Connect with us
DAPA Banner

NewsBeat

Documents required by GOP’s voting bill can be difficult and costly to get

Published

on

Documents required by GOP's voting bill can be difficult and costly to get

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Joshua Bogdan was born and raised in the United States. The only time the New Hampshire resident has left the country was for a day and a half in seventh grade, when he went to Canada to see Niagara Falls.

Even so, that did not mean proving his U.S. citizenship in last fall’s local elections was easy.

The 31-year-old arrived at his voting place in Portsmouth and handed the poll worker his driver’s license, just as he had done in other towns when arriving to vote. She said that would no longer do.

The poll worker said that under the state’s new proof-of-citizenship law, which took effect for the first time during town elections in 2025, Bogdan would need a passport or his birth certificate because he had moved and needed to reregister at his new address. A scramble ensued, turning the voting process that he had always found fun and invigorating into a nerve-wracking game of beat the clock.

Advertisement

“I didn’t know that anything had officially changed walking in there,” he said. “And then being told that I had to provide a passport that I’ve never had or a birth certificate that’s usually tucked away somewhere safe just to cast my vote — which I’ve done before — it was frustrating.”

A national push, despite noncitizen voting being rare

Bogdan’s experience in New Hampshire is a glimpse into the future for potentially millions of voters across the country. That is if Republican voting legislation being pushed aggressively by President Donald Trump passes Congress and a “show your papers” law is put in place in time for the November elections.

The Safeguard American Voter Eligibility, or SAVE America Act, cleared the U.S. House last month on a mostly party-line basis. Republicans say it would improve election integrity. Trump has called its safeguards common sense. The bill is scheduled to come up in the U.S. Senate next week for voting and debate.

Republican messaging has mostly highlighted a less divisive provision in the bill that would require voters to show a photo ID, but the mandate for people to provide documentary proof of citizenship to register to vote in federal elections is likely to have the most wide-ranging consequences. Noncitizens already are prohibited from voting in federal elections, and it is not allowed by any state. Cases where it occurs are rare.

Advertisement

Obtaining the necessary documents under the SAVE Act is not as easy as it might sound. A similar effort was tried in Kansas a decade ago and turned into a debacle that eventually was blocked by the courts after more than 30,000 eligible citizens were prevented from registering.

A long list of documents to use, but with caveats

Rebekah Caruthers, president and CEO at the Fair Elections Center, said the legislation’s strict documentation requirements could move the U.S. “in the opposite direction” of representative democracy.

“If this bill passes, it would deny millions of eligible Americans their fundamental freedom to vote,” she said in an email. “This includes millions of people who make up your communities, including married women, people of color and voters who live in rural areas.”

The list of qualifying documents in the SAVE Act for proving citizenship appears long, but many of them come with qualifiers.

Advertisement

Under the bill, a REAL ID -compliant driver’s license would have to indicate that “the applicant is a citizen,” but not all do. Only five states — Michigan, Minnesota, New York, Vermont and Washington — offer the type of enhanced REAL IDs that explicitly indicate U.S. citizenship.

Standard driver’s licenses, generally available to both citizens and noncitizens, often do not include a citizenship indicator. Some states, including Ohio, have recently added them.

The stipulations continue, buried in the fine print.

While military ID cards are listed as qualifying documents under the act, they will not suffice on their own. The bill says a military ID must be accompanied by a military “record of service” that indicates the person’s birthplace was in the U.S.

Advertisement

A DD214, the current standard-issue certificate of release or discharge for all military service branches, does not currently fulfill that requirement. According to the Pentagon, that document only lists where someone lived at points of entry and discharge and a person’s current home of record. It does not list where someone was born.

Obtaining a passport requires time and money

For most provisions, the SAVE Act contains no phase-in period that would give voters and local election offices time to adjust. If passed by Congress and signed by Trump, its documentary proof-of-citizenship mandate would apply immediately, meaning it would be in place for this year’s midterm elections.

