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Cleveland cruise to record 16th straight win, Boston clinch
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Sabalenka routs Keys, books Indian Wells title clash with teen Andreeva
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Cuba suffers fourth nationwide blackout in five months
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Piastri tops final Melbourne practice ahead of Russell
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Sabalenka crushes Keys to reach Indian Wells final
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Residents flee new wave of violence in Haiti capital
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Starmer to host coalition call as he says Putin 'not serious about peace'
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New nationwide blackout hits Cuba, officials say
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Advantage France in three-way fight for Six Nations crown
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Bangladeshi women alarmed by emboldened Islamists
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Unification Church faces dissolution in Japan
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Teen Andreeva topples defending champ Swiatek to reach Indian Wells final
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Slot eyes first Liverpool trophy against Newcastle in League Cup final
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Formula One boss to visit Thailand for talks on Bangkok race
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Former Meta employee barred from promoting explosive memoir
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Thomas ties course record with 62 as Lee, Bhatia lead Players
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England boss Tuchel wants to 'earn right' to sing national anthem
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Guardiola hits back at Capello over 'arrogant' jibe
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Van Dijk won't 'panic' over Liverpool future
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Alcaraz expects tough test from Draper in Indian Wells semi-finals
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Injured Neymar out of Brazil World Cup qualifiers
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Former Australia rugby captain Elsom handed two-year jail sentence
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Trump blasts foes and media in speech at 'Department of Injustice'
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Meta strives to stifle ex-employee memoir
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US Congress clears key hurdle in bid to avert govt shutdown
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Captain of ship in North Sea crash charged with manslaughter
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Sean 'Diddy' Combs pleads not guilty to new indictment
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Putin, Maduro vow to boost ties in wake of Trump sanctions
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Sherratt says Wales need 'fresh' coach as Six Nations stint ends against England
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New Canada PM Carney says Canada will never be part of US
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Putin calls on Ukraine troops in Russian region to 'surrender'
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Itoje urges England to 'take game to Wales' in Six Nations finale
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Ebola-infected monkeys cured with a pill, raising hopes for humans: study
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Mexicans seek answers after bones, shoes found at cartel camp
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Triumphant Pedersen finds cold comfort on shivering 'Race to the Sun'
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Greenland party leaders call Trump's behaviour 'unacceptable'
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United G7 warns Russia to back Ukraine truce
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Inothewayurthinkin beats Galopin Des Champs to win Cheltenham Gold Cup
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Sebastian Coe criticises IOC election process
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Israel PM, security agency fight it out in public
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Courtois returns from Belgium exile for Nations League duty
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Dupont absence 'changes nothing' for Alldritt before France's Six Nations decider
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Russia 'committed crimes against humanity' in Ukraine: UN probe
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Trump hails 'productive' truce talks with Russia, urges Putin to spare Ukrainians
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Hundreds of Olympians call on IOC candidates to make climate top priority
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Florence cathedral closed as Italy's Tuscany on flood alert
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Mark Carney sworn in as Canada PM

US govt shutdown in balance after top Democrat avoids fight
The US Senate appeared closer Friday to avoiding an economically damaging government funding shutdown after the Democrats' leader shied away from a major confrontation with President Donald Trump.
Democrats are smarting over Trump's radical spending cuts which have shredded entire sections of government and seen Congress largely bypassed in what critics say is an unconstitutional exercise of power by the White House.
Many in the party argue that refusing to back the Republican bill funding the US government for another six months would be a chance for Democrats to demonstrate opposition to the Trump project. Republicans have a slim majority with 53 of the 100 senators, but need some Democratic support to reach the necessary 60 votes for getting their bill through.
Ahead of the Friday midnight deadline, top Senate Democrat Chuck Schumer -- who has long insisted that it is bad politics to shut down the government -- said he would support the bill.
A Democratic blockade of the bill and the ensuing chaos of the entire US government temporarily being out of funds would be "a gift" to Trump, he said.
Many senior Democrats were furious at Schumer but early Friday, Trump signaled his pleasure at the climbdown.
"Congratulations to Chuck Schumer for doing the right thing — Took "guts" and courage!" Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform.
Schumer has been joined by Pennsylvania's Democratic Senator John Fetterman. However, Schumer has not explicitly told his troops which way to vote, leaving it unclear whether enough Democrats will join Republicans.
- Defying Elon Musk? -
There have been four shutdowns where operations were affected for more than one business day, with the last occurring during Trump's first term.
During the disruption, up to 900,000 federal employees can be furloughed, while another million deemed essential workers -- from air traffic controllers to police -- work without pay.
Back salaries are paid once Congress agrees to a funding bill.
Meanwhile, Americans have to contend with a paralyzed government. Social Security and other benefits are protected, but there are typically delays in a variety of services while parks shut and food-safety inspections are halted.
The latest tussle is focused on the far-reaching program run by the so-called Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), led by Trump's advisor and top donor, billionaire Elon Musk.
DOGE aims to cut federal spending by $1 trillion this year and claims to have made savings so far of more than $100 billion, although verified cost savings amount to less than a tenth of that figure.
Grassroots Democrats, infuriated by what they see as the SpaceX and Tesla CEO's lawless rampage through the federal bureaucracy, want their leaders to fight hard to defy DOGE and Trump.
But several top party figures have warned that a shutdown could play into Musk's hands, distracting from DOGE's most unpopular actions and making it easier for him to announce more layoffs.
Republicans voiced confidence that the needed Democratic support would be available, with several opposition senators facing challenging reelection fights in the 2026 midterms and wary of being blamed for chaos in Congress.
One of the most vulnerable Democratic senators, Georgia's Jon Ossof, said however that he was a firm no.
He berated the Republican authors of the bill for failing to "impose any constraints on the reckless and out-of-control Trump administration."
John Thune, the Republican leader of the Senate, said Friday he had not spoken with his Democrat counterpart Schumer yet, telling Punchbowl News: "Passing this and getting this behind us is the best thing that can happen right now for everybody."
O.Gaspar--PC