Turkey-backed rebels ‘move forces’ near Kurdish-held areas

Turkish-backed Syrian fighters have sent reinforcements to the front line along the northern Syrian areas controlled by Kurdish fighters, Turkey’s state-run Anadolu Agency reported on Monday, days after the Washington took an unexpected decision to withdraw troops from the war-torn country.

The Hamza Division, a part of the Syrian rebels supported by Turkey, dispatched fighters and armoured vehicles to the border line between the areas controlled by the rebels – Kurdish People’s Protection Forces (YPG) – the Syrian regime, Abu Yazan, a commanding officer, told the agency.

He said the troops will take up important tasks during an expected Turkish military operation in the northern Syrian border city of Manbij. 

“Our units headed out to contact regions” controlled by the YPG, Yazan said.

A Turkish operation in Syria is expected to target some of the areas under the control of YPG fighters, who are considered as “terrorists” by Ankara.

On Monday, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan renewed threats to target Kurdish fighters as he sent more troops to the border with Syria ahead of an imminent US withdrawal.

The US has an estimated 2,000 US troops in Syria.

Turkey was in Syria “to return the freedom of our Arab brothers and sisters, to return the freedom of our Kurdish brothers and sisters”, he said during a speech in Ankara.

A Turkish military convoy arrived overnight on Monday at the border with Syria, with local media reporting that some vehicles had entered Syria, AFP news agency reported.

In the past two years, Turkey has conducted two offensives into northern Syria, dubbed “Euphrates Shield” and “Olive Branch”.

Surprising decision

United States President Donald Trump‘s surprise decision to withdraw forces from Syria on Wednesday has created shock among members of the US Congress, including Republicans, as well as among Washington’s Western allies.

Erdogan’s spokesman said on Monday that US military officials will come to Turkey this week to discuss coordination on Syria.

Washington has for years supported the YPG-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) in the fight against Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) in Syria.

A senior Syrian Kurdish official said they were reaching out for help to protect the Kurdish-administered areas against a possible Turkish offensive following the US withdrawal.

“We will deal with whoever can protect the good and stability of this country,” the Associated Press news agency quoted Ilham Ahmed as saying on Monday.

Ahmed reportedly said they were in talks with Russia, the Syrian government and European countries, searching ways to deal with the US withdrawal – without elaborating further.

SDF delegation in Moscow

Meanwhile, a delegation of the SDF arrived in Moscow on Monday for talks.

Pavel Felgenhauer, a military analyst, said that Syrian Kurds are likely to turn to Moscow and Damascus, after the US forces leave the region.

“[Syrian] Kurds have a longtime relationship with Russia. They have an unofficial embassy in Moscow. They are likely to turn to Russia and possibly the Syrian regime for protection,” he told Al Jazeera from Moscow.

When the US forces leave, Russia, Turkey, the regime and Iran will try to carve a solution that determines who gets to control the oil rich Deir Az Zor region, the border, and other areas.

Ankara claims the YPG is an extension of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), which has waged attacks on Turkish soil since the 1980s as they sought autonomy.

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Mike McCarthy Rumors: Cardinals, Ex-Packers HC Have Mutual Interest

GREEN BAY, WISCONSIN - DECEMBER 02:  Head coach Mike McCarthy of the Green Bay Packers looks on from the sideline in the second quarter against the Arizona Cardinals at Lambeau Field on December 02, 2018 in Green Bay, Wisconsin. (Photo by Dylan Buell/Getty Images)

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The Arizona Cardinals and Mike McCarthy reportedly have mutual interest, provided the team fires coach Steve Wilks after one season.

Peter King of NBC Sports reported McCarthy likes Arizona and would listen if the Cardinals approached him about the position.

Arizona is expected to move on from Wilks, who has struggled to make an impact in his first head-coaching stint. The Cardinals are 3-12 and have particularly failed to make any progress on the offensive side of the ball.

The Green Bay Packers fired McCarthy earlier this month after 12-plus seasons as their head coach. He went 125-77-2, winning Super Bowl XLV. The Packers disappointed each of the last two seasons, and McCarthy drew criticism for not making adjustments to an offense many felt had grown stale. 

NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport reported there was a “disconnect” between McCarthy and Aaron Rodgers over the offensive direction. Rodgers is in the midst of perhaps his worst season as a starter in 2018. 

The Cardinals could look at McCarthy’s work developing Rodgers as a boost to his resume. Josh Rosen has struggled mightily as a rookie under Wilks and could benefit from the team hiring an offensive-minded coach moving forward. 

Regardless, McCarthy will likely be a hot name on the coaching vacancy market. ESPN’s Adam Schefter reported some teams have already begun contacting the veteran coach. 

The Packers still owe McCarthy the balance of his contract, which ran through the 2019 season. 

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‘He’s Born with It’: Luka Doncic Taking NBA by Storm in Dazzling Rookie Season

PORTLAND, OR - DECEMBER 23:  Luka Doncic #77 of the Dallas Mavericks during pregame against the Portland Trail Blazers at Moda Center on December 23, 2018 in Portland, Oregon.NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement.  (Photo by Jonathan Ferrey/Getty Images)

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PORTLAND, Ore. — After practices, Luka Doncic works on shots just like the one he hit as time expired Sunday night to send the Dallas Mavericks to overtime against the Portland Trail Blazers. The sort of falling-out-of-bounds prayer of a three-pointer that’s lab-designed to be included in a future “Where Amazing Happens” commercial.

Doncic practices those shots precisely for situations like this one—down three points, on the road, six-tenths of a second remaining, no timeouts left.

“A lot of people think that’s a joke, but it’s not,” Doncic said after the game, which Dallas lost 121-118. “Sometimes you need those shots.”

The NBA world is just getting to know Doncic, the 19-year-old Slovenian phenom who is living up to his massive predraft hype, dazzling fans nightly with tricky passes and James Harden-esque stepback contested threes. But already, he’s developed a reputation as a big-game performer. No one in the Moda Center was surprised this one went down, even with Maurice Harkless draped all over him.

“Something just told me, when he threw it up in the air, ‘Man, that s–t going in,’” Damian Lillard said.

Lillard would know. Like Doncic, he came into the NBA as a rookie and immediately played like a seasoned veteran. Nothing rattled him then, and his resume of stepping up in big moments has only grown. Doncic entered the NBA having played for Real Madrid since the age of 14, winning EuroLeague MVP as a teenager, dominating grown men in the second-best professional league in the world.

It’s rare for rookies to pick up the speed of the NBA game this quickly, and it’s even rarer for them to look and act like they belong after less than half a season in the league.

“I just remember my rookie year, it got to the point where every time I was in one of those situations, it was like, this is supposed to happen,” Lillard said. “I was just making those kinds of shots. He’s been having a lot of moments so far this season. As soon as I see him put the ball up in the air, I know, ‘He’s gonna make this. We’re gonna have to win it in overtime.’ He’s a really, really, really good player. Not just for a rookie.”

PORTLAND, OR - DECEMBER 23: Luka Doncic #77 of the Dallas Mavericks looks to shoot against the Portland Trail Blazers on December 23, 2018 at the Moda Center Arena in Portland, Oregon. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by download

Cameron Browne/Getty Images

Doncic’s teammates are already used to this. They’ve seen him perfect his late-game heroics after practices, so it’s no surprise when it manifests itself in a game. These are the moments he’s relished for his entire career, and that energy has become contagious for the Mavericks.

“He’s a gamer,” Mavs guard J.J. Barea told Bleacher Report. “When the lights are on, he loves to play against the best competition possible. He’s not scared of the moment. He’s enjoying every moment of it.”

The timing of Doncic’s arrival in Dallas is as close to ideal as can be for a Mavericks team in transition. With Dirk Nowitzki in what is almost certain to be the final season of a 21-year Hall of Fame career and no other bankable stars on the roster, Doncic is poised to immediately take over as the face of basketball in Dallas.

The Mavs were highly motivated to get Doncic from the beginning. It’s why they tanked last season so openly that owner Mark Cuban was fined $600,000 by the NBA for publicly acknowledging what they were doing. It’s why they were so willing to give up a future first-round pick to the Atlanta Hawks to move up two spots in the 2018 draft.

They knew Doncic was their franchise’s future, and even they didn’t think his seemingly limitless potential would realize itself this quickly.

“We knew he was good,” Mavs coach Rick Carlisle said before the game. “How good, how fast, nobody knew. [Mavs general manager] Donnie Nelson had a very good grasp on the situation. He’s felt for well over a year that he was the best player in that draft class last year. We’ve been in rebuilding mode, so we’ve been looking very closely at draft prospects during the season for the last two years—much more than I ever have. We’re very pleased to have drafted him.”

