
Person accused of accosting Rep. Nancy Mace at Capitol pleads not guilty to assault chargeWASHINGTON (AP) — A person accused of accosting U.S. Rep. Nancy Mace in a Capitol Office building pleaded not guilty on Wednesday to a misdemeanor assault charge. Witnesses told police that James McIntyre, 33, of Chicago, shook Mace's hand in an “exaggerated, aggressive” manner after approaching the South Carolina Republican in the Rayburn House Office Building on Tuesday evening, according to a police affidavit. Mace, who is identified only by her initials in a court filing, posted a string of social media messages about the incident. She said she was “physically accosted” at the Capitol, and she thanked President-elect Donald Trump for calling her Wednesday morning to check on her condition. “I’m going to be fine just as soon as the pain and soreness subside,” Mace wrote. Mace declined to be treated by a paramedic after her encounter with McIntyre, who was arrested Tuesday by the Capitol Police, the affidavit says. Mace told police that McIntyre said, “Trans youth serve advocacy,” while shaking her hand. Last month, Mace proposed a resolution that would prohibit any lawmakers and House employees from “using single-sex facilities other than those corresponding to their biological sex.” Mace said the bill is aimed specifically at Delaware Democrat Sarah McBride — the first transgender person to be elected to Congress. A magistrate judge ordered McIntyre’s release after an arraignment in Superior Court of the District of Columbia. Efforts to reach an attorney for McIntyre weren't immediately successful.A New Trump Tower Is Going Up in This Middle Eastern Country
Opposition Leader John Pesutto defamed ousted Liberal MP Moira Deeming, the Federal Court has found, in a high-stakes judgment that could cost him his job. Pesutto was ordered to pay Deeming $300,000 for the damage to her reputation in a damning judgment that found he had defamed her on five separate occasions. Independent MP Moira Deeming (centre) pictured arriving at court ahead of the judgment. Credit: AAPIMAGE Deeming alleged she had been “tarred with the Nazi brush” as part of Pesutto’s “campaign” to expel her from the parliamentary Liberal Party, her barrister Sue Chrysanthou, SC, had told the court. Deeming, who now sits on the crossbench of the Victorian Parliament, had helped organise the Let Women Speak rally on March 18, 2023. Neo-Nazis were among several groups of protesters that arrived at the steps of parliament that day. She condemned the men, said they were not there to support her cause, and told the court she did not see them until they were escorted away by police. Pesutto moved to expel Deeming from the parliamentary party in the following days. She was instead suspended in a last-minute compromise, but was ultimately expelled weeks later, after threatening to bring in lawyers. Handing down his decision on Thursday after hearing more than three weeks of evidence that damaged the party room and threatened stability, Justice David O’Callaghan agreed Pesutto had defamed Deeming. Rumblings to overthrow Pesutto in October did not amount to anything, but many in the party room had privately accepted that a loss for Pesutto would make his position as leader untenable. John Pesutto and Moira Deeming outside the Federal Court during the defamation trial. Credit: The Age In a damning finding, O’Callaghan found Pesutto had defamed Deeming in a media release, during two radio interviews, at a press conference and in an expulsion motion and dossier. O’Callaghan said that while Pesutto had defended the case on the grounds of public interest, honest opinion and qualified privilege, all those failed and the defence of contextual truth did not arise. More to come Get alerts on significant breaking news as happens. Sign up for our Breaking News Alert .
Opposition Leader John Pesutto defamed ousted Liberal MP Moira Deeming, the Federal Court has found, in a high-stakes judgment that could cost him his job. Pesutto was ordered to pay Deeming $300,000 for the damage to her reputation in a damning judgment that found he had defamed her on five separate occasions. Independent MP Moira Deeming (centre) pictured arriving at court ahead of the judgment. Credit: AAPIMAGE Deeming alleged she had been “tarred with the Nazi brush” as part of Pesutto’s “campaign” to expel her from the parliamentary Liberal Party, her barrister Sue Chrysanthou, SC, had told the court. Deeming, who now sits on the crossbench of the Victorian Parliament, had helped organise the Let Women Speak rally on March 18, 2023. Neo-Nazis were among several groups of protesters that arrived at the steps of parliament that day. She condemned the men, said they were not there to support her cause, and told the court she did not see them until they were escorted away by police. Pesutto moved to expel Deeming from the parliamentary party in the following days. She was instead suspended in a last-minute compromise, but was ultimately expelled weeks later, after threatening to bring in lawyers. Handing down his decision on Thursday after hearing more than three weeks of evidence that damaged the party room and threatened stability, Justice David O’Callaghan agreed Pesutto had defamed Deeming. Rumblings to overthrow Pesutto in October did not amount to anything, but many in the party room had privately accepted that a loss for Pesutto would make his position as leader untenable.
