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‘Now she’s the world’s problem’: Some Arizona Republicans relieved Lake is heading to Washington

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President-elect Donald Trump’s pick of longtime loyalist Kari Lake to lead Voice of America has some Arizona Republicans breathing a sigh of relief.

Lake has for the last two election cycles dominated Republican politics in Arizona, running and losing back-to-back races for governor and Senate — and earning her the ire of some of her fellow conservatives in the state. Some Arizona Republicans had already been skeptical of her political future in the state, given the losses, though her name had been floated both for state Republican Party chair and Arizona secretary of state.

This decision now all but removes her from those conversations, creating space for other Republicans, like Karrin Taylor Robson, who ran against Lake in the Republican gubernatorial primary in 2022 but came in second, to rise to the fore.

“When you’re a two-time loser and you did worse the second time around, that’s a clue that maybe the voters don’t want you,” said Barrett Marson, a GOP strategist in Arizona. “I think it clears space for the conservative but normal wing of the Republican Party in Arizona.”

Robson has been floated as a likely Republican candidate for governor, and there was some uncertainty over whether Lake would be interested in a rematch.

“As the 2026 governor’s field on the Republican side comes into focus, the big question mark was, what’s Kari Lake going to do? … This at least partially answers that question and takes a pretty big potential name off the chessboard, at least for now,” a Republican strategist in Arizona, granted anonymity to speak candidly about the dynamics, said. “She’s certainly a name. She’s been the Republican nominee twice. It’s safe to say she would’ve been formidable. It’s a fairly big deal, I think, in terms of how that race is going to play out.”

Still, Lake, who maintains a robust social media presence and following among the MAGA crowd, is expected to remain an important presence in Arizona GOP politics. Multiple Republican political operatives in the state said had Lake run for Arizona Republican Party chair, she likely would have won.

Lake’s name had also been floated for U.S. ambassador to Mexico, a post that ultimately went to former U.S. Ambassador to El Salvador Ronald Johnson. Johnson is a Green Beret who spent more than 20 years at the CIA and brings significant foreign policy experience to the job.

Lake is one of several candidates who have demonstrated the challenges of running on a “Make America Great Again” platform without President-elect Donald Trump’s name.

At the federally funded broadcaster Voice of America, Lake will lead a $267 million agency that broadcasts in more than 40 languages to a global audience of more than 354 million people. Lake has more than three decades of experience in broadcast news, including 22 years working at the Fox affiliate in Phoenix.

The Voice of America director is officially appointed by the head of the U.S. Agency for Global Media, a Senate-confirmed position Trump has yet to name. The VOA director needs a majority support from a seven-member advisory board of presidential appointees, who require Senate confirmation.

Trump’s previous pick to lead the Agency for Global Media, Michael Pack, was accused of using his position to amplify the Trump administration’s message. The findings of a federal investigation released last year found Pack abused his power to sideline executives he believed were insufficiently supportive of Trump, engaging in gross mismanagement and breaking laws and regulations in doing so.

In a post on Truth Social, Lake said she was “honored” Trump had asked her to lead Voice of America, which she called “a vital international media outlet dedicated to advancing the interests of the United States by engaging directly with people across the globe and promoting democracy and truth.”

“Under my leadership, the VOA will excel in its mission: chronicling America’s achievements worldwide,” Lake said.

A person close to Lake, granted anonymity because they weren’t authorized to speak publicly about the appointment, said that the position will provide Lake “the perfect platform to share America’s story and keep delivering the truth to people across the world.”

“After a three-decades long career as a trusted journalist and news anchor, she courageously walked away from the mainstream media,” the person said. “Refusing to compromise her principles or push Fake News, Kari’s decision inspired countless Americans to seek the truth in a world of increasing disinformation.”

Trump, in a post on Truth Social, said Lake would work “to ensure that the American values of Freedom and Liberty are broadcast around the World FAIRLY and ACCURATELY, unlike the lies spread by the Fake News Media,” calling her a “beloved News Anchor in Arizona.”

Lake is one of several candidates who have demonstrated the challenges of running on a “Make America Great Again” platform without Trump’s name. In addition to Lake, MAGA-aligned gubernatorial candidates Doug Mastriano and Tudor Dixon lost their respective gubernatorial bids in Pennsylvania and Michigan in 2022.