PORTLAND, OR - DECEMBER 23: Luka Doncic #77 of the Dallas Mavericks shoots the ball against the Portland Trail Blazers on December 23, 2018 at the Moda Center Arena in Portland, Oregon. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloa

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Doncic’s knack for making big shots is only part of his star appeal. He’s also a high-IQ playmaker who knows how to take advantage of his size to create mismatches with opposing point guards. That part has come with some growing pains, as Doncic is eighth among guards with 3.4 turnovers per game. But more often than not, his flashy style has been a help for a surprising Dallas team.

“It’s very obvious that he’s been playing professionally,” Lillard said. “I’m sometimes on the weak side and seeing him coming off of a pick-and-roll, and he’s seeing everything. He’s making the right plays, and he’s manipulating situations to get what he wants out of the play. You don’t really see that from a rookie.

“He’s got real game. He’s a real pro.”

Unlike most kids his age, Doncic has been a pro since many of his peers were in middle school. The NBA is a jump for him, but it’s not a massive one. And he’s fully prepared to embrace it.

“I think you have to be born with that stuff,” Barea said. “He’s one of those guys who’s born with it.”

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Every NBA Team’s Biggest Regret of 2018

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    Edward A. Ornelas/Getty Images

    Welcome, hoop fans.

    NBA Grinch here to disrupt your spectacular end-of-the-year celebrations with a reminder that not all parts of 2018 were terrific.

    It isn’t the nicest task, but it’s among the most necessary. Just like the rest of us, NBA organizations are in a constant state of experimenting, analyzing and (hopefully) maturing. Missteps are an unavoidable part of the process. They’re also one of the most critical developmental tools, provided we’re able to learn from them.

    So, before we shift to the refreshing feeling of starting a new calendar, we first must reflect on the biggest 2018 regret for each of the Association’s 30 squads.

    From free-agency failures to draft-night debacles and everything in between, we’ll examine where it went most wrong for clubs over the last 12 months.

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    Kevin Hagen/Associated Press

    Look, we get it.

    Atlanta Hawks general manager Travis Schlenk honed his front office craft with the Golden State Warriors. Through blurred, ultra-optimistic vision, you can see some Splash Brothers resemblance in Trae Young and Kevin Huerter.

    The problem is Stephen Curry is a generational talent. Klay Thompson is a generational shooter. Expecting either Young or Huerter to approach that territory—let alone both to do so simultaneously—seems preposterously far-fetched.

    And to think, by dealing away Luka Doncic, the Hawks parted with a potential superstar-in-the-making to chase this vision.

    If the campaign closed today, Doncic would be only the 10th rookieand first since Grant Hillto average at least 18 points, six rebounds and four assists. Young, meanwhile, would be just the fourth freshman in the three-point era to average 14-plus shots a game with a sub-40 field-goal percentage.

    Yikes.

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    Elise Amendola/Associated Press

    As Kawhi Leonard’s prolonged exit from the San Antonio Spurs played out, there were more reports about who was being held out of trade talks than pieces potentially in them. Third-year swingman Jaylen Brown was among those reportedly made off-limits.

    It might have been a defensible stance back then. Leonard made just nine appearances in 2017-18, raising questions about the type of player he’d be in 2018-19—concerns amplified by his uncertain future beyond this year. Brown, on the other hand, had just put an exclamation point on a breakout sophomore season by averaging 18 points in the playoffs for a conference finalist.

    ESPN’s Zach Lowe even raised the question, “What if Brown is on a path to becoming the next Kawhi Leonard?”

    That almost sounds comical now, with Brown backtracking in a big way and Leonard reclaiming his place as a top-five talent. Complicating matters, Leonard just so happens to be starring for the Toronto Raptors, Boston’s chief rival in the East.

    While the Celtics’ conservative approach to their own assets has allowed them to dream about a different elite, they might regret letting another pass right through their fingertips.

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    Mary Altaffer/Associated Press

    DeMarre Carroll’s value had flatlined ahead of his July 2017 trade to the Brooklyn Nets. After a pair of injury-riddled, disappointing seasons with the Toronto Raptors, his remaining two years and $30 million were burdensome enough that the Raptors had to sacrifice a first- and second-round pick to the swap.

    Fast-forward to February, and Carroll had played his way back into respectable three-and-D range. In fact, he heard from his agent, Mark Bartelstein, that “a lot of teams” were interested in acquiring him, per Brian Lewis of the New York Post.

    This could have been the best kind of double-dipping for the Nets—adding value by bringing Carroll in, adding some more by sending him out. But Brooklyn held on to him then, and it might not be able to reverse course now if it wanted to. His shooting rates have plummeted since last season, likely dragging down his trade stock with them.

    Keeping him around is tricky, too. Any floor time he receives might be better spent on developmental minutes for Rondae Hollis-Jefferson, Rodions Kurucs, Treveon Graham, Allen Crabbe and Dzanan Musa.

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    Jeff Haynes/Getty Images

    The Charlotte Hornets didn’t have the funds to make big-ticket splurges, so we’ll instead shift the focus to a relatively minor move that actually makes sense in a vacuum.

    In 2016-17, Willy Hernangomez was an All-Rookie first-teamer. In February 2018, he was acquired by the Hornets for a pair of second-rounders and no-longer-in-the-NBA Johnny O’Bryant.

    The price is fine—perhaps a bit of a bargain even—but the fit has been flawed from the start. Charlotte was already overcrowded up front before Hernangomez arrived, and the congestion carried over into this campaign. With Cody Zeller, Frank Kaminsky and Bismack Biyombo in the same center rotation, the Spaniard has found either limited minutes or, on occasion, no floor time at all.

    This isn’t a particularly damaging move, but it’s a bit of a head-scratcher nonetheless.

    That said, history will likely view the Hornets holding much greater regrets from this time. Not moving Kemba Walker to kick-start an overdue rebuild seems like a wasted opportunity, even while recognizing his importance to the franchise.

    In a similar vein, the draft-night swap of Shai Gilgeous-Alexander for Miles Bridges may not age well, though the former’s value would’ve been capped without a Walker trade.

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    Andy Lyons/Getty Images

    Jabari Parker’s journey to the Chicago Bulls morphed from fun homecoming tale to disastrous $40 million mistake in near-record time.

    He was signed in July, debuted in October and lost his rotation spot in December.

    Granted, free-agency dealings are never guaranteed to succeed, but Parker’s case is unique. It’s as if Chicago knew this was a dicey investment, ponied up the $40 million anyway (the second year is a team option, at least) and second-guessed itself almost immediately.

    The Bulls’ version of Parker has essentially been the NBA’s version of Parker. He struggled as a shooter a bit more than usual, but he was basically a volume scorer who doesn’t defend (just like he said he wouldn’t), rebounds fine and doesn’t bring much else to the table. Are we sure the Bulls read his scouting report before making the offer, or did they just digest some of his old Simeon highlights?

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    Jason Miller/Getty Images

    How, Sway?! How is this possible?

    The Association’s best player of his generation—and, in the eyes of many, the best to ever do it—is an Ohio native. He has twice served lengthy tenures with the Cleveland Cavaliers, each stint unlocking a new level of success for the franchise.

    And still, the Cavs have given LeBron James reasons to find the nearest exit. Twice.

    He had a championship-level sidekick in Kyrie Irving, who reportedly requested a trade after hearing of a discussion among Cleveland’s front office about his possible trade value, sources told ESPN’s Dave McMenamin. They then botched Irving’s exit, settling on a package featuring Isaiah Thomas, who arrived with a hip injury and eventually went under the knife—after the Cavs had moved him for a minimal return.

    Oh, and James offered a different alternative for Irving’s exit: trading for Damian Lillard, sources told Bleacher Report’s Ric Bucher. Cleveland’s front office never even placed a call.

    So, while James’ exit was ultimately his decision, the Cavs will regret not doing everything in their power to appease the best player they ever had.

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    Matthew Stockman/Getty Images

    In July 2015, DeAndre Jordan ditched the Dallas Mavericks at the altar, backing out of an agreement to join the club during free agency’s moratorium period. Considering the spotty play they’d received from the center position since then, you can understand why they were willing to let bygones be bygones when the big man returned to the market this summer.

    But shouldn’t a $22.9 million investment return more value than this?

    The counting categories say Jordan is having his typical season, averaging a double-double and threatening to push for the third rebounding title of his career. His on-court impact, though, is not what it seems. The Mavs have fared better on both ends of the floor without him, resulting in a plus-5.6 swing in net efficiency when he’s spectating from the sidelines.

    He also hasn’t exactly endeared himself to his new teammates.

    “He has been a major disappointment for the Mavs,” ESPN’s Tim MacMahon wrote in November. “He has rubbed teammates the wrong way with what they perceive as selfish play … Jordan’s disinterest in playing help defense has been a big problem as Mavs opponents light up the scoreboard.”