Price Over Earnings Overview: L3Harris Technologies
Patrick Mahomes Eyeing To Score Russell Wilson’s Star Target: NFL Analyst Sparks SpeculationCiv 7 Releases on PC February 11, 2025 Sid Meier’s Civilization VII is almost here, and it’s shaping up to be a considerably more console-friendly experience than its predecessor was at launch. With Firaxis and 2K Games placing importance on fluid gamepad control, the future of Civ 7 on Steam Deck (and other PC handhelds like the ROG Ally and Legion GO) already looked bright. And today it looks even brighter with the game’s newly updated PC requirements for the native Linux version. Civ 7 on Linux: Minimum PC Requirements Here’s the baseline hardware you’ll need to run the official Linux version of Civilization VII. This setup should deliver 1080p/30FPS at the low graphics quality preset: Curiously, the minimum requirements for the Windows version shows an Nvidia GTX 1050, while on Linux the developer lists a GTX 1060. Still, it’s refreshing to see a PC game in 2025 that isn’t abandoning millions of gamers with steep minimum requirements like hardware-level ray tracing. How does this translate for Steam Deck users? At first glance, it may seem like they’re out of luck. After all, the equivalent desktop GPUs to the Steam Deck are widely acknowledged as being the Nvidia GTX 1050Ti or the AMD Radeon RX 570. Those are just below the graphics cards listed for Civ 7’s minimum Linux requirements. But consider that Steam Deck is also running at a lower resolution — 1280x800 versus the desktop standard of 1920x1080. Thus, I feel confident saying Civ 7 will run smoothly on Deck — it should even end up becoming Steam Deck certified. And don’t worry, Ubuntu is not a hard requirement. Rather, people running Ubuntu should ensure they’re using 22.04 or higher, and that’s mainly down to having updated software libraries to ensure a reliable gaming experience on Steam. Certainly, any current Linux distro (like Fedora, Zorin OS, Bazzite, or Mint) running a modern kernel should fit the bill. Forget Chrome—Google Starts Tracking All Your Devices In 8 Weeks Bitcoin Suddenly Surges Back To $100,000 On Huge $20 Trillion Price Prediction FBI Warns Gmail, Outlook, Apple Mail Users—Check 3 Things To Stop Attacks Does Civ 7 Even Need A Linux Version? As Firaxis did with Civilization VI, the developer is once again gracing Linux users with a dedicated version of Civilization VII. (MacOS users will also get a dedicated port, provided the Mac is powered by Apple Silicon). It’s honestly a surprising decision given the state of Valve’s Proton, the compatibility layer that helps Windows games run (and run well ) on Linux and the SteamOS-powered Steam Deck. When Civ 6 released in 2018, Steam Proton was in its first few months of existence, the Steam Deck didn’t exist, and the state of Linux gaming had barely begun its positive upward trajectory. A native Linux version certainly made sense then, especially for a game that was — at the time it launched — a decidedly PC-forward experience. Firaxis doesn’t need to do this in 2025, just as Hello Games didn’t need to produce a constant stream of major content updates for No Man’s Sky after the game had more than earned its years-long comeback story. But goodwill goes a long way. There’s another reason, though. Proton isn’t foolproof or bulletproof. We frequently see game updates that break the fragile state of compatibility with Linux. Sometimes this results in degraded performance; sometimes it results in the game no longer running at all. With a dedicated Linux version, there is no guesswork about which Proton version to use. No unintentional breakage. The developer is in full control of ensuring gamers have the best experience possible. And with Linux gaming on the rise, this is a good look for game developers to have. Civilization VII releases February 11, 2025, and I’m very much looking forward to testing performance of both the Linux native version and the Steam Proton version. Stay tuned for that!
Watchdog told about fake Fine Gael social media account