That could lead to a rush to obtain documents by those who want to register or need to reregister. A 2025 University of Maryland study estimates that 21.3 million Americans who are eligible to vote do not have or have easy access to documents to prove their citizenship, including nearly 10% of Democrats, 7% of Republicans and 14% of people unaffiliated with either major party.

A passport would most effectively meet the requirement, but only about half of American adults have one, according to the State Department, and the SAVE Act requires the passport to be current. An expired one does not count.

Advertisement

Obtaining a passport in time for a looming voter registration deadline is another potential hurdle.

Workers who process passports had layoffs at the State Department reversed, but just last month the department forbid passport processing at certain public libraries that had long helped relieve pressure at the department. Government libraries, post offices, county clerks and others still provide the service.

It takes four weeks to six weeks to get a passport, according to the department’s website, excluding mailing time. A new passport costs $165 for adults while renewals cost $130, and the photo costs $10 or $20 more. The turnaround time can be sped up to two weeks or three weeks for an additional $60 — and for even faster processing, add $22 more. The fully expedited process for a new passport would cost at least $257.

Birth and marriage certificates

A birth certificate may be a quicker and cheaper choice for most people, but there are twists.

Advertisement

The SAVE Act requires a certified birth certificate issued by a state, local government or tribal government. What does not appear to qualify is the certificate signed by the doctor that many new parents are given in the hospital when their child is born. It provides information similar to a certified birth certificate, but would not meet the letter of the federal legislation.

Like passports, birth certificates can sometimes take weeks to obtain. Those who live near their birthplaces can visit the local vital statistics office, but staffing shortages and escalating demand for REAL IDs have caused significant backlogs in some states. In New York, the waiting period for certified copies is four months, the state said. Average processing times for online certificate requests vary widely by state, from as few as three days to 12 weeks or longer.

People whose birth certificates don’t match their current IDs — mostly women who changed their names when they married — would likely need additional documentation to register to vote under the bill. A 2023 Pew Research Center survey found about 80% of women in opposite-sex marriages in the U.S. take their husband’s last name.

A major change to the voting process, but with no extra money

Notably, the SAVE Act does not provide any money to help states and local governments implement the changes or promote them to voters.

Advertisement

For Bogdan, that was part of the problem when New Hampshire’s proof-of-citizenship law took effect. People who have voted elsewhere in the state are not required to show proof of citizenship in their new towns if poll workers confirm their registration history, but Bogdan said workers at his polling place did not seem to know that or try to look up the information.

He eventually was able to cast his ballot because, by luck, he had recently retrieved his birth certificate from his parents’ house more than an hour away so he could apply for a REAL ID. But he said government notices to voters would help prevent possible disenfranchisement.

“Young voters like myself don’t always carry around our birth certificate, Social Security card, all that important stuff, because it’s not used ever or very often,” he said. “And so all those young kids who are going to go out and try and vote will be held back from that.”

Advertisement

Source link

Continue Reading
Click to comment

You must be logged in to post a comment Login

Leave a Reply

NewsBeat

London’s 10 best old school Italian restaurants

Published

on

London's 10 best old school Italian restaurants

Italian food in London goes back a long way. For more than a century the capital has been home to delis and osterias, trattorias and ristorantes. It’s hard to spend a better £10 than in Terroni in Clerkenwell, Italia Uno in Fitzrovia or Bar Italia in Soho. All will bring you a mighty sandwich — ciabatta usually — fine espresso or a jovial spritz. Why anyone ever goes to Pret outside a train station is one of life’s great mysteries. Just head to Bar Bruno for a whopping great chicken Milanese.

Those who require a proper lunch or dinner, these are 10 of London’s greatest old school Italian restaurants. Sadly, we’ve had to remove the wonderful Da Maria in Notting Hill as founders Pasquale and Maria Ruocco decided to retire in February 2026 after more than 40 years.

