White House, congressional leaders will try again to reach spending deal


Nancy Pelosi

The bipartisan group met last month and reported surprising progress, only to see President Donald Trump — furious over a House Speaker Nancy Pelosi accusation that he was involved in a “cover-up” of Russian election interference in the 2016 presidential race — angrily walk out a White House meeting May 22 with Democrats. | Anna Moneymaker/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Top congressional leaders from both parties will meet with senior White House officials this week as the Trump administration and Congress try once again to reach a deal to avoid tens of billions of dollars in automatic spending cuts this fall, according to congressional and administration officials.

Yet both sides acknowledge they’re not close to an agreement at this point, with even Senate Republicans and the White House unable to fully hash out a common position among themselves.

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The federal government’s debt ceiling will also need to be increased later this year in order to avoid a catastrophic default, foreshadowing how ugly this fall may get in Washington.

Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) and House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) will huddle with Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, acting White House Chief of Staff Mick Mulvaney and acting Office of Management and Budget Director Russ Vought sometime this week, three sources said.

The bipartisan group met last month and reported surprising progress, only to see President Donald Trump — furious over a Pelosi accusation that he was involved in a “cover-up” of Russian election interference in the 2016 presidential race — angrily walk out a White House meeting May 22 with Democrats.

Since that time, McConnell and McCarthy — eager to avoid $125 billion in mandatory spending cuts to the Pentagon and domestic spending unless a deal is reached to boost those limits — have quietly tried to get the negotiations back on track, as have Democratic leaders.

Yet White House officials remain skeptical that Democrats, who want to increase domestic spending despite a rapidly rising deficit, will agree to any proposed deal, no matter what Republicans put on the table.

“Unless Democrats show a willingness to negotiate and come off their unrealistic and unaffordable spending increases, then these meetings are just summer theater and things won’t change much,” said an administration official, speaking on the condition of anonymity.

Democrats, though, are equally as frustrated with Trump and the GOP leadership, noting that the president’s tax cut — his signature legislative achievement — is the reason for the growing deficit.

They also point that Trump is wildly unpredictable in any negotiations, as even Republicans know, so that they don’t trust anything administration officials say unless Trump publicly endorses it.

And Democrats remain furious about the president’s decision following this winter’s disastrous 35-day partial government shutdown — the result of a failed strategy by Trump and GOP immigration hardliners — to declare a national emergency and use billions in Pentagon funding for his border wall project. Democrats are suing Trump over the move, even as the White House has sought more than $4 billion to deal with the immigration crisis on the southern border. Pelosi and other Democrats have not acted on the White House request yet.

“We’ll see what happens,” a senior Democratic aide said. “We’ll see what [Republicans] put on the table and we’ll go from there.”

GOP congressional leaders themselves are wary of Mulvaney and Vought, two budget hawks, which is why Mnuchin is the “point man” in the negotiations, at least for now.

A meeting with the three negotiators and Republicans on the Senate Appropriations Committee last week focused on the budget caps number, with some discussion of the debt ceiling, although no internal deal was struck, the Republican senators said.

“What we really need to do here is have the House and the president reach an agreement and then that will give us something to work off of,” Sen. John N. Kennedy (R-La.) said following that session. “The debt limit is a part of this. The wall is part of this … I wouldn’t say there’s an agreement between Republican senators and the White House. We’re still talking.”

Senate Appropriations Committee Chairman Richard Shelby (R-Ala.) added: “We want to see who is on board and not on board. We need to get the speaker, make sure that the speaker and Schumer and Leahy are together just like we’d be together.” Sen. Patrick Leahy (Vt.) is the top Democrat on Appropriatons, and he and Shelby have had their own talks on raising the budget caps.

“Did we make some progress? I think so maybe. At least we have some clarity,” Shelby told reporters. “We’re basically close to the same page” with White House

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Libya’s Fayez al-Sarraj calls for elections in 2019 to end war

The head of Libya‘s UN-recognised government has proposed holding nationwide elections to end the war in the North African country, as forces of the rival military commander Khalifa Haftar continue their two-month-long battle to take the capital, Tripoli.

Speaking at a news conference on Sunday, Prime Minister Fayez al-Sarraj said he was proposing a “Libyan congress” aimed at finding a peaceful solution to the conflict.

The talks would draw up a roadmap for parliamentary and presidential elections to be held before the end of 2019, he said in Tripoli, the seat of his administration. 

“I present today a political initiative for a way out of crisis. First, an all-inclusive Libyan congress to be convened, with the coordination of the international players … whereby we pave the way for building the state on the rule of law and democracy,” he said. 

“Second, during this congress an agreement will be reached on a future roadmap, where the constitutional foundation will be laid [for] presidential and legislative elections before the end of 2019.”

Sarraj’s Government of National Accord (GNA) holds the west, while Haftar’s self-styled Libyan National Army (LNA) holds the east and much of the south of the country. 

US politicians ask Pompeo to clarify policy on Libya (1:32)

Haftar has presented himself as a strong hand who can restore stability in Libya, but his opponents view him as an aspiring autocrat and fear a return to one-man rule.

Sarraj did not say whether Haftar or his representatives would be included in his proposed talks.

All Libyans who “call for a peaceful and democratic solution” would take part and there would be “no place for those who seek tyranny and dictatorship”, he said, while calling on the United Nations to support the forum and to oversee elections.

The two sides last held talks in the United Arab Emirates in February. 

There are fears that Haftar’s offensive on Tripoli could ignite a civil war on the scale of the violence after the 2011 uprising that toppled and killed longtime ruler, Muammar Gaddafi. The LNA launched the campaign in early April, but counter-attacks by forces loyal to the GNA have resulted in a stalemate on the city’s southern outskirts.

