• para manalo Trump Says He Plans to Attend Carter’s Funeral

    Updated:2025-01-05 04:53    Views:149

    President-elect Donald J. Trump said on Tuesday that he planned to attend former President Jimmy Carter’s state funeral in Washington next week, ending speculation about his presence at the memorial for a predecessor whom he had often criticized.

    In wide-ranging remarks to reporters as he entered a flashy New Year’s Eve celebration at Mar-a-Lago, his private Florida estate and club, Mr. Trump also predicted that House Speaker Mike Johnson would retain his post and reiterated his support for visas for high-skilled immigrants, doubling down in a fight that has divided his supporters.

    Mr. Trump declined to say whether he had spoken to the family of Mr. Carter, who died on Sunday at age 100. Though attendance at the funeral of a predecessor would be virtually automatic for any other president-elect, Mr. Trump has sometimes skipped memorials for other political titans. And it could put Mr. Trump near his living predecessors, three of whom — Bill Clinton, Barack Obama and President Biden — have been deeply critical of him.

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    With what could be a chaotic House leadership election approaching on Friday, Mr. Trump amplified his support for Mr. Johnson, saying he is “the one that can win right now” in a narrowly divided chamber where Republicans have few votes to spare.

    The president-elect endorsed Mr. Johnson on Monday, two weeks after undermining a bipartisan spending deal that the speaker had negotiated with House Democrats, imperiling his standing with his Republican colleagues. Mr. Trump had debated letting Mr. Johnson sink but ultimately decided he was the best option to get the 218 votes needed.

    Mr. Johnson still faces a tough road, with at least one House Republican publicly saying he will not vote for him. But Mr. Trump said he would make calls on Mr. Johnson’s behalf if necessary and predicted that “we’re going to get a successful vote.”

    Now, Dr. Linek and his colleagues have done so. Their findings, based on a partially migratory population of German blackbirds, challenge the conventional wisdom. Even in the depths of winter, blackbirds basking in balmy southern Europe or northern Africa did not spend any less energy than those riding out the cold in Germany, the scientists found.

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