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Hasan Piker becomes flashpoint in Dem circles as some condemn his rhetoric

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Hasan Piker, the controversial, far-left Twitch streamer, has made his way into real-life politics, where his presence is causing a rift in the Democratic Party.  While some Democrats have embraced Piker and even campaigned with him, others have urged the party to reject the streamer over what they describe as antisemitic and anti-American views.

Recently, Piker has found himself at the center of more controversy as some critics wondered, after the shooting at the White House Correspondents’ Association (WHCA) Dinner, whether rhetoric like his was partly to blame. During his Twitch stream on Sunday, Piker addressed those who he saw as condemning him for the assassination attempt and connected the critics to Israel.

“I have noticed that virtually every single person that’s doing this, ‘Hassan is responsible for this shooting,’ happens to be a propagandist for the state of Israel,” Piker said

The streamer also addressed the would-be shooter’s profile as details about suspect Cole Allen emerged. Piker said that it was “not looking good,” referring to the possibility of the shooter being left-leaning. He then added that “even though 90% of the time [it] is a Trump supporter, all that matters is the one time where it’s not,” claiming that the suspect’s politics would be used as a reason to shut other Trump critics down.

When speaking about the WHCA Dinner shooting and previous attempts on Trump’s life, Piker on Monday agreed with another streamer who said the assassination attempt in Butler, Pa., on July 13, 2024, was staged.

DEMOCRATS TEAM UP WITH FAR-LEFT STREAMER WHO ONCE SAID ‘AMERICA DESERVED 9/11’

Hasan Piker

Hasan Piker, streamer and creator, attends the press conference during the Web Summit Qatar 2026 at the Doha Exhibition and Convention Center in Doha, Qatar, Feb. 3, 2026. (Noushad Thekkayil/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

Days before the WHCA Dinner, Piker made headlines following an appearance on The New York Times podcast “The Opinions.” During the interview, Piker accused slain UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson of “engaging in a tremendous amount of social murder.” Piker added that people understood why Luigi Mangione allegedly killed Thompson in December 2024.

During the podcast, Piker and New Yorker writer Jia Tolentino discussed the ethics of stealing. In a moment that sparked discussions online, Piker said he was “pro-piracy,” later adding that he was in favor of “stealing from big corporations because they steal quite a bit more from their own workers.”

Earlier this month at Yale, Piker told cheering students that the American “empire” had to end, and would inevitably fall, likely in violent fashion.

Piker began his daily online broadcasts in 2018 and has since gained a large following, including 3.1 million followers on Twitch, where he streams for several hours on a typical day.

The streamer has called religious Jews “inbred,” defended Hamas as being “a thousand times better than the fascist settler colonial apartheid state,” mocked discussions of antisemitism on college campuses and slammed a listener who criticized Hamas’ Oct. 7 massacre as a “bloodthirsty violent pig dog.” 

Piker also minimized reports of mass sexual assault during the Oct. 7 attacks, according to The Times of Israel, saying it “doesn’t matter if f—— rapes happened on October 7. It doesn’t change the dynamic for me.”

Piker, who was raised a Muslim, has repeatedly rejected claims he is antisemitic and often says he has used his platform to fight it despite what critics say about his rhetoric.

In one of his more widely criticized moments, Piker said during a stream in 2019 that “America deserved 9/11.” After immense backlash, Piker said in an interview with The Young Turks founder Cenk Uygur that he “obviously” did not mean that America deserved the attacks and accused critics of not disregarding “the actual truth of what I was talking about,” explaining the viral quote as a critique of U.S. foreign policy.

“I should have used more precise and better use of language there,” Piker said in the 2019 interview. “It’s messed up that I would give the opportunity to the right to try to morally grandstand on an issue like this when they are 100% responsible for all the bloodshed that has been caused.”

He later admitted in the interview that his comments on 9/11 were “inappropriate.”

A friendly profile of him in the progressive outlet The Guardian, which also called him “fashionable and handsome,” fretted that his 9/11 remarks were “seized upon” by his critics.

ILLINOIS DEMOCRAT CONDEMNS PARTY MEMBERS RALLYING WITH FAR-LEFT STREAMER HASAN PIKER

Piker has recently become a point of division within the Democratic Party. Some candidates have chosen to campaign with him while others warn that legitimizing him gives Republicans political fodder.

