Nigeria leader says President Buhari ‘can’t hold fair election’

Former Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo has accused the incumbent President Muhammadu Buhari of planning to rig the upcoming national elections in February.

In a statement issued on Sunday, Obasanjo in Abeokuta city urged the Nigerians to resist any plot by the government to manipulate the vote.

“I personally have serious doubts about the present INEC’s integrity, impartiality and competence to conduct a fair, free and credible election,” he said.

WATCH:Nigeria’s era of big spending for election is disappearing

Buhari is seeking re-election on February 16. His main challenger is Obasanjo’s former deputy, Atiku Abubakar of the main opposition People’s Democratic Party.

Elections in NigeriaAfrica’s most populous nation, are often turbulent affairs, frequently marked by accusations of plotting or back-doors dealing.

Obasanjo also urged the electorate to vote out Buhari for failing to manage the country’s security crisis. 

“The security situation has deteriorated with kidnappings everywhere and Boko Haram being more in action and nobody should deceive Nigerians about this,” Obasanjo said.

“This administration has reached the end of its wit even in handling security issues, particularly the Boko Haram issue, partly due to misuse of security apparatus and poor equipment, deployment, coordination and cooperation,” he added.

“Boko Haram has also been empowered by the Nigerian government through payment of ransom of millions of dollars which each administration disingenuously always denies.”

The former president accused Buhari of resorting to desperate plans, despite being sick, to retain himself in power, like former military dictator Sani Abacha.

“Buhari has intimidated and harassed the private sector, attacked the National Assembly and now unconstitutionally and recklessly attacked and intimidated the judiciary to cow them to submission,” Obasanjo said.

“Today, another Abacha era is here. Security institutions are being misused to fight critics and opponents of Buhari and to derail our democracy.”

Buhari rejects allegations

President Buhari’s office dismissed the accusations, calling the remarks “most unfitting” by a former president.

“This language of his 16-page letter, likening President Buhari to General Sani Abacha, a man he dreaded and the one who jailed him under military laws, is most unfitting from a former President of Nigeria,” Buhari’s spokesman Garba Shehu said.

Shehu called the opposition’s accusations of vote rigging “outlandish and outrageous”.

“The claim that President Buhari has put in place a rigging machinery is both outlandish and outrageous. We are unable to get words to describe a 90-year old liar, except to say that with his lies against the President, it is Obasanjo, not the president, who falls in esteem,” he added.

Shehu said Buhari is being attacked for his fight against corruption.

“What the former president said is no more than evidence that President Buhari’s war against corruption is succeeding,” Shehu said.

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Monday Morning Digest: Patriots-Rams Super Bowl Is a Battle of the Generations

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    Jamie Squire/Getty Images

    The Patriots are back in the Super Bowl, like it or not.

    The Rams are in the Super Bowl for the first time since the Greatest Show on Turf era, and all it took was one of the worst calls in NFL history.

    Super Bowl LIII pits reigning NFL evil genius Bill Belichick against boy genius Sean McVay, and this edition of Digest brings you:

    • All of the action, blown calls and weird whistling from Sunday’s overtime shootouts

    • Deep analysis of the Rams-Patriots matchup

    • Winners and losers from the coaching carousel

    • One last look at the Chiefs and Saints, and what they must do to get over the hump next year

    • A preview of the top prospects at next week’s Senior Bowl

    …and much more! 

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    Jonathan Bachman/Getty Images

    Rams head coach Sean McVay was a high school quarterback in Georgia who had just turned 16 when the Patriots beat the Rams in Super Bowl XXXVI and began their dynasty.

    Rams quarterback Jared Goff was seven years old.

    The Rams played in St. Louis, not Los Angeles.

    Your television was low-def. Your cellphone probably flipped.

    Jeff Fisher was well-regarded. It was that long ago.

    A number of the Rams players the Patriots beat on that fateful day in 2002 are now in the Hall of Fame, including Kurt Warner, Marshall Faulk and Orlando Pace. The Rams slowly faded, wandered in the wilderness for years, relocated halfway across the country and finally rebuilt with kids too young to remember the Greatest Show on Turf and a coach who was too young to drive during the Warner-Faulk heyday. 

    And who is here to meet them in Super Bowl LIII? Bill Belichick and Tom Brady, still going strong 17 years later.

    The Patriots have faced youthful challengers before, from the Seahawks a few years ago to the upstart Eagles last year. Heck, Eli Manning was young once. Some manage to win a Super Bowl. None came close to toppling a dynasty.

    These Rams are unique, though. Not because they pose any more of a threat to the Patriots than the Eagles, Seahawks or anyone else did, but because they have already been adopted as the NFL’s next wave of innovators, pioneers and—if not this year, then eventually—champions.

    The joke is already stale: Everyone who ever had lunch with McVay is a hot head-coaching candidate. We can laugh at the copycat NFL’s obsession with young offensive masterminds, but the McVay Movement sweeping the NFL is supposed to be about more than a fancy new offense (which is not all that new).

    McVay and his assistants/friends/look-alikes promise a new way of calling plays, installing schemes, controlling the clock, deploying personnel and managing the locker room. It’s supposed to be about the complete reimagining of how NFL teams operate. 

    McVay, in short, is supposed to be the next Belichick.

    But the original Belichick is still here, still manufacturing wins like Sunday’s victory over the Chiefs in the same way he and an unknown quarterback named Tom Brady beat a much more talented Rams team in February 2002.

    A Rams win in Super Bowl LIII could mark the end of one era and the dawn of another. A Patriots win? In one sense, that’s just another Patriots win, another golden bauble on the treasure heap. But it would also cast doubt on the brave new era the McVay generation represents.

    For players and coaches who grew up in the era of Belichick and Brady, winning the Super Bowl will be as revolutionary as changing the world. McVay and the Rams may just be good enough to do it—and young enough to believe that they can. 

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    Gerald Herbert/Associated Press

    Digest’s quick takes on the stories from Sunday that everyone will be talking about:

    The Blown Call

    Rams cornerback Nickell Robey-Coleman said he was just trying to whack Tommylee Lewis to prevent an easy touchdown in the fourth quarter. He expected a flag. He said the officials told him that the ball was tipped, which is why he wasn’t flagged for obvious pass interference.

    The only person on earth who saw a tipped pass was the official who told Robey-Coleman that. 

    The blown call forced the Saints to settle for a field goal with 1:45 to play. A fresh set of downs would have allowed them to burn the clock to ice the game.

    But let’s not forget the sequence that led up to the blown call: an incomplete pass on a shaky throw by Drew Brees (saving a Rams timeout), a burned timeout by the Saints and a pitch play to Alvin Kamara that netted zero yards. 

    According to Ian Rapoport of NFL Network, senior vice president of officiating Al Riveron admitted to Saints head coach Sean Payton that it was a blown call. It was both terrible and game-altering. But with better clock management, the Saints still could won the game.

    Fourth-quarter madness

    On the one hand, the fourth quarter of the Patriots-Chiefs game was NFL spectacle at its best: four lead changes and lots of miraculous plays by a pair of great quarterbacks, all culminating in a sudden-death encore and some patented Tom Brady magic.

    On the other hand, it was also a swirling vortex of inexplicable calls and endless replay reviews in which the officiating both upstaged the game and had too much of an influence on the outcome.

    Julian Edelman either muffed a punt or watched the ball bounce in an exact outline of his body. There were multiple “what’s a catch?” plays. Worst of all, Chris Jones was called for roughing the passer because he thumped Tom Brady’s shoulder pad.

    The calls and no-calls may have evened out at the endan offensive pass interference on a pick play to set up a Chiefs touchdown was almost as bad as the Tapping a Brady callbut the myriad calls slowed the game down and made it feel like the referees, not Brady and Mahomes, had ultimate control over the flow.

    It would be a major problem if everything that happened on the field—including the bad stuff—didn’t somehow keep making the NFL even more popular.

    The incredible disappearing Gurley

    Todd Gurley had a bad game: two early carries that went nowhere, two dropped passes (one tipped into a defender’s hands), a blown block in pass protection. Then he disappeared for almost the entire second half, with C.J. Anderson getting the bulk of carries.

    Anderson is pretty darned good, and Gurley admitted after the game that he deserved a little time on the sideline. But Anderson was stopped short on a goal-line carry he got in place of a back with 40 regular-season touchdowns in the last two years, forcing the Rams to settle for a short field goal. Anderson took a handoff on 3rd-and-15. It’s hard to believe that this was the best use of the Rams’ manpower.

    Maybe Sean McVay was in Galaxy Brain-mode with his short field goals and benchings. He’ll learn in two weeks whether he can outsmart the best ever, or just himself. 

    The whistle blower

    His calls himself Whistle Man. He has been attending Saints games, dressed as a human whistle, bleating his high-pitched squeal to pump up the Saints (and distract their opponents) for years. Not only did he nearly win the game for the Saints on Sunday—Jared Goff looked ready to jam icepicks in his ears and played the second half with his earholes taped up—but he made half of America want to shut off our surround sound.