The UN mission to Libya in a brief statement welcomed Sarraj’s initiative, describing it as a “constructive proposal to advance the political process towards ending Libya’s long state of conflict”.

A spokesman for Haftar did not immediately answer phone calls and messages seeking comment.

Emad Badi, a non-resident scholar at the Middle East Institute, told Al Jazeera that Sarraj’s initiative was unlikely to have a political or military impact. 

“There needs to be some sort of a domestic buy-in from the eastern side. Haftar is the sole interlocutor in the East. Without another interlocutor, this deal is non-implementable,” he said, adding that the proposal may be a bid by Sarraj to show “goodwill and that he’s open to negotiations and power-sharing”.

The battle for Tripoli has killed over 650 people, including combatants and civilians, according to the World Health Organization. More than 94,000 have been displaced by the fighting.

Sarraj also demanded an international probe into alleged “war crimes and crimes against humanity” since Haftar launched his offensive. 

The two camps have so far refused to negotiate a ceasefire. 

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Trump campaigned on defeating the opioid crisis. It’s hard to tell if he’s winning.


Protest at HHS of federal opioids policy.

Demonstrators protest the federal government’s policies related to pharmaceutical opioids in front of the Health and Human Services headquarters on April 5, 2019. | J. Scott Applewhite/AP Photo

health care

Democrats aren’t ceding the issue for 2020.

President Donald Trump’s focus on the opioid crisis may strengthen his bond with poor, disaffected voters in hard-hit places like Appalachia that are a bedrock of his base. But the administration, for all its efforts, has not yet reversed the tide of the deadly epidemic.

The Trump administration’s response to the crisis of painkiller addictions and overdoses poses an unusual challenge for Democrats, who otherwise have claimed the electoral advantage on health issues during the Trump era. The White House can accurately point to signs of progress: Opioids prescriptions are down dramatically from their peak in 2012, early data suggests that overdose deaths are slowing, and the crisis is getting far more urgency and attention.

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“We will never stop until our job is done,” Trump declared at an opioid summit in Atlanta this spring. “We have results that are unbelievable … We’re making tremendous progress.”

But some of these gains could be attributed to work started in previous administrations. Nor is it clear what yardstick measures success. For instance, the decline in fatalities may not mean that fewer people are overdosing; it may mean that the campaign to make antidotes widely available is saving their lives, though not necessarily getting people treatment to end their addiction.

Democrats aren’t ceding the issue — presidential candidates like Elizabeth Warren and Amy Klobuchar have called for a much more aggressive counterattack and a whole lot more spending. Still, White House drug czar Jim Carroll says the Trump approach is finally addressing a crisis that flourished unabated during the Bush and Obama years.

“We are absolutely making progress,” Carroll told POLITICO in a recent interview. “It’s too soon to say we are turning the corner, but we now have the national attention and the spotlight on this issue. We’re reducing stigma, we’re getting more people to provide medication assisted treatment.”

“We are making a difference,” Carroll said. “We just need to continue to push hard.”

The team of top health officials helming the response includes several who weren’t in place when Trump declared a national opioid emergency in 2017. They include Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar, who assumed his post in January 2018, and Carroll, who was sworn in January 2019. That’s a contrast to a year ago, when the White House had no confirmed drug czar and Kellyanne Conway, a political strategist with no public health background, was running point on the crisis.

And while much of Trump’s own rhetoric around the crisis focuses on “building a wall” and punishing dealers, his administration has emphasized a public health approach, addressing addiction as a disease instead of a crime.

Congress has also responded, and it’s been bipartisan. Lawmakers have passed two major pieces legislation focused on all aspects of the crisis, from public health to law enforcement. It’s directed billions of dollars to states to get the crisis under control.

But as one aspect of the epidemic improves, another one gets worse. Deaths from prescription drugs and heroin may be slowing, but the body count from fentanyl and drugs like meth and cocaine are on the rise, alarming public health experts who say a response narrowly focused on opioids misses the mark on the broader challenge of drug addiction. Progress is slow in expanding access to safe, affordable treatment for more than 2 million Americans suffering from opioid addiction and countless more from other substances.

“We have turned off the opioid prescriptions spigot, but now we see meth making a comeback,” Mark Drennen, chief executive officer of the West Virginia Behavioral Healthcare Providers Association. Federal attention to opioids does help people with other drug addiction problems, he said, but “they kind of take a back seat.”

Deaths involving meth have been on the rise since 2010 and spiked 37 percent between 2016 and 2017, according to the most recent CDC figures.

West Virginia is among roughly 28 states that have seen a drop in overdose deaths in the past year, according to preliminary federal figures.

Trump’s stress on opioids in 2016 helped him build a base in hard-hit West Virginia, Ohio and Pennsylvania — states that also liked his appeal to the displaced working class and his exuberant support for reviving the coal industry. Conway calls the opioid crisis a “legacy issue” for Trump. His drug czar has been flying around the country touting the president’s efforts and early successes.

But Carroll’s recent trip to Minnesota is a good illustration of just how hard the task is. He went there on June 5 — right in the midst of a massive statewide spike in overdoses, with 175 overdoses, 17 of them fatal, over a two-week span. Officials attribute it to a bad batch of heroin, potentially laced with fentanyl.

According to the CDC, fentanyl-related deaths increased 47 percent between 2016 and 2017. Lawmakers on Capitol Hill on Thursday sent letters to Trump officials across six different agencies, asking on what they are doing to stop the flow of fentanyl and other illicit opioids.

Democrats running for president have rolled out their own strategies on the broader opioid issue. Warren and Klobuchar have both proposed significantly more funding — $100 billion over 10 years, compared with the $6 billion that the Trump administration and Congress have directed to states during the past two years.