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    David Zalubowski/Associated Press

    Emmanuel Mudiay spent the bulk of his Denver Nuggets tenure on the trade block. The seventh pick in the 2015 draft transformed from a potential foundational piece into a trade chip as soon as the Nuggets doubled down at the position with Jamal Murray, also the No. 7 pick, in 2016.

    The Nuggets were “quietly” shopping Mudiay as far back as the 2017 trade deadline, per ESPN’s Zach Lowe, but they either didn’t like the incoming offers or deemed it better to wait on the point guard’s potential. But Mudiay seemingly plateaued early, eventually costing him both his rotation spot and any trade value he may have offered.

    By the time Denver finally pulled the trigger on a Mudiay deal, he’d become a part-time player with a potentially crushing shooting problem. The February 2018 three-team exchange yielded Denver only Devin Harris and swapped second-rounders.

    “It looks [like] the Nuggets waited too long to strike,” ESPN’s Kevin Pelton wrote at the time, while giving the Nuggets a B-minus for their return. “Mudiay’s value proved close to negligible, as Denver got only a veteran rental and the chance to move up a couple spots in the second round.”

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    Brian Sevald/Getty Images

    The motivations behind this move are fine, or at least seemed to be at the time.

    The trade market was the Detroit Pistons’ only path to a player of Blake Griffin‘s stature, and this meant they wouldn’t have to figure out the right rate on Tobias Harris’ next deal. The Avery Bradley rental wasn’t having the desired effect on the win column. And if this swap sparked a late-season run, the outgoing first-rounder wouldn’t have been the toughest pill to swallow.

    They weren’t going to join the contending ranks, but maybe that was fine.

    “Maybe super-mediocrity, with multiple playoff appearances in the middle of the Eastern Conference, is OK for the Pistons,” ESPN’s Zach Lowe wrote. “… They are struggling to fill a new arena, at risk of missing the playoffs for a second straight season. Being the Joe Johnson-era Hawks might be a great outcome for them.”

    But a couple miscalculations could prove wildly costly.

    The gap between Griffin and Harris has grown uncomfortably slim. Harris is three years younger, significantly cheaper, less of an injury risk and, as of now, a 21-plus-point scorer and near-50/40/90 shooter. Oh, and since last season’s playoff push fell short for the Pistons, they actually sacrificed the lottery pick used to acquire Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, a 20-year-old averaging 14.1 points and 3.8 assists per 36 minutes.

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    Rocky Widner/Getty Images

    Before DeMarcus Cousins fell into the Golden State Warriors’ lap, general manager Bob Myers possessed the mid-level exception and was “mostly … thinking wings,” per Greg Papa and Bonta Hill of 95.7 The Game. Boogie’s budget rate necessitated pivoting off the initial plan, but the Dubs never strengthened what they saw as a potentially problematic area. In fact, they’re even more shallow than they feared with Patrick McCaw holding out.

    Golden State’s collection of perimeter reserves features either young, unproven players or 30-somethings with shaky injury histories. That probably explains why Kevin Durant is averaging his most minutes as a Warrior and Klay Thompson is getting the most floor time he’s received during Steve Kerr’s tenure.

    Granted, this isn’t the worst regret to have. We’re talking about insurance policies behind in-prime All-Stars. And maybe a cheap fix will eventually emerge on the buyout market; the franchise has left one roster spot open.

    But a serious injury to one of the stars—or even a key reserve like Andre Iguodala or Shaun Livingston—could bring this issue to the forefront. The Warriors will need all the bodies they can get for maximum postseason protection, and only they know if they’d be comfortable giving Alfonzo McKinnie, Damion Lee or Jacob Evans any playoff minutes.

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    Ned Dishman/Getty Images

    We’ll let Mike D’Antoni speak to the state of the Houston Rockets’ depth.

    “Obviously, it’s a problem,” the skipper told reporters in November. “It’s something that I know that the front office tried to address. They’re going to do the best they can. No blame going around; it’s just the way it is.”

    It turns out that filling the void left by two-way stalwarts Trevor Ariza and Luc Mbah a Moute with Carmelo Anthony wasn’t the best idea. And shockingly, Michael Carter-Williams and his career 25.4 three-point percentage have proved an awkward fit for a group that embraces the long ball like no team ever has.

    To be clear, Houston was never going to find much in free agency after spending big on both Chris Paul and Clint Capela. But for a squad entertaining realistic championship hopes, the lack of reliable reserves might be a fatal flaw.

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    Brian Munoz/Getty Images

    That this would stand as the Indiana Pacers’ biggest regret shows the franchise had a pretty productive 2018. Extending Myles Turner was a wise gamble with a ton of upside. It was also smart to keep Tyreke Evans’ feet to the fire with a one-year agreement, and Kyle O’Quinn was fine for the price.

    But going three years and $22 million for shooting specialist Doug McDermott seems a tad excessive.

    While they need his outside touch, they also can’t give him a ton of floor time because he’s too much of a defensive liability. There’s a reason he’s played for five different teams through five seasons. He’ll always have a home due to his perimeter proficiency, but when his defensive box plus/minus is consistently in the red, it’s not always worth the effort to get him involved.

    There were a decent number of snipers available this summer, and few matched McDermott’s deal in length and salary. In the newer, (relatively) tighter NBA economy, he’s just not a $7 million-plus player.

13 of 30

    Adam Pantozzi/Getty Images

    Jerome Robinson might have lottery talent. He might even be the 13th-best player in the 2018 draft class.

    But it will be a long while before we have any type of read on him, because the Los Angeles Clippers didn’t need him to begin with.

    Their backcourt looks like L.A. at rush hour. The starting guard spots belong to Gilgeous-Alexander and Avery Bradley. The reserve minutes are distributed amongclears throat—Lou Williams, Patrick Beverley, Milos Teodosic, Tyrone Wallace and Sindarius Thornwell.

    Oh, yeah, and Robinson. Sorry, he’s easy to overlook when he’s barely broken a sweat this season.

    How the Clippers left that draft without their center of the future (what up, Robert Williams?) or wing depth behind the oft-injured Danilo Gallinari is beyond comprehension.

14 of 30

    John McCoy/Getty Images

    As soon as LeBron James joined the Los Angeles Lakers, their need for shooting ballooned. Ideally, they’d find a floor-spacer for all five positions, as the King had previously enjoyed his most team success alongside stretch bigs like Chris Bosh and Kevin Love.

    Brook Lopez should have been an obvious choice. The North Hollywood native had just splashed the fourth-most triples among 7-footers over the previous two seasons, the second of which was spent with the Purple and Gold.

    But the Lakers passed on re-signing Lopez, who took a one-year, $3.4 million deal with the Milwaukee Bucks and immediately helped them vault atop the offensive efficiency rankings. L.A. instead gave JaVale McGee a minimum deal, then added Michael Beasley on a one-year, $3.5 million pact.

    The Lakers have been struggling for proper spacing ever since, posting mediocre marks in three-point makes and attempts. Unless rookie Moritz Wagner launches up the rotation, this club will either have to live with some interior congestion or sacrifice size to clear it up.

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    David Zalubowski/Associated Press

    Leading up to the 2018 trade deadline, the Memphis Grizzlies had the hottest chip on the market in Tyreke Evans, whose return to Bluff City had sparked an improbably productive turnaround.

    Everyone wanted Evans. The former Rookie of the Year was suddenly an across-the-board contributor again and a quantity-plus-quality outside shooter to boot. The Grizzlies shut down the swingman in anticipation of a deal, hoping for a first-round pick but, if that wasn’t possible, expected to eventually take the best offer available, per Yahoo Sports’ Chris Mannix.

    Then, the deadline came and went with Evans going nowhere. Chris Herrington of the Memphis Commercial Appeal opined the Grizzlies “seem to be betting that keeping Evans now significantly increases his odds of returning next season.”

    Narrator: Evans did not return.

    Memphis played out its 22-win season, then watched Evans leave for nothing. The Grizzlies could have collected an asset from someone who cost them just a one-year, $3.3 million contract the prior summer. Instead, they’re left with only a highlight reel from a season the franchise hopes to forget.

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    Jonathan Bachman/Getty Images

    The Miami Heat have been whale hunting ever since the Big Three disbanded. But a batch of bloated contracts and some loose handling of draft picks effectively prevented them from even joining a star pursuit.

    That all changed in September, when a disgruntled Jimmy Butler made them his preferred trade destination. The Heat were even close to reeling him in before trade talks crumbled at the last minute. They pulled Josh Richardson off the table shortly thereafter, per ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski, and later watched Butler land with the Philadelphia 76ers.

    This all seemed somewhat defensible when Richardson came roaring out of the gate and hinting toward a tremendous leap. Already an impact defender, the 25-year-old was averaging 21.4 points on 43.9/41.2/90.6 shooting through the first nine games.

