WATCH: Gangster Lawrence Bishnoi wishes ‘Eid Mubarak’ to Pakistani gangster Shahzad Bhatti from Gujarat jail, says…

The video, shared on X (formerly Twitter) by Bikram Singh Majithia, General Secretary of the Shiromani Akali Dal, shows Bishnoi extending Bakrid wishes to Bhatti
Chicago Teachers Union president raises eyebrows with claims about conservatives

Chicago Teachers Union (CTU) President Stacy Davis Gates told a news radio host that conservatives do not want Black children to read, adding that it is “part of the oath they take to be right wing.” In an interview published on WBBM News radio’s site on Sunday, the station’s political editor, Craig Dellimore, spoke with Davis Gates on “At Issue,” about the union’s contract demands. Some of the demands included social justice issues. During the interview, Dellimore asked Davis Gates about the teacher union contract proposals that drew criticism from conservatives for being “too big,” and raising concerns that too many elements are not directly concerned with education. CHICAGO DEMOCRAT SOUNDS ALARM AS 55 SCHOOLS REPORT NO PROFICIENCY IN MATH OR READING: ‘VERY SERIOUS’ “Conservatives don’t even want Black children to be able to read,” Davis Gates said. “Remember, these same conservatives are the conservatives who probably would have been championing Black codes, you know, during reconstruction or thereafter. So, forgive me again if conservatives pushing back on educating immigrant children, Black children, children who live in poverty, doesn’t make my anxiety go up. That’s what they’re supposed to say. That is literally a part of the oath that they take to be right wing.” The teachers’ union is in the process of negotiating a new teacher’s contract with the public school system, which calls for an extra $50 billion in funding. The massive increase is being proposed to cover wage hikes as well as other demands. For instance, the money would be used to provide fully paid abortions for its members, new migrant services and facilities and a host of LGBTQ-related requirements and training in schools. Last year, the total base tax receipts for the state of Illinois was $50.7 billion. PARENTS CAST BLAME FOR ‘DEVASTATING’ NATION’S REPORT CARD IN WAKE OF PANDEMIC: ‘VERY BAD DECISIONS’ The incredible demands are being made despite its members delivering underwhelming results for its students. Only 21% of the city’s eighth graders are proficient readers, according to the Nation’s Report Card, which provides national results about students’ performance. Terry Schilling, the president of the American Principles Project and a conservative school choice and education advocate, told Fox News Digital that if conservatives did not want minority kids to know how to read, they would not protest. “They would allow and support the teachers union and give them everything they want, because right now in Chicago public schools, only 20% of minority students can read at grade level,” he said. “Whatever the conservative goals are, I disagree with what she was saying. I want every kid to know how to read and write. I think that our country’s a lot better off when everyone’s literate, when everyone knows how to do math.” SCHOOL CHOICE GIVES PARENTS THE POWER TO BREAK TEACHERS UNIONS’ CHOKEHOLDS ON STUDENTS: COREY DEANGELIS Schilling is a father of seven who lives in Fairfax, Virginia. During the pandemic, he pulled all of his kids out of public schools because he felt the academics were terrible. He explained that he got to see firsthand what his kids were learning and found out that only about 36% of the students in Fairfax County Public Schools could read at grade level. So, when you look at one of the wealthiest and best-funded schools in the country and find out less than half the kids could read at grade level, “it was a no-brainer,” he said. David Gates touted having her children in public schools in 2022. She said it helps to “legitimize” her position within the union and that she could not advocate on behalf of public schools if that were not the case, according to NBC Chicago. SCHOOL BOARD MEMBER DOES NAZI SALUTE IN CLASH WITH ‘DICTATOR’ RIVAL However, in 2023, Davis Gates placed her teenage son in a private Catholic high school in the city. “She is the poster child for what it means to be part of the teachers union,” Schilling said. “They’re all hypocritical. The leaders of the teachers’ unions, almost none of them, send their kids to public schools, and they know that these are failing public schools and putting their kids in these schools means that they won’t be that smart. They want the best for their kids, but not for our kids.” He continued by saying the leadership of the district is important, and who the leader is trickles down to everyone below. “If your leadership is corrupted at the top, then everything else is going to follow suit below,” he said. “And that’s what we’re experiencing with Chicago public schools: it’s rotten from the top down.” TEACHERS UNION BOSS DEFENDS SENDING SON TO PRIVATE SCHOOL AFTER CALLING SCHOOL CHOICE RACIST Davis Gates did not respond to requests from Fox News Digital seeking clarification or a statement on her comments to the radio host. Schilling pointed to