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Astros vs Rangers getaway day features two dominant pitchers in a battle of Texas rivalry


We have a getaway day in the baseball schedule. There are only six games on the diamond today, and just one of them is the start of a new series. I often think about the mentality of players on getaway days – some guys are headed home, others are just in the middle of a trip.

In this one, we get a getaway day and a battle of Texas as the Astros take on the Rangers.

A general view of Globe Life Field during a baseball game between Houston Astros and Texas Rangers

A general view of Globe Life Field during the game between the Houston Astros and the Texas Rangers in Arlington, Texas, on May 25, 2026. (Getty Images)

The Houston Astros are expected to be one of the teams that miss the playoffs this year. However, counting them out seems a bit foolish because the team tends to do anything they can to win. That is not a shot at them for being proven cheaters, but more a reflection that no matter who is on their roster, they win games.

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This year, they are reasonably below .500, but no one in their division is all that impressive. They have a chance to make a deal at the deadline or do something that could give them a winning streak and position themselves for a shot at the division.

One person they likely won’t alter or do anything with is their starter for today. Taking the ball is Spencer Arrighetti, a solid right-handed pitcher who has been great for them in limited innings. He is 6-1 for the season with a 1.32 ERA and a 1.20 WHIP. If he had enough innings, that would be the league leader.

He had a later start to the season, but he hasn’t allowed more than two earned runs in any game this season. He has also allowed just three hits and no runs over his past 12.1 innings. Of those, 7.1 innings came against the Rangers.

Houston Astros starting pitcher Spencer Arrighetti walking in the dugout at Daikin Park.

Houston Astros starting pitcher Spencer Arrighetti walks in the dugout before the game against the New York Mets at Daikin Park on March 29, 2025. (Troy Taormina/Imagn Images)

Speaking of the Texas Rangers, they are also below .500 and will need to make some adjustments if they want to get themselves in a spot to win their division. I don’t know that this team has a ton of capital to make a push, but they are just a few years removed from a World Series win, so they still have pieces in place that can make a difference.

I like the Rangers’ lineup, but recognize they could use another bat. Their pitching staff is a strength, and I think one that they can ride down the stretch.

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One of those arms they will ride is tonight’s starter, Nathan Eovaldi. For the year, Eovaldi is 5-5 with a 3.65 ERA and a 1.14 WHIP. His numbers are a bit uglier than normal due to a few bad early-season starts. He allowed 11 earned runs in his first two games of the season and has allowed 15 over his past eight starts. He was locked in a couple of weeks ago against these Astros as he allowed five hits over seven scoreless innings.

Nathan Eovaldi of the Texas Rangers celebrating an out at Minute Maid Park in Houston

Nathan Eovaldi of the Texas Rangers celebrates an out against the Houston Astros to end the fifth inning in Game Two of the American League Championship Series at Minute Maid Park in Houston, Texas, on Oct. 16, 2023. (Carmen Mandato/Getty Images)

There is only one way to play this matchup in my opinion. I’m taking the under through five innings. I feel like both pitchers are going to be dialed in. I normally fade pitchers that face a team twice in a short span. If they did well in the first, I usually take the over. If they did poorly, I usually take the under. However, in this situation, I think both of these guys are too good to just assume they will fail.

Give me the under through five innings because I don’t want to deal with the bullpens blowing it for a full game.

For more sports betting information and plays, follow David on X/Twitter: @futureprez2024 



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IOC chief Coventry stirs social media storm over athlete payment comments | Olympics News

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The President of the International Olympic Committee, Kirsty Coventry, has been censured by fellow Olympians over her recent comments saying athletes shouldn’t be paid prize money at the Games.

Coventry, who represented Zimbabwe at five Olympics and won seven medals, made the controversial comments last week while on her first visit to Oceania as IOC chief.

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“I don’t believe in paying athletes,” Coventry told New Zealand based outlet Sport Nation.

“I come from a small country, I came from a sport that doesn’t necessarily pay athletes very well and I still don’t think we should be paying athletes at the Olympic Games.”

The IOC does not pay athletes a stipend or salary for competing at the Olympic Games.