Il Giardino

Il Giardino

There is a cafe and deli on the island of Ischia, off the coast of Napoli, which I think might be the inspiration behind Il Giardino, one of Peckham’s most joyful restaurants. Like Ischia’s Serpico Specialit, Il Giardino is beautiful: outside, it’s a soft mustard yellow, with green shutters and a green and white awning that hangs stiffly over a few alfresco tables. Inside, find a riot of old pine — the soft, curved kind that smells a bit like the back room of a church — paper napkins and dim lighting. There’s exposed brick, stumpy thick wine glasses waiting for inoffensive house wine, and a dainty bar. Nothing much has changed since 1987, including the food. Don’t deviate from one of the pasta dishes, most of which are softened by a fair amount of cream. There’s spaghetti with garlic, chilli and mussels; penne with smoked bacon and a snappy tomato sauce; or, my favourite — a perfect representation of Italian-British cooking in London — the tagliatelle with chicken, ham, peas, and a little chilli. One more thing: Il Giardino remains wonderfully cheap. Everything is under £20, trout and roast lamb included.

Ciao Bella is interesting because it has in recent years transcended being a local, neighbourhood restaurant and become a relatively famous London one. It’s a destination, a place for which people travel across town. Why? Here since 1983 and under the stewardship of Felice Pollano since 1999, it’s probably the best of old-school Italian kitsch: pictures of film stars on the walls, flimsy blue tablecloths, smart waiters and that sugary sort of affordable glamour. But it might also be the location in haughty Bloomsbury — to that end it’s a little glitzier than most. Obviously, the place isn’t really about the food, though something should be said about the portion sizes, ever-commendable. Stick to the Italian-British classics like tagliatelle with salmon, spaghetti and meatballs and grilled sea bass, and prepare to be unadventurous with wine — a bottle of Gavi for £36 is okay. Ciao Bella is a little more expensive these days — popularity partly the cause, most likely — but it’s still a magical restaurant, a London institution all should experience at least once.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

NewsBeat

Catch some great films as Adventure Cinema returns to Chatelherault

Published

on

Daily Record

The open-air cinema experience will take place in July.

Adventure Cinema is heading back to Chatelherault Country Park this summer.

Advertisement

The open-air cinema experience will take place from Friday to Sunday, July 10 to 12, with a giant screen set against the backdrop of the park’s iconic hunting lodge and surrounding woodland.

The weekend programme begins on Friday evening with Dirty Dancing at 6pm. On Saturday, families can enjoy an Encanto sing-a-long at 12pm, followed by the popular Mamma Mia ExtraABBAganza at 5pm.

Sunday’s screenings include Bing and his Friends at the Cinema at 12pm, Andrea Bocelli 30: The Celebration at 2pm, and the classic adventure film Jurassic Park at 6.30pm.

Whether guests are packing a picnic with friends, planning the ultimate family night out, or heading to an open-air disco beneath the stars, Adventure Cinema’s destinations offer a full evening experience, with a variety of on-site food and drink options available.

Advertisement

Tickets for Adventure Cinema start from £9.80 and are available at www.adventurecinema.co.uk

*Don’t miss the latest headlines from around Lanarkshire. Sign up to our newsletters here.

And did you know Lanarkshire Live had its own app? Download yours for free here.

READ MORE: Funding launches for Lanarkshire’s biggest climate festival

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

NewsBeat

ITV is closing down channel CITV for good after 42 years

Published

on

ITV is closing down channel CITV for good after 42 years

Children’s channel CITV is being turned off for good, having launched in 1980.

The channel was home to hit shows like Art Attack, My Parents Are Aliens, Tots TV, and Fraggle Rock.

However, it has now been reported that CITV will be closed for good on April 10.

Advertisement

ITV is closing down CITV

CITV first began as Watch IT, then was rebranded as Children’s ITV and later shortened to CITV.

