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  • Vladimir Putin promises economic reforms as he takes oath of office

    Vladimir Putin took the oath of office for his fourth term as Russian president on Monday and promised to pursue an economic agenda that would boost living standards across the country.

    MOSCOW (AP) — Vladimir Putin took the oath of office for his fourth term as Russian president on Monday and promised to pursue an economic agenda that would boost living standards across the country.

    In a ceremony in an ornate Kremlin hall, Putin said improving Russia’s economy following a recession partly linked to international sanctions would be a primary goal of his next six-year term.

    “Now, we must use all existing possibilities, first of all for resolving internal urgent tasks of development, for economic and technological breakthroughs, for raising competitiveness in those spheres that determine the future,” he said in his speech to thousands of guests standing in the elaborate Andreevsky Hall of the Grand Kremlin Palace and two adjacent halls.

    “A new quality of life, well-being, security and people’s health — that’s what’s primary today,” he said.

    Although Putin has restored Russia’s prominence on the world stage through military actions, he has been criticized for inadequate efforts to diversify Russia’s economy away from its dependence on oil and gas exports and to develop the manufacturing sector.

    Putin held onto the presidency in March’s election when he tallied 77 percent of the vote.

    Putin has effectively been the leader of Russia for all of the 21st century. He stepped down from the presidency in 2008 because of term limits, but was named prime minister and continued to steer the country until he returned as president in 2012.

  • Nicolas Maduro-Mauricio Marci feud defines foreign relations

    One is a former bus driver and union leader with a soft spot for Cuban-style fatigues and Cuban-style political authoritarianism. The other is a millionaire heir and soccer czar, a onetime business pa

    Buenos Aires | One is a former bus driver and union leader with a soft spot for Cuban-style fatigues and Cuban-style political authoritarianism. The other is a millionaire heir and soccer czar, a onetime business partner of Donald Trump who favors suits from this city’s finest tailors and policies to lift up the country’s once-battered private sector.

    And while they may share a title as presidents of their respective nations, the rift between Venezuela’s Nicolas Maduro and Argentina’s Mauricio Macri has never been greater, defining the ideological polarization that increasingly marks South American politics these days. With Brazil and Colombia in political limbo as they await national elections, the rebound of Mr. Macri and a number of center-right governments in South America is posing a direct challenge to the old-line leftism embodied by Mr. Maduro and his late predecessor and charismatic mentor, Hugo Chavez.

    The ideological divide is matched by a personal animosity. Mr. Macri’s disdain for the embattled Mr. Maduro was on full display late last month when he all but called for his counterpart’s ouster, telling reporters he wants “what’s happening in Venezuela to come to an end.”

    His comments came days after Argentina had announced it was joining Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Paraguay and Peru in pulling out of the Union of South American Nations, or UNASUR — a brainchild of Chavez.

    The final straw — largely symbolic as the bloc had effectively lain dormant for years — seems to have been Caracas’ refusal to accept Argentine diplomat Jose Octavio Bordon, a Macri nominee, as its next secretary-general.

    The volatile Mr. Maduro, facing a massive economic and demographic crisis at home as Venezuela’s oil-financed social welfare system nears collapse, meanwhile, characterized Mr. Macri and the region’s other center-right presidents as puppets of Washington.

    “Some leaders of the right let themselves be pressured by the U.S. government to destroy UNASUR,” he said en route to a meeting with new Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel. “[If] some right-wing government tries to stab it and let it bleed to death, we social movement and revolutionaries of South America will defend it.”

    Colorful as they may be, by Mr. Maduro’s standards, the comments were rather tame. In one of his infamous diatribes last year, Venezuela’s head of state had labeled Mr. Macri a “sewer rat” espousing to be the “godfather of the Venezuelan fascist right.”

    Imitating Chavez

    In lashing out, Mr. Maduro seeks to imitate his mentor Chavez, said veteran Venezuelan diplomat Oscar Hernandez Bernalette, though Mr. Maduro’s approval numbers lag his idol’s maximum popularity by some 40 percentage points.

