It locks in place - at least for now - a 30% tariff on Chinese imports, with Chinese duties on U.S. imports at 10%. There was relief on the streets of China's capital, where officials are grappling with the challenge Trump's trade policy poses to the economy's long-standing, export-oriented growth model. "I don't think either China or the United States wants to see their relationship continue to deteriorate," said Wang Mingyue, a 39-year-old professional working in robotics. "That's why both are taking the current approach, but the game and confrontation may not be over yet - so there's still risk." Markets showed optimism for a breakthrough between the two superpowers, with Asian stocks rising and currencies mostly steady, after treading water for weeks. Trump told CNBC last week that the U.S. and China were getting very close to a trade agreement and he would meet Xi before the end of the year if a deal was struck. TRADE 'DETENTE' CONTINUED The two sides announced a truce in their trade dispute in May after talks in Geneva, Switzerland, agreeing to a 90-day period to allow further talks. They met again in Stockholm, Sweden, in late July, and U.S. negotiators returned to Washington with a recommendation that Trump extend the deadline. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has said repeatedly that the triple-digit import duties both sides slapped on each other's goods in the spring were untenable and had essentially imposed a trade embargo between the world's two largest economies. "It wouldn't be a Trump-style negotiation if it didn't go right down to the wire," said Kelly Ann Shaw, a senior White House trade official during Trump's first term and now with law firm Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld. She said Trump had likely pressed China for further concessions before agreeing to the extension. Trump pushed for additional concessions on Sunday, urging China to quadruple its soybean purchases, although analysts questioned the feasibility of any such deal. Trump did not repeat the demand on Monday. "What is he going to offer in exchange?" said Xu Tianchen, senior economist at the Economist Intelligence Unit in Beijing. "China says: 'you should allow us to buy more high-tech goods,' but the U.S. is reluctant." Xu said Trump's refusal to ease his 20% tariff on Chinese goods over fentanyl flows suggested both sides believed they could continue to withstand the trade shock. "If (Trump) escalates, he will struggle to gain an upper hand over China, which has many cards to play," Xu said. China's exports to the U.S. fell an annual 21.7% last month, according to the country's latest trade data, while shipments to Southeast Asia rose 16.6% over the same period as manufacturers sought to pivot to new markets and capitalise on a separate reprieve that allowed trans-shipment to the U.S. Separate U.S. data released last week showed the trade deficit with China shrank to its lowest in more than 21 years in June. Still, analysts expect the world's two largest economies to reach an agreement before long, as their deep interdependence makes pursuing alternative markets unattractive over the long term. Ryan Majerus, a former U.S. trade official now with the King & Spalding law firm, said the news would give both sides more time to work through long-standing trade concerns. 'This will undoubtedly lower anxiety on both sides as talks continue, and as the U.S. and China work toward a framework deal in the fall," he said. Washington has also been pressing Beijing to stop buying Russian oil to pressure Moscow over its war in Ukraine, with Trump threatening to impose secondary tariffs on China. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Black leaders feel under siege after Trump's D.C. takeover
Black leaders feel under siege after Trump's D.C. takeover