various other reasons the district is failing. The Illinois Report Card recently released a report showing Chicago Public Schools spent $29,000 per student, and the teachers in the district are among the highest paid in big cities. But despite high pay, the report showed that 43% of the district’s teachers are chronically absent each school year. “That means they miss more than 10 days of school a year, and the reason that’s important… is the Illinois State School Board says that teacher absences are critical, and they greatly devastate student outcomes,” Schilling said. “They have almost half of your teachers as chronically absent? That’s a recipe for failure. What are they doing to crack down on that?” Davis Gates’ comments about conservatives are not too far off from what other teachers’ union leaders say, though Schilling said they are more direct than what his organization is familiar with. “They all think that we’re the enemy, and they refuse to acknowledge their own failures,” he said. “But the problem is that it’s not, you know, a bunch of Republicans in these schools that are failing to teach these kids. It’s not
‘Squad’ lawmaker in danger of losing primary as Dem-led attacks pile up

A progressive “Squad” Democrat could see his career in the House of Representatives end after New York’s congressional primaries next Tuesday. On one side of the contentious primary race in New York’s 16th Congressional District is Rep. Jamaal Bowman, D-N.Y., a former middle school principal who is backed by the progressive left, including self-described Democratic Socialist Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y. On the other side is Westchester County Executive George Latimer, a more moderate candidate who has scored backing from Hillary Clinton, the American Israeli Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), and former Rep. Mondaire Jones, D-N.Y., who is vying to get back into Congress himself. The fight is part of a wider fracture within the Democratic Party caused by Israel’s war in Gaza. AOC SLAMMED FOR SAYING ‘FALSE ACCUSATIONS’ OF ANTISEMITISM ARE ‘WIELDED AGAINST PEOPLE OF COLOR’ Bowman is part of a growing coalition on the left that’s critical of the Israeli government and its treatment of Palestinians, a movement that’s been met with bipartisan pushback. It sparked a new battle for Bowman on Saturday after he criticized fellow House Rep. Ritchie Torres, D-N.Y., on the “Night School” podcast for his vocal support of Israel. “I think that he’s trying to gain political power for himself towards an ultimate objective,” Bowman said. Torres told Fox News Digital on Monday in response, “I have a general rule of not weighing in against a congressional Democrat who has not weighed in against me. But Bowman’s gratuitous attack on my character might cause me to rethink that rule. Stay tuned.” ‘SQUAD’ MEMBER DEFENDS ‘RIVER TO THE SEA’ PHRASE INTERPRETED AS CALLING FOR ‘EXTERMINATION’ OF JEWS AIPAC’s political arm also donated more than $1.5 million to Latimer during this campaign cycle, according to financial disclosures. In response, Bowman and his allies have criticized AIPAC as a right-wing organization despite its bipartisan reputation. Ocasio-Cortez called the group a “slush fund for Republican billionaires” on X this month and previously compared it to the National Rifle Association. She’s also accused outside groups of spending more than $15 million to unseat Bowman, writing on X, “This is corruption. It is a core threat to American democracy. It also fuels Trump.” She and Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., are holding a rally for Bowman on Saturday before primary day. Bowman’s comments on the Israel-Hamas conflict are also what inspired Jones, a former ally of Bowman’s in the Congressional Progressive Caucus (CPC), to publicly shun him in favor of his opponent. NIKKI HALEY WRITES CLEAR MESSAGE TO HAMAS ON IDF ARTILLERY SHELL “Over the past few months, I have had countless conversations with Jewish residents in my district and across the Lower Hudson Valley who feel anxiety, anger, and fear due to Rep. Bowman’s words and actions. I will always stand up for my Jewish constituents,” Jones said in a statement when the CPC challenged him over his Latimer endorsement. Bowman could lose his seat in similar circumstances under which he won it, by defeating longtime moderate Rep. Eliot Engel, D-N.Y., in the 2020 primary. A survey by Emerson College Polling/PIX11/The Hill released last week had Latimer leading Bowman 48% to 31%. But Democrat strategist Max Burns of Third Degree Strategies argued that Bowman was still popular with voters. “I think there’s always going to be a concern that we need to move back to the center. There’s always going to be this fear that we’re alienating voters, but the data just shows that that’s not true,” Burns told Fox News Digital. “I mean, Jamaal Bowman has been incredibly popular in his district. … I do think that at the end of the day, voters are going to look at the candidate that they know, but then the candidate who more likely than not has knocked on their door this cycle.” Fox News Digital reached out to Bowman, Latimer and Ocasio-Cortez’s campaigns for comment.