Read More: How Amy Klobuchar and Elizabeth Warren would address the opioid crisis and drug addiction.

They say Trump is falling short for a crisis of this magnitude. They also point to the contradiction in his administration calling for more access to addiction treatment while it tries to roll back the Affordable Care Act and Medicaid, the biggest payer of behavioral health care.

More than 70,000 people died of drug overdoses in 2017, the highest number on record, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Trump advisers, including Carroll, tout preliminary numbers for 2018 showing that overdoses are down 4 percent nationally. But there improvement is inconsistent: 21 states saw no improvement or even upticks in deaths.

“We don’t have enough [medication-assisted treatment] providers,” said Alexander Billioux, the assistant secretary of health for the Louisiana Department of Health’s Office of Public Health. “We’re starting from very little capacity and trying to expand as quickly as we can.”

Even with an infusion of an estimated $82 million federal dollars last year, Louisiana is having trouble expanding treatment. It’s one of the states where overdose deaths have gone up slightly.

Advocates say the overdose death rate is an important metric, but that it doesn’t tell the whole story. The administration does not have data on whether access to addiction treatment has increased within the past two years or how many people are in treatment now. It’s also not clear whether the slowdown in deaths means fewer people are overdosing or more people are getting saved amid national efforts to arm the public with naloxone, the overdose antidote.

“People will count the overdose deaths because it’s the most severe metric,” said Regina LaBelle, program director of the of the O’Neill Institute for National and Global Health Law at Georgetown University and former ONDCP official under the Obama administration. “It’s the worst consequence, but it’s not the only consequence.”

Public health experts generally say the administration’s efforts on opioids are doing some good. But those steps don’t address the overarching problem of drug addiction, they say. Most of the administration’s policies target people struggling with opioids, while other drug-related deaths are also on the rise.

“It’s still a very acute approach to a chronic problem,” said Andrew Kessler, founder and principle of Slingshot Solutions. “I’m still not seeing a comprehensive response for the disease of addiction.”

Trump’s drug control policy office, typically in charge of coordinating the federal drug control strategy, has recently been under fire by lawmakers and the nonpartisan Government Accountability Office for not effectively fulfilling its role and for failing to provide the metrics required under statute to assess whether its strategy is working.

“There are serious issues that we flagged in terms of what they’re required to do and what they actually have been doing,” Triana McNeil, the acting director director of the Government Accountability Office, said in an interview. “I don’t think the GAO, based off the work we’ve done today, could say we feel ONDCP is fulfilling their statutory role.”

For example, the GAO said that though the administration aims to expand access to medication assisted treatment, it doesn’t have data on how many providers and facilities currently administer MAT, making it difficult to fully assess whether they are indeed increasing access.

The drug office recently released its own set of goals, including reducing overdose deaths by 15 percent over five years and doubling access to medication assisted treatment. It didn’t say how it plans to do that or at what cost.

A study published in the journal Health Affairs found only 36 percent of addiction treatment facilities in 2016 offered a form of medication-assisted treatment and only 6 percent offer all three Food and Drug Administration-approved options. Many facilities and providers choose not to prescribe these medications because of low reimbursement rates and stigma.

Some federal officials have also acknowledged gaps in reaching racial and ethnic minority populations. According to the CDC, the death rate among African Americans involving fentanyl increased 141 percent each year, on average, between 2011 and 2016 and 118 percent among Hispanics, compared to 61 percent for their white counterparts.

“African Americans are less likely to be prescribed naloxone,” said Nora Volkow, the director for the National Institute on Drug Abuse, referring to the overdose antidote and studies her agency has done on racial gaps in administration of that drug. “Some communities have been more successful than others and that requires a certain structure of resources to make them available,” she said. The Trump administration, for its part, is working to address these gaps, she said, through demonstration programs and grants.

Public health experts say they are optimistic about the administration’s efforts but caution that it’s going to take years and sustainable solutions to turn the tide.

“We really need to be very careful and not spike the ball,” Georgetown’s LaBelle said.

“These towns and cities across the country will be dealing with the wreckage of the opioid crisis for quite some time.”

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Carli Lloyd, USA Beat Chile to Reach 2019 Women’s World Cup Knockout Stage

United States' forward Carli Lloyd (R) celebrates with teammates after scoring a goal during the France 2019 Women's World Cup Group F football match between USA and Chile, on June 16, 2019, at the Parc des Princes stadium in Paris. (Photo by FRANCK FIFE / AFP)        (Photo credit should read FRANCK FIFE/AFP/Getty Images)

FRANCK FIFE/Getty Images

Reigning champions the United States reached the last 16 of the 2019 FIFA Women’s World Cup after beating Chile 3-0 in Group F on Sunday. 

Carli Lloyd bagged a brace but missed a second-half penalty, while Julie Ertz also found the net thanks to a fine header at the Parc des Princes in Paris.

The goals have put coach Jill Ellis’ team back in top spot after Sweden beat Thailand 5-1 earlier in the day.

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Ellis had made seven changes to her lineup, leaving star names such as Alex Morgan and Megan Rapinoe on the bench. Yet there was no drop in the performance levels as the U.S. went in front after just 11 minutes.

Grant Wahl @GrantWahl

#USA: Naeher; Krieger, Sauerbrunn, Dahlkemper, Davidson; Ertz, Brian, Horan; Pugh, Lloyd, Press.