Dr. Abdul El-Sayed, who is running in Michigan for U.S. Senate, recently drew heavy criticism after he announced his plan to hold two campaign events with Piker. 

Amid the growing backlash, El-Sayed addressed the issue in a video, explaining his decision to appear with Piker as an attempt to reach people who feel left out of traditional politics. However, he also said that he agrees with Piker on several issues, including criticism of the war in Iran, lambasting pro-Israel AIPAC’s role in politics and support for free healthcare.

The Anti-Defamation League (ADL) condemned the planned events, with ADL Michigan Regional Director Elyssa Schmier saying that El-Sayed’s decision to appear with Piker was “yet another example of the growing normalization of extreme anti-Zionism in mainstream spaces.”

ADL CEO Jonathan Greenblatt condemned Piker’s “long track record of commending and excusing terrorism,” saying the streamer “routinely uses his platform to spread anti-Jewish tropes, amplify propaganda from designated terrorist groups and promote toxic anti-Zionism.”

Greenblatt said it was “absolutely shocking” that El-Sayed decided to campaign with Piker, especially after the attack on Temple Israel in West Bloomfield, Michigan.

Progressive stars like Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y.; Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn.; Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif.; and New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani have appeared on Piker’s show. 

He appeared on CNN this week to discuss his recent trip to Cuba, boasting about appearing on his “friend” Elex Michaelson’s program after being sharply criticized on the same network by CNN anchor Jake Tapper. 

Hasan Piker

Hasan Piker attends the 2026 Vanity Fair Oscar Party hosted by Mark Guiducci at Los Angeles County Museum of Art on March 15, 2026, in Los Angeles. (Taylor Hill/FilmMagic via Getty Images)

MAMDANI SPARKS VIRAL OUTRAGE OVER DINNER PHOTO WITH MAHMOUD KHALIL INSIDE GRACIE MANSION: ‘DISGRACEFUL’

Effie Phillips-Staley, who is running for Congress in the heavily Jewish 17th Congressional District in New York, is also facing backlash over her ties to Piker. The Democratic hopeful accused Israel of genocide and being an apartheid state during her appearance on Piker’s show March 28, according to the Jewish Telegraphic Agency (JTA). 

The outlet reported that Democratic committees in several New York counties issued a joint statement condemning Piker’s rhetoric and expressing “deep disappointment” in Phillips-Staley.

“Her decision represents a dangerous and unacceptable step toward legitimizing rhetoric that has no place in this district, in mainstream Democratic politics or in any serious political discourse,” the statement said, according to JTA.

Like El-Sayed, Phillips-Staley said she did not “align with every word Hasan Piker has ever said,” adding it was important to “recognize the massive value of a platform that engages millions of young people in the democratic process.”

Rep. Ritchie Torres, D-N.Y., condemned Piker in a letter to Twitch CEO Daniel Clancy and several others.

“Hasan Piker has emerged as the poster child for the post-October 7th outbreak of antisemitism in America,” Torres wrote. “Hasan Piker has come out as an apologist not only for 10/7 but also for 9/11, compounding antisemitism with anti-Americanism.”

Hasan Piker

Hasan Piker attended Zohran Mamdani’s election watch party Nov. 4, 2025. (Selcuk Acar/Anadolu via Getty Images)

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Another Democrat, Rep. Brad Schneider, D-Ill., called Piker “an unapologetic antisemite” and warned members of his party against associating with the controversial Twitch streamer.

“Democrats risk losing our credibility to condemn those on the right who traffic in bigotry, antisemitism, & hate when our own Members of Congress & candidates are celebrating or, worse yet, platforming those who espouse hate of any kind,” Schneider wrote on X.

Additionally, Jonathan Cowan, co-founder of the Democratic think tank Third Way, co-authored a Wall Street Journal opinion piece about the Democratic Party’s closeness with Piker.

“Mr. Piker is anti-American, antiwomen, anti-Western and antisemitic. No Democrat should engage with him. All should seek to push him to the fringe, where he belongs,” the article said.