    Connor Orr of The MMQB tracked down Whistle Man during the game for a brief serenade. But Digest went one step further: We spoke to his mother.

    Digest: Where did you watch the Saints-Rams game?

    Whistler’s mother: At home in my wooden chair, with my black dress and bonnet on, next to the curtains and the little painting on my wall.

    Digest: Did your son always whistle like that?

    Whistler’s mother: Always. The dour couple next door used to get mad and stand outside their house holding a pitchfork when he got too loud.

    Digest: What do you have to say about your son’s newfound fame?

    Whistler’s mother: Like I always told that young man who wears bright blue everywhere, “They only hate you ‘cuz they ain’t you.” WE WERE ROBBED! WHO DAT? 

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    David J. Phillip/Associated Press

    How they got here

    The Rams offense overcame a miserable first quarter, deafening noise and Todd Gurley vanishing like Luke Skywalker in The Last Jedi to execute when it mattered in Sunday’s 26-23 victory over the Saints. They drove for a touchdown just before halftime and set up a game-tying field goal at the end of regulation after their defense (and the refs) gave them one last chance.

    Quarterback: Jared Goff

    Strengths: One of the most impressive passers in the league when he can drop to his spot in the pocket, make his reads and calmly deliver strikes to open receivers.

    Weaknesses: One of the least impressive passers in the league when facing a pass rush, coping with cold weather (Patriots joke here?) or otherwise forced to operate outside of Sean McVay’s carefully constructed structure.

    Skill-position players

    Todd Gurley: Gained 1,800 scrimmage yards. Led the NFL in touchdowns. Disappeared Sunday after a few short runs and costly dropped passes.

    Robert Woods: Led one of the league’s best offenses in receiving this year. Also one of the best blocking receivers in the NFL. Think Hines Ward, but with 1/500th of the media adulation (save for this inside look at Woods’ impact from B/R’s Tyler Dunne earlier this month).

    Brandin Cooks: Dangerous deep threat who played for three of the four teams in the conference championship round in the last three seasons. Will probably be traded to the Chiefs in the offseason to complete the cycle.

    C.J. Anderson: Wrecking ball with a dad bod. Cut by two teams during the regular season. Has been the Nick Foles of running backs since late December.

    Offensive line

    Left tackle Andrew Whitworth played himself into a future Hall of Fame discussion over the last two seasons. Right guard Austin Blythe and tackle Rob Havenstein have been as good if not better than Whitworth this season. Left guard Rodger Saffold has been a steady starter since before the Jeff Fisher era. Center John Sullivan got roughed up by Fletcher Cox and a few other elite defensive tackles this season, but he remains a capable veteran.

    The Rams’ play-action-heavy scheme is lineman-friendly (fake handoffs slow down pass-rushers), and a steady diet of bunch formations ensure there’s an extra blocker or two to help out on the edge of the line.

    The scheme

    A receiver crosses the formation pre-snap, Goff reads the defense (with McVay whispering in his helmet), then either hands off, play-fakes or slips the ball to the receiver for a reverse. After a play-fake, Goff either bootlegs looking for a tight end, throws deep or dumps the ball back to Gurley or Anderson in the flat.

    Yep, that’s the entire Rams offense. And an impressionist masterpiece is just a bunch of pastel paint blots. It’s all about how things are assembled.

    Looking ahead

    Goff’s ability to overcome the Superdome crowd and a sputtering start speaks well for his ability to handle the Super Bowl spotlight. The Rams enter the big game with many problems—again, they were one inexplicable pass interference no-call away from all-but-certain elimination—but their young quarterback is not one of them. 

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    Jeff Roberson/Associated Press

    How they got here

    The Patriots gave up some big plays against Patrick Mahomes—it’s nearly impossible not to—but they produced just enough sacks and stops, particularly early in the game, to give their offense a chance to win 37-31 in overtime.

    The stars

    Stephon Gilmore: All-Pro cornerback. Usually shadows the opponent’s top receiver. Signed away from the Bills in 2017, because the Bills don’t need great players (see also: Rams receiver Robert Woods).

    Trey Flowers: All-purpose defensive end and pass-rusher. Drafted with a fourth-round pick the Patriots acquired from the Buccaneers in a trade for Logan Mankins. Remember Logan Mankins? Remember the Buccaneers?

    Jason and Devin McCourty: Identical twin defensive backs. Devin has been a Patriots safety forever. Jason was cut by the Titans in 2017 and thrown into a late-round pick swap between the Browns and Patriots in 2018.

    Non-stars like Kyle Van Noy (who had two sacks on Sunday) and Adrian Clayborn were also cast-offs from weaker teams. The Patriots dominate the NFL by knowing your team’s roster better than it does.

    The weak links

    The Patriots’ defensive home-road splits were extreme in the regular season: They allowed 6.15 yards per play on the road as opposed to 5.19 at home, 22 touchdowns on the road to only 14 at home, and so on. Sunday’s victory might have looked far different if Mahomes didn’t miss a few wide-open receivers deep.

    Other than the home-road split, the Patriots’ biggest defensive “weakness” is the lack of one outstanding strength. Flowers is the only impact pass-rusher. The cornerbacks are reliable and fundamentally sound, but they can be beaten by top receivers (Brandin Cooks presents a real matchup threat).

    The Patriots rely on scheme and execution to beat you defensively. Luckily, they are coached by the greatest defensive mind in NFL history.

    Special teams notes

    Stephen Gostkowski is 37-of-41 on postseason field goals. Only David Akers and Adam Vinatieri have kicked more career field goals in the playoffs, per Pro Football Reference.

    Cordarrelle Patterson finished third in the NFL with 28.8 yards per kickoff return.

    The Super Bowl will be special teams ace Matthew Slater’s 23rd career postseason game, tying him with several players for 15th on the all-time postseason appearance list. Slater is one game away from appearing in as many playoff games as Brett Favre. For the record: Gostkowski is now tied for fourth all-time with 27 playoff appearances, while Brady leads the list with 39 (going on 40).

    Bottom line

    Historically, the best way to beat Bill Belichick’s defense has been to run the ball down its throat. All the play-calling wizardry in the world cannot help when you are being overpowered up the gut. Sean McVay and the Rams like to play that brand of football. The matchup of McVay’s offense against Belichick’s defense will be a battle for the NFL’s mind, soul and future. 

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    Jeff Roberson/Associated Press

    How they got here

    It was clunky at times. There were goal-line interceptions, bobbled passes and near-turnover disasters overturned by penalties. The Patriots appeared to have the Chiefs by the throat at the start of Sunday’s AFC Championship Game, but they let them come back and turn it into a scorcher.

    But Tom Brady and the Pats drove for two go-ahead touchdowns in the fourth quarter and then drove 75 yards in 13 plays to cap a 37-31 overtime win. 

    Quarterback: Tom Brady

    Strengths: The best decision-making, pocket awareness and short-range accuracy—not to mention the most postseason and Super Bowl experience—in NFL history. 

    Weaknesses: Brady is a little like Nolan Ryan in the 1990s: He only has one or two fastballs per game left in his arm and must be careful when he uses them.

    Skill-position players

    James White: Running back. Also the Patriots’ leading receiver. Known for occasionally catching 14 passes and scoring three touchdowns in Super Bowls.

    Sony Michel: Rookie workhorse running back. Yeah, it’s weird seeing the Patriots use one.

    Julian Edelman: A Wes Welker type.

    Rob Gronkowski: Like the hero at the end of a Korean action movie who has been in one too many hallway brawls, Gronk is still deadly but is definitely staggering.

    Rex Burkhead: This year’s official Patriots bench player everyone forgot about who suddenly scored two touchdowns in a championship game. 

    Offensive line

    Left tackle Trent Brown was signed as a budget-friendly replacement for Nate Solder. Right tackle Marcus Cannon is a 335-pound snowplow who spent his first five seasons in New England largely as a backup. Center David Andrews was an undrafted free agent in 2015. Guards Joe Thuney and Shaq Mason were third- and fourth-round picks, respectively, a few years ago. First-round pick Isaiah Wynn, Cannon’s expected replacement, was injured in the preseason.

    On paper, this line should stink. On the field, it’s one of the best in the league.

    The scheme

    Pick plays, rub plays, screens, shovel passes, quick tosses into the flat. Intricately designed running plays for Michel when the defense goes nickel to chase down all of the short sideline passes. Brady over the top like old times once the defense is scattered, battered, bewildered and demoralized.

    Bottom line

    The Patriots lack the aura of invincibility they had entering past Super Bowls, but no team is better at managing the clock before halftime and at the end of games, taking advantage of opponents’ errors or staying cool late in a close game. They still capitalize on every mistake. And they’ll be facing a Rams defense that makes plenty of them. 