Coventry emphasised in the same interview that the IOC needed “to find more ways to directly impact athletes, and find ways to help them on their journey to becoming Olympians and while they’re Olympians”.

She underlined the need for talent identification, and finding means to inspire athletes from smaller nations to make it to the largest sporting event in the world.

“That was very much my journey,” Coventry, 42, said. “I was an Olympic solidarity scholarship holder without that money. I’m not sure I would have been as successful, and so I’m so grateful for that.”

The multiple Olympic and World champion from Zimbabwe is considered the most decorated African Olympian. She returned to the global spotlight after becoming the first woman, and first African chief of the IOC, in 2025.

Under the current Olympic model, athletes are financed through national sporting federations, sponsorships, self-funding, or, in the case of Coventry, the Olympic Solidarity Scholarship.

Why was Coventry criticised?

Coventry’s remarks came just days after the ethically questionable Enhanced Games saw top athletes win $250,000 for every gold medal.

The Enhanced Games allow elite sprinters, swimmers and weightlifters to vie for world records, while taking banned performance-enhancing drugs.

Greek swimmer Kristian Gkolomeev earned a $1m bonus for “breaking” a world record in the men’s 50m freestyle, though it will not make the official record books since global sporting authorities do not recognise the competitors’ results as legitimate.

Coventry’s comments drew sharp criticism from Olympic athletes, who left comments on an Instagram post by swimming news outlet SwimSwam.

Reigning Olympic champion and 50m freestyle record holder Cameron McEvoy said Coventry’s comments “could not have been stated at a more inopportune time”, ostensibly referring to the Enhanced Games. The inaugural experimental competition, albeit heavily criticised, stands as a more lucrative option for athletes looking to make money while continuing their sport.

Former World and European champion Filippo Magnini criticised competitions “where the values of sports are trampled on for the sake of show.

“But let us remember that athletes sacrifice their lives to pursue a dream, and once they retire, 90 percent do not have a future,” the Italian freestyle sprint champion commented.

He emphasised how athletes who put on the show are the backbone of competitions such as the Olympics. “Without athletes, you wouldn’t even be here.”

Former Olympic champion and Australian distance swimming great Grant Hackett called the decision “backwards”, while retired South African swimmer Roland Schoeman said: “The IOC loves the idea of ‘Olympic values’ as long as athletes are the only ones expected to sacrifice financially.”

‘This won’t age well’

Canadian gymnast Felix Dolci and retired British athlete Greg Rutherford also backed the swimmers, with the long jumper saying: “This won’t age well.”

American rapper Flava Flav also commented on the post: “This is why I had to step up.” The television personality became an unlikely sponsor and a financial blessing for several athletes, most notably the US women’s water polo team, whom he supported at the 2024 Paris Olympics.

He also teamed up with Alexis Ohanian, Reddit cofounder and husband of tennis icon Serena Williams, to financially aid US discus thrower Veronica Fraley after she lamented being unable to pay her rent.

Retired Olympic hurdler Sally Pearson reacted to Coventry’s remarks in a video on her Instagram account.

“The Olympians, the athletes that are out there on the stage performing and competing for everyone’s entertainment don’t get paid. The volunteers and the Olympians don’t get paid at the biggest sporting event in the world,” the former world and Olympic champion from Australia said.

“Can you imagine telling a rockstar ‘you’re going to go on a tour and perform in front of thousands of people but we’re not going to pay you’; do you reckon they would go?”

Pearson, 39, further explained in a comment how stringent rules prevent athletes from earning money in the lead-up to the Olympics.

Calls for creating athletes’ union

The IOC can use athletes’ name, image and likeness (NIL) to promote or celebrate the Olympics, while athletes receive nothing in return.

In 2021, the National Collegiate Athletic Association changed NIL rules to allow student-athletes to financially benefit from NIL usage. When asked whether the IOC would adopt a similar stance, Coventry — who swam for Auburn University in Alabama in the US — denied moving to a similar model.

“Well, they get beautiful venues. They get beautiful villages. They get a beautiful experience. And all of that comes from the money that we raise,” Coventry went on to say in the same interview.