The growing divide among Democrats over Piker underscores a larger challenge for the party ahead of the midterm elections of how to reach progressive voters without alienating moderates or handing Republicans a political opening.

Fox News Digital has reached out to Piker’s team for comment.



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Croatia’s Modric undergoes facial surgery but aims to be fit for World Cup | World Cup 2026 News

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Luka Modric suffered a facial ⁠fracture in AC Milan’s game against Juventus and underwent surgery the following day.

Luka Modric has undergone ⁠a successful surgery after ⁠fracturing his left cheekbone and is expected to be fit for the upcoming FIFA World Cup, the Croatian Football Federation said.

The AC Milan midfielder sustained the injury following a clash of heads with Juventus ⁠midfielder Manuel Locatelli during Sunday’s 0-0 Serie A draw at the San Siro and underwent surgery on Monday, weeks before the 40-year-old ⁠is due to participate in his fifth World Cup.

Modric left the field with 10 minutes left in the game, and although clearly in pain, he remained on the bench until the end without receiving medical treatment.

Tests revealed a fracture to his left cheekbone, and Modric underwent surgery hours later.

Milan said it was “a complex, multi-fragment fracture of the left zygomatic bone”, but the operation “was completely successful”.

The club did not say how long Modric will be sidelined. However, only four rounds remain in Serie A.

“The club wishes Luka a speedy recovery ahead of the FIFA World Cup!” Milan added.

AC Milan's Croatian midfielder #14 Luka Modric leaves the pitch after being injured during the Italian Serie A football match between AC Milan and Juventus FC at the San Siro stadium in Milan, northern Italy, on April 26, 2026. (Photo by Stefano RELLANDINI / AFP)
Modric will play in his fifth World Cup if he represents Croatia in the 2026 tournament [Stefano Rellandini/AFP]

The Croatian federation said national medical staff remained in contact with Modric, who captains the side, as well as his club.

“I’ve been talking to Luka, and wished him a successful surgery and a quality and speedy recovery,” Croatia head coach Zlatko Dalic said in ⁠a statement.

“I am convinced that he will ⁠do everything to be ready for the World Cup, and we’ll provide full support.

“I am confident that the recovery will go according to plan and that ⁠Luka, as team captain, will lead us at another major competition this summer.”

Milan are ⁠third in the standings, 12 points behind ⁠leaders Inter Milan with four games remaining, and Modric is doubtful to take any part in their season run-in. A protective mask may be needed should ‌he recover in time for the World Cup.

Modric is in the final months of his contract with Milan, having signed a one-year deal last summer following 13 trophy-filled seasons at Real Madrid. He has an option to extend the contract for another year.

The World Cup, cohosted by the United States, Canada and Mexico, starts on June ‌11, ‌and Croatia will face England on June 17, Ghana on June 23 and Panama on June 27 in Group L.

INTERACTIVE-Football FIFA World Cup 2026 group stage schedule-1776670775



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Ex-college football star Diego Pavia hit with ‘brutal reality’ during NFL Draft, sportscaster says

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Sportscaster Dan Patrick said Monday that Heisman Trophy finalist Diego Pavia was handed a “brutal reality” over the weekend when he went undrafted and received only an invite to Baltimore Ravens camp.

Pavia was the first Heisman Trophy finalist in more than 10 years to go unselected in the NFLNFL Draft.

Patrick claimed on his show that it was a “really clear” message from the NFL.

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Vanderbilt quarterback Diego Pavia throwing a football during pro day at Vanderbilt University

Vanderbilt quarterback Diego Pavia throws the ball during football pro day at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tenn., on March 20, 2026. (ANDREW NELLES / THE TENNESSEAN / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images)

Diego Pavia was a Heisman Trophy finalist who did not get drafted. Now, there’s a few reasons why. He was very, very good in the SEC – that should stand out and that should make you draft eligible. You should get drafted just based off what you did. You did it for Vandy in the SEC. You can have personality at other positions. You can be absorbed, you can be embraced, but not at backup quarterback because quarterback is evaluated differently. You can be an elite talent and get away with that.