In 2006, its late-afternoon slot on ITV1 was axed as it got its own channel on Freeview but was still available on weekend mornings on ITV channels.

The CITV Freeview was later shut down and replaced by the streaming service ITVX Kids Hub on ITVX in 2023, with the weekend showings moving to ITV2.

It has now been claimed by a media account that the ITV2 showings will now be ending, marking the end to CITV after 42 years on air.

Advertisement

Reporting the claims, X account, Media Central UK, wrote: “In TV news, the CITV block on ITV2 is officially ending on 10th April. This really means the end of the iconic CITV brand that has been around for 42 years.

“Farewell CITV, this time for real.

“CBBC will have some of CITV’s programming, while the rest will be under ITVX Kids.”

Those who grew up with CITV have begun reminiscing on the TV channel and the shows it brought to audiences.

As one X user said, “Grizzly Tales for gruesome kids was awesome on CITV when I was a kid.”

Another former CITV watcher wrote: “End of an era …. I remember watching the Pokémon movies on this channel.”

Advertisement

Recommeded Reading


A third person said, “I feel bad for CITV’s closure as shows such as Horrid Henry, Rosie and Jim, Art Attack and Sooty (of course) put a smile on my face in my childhood and I had said goodbye to its TV channel too.”

ITV has been contacted for a comment.

What was your favourite show on CITV? Let us know in the comments below.

Advertisement

Source link

Continue Reading

NewsBeat

HOPING Street Kitchen and Hickory’s help homeless at Easter

Published

on

HOPING Street Kitchen and Hickory's help homeless at Easter

Customers and staff at Hickory’s Smokehouse, in Shipton Road, donated Easter eggs to be distributed by HOPING Street Kitchen in King’s Manor Garden on Easter Sunday (April 5).

Easter character Hetty Hen even joined staff at the street kitchen, which services hot meals to around 120 people in need each week, to spread festive cheer.

The Hickory’s team with the donated Easter eggs for homeless people in York (Image: Supplied)

Hayden Broadbent, Hickory’s community manager, brought a car full of the donated Easter eggs and said: “Everyone’s on board with the need to help those struggling and Easter is a special time for spreading hope and having a bit of fun together. We wish everyone a very happy Easter!”

Hetty Hen said the street kitchen’s Easter menu, as well as the donated Easter eggs, “hit the spot”.

Advertisement

Read next:


Helen Meadows, HOPING’s chair of trustees, said the team was “thrilled” to have Hayden at the Easter Sunday service. “Hayden and the Hickory’s Smokehouse team are such cheerful positive people who always do their best for us. They keep our team hopeful too.  We really can’t thank them enough.”

Helen thanked the “kind folk” for their donated chocolate eggs which she said ensured “everyone in our community got to celebrate Easter properly”. 

She added that “world events are tightening belts further”, meaning the street kitchen is “bracing ourselves for a further spike in homelessness with cost-of-living rises”.

Advertisement

To support HOPING Street Kitchen, visit its JustGiving Page titled: “HOPING York Street Kitchen.”

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

NewsBeat

Lisa McHugh says ‘you need a thick skin’ to survive in male-dominated country music

Published

on

Belfast Live

Lisa McHugh says it taught her the importance of self belief as she prepares to return to music

Country star Lisa McHugh has spent years building a loyal fan base across Ireland and the UK, but she admits the live music scene has changed dramatically in recent years.

Advertisement

The singer says performing live has become much tougher for artists, with rising costs and fewer venues putting pressure on the industry.

“I definitely think the live scene in general is a lot tougher these days – ticket sales are harder and the competition is really stiff,” she told RSVP Country.

READ MORE: Country star Cliona Hagan on missing family events and the item she always brings on tourREAD MORE: Lisa McHugh says losing the use of her legs changed her life forever – and she feels grateful

“A lot of venues have closed, which means more artists are fighting for the same dates and spaces. Then you also have the challenge of trying to get people to come to your show when someone similar could have been in that same venue the week before – it’s tough.”

