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Japan, US, Australia to carry out joint naval drills in South China Sea next week - Kyodo
Japan, US, Australia to carry out joint naval drills in South China Sea next week - Kyodo
TOKYO Japan, U.S. and Australia will hold joint naval drills in the South China Sea on Wednesday, Kyodo
2023-08-18 17:22
Inoue vs Fulton LIVE: Latest boxing fight updates and results
Inoue vs Fulton LIVE: Latest boxing fight updates and results
Pound-for-pound phenom Naoya Inoue fights Stephen Fulton in Tokyo today, in a bid to become a four-weight world champion. Japanese superstar Inoue – a former light-flyweight champion and unified title holder at super-flyweight – achieved undisputed status at bantamweight in 2022, before vacating those titles to set up this clash with Fulton. The American, 29, will carry the WBC and WBO super-bantamweight titles into the Ariake Arena, as well as an unbeaten record (21-0, 8 knockouts). It was in the Ariake Arena that Inoue, 30, last fought, toying with Paul Butler in December before finishing the Briton to stay unbeaten (24-0, 21 KOs). Meanwhile, Fulton most recently competed in June, beating David Roman on points to retain his world titles. Those belts will be on the line today, in what should be an intriguing main event. Follow live updates and results from Inoue vs Fulton and the undercard fights, below. Click here to subscribe to The Independent’s Sport YouTube channel for all the latest sports videos. Read More Inoue vs Fulton live stream: How to watch fight online and on TV Spence vs Crawford time: When does fight start in UK and US this weekend? Another boxing robbery: Maxi Hughes deserves justice for heist that shames the sport
2023-07-25 16:31
Canada's oil province Alberta forecasts increased C$5.5 billion budget surplus
Canada's oil province Alberta forecasts increased C$5.5 billion budget surplus
Canada's main oil-producing province Alberta on Thursday forecast an increased surplus of C$5.5 billion ($4.06 billion) for the
2023-12-01 08:12
Verizon Raises Prices Again as Wireless Customer Growth Slows
Verizon Raises Prices Again as Wireless Customer Growth Slows
Verizon Communications Inc. is raising prices on some existing wireless plans to help boost revenue and offset slumping
2023-08-09 22:26
K-pop to the rescue? S. Korea all-in for scout jamboree closing concert
K-pop to the rescue? S. Korea all-in for scout jamboree closing concert
Tens of thousands of scouts are set to gather for a massive K-pop festival in Seoul on Friday, as South Korea seeks to salvage a problem-plagued jamboree...
2023-08-11 14:46
Focus on coalition horse-trading as Greek election looks unlikely to deliver a strong winner
Focus on coalition horse-trading as Greek election looks unlikely to deliver a strong winner
Sunday’s Greek parliamentary election looks likely to be a dress rehearsal for a new round of voting in the busy summer tourist season
2023-05-20 16:15
Israel weapons makers leave stands empty at Dubai Airshow
Israel weapons makers leave stands empty at Dubai Airshow
By Alexander Cornwell DUBAI The exhibition stands of Israeli weapons makers Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI) and Rafael Advanced
2023-11-13 16:27
'Across the Spider-Verse' spins box office with $120.5 million debut
'Across the Spider-Verse' spins box office with $120.5 million debut
By Danielle Broadway LOS ANGELES Audiences swung into theaters for “Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse," giving the animated film
2023-06-05 07:11
Hockey Hall of Fame Class of 2023 revealed: Welcome to immortality!
Hockey Hall of Fame Class of 2023 revealed: Welcome to immortality!
The 2023 class of inductees for the Hockey Hall of Fame have been announced, including some of the greatest goaltenders of all time.The Hockey Hall of Fame has revealed its 2023 inductees, some of the most prominent figures in the sport. New York Rangers legend Henrik Lundqvist headlines the cla...