“The message from the NFL was really clear – if you’re not a can’t-miss prospect, professionalism is not just valued, it’s required, and that hurt Diego Pavia. Also, that he’s not a tall guy. Most of your backup quarterbacks, if you check, are not short quarterbacks. Diego Pavia might be 5-10, but you start to look at what you did at pre-draft meetings with teams. … You have (Tim) Tebow, Cam Newton, (Colin) Kaepernick, other examples of your backup quarterback being too much of a headline, or potential for a headline.”

Patrick pointed to Pavia’s friendship with Johnny Manziel and making snide comments about Fernando Mendoza on Heisman night as other reasons why Pavia didn’t get drafted.

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Vanderbilt quarterback Diego Pavia running with the football on a field.

Vanderbilt quarterback Diego Pavia runs the ball during the game against Louisiana State University at FirstBank Stadium in Nashville, Tenn., on Oct. 18, 2025. (Nicole Hester/ The Tennessean / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images)

“Football moves on quickly. Just as Johnny Manziel, it moves quickly. … But Diego Pavia has a personality, but he doesn’t have a personality that I want as my backup quarterback. I don’t think he’s good enough to be a starter in the NFL He’s not Doug Flutie. I mean, Doug Flutie was 5-9, Heisman Trophy winner, but he was the ideal personality to be a backup quarterback and ready to come in when need be. In fact, Flutie was ahead of his time.

“But Diego Pavia, the personality, that’s who you are. You’re selling that personality. But I’m not buying that. Teams are not buying that. Teams didn’t buy Shedeur Sanders.”

Patrick said that NFL coaches have a tough enough time trying to win games as it is without personalities becoming headlines.

Patrick added that NFL teams usually want a quarterback who is seen and not heard from, or a player who isn’t drawing too much attention to himself.

“You gotta have a backup quarterback, who you probably don’t see very much and that’s a good thing. If you’re one of the McDown brothers and you’re just there for 15 years, Chase Daniel, nice college career, you just want to make sure that guy is there just in case,” he said.

Patrick said Pavia’s reality check was that teams don’t want him to be the star, they only want him to help the starting quarterback.

“And that was the brutal reality that Diego Pavia was handed over the weekend. He did not get drafted.”

Pavia was named the SEC Offensive Player of the Year and had 3,539 passing yards and 29 touchdowns as he helped put the Commodores back on the map.

Vanderbilt quarterback Diego Pavia talks to Indiana quarterback Fernando Mendoza during NFL scouting combine drill

Vanderbilt quarterback Diego Pavia talks to Indiana quarterback Fernando Mendoza as quarterbacks run a drill at the NFL scouting combine in Indianapolis on Feb. 28, 2026. (Michael Conroy/AP)

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Vanderbilt was 10-3 last season and nearly made the College Football Playoff.



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Iraq appoints new prime minister-designate | Government

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Iraqi multimillionaire Ali al-Zaidi has been named as prime minister-designate after he was nominated by a coalition of Shia parties that make up the majority of parliament. Al-Zaidi has 30 days to form a cabinet.



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Beware the pod machine mistake that leads to bacterial growth and stale coffee

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There’s one key step with certain types of coffee machines that’s easy to forget — but doing so can lead to major issues with your brew.

Whether using a Keurig or Nespresso, every pod machine confronts users with the same moment after brewing: Remove the used pod.

If you take the pod out immediately after brewing, it may still be boiling hot and increase your risk of burns.

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But if you wait too long, you might forget to take it out entirely — and realize the next day that you left a damp, used pod sitting in the machine overnight.

Though it seems harmless, that habit can affect your machine’s performance and your coffee’s taste, said Andrew Pautler, the Missouri-based founder of the specialty coffee website Pull & Pour Coffee.

Woman pressing button on modern espresso machine with ceramic mug underneath

A forgotten coffee pod left overnight may seem like a harmless act, but it can impact flavor and machine performance. (iStock)

Pautler, whose website focuses on coffee tips and recipes, told Fox News Digital that leaving used pods in a brewer creates a “warm, damp environment inside the machine.”

That damp environment can spell trouble for the flavor of your drinks.

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The habit “can lead to bacterial growth, stale flavors, residue buildup and general cleanliness issues,” Pautler said.

He added that small habits “add up over time” — and making a few simple changes can have a big impact.