Advertisement

Lisa said that while she has focused mainly on concert venues in recent years, even those have become increasingly challenging for artists trying to fill seats.

“A lot of that comes down to the economy. Money is tight for everyone, the cost of living is high and people just don’t have the extra funds they might have had a few years ago,” she said.

“That’s completely understandable – we’re all in the same boat. Hopefully that will turn around soon so people can get back out and enjoy live music, because there’s really no better therapy than dancing and singing along to your favourite artist and forgetting your worries for a few hours. It can lift your mood for weeks.”

Despite the challenges facing the industry, Lisa says it has only strengthened her determination to evolve creatively.

Advertisement

The singer is no stranger to adversity. Last summer she was was hospitalised after temporarily losing the use of both legs and experiencing excruciating pain in her face and head.

Following extensive tests, she was eventually diagnosed with Functional Neurological Disorder (FND), a condition that affects how the brain and nervous system send and receive signals.

“It basically means there’s a nervous system problem and your brain isn’t sending the signals properly to your limbs or body. They call it a software problem in your brain, not a hardware problem,” Lisa explained.

Advertisement

The diagnosis saw her go from touring and raising two young children – Milo, now four, and Hallie, 18 months – to being unable to carry them and relearning how to walk using a frame.

However, her recent health issues have made Lisa more determined than ever to seize every opportunity and she is excited to explore what other avenues might lie ahead.

“I’ve always had it on my radar,” she said of exploring opportunities beyond music.

“I first tried TV presenting ten years ago and loved it. TV and radio is something I have a passion for alongside music. I don’t want to be pigeonholed.”

Advertisement

“I love to challenge myself creatively in the media industry and if the opportunities come along I’m going to grab them with both hands,” she added.

Lisa also reflected on the early days of her career, when the Irish country music scene was overwhelmingly male-dominated.

“When I was doing 140 or 150 gigs a year, I was the only female on the road full-time doing that at the time – the rest were all men,” she recalled.

“I was competing against them for the good venues and the best dates. That was tough.”

Advertisement

She said it took years of persistence to gain the respect of promoters and prove she could draw the same crowds as her male counterparts.

“It took a long time for people to believe that I could sell just as many circuits, if not more, than the male artists they might have chosen otherwise. That takes time, effort and hard work.

“You need a thick skin – you hear ‘no’ more than ‘yes’, and you just have to shake it off, keep hustling and keep working hard.”

Lisa believes the experience taught her resilience, and having had to ‘hustle’ to succeed in the industry before she’s prepared to do it again.

“It’s the same in any job – you can’t just walk in and expect the top seat at the table,” she said. “You have to put in the work, earn respect and trust, and then move up.”

She said that ability to believe in yourself has been crucial to her success in the industry and is something she will rely on again as she prepares to return to music this year.

“You don’t get far in life if you don’t believe in yourself – it all starts there,” she said. “If you don’t believe you can achieve your goals or sell those tickets, no one else will. You have to be confident in everything you do.”

Advertisement

Taking time away from performing can naturally bring some doubts, she admitted, but she remains realistic about what it takes to rebuild momentum.

“Of course, taking time off brings natural concerns – you think, ‘If I’m away for a while, people will forget me.’ They won’t necessarily forget, but you won’t be at the forefront of their minds either,” she said.

“I need to be realistic when I come back. It’s going to take a little time for people to fully realise I’m back, see if I’m doing something new and give them the opportunity to buy into it again.

“But it all starts with you. If you don’t believe in your abilities and what you’re capable of, you can’t expect anyone else to.”

Advertisement

To read Lisa’s interview in full and see all the stunning pictures, pick up the Spring edition of RSVP Country on shelves now.

Want to see more of the stories you love from Belfast Live? Making us your preferred source on Google means you’ll get more of our exclusives, top stories and must-read content straight away. To add Belfast Live as a preferred source, simply click here.