    “Maduro’s attitude is little more than a bad copy of Chavez’s attitude when Chavez had an audience, but he doesn’t have that same audience,” said Mr. Hernandez Bernalette. “His rhetoric likely reaches — and pleases the ears of — his closest collaborators and the few who back him.”

    Most Venezuelans, though, are bewildered by the president’s crude rhetoric and intemperate attacks, said Mr. Hernandez Bernalette, now a prominent columnist for the El Nacional newspaper.

    “Mr. Maduro’s reaction always is to insult, to attack whatever president’s turn it is — in this case Macri,” he said. “Venezuelans overall are mortified every time the head of state, of whom one expects the highest levels of conduct, [does that].”

    But beyond personal grudges, Mr. Macri is carving out a role for himself as champion a more pragmatic, conservative South America that is not instinctively hostile to the private sector, said Gustavo Cardozo, an analyst at the Argentine Center of International Studies in Buenos Aires.

    “He [wants to] focus on trade relations untainted by the kind of extremist ideology the Maduro regime has laid out,” he said. “Maduro constantly attacks Europe and the United States, which are very important markets. Logically, you can’t be in sync with a regime that turns its back on international trade.”

    Mr. Macri’s domestic critics, meanwhile, see a conspiracy to reverse South American integration behind the UNASUR exit, as well as behind last year’s suspension of Venezuela from the Mercosur trade bloc.

    “All that was halted to return our country to the great powers’ axis of dependency,” said Alicia Castro, an Argentine ambassador to Venezuela under Mr. Kirchner and Ms. Fernandez. “The goal is very clear: to destroy our region’s economies.”

    “It’s regrettable that Argentina is aligning itself with Trump to harass and hit Venezuela,” she said. “In Venezuela, there is no ‘interruption of the democratic order’ — that’s Washington propaganda Macri repeats like a parrot.”

    With the rhetoric showing no signs of cooling, though, the next showdown between South America’s rival presidents is already under way, as Mr. Maduro’s plan to hold early presidential elections on May 20 — over the objections of the Venezuelan opposition parties — did not come without commentary from Buenos Aires.

    “We won’t accept the results because that election doesn’t have any validity, however much Mr. Maduro insults me,” Mr. Macri warned last month. “We won’t recognize [him] as a democratic president because there hasn’t been any democracy in Venezuela for quite a while.”

    “Who is Macri to determine what happens in Venezuela?” Mr. Maduro, predictably, shot back. “A dummy of imperialism.”

  • Donald Trump urged by U.K. not to nix Iran nuke deal

    U.K. Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson on Monday went on President Trump’s favorite TV show to urge him not to quit the Iran nuclear deal, although agreeing with the president’s assessment that it is a

    U.K. Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson on Monday went on President Trump’s favorite TV show to urge him not to quit the Iran nuclear deal, although agreeing with the president’s assessment that it is a bad deal.

    He stressed that there was no “Plan B” if the U.S. nixes the deal.

    “The president has a legitimate point,” Mr. Johnson said on Fox News’ “Fox & Friends,” which Mr. Trump regularly views. “He set a challenge for the world. We think that what you can do is be tougher on Iran.”

    He said ripping up the Iran deal would be like “throwing the baby out with the bathwater.”

    Mr. Trump has set a Saturday deadline to decide whether to pull out of the Obama-era agreement that lifted economic sanctions on Iran in return for halting the Islamic regime’s nuclear program until 2025.

    Mr. Johnson is in Washington this week but will not meet with the president. He took to the airwaves to deliver his message to Mr. Trump.

    Similar appeals were delivered directly to Mr. Trump in visits last month by French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Angela Merkel. France, Germany and the U.K., as well as China and Russia, joined the U.S. in negotiating the deal.

    Mr. Trump’s concerns, from more rigorous inspections of Iran nuclear facilities to extending the moratorium beyond 2025, would be addressed by building on the current deal, Mr. Johnson said.

    “As I say, a Plan B does not seem to me to be particularly well developed at this stage,” the foreign secretary said.