    But he turned back into a pumpkin in December; this month he’s averaged just 14.1 points on 35.0 percent shooting. The lack of consistency makes one wonder if he’ll ever make an All-Star leap like Butler once did or merely top out as a three-and-D complementary piece. There’s value in high-level three-and-D play but not enough to block the arrival of a four-time All-Star.

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    Stacy Revere/Getty Images

    Zero regrets for the Milwaukee Bucks in 2018.

    The hiring of Mike Budenholzer was a home run, and they enhanced its value by giving him free-agent snipers like Brook Lopez, Ersan Ilyasova and Pat Connaughton. Donte DiVincenzo was a good enough value as the 17th pick. The three-team trade that brought back George Hill helped both the present on-court product and the future cap situation. Resisting temptation with Jabari Parker looks smarter by the day.

    The Bucks are doing everything right, which is critical when employing an all-galaxy talent like Giannis Antetokounmpo. While the Greek Freak has given no indication he’ll want out of Wisconsin when he hits the open market in 2021, plenty of superstars have outgrown smaller markets. Other teams are hoping he’ll eventually feel a similar itch.

    “Rival executives, particularly those in major markets, are already plotting to chase … Antetokounmpo, whether in free agency or via trade,” Bleacher Report’s Howard Beck wrote. “They’re gathering tradeable assets and freeing future salary-cap room.”

    Maybe Milwaukee doesn’t need an Antetokounmpo statue just yet, but life in today’s NBA demands that clubs do as much in-house recruiting of their own stars as possible.

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    Jesse D. Garrabrant/Getty Images

    At what point did the Minnesota Timberwolves realize that having a future with Jimmy Butler was no longer possible? His mid-September trade request seems like the obvious answer. Or if not that, then perhaps his wild return to practice in early October.

    But the message was reportedly communicated much earlier than that. Butler told ESPN’s Rachel Nichols he informed the Timberwolves of his unhappiness just four days after their playoff run ended.

    So how, then, was Butler still on the roster in September—let alone through training camp and nearly the first month of the regular season? Why was he given “precautionary rest” some nights and trotted out for 40-plus minutes on others? Why was there no sense of urgency on Minnesota’s end, not to placate Butler but to maximize his trade value and minimize the potential damage of keeping a disgruntled veteran around?

    “Trading a star rental … isn’t easy, but the lack of urgency from [Tom] Thibodeau and the Wolves was shocking,” Tom Ziller wrote for SB Nation. “They made the playoffs by one game last season. They were two wins from the No. 3 seed. Every game matters, and the Wolves were out here spitting away games on Butler’s whims.”

    Minnesota’s reluctance to move cost it an offer of Josh Richardson and a first-round pick from the Miami Heat, and who knows what else was on the table. Once the Wolves finally relented, they only collected Robert Covington, Dario Saric, Jerryd Bayless and a future second-rounder. Covington and Saric are solid, but they’re hardly what you’d consider acceptable centerpieces of a return package for a 20-point scorer and all-league stopper.

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    Jim Mone/Associated Press

    How long has the small forward position been the weak spot of the New Orleans Pelicans? You have to dip back into the memory banks to even find a serviceable option there. Tyreke Evans maybe? A half-season of Quincy Pondexter?

    Point being, this is hardly a new problem. But are they any closer to finding a solution?

    The Pelicans reportedly have a “plan,” which might prove nothing more than wishful thinking. Multiple league sources told Scott Kushner of the New Orleans Advocate that general manager Dell Demps is “waiting for a midseason trade to strike.”

    Great. So, the answer is waiting for an unidentified trade target to emerge—in a market that looks like it will be short on sellers—and then ponying up something better than all the other wing-needy teams can offer? Does this mean yet another first-round pick will be headed out of the Big Easy?

    And what exactly happens in the meantime? Just sit back and hope that E’Twaun Moore, Darius Miller, Wesley Johnson and Solomon Hill can cobble together a workable rotation? In possibly the most important season in franchise history that could determine how Anthony Davis reacts to the supermax offer headed his way over the summer?

    If this convinces the Brow to bounce, it’ll be an all-time regret.

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    Mary Altaffer/Associated Press

    The New York Knicks’ plan for their point guard position seemingly entailed throwing a handful of youngish floor generals at the wall and seeing which one sticks.

    In a vacuum, that’s not the worst strategy you’ll ever hear. Rebuilding clubs must be open to help wherever they can find it, and this allows the ‘Bockers to hedge their bets that the lead guard of the future exists somewhere on their roster.

    The issue is these point guard prospects are not created equally—not by upside or the organization’s level of investment. Trey Burke and Emmanuel Mudiay both arrived as castoffs from other clubs, players who had squandered previous opportunities to produce. Frank Ntilikina, on the other hand, landed in the Empire State as New York’s second-highest drafted player of the 2010s.

    Ntilikina is clearly rough around the edges, particularly at the offensive end. But he’s also a 20-year-old on a team that knew it would spend this season outside of the playoff picture. He needs all the maturation minutes he can get, either to prove his worth in the Knicks’ future plans or inflate his value to ensure they get something in return for 2017’s No. 8 pick.

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    Jeff Chiu/Associated Press

    There’s plenty to like about the Oklahoma City Thunder’s formula for success. They have the requisite multi-star collection with Russell Westbrook and Paul George, a 7-foot bulldozer in Steven Adams and a host of rangy, energetic athletes around them.

    Defend better than anyone else, and you’re bound to give yourselves a shot every night, right?

    Let’s just say that’s to be determined. For everything the Thunder have, their nearly team-wide shooting shortage might be the worst weakness to have in today’s game. Their 32.6 three-point conversion rate is the Association’s worst. Their 70.5 free-throw percentage is only three spots from the cellar.

    What’s most regretful about this is Oklahoma City had to see it coming. Of the nine players to log at least 400 minutes this season, only three have a career three-pointer rate above 33 percent. (League-average, mind you, is 35.2). Oh, and that trio includes part-time players Patrick Patterson and Alex Abrines. Unless this can be fixed via trade, a wave of regret might rush over the Sooner State amid a brick-filled playoff failure.

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    Sue Ogrocki/Associated Press

    The Orlando Magic had their reasons for moving on from Elfrid Payton.

    He was inherited from the previous front office regime and clearly didn’t have many fans in the new one. His outside shooting woes were especially problematic with Orlando’s roster construction, and the glowing pre-draft scouting reports on his defense have mostly failed to materialize at the NBA level.

    But at the time of his trade to the Phoenix Suns, he was a 23-year-old former top-10 pick averaging career highs in points, field-goal percentage, three-point accuracy and player efficiency rating. Was it really worth moving him for a mid-second-round pick?

    It’d be one thing if Payton was blocking an up-and-comer behind him, but he was the only point guard prospect Orlando had. It’d also be forgivable if the Magic had clearly superior options. They have 31-year-old journeyman D.J. Augustin, Jerian Grant and Isaiah Briscoe.

    Obviously, Orlando had no intention of re-signing Payton, so maybe a bit of credit is due for returning something. But with Justin Jackson in the G League and a 2019 second-rounder still looming, it might be a while before we know what value, if any, the Magic actually received in this swap.

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    Chris Szagola/Associated Press

    With budding stars Joel Embiid and Ben Simmons finally healthy, the Philadelphia 76ers burst onto the contending scene last season with 52 wins and a trip to the conference semis. Head coach Brett Brown, then also acting as interim general manager, highlighted the club’s win-now mentality while expressing its intentions to spend the summer in pursuit of a third star.

    They scored a meeting with LeBron James’ representatives. They made an offer for Kawhi Leonard. And finally, they came out on top in the Jimmy Butler sweepstakes.

    So why, then, did their biggest draft-night deal have such a future focus? To be clear, the swap had value. Zhaire Smith might have a better pro career than Mikal Bridges, and the incoming 2021 unprotected first-rounder from the Miami Heat could be the biggest prize of all.

    But that draft pick does nothing for Philly’s current championship pursuit. And Smith may not either, with a fractured foot and subsequent surgery, plus a procedure necessitated by an allergic reaction, sidelining him indefinitely. Bridges, on the other hand, offered plug-and-play potential as a three-and-D role player, the same skill set Philly is now hoping to find on the trade market.

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    Frank Franklin II/Associated Press

    As far back as January, the Phoenix Suns made clear they were going for it this summer. Then in April, perhaps as a way of holding the front office to its word, Devin Booker capped a 61-loss season by saying, “I’m done with not making the playoffs.”

    The Suns sort of followed through with that plan. They spent the first pick on Deandre Ayton, a readymade big man with 20-10 potential. They sacrificed a current and future first to climb up for Mikal Bridges, a polished prospect. They lavished Trevor Ariza with a $15 million salary as soon as the market opened.

    But their efforts to address a glaring point guard problem fell flat, resulting in one of the worst position groups in recent memory. The opening night rotation at the 1 featured Isaiah Canaan, Elie Okobo and De’Anthony Melton. Canaan was gone before December, and Jawun Evans arrived on a two-way deal shortly thereafter.