Politico

timean hour ago

  • Politico

Black leaders feel under siege after Trump's D.C. takeover

What up, Recast fam. On today's agenda: Donald Trump's unprecedented takeover of Washington, D.C.'s police force is testing the limits of his presidential authority and ratcheting up fears that other cities also led by Black elected officials will soon be caught in his crosshairs. Trump, citing flimsy and misleading statistics, declared a 'crime emergency' in the nation's capital, seizing control over local law enforcement from three-term Mayor Muriel Bowser and deploying some 800 National Guard troops to city streets. 'This is Liberation Day in D.C. and we're going to take our capitol back,' Trump proclaimed, echoing World War II-era language associated with emancipation of Italy from facism and the German Nazi occupation. Trump added that his action would 'rescue our nation from crime, bloodshed, bedlam and squalor and worse.' The National Guard troops, who will work alongside the Metropolitan Police officers, will be tasked with clearing homeless encampments, protecting landmarks and keeping order in the city. It's an unprecedented presidential power grab that Bowser herself said is unnecessary, but has very little recourse to stop given the 'special conditions' outlined in the Home Rule Act. While Trump's supporters have cheered him on, his detractors say the move is nothing more than the president, once again, leaning into racist tropes to cast Black elected officials as incompetent and minority citizens as threats to society. During his wide-ranging press conference, Trump also singled out Baltimore, Chicago, Los Angeles, New York and Oakland — all of which have Black mayors and large minority populations that overwhelmingly voted against him in his three presidential runs — as crime ridden. 'He has never thought well of Black elected leaders, and he's been explicit about that,' said Maya Wiley, the president and CEO of the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights. She added that she views Trump's actions as a tactic to undermine liberal dissent. 'It's also clear from his previous statements that he has always searched for excuses to assert might over places he does not have political support and that will not just do his bidding,' she added. 'Washington, D.C., has been one of those cities.' Was The Recast forwarded to you by a friend? Don't forget to subscribe to the newsletter here. You'll get a weekly breakdown of how race and identity are the DNA of American politics and policy. Bowser worked to quell tensions between her and Trump stemming from his first term. This included painting over the yellow letters of the city's Black Lives Matter Plaza, which was formed in a response to police brutality during the national protests of 2020. Prior to Trump's inauguration she traveled to Mar-a-Lago to discuss possible areas of collaboration. In late April, Bowser helped lure the Washington Commanders NFL franchise from suburban Maryland back to D.C., with Trump cheering the move in a social media post as a 'HUGE WIN' for the city and it's 'incredible fan base.' Days later, she appeared with him at the White House to announce the city would host the NFL Draft in 2027. (Last month, Trump injected himself again by threatening to scuttle the deal to bring the football team back to D.C. if the team didn't return to its original name, which is considered a racial slur against Native Americans.) None of that appears to have deterred Trump from launching his federal takeover. 'I think this is a moment for the mayor to question whether her strategy, which has been appeasement, has been a success,' said Paul Butler, a Georgetown law professor and former federal prosecutor. He described Trump's actions as a 'bogus declaration' but suggested there is likely little reprieve D.C. officials will gain trying to challenge the president's declaration in court. 'While the court reviews whether he appropriately has this power, the Supreme Court and other lower courts [have] generally allowed him to … proceed with what he wants to do, until they get around to deciding the case,' Butler added. 'It opens the doors to further militarization of the police, not just in the District, but in the other cities that he named.' This is not the first time Trump has ignored the wishes of local officials and deployed federal troops. During the height of federal immigration raids in Los Angeles, which sparked protests that turned violent, Trump federalized some 2,000 California Guard troops against the wishes of Mayor Karen Bass, who is Black, and California Gov. Gavin Newsom. Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott told The Recast that Trump's actions in D.C. and his singling out of other Black-led jurisdictions, including his own, is nothing more than a 'diversion and distraction tactic' to shift the focus from a volatile economic climate and the release of materials associated with Jeffrey Epstein, the disgraced financier and convicted sex offender. 'It's also the continuation of the president, unfortunately, spouting these racist-based, right-wing propaganda talking points about cities and Black-led cities,' said Scott, who last month said his city is in the midst of a historic reduction in violent crime. 'For the president to say that we're too far gone — it's just obscene, obnoxious and just not based in reality.' Maryland Gov. Wes Moore, a combat veteran, chastised Trump for using military personnel for political gain. 'These actions by the president lack both data and a battle plan,' Moore said in a statement. '[The president] is simply using honorable men and women as pawns to distract us from his policies, which continue to drive up unemployment and strip away health care and food assistance from those who need it most.' Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson echoed Moore's sentiments. 'If President Trump wants to help make Chicago safer, he can start by releasing the funds for anti-violence programs that have been critical to our work to drive down crime and violence,' Johnson said. 