Older woman holding a coffee cup and drinking

Regular maintenance habits, including removing pods, can help extend the life of single-use coffee machines. (iStock)

Pautler recommends ejecting pods after each use, as well as occasionally rinsing removable parts of the machines.

He also recommends descaling your machine regularly.

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Descaling involves running a vinegar or commercial descaling solution through the machine to flush out mineral buildup, then rinsing it out with multiple water cycles.

The process is crucial, “especially if you’re using hard water,” Pautler said.

A barefoot man holding a white cup of black coffee.

Small habits “add up over time,” so making a few simple changes can have a big impact on your morning brew. (iStock)

“While most machines appear to work fine initially without any regular maintenance or cleaning, if left too long, they start to have performance and quality issues,” he said.

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A Keurig spokesperson told Fox News Digital that the company “recommends that used pods be removed from the pod holder once cooled.”

The spokesperson added, “Removal will assist in maintaining a hygienic pod holder.”

Man using coffee mahcine

Keeping pod holders clean and dry is one step toward preserving the flavor of your daily coffee. (iStock)

“If you find that a used pod has been left in the pod holder, we recommend running a cleansing brew.”

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The spokesperson also recommends descaling your coffee brewer “if a used pod has been left in for an extended period of time.”



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A $6bn question hangs over SUSE’s sovereignty pitch • The Register

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European-based SUSE devoted much of the annual SUSECON event to its sovereignty-focused pitch – even as reports swirl that its majority stakeholder is exploring a $6 billion sale which could land the Linux vendor in American hands.

In March, Swedish private equity biz EQT – which spun out SUSE from US group Micro Focus in 2018 for $2.5 billion – reportedly commissioned Arma Partners to examine the open source provider’s options. This is still at the early stages, but any sale to a US buyer would put a dent in SUSE’s European digital sovereignty credentials.

Plane. Image via shutterstock

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The Register asked SUSE CEO Dirk-Peter van Leeuwen at SUSECON what sovereignty means given the potential acquisition.

“SUSE, in its nature, is a European company. We are registered in Europe, everything is in Europe. If we get acquired by another shareholder, even if the shareholder would be American, we are still a European company with shareholders in America. But we are operating according to European laws. That’s all I can say about it other than it’s all speculation.”

Digital sovereignty is not a new notion but since the Trump administration returned to power in January last year, generating trade and geopolitical turbulence with its allies, European enterprises have accelerated efforts to reduce their dependence on US big tech.

The wrinkle for SUSE is that a sale to US owners would complicate its narrative considerably: American corporations can be compelled under the US CLOUD Act to hand over customer data held on servers located anywhere in the world.

SUSE’s Global Head of Sovereign Solutions, Andreas Prins – formerly CEO of StackState, which SUSE acquired in 2024 – acknowledged the nuance. “We’re a European company, but our customers are global customers, and that’s super important.”

He sees a meaningful difference in how US and European customers frame the problem. American customers, he says, focus on data security: who owns it, who has access, who controls the keys. Europeans, by contrast, are preoccupied with the vendor relationship itself – the contract, the jurisdiction, the question of who can ultimately reach in.

SUSE hammered home its Europeanness repeatedly throughout the event. The Reg lost count of how many times various company reps made the point. The company is surfing a genuine wave of interest in digital and AI sovereignty, even as countries and regions diverge on what sovereignty actually means in practice.

As regulations pile up, SUSE’s CTO Dr. Thomas Di Giacomo offered a weary quip in a briefing: “I’d rather have less!”

The scale of interest is real. In a survey of 309 IT leaders from countries including the US and Japan, SUSE found that 98 percent were prioritizing digital sovereignty, with more than half taking action, be that developing a strategy or having one in place.

Prins is clear that a wholesale exodus from the hyperscalers is highly unlikely. “We’ve seen that 70 percent of the respondents across the globe believe that the hyperscaler is part of the solution.”

What SUSE does see is a trend towards local workloads – though Prins is quick to add that this remains a small slice of what already runs in the cloud.

“We’re not saying that we will see an exodus of the hyperscaler in any region, and therefore hyperscalers die, right? I don’t believe that, not at all,” said Prins.