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    David J. Phillip/Associated Press

    How they got here

    It wasn’t perfect, but the Rams defense shut down Michael Thomas (four catches for 36 yards) and made the most of some off-target Drew Brees throws, strange Sean Payton decisions and one ridiculous no-call to hold the Saints to only 23 points at the end of regulation Sunday. 

    Pressure by Dante Fowler Jr. in overtime forced a Brees interception to John Johnson III, setting up the long Greg Zuerlein field goal that gave the Rams a 26-23 victory. 

    The stars

    Aaron Donald: The best defensive player in the NFL. Lives up to 100 percent of his billing.

    Ndamukong Suh: Three-time first-team All Pro and former superstar. Lives up to about 85 percent of his reputation.

    Aqib Talib: Much-traveled former Pro Bowl cornerback. Lives up to about 75 percent of the hassles and trash talk.

    Dante Fowler Jr.: The No. 3 overall pick in 2015, imported midseason from Jacksonville for a pass-rush boost. Lives up to about 45 percent of his potential (but had a handful of big plays Sunday).

    Marcus Peters: Former Pro Bowl cornerback turned motormouth with fourth-degree burns, like Deadpool without the efficacy. Lives down to about 90 percent of his criticism (but was quiet—in a good way—on Sunday). 

    The weak links

    Let’s pick on someone other than Peters, who gets picked on enough by opposing quarterbacks.

    Linebacker Mark Barron used to be the type of defender forward-thinking teams crave: a converted safety with the quickness, instincts and size to handle both coverage and run defense. An Achilles injury has sapped his athleticism, turning him into an undersized defender who gets steamrolled by blockers and is a step too slow in coverage.

    Rams cornerbacks line up almost exclusively “by sides” instead of shadowing specific receivers when both Talib (left cornerback, offensive right side) and Peters (right cornerback, offensive left) are healthy. Football Outsiders ranks the Rams second leaguewide at stopping passes to the offensive right but 24th on passes to the offensive left.

    The Rams had the second-worst defense in the NFL against play-action passes, allowing 8.8 yards per play, per Football Outsiders. That’s odd considering they practice against the best play-action offense in the NFL.

    Special teams notes

    Zuerlein has missed only one field goal inside 40 yards since 2015.

    Counting Sunday, punter Johnny Hekker has completed 12 of 20 career passes for 168 yards and one touchdown on fake punts and field goals (he’s the holder). His regular-season passer rating of 102.9 would rank second in NFL history if he wasn’t 1,480 attempts short of qualifying for the career leaderboard.

    Laugh about the rating if you’d like, but Sunday’s throw to Sam Shields was a dart. It was also the first thing the Rams “offense” did right against the Saints, so watch the fake.

    Bottom line

    Relatively solid efforts by Peters and Fowler offer hope that the Rams defense will play to its potential and price tag in the Super Bowl, something it rarely did against top competition in the regular season. 

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    David Eulitt/Getty Images

    The NFL is not like college basketball. No one cares if you made the Final Four. So let’s look ahead to see what the Saints and Chiefs must do to get at least one step further next year.

    Kansas City Chiefs

    ESPN’s Adam Schefter reported early Sunday that Patrick Mahomes may fetch a $200 million contract when he becomes eligible for an extension in 2020. In other words, the Chiefs had better make the most of 2019, the last season in which they will have an MVP-caliber quarterback at a deeply discounted price.

    The Chiefs have nearly $36 million in cap space on paper, per Over the Cap, but they have some in-house free-agent decisions to make (most notably Dee Ford), so don’t expect many splashy new arrivals. An extra second-round pick from the Marcus Peters trade will help them upgrade their defense.

    Overall, it shouldn’t take much to keep the Chiefs neck-and-neck (at least) with the Patriots again next year. As for 2020, let Schefty and Mahomes’ agent worry about that. 

    New Orleans Saints

    The Saints have only around $19 million in cap space next year, per Over the Cap. They traded away their 2019 first-round pick to move up and select Marcus Davenport in the 2018 draft, and they gave up this year’s third-round pick for Teddy Bridgewater in late August. They are loaded with needs, starting with a tight end and two or three wide receivers. Drew Brees is set to eat up $33.5 million in cap space, and it looked like age-related diminishing returns were setting in at numerous times during this year’s playoff run.

    In summary, everything you expected or hoped would happen to the Patriots this season is about to happen to the Saints in the offseason.

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    Seth Wenig/Associated Press

    Digest highlights the best, worst and weirdest moments and developments from the past week, as the coaching carousel slowly grinds to a stop.

    Best staff

    New Browns head coach Freddie Kitchens spent the week hiring a fascinating group of assistants, including:

    • Offensive coordinator Todd Monken. He called the Buccaneers’ plays early in the year, when the Buccaneers were relevant and fun.

    • Defensive coordinator Steve Wilks. He’s a fine coach when he isn’t saddled with roughly 30 players the Patriots would have cut before training camp.

    • Defensive line coach Tosh Lupoi. Nick Saban’s former defensive coordinator? Why not!

    • Running game coordinator Stump Mitchell. He was the Darren Sproles of the 1980s and has been known to sport the greatest beard of any NFL coach.

    Most overdue decision

    The Buccaneers hired former Cowboys and Eagles kicker Chris Boniol as a specialists coach to work exclusively with kickers and punters. It’s three years too late to help Roberto Aguayo, but the Buccaneers were still plagued by kicker woes last year.

    Specialists coaches remain rare in the NFL because coaches like to fuss over a third-string tight end’s blocking footwork for months and then send a guy out to win a playoff game with instructions that amount to: “Go do whatever you do, and do it perfectly, or else.”

    Most revealing hire

    The Jaguars hired Digest favorite John DeFilippo as offensive coordinator. He was in Philly during Nick Foles’ Super Bowl run two years ago, so the hire sparks speculation that Jacksonville is a likely landing spot for Foles.

    It’s possible to like and respect both DeFilippo and Foles while still believing that uniting them under a conservative head coach in Jacksonville is the perfect recipe for recreating the 2018 Vikings.

    Most revealing firing

    Cowboys head coach Jason Garrett said early last week on Dallas radio that he didn’t anticipate any major shakeups to his staff. A few hours later, Cowboys executive vice president Stephen Jones said it was “a little early” for such talk. Garrett then backtracked at his press conference that same afternoon. On Friday, the Cowboys “parted ways” with offensive coordinator Scott Linehan.

    It’s hard to publicly undermine your head coach’s authority, leave a veteran assistant coach twisting in the wind during the hiring cycle, fire him during a news lull to maximize everyone’s embarrassment and put your team behind schedule for finding a replacement, all in only a few days of miscommunication and inertia. But the Cowboys found a way.

    Worst non-decision

    The Steelers appear to be keeping head coach Mike Tomlin, defensive coordinator Keith Butler and defensive coordinator Randy Fichtner in place while losing some of their best-regarded assistants. Offensive line coach Mike Munchak (now in Denver) is the latest defector. James Saxon, the running backs coach who got James Conner and Jaylen Samuels ready for featured roles in 2018, is now on the Cardinals staff.

    The Steelers coaches who elevated their units are leaving. The ones who fostered the junior-high drama-camp atmosphere are staying.

    Most mind-altering moment

    No, it wasn’t new New York Jets head coach Adam Gase starting his press conference by reenacting an old Talking Heads video. It was Gase claiming the Dolphins were terrible offensively in 2018 because they “sacrificed statistics to try to get wins.”

    What Gase was trying to say was that the Dolphins had a lot of injuries on offense, so they opted to be ultra-conservative on third-and-long and in other risky situations, lowering their yardage and point totals to keep things close.

    You know, like what former Jets head coach Todd Bowles did for the last three years, just with less clarity of thought.

    As always with the Jets, you may always say to yourself, “My God, what have they done?”

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    Butch Dill/Associated Press

    Eagles declare Carson Wentz is their starting quarterback; meanwhile, Nick Foles is expected to enter free agency.

    Point: Committing to Wentz was the only real option for the Eagles once you account for the salary cap, contract situations, actual scouting reports of both players and so forth. It’s hard to imagine anyone seriously arguing…

    Counterpoint: This is a disaster! Foles is a PROVEN CHAMPION. And Wentz is injury-prone! The Eagles should have gotten older, far more expensive and less talented at quarterback, because that’s how teams win!

    Antonio Brown feuds with former teammate Emmanuel Sanders and offensive coordinator Bruce Arians about television segments criticizing Brown.

    Point: Brown appears to have a beef with nearly everyone these days, which proves he’s a potential locker room headache for his next team. It’s hard to imagine anyone exonerating him for his end-of-season…

    Counterpoint: This is all Sanders’ fault! And Arians’ fault! And Mike Tomlin’s, Ben Roethlisberger‘s, the organization’s and society’s fault. We are all to blame for Brown’s dissatisfaction and must work together to ensure he is traded to a team that brings him money, championships and personal satisfaction, possibly the same team that shells out $80-plus million for Nick Foles!