Advertisement

Source link

Continue Reading

NewsBeat

Ronan Keating sobs ‘I’m sorry’ as he shares regret over brother’s death

Published

on

Belfast Live

The One Show star Ronan Keating has opened up about his grief following the death of his brother

Ronan Keating emotional as he talks about loss of brother

The One Show host Ronan Keating struggled to hold back tears in a preview clip from his upcoming BBC programme, Ronan Keating’s Wild Atlantic.

Advertisement

Alongside his nephew Ruairí Keating, Ronan revealed his one regret after the passing of Ruairí’s father and Ronan’s brother, Ciarán Keating.

Ciarán lost his life in a car crash in 2023 while on his way to watch his son play football, with his wife Annemarie sustaining severe injuries in the incident.

“I never get to say it but…I was the baby,” Ronan said through tears. “He was my older brother, my eldest brother, and he’s my hero.

“I always looked up to him, you know. I joined the band, and I had to kind of grow up very quickly, and I missed stuff between us, and because of that, I lost a lot,” reports the Mirror.

Advertisement

READ MORE: Britain’s Got Talent viewers blast ‘baffling’ snub as singer ‘robbed’READ MORE: Ronan Keating breaks down in tears discussing brother’s tragic death ‘he’s my hero’

He continued, “I lost a lot and made a lot of sacrifices.”

Advertisement

“It is very hard,” Ronan wept, reaching across to console his nephew. “I am sorry, I am sorry, I don’t want to get upset.”

In a separate clip, Ronan spoke about Ruairi’s bond with his father. He remarked, “Oh, man, it’s hard enough for us as siblings. I can’t imagine where you are.

“You know, I’ve kind of parked my emotions for the last two years. I haven’t been able to really deal with it. I haven’t been able to deal with the loss, you know.

“He made the decision to make a life for his family. He left Dublin, and he went to the west. And I think this journey that I’m on, you know, coming here and doing this, is me trying to understand more about Ciarán’s choice, so that I can somehow grieve and let go, because I found it very hard.”

Advertisement

Ruairí continued, “It’s the same for me playing football too. I always look up and still think I can see him there.

“It’s always the hardest part as well, after games, I used to check my phone. The first thing I’d see is my dad’s name, looking at my phone and not seeing that anymore. It’s really hard.”

He then said, “I know he can see me, and I know he’s watching.”

Advertisement

Ronan told his nephew, “He was so proud of you, and he will still be so proud of you in everything that you do, all of you kids, you were his world, you know, pride and joy.”

Ronan Keating’s Wild Atlantic airs on BBC Two at 6.30pm on Monday.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

NewsBeat

Boxing: Delicious Orie says depression fear drove his retirement

Published

on

Davit Chaloyan ducks under a punch from Delicious Orie

“I fear that I would have ended up being a world champion but a very depressed, sad and miserable world champion.”

Delicious Orie had the world at his feet when he made his professional debut a year ago.

After the Paris Olympics there was a bidding war for him despite the heavyweight failing to win a medal.

Frank Warren’s Queensberry eventually saw off Eddie Hearn’s Matchroom as well as interest from the WWE to sign him.

Advertisement

He was the next big thing in heavyweight boxing. And then a month later, Orie announced his shock decision to walk away from boxing altogether.

“I wanted to pull out before the boxing exposed me,” he tells BBC Sport.

“I turned pro for the money, I needed the money, only to realise that money gives you a little bit of happiness, it really does, but it gives you zero fulfilment. Nothing. You feel nothing.”

Orie was a standout fighter in the amateur ranks despite only taking up the sport aged 18. Originally from Russia, he moved to the UK as a child with his family.

Advertisement

He set high standards for himself, even as a seven-year-old realising the opportunities available to him in the UK.

Orie worked for years to become part of Team GB and secure a regular income from boxing. His goal, over a near-decade journey, was to be Olympic champion. When that did not happen, Orie felt a shift inside him, even if it was subtle.