Trump targets House Freedom Caucus chair in intra-party Republican primary feud

As he fights for his political life, House Freedom Caucus chair Rep. Bob Good of Virginia is facing off against a primary challenger supported by the most powerful politician in the Republican Party – former President Trump. And the contentious intra-party battle in Virginia’s reliably red 5th Congressional District, in the southern part of the Commonwealth, is pitting conservatives versus conservatives and Trump against some of his biggest allies in the House of Representatives. It’s one of the high-profile races on Tuesday as Virginia and Oklahoma hold primary elections. And if Good loses, he’ll become the first House incumbent from either major party to be defeated by a primary challenger so far this election year. FOX NEWS POLL: BIDEN, TRUMP IN A DEAD HEAT IN VIRGINIA Good incurred Trump’s wrath for being one of just a handful of House Republicans to endorse Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis in the GOP presidential primaries. Even though the two-term congressman avoided criticizing Turmp and quickly endorsed the former president after DeSantis ended his White House bid in January, Trump wrote on this Truth Social platform that “the damage had been done!” Trump last month endorsed John McGuire, a Virginia state senator and former Navy SEAL, who is challenging Good for the GOP nomination. McGuire also has the backing of Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia, a conservative firebrand and major Trump ally who is a vocal critic of Good who last year broke with the House Freedom Caucus, which is considered the most far-right group of lawmakers in the chamber. Former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy is also targeting Good, who was one of eight Republicans last autumn who joined with Democrats to vote to oust McCarthy from his leadership position. But Good has the support of Reps. Matt Gaetz and Byron Donalds of Florida, two conservatives who are also strong backers of Trump. And fellow House Freedom Caucus members, Reps. Chip Roy of Texas and Andy Biggs of Arizona, joined Good in Virginia for a rally on Friday. Even though he’s being targeted by Trump, Good is spotlighting his support for the former president as he runs for re-election. “Happy Birthday to the best and next president of the United States, President Trump!” Good wrote on social media on Friday, on the former president’s 78th birthday. Good also showed up earlier this spring at Trump’s criminal trial in New York City, to show his support for the former president. In Virginia’s Republican Senate primary, Trump is supporting Navy veteran Hung Cao. Cao faces Scott Parkinson, who has endorsements from Good and other GOP members of Congress. Three other candidates are also vying for the Republican nomination, with the winner challenging Democratic Sen. Tim Kaine in November. In Oklahoma, the race to watch is in the red-state’s 4th Congressional District, where 10-term Republican Rep. Tom Cole is facing a primary challenge from wealthy businessman Paul Bondar. Cole, the chair of the powerful House Appropriations Committee, has spent over $3 million as he fights for re-nomination. But Bondar, a first time candidate who made his money in the insurance industry, has shelled out nearly $5 million to try and unseat Cole, who has Trump’s backing. There are three other candidates on the primary ballot, and if no one tops 50%, there will be a runoff with the two leading contenders in August. Fox News’ Matt Reidy contributed to this report Get the latest updates from the 2024 campaign trail, exclusive interviews and more at our Fox News Digital election hub.