    Colts head coach Frank Reich composes an open letter thanking the team’s fans.

    Point: What a lovely gesture! Reich’s personality will foster a bond with both players and fans in the years to come. It’s hard to imagine anyone reacting negatively to…

    Counterpoint. Why, the Colts might as well hang a banner in Lucas Oil Stadium reading: “2019: NFL’s Friendliest Team!” Real champions don’t thank fans for supporting them; they act personally aggrieved that anyone in the nation would dare criticize them!

    Point: Wow, Counterpoint, you are all over the hot takes today.

    Counterpoint: Haven’t you heard? Due to Digest budget cuts, Point-Counterpoint is on the bubble. One of us could be laid off if we don’t attract more readers!

    Point: Eh, we can’t let stuff like that cloud our judgment and color our expert opinions.

    Cam Newton gets new tattoo.

    Point: This is nothing less than a death knell for American society. Vince Lombardi did not climb down from a mountain with the Packers sweep chiseled into a stone tablet so insolent whelps like Newton can use their bodies like billboards. And shouldn’t he be rehabbing his shoulder instead of hanging around seedy tattoo parlors? The Panthers should release him immediately for this. AND REPLACE HIM WITH NICK FOLES.

    Counterpoint: Sheesh. Leave a little meat on the bone next time, man. 

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    Rogelio V. Solis/Associated Press

    It’s “Wait ’til next year” time for 30 of the NFL’s 32 teams. That’s why the Digest team will be tempering next week’s Super Bowl hype with a trip to the Senior Bowl to check out some of the best prospects in this year’s draft class.

    Here’s who we will have an eye on over a week of intense practices, weigh-ins, interviews and, oh yeah, an all-star game.

    Quarterbacks

    Drew Lock, Mizzou: He was at the top of the quarterback draft board before Dwayne Haskins (Ohio State) and Kyler Murray (Oklahoma) declared. Lock has the arm to play his way back into the conversation—and the top of the first round—this week.

    Daniel Jones, Duke: An early graduate from college and late arrival to the top-tier-quarterback conversation. Is he first-round material or just a toolsy tease?

    Gardner Minshew, Washington State: A transfer from East Carolina who threw for six billion yards in 2018 (4,776, actually). True prospect or Mike Leach mirage?

    Jarrett Stidham, Auburn: He looked like a future first-round pick as a Baylor freshman but backslid in two seasons at Auburn. Bad system fit with something to prove or Christian Hackenberg 2.0?

    Trace McSorley, Penn State: There are other mid-tier prospects to keep an eye on, but McSorley is exactly the kind of pesky scrambler scouts fall in love with during Senior Bowl week.

    Defenders

    Kentucky edge-rusher Josh Allen backed out of the Senior Bowl last week. LAME. Actually, logical and prudent for a surefire top-10 pick with nothing to prove from a week of practices. But we wanted to watch him. So: LAME.

    With Allen out of the picture, Montez Sweat (Mississippi State), Jaylon Ferguson (Louisiana Tech) and D’Andre Walker (Georgia) may be the best edge-rushers on the field this week. Both coaching staffs (49ers and Raiders) will be in the market for a few good edge-rushers.

    Terrill Hanks of New Mexico State looks a little like the next Darius Leonard on film. A big week against top competition can mean a lot for a mid-major defender.

    Johnathan Abram (Mississippi State) is a Donte Whitner-type: a danger to others and himself in the open field. He must prove that he’s aggressive, not reckless. 

    Small-school wonders

    Nasir Adderley of Delaware may be the best safety in the draft class. He can solidify a first-round grade with a strong week.

    Oshane Ximines of Old Dominion is a small-program edge-rusher with tools and moves, which is often the kind of guy who makes a lot of money in Senior Bowl pit drills.

    Slot receiver Andy Isabella of UMass caught 15 passes for 219 yards and two touchdowns against Georgia. You don’t want to know what he did against Liberty. (Yes you do: nine catches, 303 yards, two TDs.)

    Khalen Saunders of Western Illinois is a 310-pound defensive lineman who can do backflips. ‘Nuff said.

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Serena Williams Digs Deep for Australian Open Last-16 Win over Simona Halep

Serena Williams of the US reacts after a point against Romania's Simona Halep during their women's singles match on day eight of the Australian Open tennis tournament in Melbourne on January 21, 2019. (Photo by Jewel SAMAD / AFP) / -- IMAGE RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - STRICTLY NO COMMERCIAL USE --        (Photo credit should read JEWEL SAMAD/AFP/Getty Images)

JEWEL SAMAD/Getty Images

Serena Williams held off an impressive fightback from world No. 1 Simona Halep on Monday to reach the quarter-finals of the 2019 Australian Open.

After easing through the first set comfortably, Williams came out on top in what became a hard-fought contest to win 6-1, 4-6, 6-4 in Melbourne to extend her head-to-head record against Halep to 9-1.

Per the Guardian‘s Jacob Steinberg, Williams reflected on her victory:

“I really needed to elevate my game. She’s the No. 1 player in the world. I’m such a fighter. I just never give up. It’s definitely something that’s innate. It’s a miracle I’m here and I get to do something I enjoy. This is my job and it’s a super pleasure. That keeps me motivated and keep fighting for every point.”

An inauspicious start from Williams saw her broken to love, sealed with a double-fault.

Former player Patrick McEnroe was concerned for his compatriot’s movement in the early stages:

Patrick McEnroe @PatrickMcEnroe

Wow rough start for Serena. I know only first game but not moving well at all

The 23-time Grand Slam winner conjured the perfect response, however, as she quickly rattled off six games in a row, to seal the first set in 20 minutes.

Halep was broken three times in the process, and sports writer Tumaini Carayol gave some insight into Williams’ success on her serve:

Tumaini Carayol @tumcarayol

Either way, this is obviously the best tennis Serena has played since her return

The world No. 1 finally stopped the rot with a hold in the opening game of the second set, but she was broken again soon after as she continued to struggle with the American’s power:

#AusOpen @AustralianOpen

Down. The. Line.

@serenawilliams lands a 132 km/hour winner on her way to breaking #Halep for a 6-1 2-1 lead.

#AusOpen https://t.co/pFk31e5vN2

The 27-year-old was beginning to show some signs of life, though, and the set was back on serve when Williams crashed a backhand into the net.

A confidence-boosting hold to love gave Halep a greater foothold in the contest, which had become far more competitive than it had been at the start.

After some more aggressive shot-making helped her remain ahead and had Williams on the back foot, Halep broke to win the second set when the No. 16 seed fired a backhand long.

The tournament’s official Twitter account shared the numbers behind Halep’s efforts:

#AusOpen @AustralianOpen

In the final six games of the second set, @Simona_Halep hit 5⃣ winners to @serenawilliams’s 2⃣.

Follow every point, every ace, every winner and more with #Infosys MatchBeats: https://t.co/LjrcepbOzc

#AusOpen https://t.co/74a4B9WRsa

As Ben Rothenberg of the New York Times observed, Halep was capitalising on some uncharacteristic physical struggles from her 37-year-old opponent:

Ben Rothenberg @BenRothenberg

Serena’s movement is just not there tonight. Doesn’t know if she’s carrying some sort of injury or just sluggish, but she’s in trouble whenever Halep is able to pull her around the court for several balls. #AusOpen

Williams’ serving remained undiminished, though, and she dug deep to save three break points before grabbing a break of her own for a 4-3 lead in the decider, which was quickly consolidated.

Halep was able to force Williams to serve for the match, and the American duly did so when Halep sent a forehand long.

Williams will face seventh seed Karolina Pliskova in the quarter-finals.  

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Why 2019 Could Be Marijuana’s Biggest Year Yet

On November 7, the day after Democrats seized control of the House with what would become a 40-seat swing, President Trump fired his Attorney General, Jeff Sessions. That day, at his home in California, Smoke Wallin’s phone blew up with congratulatory calls from friends and associates celebrating the political demise of the nation’s top law enforcement officer. Sessions had spent good parts of the preceding two years looming menacingly over a booming industry that is caught between a tidal wave of popularity at the state level and an implacable wall of illegality in Washington. Wallin, the president of Vertical, a cannabis company with a 1,500-acre ranch outside of Santa Barbara and operations in four states, was not unmoved by Sessions’ departure, but he saw an even more welcome development in the election results.

“People kept saying that with Sessions no longer attorney general, a major obstacle was removed from the cannabis movement’s progress,” Wallin told POLITICO Magazine. “I had to remind them that Jeff Sessions was not really the major problem. He had been all bluster and no action.” Instead, Wallin was focused on the departure of another Sessions — the all-powerful chairman of the House Rules Committee.