Famed Paralympic champion Hunter Woodhall called Coventry’s comments “embarrassing”, while retired British long jumper Rutherford said “the quicker an athlete union can be formed, the better”.

Rutherford detailed his own financial struggles in the sport, but acknowledged that he was from “one of the best sports in the Olympics” that allowed him to earn a decent wage compared to other sports.

“A lot of money I did make went back into the sport to try and win again,” he said, explaining the gamble athletes take with investing thousands of dollars in their training, nutrition and competitions.

World Athletics became the first governing body to award athletes $50,000 in prize money for an Olympic gold medal. Rutherford drew comparisons between World Athletics President Sebastian Coe — a former Olympic champion — drawing on his own experience as an athlete to change the financial system, while his counterpart Coventry stood firm on not paying athletes.

“I’m not saying every athlete should become a millionaire. I’m asking for an organisation that makes $12 billion, charges nations billions to host it, pays its executive millions, blocks athletes from earning, and owns footage of their greatest moments to have a long, hard look at itself,” Rutherford said.

The IOC generated $12.4b during the 2021-2024 cycle, mostly from global broadcast rights, according to its financial report. Nearly 74 percent of that was redistributed back into international sport.

While the IOC has not officially detailed what Coventry makes as president, it is speculated to be $350,000 annually, after it was disclosed last year that Coventry’s predecessor, Thomas Bach, was paid that amount for the final two years of his tenure.

Coventry’s past controversies

Coventry received backlash from athletes and human rights groups alike when the IOC reinstated gender verification tests for the 2028 Los Angeles Games. The global governing body said that only “biological females” will be allowed to compete in women’s events, preventing transgender women from competing.

South African runner and two-time Olympic 800m champion Caster Semenya expressed her disappointment that the IOC’s decision was made under newly-appointed Coventry.

“For me personally, for her being a woman coming from Africa, knowing how African women or women in the Global South are affected by that, of course it causes harm,” Semenya said in Cape Town on the sidelines of a sporting competition.

Coventry was also the centre of attention in Zimbabwe after the 2008 Beijing Olympics where she smashed the world record in the 200m backstroke to win gold. She accepted a cash prize of $100,000 from then President Robert Mugabe on live television, when many Zimbabweans were struggling with hyperinflation.

She’s also been at the centre of political controversy during her tenure as sports minister which began in 2018.



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Husband’s phone GPS data prompts new Bahamas search for missing wife: sources


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FIRST ON FOX: Data from Brian Hooker’s phone led United States investigators to plan to search a new area in 25-foot-deep Bahamian waters in the search for missing Lynette Hooker, sources familiar with the investigation told Fox News Digital.

Brian Hooker and Lynette Hooker initially left shore at Hope Town in the Bahamas at around 7:30 p.m. on April 4, with the husband telling local authorities that rough waters caused his wife to fall off their dinghy. However, GPS data from Brian Hooker’s phone obtained by authorities allegedly shows a discrepancy between what he first told law enforcement, sources familiar with the investigation told Fox News Digital.

That discrepancy prompted federal U.S. authorities to seek permission from Bahamian authorities to search a new area in the Sea of Abaco with 25-foot-deep waters, the sources added.

LYNETTE HOOKER MISSING IN BAHAMAS: TIMELINE OF MICHIGAN WOMAN’S DISAPPEARANCE, HUSBAND’S ARREST

(L) Brian Hooker, sailboat Soulmate (R)

(L) Brian Hooker and his sailboat Soulmate (R) (Matthew Symons for Fox News Digital and Coast Guard)

Authorities obtained data from Brian Hooker’s phone, specifically GPS data from a marine navigation app that was used while the couple was on the dinghy, the sources said.

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The couple was headed back to their sailboat Soulmate, their full-time home in retirement, when Lynette fell overboard. They frequently sail around the U.S. and Caribbean, according to their social media pages.

Karli Aylesworth, Lynette Hooker’s daughter, told Fox News Digital that the Coast Guard has asked her family to submit DNA samples to help with their investigation.