Top Republican demands answers after WH protests yield 0 arrests; questions ‘political sympathy’ with vandals

The top Republican on the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee demanded answers from the Department of the Interior over its handling of violent protests that engulfed National Park Service property outside the White House last week. Sen. John Barrasso, R-Wyo., whose committee has oversight over the Interior Department, also questioned in a Thursday letter whether politics played a role in how the chaos concluded with a “disturbing” lack of arrests. The letter, obtained by Fox News Digital, recounted assaults on U.S. Park Police and a National Park Service ranger at Lafayette Park – which lies just north of the White House – as thousands of pro-Palestinian demonstrators amassed to protest the administration. “I am deeply troubled with last weekend’s incidents near the White House involving pro-terror, anti-Israel agitators,” Barrasso wrote to Interior Secretary Deb Haaland, saying the vandals inscribed “Long live Hamas” and other slogans on federal property. US PARK POLICE INVESTIGATING CRIMINAL ACTIVITY AFTER ANTI-ISRAEL PROTESTS Barrasso demanded Haaland account for the lack of arrests by describing how she is working with law enforcement to identify suspects, and he also called on the department to implement explicit measures to protect federal park rangers on-duty. No arrests were made following the chaos, but NBC News reported one individual who had scaled a statue slipped away from a law enforcement officer who attempted to detain them. Statuary honoring two key French figures in the American Revolution – the Compte de Rochambeau and Marquis de Lafayette – were vandalized during the protests. President Biden was coincidentally in France at the time. Barrasso wrote to Haaland that her oversight of the NPS and USPP is paramount to federal land security and that the chaos that ensued in Lafayette Park is emblematic of the dangers rangers and other law enforcement face daily. “I question whether political sympathy with the agitators influenced your department’s response to these acts of violence and vandalism. It is imperative that your department’s actions are guided by the principles of law and order, rather than political considerations,” said Barrasso. RIOTER VANDALISM TARGETED AFTER PRO-PALESTINIAN PROTESTS Some Republicans have criticized the Biden administration writ-large for appearing to waffle at times on support for Israel, purportedly to shore up electoral support in places like Michigan. The thousands of protesters, however, were angry at the administration for what they saw as just the opposite – not enough support for the Palestinian faction in the conflict. Demonstrators shouted “f— you, fascist” and “oink, oink” at park rangers while at least one American flag was lit ablaze and a protester brandished a bloodied Joe Biden face mask. In response to the chaos, an NPS spokesperson told Fox News Digital last week that the “safety of our employees and our visitors is our top priority.” “National Park Service managers, in conjunction with local officials, engage in event planning to provide for public safety during permitted demonstrations,” the spokesperson said, going on to confirm injuries to one ranger and two USPP officers. In his letter, Barrasso called for enhanced security measures at NPS properties like Lafayette Park and revisions to protocols for managing violent demonstrations. CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP Another Republican, Sen. Tom Cotton of Arkansas, reacted to the protests by introducing the Saving Treasured Artifacts Through Uniform Enforcement (STATUE) Act, which would establish mandatory minimum sentences for such vandalism. Cotton appeared to echo Barrasso’s conjecture of “political sympathy,” saying in a statement, “Joe Biden seeks to appease the pro-Hamas wing of the Democratic Party [and] it’s clear his administration won’t do anything to punish the protestors (sic) who defaced the area around the White House recently.” Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C., called the protests “disgusting, disgraceful behavior we’ve come to expect from terrorist sympathizers.” Haaland and the Interior Department did not respond to multiple attempts to procure comment. Fox News’ Brianna Herlihy and Julia Johnson contributed to this report.
Judge rules federal agency cannot force Louisiana, Mississippi to offer employee accommodations for abortions

A federal judge granted a preliminary injunction in a case brought by Louisiana, Mississippi and a group of Catholics to stop a federal rule that would have required them to provide workers who wanted to get abortions with time off and other accommodations. Judge David Joseph granted temporary relief on Monday in two consolidated lawsuits – one brought by the attorneys general of Louisiana and Mississippi, and another brought by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, Catholic University and two Catholic dioceses. The lawsuits challenge rules by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission that take effect Tuesday stating abortions are among pregnancy-related conditions covered by the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act, which took effect last year. Joseph prohibited the EEOC from enforcing the abortion provision of its rules against the Catholic plaintiffs and employers located in Louisiana and Mississippi while the case plays out in court. JUDGE RULES MISSOURI ABORTION BAN DID NOT AIM TO IMPOSE LAWMAKERS’ RELIGIOUS VIEWS ON OTHERS “The District Court applied a common sense