Story Continued Below

Republicans had taken such heavy losses on Election Night, it would have been easy to overlook Texas Congressman Pete Sessions’ defeat to Colin Allred, a former professional football player and Obama administration HUD attorney, but Wallin understood that it had been Rep. Sessions, not Attorney General Sessions, who had almost-singlehandedly blocked marijuana reform in Congress by denying votes on marijuana-related amendments. With Pete Sessions gone, and Democrats in charge, the backlog of small-bore changes that marijuana advocates have been clamoring for since 2016 — clarification of banking rules; permission for veterans to talk to their VA doctors about medicinal marijuana; protections against federal interference for state-legal programs (medical and recreational) — are all due to appear in upcoming appropriations bills. Two hundred and ninety-six members of Congress (68 percent) represent the 33 states with at least medical marijuana, which means the votes are there to pass these amendments. In the words of Rep. Earl Blumenauer, the Oregon Democrat who is the dean of the Cannabis Caucus: “Cannabis reform is inevitable.”

Reform certainly didn’t seem inevitable two years ago.

Even though legal marijuana had continued its advance across the country, many observers, at the dawn of 2017, feared Jeff Sessions’ rise to the top of the Department of Justice would mean much stricter enforcement of federal drug law than had existed under President Obama. True to form, Sessions repealed the Obama-era Cole Memo, which had provided a buffer to keep the feds at bay while state-legal marijuana programs got their legs. But it had been Pete Sessions’ blockade of key legislation in Congress to protect state-legal marijuana programs that had a far greater stifling effect on the nascent industry that is expected to grow into a $25 billion market by 2025. As Wallin told me: “Everybody talks about Jeff Sessions, but honestly the big Sessions was really Pete.”

But even while Pete Sessions stood fast in the Rules Committee, the pressure at the state level kept mounting as deep-red states such as West Virginia, Louisiana, Arkansas, Oklahoma, and Utah passed medical marijuana laws. Then in November, a slew of gubernatorial candidates campaigned on pro-marijuana platforms, and a dozen of them won: 11 Democrats (Gavin Newsom in California, Jared Polis in Colorado, J.B. Pritzker in Illinois, Andrew Cuomo in New York, Tim Walz in Minnesota, Ned Lamont in Connecticut, Janet Mills in Maine, Gretchen Whitmer in Michigan, Steve Sisolak in Nevada, Michelle Lujan Grisham in New Mexico, and Kate Brown in Oregon) and one Republican (Phil Scott in Vermont).

In November, Michigan became the tenth state to legalize recreational marijuana, but the number of legal states could potentially double by year’s end. States like Illinois, whose new governor has made it known that he wants Illinois to beat Michigan to claim the title of the first midwest state to sell legal marijuana, are looking to legalize pot through their legislatures rather than at the ballot box. A legal marijuana map that included all regions of the country, rather than weighted to the mountain west, would place a new level of pressure on a Democratic-controlled Congress to get something done. And for the first time in several years, Congress seems ready for the challenge.

“This is the first Congress in history where, going into it, it seems that broad marijuana reforms are actually achievable,” said Tom Angell, an advocate-journalist who runs Marijuana Moment.

Members of Congress are lining up to introduce bills that never saw the light of day when Republicans ran the show. Two bills have already been filed: a re-introduction of the CARERS Act by Steve Cohen (D-Tenn.) and Don Young (R-Alaska), which would expand marijuana research, allow VA doctors to discuss it with veteran patients; and prevent the federal government from meddling with state-legal programs without removing marijuana from the schedules created by the Controlled Substances Act of 1970; and H.R. 420, the “Regulate Marijuana like Alcohol Act” by Blumenauer, which would remove marijuana from the list of most dangerous drugs, “de-scheduling it” in Congress-speak, and shift regulatory authority to the Bureau of Alcohol Tobacco and Firearms.

“For the past several Congresses, there have been dozens of pieces of marijuana legislation filed, but this is the first time where advocates can legitimately say that some of these bills can actually pass,” Angell told me.

And, sure, the Senate remains in control of Republicans, so it seems unlikely that such bills would have much luck there. But the current Senate is practically the same body that just a month ago passed a criminal justice reform bill 87 to 12, and under the leadership of Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell legalized hemp (the non-psychoactive sister plant of marijuana) through the Farm Bill.

This level of disconnection between state and federal law cannot hold for much longer, and it might not have to. In the wake of the Farm Bill, the idea that Congress could remove marijuana entirely from the list of scheduled drugs is now entirely conceivable; after all the plant is now legal, only the potency is in question. Maybe this year, for the first time, Blumenauer’s bill doesn’t seem so crazy. Nothing would solidify 2019 as marijuana’s biggest year yet more than a rollback of that half-century-old designation.

“It would not be shocking to see the end of federal marijuana prohibition signed into law this year,” Angell told me. “This is the first time that actually seems achievable.”

***

Even before the election, Blumenauer proposed a blueprint for this Congress to legalize marijuana by the end of 2019.

“The House should pass a full de-scheduling bill,” the bow-tied, bike-pin-wearing Blumenauer said in October. With a 36-seat majority, passing a de-scheduling bill out of the House seems all but inevitable with Jerrold Nadler (D-N.Y.) chairing the Judiciary Committee and Nancy Pelosi becoming the first pro-cannabis Speaker of the House since Henry Clay, who actually grew hemp on his Kentucky plantation.

“Nancy Pelosi is out there as a champion on this issue,” Michael Collins of the Drug Policy Alliance told POLITICO Magazine.

Further emphasizing the rise of women in leadership on this issue, Blumenauer passed the torch of Democratic co-chair of the Congressional Cannabis Caucus to Barbara Lee (D-California), the first woman and first person of color to join a group that leaned heavily white and male.

“For far too long, communities of color and women have been left out of the conversation on cannabis. I am committed to ensuring that marijuana reform goes hand-in-hand with criminal justice reform so we can repair some of the harm of the failed War on Drugs,” Lee said in the press release. In the last Congress, she took a leadership role on this issue as the House sponsor of New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker’s Marijuana Justice Act, which garnered 43 co-sponsors.

Her Republican co-chair, David Joyce, is newer to the issue. He’s the first member of the Cannabis Caucus to not represent a fully legal state; Ohio is a medical marijuana state, whose dispensaries have only just opened. “Joyce has come really far, really fast on marijuana policy,” Justin Strekal of NORML told me.

Elected in 2012, Joyce had quietly used his role as a member of the majority in the Appropriations Committee to protect pro-marijuana amendments. Then last summer, he co-sponsored the House version of the STATES Act, a bare-bones legislative fix to Pete Sessions’ blockade of appropriations amendments and Jeff Sessions’ repeal of the Cole Memo. It was introduced in the Senate by Cory Gardner (R-Colo.) and Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.).

These are the players to watch as marijuana legislation winds its way through the House this year. Although Republicans remain split on this issue, the Democrats have all pretty much fallen in line. Unlike other policies, such as Medicare for All, that seem to divide the Democrats’ liberal and moderate wings, “This isn’t one of those issues,” Collins told me. “Marijuana legalization is one of these issues that I feel Democrats are pretty united on these days.”

***

Before the 2016 election, the only fully legal states were in the Rocky Mountains or west. That’s about to change dramatically. In the Northeast, marijuana will soon be totally legal from Madawaska, Maine, south to Cape May, New Jersey, and from Buffalo, New York, east to Cape Cod, Massachusetts.

Much of this momentum can be traced back to 2018 gubernatorial primary in New York, when Gov. Andrew Cuomo was forced to deal with this issue because of a primary challenge from Cynthia Nixon. Now, with Cuomo ready to legalize New York, its smaller neighbors are jumping on the bandwagon with a fear of missing out. In the Midwest, Illinois and Michigan are vying to be the first state in the region to implement legal sales, with Minnesota poised to be third.

“There’s such tremendous momentum, state-by-state,” Wallin, the president of Vertical Cannabis, told me. “How can you be for states’ rights without acknowledging that the states are making a statement?”

Among the statements being made by the states in the past year: Washington Gov. Jay Inslee (D) has begun pardoning citizens of his state with past convictions as part of his “Marijuana Justice Initiative.” In California, former Democratic Gov. Jerry Brown signed a bill last May that would allow hundreds of thousands of Californians to reduce or eliminate the marijuana crimes on their records. In Michigan, Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, also a Democrat, pledged to expunge records and free inmates convicted of marijuana crimes that were legalized on the same day she was elected.

And it’s not just Democrats. In Republican-controlled Florida, marijuana legalization is moving forward, even if by fits and starts. Last week, newly elected Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis announced he had asked the state legislature to repeal its ban on smokable marijuana, which it had imposed even after a 2106 constitutional amendment in favor of medical marijuana. “I don’t want to continue fighting some of these old battles.” Former Gov. Rick Scott, who fought against smokable marijuana until his last day in office, is now Sen. Scott, who is likely a no vote if a marijuana bill ever makes it to the floor of the Senate.

***

In the end, the success of major legislation in Congress is all about the Senate, where marijuana advocates “still face an uphill battle,” Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Oregon) told POLITICO Magazine.