“There was no plan B, there was no other thing, it was just tunnel vision to win that medal,” he says.

“So the fact that I didn’t magnified the feeling even more when my hand wasn’t raised.

Advertisement

“I gave everything to the sport, I missed everything – happiness, birthdays, weddings, funerals, everything,” he adds.

“Knowing that I could never achieve that again when I didn’t have my hand raised, that was very sobering.”

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

NewsBeat

Gary Lineker makes Arsenal title claim and accuses Mikel Arteta of ‘panicking’ | Football

Published

on

Gary Lineker makes Arsenal title claim and accuses Mikel Arteta of 'panicking' | Football
Ex-England striker Gary Lineker (Picture: YouTube)

Gary Lineker believes Mikel Arteta has shown signs of ‘panicking’ in recent weeks but still expects Arsenal to win the Premier League.

Arsenal lost the Carabao Cup final to Manchester City before the international break and suffered a shock FA Cup defeat to Championship side Southampton on Saturday.

Those back-to-back defeats mean an Arsenal team who were chasing a historic quadruple just two weeks ago have fallen short in two competitions.

Arsenal are still on the verge of a memorable season, however, as they attempt to win their first league title in 22 years and lift the Champions League for the first time ever.

Advertisement

Their nine-point lead over second-placed Man City is ‘huge’, according to Lineker, who remains confident Arsenal will clinch a long-awaited Premier League title.

But the England legend admits Arsenal are going through a ‘little wobble’ and has also accused Arteta of ‘panicking’ since the Carabao Cup final defeat.

‘It’s been a tough two weeks for Arsenal,’ Lineker said on The Rest is Football podcast. ‘People are asking if they’re panicking or if it’s a crisis, it’s definitely a little wobble.

Get your football fix

Metro‘s weekly newsletter In The Mixer delivers punchy analysis and breakdowns of the biggest football stories directly to your inbox.

Advertisement

Sign up here, it’s an open goal.

Southampton v Arsenal - Emirates FA Cup Quarter Final
Arsenal are going through a difficult spell (Picture: Getty)

‘Obviously Gabriel went off with ice on his knee so that’s a concern because he will be a big miss if he’s out. The next game or two are hugely important for Arsenal, they need to steady the ship, there’s no doubt about it.

‘They’ve got a huge lead in the title race but it’s squeaky bum time. I think they will be fine, I think they will win the league, which will still be the main thing for them.

Advertisement

‘The Champions League would obviously be an enormous bonus because it’s a competition they’ve never won.

Southampton v Arsenal - Emirates FA Cup Quarter Final
Southampton stunned the Premier League leaders (Picture: Getty)

‘I’m pretty confident they will win the league. It’s not a bad situation to be in, nine points clear at the top of the Premier League and in the quarter-finals of the Champions League.’

Lineker added: ‘Southampton played exceptionally well and Arsenal were off it.

‘I do want to throw something out there and it’s easy in hindsight but I thought there was a slight signal of panic when they withdrew so many players or the players themselves withdrew from international duty.

‘I just wonder if it showed a bit of panic when you need a bit of calm and confidence.

Advertisement

‘It’s easier to say that now but I just wonder if it showed us something because you wouldn’t ordinarily do that.’

Fellow ex-England striker Alan Shearer is less optimistic about Arsenal’s title aspirations following their FA Cup defeat to Southampton.

‘This is not a fluke,’ Alan Shearer on BBC One as Southampton celebrated a brilliant victory in the FA Cup. ‘Victory went to the better side on the night.’

Speaking to Betfair, Shearer added: ‘After Arsenal got knocked out of the FA Cup, it will be incredibly tough for them, mentally, to go on and achieve what they want to achieve.’

Advertisement

Arsenal face Sporting in the quarter-finals of the Champions League on Tuesday night before returning to Premier League action at the weekend against Bournemouth.

For more stories like this, check our sport page.