Lake repeatedly claimed falsely that Trump won the 2020 election, and contested the results of her own loss in 2022. She did not, however, contest the results of her 2024 loss, with Trump winning in the state even as Democrat Ruben Gallego bested her in the Senate contest.

“She’s no longer Arizona’s problem. Now, she’s the world’s problem,” Marson said.

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The US-Australia face-off that isn’t happening

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Who’s not here at Seattle’s Lumen Field for the Pacific Rim face-off between the United States and Australia?

If they’re following the match, the two countries’ elected heads — President Donald Trump and Prime Minister Anthony Albanese — are doing so from afar.

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The soccer boss in Mark Carney’s ear

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VANCOUVER — Major League Soccer commissioner Don Garber joined Prime Minister Mark Carney on Friday to watch Canada’s thrashing of Qatar. Garber probably did not want Carney to enjoy the stadium experience too much.

BC Place is Major League Soccer’s most troublesome facility. The arena is old, was not designed with soccer in mind, and is owned by a government agency — the BC Pavilion Corporation, which also controls the Vancouver Convention Center — that forces the Vancouver Whitecaps to fight for dates on the calendar against concerts and other events.

“We want to be the ones that control our destiny, like every sports team does,” Garber told reporters Friday in Seattle.

The Whitecaps are now up for sale, and Garber is actively pushing British Columbia’s political establishment — including Premier David Eby and Vancouver Mayor Ken Sim — to find a solution can keep the team from decamping to Las Vegas. While the government has been willing to renegotiate its financial relationship with the team, a proposed new stadium would take “four-plus years” in construction, which Garber said was untenable.

“It unimaginable how long we’re going to be out of the stadium,” he told reporters Friday in Seattle. “They are very relevant club that doesn’t have a good business model, and you can’t be sustainable.”

Garber recounted he met with Eby while in Vancouver, and sat with Carney and Victor Montagliani — the head of regional soccer confederation CONCACAF and a close ally of the prime minister — during the match itself. Garber said he has placed a league official in Vancouver full-time to manage the negotiations with local officials over the Whitecaps’s future.

“We want to be the ones that control our destiny, like every sports team does,” said Garber. “It’s easier for business people to make decisions, a little harder for politicians.”

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The accidental American

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In 2001, airline employees stopped a seven-months pregnant Florence Balogun from traveling home to London, deeming her too pregnant to fly. She stayed in New York, where she was visiting, eventually giving birth to a son, Folarin, before returning to London.

Twenty-five years later, Folarin Balogun has attracted global notice as a rising soccer star. Despite training in Arsenal’s youth academy and spending much of his career playing for England’s youth teams, Balogun — legally an American citizen, thanks to his Brooklyn birth — has emerged as a key contributor to the U.S. team’s attack at this year’s World Cup. The striker scored two goals in America’s opener against Paraguay last Friday, hoisting his team to a record-breaking 4-1 victory, the most goals the U.S. men’s team has ever scored in a World Cup game.

While Balogun’s performance has fueled fresh hopes about America’s World Cup prospects, he’s also found himself in the middle of America’s ongoing birthright citizenship debate.

On his first day in office, President Donald Trump signed an executive order overturning the country’s long-standing birthright citizenship practice. The American Civil Liberties Union then sued to block the move, taking their legal battle to the Supreme Court. The court is expected to issue a final ruling soon — though it seems“broadly skeptical” of Trump’s effort.

“The executive order itself doesn’t claim to strip away [Balogun’s] citizenship or or the citizenship of other people born before [Feb. 19, 2025],” Cody Wofsy, the lead lawyer in the ACLU’s case, told Blue Light News. “But the constitutional theory that the government is asking the Supreme Court to adopt casts a shadow over the citizenship of millions and millions of people who were born in this country and have lived their entire lives as citizens.”

Examples of high-profile birthright citizens — like Balogun, but also politicians such as Kamala Harris and Marco Rubio — help illustrate the reality of banning birthright citizenship, Wofsy said.

“We don’t know what the justices are thinking,” he said, “but I would hope that they understand just how grave an action the government’s asking them for.”

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