'Sending in the National Guard would only serve to destabilize our city and undermine our public safety efforts.' The pretext of Trump's actions appears to be a response to an attack on Edward Coristine, who is white and a former staffer at DOGE who goes by the nickname 'Big Balls.' He was allegedly assaulted by approximately 10 juveniles near Dupont Circle this month, according to a police report obtained by POLITICO. It caught the attention of Trump, who posted on his Truth Social platform a photo of a bloodied Coristine and called for D.C. laws to be changed so that teenagers who commit violence can be tried as adults 'and lock them up for a long time, starting at age 14.' Trump is deputizing key administration officials to help oversee the D.C. police, which he can maintain control of for up to 48 hours, but if he sends a special message to certain congressional leaders, he can extend that control for up to 30 days. Attorney General Pam Bondi will be in charge of D.C. police, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth will direct the order to call up troops, while the District's U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro said on Monday that she is preparing to bolster prosecutions. Bowser, the D.C. mayor, delivered a measured response to the federal takeover in her remarks following Trump's announcements. 'While this action [Monday] is unsettling and unprecedented, I can't say that, given some of the rhetoric of the past, that we're totally surprised,' she said. We'll continue to monitor how this plays out in D.C. and if similar federal action is deployed in other major cities. All the best,The Recast Team ARRESTED AT SEA The Israeli military last month intercepted the Handala, the flotilla carrying aid to Gazans, arresting 21 crew members. Among them was Chris Smalls, former president of the Amazon Labor Union. Smalls, the only Black member of the crew, told The Recast he believes he was singled out by the Israeli military because of his race and subsequently beaten. In prison, Smalls began a hunger strike, which he said lasted until he was released five days later. Our colleague Teresa Wiltz caught up with Smalls, who in 2023 was an honoree on the Recast Power List, to talk about his experiences on and off the flotilla, what happened once he was released — and why he says he's going back on the flotilla as soon as possible. This interview was edited for length and clarity. THE RECAST: Can you talk me through what happened? SMALLS: We were intercepted, illegally kidnapped against our will because we had intentions to go to Israel. They cut communications off from the outside world. There's at least a dozen ships [surrounding us]. We had to ride with them for about 12 hours before we were transferred to the port of authority. THE RECAST: At what point were you arrested? SMALLS: Well, once we were transferred to the immigration department, they violently assaulted me; seven authorities threw me to the ground. They put their knees in my back. They pushed my arm behind my back, and three of them levitated me on each side, while one of them was using my jewelry to choke me. Then they isolated me. THE RECAST: Talk to me about what it was like in the prison. SMALLS: Yeah, we were seven in one cell, not ideal for a hot, low-oxygen room. It was a heat wave, very inhumane conditions. It was bedbug-infested; I have scabies now because of it. Yeah, it was, it was pretty much hell. They had us strip naked, humiliated us, tried to break us down psychologically. THE RECAST: Do you feel like you were being targeted because of your race? SMALLS: Oh, 1,000 percent. It was not a coincidence that I was the last [of my group released with Hatem from Tunisia, the only other person of color left behind from the flotilla.] THE RECAST: Tell me about the day they released you. SMALLS: They came in, told us to get ready, we're going home. They threw us in the back of a van, and we were off to the Jordan border. We had no idea where we're going. When we got to the border, they just handed us $300 in cash and told us, 'Take a taxi to the airport.' So thankfully, I was able to meet some Palestinian people that allow me to use one of their cell phones and contact the coalition to tell them where I was at. THE RECAST: Sens. Cory Booker (D-N.J.) and Andy Kim (D-N.J.) are your senators. Did you hear from them? SMALLS: Yeah, I hadn't heard from any of them. I mean, they take money from AIPAC or whatever they do. I'm not surprised. You know, it is what it is. It's a shame, you know. But that's the reason why I went, to shed light on this and for American citizens to be outraged about where our taxpayer dollars are going. [Editor's note: An aide from Booker's office said in a statement, 'Since being made aware of Mr. Small's detainment, Senator Booker's office worked with the U.S. Department of State and the Israeli Embassy to obtain information about the circumstances of his detainment, his treatment and ensure he was receiving assistance.' Kim's office did not respond to a request for comment in time for publication.] THE RECAST: Are you going to do it again? SMALLS: Yeah, of course. I'll definitely, definitely do it [with] other folks for sure.. WHAT WE'RE WATCHING THIS WEEK Thorny Texas tilt — Democratic Reps. Lloyd Doggett, the dean of the Texas congressional delegation, and Greg Casar, who heads the Congressional Progressive Caucus, may compete for the same Texas district if Texas lawmakers approve new redistrict maps. POLITICO's Gregory Svirnovskiy explores Doggett's push to get Casar to run in another district — one that's a Trump +10 — instead of the safe Democratic district. And more… TODAY'S CULTURE NEWS A royal extension — Meghan Markle and Prince Harry have reportedly extended their partnership with Netflix with a multiyear, first-look deal. Snoop Dogg goes down under — The 'Drop It Like It's Hot' rapper and former ambassador for the Olympics last year was just named headliner for next month's Australian Football League's Grand Final,billed as 'the biggest event on the Australian sporting calendar.' Country singer opens up about boyfriend, Kash Patel – Country singer Alexis Wilkins swatted away any unease about her 19-year age gap with boyfriend Kash Patel, the head of the FBI. 'Modern Family' star changes name, drops new music – The actress that played Lily on the hit show, Aubrey Anderson-Emmons, is reportedly changing her stage name and also debuting an indie pop EP.