interpretation of the plain words of the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act,” Louisiana Attorney General Liz Murrill said in a statement to The Associated Press. The ruling was a partial victory for the attorneys general of Louisiana and Mississippi, who sought a broader emergency injunction that would have blocked the entirety of the EEOC rules from taking effect across the country. That request drew concern from some civil rights and women’s advocacy groups who cautioned that the EEOC rules are essential to the implementation of the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act. More than 20 labor, civil rights and women’s advocacy groups, including the American Civil Liberties Union and the National Women’s Law Center, cited in an amicus briefing dozens of cases of pregnant workers who continue to be denied accommodations by their employers. The groups said the EEOC rules offered clarity for resolving disputes. “The court has left some pregnant workers who need abortion-related accommodations to fend for themselves,” Gaylynn Burroughs, vice president of Workplace Justice and Education at the NWLC, wrote. The limited ruling would still have a huge impact by making it more difficult, even if only temporarily, for women in the workplace to obtain abortions, according to Rachel Shanklin, National Women’s Entrepreneurship Director for Small Business Majority. “Our research consistently finds that women entrepreneurs said the ability to choose if and when to start a family played a significant role in their ability to advance their careers and launch their small businesses,” Shanklin said in a statement. Legal advocacy group A Better Balance’s president Dina Bakst, whose organization led a campaign for the law, criticized the ruling, claiming it “disregarded decades of legal precedent” that included abortion in interpretations of pregnancy-related medical conditions. SUPREME COURT RULES IN ABORTION MEDICATION CASE, FINDS GROUP LACKED STANDING TO CHALLENGE FDA APPROVAL But given the limited scope of the injunction, Bakst emphasized it is “important for pregnant and postpartum workers to understand that this ruling does not mean their rights under the PWFA have been taken away.” The Pregnant Workers Fairness Act passed with bipartisan support in 2022 after a decade-long campaign by women’s rights advocates who praised it as a win for low-wage workers who had been denied accommodations, including time off for medical appointments and the ability to sit or stand at work. But many Republicans, including Louisiana Sen. Bill Cassidy, the bill’s co-sponsor, were upset when the EEOC claimed the law covered abortions. The EEOC said in its regulations that the inclusion of abortion is consistent with its own decades-long interpretation of pregnancy-related anti-discrimination law, as well as several court rulings supporting that interpretation. The regulations also said that the rules do not require employers to provide health care coverage that covers abortions and the most likely accommodation request would be to ask for time off to have the procedure performed or to recover from any complications. The EEOC has said that any situations in which an accommodation request potentially conflicts with state laws would be examined on a case-by-case basis. The attorneys general said in their lawsuit that the EEOC is forcing states like Louisiana and Mississippi to go against state law and “effectively facilitate an abortion.” Mississippi bans most abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy, while Louisiana’s ban includes exceptions for cases where there is a substantial risk of death or impairment to the mother if she were to continue the pregnancy and in cases where the fetus has a fatal abnormality. The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops said in its lawsuit that it had publicly supported the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act because lawmakers had ensured it was uncontroversial, including some who said it would not require leave for elective abortions. Lawyer Laura Wolk Slavis, who represents the Catholic groups, said the EEOC “hijacked a bipartisan protection for expecting mothers and their babies, imposing a national abortion-accommodation mandate” and that the ruling was a “crucial step” in restoring the law “to its purpose.” Monday’s ruling comes just days after a federal judge in Arkansas dismissed a similar lawsuit filed by 17 states. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Trump’s lead just won’t budge: Why the debates may be Biden’s last shot

The presidential campaign is as frozen as the Arctic Circle. Virtually nothing seems to melt the ice caps that have encased the race. The former president convicted of 34 felonies? Feels like it happened months ago, without exactly dooming the Trump candidacy. TRUMP FOUND GUILTY BUT, FACING BIDEN, COULD STILL WIN BACK THE WHITE HOUSE The current president’s son, also convicted of felonies? Now that’s deemed a mere distraction by those who used an impeachment inquiry to try to sink the Biden campaign. Each attack, each smear, each controversy dominates the news and then quickly yields to the next real or perceived outrage, leaving little lasting impression on the shape of the race. All this is bad news for Joe Biden, who has an anemic 38 percent approval rating and is on track to lose, despite the apparent closeness of the contest. While Trump’s lead in such core battleground states as Michigan and Pennsylvania is often just 2 to 3 points, it’s been remarkably consistent (with the president having a slight edge in Wisconsin). If