Republicans gained two seats in November, but they lost Dean Heller, a reliable marijuana opponent, to Sen. Jackie Rosen (D-Nev.), a fierce marijuana advocate. Although the Republicans control the Senate with 53 seats, the more relevant number is 33. That’s the number of states that now have medical marijuana, which means 66 senators represent states where federal law has been repudiated in the state legislature or at the ballot box.

In 2020, 33 Senate seats will be up for grabs, 12 held by Democrats and 21 by Republicans. Of these, Republicans will defend nine seats in states with legal medical marijuana: Dan Sullivan in Alaska, Steve Daines in Montana, Susan Collins in Maine, Jim Inhofe in Oklahoma, Bill Cassidy in Louisiana, Tom Cotton in Arkansas, Shelley Moore Capito in West Virginia, Martha McSally in Arizona, and Cory Gardner in Colorado.

“It’s likely that Gardner will be re-introducing the STATES Act with Sen. [Elizabeth] Warren,” Strekal told me.

Tom Angell is also watching Gardner: “Even if Mitch McConnell isn’t personally on board with the changes that would be achieved by the STATES Act, it’s easy to envision a scenario where he, for electoral reasons, goes along with letting Cory Gardner bring that victory home to Colorado,” he told me. Gardner did not respond to a request for comment for this story.

If the STATES Act passed the House, it would land in the Senate Judiciary Committee, now chaired by Sen. Lindsey Graham, where, admittedly, hope for it dims.

“I’m just being realistic,” Michael Collins told me. “The challenge that you have with Lindsey Graham is that he got onto the CARERS Act, then he got off the CARERS Act. He didn’t get on it last year because I think he heard from people back in his state — law enforcement, et cetera… I think he regretted getting on the bill.” In 2016, I wrote about Graham’s flirtation with marijuana reform for POLITICO Magazine. “I think that story had a lot to do with it,” Collins told me. Graham did not respond to a request for comment.

If the Judiciary Committee is doubtful, there’s always the Appropriations Committee, where advocates have found success in the past. “The question is now, can we cobble enough votes together on the Senate Appropriations Committee to get a sort of McClintock vote,” Collins told me, referring to McClintock-Polis, a narrowly defeated amendment that would have protected recreational marijuana from federal interference. How would Susan Collins or Lindsey Graham vote on an amendment like that? That’s what Michael Collins is looking for.

Above it all sits McConnell, who has completely mystified advocates and observers with his recent advocacy for hemp and calling the vote for the First Step Act, the historic criminal justice reform bill, but only after a long and seemingly needless delay. “He’s an enigma, to be honest. He’s hard to read,” Collins said.

Blumenauer was equally clear on this point: “Senate leadership remains a question.”

McConnell’s staff declined to comment for this story by referring me to McConnell’s answer to this question last May, when he said: “I do not have any plans to endorse the legalization of marijuana,” which is hardly a no, but not a yes either.

“I mean, we could debate this, but I don’t think anybody really knows the mind of Mitch McConnell,” Collins told me, saying the House presents a much clearer path for progress. “I think we see a path through Appropriations, in terms of getting things done. Then, I think we need to see how things shake out in the Senate. Let’s see how Lindsey Graham is. Let’s see what Cory Gardner tries to get done. Let’s see what pull he has.”

Far away from D.C., from his view in Santa Barbara, Smoke Wallin seemed more optimistic than Collins: “[McConnell] gets a lot of credit for the Farm Bill, and he’s in a pretty strong position, and he can choose if he wants to do this. But it’s guys like Cory Gardner, who [McConnell] wants to get re-elected, that’s going to be the thing that drives it. You’ve got a risk of losing the Senate, and that’s the only thing that matters to Mitch at the end of the day.”

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Fears of ‘Windrush-type scandal’ as EU citizen registration opens

A government scheme designed to allow European citizens to continue living in the UK after Brexit was launched in public test phase on Monday, amid warnings that it could leave tens of thousands of people undocumented in years to come.

The 3.5 million citizens of the EU’s 27 countries residing in the UK must go through an online application process to apply for “settled status” if they have lived in the UK for at least five years, or “pre-settled status” if they haven’t reached that threshold. 

The scheme will be fully opened by March 30. 

By July 2021, it will become mandatory for EU citizens living in the UK to hold settled or pre-settled status. That deadline would become the end of 2020 should the UK exit the EU without a deal.

A report released today by the think-tank British Future warns of a new “Windrush-type scandal” unless the government addresses potential pitfalls in the system, steps up its information campaign and pays particular attention to vulnerable cases including the elderly and those with patchy employment and residence histories.

“The Home Office must invest in getting the EU Settlement Scheme right from the start. Failure to do so could cause massive problems in years to come, on a far bigger scale than the ‘Windrush scandal’,” said Jill Rutter, director of Strategy for British Future and co-author of the report, referring to the denial of health services, detention and in some cases deportation of Commonwealth citizens after they were retroactively asked to prove their right to reside in the UK.

“The application system should work simply and efficiently for the vast majority of EU citizens. But there will always be more complex cases where people find it harder to navigate the system or to prove their residency – and the sheer scale of this task means even a low rate of failure equates to tens of thousands of people,” Rutter said.

Even if they say we shouldn’t worry, they won’t give it to everyone. You still have to apply.

Kristina, Slovakian citizen who has been living in the UK for 10 years

The report points out that if only five percent of those eligible either struggled to apply or were unjustly rejected, that would equal 175,000 people. In order to process all applications before the deadline, the Home Office would have to process 5,600 applications each working day.

The scheme will cost the British government between 500 million British pounds and 600 million pounds, while it will raise 170-190 million in revenue. The application costs 65 pounds for adults and 32.50 for children.

The British government has made a point of reassuring EU citizens that its default position will be to grant rather than deny settled status.

“I couldn’t be clearer: EU citizens living lawfully in the UK today will be able to stay,” Theresa May wrote in an open letter to EU citizens back in October 2017. 

The UK government assured EU citizens they will still be able to apply for the settlement scheme should a no-deal scenario materialise. 

However, there would be no transition period in which free movement rights would be guaranteed and applicants would have to be in the UK by Brexit day, currently March 29, in order to be eligible. 

Critics have said that no deal could leave EU citizens vulnerable to discrimination from employers and landlords who are asked to do stringent checks before hiring or renting out a home.

Pro-Brexit protesters demonstrate outside the houses of Parliament [John Sibley/Reuters]

Despite promises, many fear for their future.

Kristina (not her real name), 30, moved to the UK from Slovakia 10 years ago. She is married to a British citizen and has two British children, but she must still apply for settled status to remain in the UK after Brexit, and she’s worried she may not get it.

“Even if they say we shouldn’t worry, they won’t give it to everyone. You still have to apply,” Kristina told Al Jazeera.

Kristina, who worked for a catering agency when she first arrived in the UK, became a full-time carer in 2012 after her husband was diagnosed with cancer and her two children with autism. 

Now, she is concerned that gaps in her employment history will leave her unable to prove she has been “exercising treaty rights” – to be working, studying or self-sufficient according to EU free movement rules – throughout her stay in Britain.

Her husband does not currently meet the income requirements set for British citizens to sponsor their spouses in the UK.

“In the rules they published, they added a provision that says that home office caseworkers, if they decide that the person can be removed for not exercising treaty rights, they also have to refuse the settled status application,” Chai Patel, legal policy director at the Joint Council for the Welfare of Immigrants (JCWI) told Al Jazeera.

“We don’t know who is going to be affected, it would depend on how home office caseworkers choose to apply those rules,” Patel added.

Other groups at risk include the Roma and homeless EU citizens living in temporary accommodation.

The government said the first two private test phases of the scheme had been successful. The second test phase, open to selected universities and health bodies, saw 29,987 applications submitted from November 1 to December 21, 2018. Some 27,211 decisions had been issued by January 14, with no cases refused.

The remaining 3,000 were still awaiting a decision due to their application being incomplete or needing further evidence.

“All the debates around settled status and the capacity of people to secure their position imply an ideal kind of person [that would qualify], but all the people that are not thought about may struggle with the application,” Nando Sigona, who teaches international migration at the University of Birmingham, told Al Jazeera, “there is still a sense of uncertainty about what’s going on.”

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US has ‘no plan for Syria’ after pullout: Ex-envoy Brett McGurk

The United States has no plan for Syria as it proceeds with President Donald Trump‘s order to pull troops out of the country, Washington’s former anti-ISIL envoy, who quit in protest against the withdrawal, said.

Brett McGurk, who was the envoy to the US-led global coalition against the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL, also known as ISIS) group, said on Sunday that “there is no plan for what’s coming next” and this increases the risk to the US forces.

He spoke in an interview with CBS’s Face the Nation, after a suicide bomber on Wednesday killed four US military personnel and 15 others in the northern Syrian town of Manbij.