2023-06-24 00:28
Former Trump aide Meadows surrenders in Georgia election case
Former Trump aide Meadows surrenders in Georgia election case
WASHINGTON Mark Meadows, one of former President Donald Trump's 18 co-defendants in the Georgia 2020 election subversion case,
2023-08-25 02:18
Sam Altman May Return As OpenAI's CEO
Sam Altman May Return As OpenAI's CEO
The OpenAI board is reportedly in talks with ousted CEO Sam Altman to return to
2023-11-20 02:00
Republicans try to thread the needle on abortion on anniversary of the death of Roe
Republicans try to thread the needle on abortion on anniversary of the death of Roe
One year after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v Wade and ended the enshrined right to seek an abortion, Christian conservatives convened in Washington DC to size up the GOP’s leading 2024 candidates. The Faith and Freedom Coalition held its Road to Majority conference at the Washington Hilton over the weekend, where every major Republican 2024 candidate appeared to try to win over the crucial evangelical wing of the party. Former president Donald Trump closed out the event on Saturday evening; former New Jersey governor Chris Christie, former vice president Mike Pence; former South Carolina governor Nikki Haley, Sen Tim Scott (R-SC), Florida Gov Ron DeSantis and businessman Vivek Ramaswamy also made their case to social conservatives. Last year’s Dobbs v Jackson decision has caused a split among Republicans. Some have said that the Supreme Court’s decision likely cost Republicans the opportunity to win the majority in the Senate as the GOP failed to flip a single seat, and Republicans only won a narrow majority in the House of Representatives. An NBC News poll showed that 61 per cent of Americans disapprove of the Dobbs decision, with 80 per cent of women between the ages of 18 and 49 and two-thirds of suburban women saying that they disapproved of it. But Republican candidates did not reflect any anxiety about the decision in their remarks to the crowd of Christian conservatives who consider abortion to be murder. “We have to start with tomorrow’s anniversary and thank God Almighty for the Dobbs decision,” Mr Scott said in his speech. “We are creating a culture of life in America, and that’s a really good thing.” Mr Pence, an ardent social conservative, said Dobbs was only the beginning. “Now some you will hear from at this very podium will say that the Supreme Court returned to the issue of abortion only to the states and nothing could be done at the federal level,” he said. He also criticised Republicans for saying some abortion legislation was “too harsh.” “Some have even gone on to blame the overturning of Roe v Wade for election losses in ‘22,” he said. “But let me say from my heart, the cause of life is the calling of our time and we must not rest and must not relent until we restore the sanctity of life to the center of American law in every state in this country.” In turn, Mr Pence called for passing a national 15-week abortion ban. But many attendees said they preferred to leave abortion to the states. “It’s a state issue, I think it ought to stay a state issue,” Gay Dillard told The Independent. Ms Haley called herself “unapologetically pro-life,” but said that people needed to not “demonise” the issue.” Ms Haley said she thought there was a place for a federal law restricting abortion, but noted it would require a House majority and 60 Senate seats to overcome a filibuster. As a result, she talked about reducing late-term abortions, focusing on adoption and foster care. “We have one goal: To save as many babies as possible and protect as many mothers as possible,” she said, something Ms Dillard repeated. “We need to just make sure we have enough support, emotionally, physically, financially, to support women who do choose,” she said. “So it’s not just about having, not having an abortion, it’s about if they keep their baby. We have to embrace them and help and help surround them.” Max Fisher, a candidate for state legislature in Virginia, said that the focus should be on increasing options. “So make sure that adoption is an option on the table and make sure that people have the information that they need to make sure that they’re not doing, like, you go to a bar and get drunk and then you make bad decisions,” he said. “It’s the same reason why you can’t get a tattoo when you’re drinking. Make sure that you have all of the information that you have available in order to make a well-educated choice for yourself from whether that’s adoption, whether or not as another decision, but that’s entirely up to the individual.” Despite the fact that Mr Trump nominated three of the Supreme Court justices in the majority on Dobbs, the former president has at times not fully embraced the anti-abortion decision. The “too harsh” criticism that Mr Pence cited was how Mr Trump characterised Mr DeSantis’s six-week abortion ban in Florida. In fact, Mr Trump refrained from supporting any new abortion restrictions during his closing address to the conference, but instead focused on attacking Democrats. “I will continue to stand proudly for pro-life policies just as I did for four strong years,” he said. “They are the radical extremists.” Ken Cuccinelli, who runs the Never Back Down Super PAC that supports Mr DeSantis, said the Florida governor is more sufficiently pro-life. “Well, for one, he has a central core belief system that supports faith and, and you can see it reflected in policies like his pro-life stance,” he told The Independent, noting how Mr DeSantis supported abortion restrictions as a member of Congress and implemented them as governor. “He signed the heartbeat bill, while the resident is condemning it. And that’s still the biggest issue here to these voters. And then the cultural battle that these voters care about.” But Mr Trump mentioned that his actions with judges will give Republicans more power. “You have tremendous negotiating power now,” he said. “We've now given pro-life people tremendous power to negotiate something that will be happy, that will be good for everybody and you have power for the first time.” Read More Trump news – live: Trump’s legal team handed over tapes to Jack Smith as MAGA loyalists turn on each other Trump takes credit for overturning of Roe v Wade while raising questions about DeSantis’ six-week ban Chris Christie defiant as conservative crowd boos Trump criticism Trump quietly changes political fundraising site to funnel funds toward legal woes Trump celebrates anniversary of anti-abortion ruling as he tells religious crowd ‘I’m getting indicted for you’ The religious right used to be uneasy about Trump – but his dominance is now complete
2023-06-26 04:40