Lloyd got on the scoresheet in spectacular fashion courtesy of a thunderous volley:

Bleacher Report @BleacherReport

Carli Lloyd with the ROCKET 💥

(via @FOXSoccer)
https://t.co/XnYOX72qM2

Match of the Day @BBCMOTD

The USA have lift-off 🚀

Carli Lloyd 👏👏

Watch #USA v #CHI on @BBCTwo & online now 👉 https://t.co/bVdbaeTBHp #ChangeTheGame #bbcfootball https://t.co/AByBUWRRlZ

The brilliant strike also helped make history for Lloyd, who has consistently been prolific at this level:

FOX Soccer @FOXSoccer

RECORD FOR CARLI LLOYD!

She is the first player to score in 6 straight #FIFAWWC games! 👏👏 https://t.co/0rXxU6woMl

Chile thought they were level 11 minutes later when Carla Guerro’s instinctive touch deceived goalkeeper Alyssa Naeher. However, video replay came to the rescue for the U.S., judging Guerro to be offside.

The decision proved costly as Ertz made an improvised header count four minutes later.

FOX Soccer @FOXSoccer

Stop us if you’ve heard this before… Julie Ertz at the near post! 😉

She scores her 1st career #FIFAWWC goal to double the @USWNT lead! https://t.co/S2DpnurNdf

Power in the air meant the U.S. maintained a considerable threat from set pieces, and it was no surprise the third goal came from a corner. It was Lloyd who met the cross to net her 10th World Cup goal.

Out-swinging deliveries were causing Chile problems, as was the intelligent movement in the box from Lloyd and Co.

A comfortable lead at the break meant Ellis could continue to refresh the lineup. She brought on North Carolina Courage striker Jessica McDonald and moved Lloyd off the front into a natural No. 10 position.

McDonald’s pace caused immediate problems after the restart. The only reason the U.S. didn’t quickly extend their tally was the standout performance of Chile goalkeeper Christiane Endler.

She produced two remarkable saves, first to deny Lindsey Horan. The full-back was teed up by the influential Christen Press, but Endler stuck out a foot to deny what should have been a tap-in.

Eniola Aluko @EniAlu

What a save from Endler! It’s why she’s one of the best in this tournament🙌🏽 #USACHI @FIFAWWC

Next, it was McDonald’s turn to be denied. She had already hit the post, but must have thought she’d scored when her point-blank header appeared to have Endler beaten.

Yet quick feet, a full-stretch dive and a strong hand helped produce the save of the tournament so far and leave McDonald frustrated.

Match of the Day @BBCMOTD

Incredible stuff from Christiane Endler.

Watch #USA v #CHI on @BBCTwo & online now 👉 https://t.co/bVdbaeTBHp #ChangeTheGame #bbcfootball https://t.co/4vQUgUL1aU

Even when Endler could be beaten, the U.S. were let down by poor finishing. Lloyd should have sealed her hat-trick from the spot after VAR prompted the awarding of a penalty, but she dragged her effort wide of the post, with Endler going the right way.

The miss meant Lloyd had wasted the chance to become the first player to score a hat-trick in two editions of the Women’s World Cup.

It didn’t matter in terms of the outcome, though, as the U.S. had done more than enough to not only progress, but also to offer a reminder of why every other team should fear the holders.

What’s Next?

The U.S. and Sweden meet in Le Havre on Thursday, June 20, for the right to finish first in the group.

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FIFA tells Saudis to stop pirated Women’s World Cup TV feeds

FIFA has asked a Saudi-backed satellite broadcaster to stop transmitting pirated feeds of Women’s World Cup games from a Qatari network.

Bootlegged feeds from Doha-based beIN Sports of top football games have been broadcast by Saudi-based BeoutQ since 2017.

FIFA, which sells the exclusive rights to beIN, on Sunday called out Arabsat for distributing BeoutQ.

“FIFA is aware that unauthorized transmissions of the FIFA Women’s World Cup 2019 are being made available across the MENA region, primarily Saudi Arabia, via the pirate broadcaster known as beoutQ,” FIFA said in a statement to The Associated Press news agency.

“BeoutQ’s unauthorized transmissions of the FIFA Women’s World Cup 2019 are made available by way of Arabsat satellite frequencies.

“FIFA is therefore seeking the cooperation of Arabsat in addressing the misuse of FIFA’s intellectual property.”

Screengrabs from BeoutQ’s coverage of England’s victory over Scotland at the Women’s World Cup last week show the beIN logo on the screen.

Saudi authorities declared beIN illegal in the kingdom, a proxy battle in the nation’s wider economic and diplomatic boycott of Qatar that was launched two years ago. BeIN has pursued Arabsat through the French courts.

“Even if we are illegally denied access to justice in Saudi Arabia, we will use every means possible to hold beoutQ and Arabsat to account for their daily theft of rights-holders’ intellectual property,” beIN group chief executive Yousef Al-Obaidly said.

“But we are not fighting this battle alone – the weight of the international community is now firmly coming to bear on Saudi Arabia to end its safe haven for piracy, which is destroying not only the economic model of the global sports and entertainment industry, but the livelihoods of content creators all around the world.”

Arabsat was founded in 1976 by members of the Arab league and the Saudis hold the biggest stake with 36.7 percent. There was no immediate response to a request for comment from Arabsat.

“FIFA continues to explore each of its legal options as a means to address beoutQ’s unauthorized broadcasts,” football’s governing body said.

“In this regard, FIFA is working with a number of other rights holders whose rights have also been infringed by beoutQ.”

In January, FIFA, UEFA and the Asian Football Confederation issued a joint statement with the English Premier League, German Bundesliga and Spanish league denouncing “persistent and illegal screening” of games where beIN owns the Middle East rights.

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US Open 2019 Leaderboard: Sunday Live Updates, Scores and Results for Round 4

  1. Clock Icon5 minutes ago

    Kinhult Makes Turn With Best Score on Course

    Marcus Kinhult recorded birdies at No. 1, No. 3 and No. 6 plus six pars to make the turn with the best score on course.
    The Swede is two-over for the tournament and is coming off a third-round 74.