    Remember, the Suns had multiple first-rounders, financial flexibility and, once they realized Ariza wasn’t what they needed, one of the most coveted trade chips on the market. None of those avenues brought back a point guard. That’s wild.

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    Steve Dykes/Associated Press

    Raise your hand if you ever watched the Portland Trail Blazers in recent years and thought the weak spot of this roster rested in the backcourt. And we don’t mean in the “Can Damian Lillard and CJ McCollum successfully coexist?” sense, but simply which positions were least talented.

    Zero hands raised, right? So, see if you can make sense of this approach.

    They drafted one rookie (Anfernee Simons) and traded for another (Gary Trent Jr.), both of whom are guards. They added two external free agents (Seth Curry and Nik Stauskas), both of whom are guards.

    Hmmm.

    Stauskas and Curry are unsurprisingly failing to move the needle. Trent and Simons can’t even find the floor because of the overcrowding. Meanwhile, the forward group continues to underwhelm; letting Ed Davis walk still looks like an unnecessary chemistry risk; and $48 million feels steep for Jusuf Nurkic, the kind of throwback big man the market mostly turned frigid on over the summer.

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    Glenn James/Getty Images

    The Sacramento Kings held the No. 2 overall pick this summer. Luka Doncic was selected at the No. 3 spot.

    Hey, Dave Joerger, the floor is yours.

    “Perhaps there was an idea that there was a ceiling on [Doncic],” the Kings skipper said recently. “I don’t see it, unfortunately for us.”

    While Joerger clarified this wasn’t meant as a shot at Sacramento’s front office or a dig at Marvin Bagley III, the underlying sentiment stands. Doncic has superstar potential, and the Kings let him pass by.

    To their credit, they’ve been both exciting and better than expected without him. But he could’ve nudged the ceiling even higher, wreaking transition havoc with De’Aaron Fox, feeding lob passes to Willie Cauley-Stein or making defenses pay for giving Buddy Hield and Nemanja Bjelica too much space. This isn’t an anti-Bagley regret, but Doncic had the edge in both talent and team fit.

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    Darren Abate/Associated Press

    Second-guessing Gregg Popovich is never easy and rarely wise. Not to mention, if he wasn’t interested in spending the twilight of his career navigating a full-scale rebuild, he’s earned the right to remain competitive.

    But losing a player like Kawhi Leonard will almost assuredly lead clubs to an eventual, inevitable reclamation project. The Spurs could have at least received a solid head-start on that effort by accepting the best offer of prospects and/or picks on the table.

    They went with DeMar DeRozan instead, a 29-year-old—two years older than Leonard—owed $27.7 million both this season and next (and 2020-21 if he picks up his player option). Oh, they also landed a top-20 protected 2019 first-rounder and Jakob Poeltl, a 23-year-old who’s been a career reserve so far.

    There’s some talent in San Antonio, but it’s aging, expensive and light on both three-point volume and perimeter defense. Sooner than later, the Spurs will regret taking such a narrow view with the Leonard trade instead of putting some potential building blocks around Dejounte Murray.

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    Jeff Chiu/Associated Press

    While we can’t confirm this, we’re guessing that’s the exact expression Kyle Lowry had upon receiving the 2:30 a.m. call from best friend and longtime running mate DeMar DeRozan that he’d been traded away from the Toronto Raptors.

    The Leonard-DeRozan swap was a brilliant move for the Raptors. Leonard is a 27-year-old MVP candidate. It’s next to impossible to snag a player of that stature in a trade. And while there’s risk he might bolt next summer in free agency, that would send Toronto down a rebuilding path with far fewer obstacles now that the organization is out from underneath DeRozan’s deal.

    But didn’t the execution of all this seem a bit sloppy?

    DeRozan was given the impression he wouldn’t be moved, which Raptors president Masai Ujiri would call a “miscommunication.” DeRozan told Haynes he felt he wasn’t given “the respect that I thought I deserved.” Lowry, who didn’t publicly address the deal for months, would later tell ESPN’s Rachel Nichols, “I felt betrayed because [DeRozan] felt betrayed, because that is my guy.”

    Again, right business decision for Toronto, but not the cleanest transaction you’ll ever see.

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    Richard W. Rodriguez/Associated Press

    Questioning a three-year, $33 million commitment to Dante Exum would’ve been a scalding-hot take in 2014. Back then, the No. 5 pick was being billed as a possible Penny Hardaway 2.0.

    Exum’s potential now is…who knows? Not “New Penny” probably, but Exum’s range of potential career outcomes is nearly impossible to predict given how little he’s played to date.

    He appeared in 80 games over the previous three seasons combined, and his career high in minutes is still the 22.2 he logged as a freshman. His lanky 6’6″ frame has proved disruptive on defense, but his scoring is erratic, and his outside shooting is several notches beneath average.

    It’s hard to see how this all adds up to a player worth an eight-figure salary, even while acknowledging teams routinely chase potential in this league. With the 2018 free-agency market largely reserved, this feels less like the Utah Jazz won a bidding war and more like they went beyond what was needed to eliminate the risk of their former high draft pick blossoming elsewhere.

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    Matt Slocum/Associated Press

    Troy Brown Jr. is 19 years old and two months into his NBA career. There’s no telling what type of pro he’ll eventually be or how history will remember his selection at the No. 15 spot.

    But all those unknowns are the issue for the Washington Wizards, who want to win now but have been perpetually searching for a suitable second team.

    Brown was unlikely to be an early contributor regardless of where he landed. He averaged 11.3 points and 3.2 assists during his lone season in college, where he also struggled to right a wonky three-point shot (29.1 percent). He’s a project, albeit a moderately interesting one thanks to his size-handles-playmaking ability.

    The Wizards needed more immediate help, particularly from someone on a rookie-scale contract to balance the budget with major money already on the books. Brown isn’t ready, which does nothing to help Washington’s race against time to salvage whatever window 28-year-old John Wall and 25-year-old Bradley Beal have left.

    Statistics used courtesy of Basketball Reference and NBA.com and current through Dec. 23.

    Zach Buckley covers the NBA for Bleacher Report. Follow him on Twitter, @ZachBuckleyNBA.

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Israel to hold early elections in April

Israel's coalition party leaders have agreed to call early elections amid a fallout with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu [Corinna Kern/Reuters]
Israel’s coalition party leaders have agreed to call early elections amid a fallout with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu [Corinna Kern/Reuters]

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government has agreed to hold early elections on April 9 after a meeting between members of his governing coalition.

Monday’s move comes after the ruling coalition appeared to come up short on votes needed to pass a contentious piece of court-ordered legislation.

Coalition party heads in Netanyahu’s government have decided to dissolve parliament and hold elections in early April “in the name of budgetary and national responsibility,” the statement distributed by a spokesman for Netanyahu’s Likud party said.

A new law extending the military draft to ultra-Orthodox men appears to have triggered the government’s downfall.

Netanyahu’s ultra-Orthodox partners are demanding the legislation be weakened and his small parliamentary majority seems to be making such a compromise impossible.

Netanyahu, now in his fourth term as prime minister, has been governing with a razor-thin majority of 61 seats in the 120-member parliament. He heads the right-wing Likud party.

Under Israeli law, a national election had to be held by November 2019.

Netanyahu’s coalition was left with a one-seat majority in parliament following Defence Minister Avigdor Lieberman’s resignation in November over a controversial Gaza ceasefire deal.

     

His resignation removed the five seats held by his party, Yisrael Beytenu, from the coalition.

     

Netanyahu is also facing mounting pressure over a series of corruption investigations into his affairs.

     

Police have recommended his indictment in three different probes and the attorney general is considering how to proceed.

     

Netanyahu is, however, not required to step down if indicted and polls have indicated his Likud party would remain the largest in parliament after new elections.

     

Some analysts believe he would be better positioned to face potential charges with a fresh electoral mandate.

SOURCE:
News agencies

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Which 2020 Candidates Won 2018?

With the end of 2018 comes the end of the part of the presidential race when people run for president while pretending they aren’t running. While nearly every Democrat insisted they were solely focused on the midterm elections, the reality is that more than two dozen possible contenders have spent the year burnishing their personas, floating policy ideas, road testing messages, meeting donors and earning chits in key primary states. Of course, nobody has been able to clear the field in advance, but there is no question that some 2020 candidates came out of 2018 ahead, some behind, and many spun their wheels.

Several candidates spent much of 2018 well below the radar, doing little more in public than signaling their intentions, such as former Housing and Urban Development Secretary Julián Castro, Rep. Tulsi Gabbard of Hawaii and South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg. But for those who overtly jockeyed in the past year, here’s my scorecard of how successful they were in establishing pole position before the race begins in earnest.