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U.S. Coast Guard investigators searching the boat Soulmate docked at Fort Pierce station

U.S. Coast Guard investigators search the boat Soulmate docked at their station in Fort Pierce, Fla., on May 13, 2026. The vessel belongs to Brian Hooker and his missing wife Lynette Hooker and was brought back to the U.S. from the Bahamas by the Coast Guard. (Obtained by Fox News Digital)

The Coast Guard seized the couple’s sailboat, Soulmate, in early May and took it to Fort Pierce, Florida, but it was recently moved to Fort Lauderdale, as authorities couldn’t pull it from the water.

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Brian Hooker was previously detained for five days by Bahamian police after his wife disappeared, but wasn’t charged.

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Brian Hooker’s Michigan-based attorney asked Americans in an earlier interview to give him the benefit of the doubt in an interview with ABC News.

“I would ask those watching to treat him the way you would want to be treated, to give him the benefit of the doubt, and to consider that not all of us, nor you, considering your own relationships, the way you speak to one another, we all handle things in different ways,” Crystal Marie Hauser said.

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Fox News Digital reached out to the Coast Guard and Hauser for comment.



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Burberry boss could earn up to £12.2m under new bonus scheme | Burberry group

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The boss of Burberry could earn up to £12.2m after the luxury British brand introduced a new bonus scheme.

Joshua Schulman, a former chief executive of the US fashion brand Coach who was hired in July 2024 to help revive Burberry, was paid £4m in the year to March, up from £2.5m for his first nine months in the job.

The latest year’s pay package included £1.2m in basic pay, a £2.3m annual cash bonus and £299,000 in relocation assistance after a move from New York, according to Burberry’s annual report published on Thursday.

The company made pre-tax profits of £49m in the year to 28 March, compared with a loss of £66m in the previous 12 months, as it cut £80m of annual costs, trimmed store numbers and won back Chinese and North American shoppers under Schulman’s Burberry Forward campaign.

The brand has moved away from discounting and has prioritised sales of core products including trenchcoats, scarves and bags. Photograph: Burberry

Sales were flat year on year at £2.4bn, once the effect of exchange rates was taken into account, as the brand moved away from discounting and prioritised sales of core products including trench coats and scarves.

The pay package of Kate Ferry, the finance director of Burberry, more than doubled to £2.5m, up from £904,000 the previous year, and included a £1.3m cash bonus and £457,000 long-term bonus. Ferry could earn £5.6m this year if she hits all targets and Burberry’s share price increases by 50%.

From July, Schulman’s basic pay will increase by 3% to £1.24m and he could also earn a new long-term share bonus worth up to 300% of salary if he meets performance targets that include increasing Burberry’s annual revenues to £3.1bn by 2029.

That award will come on top of an existing share bonus that is being slightly reduced from a maximum of 162.5% of salary to 150%, if shareholders approve the new scheme at the company’s annual meeting in July.

A scarf displayed at the Burberry store in Regent Street, London. Overall sales were flat year on year at £2.4bn, the company’s annual report said. Photograph: Toby Melville/Reuters

Burberry’s report said Schulman’s target pay was £6.4m, which would put him at the upper end of FTSE 100 executive pay rates but the lower end of global peers. That figure could rise to £12.2m in three years’ time, based on this new pay policy introduced this year, if he hits the most “stretching performance targets” and the share price increases by 50%. He could earn even more if his basic salary is increased further.

In the annual report, Danuta Gray, the chair of Burberry’s remuneration committee, said Schulman’s new reward scheme had “been chosen so as to be appropriately incentivising (aligning him with the delivery of the strategy)” and aimed to retain him by improving his pay position relative to those who headed the brand’s luxury peers.

The report added that the scheme was also intended to be “reasonable”, Burberry had “not sought to match USA pay levels” and the payout was also subject to “the delivery of stretching performance targets”.

Schulman became the chief executive of Burberry in July 2024, replacing Jonathan Akeroyd.



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Husband’s phone GPS data prompts new Bahamas search for missing wife: sources


NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

FIRST ON FOX: Data from Brian Hooker’s phone led United States investigators to plan to search a new area in 25-foot-deep Bahamian waters in the search for missing Lynette Hooker, sources familiar with the investigation told Fox News Digital.

