Peeved NYC students, teachers, parents beg mayor to cancel school for Knicks parade: ‘This is once in a lifetime’
Instead of hitting the parade, they have to work to get the grade.

In Tuesday's Democratic primary, voters overwhelmingly voted for Janeese Lewis George, a socialist who's promised to resist Donald Trump.
Instead of hitting the parade, they have to work to get the grade.
President Donald Trump will not serve out his full second term in office, argues political strategist James Carville, but rather, he will resign and “walk away.”Carville points to two major reasons looming over Trump as to why he believes the 47th president will exit the office.“I want to be very clear on something,” says Carville. “I’m not doing this as a crazy a—— prediction. I’m doing it because I genuinely think that he will resign next spring.” “He’s going to walk away because the pain that is coming for him, both the emotional pain and the physical deterioration, you watch it right in front of your eyes,” said Carville. “I don’t have to be a doctor to see this guy can’t move. He can’t get out of a chair. I know what it’s like to be in the 80s. And unlike a lot of people, I know what that job is like, and it’s not compatible. You know, maybe there’s some people 80 who could do that. He’s not one.”Acknowledging that he is not a medical doctor, Carville does note that he is close to Trump’s age: the president is 80, Carville is approaching 82.He highlights Trump’s “rate of decline from Election Day to now,” and warns that “it’s not linear. You don’t lose a quarter of a percent a month. When it goes down, it goes quickly, and you can look at him and see just how fat and unhealthy he is.”The other reason Carville believes Trump will exit the White House next spring: he suggests a tremendous loss in the November midterms for Trump, and explains how devastating that will be.“I know what it’s like to lose a massive off-year election,” says Carville. “We did in 1994. It’s so monumental. It’s so massive. It hurts so deep. You just can’t imagine it. The entire world around him is going to change after November of this year.”“People don’t pay attention to you,” says Carville. “They’re making jokes. Everybody knows you’re on a short leash. You got two years left to go. You don’t have any power. Everybody around you is being subpoenaed for everything that you can imagine. Your life is miserable.”Carville went on to declare, “I’m doubling down on this prediction. He is just going to walk away.”Trump, Carville predicts, will tell Vice President JD Vance — who would become president should Trump resign — that as president Vance can likely pardon himself. And while there is “some uncertainty as to whether you can do that,” there is “no uncertainty” as to whether a President Vance can pardon Trump and his family.“So, I’m sticking with my prediction,” says Carville. “I think the son of a b—— is just going to walk away.” - YouTube www.youtube.com
Five passages of the 14-point memorandum of understanding that was released Wednesday are giving critics particular concern because they leave so much room open for negotiation and interpretation....
Voters across the country delivered a mixed verdict in a series of high-profile primary contests Tuesday, elevating political outsiders, boosting progressive candidates in deep-blue jurisdictions, and offering fresh clues about President Donald Trump’s hold on the GOP ahead of the midterm elections. Kemp and Trump both lose in Georgia’s gubernatorial race Republican businessman Rick Jackson […]
Alabama called races within an hour of polls closing while D.C. officials didn't begin counting ballots until nearly three hours later Tuesday.
White won 63.2% of the vote compared to his City Council colleague Brooke Pinto, who notched 21.5% when the contest was called by the Associated Press just after 12:10 a.m. ET. Wednesday.
When discussing the legacy President Donald Trump is likely to leave behind regarding his deeply unpopular war against Iran, the cast of MS NOW’s “Morning Joe” pivoted Wednesday to another legacy project of the president’s, one that host Mika Brzezinski said Trump had been exhibiting “strange behavior" over since last week.The legacy project in question was the rebranding of the Kennedy Performing Arts Center to feature Trump’s name on the building in Washington, D.C. A federal judge ordered Trump’s name be removed from the building, with workers finally taking the president’s name down last weekend. Visitors hoping to catch a glance at the modification, however, have been disappointed to see that a large tarp had been set up to obscure the spot where Trump’s name was once plastered.“There's a sense in Washington that he, at 80, is beginning to show his real priorities – his priorities are to build his own legacy, put his name on things,” noted The New York Times’ Peter Baker during an appearance on “Morning Joe.” “The bigger legacy would have been to have a better result to this war... that means a whole lot more than having your name on the Kennedy Center, that means a whole lot more than whether the Reflecting Pool has algae or not.”Brzezinski interjected to note that, despite Trump’s name being removed from the Kennedy Center last weekend, the tarp partially covering the building appears to remain up, with The Washington Post reporting the tarp remaining as of Tuesday.“The Kennedy Center, just a quick point about that: it shows what he considers important,” Brzezinski said.“That canopy that they have put over the changing of the name of the Kennedy Center taking Donald Trump's name off – is that still up? Is he too scared to show that to the American people, or too humiliated? It's a strange behavior, and that is the mindset that's dealing with this war in Iran.”
GOP Rep. Mike Collins emerged from a brutal primary Tuesday — but he has a lot of fundraising and convincing to do ahead of November.