It was the deadliest attack on the US troops since their deployment in Syria in 2014 to assist the local forces fighting ISIL.

The bombing came after Trump’s announcement last month that he was ordering a full withdrawal of the 2,000 US troops from Syria, shocking allies and prompting the resignations of Defence Secretary Jim Mattis as well as McGurk.

‘Withdrawal began’

Senior US officials have since given contradictory statements about the US intentions. On January 10, the Pentagon said the withdrawal process had begun. It started with the removal of equipment, not troops, according to the Pentagon. It is uncertain how long a full withdrawal will take.

“The president has made that clear – we are leaving. And that means our force should be really with one mission: to get out and get out safely,” McGurk told “Face the Nation”.

But he added: “Right now we do not have a plan. It increases the vulnerability of our force… It is increasing the risk to our people on the ground in Syria and will open up space for ISIS.”

Most importantly, said McGurk, the US cannot expect “a partner” such as NATO-ally Turkey to take the place of the US.

“That is not realistic. And if our forces are under order to withdraw, as at the same time they are trying to find some formula for another coalition partner to come in, that is not workable. That is not a viable plan.”

Trump announced the US withdrawal because, he said, ISIL had been defeated – something McGurk and other experts dispute.

McGurk has previously warned that the US pullout would shore up Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad and lessen the US’s leverage with Russia and Iran.

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Hindus take auspicious plunge during India’s Kumbh Mela

Millions of Hindu devotees will take a holy dip in the Ganges River on Monday on one of the six most auspicious days to bathe during Kumbh Mela – the world’s largest religious festival.

More than 18 million pilgrims – led by naked, ash-smeared ascetics – entered the grounds last week as the festival began.

During the eight-week gathering at Prayagraj, in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh, up to 150 million people, including a million foreign visitors, are expected to bathe at the confluence of the Ganges, the Yamuna, and a mythical third river, the Saraswati.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi‘s Bharatiya Janata Party, which governs the state, sees a successful festival as a way to burnish its credentials as a defender of the Hindu faith. Giant cardboard cutouts of Modi, who faces a tough test in a general election due by May, have adorned the sacred site. 

For the first time at the Kumbh Mela, a transgender ashram known as the Kinnar Akhara and led by rights LGBTQ activist Lakshmi Narayan Tripathi from Mumbai, joined the holy bathing. Tripathi, a tattooed transgender leader and a former reality TV star, has become an unlikely icon at the festival.

India legalised gay sex in September, but the LGBTQ community still faces prejudice in the deeply religious country.

Members of the Kinnar Akhara received a police escort to the bathing site, where Tripathi last Tuesday plunged into the waters fully clothed to the cheers of her followers.

Tripathi has courted controversy with support for the building of a temple dedicated to Ram on the site of a former mosque in Ayodhya, which was demolished by hardline Hindus in 1992, leading to riots in which thousands died.

The Kumbh Mela festival has its roots in a Hindu tradition that says the God Vishnu wrested a golden pot containing the nectar of immortality from demons.

In a 12-day fight for possession, four drops fell to Earth, in the cities of Prayagraj, Haridwar, Ujjain and Nasik, which now share the Kumbhs.

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Colombia’s ELN rebels claim deadly police academy attack

Colombia‘s leftist ELN rebels have claimed responsibility for the bombing of a police academy in Bogota that killed 20 people as well as the attacker and derailed peace talks being held in Cuba.

The National Liberation Army (ELN) said Thursday’s vehicle bombing was a reprisal attack after the government of President Ivan Duque failed to respect a unilateral ceasefire declared by the rebels over Christmas.

“The president did not respect the gesture of peace [and] his response was to carry out military attacks against us,” the group said in a statement on Monday on its website.

Specifically, ELN said Colombian troops bombed a camp on December 25.

“It is then very disproportionate that while the government is attacking us, we cannot respond in self-defence,” it said. “The operation carried out against these installations and troops is lawful within the law of war, there were no non-combatant victims.”

The attack was a major setback to two years of peace talks – first hosted by Ecuador and currently by Cuba – that failed to go beyond the exploratory stage before stalling when Duque took power in August 2018.

Future is peace?

ELN proposed “a political debate on these issues”, saying “the road of war is not the future of Colombia, it is peace”.

On Saturday, Colombia demanded that Cuba hand over ELN negotiators who were in Havana for peace talks. 

Duque announced he was reinstating arrest warrants for 10 ELN members who are part of the group’s delegation to the Cuba talks, and said he was revoking “the resolution creating the conditions that allow their stay in that country”.

ELN urged the government delegation to come back to the talks.

“President Duque … we remind you that the best thing for the country is to send your delegation back to the negotiating table, and to give continuity to the peace process,” the statement said. 

Protest march

Thousands of Colombians marched throughout the country on Sunday to denounce violence.

The huge crowd descended on Bogota’s iconic Plaza Bolivar while chanting slogans such as “down with the terrorists” and “no more violence”. They were wearing white clothes and waving white flags.

Colombia protests over deadliest attack in 16 years (2:31)

Duque and his predecessor, Juan Manuel Santos, were among those at the march. 

“For me, it is a very good signal that the country is united around a very important cause, which is to say no to violence and no to terrorism,” Santos told Al Jazeera. 

Yet there were clashes along the route as some students demanded the government keep the option open for peace negotiations with ELN.

“We can’t let the government instil fear and promote the return of war and militarisation,” said protester Julian Rodriguez.

“A negotiated peace is the only way out of this. We need the government to negotiate with the ELN.”  

Peace talks are aimed at ending more than five decades of rebellion by Marxist-inspired fighters.

Colombia has experienced several years of relative calm since the 2016 peace accord signed by Santos and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) rebels.

With the landmark agreement turning the former rebels into a political party, the smaller ELN is considered the last active armed group in the country.

Colombia’s President Ivan Duque takes part in a rally against violence [Luisa Gonzalez/Reuters]

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Patrick Mahomes Must Wait Because It’s Still Tom Brady’s League

FILE - At left, in a Nov. 19, 2018, file photo, Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes throws a pass during an NFL football game against the Los Angeles Rams in Los Angeles. At right, in a Dec. 30, 2018, file photo, New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady throws during the second half of an NFL football game in Foxborough, Mass. It seems football fans everywhere are suddenly on the Chiefs’ bandwagon, enthralled by their record-setting young quarterback and exciting offensive playmakers while hopeful that their amiable old coach can finally win the big one. Then again, maybe they’re just fans of anybody facing New England.(AP Photo/File)

Uncredited/Associated Press

The greatest quarterback in NFL history isn’t ready to cede the reins to the league’s next big thing.

Instead, MVP front-runner Patrick Mahomes must wait his turn, because the Kansas City Chiefs couldn’t dethrone the dynastic New England Patriots led by the 41-year-old Tom Brady

Brady threw for 348 yards during Sunday’s 37-31 overtime victory at Arrowhead Stadium. With the victory, the three-time NFL MVP will appear in his ninth Super Bowlmore than any other franchise. 

Not surprisingly, the outcome seemed inevitable. The moment the Patriots took the field with two minutes, three seconds remaining and down by four points, the game’s momentum seemed to swing in New England’s favor. 

“I just knew,” backup quarterback Brian Hoyer said of another Brady fourth-quarter comeback, according to ESPN.com’s Mike Reiss. “He had that look.”

Mahomes responded with a pair of clutch throws to Spencer Ware and Demarcus Robinson to set up kicker Harrison Butker for the game-tying 39-yard field goal and force overtime. However, the Patriots never let the Chiefs offense touch the ball during the extra period. Brady connected on three 3rd-and-long situations to extend the Patriots’ game-winning drive before running back Rex Burkhead found paydirt to secure yet another Super Bowl appearance. 

With the win, Brady led his 57th career and ninth playoff fourth-quarter comeback victory. 

“It’s in his DNA,” wide receiver Julian Edelman said, per Reiss. “He has a clutch gene.”

Brady isn’t the same player today as he once was, and no one should expect him to be at an advanced playing age. Statistically, his 4,355 passing yards were the lowest output over a 16-game slate since 2014. Brady also threw for fewer than 30 touchdowns for only the third time in the last nine seasons. According to Football Outsiders’ Scott Kacsmar, the veteran signal-caller had the third-highest percentage of off-target throws during the regular season behind a pair of rookies, the Buffalo Bills’ Josh Allen and New York Jets’ Sam Darnold.

Even if the 14-time Pro Bowl selection’s natural gifts are fading, he consistently places his offense in a position to succeed on a down-by-down basis with his football IQ. 

According to Reiss, head coach Bill Belichick credits Brady’s winning mental edge as an “often-overlooked part of his excellence.”

For example, the Patriots faced 4th-and-1l at the Kansas City 10-yard line in the fourth quarter while trailing 21-17. The Chiefs expected a Brady sneak to cover the short distance. Instead, the veteran signal-caller read the defense and audibled to an outside runthe perfect call for the situation as running back Sony Michel waltzed into the end zone. 