  2. Clock Icon16 minutes ago

    Rex Hoggard @RexHoggardGC

    The last three US Opens at Pebble through 54 holes via GC research:
    Yr. – Leading – Players under par
    2000 – 8 under – 1
    2010 – 6 under – 3
    2019 – 11 under – 26

  3. Clock Icon20 minutes ago

    Wise Back to Even Par

    Wise has come out strong in the first four holes.
    He has three birdies to move back to even for the tournament.
    Sweden’s Marcus Kinhult is the only other player at three-under for the round right now.

  4. Invalid Date
  5. June 16, 2019
  6. Clock Icon30 minutes ago

    Golf Channel @GolfChannel

    We’ve got these views for one more day. Soak it up, everyone 😍 #USOpen https://t.co/TtiGuJaq1q

  7. Clock Icon41 minutes ago

    KPMG Mickelson @MickelsonHat

    How about a birthday birdie at the first? Yes, please! 🐥 Lefty comes out firing and will be +2 overall to begin his final round at the @usopengolf. #LetsGoLefty https://t.co/WtBQhn4JZM

  8. Clock Iconabout 1 hour ago

    U.S. Open (USGA) @usopengolf

    Happy birthday to @PhilMickelson! #USOpen https://t.co/AQzmlZukys

  9. Clock Iconabout 1 hour ago

    Mickelson Out on Course

    Phil Mickelson just started his final round alongside Charles Howell III.
    Mickelson is three-over for the tournament after a third-round 75 in which he recorded a triple bogey on the 18th hole.

  10. Clock Iconabout 1 hour ago

    Wise Looking for Bounce Back Day

    Aaron Wise was in the top 10 entering the third round, but he dropped out of contention with a third-round 79.
    Wise just started his fourth round with a birdie at No .1.
    He has the lowest overall score on course at two-over.

  11. Clock Icon4:21 pm

    Will Gray @WillGrayGC

    Reminder of incentives today beyond the trophy: top 4 and ties get into 2020 Masters, top 10 and ties get into Winged Foot.

  12. Clock Icon4:06 pm

    Zach Johnson Starting Strong

    Zach Johnson, who has two major titles on his resume, picks up back-to-back birdies at No. 4 and No. 5.
    Johnson shot 70 and 69 in his first two rounds, but he dropped down the leaderboard with a third-round 79.

  13. Clock Icon3:53 pm

    Only Two Players With Early Under-Par Rounds

    Sweden’s Marcus Kinhult and South Africa’s Justin Walters are the only two players with an under-par round on the course.
    Seven players are even-par for the round, while six players, including Kevin Kisner, are already over-par.
    It will be interesting to see if any low scores are out there in the early groups, and if that sets the tone for the leaders later in the afternoon.

  14. Clock Icon3:45 pm

    U.S. Open (USGA) @usopengolf

    The last time the #USOpen was contested at Pebble Beach, it was won by Graeme McDowell, who celebrated with his dad. #FathersDay https://t.co/lQU8x8R6yy

  15. Clock Icon3:34 pm

    U.S. Open (USGA) @usopengolf

    For the first time in his career, Gary Woodland will play in a major’s final group on Sunday, but there are seven major champions within seven strokes of his lead: https://t.co/y2q27oqzOy https://t.co/o8d2kc0AI8

  16. Clock Icon3:21 pm

    Geoff Shackelford @GeoffShac

    Experience matters @usopengolf @PebbleBeachGolf: Average age of top 10 going into final round is 38…
    Woodland 35
    Rose 38
    Koepka 29
    McIlroy 30
    Reavie 37
    Oosthuizen 36
    McIlroy 30
    Kuchar 40
    Hadley 31
    Willett 31
    Stenson 43
    #liveunderpar

  17. Clock Icon3:13 pm

    Golf Digest @GolfDigest

    49 👍 for 49 years.

    Happy birthday to the one and only @PhilMickelson! https://t.co/5bY1bRLjUP

  18. Clock Icon3:04 pm

    Notable Tee Times

    Kyle Stanley and Zach Johnson are next on the first tee at 11:05 a.m. ET.
    Kevin Kisner will be part of the next group at 11:16 a.m. ET.
    Rafa Cabrera Bello and Brandt Snedeker are off at 11:38 a.m. ET, while Phil Mickelson tees off at 12:33 p.m. ET alongside Charles Howell III.

  19. Clock Icon2:51 pm

    Nosferatu @VC606

    Stat of the day:

    This is the 119th #USOpen and the 450th golf major ever

    If @GaryWoodland wins he will be the 222nd major champion in history

    If @JustinRose99 wins he will be the 83rd multiple major champ ever

    If @BKoepka wins he will be the 20th quintuple champ ever

    etc…

  20. Clock Icon2:38 pm

    U.S. Open (USGA) @usopengolf

    You cannot miss these 3 things during the final round of the #USOpen.

    📰: https://t.co/easDgTrcYi https://t.co/PxOUd2LnkC

  21. Clock Icon2:32 pm

    Final Round Underway

    We still have over six hours until the leaders hit the course, but the final round has already kicked off.
    Amateur Michael Thorbjornsen is the first player out on the course playing by himself.
    Zach Johnson, Kevin Kisner and Luke Donald are among the notable names teeing off in the first hour of play on Sunday.

  22. Clock Icon2:09 pm

    U.S. Open (USGA) @usopengolf

    It all comes down to Sunday at the #USOpen. https://t.co/iKmtVhURdt

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US Open 2019 Leaderboard: Sunday Live Updates, Scores and Results for Round 4

  1. Clock Icon5 minutes ago

    Kinhult Makes Turn With Best Score on Course

    Marcus Kinhult recorded birdies at No. 1, No. 3 and No. 6 plus six pars to make the turn with the best score on course.
    The Swede is two-over for the tournament and is coming off a third-round 74.