Story Continued Below

The Winners: Rep. Beto O’Rourke and Sen. Amy Klobuchar

O’Rourke and Klobuchar are the only two prospective Democratic candidates who in 2018 demonstrably moved from the fringes into the realm of serious consideration.

O’Rourke did it, as any Pod Save America listener knows, by losing. The outgoing three-term member of the House became a progressive sensation during his race against the loathed Sen. Ted Cruz by livestreaming his long road trips across Texas, breezily dropping F-bombs and eschewing PAC money. He ended up raising $80 million, the most money ever for a Democratic Senate campaign (Florida Republican Rick Scott now holds the all-time Senate record of $84 million), and he lost by only 2.5 percentage points in what has been a firmly red state.

Particularly tantalizing for progressive voters is that he did all that without tacking rightward. The most memorable moment of the campaign was when O’Rourke praised NFL players who “take a knee” during the national anthem to protest racism, insisting there was “nothing more American.” That wasn’t enough to win his Senate race, but it was part of a straight-talk charm that has catapulted him to third place in every 2020 presidential primary poll taken since his defeat, including the most recent Des Moines Register/CNN poll of likely Iowa caucus-goers.

Unlike O’Rourke, Klobuchar did win her race this year—and by 24 points. Like many other victorious Democrats, the senator from Minnesota portrayed herself as a mild-mannered pragmatist willing to reach across the aisle. For Democrats who believe their easiest path back to the White House runs through the Rust Belt, an Upper Midwesterner has a geographic edge.

She may also have a demographic advantage. Many Democrats are eager to take another shot at breaking the biggest glass ceiling in politics, and avenge Donald Trump’s defeat of Hillary Clinton. But for most of the past two years, the buzz has followed female senators from the coasts who have been pushing the ideological envelope. That was until Klobuchar had her first dramatic televised moment. When a defensive Brett Kavanaugh tried to answer her question about blackout drinking with another question—“I don’t know, have you?”—Klobuchar’s unruffled response, “I have no drinking problem, judge” won her new feminist fans.

Klobuchar may also be winning the Rachel Maddow primary. On her MSNBC show, Maddow praised her as “one of the people who I most enjoy talking to on television about politics” and suggested, “You have the exactly the right profile of somebody who ought to run for president.” When Klobuchar said she wouldn’t make a decision about running without consulting with her family, Maddow playfully offered, “If you want me to talk to them, I’ll do so!”

All of that helps explain why Klobuchar has zoomed into the field’s top tier, at least in Iowa. She hit 10 percent in this month’s David Binder Research poll of likely Iowa caucus-goers, in fourth place and just a point behind O’Rourke.

Still, it is O’Rourke who has leaped the furthest this year, though with his rise comes the inevitable attacks. O’Rourke has been hit this month with a spate of negative articles from the socialist-populist left, criticizing him for wobbly support of single-payer health insurance, insufficient ambition on tackling the climate crisis, and various House votes in support of Republican-sponsored legislation. So O’Rourke ends 2018 with both substantial momentum and brewing headwinds.

The Loser: Sen. Elizabeth Warren

Warren started 2018 in pretty good shape. She was one of the few contenders who scored double-digits in Democratic primary polling. In May, she even led a New Hampshire poll. Unlike most potential candidates, she already has enough of a following that she inspires children’s books and action figures.

However, in the second half of the year, her support began to soften. In August, she slipped to third in a different New Hampshire poll. In September, a Massachusetts poll found a majority of her own constituents did not want her to run. And in a national poll taken in early October, she registered at 8 percent, down to single digits. These polls were taken before Warren’s controversial DNA test.

Of course, the test failed to help. Since then, she hasn’t been able to break 5 percent in the three most recent national polls, and came in third in a Massachusetts poll. Not only has she taken criticism from some Native American leaders who reject the use of DNA to determine indigenous ancestry, but some progressive activists—who long viewed Warren as their leader—faulted her strategic sense in taking Trump’s bait.

But the test is more symptom than cause of her current struggles. Arguably no other potential Democratic contender has been on the receiving end of Trump’s barbs as much as Warren, and every jab attracts more attention than any of Warren’s policy speeches. This wasn’t the first year the president mocked her as “Pocahontas,” but he ratcheted up the attacks, offering her $1 million if she took a DNA test. That was in July, just before her poll numbers ebbed.

Warren’s fans used to lap up each withering takedown of a Wall Street banker she delivered from her perch on the Senate Banking Committee. But Wall Street isn’t the left’s biggest boogeyman anymore; now it’s Trump. And Warren hasn’t been able to win a war of words with him.

Even the editorial page of her hometown newspaper, the Boston Globe, argued that she shouldn’t run because “she has become a divisive figure.” That’s unfair. She’s “divisive” not because of what she says—plenty of other Democrats spout economic populism and skewer Wall Street bankers— but because of what Trump says about her. Whoever becomes the Democratic nominee will end up “divisive” in the same way, once Trump’s insult machine cranks up. Still, the Globe is voicing the fears of many rank-and-file Democrats: that she can’t win.

That doesn’t mean Warren actually can’t win. But if she does proceed, instead of launching a presidential campaign as a top-tier candidate, perhaps even the front-runner, she will instead begin in a hole. She will have to prove her electability to an increasingly skeptical base, which has other populists to choose from.

Still in Front: Former Vice President Joe Biden and Sen. Bernie Sanders

Yes, they’re old. Yes, they’re white men. Yes, they’ve lost before. But they have been at the top of every poll this year for a reason, and it’s not mere name recognition.

These are two politicians with loyal supporters, strong approval ratings, huge fundraising networks, well-honed philosophical visions, deeply substantive policy agendas and more experience on the presidential campaign trail than anyone else. Dismiss them at your peril.

They have continued to lead the pack in national primary polling, with both well into the double-digits, and Biden consistently at the top. (The most recent CNN poll gives Biden double the support of Sanders, though other polls show a narrower separation between the two.) Yet neither has been able this year to shake the criticisms that pose the biggest threat to their presidential ambitions.

When Sanders said, after the midterm elections, that white voters who wouldn’t support Andrew Gillum because he was African-American were “not necessarily racist,” he fed the perception that he still hasn’t learned how to connect with African-American voters. And last fall’s Kavanaugh hearings renewed attention on Biden’s handling of Anita Hill’s testimony during the 1991 Clarence Thomas hearings, raising questions whether Biden has permanently damaged his standing with female voters.

And yet, these two men are the most influential figures in the Democratic Party short of Barack Obama.

The nominally independent Sanders, more than anyone else, is able to single-handedly define what policies qualify as the progressive gold standard. Nearly every potential presidential candidate in the Senate scrambled to co-sponsor Sanders’ single-payer health insurance bill last year. To close out this year, Sanders, along with incoming Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, is setting a new bar for progressive climate policy: a “Green New Deal,” spending FDR-style to eliminate fossil fuel production in 10 years.

Biden, meanwhile, was the Democrats’ most popular campaign surrogate in the midterm elections, traveling to more than 20 states to boost 65 candidates. The former vice president was often welcomed by Democratic candidates campaigning in Trump-won territory—he was one of the few national figures Alabama’s Doug Jones was willing to be seen with during last year’s special election campaign—and most of his endorsed candidates won.

Sanders’ record wasn’t nearly as impressive. His multistate campaign swing in October brought him to few competitive House districts. Most of the long-shot progressives he supported for Congress lost, both in the primaries and the general election. In advance of a South Carolina rally, some local Democrats called him “extremely selfish” and told him to “get lost.”

But even if Sanders didn’t advance his electability argument, he maintained his stature as the voice of the populist left, at a time when the populist left is feeling confident enough to ignore electability arguments.

Neither Biden and Sanders can be considered locks. But nor can they be shrugged off as has-beens. Any candidate hoping to claim the progressive mantle has to wrest it from Sanders. And any candidate hoping to be the candidate of the Rust Belt has to run through the Scranton, Pa.-born Biden.

Stuck in the Weeds: Sens. Cory Booker, Kamala Harris,

Kirsten Gillibrand and Jeff Merkley

Consider this about Gillibrand: The thing about her that people talk about the most is how she shoved Al Franken out of the Senate before an investigation into alleged sexual misconduct could be pursued. That happened in December 2017.

A whole year has passed. In that time, Gillibrand—who in her early career as an upstate New York congresswoman styled herself as a moderate—has sought to sharpen her progressive bona fides. She has proposed a federal jobs guarantee, supported retail banks in post offices (which has been called a “public option” for banking) and declared of Immigration and Customs Enforcement that we should “get rid of it, start over, reimagine it.” And yet, she still has been defined by the Franken episode.

Whether you think Gillibrand helped herself or not by leading the charge against Franken, the fact remains she wanted to broaden her profile in 2018, and despite her wonky efforts, she has not succeeded. For someone often knocked as an opportunist, she didn’t seize many opportunities this year.