Brian Hooker and Lynette Hooker initially left shore at Hope Town in the Bahamas at around 7:30 p.m. on April 4, with the husband telling local authorities that rough waters caused his wife to fall off their dinghy. However, GPS data from Brian Hooker’s phone obtained by authorities allegedly shows a discrepancy between what he first told law enforcement, sources familiar with the investigation told Fox News Digital.

That discrepancy prompted federal U.S. authorities to seek permission from Bahamian authorities to search a new area in the Sea of Abaco with 25-foot-deep waters, the sources added.

LYNETTE HOOKER MISSING IN BAHAMAS: TIMELINE OF MICHIGAN WOMAN’S DISAPPEARANCE, HUSBAND’S ARREST

(L) Brian Hooker, sailboat Soulmate (R)

(L) Brian Hooker and his sailboat Soulmate (R) (Matthew Symons for Fox News Digital and Coast Guard)

Authorities obtained data from Brian Hooker’s phone, specifically GPS data from a marine navigation app that was used while the couple was on the dinghy, the sources said.

LISTEN TO THE NEW ‘CRIME & JUSTICE WITH DONNA ROTUNNO’ PODCAST

The couple was headed back to their sailboat Soulmate, their full-time home in retirement, when Lynette fell overboard. They frequently sail around the U.S. and Caribbean, according to their social media pages.

Karli Aylesworth, Lynette Hooker’s daughter, told Fox News Digital that the Coast Guard has asked her family to submit DNA samples to help with their investigation.

LIKE WHAT YOU’RE READING? FIND MORE ON THE TRUE CRIME HUB

U.S. Coast Guard investigators searching the boat Soulmate docked at Fort Pierce station

U.S. Coast Guard investigators search the boat Soulmate docked at their station in Fort Pierce, Fla., on May 13, 2026. The vessel belongs to Brian Hooker and his missing wife Lynette Hooker and was brought back to the U.S. from the Bahamas by the Coast Guard. (Obtained by Fox News Digital)

The Coast Guard seized the couple’s sailboat, Soulmate, in early May and took it to Fort Pierce, Florida, but it was recently moved to Fort Lauderdale, as authorities couldn’t pull it from the water.

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Brian Hooker was previously detained for five days by Bahamian police after his wife disappeared, but wasn’t charged.

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

Brian Hooker’s Michigan-based attorney asked Americans in an earlier interview to give him the benefit of the doubt in an interview with ABC News.

“I would ask those watching to treat him the way you would want to be treated, to give him the benefit of the doubt, and to consider that not all of us, nor you, considering your own relationships, the way you speak to one another, we all handle things in different ways,” Crystal Marie Hauser said.

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Fox News Digital reached out to the Coast Guard and Hauser for comment.



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US attacks Bandar Abbas again: Why is the port so important for Iran? | US-Israel war on Iran News

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The United States has carried out strikes near Bandar Abbas, the second attack in less than a week on Iran’s strategically important port city, escalating tensions around the Strait of Hormuz despite a fragile ceasefire that has been in place between Washington and Tehran since April 8.

Reuters and The Associated Press, quoting unnamed US officials, reported that US forces shot down four Iranian drones and struck a ground control station for drones on Wednesday in Bandar Abbas.

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The strikes followed explosions in Bandar Abbas on Tuesday. Iran’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs accused Washington of violating the ceasefire through “aggressive acts” in Hormozgan province, where the port city is located.

The semiofficial Iranian news agency Tasnim also reported that Iranian forces had fired on an “American airbase” in the region in response to a US attack near Bandar Abbas.

The escalation came after US President Donald Trump said during a cabinet meeting in Washington, DC, on Wednesday that “nobody’s going to control” the Strait of Hormuz as he spoke about ongoing negotiations between Tehran and Washington.

Bandar Abbas, home to key Iranian naval forces, occupies one of the most strategically sensitive positions in the Gulf. Its location on the Strait of Hormuz has made it central to both Iran’s military position and the wider confrontation with the US. Here is what we know:

Where is Bandar Abbas?

Bandar Abbas lies on Iran’s southern coast, on the northern side of the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow waterway linking the Gulf to the Gulf of Oman and Arabian Sea.