    If Iran begins fast-tracking a nuclear weapon, the option of bombing its nuclear facilities or allowing a nuclear arms race in the volatile Middle East were both bad options, Mr. Johnson said.

    “At the moment there does not seem to be a viable military solution,” he said.

  • Richard Grenell: U.S. and Germany ‘on the same side’ despite differences

    U.S. Ambassador to Germany Richard Grenell said Monday that despite some differences President Trump and German Chancellor Angela Merkel are on the same side.

    U.S. Ambassador to Germany Richard Grenell said Monday that despite some differences, President Trump and German Chancellor Angela Merkel are on the same side.

    “I wish every American can see the way Donald Trump negotiates,” Mr. Grenell said on Fox News.

    He said Mr. Trump’s meeting with Ms. Merkel on Friday went well despite differences on the Iran nuclear agreement and trade policy.

    “He is a great negotiator and she — Angela Merkel — realizes that. They had a great give and take at the end of very tough negotiations. We have some difficult issues with Germany, but we’re totally on the same side,” he said.

    The two met just days after French President Emmanuel Macron came to the U.S. for Mr. Trump’s first official state visit. They also discussed the Iran deal and Mr. Trump criticized Germany for not paying enough in defense spending.

    “We need a reciprocal relationship, which we don’t have,” Mr. Trump said at a joint news conference. “We’re working on it. We have a far greater burden than we should have.”

  • Paris Hilton: “As if I had been raped”

    1 Night in Paris “was the name of the clip the 37-year-old suddenly faced, and she owed the scandal to Rick Salomon himself, who had posted the actually very private video after her breakup – 14 years ago Meanwhile, Paris Hilton is talking about it for the first time in the documentary “The American Meme.” Under the shame, she has suffered a lot, the hotel owner emphasizes today.

    It was like being raped. I felt like I had lost part of my soul. I literally wanted to die at some points, “Hollywood reporter quoted the blonde. In retrospect, however, she was repeatedly assumed to have benefited even from the spicy video. Undoubtedly, the scandal brought beauty to the front, but Paris Hilton dismisses it. “I did not want to be known, I could never be the person I wanted to be,” she continues.

    Today she has left this dark chapter of her past behind. Paris Hilton is a businesswoman and happily engaged to her sweetheart Chris Zylka.

  • ‪‪Donald Trump‬, ‪John F. Kelly‬, ‪Beyaz Saray‬‬

    White House Chief of Staff John F. Kelly on Monday denied that he said President Trump is an “idiot,” calling an NBC News story that said he had done so “total BS.”

    Kelly’s statement came about 45 minutes after NBC News published a report that described a number of fights between Trump and his embattled chief of staff. The outlet reported that Kelly often tells senior aides that they have to save the president from himself and his impulses — and that Trump does not understand policy.

    “He doesn’t even understand what DACA is. He’s an idiot,” Kelly told White House aides, according NBC News, which cites two White House officials present for the meeting. DACA refers to a program that protects from deportation young undocumented immigrants brought to the United States as children.

    “I spend more time with the President than anyone else and we have an incredibly candid and strong relationship. He always knows where I stand and he and I both know this story is total BS,” Kelly said in a statement released by the White House press office in response to the story.

  • Gigi Hadid & Zayn Malik Are Back Together

    Here is some unexpected celebrity couple news. Gigi Hadid and Zayn Malik were seen kissing, according to new photos obtained by TMZ. So does this mean Hadid and Malik are back together? It’s not entirely clear at this point in time if they are officially in a relationship again, but the images are hard to ignore. The model and singer sure do look like they’re having a good time together. (Bustle reached out to reps for Malik and Hadid, but did not receive a response at the time of publication.)

    According to TMZ, Hadid and Malik were hanging out on Sunday, April 29 in New York City, where they were spotted walking around Soho, smiling and sharing a kiss. The photos also show the once beloved celebrity couple helping a homeless man by giving him what appears to be a gift card.