She’s not alone in that failure—and not for lack of trying. Booker sponsored a bill funding job-guarantee pilot projects (which Gillibrand, Harris, Merkley and Warren co-sponsored). He also drafted a bill to establish “baby bonds,” putting $1,000 in a government savings account for every child born in America (paid with estate-tax increases) then adding more funds to the account every year on a sliding scale, based on family income. The money can be used to help buy a home or pay for higher education upon turning 18.

Harris has her own redistributive proposal: monthly cash payments of up to $500 that would reach about 80 million Americans. And Merkley has a bill that would deny pharmaceutical companies access to Medicare, Medicaid and Veteran Affairs patients, kneecapping their profits, if their drug prices for all consumers are too high.

All of these proposals may soon lead to a thoughtful and substantive campaign trail discussion of the best ways to reduce inequality and poverty. But the cold truth is they did little to boost the profile of their sponsors in 2018.

Winning the wonk primary is tough because ideas draw more attention when progressive activists give them snappy slogans and launch pressure campaigns to smoke out timid moderates (see “Medicare for All,” “Abolish ICE” and “Green New Deal.”) Propose an idea by yourself, and it can be like a tree falling in a forest.

Moreover, all of these senatorial candidates live in Sanders’ shadow. Because it’s hard to out-left a democratic socialist, almost anything they can come up with will either seem tame by comparison, or co-opted by him (as he did with Gillibrand’s and Booker’s idea for a federal job guarantee). Trying to prove you’re more effective than Sanders by working across the aisle also has its pitfalls; Booker may want some credit for the passage of the bipartisan criminal justice reform bill he has championed, but chances are Trump is going to hog that spotlight.

Presidential candidates need breakout moments more than 10-point plans, but this group fell short on that front as well. Booker received mostly mockery when he capped a speech about releasing previously confidential documents about Brett Kavanaugh with the all-too-self-aware observation: “This is about the closest I’ll probably ever have in my life to an ‘I am Spartacus’ moment.” Harris dramatically interrogated Kavanaugh about a supposed inappropriate conversation he had about the Mueller investigation, but then she never produced the goods.

Merkley actually had a moment of great impact in June when he livestreamed his attempt to see a Texas facility that was detaining child refugees separated from the parents, and was denied access. As the Daily Beast’s Gideon Resnick noted at the time, Merkley helped to “escalate the story from a horrifying but smoldering issue in the nation’s political discourse into a five-alarm fire.” And the visit exemplified “how lawmakers in the age of Trump are finding potency when they leave the confines of the Capitol.” Since then, however, Merkley hasn’t found a way to replicate that success on other issues.

Flush With Cash … But Not Much Else: Michael Bloomberg, Rep. John Delaney and Tom Steyer

Maybe Democrats will go for a socialist. Maybe they will go for a centrist. It remains hard to fathom how they would go for a multimillionaire Wall Streeter. But that doesn’t mean these guys won’t spend money trying.

Bloomberg, the billionaire Republican-turned-independent-turned-Democrat, spent a whopping $110 million to help Democrats in the midterm elections. That included $5 million on a November ad that seemed to promote himself as a voice for “calm reasoning” instead of “shouting and hysterics” and “partisan bickering.” But it would be unfair to call the entire endeavor a vanity project. He spent more than $50 million on direct spending for candidates in swing districts, including overlooked districts like Oklahoma’s 5th, and backed the winner in most of them.

Steyer, the billionaire hedge fund investor turned political donor, spent even more, $123 million, in this past election cycle, but generally not on direct spending for candidates. Almost half went toward his “Need to Impeach” project, which has produced several TV ads featuring himself demanding Trump’s immediate ouster. And while Bloomberg was flipping swing districts and polishing his bipartisan persona, Steyer bet biggest on helping Andrew Gillum’s gubernatorial race in Florida, where he came up short.

Delaney, a former banker whose net worth was recently estimated at a relatively paltry $233 million, announced his presidential campaign in July 2017 and has practically lived in Iowa ever since. Before anyone else entered the race, he already visited every one of Iowa’s 99 counties, preaching a message of bipartisanship and civility.

Did any of these fat cats get a return on their investment? Of the three, Bloomberg rates the highest in primary polls, eking out 4 percent support in the most recent from Harvard-Harris. That might not seem like much, but it was enough to tie Booker and hold a slight edge over Harris.

Meanwhile, Steyer and Delaney each scored a goose egg in the latest CNN poll. But they get consolation prizes for 2018. Steyer’s Need to Impeach online petition drive has collected more than 6 million email address. That may not be all that helpful in persuading Congress to impeach and convict the president, but many other presidential candidates wish they had that much voter data with which to launch a campaign.

For all his time in Iowa, Delaney registered at only 1 percent in this month’s CNN/Des Moines Register Iowa caucus poll. But that was at least better than Gillibrand! And a September poll of likely Iowa caucus-goers by David Binder Research found his name ID in the state is up to 64 percent, roughly the same as Gillibrand and Harris. So he hasn’t completely wasted his time.

***

Early presidential punditry like this can be dismissed on the grounds that polls more than a year out are not always predictive, new faces (hello, Sherrod Brown!) can still emerge, and unforeseen events can transform campaigns. All true. But it’s worth understanding why certain candidates gained or held ground this year, and others failed to rise. Once again, the Democratic presidential primary is becoming a debate over perceptions of electability.

While some Democrats recoil at yet another debate over the nebulous concept, few can resist electability arguments, be they based on progressive conviction, moderate pragmatism, red state geography or multicultural demographics. The candidate that took the biggest hit this year, Warren, did so because Democrats, even those of her populist ilk, worry she can’t win. O’Rourke and Klobuchar rose because they represent fresh, albeit different, approaches to flipping red states. Biden and Sanders are still formidable because their supporters believe they have unequaled stature and appeal beyond the party’s base.

As for the rest, as well as Warren, we should not count them out so early in this process. But nor should they shrug off their failure to break out of the pack this year as irrelevant to their prospects in 2019 and 2020.

This primary will be a chaotic, sprawling demolition derby. Candidates who don’t get traction soon will get smashed by those who do. You may have a great argument for yourself on paper, but it will be hard to convince any primary voter you can win in the general election if you can’t draw attention to yourself now. Those who couldn’t figure out how to do that in 2018 will need to think very hard about what they should do differently in 2019.

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Protesters in France call for closure of Generation Identity bar

Lille, France – Protestors demonstrated in Lille, northern France calling for the closure of the local headquarters of Generation Identity, following revelations from Al Jazeera’s Investigative Unit’s documentary “Generation Hate”.

Around 300 people gathered on Lille’s Republic Square on Sunday demanding the closure of a bar called the Citadel, which had been infiltrated by an Al Jazeera undercover reporter over a period of six months beginning in September 2017.

The activists took to the streets behind a banner reading “Right into fifth gear into the Citadel” – a reference to comments filmed by the undercover journalist made by Generation Identity activist Remi Falize, describing his wish to commit an attack against a local market used by Muslims. The protestors were followed by several police vehicles and dozens of plain clothes officers.

Generation Identity (GI) is one of Europe’s fastest growing and most prominent far-right movements. The organisation was set up in France six years ago, and now has branches in several countries, including Italy, Austria, Germany and the United Kingdom.

The pan-European group, estimated to have thousands of members and an online following of tens of thousands, advocates the defence of what it sees as the identity and culture of white Europeans from what it calls the “great replacement” by immigration and “Islamisation”.

It presents itself as a patriotic movement and claims to be non-violent and non-racist.

Activists protested against Generation Identity carrying banners that read ‘The Citadel on fire, fascists in the midst’ [Lucas Chedeville/Al Jazeera]

But when the Al Jazeera undercover reporter infiltrated the Citadel, he found the opposite.

Footage filmed covertly shows GI members carrying out racist attacks and admitting to a series of other assaults on Muslims, as well as making racist jokes and singing anti-Semitic songs.

On Sunday, the protest stopped in front of a bar where Falize was filmed punching a young Arab woman. A line of police officers stood outside the bar.

“We were aware of the violence and the racist attacks, but they were done on the quiet,” said Philippe, a 52-year-old who attended the protest.

France: Generation Identity, the far right and racist violence

“The documentary has proved that this violence was taking place, and I hope people will open their eyes to what is happening in Lille.”

Another demonstrator, 33-year old Anais, who also asked not to print her family name, told Al Jazeera that since the Citadel opened in 2016, “people are at greater risk of being assaulted on the streets because of the colour of their skin”.

Lille resident Joe Dadit has been campaigning since 2016 to  make the authorities aware of the presence of the Citadel.

As soon as the GI bar opened, she launched a petition to protest against its presence in Lille.

“In the days afterwards, I had several meetings with [Lille Mayor] Martine Aubry, who told me that she could not do anything, since [the Citadelle] is a private space.”