The city, which had a population of more than 526,000 people at the time of Iran’s 2016 census, sits roughly 60km to 70km (35 to 45 miles) north of the strait’s narrowest point.

Its position gives Iran oversight of one of the world’s most important shipping lanes. About one-fifth of global oil and gas supplies transit through the Strait of Hormuz during peacetime.

Since the ceasefire was announced on April 8, Iran has continued to control shipping through the Strait of Hormuz while US forces have imposed a blockade on Iranian ports.

Map

What is the military significance of Bandar Abbas?

Bandar Abbas is the headquarters of both Iran’s conventional navy and the naval arm of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).

The conventional navy has used it as its base since 1977 when Iran moved much of its fleet from Khorramshahr at the western edge of Iran’s Gulf coastline, to Bandar Abbas, transforming the city into the country’s main southern naval command centre.

According to the Middle East Institute, the IRGC navy later relocated its headquarters from Tehran to Bandar Abbas to improve operational control along the Strait of Hormuz.

Although Trump and Israeli officials claimed Iran’s naval capabilities have been heavily damaged in their recent attacks, Tehran still maintains a fleet of fast attack boats operated by the IRGC navy.

The vessels are designed for “swarm” tactics and are being used against commercial ships that do not have authorisation from Iran to sail through the narrow Strait of Hormuz. They were used recently against two Indian ships and two foreign container vessels, the Panama-flagged MSC Francesca and the Liberian-flagged Epaminondas, which Iran said had not been given approval to transit the waterway.

INTERACTIVE - IRGC releases map of control over Strait of Hormuz - May 5, 2026-1777975253
(Al Jazeera)

Why is Bandar Abbas important to Iran’s economy?

The Strait of Hormuz is not just a military chokepoint but also an economic lifeline.

Analysts estimated that more than 90 percent of Iranian crude shipments transit through the strait.

That makes Bandar Abbas and nearby Gulf infrastructure critical to government revenues, including the trade networks that help Iran circumvent sanctions, particularly by exporting oil to China.

Why are the US attacks significant?

Samir Puri, a visiting lecturer in war studies at King’s College London, told Al Jazeera the ceasefire has not yet formally collapsed despite these latest exchanges of fire.

He described those incidents as “limited” compared with strikes carried out before April 8. These attacks can be characterised as “tit-for-tat military-to-military engagements rather than attacks on infrastructure or widespread destruction en masse”, he said.

“What the US military is attempting to do is explore whether it can physically deny the IRGC and Iran the ability to control the Strait of Hormuz,” he said.

“Iran, of course, wants to show it cannot be denied that capability.”

What does this mean for peace negotiations?

Diplomatic and military operations are unfolding simultaneously as Iran and the US have exchanged a volley of proposals and counterproposals for peace since the ceasefire began.

“This is unfolding on parallel tracks. There is a military track and a negotiating track all unfolding at the same time,” Puri said. These limited strikes are, therefore, ultimately being launched as part of the negotiations, he said.

“The negotiators can only present the leverage they have from the field of battle. Is the US going to put itself into a position in which it can say to Iranian negotiators that they do not control the Strait of Hormuz? Because if you try to amass forces around Bandar Abbas and launch attacks from that coastal area, we can strike back.

“But Iran will not want to be pushed into that position and will want to say it retains the ability to strike shipping and US bases hosted by Gulf allies and partners. So that’s the duality that’s unfolding right now.”

Puri said both Washington and Tehran still appeared to have incentives to continue mediation but the two sides are approaching negotiations with very different objectives.

“Trump and the US administration want to impose a victor’s peace on Iran. Iran’s reading of the same script that they’re being handed is very different, and Iran probably wants to stretch out these negotiations for as long as possible without conceding.”

“So again, you end up in a situation that wars elsewhere have seen – negotiations without an endpoint or even the promise of an endpoint but still an incentive for both parties to participate, for now.”



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Democrats in Maine swing district rally behind Graham Platner despite backlash


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Democrats running to replace retiring Rep. Jared Golden in Maine’s Trump-friendly 2nd Congressional District are lining up behind controversial Senate candidate Graham Platner despite mounting backlash from centrists within their own party.