Scranton Joe can’t win Pennsylvania despite endless trips there, the election is over. That’s why Biden abruptly challenged Trump to two debates, with the first one, on CNN, in less than 10 days. It’s really his last chance to bring some heat and shake up the race. Now I could make the argument that the Trump team has lowered expectations for Biden to the point that if he avoids major gaffes and doesn’t fall off the stage, he wins. The CNN rules – two-minute answers, no notes, muting the opponent’s mike – will also favor the president. VEEPSTAKES VERVE: CONTENDERS CREATE MEDIA BOOMLETS WITH LEAKS AND MANIPULATION But debates can be overrated. Mitt Romney clobbered Barack Obama in their first debate and it didn’t matter. Hillary Clinton arguably won two or even three of her debates against Trump and it didn’t matter. The pressure is on Biden, who’s drilling with former top aide Ron Klain, to show that he’s aggressive and feisty as well as knowledgeable. Trump, who is doing only informal prep, will be hailed by his base no matter what he says or does. In short, it will take something highly unusual to change many minds. Most Americans already know what they think of these guys. The same goes for the Trump veepstakes. As Donald Trump told me, it doesn’t matter much because people vote for the top of the ticket. I think Doug Burgum has a somewhat better chance than when I first interviewed him three weeks ago, on this shorter short list that seems to include Tim Scott, Marco Rubio and J.D. Vance. But I can’t see that changing the race’s trajectory. What’s striking is that the anchors are now handling these as “vetting” interviews about each candidate’s record, because they believe one of them may well be moving into the vice president’s mansion. Trump’s GOP unity day on the Hill got muddied when he criticized Milwaukee, the host city for next month’s convention. Even though Trump said he was talking mainly about crime in the city – which is actually down substantially this year – I’m not sure why he needed to go there. The 78-year-old Trump is so anxious to depict the 81-year-old Biden as mentally unfit for the job that minor incidents are being exaggerated and distorted. There’s no question, as I said on the air, that Biden often comes across as frail and confused. But after a $30-million L.A. fundraiser over the weekend, Obama grabbed his arm and then kept touching his back as they exited the stage. This went viral as the former president was depicted as “leading” his onetime VP away. Earlier, the New York Post, taking its lead from the RNC, misleadingly cropped a photo as if Biden was talking to no one at the G-7 in Italy. A wider angle showed Biden was saying a few words and giving a thumbs up to a skydiver who had landed next to the world leaders before the Italian prime minister led him back to the group. THERE’S ‘CORROSION’ IN HOW THE MEDIA COVERS POLITICS: LUCY CALDWELL Despite a couple of flashy media headlines, I did not criticize Fox’s coverage, though sometimes that comes with the job. I made a point of saying that the coverage by “Fox & Friends” was perfectly straightforward. We played a clip of Sean Hannity criticizing Biden, but there was no suggestion that he didn’t show the proper footage; he was paired with Joe Scarborough hitting Biden’s critics, as we often do to convey the range of commentary. In my view, there’s little doubt that most of the media believe Trump will win the election, and here’s the proof. The New York Times just ran a deep dive on how the Trump resistance is already laying the groundwork to battle and stymie him in a second term. These groups “are drafting potential lawsuits in case he is elected in November and carries out mass deportations, as he has vowed. One group has hired a new auditor to withstand any attempt by a second Trump administration to unleash the Internal Revenue Service against them. Democratic-run state governments are even stockpiling abortion medication. “A sprawling network of Democratic officials, progressive activists, watchdog groups and ex-Republicans has been taking extraordinary steps to prepare for a potential second Trump presidency, drawn together by the fear that Mr. Trump’s return to power would pose a grave threat not just to their agenda but to American democracy itself.” SUBSCRIBE TO HOWIE’S MEDIA BUZZMETER PODCAST, A RIFF ON THE DAY’S HOTTEST STORIES A newspaper simply doesn’t devote the enormous resources the Times did to this investigative piece without believing a Trump victory is at the least very likely. Some groups are described as “wary” of discussing their plans for fear of signaling a lack of confidence in the Biden campaign, which is exactly what it signals. And that brings us back to the CNN debate. Biden is
West Bengal train collision: Railways to hold inquiry into Kanchenjunga train mishap on June 19

Kanchanjungha Express, arrived at its destination station, Sealdah in Kolkata, in the early hours today after the completion of restoration work. A goods train allegedly disregarded a signal and hit the Sealdah-bound Kanchanjungha Express on Monday.
Odisha: Curfew imposed in Balasore after clashes, internet services suspended

The conflict began when a group of protesters staged a dharna against the blood of animal sacrifice on the road, leading to an alleged stone-pelting incident by another group.
PM Modi to release 17th instalment of PM-KISAN scheme at Varanasi today

The event will be attended by Anandiben Patel, Governor of Uttar Pradesh, Yogi Adityanath, Chief Minister of Uttar Pradesh, Shivraj Singh Chouhan, Union Agriculture Minister and several State Ministers.