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Joshua gets 'unbelievable lift' training with old rival Usyk - promoter
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Bayern fans apologise after photographers injured at Real game
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Stocks rise as optimism over Mideast war takes hold
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S.African left-wing leader sentenced to jail term on gun charges
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Commodities exports through Strait of Hormuz collapse, except for Iran
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Silva to leave Man City at end of the season
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Russian strikes kill at least 19 across Ukraine
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World Athletics deliver nationality switch hammer blow to Turkey
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S.African left-wing leader Malema jailed for five years on gun charges
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Silva to leave Man City at end of season
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Pope condemns 'endless cycle' of death in 'bloodstained' Cameroon region
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WADA targets India's performance-enhancing drugs production
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Tokyo stocks hit record high as Iran peace hopes grow
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O'Sullivan to face Chinese debutant He Guoqiang in World Championship opener
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England's Botterman and Campbell out of Women's Six Nations
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Leading economists call for windfall profit taxes on energy firms
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Meghan Markle claims to be 'most trolled person' in world
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Liverpool confirm Ekitike out for season, will miss World Cup
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Teachers protest as Turkey buries school shooting victims
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UK PM tells social media bosses to step up child online safety
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Luxury group Kering seeks to make flagging Gucci 'unmissable' again
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Snooker great O'Sullivan to face Chinese debutant Guoqiang in World Championship opener
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Real Madrid season in tatters, Arbeloa looking shaky after Euro exit
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S.African left-wing leader Malema sentenced to five years jail on gun charges
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In Lebanon shelters, women care for tiny babies, face pregnancy
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Pope heads to Cameroon conflict zone with message of peace
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French billionaire Bollore sparks turmoil at top publisher Grasset
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'Disgrace': fans outraged by World Cup transit fare hikes
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Repsol taking back control of Venezuelan oil assets
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PSG fix sights on another Ligue 1 and Champions League double
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Trump says Israel, Lebanon leaders to hold talks Thursday
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TotalEnergies says was able to maintain production despite war
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Russian strikes kill at least 16 across Ukraine
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Turkey launches internet crackdown ahead of funerals for shooting victims
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UK supermarket Tesco says Mideast war hits profit outlook
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EasyJet says first-half loss to deepen on Mideast war
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Kering seeks to 'reignite desirability' with Gucci reset
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Thai farmers pin hopes on microbes to end annual burning crisis
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Australian court overturns protest limits after Bondi Beach attack
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Tokyo record leads stocks higher as Iran peace hopes grow
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Turkey to hold funerals for school shooting victims
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AI demand drives chipmaker TSMC's net profit to fresh record
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Turkey to hold funerals for victims of school shooting
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'Transnational repression' worsened last year: report
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Curacao, tiny island with big dreams of World Cup glory
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Chatbots at the ballot box: AI skirts Brazil election rules
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Warriors rally to eliminate Clippers, 76ers reach NBA playoffs
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Fresh Russian barrage kills 14 in Ukraine
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Threat of grounded planes nears as jet fuel supplies dwindle
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Gasperini's Roma future in doubt as infighting mars Champions League bid
At collapsed bridge, Biden envisions rebuilding America
A bridge collapse Friday in Pittsburgh provided a symbolic backdrop for President Joe Biden's trip to the city to tout his $1 trillion infrastructure plan -- and try rebuilding his own crumbling approval ratings.
Arriving in the gritty city in Pennsylvania -- a key battleground state in presidential elections -- Biden motorcaded straight from Air Force One to the road bridge, which hours earlier had buckled into a snowy ravine.
"There are literally more bridges in Pittsburgh than in any other city in the world," the Democrat pronounced. "And we're going to fix them all. Not a joke -- this is going to be a gigantic change. There's 43,000 nationwide and we're sending the money."
Pittsburgh's public safety authorities tweeted that three people were hospitalized with injuries that were not life threatening. But Biden's visit threw the otherwise minor accident into the national spotlight.
In a speech later, Biden said rebuilding infrastructure, while completing a painful shift from old-school, heavy industry to high-tech jobs, would restore American economic leadership in an increasingly competitive world.
"Right here in Pittsburgh, the future is being built on the foundation of the city’s storied past," he said at a once massive steel mill, which now houses Carnegie Mellon University's Manufacturing Futures Institute -- a hub for research and development.
Flanked by "Building A Better America" signs, Biden said Pittsburgh had lost 100,000 steel jobs between 1970 and 1990 and that he knew "the painful ripple effect it had -- jobs lost, families ripped apart."
His push for investment in semiconductors, electric vehicle technology and other forward-looking products would restore that manufacturing base, he said.
"To build a truly strong economy we need a future that's made in America. That means using products, parts, materials built right here in the United States of America. It means bringing manufacturing back, jobs back, building a supply chain here at home -- not outsourcing abroad," he said.
- Biden's blue collar target -
Entering the second year of his administration, Biden says he hopes trips like this will help relaunch momentum ahead of November midterm elections, where Republicans are currently well poised to win control of Congress.
His speech went through many of the themes that got him elected in 2020, appealing to the blue collar voters whom former president Donald Trump and the Republicans have worked hard to lure from their historic Democratic loyalties.
In a tough first year in office, the infrastructure bill, passed with rare cross-party Republican support, was one of Biden's biggest successes. For years, presidents had failed to get Congress to revamp the sector, while Trump's repeated promises of "infrastructure week" became a running Washington joke.
But Biden has faced heavy setbacks on other priorities, most recently his attempt to get new voting rights guarantees through Congress. He is also embroiled in the standoff with Russia over Ukraine.
Despite signs of a roaring economic comeback from the Covid-19 shutdown, the recovery is proving uneven and inflation is eating into wage increases.
Biden's approval ratings have slipped to around 40 percent, making him as unpopular as Trump.
Reflecting Biden's currently dimmed political star, one important Democrat from Pennsylvania, state Attorney General Josh Shapiro, pointedly kept away from the presidential visit, citing a scheduling conflict.
However, another high profile state official, Lieutenant Governor John Fetterman, did meet with Biden at the bridge site, apparently having resolved his own previously reported scheduling conflict.
For Pittsburgh Mayor Ed Gainey, the Biden visit was certainly welcome -- a chance to home in on the kinds of problems plaguing post-industrial cities across the country, where bridges, highways, water pipes and other basic infrastructure typically have not seen upgrades for decades.
"This is critical that we get this funding and we're glad to have the president coming today," he told CNN.
L.Durand--AMWN