Follow Metro Sport for the latest news on
FacebookTwitter and Instagram
.

Advertisement

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

NewsBeat

US and Israel kill dozens in Iran air strikes as Trump’s deadline looms

Published

on

Manchester Evening News

Tehran responded with missile fire on Israel and its Gulf neighbours

More than 25 people have been killed in Iran following a wave of attacks carried out by Israel and the United States.

Tehran responded to the attacks with missile fire on Israel and its Gulf neighbours, according to reports. The airstrikes came as Donald Trump’s deadline for Tehran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz loomed.

The US President issued an expletive-laden threat against Iran over the weekend, saying America would escalate strikes on its infrastructure if it doesn’t open the Strait of Hormuz by his deadline, which is 1am UK time on Tuesday. In a social media post, Mr Trump promised strikes on Iran’s power plants and bridges.

Advertisement

Get MEN Premium now for just £1 HERE – or get involved in our WhatsApp group by clicking HERE. And don’t miss out on our brilliant selection of newsletters HERE.

He said the strikes would set the country ‘back to the stone ages’ and would added that Iran would be ‘living in hell’. But a defiant Iran showed no sign of backing down, striking economic and infrastructure targets in neighbouring Gulf Arab countries and challenging the US’s account of the rescue.

And Iran’s joint military command warned of stepped-up attacks on regional oil and civilian infrastructure if the US and Israel attack such targets there, according to state television. Overnight explosions rang out in Tehran and low-flying jets could be heard for hours as the capital was pounded.

Thick black smoke rose near the city’s Azadi Square after one airstrike hit the Sharif University of Technology grounds. Two people were found dead in the rubble of a residential building in Haifa, according to Israeli authorities.

Advertisement

The search was ongoing for two more even as new Iranian missile attacks hit the northern Israeli city early on Monday. Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates both activated their air defence systems to intercept incoming Iranian missiles and drones, as Tehran kept up the pressure on its Gulf neighbours.

Iran’s regular attacks on regional energy infrastructure and its stranglehold on the Strait of Hormuz, through which a fifth of the world’s oil is shipped in peacetime, have sent global energy prices soaring. Iran has let some vessels through the strait since the war began, but none belonging to the US, Israel or countries perceived as helping them.

Some have paid Iran for passage and the overall flow of traffic is down more than 90 per cent over the same period last year. Beyond Mr Trump’s military threats, diplomatic efforts are still underway to see if a solution can be reached to open the waterway.

Advertisement

One of Monday’s morning airstrikes targeted Tehran’s Sharif University of Technology, where Iranian media reported damage to the buildings as well as a natural gas distribution site next to the campus. It was not immediately clear what had been targeted on the grounds of the university, which is empty of students as the war has forced all schools into the country into online classes.

Multiple countries over the years have sanctioned the university for its work with the military, particularly on Iran’s ballistic missile programme, which is controlled by the country’s paramilitary Revolutionary Guard. A strike near Eslamshar, southwest of Tehran, killed at least 13 people, the semi-official Fars news agency reported.

Five others were killed when a residential area in the city of Qom was hit, and six more were killed in strikes on other cities, the state-run IRAN daily newspaper reported. Three more people were killed when an airstrike hit a home in Tehran, Iranian state television reported.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

NewsBeat

‘Dangerous’ TV ariel removed from Wellington Street home

Published

on

Sheriff Hutton shed set alight after hedge fire spreads

Two fire crews were called to the property in Wellington Street shortly after 6.20pm on Sunday (April 5).

North Yorkshire Fire and Rescue Service said the crews responded to a report that the television ariel was “hanging in a dangerous position from a property after becoming damaged in high winds”.

“Crew power and bolt cutters were used to remove the ariel before the possibility of it falling onto the footpath below,” a service spokesperson said.

Advertisement

The callout by the fire service came as York and North Yorkshire were battered by high winds brought by Storm Dave at the weekend.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2025