  2. Clock Icon16 minutes ago

    Rex Hoggard @RexHoggardGC

    The last three US Opens at Pebble through 54 holes via GC research:
    Yr. – Leading – Players under par
    2000 – 8 under – 1
    2010 – 6 under – 3
    2019 – 11 under – 26

  3. Clock Icon20 minutes ago

    Wise Back to Even Par

    Wise has come out strong in the first four holes.
    He has three birdies to move back to even for the tournament.
    Sweden’s Marcus Kinhult is the only other player at three-under for the round right now.

  4. Invalid Date
  5. June 16, 2019
  6. Clock Icon30 minutes ago

    Golf Channel @GolfChannel

    We’ve got these views for one more day. Soak it up, everyone 😍 #USOpen https://t.co/TtiGuJaq1q

  7. Clock Icon41 minutes ago

    KPMG Mickelson @MickelsonHat

    How about a birthday birdie at the first? Yes, please! 🐥 Lefty comes out firing and will be +2 overall to begin his final round at the @usopengolf. #LetsGoLefty https://t.co/WtBQhn4JZM

  8. Clock Iconabout 1 hour ago

    U.S. Open (USGA) @usopengolf

    Happy birthday to @PhilMickelson! #USOpen https://t.co/AQzmlZukys

  9. Clock Iconabout 1 hour ago

    Mickelson Out on Course

    Phil Mickelson just started his final round alongside Charles Howell III.
    Mickelson is three-over for the tournament after a third-round 75 in which he recorded a triple bogey on the 18th hole.

  10. Clock Iconabout 1 hour ago

    Wise Looking for Bounce Back Day

    Aaron Wise was in the top 10 entering the third round, but he dropped out of contention with a third-round 79.
    Wise just started his fourth round with a birdie at No .1.
    He has the lowest overall score on course at two-over.

  11. Clock Icon4:21 pm

    Will Gray @WillGrayGC

    Reminder of incentives today beyond the trophy: top 4 and ties get into 2020 Masters, top 10 and ties get into Winged Foot.

  12. Clock Icon4:06 pm

    Zach Johnson Starting Strong

    Zach Johnson, who has two major titles on his resume, picks up back-to-back birdies at No. 4 and No. 5.
    Johnson shot 70 and 69 in his first two rounds, but he dropped down the leaderboard with a third-round 79.

  13. Clock Icon3:53 pm

    Only Two Players With Early Under-Par Rounds

    Sweden’s Marcus Kinhult and South Africa’s Justin Walters are the only two players with an under-par round on the course.
    Seven players are even-par for the round, while six players, including Kevin Kisner, are already over-par.
    It will be interesting to see if any low scores are out there in the early groups, and if that sets the tone for the leaders later in the afternoon.

  14. Clock Icon3:45 pm

    U.S. Open (USGA) @usopengolf

    The last time the #USOpen was contested at Pebble Beach, it was won by Graeme McDowell, who celebrated with his dad. #FathersDay https://t.co/lQU8x8R6yy

  15. Clock Icon3:34 pm

    U.S. Open (USGA) @usopengolf

    For the first time in his career, Gary Woodland will play in a major’s final group on Sunday, but there are seven major champions within seven strokes of his lead: https://t.co/y2q27oqzOy https://t.co/o8d2kc0AI8

  16. Clock Icon3:21 pm

    Geoff Shackelford @GeoffShac

    Experience matters @usopengolf @PebbleBeachGolf: Average age of top 10 going into final round is 38…
    Woodland 35
    Rose 38
    Koepka 29
    McIlroy 30
    Reavie 37
    Oosthuizen 36
    McIlroy 30
    Kuchar 40
    Hadley 31
    Willett 31
    Stenson 43
    #liveunderpar

  17. Clock Icon3:13 pm

    Golf Digest @GolfDigest

    49 👍 for 49 years.

    Happy birthday to the one and only @PhilMickelson! https://t.co/5bY1bRLjUP

  18. Clock Icon3:04 pm

    Notable Tee Times

    Kyle Stanley and Zach Johnson are next on the first tee at 11:05 a.m. ET.
    Kevin Kisner will be part of the next group at 11:16 a.m. ET.
    Rafa Cabrera Bello and Brandt Snedeker are off at 11:38 a.m. ET, while Phil Mickelson tees off at 12:33 p.m. ET alongside Charles Howell III.

  19. Clock Icon2:51 pm

    Nosferatu @VC606

    Stat of the day:

    This is the 119th #USOpen and the 450th golf major ever

    If @GaryWoodland wins he will be the 222nd major champion in history

    If @JustinRose99 wins he will be the 83rd multiple major champ ever

    If @BKoepka wins he will be the 20th quintuple champ ever

    etc…

  20. Clock Icon2:38 pm

    U.S. Open (USGA) @usopengolf

    You cannot miss these 3 things during the final round of the #USOpen.

    📰: https://t.co/easDgTrcYi https://t.co/PxOUd2LnkC

  21. Clock Icon2:32 pm

    Final Round Underway

    We still have over six hours until the leaders hit the course, but the final round has already kicked off.
    Amateur Michael Thorbjornsen is the first player out on the course playing by himself.
    Zach Johnson, Kevin Kisner and Luke Donald are among the notable names teeing off in the first hour of play on Sunday.