After Al Jazeera released “Generation Hate”, mayor Aubry made a statement saying she was shocked by the documentary’s findings and was looking for ways to shut the bar down.

At the request of both the mayor and the police commissioner, the public prosecutor has started a criminal investigation.

Joe Dabit described Al Jazeera’s  investigation as a “bombshell which has opened people’s eyes”.

Al Jazeera Investigations – Generation Hate (Part 2)

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Trauma of Clinton’s Pennsylvania loss has Casey weighing 2020 bid


Bob Casey at an election debate

Pennsylvania Sen. Bob Casey easily defeated his Republican challenger in November, faring well in some parts of the state where Democrats typically fare poorly. | Gene J. Puskar/AP Photo

2020 Elections

‘I share some of the blame for not calling Brooklyn and saying, ‘You can’t just go to Pittsburgh,’’ said the Democratic senator.

It’s been more than two years since Donald Trump carried Pennsylvania in 2016, and it’s still on Bob Casey’s mind. He wishes he had pushed Hillary Clinton to campaign more outside of Pennsylvania’s two major cities. He thinks he should have pressed the Democratic nominee to go to economically struggling places like Washington and Greene counties and talk about rural broadband rather than talk about Trump.

Those regrets help explain why Casey has emerged as one of the most improbable names being floated as a 2020 Democratic presidential prospect. The Pennsylvania senator, on the heels of a double-digit victory in the midterm election, made a late and surprising entry into the invisible primary last month. It wasn’t activists, donors or reporters who first added his name to the long list of potential candidates, but Casey himself who suggested he was considering a bid.

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He’s determined that the Democratic nominee not make the same mistakes again in 2020.

“Looking back on it, months later and months later, and after more and more therapy, every time I thought about that election, I was remembering flashing lights that I looked at and then dismissed,” Casey said in an interview with POLITICO. “I share some of the blame for not calling Brooklyn and saying, ‘You can’t just go to Pittsburgh.’”

There isn’t exactly a clear lane for a mild-mannered, self-described “pro-life” Democrat with virtually no national profile — certainly not in an era in which big personalities and progressives are ascendant in his party. But Casey can’t be easily dismissed either after winning reelection to a third term in November by nearly 700,000 votes in a state with 20 electoral votes.

He thrashed Rep. Lou Barletta, a Republican who ran for the Senate at President Trump’s urging, not only in the Philadelphia suburbs, but in some of the mostly white, working-class counties that were key to the GOP’s victory in 2016 as well.

Casey also won 40 percent of the vote in rural areas, according to exit polls — 14 points more than Clinton captured in those parts of the state in 2016.

Casey, whose father served two terms as governor, believes Democrats have to compete in those places to win back the state in 2020.

“When a Democrat goes to a rural county, it’s not just showing up, but showing them you give a damn about their lives,” he said.

As Democrats debate whether to try to win back white working-class voters who cast a ballot for Trump after backing Obama, or focus their efforts on increasing turnout among people of color and other more loyal Democratic constituencies, Casey said, “I believe we’re a great party and we can do both.”

Pennsylvania’s Democratic attorney general, Josh Shapiro, said he’s encouraged Casey to run.

“Bob is a unique politician in that he can compete everywhere from Fishtown to Johnstown,” said Shapiro, referring to a popular Philadelphia neighborhood and a small city 240 miles away in western Pennsylvania.

Shapiro noted that Casey’s endorsement of Barack Obama in the 2008 presidential primary “really mattered”— and that his electoral experience should be part of the Democrats’ “formula for victory.”

Casey was the first prominent Democrat in the state to throw his weight behind Obama.

“It helped Barack Obama connect in communities that, at least in that moment in time, were not natural areas where he connected,” Shapiro said.

Obama went on to lose Pennsylvania’s primary that year, but by a smaller margin than first expected, denying Clinton a blowout victory and helping Obama hold onto his lead in the delegate count.

Unlike other potential presidential candidates, Casey hasn’t courted Democrats in key early primary states. He was invited to New Hampshire’s Politics & Eggs series, a longtime campaign stop for possible presidential candidates, but he hasn’t confirmed that he’s attending yet.

“At some point, a candidate gets to an active consideration,” Casey said, “and I’m nowhere near that.”

Sources familiar with Casey’s thinking on the matter say it’s unlikely he’ll launch a presidential campaign. As much as anything else, Casey seems to care about having a voice in the 2020 nomination process as someone who has won six statewide elections in Pennsylvania — a must-win state for Democratic presidential nominees that the party let slip away in 2016 the first time since 1988.

With most top-tier presidential prospects poised to announce campaigns in coming weeks and already deep into campaign preparations, Casey’s comments also suggest he’s gunning to be the future Democratic nominee’s running mate.

J.J. Balaban, a Democratic political strategist based in Pennsylvania, said Casey could be a “reassuring, mainstream” pick for vice president — not unlike Tim Kaine in 2016.

“Casey would be a choice that a Democratic president nominee, particularly one who is not a white male, would look at Bob Casey and say, ‘He could help the ticket carry Pennsylvania, which is a must-win state,’” he said.

Being considered for vice president, Casey said, “would be a great privilege.”

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Sudan football fans clash with police, call on Bashir to leave

Fans at a football match in Sudan‘s capital chanted slogans demanding President Omar al-Bashir step down and later clashed with police in the Khartoum suburb of Omdurman.

Video clips posted online show the fans in the stadium chanting “the people want to bring down the regime,” one of the main slogans of the Arab Spring uprisings.

Activists say police used tear gas and rubber bullets to disperse the fans after the match.

The violence late on Sunday was the latest in a series of anti-government protests across Sudan that have killed at least 12 people.

The protests were initially sparked by rising prices and shortages, but soon turned to demands for al-Bashir, in power since 1989, to step down.

“Fuel and bread shortages may have triggered protests across the country, but other factors now seem to be helping to keep them going,” Al Jazeera’s Hiba Morgan, reporting from the capital, Khartoum, said.

“People seem to be frustrated not just by the economic crisis, but by the way the country is being run and they want to see change.”

Sudan’s doctors, meanwhile, began an indefinite strike on Monday, with organisers reporting a widespread response.

‘Officers join protesters’

On Sunday, the Sudanese military reiterated its support for al-Bashir in a statement, saying “The armed forces assert that it stands behind its leadership and its keen interest in safeguarding the people’s achievements and the nation’s security, safety along with its blood, honour and assets”.

Cited by the official SUNA news agency, the statement came amid reports that some senior military officers had joined protesters in the cities of Atbara, Gadaref and Port Sudan.

While official estimates put the death toll from the protests at 12, opposition groups say that at least 22 people have been killed in the unrest.

On Sunday, protests broke out in Omdurman, the twin city of Khartoum, and the North and South Kordofan states.

Sudanese authorities have announced a state of emergency and curfew in a number of provinces over the protests, with government officials accusing Israel of plotting with rebel groups to cause violence in the country.

A nation of 40 million people, Sudan has struggled to recover from the loss of three quarters of its oil output – its main source of foreign currency – when South Sudan seceded.

Sudan’s economic woes have therefore exacerbated in the past few years, even as the United States lifted its 20-year-old trade sanctions on the country in October 2017.

The US has kept Sudan on its list of state sponsors of terrorism, which prevents Khartoum from accessing much-needed financial aid from institutions such as the IMF and the World Bank.

Bread prices have more than tripled since the start of this year after a government decision to stop state-funded imports of wheat.

Officials had hoped the move would create competition between private companies importing wheat, and therefore, act as a check on price rises.

But a number of bakeries stopped production, citing a lack of flour. This forced the government to increase flour subsidies by 40 percent in November.

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Former Pakistan PM Nawaz Sharif sentenced to seven years in jail

Supporters of former Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif shout slogans against the government outside the court [B.K. Bangash/AP Photo]
Supporters of former Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif shout slogans against the government outside the court [B.K. Bangash/AP Photo]

A Pakistani anti-corruption court has jailed former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif for seven years on corruption charges he says were politically motivated.

The court found on Monday the three-time prime minister was unable to prove the source of income for the ownership of a steel mill in Saudi Arabia, Geo News reported.

Sharif was sentenced in July to 10 years in prison by the same court, on charges related to the purchase of upscale apartments in London, after the Supreme Court removed him from power.

He was released from prison in September pending an appeal.

Reporting from Islamabad, Al Jazeera’s Kamal Hyder said that Sharif’s party would take the verdict seriously.

“The court announced that he would be sentenced to seven years in jail in the Al-Azizia steel mills case, whereas he has been cleared of the other charge,” he said.

“This is indeed something which is going to be taken seriously by his political party. However, it should also be remembered that Nawaz Sharif was earlier arrested in the Avenfield properties case, he was sent to prison. He then lodged a review petition and was released on bail,” he said.

More to follow…

SOURCE:
Al Jazeera and news agencies

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