    Their kiss and hangout is somewhat shocking, especially since they announced their breakup in March. In a statement posted on Twitter, the former One Direction singer confirmed their split by writing, “Gigi and I had an incredibly meaningful, loving, and fun relationship and I have a huge amount of respect an adoration for Gigi as a woman and a friend.” He continued, “She has such an incredible soul. I’m grateful to all of our fans for respecting this difficult decision and our privacy at this time, we wish this news could have come from us first. We love you all. xZ”.

    As for Hadid, she also took to Twitter and shared about the two going their separate ways, “Breakup statements often seem impersonal because there is really no way to put into words what two people experience together over a few years .. not only in the relationship, but in life in general.” She then added, “I’m forever grateful for the love, time, and life lessons that Z and I shared. I want nothing but the best for him and will continue to support him as a friend that I have immense respect and love for. As for the future, whatever’s meant to be will aways be. xG”.

    The couple spending time with one another on April 29 is the first time they’ve been seen together publicly since their split. Based on how Hadid ended her March statement confirming the end of their relationship, it seems possible they’ve reconciled. Like she said, “As for the future, whatever’s meant to be will aways be.”

    That said, the kiss the 23-year-old model and “Let Me” artist shared isn’t the only time reconciliation rumors have surfaced. On April 20, People reported Malik visited Hadid at her New York City home. He also reportedly spent the night, because, per People, after arriving at her place on Thursday, April 19, Malik wasn’t seen until the next day, Friday, April 20, leaving her home and reportedly in the same hoodie as he wore the previous day. According to Elle, Malik was spotted at Hadid’s apartment again on April 24.

    On April 13, Malik spoke with Ryan Seacrest for On Air With Ryan Seacrest about his new single, “Let Me”, which he wrote while he was still dating Hadid. He opened up about writing the track and said, “I was in love, and I think that’s pretty evident. I was aspiring to be in love with someone for the rest of my life and the rest of theirs, as we all do. Things change and we move forward in life. Times change, but that’s what I was thinking when I wrote it.”

    Clearly, times have changed for Hadid and Malik, but maybe not as much as people originally thought since they were recently seen kissing. Who knows what’s going on between them, but you know fans are going to want answers — and stat.

  • Dust Storm Warning Issued for Eastern Nebraska

    Counties In Warning Area According to National Weather Service

    Monona-Harrison-Shelby-Pottawattamie-Mills-Montgomery-Fremont- Page-Thurston-Pierce-Wayne-Boone-Madison-Stanton-Cuming-Burt- Platte-Colfax-Dodge-Washington-Butler-Saunders-Douglas-Sarpy- Seward-Lancaster-Cass-Otoe-Saline-Jefferson-Gage-Johnson-Nemaha- Pawnee-Richardson-

    NWS SPECIAL WEATHER STATEMENT FOR BLOWING DUST

    Windy conditions this afternoon are producing blowing dust and reduced visibilities. Wind gusts to around 55 mph can be expected. These winds will continue through the afternoon and then diminish to 20 to 30 mph with gusts near 35 mph by 9 PM. Fields are being planted across much of the region and there are a number of active construction sites. These winds will create areas of blowing dust and dirt. This will result in localized areas of extremely low or near zero visibility. Drivers should use caution on Interstate 80…Highways 6 and 92…and all east-west oriented roads.

  • Judge faces punishment for sex acts in courthouse

    Massachusetts’ highest court will meet to consider the punishment for a judge who admitted to having a relationship with a courthouse employee that included sexual encounters in his chambers.

    BOSTON (AP) – Massachusetts’ highest court will meet to consider the punishment for a judge who admitted to having a relationship with a courthouse employee that included sexual encounters in his chambers.

    The Supreme Judicial Court will hold a hearing Tuesday to explore sanctions for Judge Thomas Estes for his affair with social worker Tammy Cagle.

    The Commission on Judicial Conduct wants Estes to be suspended indefinitely to give lawmakers time to decide whether to remove him from the bench. The last time Massachusetts lawmakers ousted a judge was in 1973.