Next Gen Stats @NextGenStats

The threat of Tom Brady on a QB sneak had the Chiefs defense stack three defensive linemen in the A-gap on this 4th & 1 play, leaving a gaping hole for the caravan of James Develin & Sony Michel.

#NEvsKC | #GoPats https://t.co/uUGdNwKlTN

The aging star does benefit from an outstanding supporting cast. 

Early in the contest, the Patriots leaned on a ground-and-pound approach to keep Kansas City’s sack-happy defense on its heels and Mahomes off the field. Michel carried the ball 29 times for 113 yards and a pair of scores. Burkhead added two more touchdowns. The Patriots even deviated from the norm by handing off to James White six times after not running him once the previous weekend against the Los Angeles Chargers.  

New England’s offensive front has been nothing short of spectacular the last two weeks. Brady has yet to be sacked in the playoffs with the quintet of Trent Brown, Joe Thuney, David Andrews, Shaq Mason and Marcus Cannon creating a cozy pocket for him to operate. Those five, along with fullback James Develin, also created massive running lanes. 

Brady’s quick release makes everyone’s lives easier, per NFL Next Gen Stats: 

Next Gen Stats @NextGenStats

Tom Brady’s quick-passing style (2.51 seconds) led to a low pressure rate against (19.6%) despite throwing all 46 passes from inside the pocket.

Relative to expectation, Brady was at his best on 3rd down (+24.4%) and when targeting the intermediate (+10.7%).

#NEvsKC | #GoPats https://t.co/Ha1QQ8Sb1H

The keep-away approach only worked for so long, though. Once crunch time came, the 199th pick in the 2000 NFL draft morphed into his superhero identity. 

“He’s been doing it for 100 years, man,” Chiefs linebacker Reggie Ragland said of Brady, per NFL Network’s James Palmer

The performance proved to be just enough, but Mahomes is ready, willing and able to take the reins once Brady cedes the crown. Chiefs right tackle Mitchell Schwartz described what makes his quarterback special, per Palmer: 

James Palmer @JamesPalmerTV

Here is what Chiefs RT Mitchell Schwartz told me when I asked him about Patrick Mahomes’ final drive in regulation to tie the game. Chiefs were down 3 with :39 to go. Mahomes went 48 yards on 4 plays in :31 seconds to force OT. https://t.co/lffawXIC2L

Mahomes and the high-powered Chiefs offense can only be held down for so long. After trailing 14-0 at halftime, Kansas City exploded for 31 points. The second-year signal-caller threw three touchdowns and didn’t have a turnover. His postseason performance mirrored his regular-season emergence: Flashes of brilliance kept the Chiefs alive when they had no right to be.

The types of throws Mahomes continued to make wouldn’t be believable in a video game, let alone real life. Yet, he tops himself on a weekly basis. The latest came at a critical point in the third quarter, courtesy of the NFL: 

NFL @NFL

.@PatrickMahomes5 making the sidearm throw his trademark 🎯 #LetsRoll

📺: #NEvsKC on CBS https://t.co/tDP4Dkj1kv

Obviously, the throw itself is noteworthy because of its almost submarine-like release around a defender. The quarterback stared down the gun barrel before releasing his sidearm. Perfect ball placement on a crucial third down allowed the Chiefs to convert when trailing by two scores.

What Mahomes can do is simply ridiculous. No other quarterback can do what he does. His 53 touchdown passes (including the postseason) attest to this fact. Everything seems set up for Mahomes to eventually take over as the NFL’s next top quarterback. 

However, there are no guarantees this will happen. Dan Marino once thought he would have numerous opportunities to play in the Super Bowl. He never reached another after his second campaign. 

Right now, the NFL is flush with talented young quarterbacks rising through the ranks to knock Brady off the mountaintop.

Allen and Darnold are champing at the bit to usurp the Patriots’ stranglehold on the AFC East. The Baltimore Ravens’ Lamar Jackson helped his team make the postseason during his debut campaign. The Cleveland Browns’ Baker Mayfield broke a rookie record with 27 touchdown passes. The Houston Texans offense can be explosive with Deshaun Watson leading the way if the organization finds a competent front five. The Indianapolis Colts’ Andrew Luck and Oakland Raiders’ Derek Carr have yet to turn 30 as well. And this particular group is from the AFC alone. 

All of them aren’t just coming for Brady; Mahomes is in their crosshairs as well. Yet, they’ll all be watching Super Bowl LIII as the G.O.A.T. continues to set the standard for all to follow. 

Brent Sobleski covers the NFL for Bleacher Report. Follow him on Twitter: @brentsobleski.

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Attacks in Thailand’s deep south: Who, why and what’s next?

Bangkok, Thailand – In the latest of a series of fatal attacks in Thailand’s southernmost provinces, a group of assault rifle-wielding attackers on Friday stormed a Buddhist temple, killing two monks and wounding two others.

The evening assault took place at Wat Rattananupab temple in Su Ngai Padi district of Narathiwat province, an area located in the heart of Thailand’s deep south where ethnic Malay separatists have been waging an armed campaign for independence for decades.

According to local reports, the attacker rolled up on motorcycles spraying the entrance to the temple before sprinting inside to target the Buddhist monks up close.

Among those killed was the temple’s abbot, Sawang Vethmaha, also known as Phra Khru Prachote.

A police manhunt for the attackers in under way, but Lieutenant General Pornsak Poolsawat, the army commander, has asked for more security at temples scattered throughout the region.

Authorities have also encouraged all monks in the southern province to stay inside their temples following the shooting, which capped a day of bombings across the area that left five soldiers wounded.

Addressing the assault on the Buddhist temple, Government Spokesperson Buddhipongse Punnakanta said that Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-o-cha “denounced such a brazen attack and instructed officials to investigate and find the assailants to punish them.”

 

‘War crime’

Human Rights Watch (HRW) has continued to condemn the violence, particularly the most active fundamentalist group, the Barisan Revolusi Nasional (BRN), for repeatedly targeting civilians and places of worship.

“The ghastly attack on Buddhist monks by insurgents in Thailand’s deep south is morally reprehensible and a war crime, and those responsible should be held to account,” Brad Adams, HRW’s Asia director, said.

“The insurgents’ 15-year campaign of deliberately attacking Buddhist and Muslim civilians can’t be justified.”

But in Thailand’s deep south, these kinds of attacks are not uncommon, with hundreds of violent incidents coming out of the restive region last year.

Earlier this month, on January 8, separatists orchestrated two different assaults on the same day.

The first attack was aimed at a school and a hospital, wounding a 12-year-old student and a soldier standing guard at the school.

The second assault occurred when a car bomb rocked Songkhla province’s Thepa district, wounding a police medic.

A monk looks at bullet holes on the site of Friday’s attack [Surapan Boonthanom/Reuters]

What’s behind this latest wave of attacks?

Sunai Phasuk, senior researcher on Thailand in HRW’s Asia division, told Al Jazeera the latest burst of violence is likely a response to a recent assassination of a purported BRN leader. Doloh Sarai, 62, was shot and killed by unidentified gunmen while riding home on a motorcycle in Narathiwat’s Rue Soh district.

“Thai authorities alleged that he was a BRN leader,” Phasuk said, adding that Sarai had previously been arrested on security charges.

The military has developed tactics that some are criticising as excessively punitive. Over the years, rights groups such as HRW have called against extrajudicial killings of suspected fighters and encouraged security responses that would reduce collateral damage. 

It’s also becoming clear that fighters in the mainly-Muslim south are losing patience with Thailand’s military government, according to Zach Abuza, a specialist on the conflict and professor at National War College in Washington, DC.

He said the BRN is frustrated that Thailand’s military government has refused to make any compromises, particularly after progress in 2013 when the last democratically elected government appeared to be willing to finally grant them concessions, including language reforms and general amnesties.

“The army said that the talks broke down because of the political protests and stasis that began in the fall of 2013, leading to the May 2014 coup, but the reality is the army had already put the kibosh on the talks,” Abuza told Al Jazeera.

“The junta has kept the talks open, but they do not negotiate in earnest.”

What’s likely to happen next?

Deep South Watch, a widely respected monitoring group that tracks separatism-related attacks coming out of the region, documented 548 incidents of violence that resulted in 218 deaths last year.

The figure was actually lower compared with previous years, but the latest bout of violence, coupled with the impasse in negotiations, has deepened concerns that the situation could deteriorate in the coming months.

Earlier this month, the BRN released a statement vowing to “keep fighting”, declaring they would ramp up attacks and attempt to recruit more members to join their struggle.

The military and local police are bracing for more attacks raising security measures in preparation.

“The Thai state can help break this vicious cycle of deadly retaliation by ending the use of extrajudicial tactics in counterinsurgency operations and hold abusive troops accountable for their crimes,” Phasuk said.

The conflict has killed about 7,000 people since 2004, according to Deep South Watch.

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