“What is much more interesting is the trend: how do people actually, from a strategic perspective, make a much more evaluated risk on how they … move away? So the trend we see is that they start to rank … their applications from a business criticality perspective, and say, hey, the most mission critical ones, let’s reassess where they need to be operated.”

Chip off the old block

SUSE is a software company, but hardware looms over any serious sovereignty conversation. Europe is relatively well-positioned in software; a truly sovereign hardware stack remains a distant prospect.

“Hardware is slightly different,” acknowledged Prins, “There’s a whole movement going on with regards to chip designs, and the more open, you could argue, the better it is.”

His view is that software carries the greater sovereignty risk. “If it’s an open source software and open architecture that runs there, technically speaking, everyone can pick it up until the chip physically breaks down and doesn’t do the job.

“What SUSE does is we try to certify on as much standards as possible. And if you take a look at datacenter providers, they will be stupid if they don’t have a variety of technologies in the rack, like the dual-vendor strategy we see happening in the software space. Yeah, if I [were to] host a datacenter, I [would] want to do similar from a hardware perspective.” ®



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Kashmir seminary declared unlawful under Indian law, sparks outcry | Religion News

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Kashmiri political and religious leaders denounced the move as part of a broader pattern of New Delhi’s overreach.

An important Islamic seminary in Indian-administered Kashmir has been declared unlawful under anti-terror laws, prompting backlash from prominent religious and political leaders in the territory.

Kashmir Divisional Commissioner Anshul Garg issued the order based on a police dossier that alleged “sustained and covert links” between the seminary and the banned political party Jamaat-e-Islami (JeI), local media reported.

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The seminary, Jamia Siraj-ul-Uloom, is one of the largest in southern Kashmir and is recognised by the Jammu and Kashmir Board of School Education, the main autonomous secondary and higher secondary education board in the union territories of Jammu & Kashmir and Ladakh, which were earlier part of undivided Indian-administered Kashmir until 2019.

The dossier stated that members of Jamia Siraj-ul-Uloom’s management and faculty were linked to JeI. It also cited other allegations related to land use and financial transparency.

The move was handed down under the Unlawful Activities Prevention Act (UAPA), a much-criticised law that allows authorities to designate someone a “terrorist” without evidence.

Seminary chairman Mohammad Shafi Lone has reportedly rejected the allegations.

“We are a law-abiding institute and have nothing to do with the banned Jamaat-e-Islami,” the Hindustan Times daily reported, quoting Lone. “This order has created panic among parents and students enrolled here.”

Leaders in Muslim-majority Kashmir criticised the move as part of an ongoing campaign of overreach by New Delhi.

“Declaring Jamia Siraj-ul-Uloom ‘unlawful’ under UAPA is the latest act in a calculated dismantling of Kashmir’s civic life,” wrote Aga Syed Ruhullah Mehdi, a member of parliament from the region, on X. “The pattern is unmistakable. Trusts, mosques, libraries and now seminaries serving underprivileged children, every social and nongovernmental institution that holds Kashmiri society together is being strangled.”

The school has more than 800 students and has “produced doctors, scholars and professionals from homes that could never afford private education”, he added.

Mehbooba Mufti, a former chief minister of undivided Indian-administered Kashmir, called the decision a “flagrant injustice to the poor underprivileged sections of society”.

“Banning these altruistic institutions without any solid evidence of antinational activity shows a deep-seated prejudice,” she said.

Kashmir’s top Muslim leader, Mirwaiz Umar Farooq, listed recent alleged incidents against residents, including the seizure of property and arrests under the Public Safety Act.

“Can the … administration tell people of Kashmir clearly how long they will continue this policy of harassment and disempowerment?” he asked. “And can the elected [government] tell us how long they will let this happen?”

Escalating pressure

Indian-administered Kashmir is a “union territory”, meaning that it is administered by the federal government in New Delhi.

Although Article 370 of the Indian Constitution previously granted Kashmir partial autonomy over education, employment and land ownership, Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government did away with the law in 2019 and divided the region into two federally-controlled territories.

Since then, Kashmiri leaders have pushed back against what they describe as a curtailing of religious and other freedoms.