  22. Clock Icon2:09 pm

    U.S. Open (USGA) @usopengolf

    It all comes down to Sunday at the #USOpen. https://t.co/iKmtVhURdt

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter http://bit.ly/2RiZyNG
via IFTTT

Guatemalans vote in general election amid tensions

Guatemala City & Retalhuleu – Guatemalans began voting on Sunday morning in the country’s general election amid concerns of irregularities in recent days.

Nineteen candidates are in the race for president. Five others were barred from running during a chaotic campaign period. Voters are also electing all 160 legislators and hundreds of local officials.

National Unity of Hope party centrist candidate Sandra Torres leads the crowded field for president. A businesswoman and former first lady, she has focused her campaign on public investment and social programs.

Three right-wing candidates trail her in the polls: Vamos candidate Alejandro Giammattei, PAN-Podemos candidate Roberto Arzu, and Humanist party candidate Edmond Mulet.

Movement for the Liberation of the Peoples candidate Thelma Cabrera has been polling in fifth place. A social movement leader, she is one of three indigenous Maya presidential candidates.

If no single presidential candidate obtains an outright majority, as expected, the top two candidate will face off August 11 in a presidential runoff election.

Irregularities

Over the past week, a series of reported irregularities have generated concerns. In a press conference Saturday night, the country’s election tribunal condemned the circulation of misinformation, including reports of pre-marked falsified ballots.

In a statement on Saturday, the election tribunal also noted reports of politicised distribution of funds and goods, both prohibited by election law. Jordan Rodas, Guatemala’s human rights ombudsman, shares those concerns.

“We are worried about the series of prior incidents that have occurred, especially reports concerning the use of state resources to distribute food and handouts from the ruling party,” Rodas told Al Jazeera.

Two top officials with key roles in the election recently took leaves of absence. Neither the election tribunal’s citizen registry director nor the special prosecutor for election crimes are present on election day.

“It is very serious that the prosecutor for election crimes Oscar Schaad, together with his family, has had to leave the country due to serious threats against his life and safety,” said Rodas.

The human rights ombudsman’s office is monitoring the election process around the country alongside the United Nations human rights agency. National and international observers, including an Organisation of American States mission, are also observing the election.

High poverty rate

Election issues have dominated the news for months. But nearly 60 percent of the country’s 17 million people live in poverty and not everyone has time to keep up with the details.

“We don’t follow the elections too much. We are just always working,” Dimas Urias, a street sweeper in Guatemala City, told Al Jazeera.

“We hope things change.”

The vote may have concrete global implications. Guatemala is now the top country of origin of migrants and asylum seekers apprehended at the United States’ southern border.

The issue of immigration has been largely absent from the election campaign, as the US continues to focus on a crackdown and enforcement instead of addressing root causes of the northbound exodus.

“We have let Guatemala down,” Christine Wade, a professor of Central American politics at Washington College in Maryland, told Al Jazeera.

“Our policy has been antithetical to what we say we want to do,” she said.

The leading candidates in Guatemala’s elections are not focused on key drivers of migration, such as climate change and corruption, and neither is US foreign policy, said Wade.

A United Nations-backed anti-impunity commission, CICIG, has been working with Guatemalan prosecutors. Their efforts have yielded hundreds of arrests, including high-level government officials, but also a backlash.

President Jimmy Morales began taking action against CICIG after the body started investigating him for illegal campaign financing in his successful run for president in 2015. Last August, Morales announced he would not renew CICIG’s mandate, effectively shutting down the commission as of this coming September.

For years, the US was one of CICIG’s biggest supporters and funders. But US support waned alongside that of Morales, a key US ally in the region.

“We still don’t seem to take seriously this issue of corruption,” said Wade. “Our failure to support CICIG has been a huge mistake.”

Emilio Miranda has more immediate concerns. A truck driver from Sibana, a village 190 kilometers west of Guatemala City in the Retalhuleu department, Miranda is focused about the poor condition of local roads.

“Our previous officials have done little. The roads are ruined,” he told Al Jazeera.

“We need progress,” said Miranda. “We will see if whoever is elected responds to the needs of the people.”

Election results are expected on Sunday night. Winners in the presidential, congress, and local races will take office in January 2020.

Can Guatemala’s anti-corruption drive survive? | The Stream

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World Cup Live: USWNT vs. Chile

  1. U.S. Soccer WNT @USWNT

  2. via Twitter

  3. USWNT Crowd Is Ready 🙌

    U.S. Soccer WNT @USWNT

    On and off the field, WE ROLL DEEP‼ Take a bow, @AmericanOutlaws 👏 https://t.co/PRXArCDhhJ

  4. USWNT starting XI vs. Chile: Jill Ellis makes 7 lineup changes

    via Pro Soccer USA

  5. USA v Chile: Women’s World Cup 2019 – live!

    via the Guardian

  6. Major League Soccer @MLS

  7. The Equalizer @EqualizerSoccer

  8. Michael Lewis @Soccerwriter

  9. B/R Football @brfootball

    Carli Lloyd’s last six World Cup games:

    ⚽
    ⚽
    ⚽
    ⚽⚽⚽
    ⚽
    ⚽

    She’s the only player to score in six straight #FIFAWWC games 💥 https://t.co/duHGefu1JT

  10. via Bleacher Report

  11. U.S. Soccer WNT @USWNT

    Mesdames et Messieurs, live from Paris, your #USACHI lineup for Sunday Fútbol.

