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Marines at Camp Pendleton are learning how to shoot down small enemy drones with shotguns thanks to a new training course introduced during Exercise Steel Knight 25.
Marines at Camp Pendleton are learning how to shoot down small enemy drones with shotguns thanks to a new training course introduced during Exercise Steel Knight 25.
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Президент США Дональд Трамп расширил список стран, гражданам которых запрещен въезд в Соединенные Штаты, сообщается на сайте Белого дома 16 декабря.
Президент США Дональд Трамп расширил список стран, гражданам которых запрещен въезд в Соединенные Штаты, сообщается на сайте Белого дома 16 декабря.
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PEC da Anistia, queda-de-braço com o STF, cassação de deputados… Há lógica por trás dos abusos: sustentar impasses institucionais permanentes, o que move as negociatas, e garantir o controle do orçamento público, que financia o poder. 2026 promete ser ainda mais intenso… The post Congresso: Quando o porão transborda appeared first on Outras Palavras.
PEC da Anistia, queda-de-braço com o STF, cassação de deputados… Há lógica por trás dos abusos: sustentar impasses institucionais permanentes, o que move as negociatas, e garantir o controle do orçamento público, que financia o poder. 2026 promete ser ainda mais intenso… The post Congresso: Quando o porão transborda appeared first on Outras Palavras.
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Право собственности на квартиру остается за купившей ее Полиной Лурье
Право собственности на квартиру остается за купившей ее Полиной Лурье
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La colère ne redescend pas chez les agriculteurs qui protestent contre l’abattage systématique des troupeaux atteints de la dermatose nodulaire contagieuse. Malgré le déplacement de la ministre de l’Agriculture, Annie Genevard, ce lundi à Toulouse pour rencontrer des syndicats d’agriculteurs, le bras de fer se poursuit. Preuve de la crainte d’un embrasement de la situation : le Premier ministre a repris la main sur le dossier en convoquant deux réunions à Matignon ce mardi 16 décembre.
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La colère ne redescend pas chez les agriculteurs qui protestent contre l’abattage systématique des troupeaux atteints de la dermatose nodulaire contagieuse. Malgré le déplacement de la ministre de l’Agriculture, Annie Genevard, ce lundi à Toulouse pour rencontrer des syndicats d’agriculteurs, le bras de fer se poursuit. Preuve de la crainte d’un embrasement de la situation : le Premier ministre a repris la main sur le dossier en convoquant deux réunions à Matignon ce mardi 16 décembre.
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Kansas' Democratic governor skeptical GOP-led 2026 Legislature will redraw the state's four U.S. House districts to appease President Donald Trump.

Kansas' Democratic governor skeptical GOP-led 2026 Legislature will redraw the state's four U.S. House districts to appease President Donald Trump.
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WASHINGTON — U.S. House Speaker Mike Johnson said Tuesday he will not allow a floor vote this week on a bipartisan amendment supported by moderate Republicans that would extend the Affordable Care Act enhanced tax credits. Johnson was confident that blocking the amendment would not lead centrist GOP lawmakers to oppose the Republican health care […]
WASHINGTON — U.S. House Speaker Mike Johnson said Tuesday he will not allow a floor vote this week on a bipartisan amendment supported by moderate Republicans that would extend the Affordable Care Act enhanced tax credits. Johnson was confident that blocking the amendment would not lead centrist GOP lawmakers to oppose the Republican health care […]
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The idyllic sands of Australia’s Bondi Beach turned into a slaughterhouse this week. As families lit Hanukkah candles under a twilight sky, Sajid Akram, 50, and his son Naveed, 24 – both Australian residents of Pakistani descent – unleashed a hail of bullets killing 15 innocents, including a 10-year-old girl, a Holocaust survivor, and a British-born rabbi. Forty others lay wounded. Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese called it what it was: a terrorist atrocity fueled by "extremist ideology," with intelligence linking the attackers to ISIL. This wasn't senseless rage but imported jihad, a horrific warning from Down Under to America: reckless immigration policies that welcome unvetted masses from radical hotbeds erode security, culture and the very soul of Western nations. Australia's saga is eerily familiar to our own. Over the past 20 years, Australia admitted roughly 660,000 permanent residents born in majority-Islamic nations including Pakistan, Afghanistan, Iraq, Iran, Indonesia and Bangladesh. That's a flood into a population of just 27.2 million, where those born overseas already constitute 31.5% of the country. These arrivals, often via refugee or chain migration streams, now form a constituency of almost 3% of Australians who identify as Muslim, per their 2021 census. That’s a huge increase from negligible numbers just two decades ago. The rest of Australia is starting to wake up. Fifty-one percent of native-born Australians deem immigration "too high," per a 2025 Scanlon Foundation survey. While some may attribute this to xenophobia, it is simply exhaustion from policies that prioritize global virtue-signaling over national survival. If assimilation has even been attempted in Australia, it has failed. Many newcomers cluster in parallel societies, nurturing enclaves where Sharia can take root. In Sydney's Lakemba or Melbourne's Broadmeadows sections, halal markets and madrasas flourish, but English fluency lags and anti-Western values remain. The Bondi Beach terrorists are a product of this pattern: father and son, raised in Australia, yet radicalized enough to target Jews in an antisemitic fervor. Far from outliers, they were symptoms of policies blind to the extremist ideological baggage that has been brought into the country. Australia's folly is not that different from the catastrophe in Europe. From France's detached banlieue districts to Sweden's no-go zones, lax borders have imported not just cheap labor, but lethal ideologies. The 2025 U.S. Homeland Threat Assessment warns of persistent risks from "homegrown" jihadists on the European continent, while Europe's Muslim population – currently around 46 million, or about 6% of the total – is projected to grow to between 7.4% and 14% by 2050, depending on future migration levels, with higher fertility rates among Muslims also contributing. Paris riots, London knife attacks, and Berlin truck rammings aren't accidents but erosions of border security, where radical Islamists exploit welfare states to plot attacks from mosques. Europe’s tradition-laden Christmas markets have become a popular target for foreign-born jihadis, either for demonstrations or violent attacks. As President Trump's national security strategy notes, unchecked inflows spell "civilizational erasure." The West's Achilles' heel is our generosity, weaponized by enemies among us. Excessively generous asylum laws, born from a national embarrassment or guilt over our prosperity, now serve to import radicals who game a system of fake conversions, sob stories, and porous borders. Once here, they form ascendant demographic and political blocs that demand concessions while native-born birth rates plummet. Politicians are quick to pander to these emerging groups, as their electoral futures require sufficient numbers of immigrant votes. Back home in the U.S., Minnesota has become the embodiment of the peril we face. More than 90,000 Somali-Americans there have become a political force. They powered Ilhan Omar to Congress, and her anti-Israel rhetoric and Hamas sympathies have greatly influenced Democratic foreign policy. Along the way, a Minneapolis fraud ring comprised mostly of Somalis siphoned $1 billion from welfare programs, allegedly funneling cash to Al-Shabaab terrorists. Gov. Tim Walz, seeking a third term and dependent on the Somali vote for reelection, swats away any criticism of the Somali community in the fraud scandal as evidence of racism. Throughout America, left-wing political strategists peddle the same poison: sanctuary cities, DACA expansions, and border nullification. They frame resistance as bigotry, ignoring New Orleans' 2025 ISIS truck attack (14 dead) or an Afghan migrant shouting "Allahu Akbar" while gunning down two members of the National Guard. Their vision is a borderless utopia where radicals roam free, eroding the melting pot into a balkanized nation at its sunset. Looking at these trends from a macro level, do they portend a future of strong, cohesive nations? Absolutely not. Without a serious reversal of our recent path, the Western world will continue to deteriorate into lawless, fractured states in decline. A majority of Americans want to reverse course, and that desire fueled Donald Trump to his two presidential election victories. America must take a stand against grim scenario through immigration freezes, ironclad vetting, and assimilation mandates. Deport radicals, defund pandering NGOs, and reclaim our traditions. The West's generosity helped sustain the world, and now it is being exploited to tear down our once-great societies. Resist these anti-borders policies at all costs, or follow Australia's trajectory. Our future depends on it.