Police began profiling mosques in Kashmir earlier this year, prompting a wave of fear over increased surveillance by the federal government.

Meanwhile, Jamia Masjid in Srinagar, the region’s most prominent mosque, was forced to shut for almost two years following the 2019 transition and still faces frequent closures, along with limits on the number of people allowed to gather for prayers.

Kashmiri voters elected their local representatives in 2024, in the first elections in a decade. However, most powers remain with the New Delhi-appointed lieutenant governor, including control over the police, public order and the transfer and posting of officials.



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Republicans warn AI chip shortage threatens their 2026 midterm message

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Republicans are warning that their ability to deliver on lowering everyday costs, one of their core campaign promises heading into the 2026 midterms, is being tested by an AI-driven chip shortage that has spilled into consumer markets.

“When you have a big race like we have with AI, there are secondary effects that we need to be very concerned about,” former Rep. Patrick McHenry, who served as House Financial Services Committee chairman, told Fox News Digital, adding, “It is hurting Republicans.”

Tech industry reports have for months been raising alarm over a global chip shortage. In January, a report predicted that this year, 70% of the high-end memory chips produced would go toward data centers, which store AI memory, constraining all other downstream technology and driving up prices, directly undermining Republicans’ affordability agenda.

AFFORDABILITY: THE ISSUE THAT BOOSTED TRUMP AND REPUBLICANS IN 2024 DEFLATED THEM IN 2025

President Donald Trump delivering remarks at the AI Summit in Washington, D.C.

President Donald Trump delivers remarks at the “Winning the AI Race” AI Summit at the Andrew W. Mellon Auditorium in Washington, D.C., on July 23, 2025. (Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP)

“We see this from our handheld devices to our computers, to TVs,” McHenry, a North Carolina Republican congressman turned policy advisor, said in an interview. “Even autos are impacted, and even things such as what we think of as average everyday things that aren’t particularly high tech, like the things we use to manicure our lawns are impacted by rising prices of chips, so there’s a lot of secondary effects across consumer goods and should be a huge concern.”

Heading into 2026, President Donald Trump framed the midterms as a referendum on cost of living, saying in a Politico interview the elections “will be about pricing.” 

Historically, the party in control loses seats during the midterms. One Republican strategist told Fox News Digital that AI’s well-documented dominance over the chip market should be viewed as hurting voters’ pocketbooks. The strategist called on the three largest chip manufacturing companies to expand production, which he said would help bolster the GOP’s campaign message.

“America must win the artificial intelligence race. Companies like Samsung, SK Hynix, and Micron understand that,” the strategist said. “At the same time, we can’t forget about consumer goods. Memory chip manufacturers need to increase production to boost both American AI and lower the cost of consumer goods. If they don’t, it will undoubtedly hurt Republicans politically in the midterms. How can Republicans campaign on ‘lower costs’ in 2024, but see computer and car prices rise in 2026 due to a lack of chip production?”

TRUMP TORCHES DEMS’ ‘FAKE AFFORDABILITY’ PITCH – BUT GOP PANIC IN DEEP RED STATE HINTS VOTERS AREN’T BUYING IT

OpenAI logo displayed on a mobile phone in front of a computer screen showing ChatGPT output

The OpenAI logo appears on a mobile phone in front of a computer screen displaying ChatGPT output in Boston on March 21, 2023. (Michael Dwyer/AP)

The AI boom is increasing demand for memory chips, which are semiconductor components used in data centers, laptops and smartphones.

That chip consumption has rippled across industries. Microsoft this month attributed its rise in laptop prices to “recent increases in memory and component costs.” The smartphone market remained “under pressure,” with shipments down 6% this year, largely because of chip shortages, Counterpoint Research found

Sen. Bernie Moreno, R-Ohio, previously a car dealership owner, warned in a letter this month his state was seeing “immediate and severe” consequences of rising chip prices and that automakers have said they could begin halting assembly lines as early as next month.

While affordability has been a resounding priority for Republicans seeking to retain control in Washington, AI advancements are also a pillar of Trump’s agenda. The White House declared last year in a sweeping plan that the country was in “a race to achieve global dominance in artificial intelligence” and cited the need for a “revitalized U.S. chip industry.”

