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Singapore votes with new PM seeking strong mandate amid tariff turmoil
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Five things to know about the Australian election
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Scheffler fires 63 despite long delay to lead CJ Cup Byron Nelson
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Israel launches new Syria strikes amid Druze tensions
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Finke grabs 400m medley victory over world record-holder Marchand
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Apple eases App Store rules under court pressure
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Polls open in Australian vote swayed by inflation, Trump
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Russell clocks second fastest 100m hurdles in history at Miami meeting
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Germany move against far-right AfD sets off US quarrel
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Billionaire-owned Paris FC win promotion and prepare to take on PSG
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Teenager Antonelli grabs pole for Miami sprint race
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Man City climb to third as De Bruyne sinks Wolves
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Mercedes' Wolff backs Hamilton to come good with Ferrari
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'Devastated' Prince Harry says no UK return but seeks reconciliation
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Elway agent death likely accidental: report
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Turkish Cypriots protest new rule allowing hijab in school
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Germany's AfD dealt blow with right-wing extremist label
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Trump NASA budget prioritizes Moon, Mars missions over research
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Hard-right romps through UK polls slapping aside main parties
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Rangers hire two-time NHL champion Sullivan as coach
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Haaland on bench for Man City as striker returns ahead of schedule
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US designates two Haitian gangs as terror groups
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Lower profits at US oil giants amid fall in crude prices
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NBA icon Popovich stepping down as Spurs coach after 29 seasons
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'Devastated' Prince Harry says no return to UK but seeks royal reconciliation
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Grande scratched from Kentucky Derby
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Carney vows to transform Canada economy to withstand Trump
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Prince Harry says he would 'love' to reconcile with family
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Major offshore quake causes tsunami scare in Chile, Argentina
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GM cuts shift at Canada plant over 'evolving trade environment'
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F1 extends deal to keep Miami GP until 2041
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Popovich mixed toughness and spirit to make NBA history
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US asks judge to break up Google's ad tech business
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Trump eyes huge 'woke' cuts in budget blueprint
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Ruud downs Cerundolo to book spot in Madrid Open final
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Gregg Popovich stepping down as San Antonio Spurs coach after 29 seasons: team
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Guardiola to take break from football when he leaves Man City
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Vine escapes to Tour of Romandie 3rd stage win as Baudin keeps lead
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Olympic 100m medalist Kerley arrested, out of Miami Grand Slam meet
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Chile, Argentina order evacuations over post-quake tsunami threat
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Arteta 'pain' as Arsenal fall short in Premier League title race
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Hard-right romps across UK local elections slapping down main parties
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US ends duty-free shipping loophole for low-cost goods from China
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Renewables sceptic Peter Dutton aims for Australian PM's job
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Australians vote in election swayed by inflation, Trump
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Syria slams Israeli Damascus strike as 'dangerous escalation'
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Grand Theft Auto VI release postponed to May 2026
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Lawyers probe 'dire' conditions for Meta content moderators in Ghana
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Maresca confident Chelsea can close gap to Liverpool
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Watchdog accuses papal contenders of ignoring sex abuse

US Capitol riot probe renews spotlight on Trump rebels
Death threats, accusations of betrayal and censure by their local parties: for the six Republicans running for re-election after voting to impeach Donald Trump, the last 17 months have been a painful lesson in the perils of opposing an unforgiving leader.
Ten out of 211 House Republicans backed the Democrats' ultimately unsuccessful bid to have Trump convicted in a Senate trial last year, believing he should be held accountable for inciting a deadly siege of the US Capitol on January 6, 2021.
Four have since announced they would retire, and the remaining six have become pariahs in their local town halls and roadside diners, upbraided for their "disloyalty" as they campaign for November's midterm elections.
Ostracized by a party still in thrall to the former president, the group are bracing for a high-profile reminder of their break with Trump as televised congressional hearings on the insurrection begin Thursday.
- Resistance leader -
Liz Cheney, the daughter of a former vice president and one-time cornerstone of the House leadership, is now the face of Republican resistance to Trump.
Since calling his role in the insurrection the "greatest betrayal" by a US president in history, her fall from grace inside the party has been spectacular.
She has been censured by Republicans in Washington and Wyoming, faced protests in Cheyenne, Rock Springs, Casper, Big Horn and at other events across her home state.
But Cheney has not backed down, and will be in the national spotlight Thursday as vice-chair of the House committee investigating the US Capitol riot.
She has been a regular target of Trump's broadsides. As recently as May, he called her "America last," "the face of the Washington swamp" and a globalist who loves "endless, nonsensical, bloody wars."
- 'Someone may try to kill us' -
Freshman congressman and military veteran Peter Meijer told MSNBC in the wake of his vote to impeach Trump that he was altering his routine and "working to get body armor, which is a reimbursable purchase."
His office was inundated with death threats after he said Trump "betrayed millions with claims of a stolen election."
"It's sad that we have to get to that point, but our expectation is that someone may try to kill us," Meijer said.
In the weeks following his impeachment vote, two county-level Republican parties in Meijer's district voted to formally censure him, while Ron Weiser, the chairman of Michigan's state party, joked about "assassination" as an option for how to deal with Meijer.
He is expected to win his August primary against a Trump-backed opponent but it is possible a member of his own family won't be voting for him.
Meijer revealed in an interview with The Atlantic in December that his once-supportive sister Haley, a Trump supporter, had turned against him, supporting another early rival in his primary.
- 'Bad blood' -
Tom Rice and Dan Newhouse went to ground after the impeachment, seemingly hoping that if they went silent on the subject, their votes against Trump would be forgotten, if not forgiven.
Both were censured by their state parties but have rebuffed calls to resign and now face Trump-backed primary challengers.
Rice reported getting a menacing voicemail a few weeks after the impeachment from a constituent who invited the congressman to "come over to his house for coffee so that he could beat the living hell out of him," a police report cited by NBC said.
But that has not stopped Trump from making Rice the target of some of his sharpest broadsides, describing the congressman as a "coward who abandoned his constituents," a "disaster" and "a total fool... laughed at in Washington."
Another of the six dissidents, David Valadao, had his own challenger in California's Central Valley in Tuesday's primary election because of his impeachment vote.
But he is alone among the group in not having Trump weigh in on his race and looked likely to advance to the general election, though there are still a lot of votes left to count.
Nevertheless, a feature in his local paper, The Daily Republic, painted an image of Valadao as a pariah in parts of his district, reporting that the "bad blood after Valadao's vote runs deep" in the city of Hanford, where he was born and raised.
- '75 million are watching' -
Jaime Herrera Beutler was thrust into the impeachment drama when she confirmed details of a phone call between House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy and Trump during the insurrection, in which she said the president upbraided McCarthy for not being as "upset" about the election results as the rioters.
The Washington State Republican Party censured her for her impeachment vote and her office was picketed by protesters.
While other Republicans have worried about threats from constituents, Herrera Beutler received a darkly-worded warning from one of her own colleagues, far right Republican congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene.
"First voting to impeach innocent President Trump, then yapping to the press and throwing @GOPLeader (McCarthy) under the bus," Greene tweeted from her now suspended account.
"The Trump loyal 75 million are watching."
P.M.Smith--AMWN