    #OneNationOneTeam https://t.co/y9gkhxj4J9

  12. FIFA Women’s World Cup @FIFAWWC

  13. Caitlin Murray @caitlinmurr

  14. Guardian sport @guardian_sport

  15. FOX Soccer @FOXSoccer

  16. U.S. Soccer WNT @USWNT

  17. The Equalizer @EqualizerSoccer

  18. NBC Sports Soccer @NBCSportsSoccer

  19. Caitlin Murray @caitlinmurr

  20. Jamie Goldberg @Jamiebgoldberg

  21. Guardian sport @guardian_sport

  22. FIFA Women’s World Cup @FIFAWWC

  23. Erin Fish, FIFA @FIFAWWC_USA

  24. Michael Lewis @Soccerwriter

  25. Mike L. Goodman @TheM_L_G

  26. Goal @goal

  27. U.S. Soccer WNT @USWNT

  28. SB Nation @SBNation

  29. Squawka Football @Squawka

  30. Pardeep Cattry @pcattry

  31. The Equalizer @EqualizerSoccer

  32. Graham Ruthven @grahamruthven

  33. Major League Soccer @MLS

  34. U.S. Soccer WNT @USWNT

  35. WWFShow @WWFShow

  36. Michael Lewis @Soccerwriter

  37. Caitlin Murray @caitlinmurr

  38. Michael Lewis @Soccerwriter

  39. FOX Soccer @FOXSoccer

  40. Yael Averbuch West @Yael_Averbuch

  41. Jamie Goldberg @Jamiebgoldberg

  42. Caitlin Murray @caitlinmurr

  43. Jamie Goldberg @Jamiebgoldberg

  44. Jamie Goldberg @Jamiebgoldberg

  45. SB Nation @SBNation

  46. Men in Blazers @MenInBlazers

  47. The Equalizer @EqualizerSoccer

  48. Orlando Pride @ORLPride

  49. U.S. Soccer WNT @USWNT

  50. FOX Soccer @FOXSoccer

  51. Guardian sport @guardian_sport

  52. Caitlin Murray @caitlinmurr

  53. The Equalizer @EqualizerSoccer

  54. Seth Vertelney @svertelney

  55. Kevin Baxter @kbaxter11

  56. Houston Dash @HoustonDash

  57. The Equalizer @EqualizerSoccer

  58. Major League Soccer @MLS

  59. Michael Lewis @Soccerwriter

  60. SecondXI @SecondXIpodcast

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter http://bit.ly/2XLdTot
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World Cup Live: USWNT vs. Chile

  1. U.S. Soccer WNT @USWNT

  2. via Twitter

  3. USWNT Crowd Is Ready 🙌

    U.S. Soccer WNT @USWNT

    On and off the field, WE ROLL DEEP‼ Take a bow, @AmericanOutlaws 👏 https://t.co/PRXArCDhhJ

  4. USWNT starting XI vs. Chile: Jill Ellis makes 7 lineup changes

    via Pro Soccer USA

  5. USA v Chile: Women’s World Cup 2019 – live!

    via the Guardian

  6. Major League Soccer @MLS

  7. The Equalizer @EqualizerSoccer

  8. Michael Lewis @Soccerwriter

  9. B/R Football @brfootball

    Carli Lloyd’s last six World Cup games:

    ⚽
    ⚽
    ⚽
    ⚽⚽⚽
    ⚽
    ⚽

    She’s the only player to score in six straight #FIFAWWC games 💥 https://t.co/duHGefu1JT

  10. via Bleacher Report

  11. U.S. Soccer WNT @USWNT

    Mesdames et Messieurs, live from Paris, your #USACHI lineup for Sunday Fútbol.

    #OneNationOneTeam https://t.co/y9gkhxj4J9

  12. FIFA Women’s World Cup @FIFAWWC

  13. Caitlin Murray @caitlinmurr

  14. Guardian sport @guardian_sport

  15. FOX Soccer @FOXSoccer

  16. U.S. Soccer WNT @USWNT

  17. The Equalizer @EqualizerSoccer

  18. NBC Sports Soccer @NBCSportsSoccer

  19. Caitlin Murray @caitlinmurr

  20. Jamie Goldberg @Jamiebgoldberg

  21. Guardian sport @guardian_sport

  22. FIFA Women’s World Cup @FIFAWWC

  23. Erin Fish, FIFA @FIFAWWC_USA

  24. Michael Lewis @Soccerwriter

  25. Mike L. Goodman @TheM_L_G

  26. Goal @goal

  27. U.S. Soccer WNT @USWNT

  28. SB Nation @SBNation

  29. Squawka Football @Squawka

  30. Pardeep Cattry @pcattry

  31. The Equalizer @EqualizerSoccer

  32. Graham Ruthven @grahamruthven

  33. Major League Soccer @MLS

  34. U.S. Soccer WNT @USWNT

  35. WWFShow @WWFShow

  36. Michael Lewis @Soccerwriter

  37. Caitlin Murray @caitlinmurr

  38. Michael Lewis @Soccerwriter

  39. FOX Soccer @FOXSoccer

  40. Yael Averbuch West @Yael_Averbuch

  41. Jamie Goldberg @Jamiebgoldberg

  42. Caitlin Murray @caitlinmurr

  43. Jamie Goldberg @Jamiebgoldberg

  44. Jamie Goldberg @Jamiebgoldberg

  45. SB Nation @SBNation

  46. Men in Blazers @MenInBlazers

  47. The Equalizer @EqualizerSoccer

  48. Orlando Pride @ORLPride

  49. U.S. Soccer WNT @USWNT

  50. FOX Soccer @FOXSoccer

  51. Guardian sport @guardian_sport

  52. Caitlin Murray @caitlinmurr

  53. The Equalizer @EqualizerSoccer

  54. Seth Vertelney @svertelney

  55. Kevin Baxter @kbaxter11

  56. Houston Dash @HoustonDash

  57. The Equalizer @EqualizerSoccer

  58. Major League Soccer @MLS

  59. Michael Lewis @Soccerwriter

  60. SecondXI @SecondXIpodcast

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter http://bit.ly/2XLdTot
via IFTTT