Asked about the AI-driven affordability concerns, White House spokesman Kush Desai told Fox News Digital in a statement that the White House was cognizant of the clash and balancing it with a “nuanced” economic plan, which includes Trump’s signature worldwide tariffs, which the president restructured after the Supreme Court struck down his initial plan implementing them in the name of what he said was a global economic emergency.

“The fact that semiconductor chips are absolutely critical for everything from cutting-edge AI technology to everyday consumer goods only reinforces the importance of President Trump’s push to reinvigorate America’s semiconductor industry,” Desai said. “Hundreds of billions in semiconductor manufacturing investments reflect how the private sector is enthusiastically responding to the Administration’s nuanced and multi-faceted agenda of tariffs, deregulation, and tax cuts.”

KEVIN O’LEARY WARNS CHINA ‘KICKING OUR HEINIES’ IN AI RACE AS REGULATORY ROADBLOCKS STALL US

President Joe Biden speaking at a signing ceremony on the South Lawn of the White House

President Joe Biden speaks during a signing ceremony for the CHIPS and Science Act of 2022 on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, D.C., on Aug. 9, 2022. (Saul Loeb/AFP)

The strain on supply is also raising new questions about the effectiveness of the bipartisan CHIPS Act, a Biden administration bill designed to boost domestic production and prevent precisely the kind of shortage markets are now seeing.

McHenry, who specializes in fintech policy, said the CHIPS Act, a multibillion-dollar effort to pour federal subsidies and tax incentives into U.S. chip manufacturing, has been a “grave disappointment.” McHenry said both that the White House had “a lot more work” to do to address the supply shortage and that congressional reforms were another way to improve domestic chip production.

“Unfortunately for the taxpayer, they paid for the CHIPS Act the first time, and now they’re paying for it a second time with the rising price of consumer goods,” McHenry said. “Republicans need to address this on Capitol Hill. They need to clean up the CHIPS Act so the president can deploy these tools to incentivize and grow chip manufacturing here in the United States.”

Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., who founded a successful car security company, said he sees a need for chip production expansion, tying it to consumer costs, in a statement to Fox News Digital.

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“America leads the world in AI — and we stay there by unleashing the nation’s industrial base, ramping up chip production and memory as never before and lowering the consumer costs people pay every day,” he said.

The congressman said more chips were “essential” to delivering on the GOP’s promises of “opportunity, prosperity and affordability.”

Fox News Digital reached out to representatives of Samsung, SK Hynix and Micron for comment.



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Congressmen call for National Guard to address drone threat at World Cup | World Cup 2026 News

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Congressmen call for immediate interagency action to secure airspace over ‌the 11 US ​World Cup 2026 host cities.

‌Two Republican members of Congress are calling on the Trump ⁠administration to ⁠empower the National Guard to address potential drone-related threats and ensure a “unified federal security posture” at the upcoming World ⁠Cup games.

The letter by US Representatives Michael McCaul and Elijah Crane, who both sit on the House of Representatives’ Committee on Homeland ⁠Security, was sent to US Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin, Acting US Attorney General Todd Blanche and Pentagon chief Pete Hegseth on Friday.

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McCaul and Crane called for immediate interagency action to secure the airspace over ‌the 11 US cities hosting World Cup matches this year.

Potential personnel shortages and complex jurisdictional divides between event organisers and host cities risk creating a fragmented environment, they said, adding that the situation requires a unified federal security posture.

“With its rapid deployability, nationwide scalability, and extensive experience responding to domestic emergencies, the National ⁠Guard is uniquely positioned to assist federal and ⁠state authorities with C-UAS mitigation and unified coordination for World Cup security,” they wrote.

The Department of Homeland Security, Department of Justice and the Pentagon did not immediately respond to requests ⁠for comment. The call to deputise troops to respond to drone threats came a day before ⁠a gunman opened fire at the White ⁠House Correspondents’ Dinner in Washington, raising new security concerns about this year’s World Cup games.

The White House said on Monday that the matches will be safe following Saturday’s ‌shooting.

“President Trump is focused on ensuring that this is not only an incredible experience for all fans and visitors, but also the ‌safest ‌and most secure in history,” White House spokesman Davis Ingle said in a statement.



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