After Gov. Janet Mills, D-Maine, exited the Senate race in late April, the three leading Democratic contenders vying for the open House seat backed Platner, the presumptive Democratic nominee, ahead of the June 9 primary.

Unlike the Democrats seeking to replace him, Golden has not publicly backed Platner and indicated to the Portland Press Herald that he does not plan to get involved in the Senate race.

Maine State Auditor Matt Dunlap and former congressional aide Jordan Wood explicitly endorsed Platner’s campaign. State Sen. Joe Baldacci, a Democrat with establishment support, also signaled support in a statement criticizing former Gov. Paul LePage, R-Maine, who is running unopposed for the GOP Senate nomination.

Graham Platner speaks to a crowd

Maine Senate candidate Graham Platner speaks at a town hall at the Leavitt Theater on Oct. 22, 2025, in Ogunquit, Maine.  (Sophie Park/Getty Images)

DEMOCRATS BREAK WITH SCANDAL-PLAGUED GRAHAM PLATNER, WARN OF ‘CIVIL WAR’ IN PARTY

But the candidates have been largely silent on Platner’s inflammatory social media posts and controversy over his covered-up tattoo resembling a Nazi symbol — issues that have fueled backlash from some elected Democrats.

Fox News Digital reached out to Baldacci, Wood and Dunlap’s campaigns and did not hear back.

Their alignment with Platner could complicate Democrats’ already difficult path to holding the swing seat vacated by Golden, who won re-election in 2024 by fewer than 3,000 votes, despite the district’s Republican tilt.

The nonpartisan Cook Political Report rates the open House race “Likely Republican,” citing the rural district’s red hue and Golden’s decision not to seek re-election.

Dunlap, who is seeking to occupy the contest’s progressive lane, is scheduled to appear with Platner at a get-out-the-vote rally next week. The event is being headlined by left-wing populist Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., who has endorsed both Dunlap and Platner.

“With Graham Platner now the clear choice, I am prepared to rally behind his candidacy,” Dunlap wrote on social media. “He will be a phenomenal United States senator.”

Maine state auditor Matt Dunlap speaking at a campaign event

Maine State Auditor Matt Dunlap has cozied up to Graham Platner as he vies for a battleground House seat vacated by Rep. Jared Golden, who is retiring. (Matt Dunlap for Congress)

BERNIE SANDERS DEFENDS MAINE SENATE CANDIDATE UNDER FIRE FOR REDDIT COMMENTS

“He is the kind of leader Maine has been waiting for, as demonstrated by the strong support he has generated,” he continued.

The National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC), House Republicans’ campaign arm, is seeking to exploit the candidates’ ties to Platner in one of the reddest districts held by a Democrat in the country.

“By continuing to embrace Graham Platner, Matt Dunlap and Joe Baldacci have shown a stunning lack of judgment that Mainers will not overlook,” NRCC spokeswoman Maureen O’Toole told Fox News Digital.

Their support for Platner stands in stark contrast to centrist Democrats, such as Sen. John Fetterman, D-Pa., and Rep. Jake Auchincloss, D-Mass., who have sharply rebuked Platner’s campaign.

Auchincloss, a Jewish Democrat, has argued that Platner’s Nazi-linked tattoo and his remarks defending it are “personally disqualifying.”

Meanwhile, senior Democrats in Washington have largely declined to comment on Platner’s slate of controversies or distance themselves from the Senate hopeful.

Compilation photo of Rep. Jake Auchincloss and Senate candidate Graham Platner

Rep. Jake Auchincloss, D-Mass., called Senate candidate Graham Platner’s Nazi-linked tattoo “personally disqualifying” during an interview with CNN. (Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc. via Getty Images; WGME via AP)

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Melissa DeRosa, former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s chief of staff, told Fox News’ Bret Baier earlier this week that disagreement over Platner’s candidacy among Democrats is indicative of a burgeoning rift within the party.

“The Maine race really demonstrates the civil war that’s happening within the Democratic Party, and there are a lot of Democrats, moderate Democrats like myself, who will not cry tears should we lose Maine,” DeRosa said. “I mean, that would be a pickup to begin with.”



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