The 2026 midterms are officially underway
The 2026 midterms are officially underway

Politico

timean hour ago

  • Politico

The 2026 midterms are officially underway

What up, Recast fam. On today's agenda: The next federal elections are still some 15 months off, but political shifts in recent days across four key battleground states are the clearest sign yet that the race to carve out lanes ahead of the 2026 midterms is already underway. Below we break down pivotal announcements from Wisconsin, Georgia, Nevada and North Carolina — all swing states Trump won last year by less than 384,000 votes combined. Some of the newly declared candidates are looking to clear the field, while others are hoping to define their nascent primary contests on their own terms in hopes of forcing possible challengers to react to their opening salvos. At least one candidate on this list appears to be angling for the only endorsement that matters on the GOP side: Donald Trump. North Carolina The widespread speculation was finally put to rest Monday with Roy Cooper, the state's popular two-term ex-governor, announcing via video on social media that he's running for the open U.S. Senate seat. His bid is viewed as a massive recruiting victory for Democrats, who see North Carolina as perhaps the best pick-up opportunity in what is expected to be a tough Senate map next year. Democrats have reason to be excited if the past is any indication: Cooper is undefeated in statewide contests during a career that includes eight years as governor and nearly 16 years prior to that as the state attorney general. Cooper's candidacy already appears to have a clearing effect with other Democrats. Rep. Don Davis and former Rep. Wiley Nickel are both standing down in the race according to POLITICO's Nicholas Wu. Had he run, Davis could have been the state's first Black senator. Instead, he is likely to run for reelection to his competitive House district. Nickel, who launched his bid in April, is reportedly now eyeing the state's attorney general post. Was The Recast forwarded to you by a friend? Don't forget to subscribe to the newsletter here. You'll get a weekly breakdown of how race and identity are the DNA of American politics and policy. On the GOP side, Republican National Committee Chair Michael Whatley will run, according to reporting from POLITICO's Dasha Burns last week. Whatley, who previously led the North Carolina Republican Party before Trump picked him to lead the RNC, has never been a candidate but has deep connections to donors. The Senate contest is expected to be one of the most competitive and expensive races in the next cycle after Republican Sen. Thom Tillis announced last month he would not seek reelection. Nevada Nevada Attorney General Aaron Ford, a Democrat, announced Monday that he was launching a bid for governor, setting up a pivotal clash as he attempts to unseat GOP incumbent Gov. Joe Lombardo. As POLITICO's Natalie Fertig points out, Ford also has a compelling story to offer voters. He grew up as a recipient of food stamps and Medicaid benefits and now plans to run against Republicans' efforts to gut those same programs, which he claims will negatively impact Nevadans. But unlike Cooper in North Carolina, other Democrats won't be clearing the field for Ford, who is attempting to become his state's first Black governor. Washoe County Commission Chair Alexis Hill is also readying to launch a gubernatorial bid, setting up what could be a competitive primary. Keep an eye too on former Democratic Gov. Steve Sisolak, who lost to Lombardo in 2022 by less than 2 percentage points and said as recently as April that he has not ruled out another run in 2026. Georgia There are two key elections in the Peach State next year with both governor and senator on the ballot. Heading into the primaries, the intriguing action is on the GOP side as contenders race to win Trump's endorsement, with culture war issues taking center stage. Rep. Mike Collins dropped an announcement video on Monday showing him driving a big rig truck and proclaiming he helped 'drive home Trump's 'big, beautiful bill'' before adding moments later, 'We killed woke DEI garbage and banned boys from playing girls' sports.' Collins is also the author of the Laken Riley Act, the first bill Trump signed into law during his second term, which requires the detainment of any undocumented immigrant charged — not convicted — of crimes including theft and burglary. It's named after a Georgia nursing student who was murdered in Collins' district. Fellow Georgia GOP Rep. Buddy Carter, who is also leaning into his ties to Trump, referred to himself as a 'MAGA warrior' in his own campaign video announcement in May, which was released the day after the state's term-limited Gov. Brian Kemp declined to jump into the Senate race himself. The GOP field is still not set as Georgia political watchers are waiting for political newcomer Derek Dooley, the one-time head coach for the University of Tennessee football team who reportedly will get Kemp's support should he launch a Senate bid. Wisconsin Democrat Tony Evers announcement last week that he would not seek a third term as Wisconsin's governor came as a surprise for some, but it immediately blew wide open a competitive gubernatorial contest that could be among