    Cagle has accused Estes of pressuring her into performing oral sex on him in his chambers and her home. Estes says the relationship was consensual and that the humiliation he has experienced calls for a more lenient punishment of a four-month suspension.

  • Top GOP gubernatorial candidates focus on vision in debate

    Idaho’s top Republican candidates for governor gave voters three distinct options to choose from Monday during their second televised debate, which included plenty of jabs at each other’s campaign tac

    BOISE, Idaho (AP) – Idaho’s top Republican candidates for governor gave voters three distinct options to choose from Monday during their second televised debate, which included plenty of jabs at each other’s campaign tactics.

    U.S. Rep. Raul Labrador, a four-term congressman, pushed his aggressive economic plan to cut nearly a $1 billion of the state’s taxes, or roughly 30 percent of the state’s annual general fund budget.

    “We have $3 billion in tax loopholes, some of those benefit the state, most of those do not benefit the state,” Labrador said. “You can actually do a tax shift. That’s what tax reform is.”

    Labrador added that he was opposed to the state picking “winners and losers,” and said he was against the state’s current structure to help incentivize business to move to or expand in Idaho because it harmed the current businesses in the state.

    Meanwhile, Boise developer and first-time political candidate Tommy Ahlquist said he would apply a business model in order to find and eliminate wasteful government spending, as well as bring fresh ideas to a state that has long been run by the political establishment.

    Unlike Labrador, who said he would require all agency directors to reapply for the positions, Ahlquist said if elected he anticipated keeping both new and old director heads to oversee the state’s agencies.

    “You can have all the plans you want in life, you can have all the task forces, but if you don’t have action, if you don’t follow through, you won’t get anywhere,” Ahlquist said, who has previously promised that unlike Gov. C.L. “Butch” Otter, he would not create any task forces if elected.

    “We need to change the status quo,” Ahlquist added.

    Lt. Gov. Brad Little maintained that Idaho was on the right path to continue growing and attracting new businesses, but his experience working with Otter and the Idaho Legislature was needed to ensure the state’s future success.

    Little proposed tax cut plan would cost Idaho around $116 million in its first year, which includes reducing the general fund by $27.9 million to lower the top personal and corporate income tax rates by a tenth of a percent and $9 million for the business equipment property tax break.

    “We’ve had revenue over these past two years that went up $400 million, I don’t think it’s a stretch at all to give the taxpayers during these good times half of their money back,” Little said, returning to his previous campaign promise that he would cut $350 million in income taxes over the next several years but not at the expense of cutting education.

    All three candidates once came out again in support of eliminating the sales tax on groceries. On education, all three shied away from endorsing a path to a government-funded preschool – which Idaho currently does not fund.

    Labrador was the only candidate to come out against changing Idaho’s laws that allow families to cite religious reasons for medical decisions without fear of being charged with neglect or abuse. Little and Ahlquist said they would have to consider the legislation before weighing in on the issue.

    Ahlquist refused to answer directly if he would sign legislation allowing women to be prosecuted if they had an abortion, saying he didn’t want to participate in a “theoretical” situation. Little and Labrador both agreed that while they opposed abortion, they thought charging women with first-degree murder – which would allow for the death penalty – went too far.

    In between talking about policy positions, the candidates took time to critique each other’s attack ads.

    “Probably one of the most disturbing ones was I was driving my 15-year-old daughter a couple of weeks ago and she pulled up an ad that was being run by one of my opponents with me dressed in a Ku Klux Klan outfit saying that I was a dirty, filthy racist,” said Ahlquist.

    Labrador quickly responded that while the claim came from one his supporters, he did not support the ad and neither was his campaign involved in the ad.

    “My campaign had nothing to do with that blog and I actually asked him to take down that picture because I found it to be offensive,” said Labrador, who then accused Ahlquist of lying about Labrador’s support of President Donald Trump and his immigration involvement.

    Little said the biggest lie that’s been spread about him so far during the campaign was by Ahlquist’s campaign that he was not a conservative and that he would raise taxes.

    “I’ve governed, whether I was serving the Senate or as lieutenant governor, with the lightest possible hand of government,” he said.