the most expensive in the nation next year. Wisconsin Lt. Gov. Sara Rodriguez launched her candidacy the following day, railing against Trump as 'a maniac in the White House,' citing his tariffs' detrimental effect on Wisconsinites and painting herself as someone who will fight to expand Medicaid and champion the health care workforce. Rodriguez is a former emergency room nurse and is married to a first-generation immigrant from Mexico. She's been candid about how Trump's campaign rhetoric from the 2024 campaign, when he said immigrants are 'poisoning the blood of our country,' impacted her family. As with other states, Rodriguez's entry into the race will do little to clear the field. One grassroots organizer in the state, when asked to weigh in on the potentially large Democratic field, said: 'This is going to be a long and annoying primary.' A slew of Democrats are expected to jump into the race; that list potentially includes state Attorney General Josh Kaul, former state Democratic Party Chair Ben Wikler, and state Sen. Kelda Roys. Both Roys and Rodriguez would be the state's first woman to serve as governor. Three other potential candidates would also make history should they choose to enter the race: Milwaukee County Executive David Crowley, Milwaukee Mayor Cavalier Johnson and former Lt. Gov Mandela Barnes, who narrowly lost a Senate bid 2022, are all considering a gubernatorial bid. All three men would make history as the first Black person to serve as Wisconsin governor should any of them win. On the GOP side, former Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker declined to run again but offered advice on the social media platform X for Republicans to court younger voters. Republicans who are running include Josh Schoemann, the Washington County executive, and Bill Berrien, a Navy SEAL veteran and manufacturing CEO who likened himself to Trump and self-identifies as 'an outsider and a business man.' Rep. Tom Tiffany (R-Wis.) is also leaning toward launching a bid. All the best,The Recast Team PROJECT 2025 AUTHOR PRIMARIES LINDSEY GRAHAM Paul Dans, one of the leading architects of Project 2025, is mounting a primary challenge to Sen. Lindsey Graham, arguing that the four-term senator's loyalty to Trump is unsatisfactory. His entry in the race will undoubtedly test the MAGA base's loyalties, and Dans told The Associated Press he does not plan to shy away from Trump's push to gut the federal workforce and scale back federal safety net programs — efforts outlined in the policy blueprint he helped author. 'What we've done with Project 2025 is really change the game in terms of closing the door on the progressive era,' Dans told the AP. 'If you look at where the chokepoint is, it's the United States Senate. That's the headwaters of the swamp.' Over the course of his career Graham has proven a formidable candidate and has routinely beat back GOP challengers. But next year's primary field is growing bigger as many see him as vulnerable, despite the fact that he has already secured Trump's endorsements as well of those fellow GOP Sen. Tim Scott and Gov. Henry McMaster — who will both serve as co-chairs of his 2026 campaign. South Carolina Democrats, who are attempting to claw back into relevance in the state after Republicans gained super majorities in both chambers of the state Legislature following the 2024 election, may see an opportunity to meddle in the GOP Senate primary. 'If we don't have a contested primary, I see Dems voting in the Republican [primary],' longtime South Carolina Democratic strategist and DNC member Clay Middleton told The Recast. POLITICO's Nicole Markus noted that Chris LaCivita, who is serving as senior advisor to Graham's campaign, said Dans 'parachuted himself' into South Carolina after being 'unceremoniously dumped in 2024 while trying to torpedo Donald Trump's historic campaign.' LaCivita added: 'Like everything Paul Dans starts, this too will end prematurely.' WHAT WE'RE WATCHING THIS WEEK Trump floats pardon of Epstein co-conspirator — While overseas in Scotland, Trump was asked by reporters if he'd consider pardoning Ghislaine Maxwell. She is currently serving a 20-year federal prison sentence for child sex trafficking and other crimes in connection with a scheme that spanned years where she and Jefferey Epstein would groom and sexually abuse underage girls. POLITICO's Cheyanne M. Daniels reports Trump said: 'Well, I'm allowed to give her a pardon, but I — nobody's approached me with it.' And more… TODAY'S CULTURE NEWS Deion Sanders reveals he beat cancer — The NFL Hall of Famer and current head coach at the University of Colorado revealed he had been diagnosed with an aggressive form of bladder cancer but is now considered cured following surgery. Sea World splashes with summer concert series — The San Diego theme park has drawn crowds and an elevated social media presence for hosting nostalgic acts like Ashanti and Ying Yang Twins at the venue's Bayside Amphitheater. Eddie Murphy weighs in on being 'the old guy' — The comedy legend waxes poetic about bonding with fellow comic Pete Davidson on their latest film, as well as being a 64-year-old star, still doing action scenes and having co-stars ad lib by needling him about his age.

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