The idyllic sands of Australia’s Bondi Beach turned into a slaughterhouse this week. As families lit Hanukkah candles under a twilight sky, Sajid Akram, 50, and his son Naveed, 24 – both Australian residents of Pakistani descent – unleashed a hail of bullets killing 15 innocents, including a 10-year-old girl, a Holocaust survivor, and a British-born rabbi. Forty others lay wounded. Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese called it what it was: a terrorist atrocity fueled by "extremist ideology," with intelligence linking the attackers to ISIL. This wasn't senseless rage but imported jihad, a horrific warning from Down Under to America: reckless immigration policies that welcome unvetted masses from radical hotbeds erode security, culture and the very soul of Western nations. Australia's saga is eerily familiar to our own. Over the past 20 years, Australia admitted roughly 660,000 permanent residents born in majority-Islamic nations including Pakistan, Afghanistan, Iraq, Iran, Indonesia and Bangladesh. That's a flood into a population of just 27.2 million, where those born overseas already constitute 31.5% of the country. These arrivals, often via refugee or chain migration streams, now form a constituency of almost 3% of Australians who identify as Muslim, per their 2021 census. That’s a huge increase from negligible numbers just two decades ago. The rest of Australia is starting to wake up. Fifty-one percent of native-born Australians deem immigration "too high," per a 2025 Scanlon Foundation survey. While some may attribute this to xenophobia, it is simply exhaustion from policies that prioritize global virtue-signaling over national survival. If assimilation has even been attempted in Australia, it has failed. Many newcomers cluster in parallel societies, nurturing enclaves where Sharia can take root. In Sydney's Lakemba or Melbourne's Broadmeadows sections, halal markets and madrasas flourish, but English fluency lags and anti-Western values remain. The Bondi Beach terrorists are a product of this pattern: father and son, raised in Australia, yet radicalized enough to target Jews in an antisemitic fervor. Far from outliers, they were symptoms of policies blind to the extremist ideological baggage that has been brought into the country. Australia's folly is not that different from the catastrophe in Europe. From France's detached banlieue districts to Sweden's no-go zones, lax borders have imported not just cheap labor, but lethal ideologies. The 2025 U.S. Homeland Threat Assessment warns of persistent risks from "homegrown" jihadists on the European continent, while Europe's Muslim population – currently around 46 million, or about 6% of the total – is projected to grow to between 7.4% and 14% by 2050, depending on future migration levels, with higher fertility rates among Muslims also contributing. Paris riots, London knife attacks, and Berlin truck rammings aren't accidents but erosions of border security, where radical Islamists exploit welfare states to plot attacks from mosques. Europe’s tradition-laden Christmas markets have become a popular target for foreign-born jihadis, either for demonstrations or violent attacks. As President Trump's national security strategy notes, unchecked inflows spell "civilizational erasure." The West's Achilles' heel is our generosity, weaponized by enemies among us. Excessively generous asylum laws, born from a national embarrassment or guilt over our prosperity, now serve to import radicals who game a system of fake conversions, sob stories, and porous borders. Once here, they form ascendant demographic and political blocs that demand concessions while native-born birth rates plummet. Politicians are quick to pander to these emerging groups, as their electoral futures require sufficient numbers of immigrant votes. Back home in the U.S., Minnesota has become the embodiment of the peril we face. More than 90,000 Somali-Americans there have become a political force. They powered Ilhan Omar to Congress, and her anti-Israel rhetoric and Hamas sympathies have greatly influenced Democratic foreign policy. Along the way, a Minneapolis fraud ring comprised mostly of Somalis siphoned $1 billion from welfare programs, allegedly funneling cash to Al-Shabaab terrorists. Gov. Tim Walz, seeking a third term and dependent on the Somali vote for reelection, swats away any criticism of the Somali community in the fraud scandal as evidence of racism. Throughout America, left-wing political strategists peddle the same poison: sanctuary cities, DACA expansions, and border nullification. They frame resistance as bigotry, ignoring New Orleans' 2025 ISIS truck attack (14 dead) or an Afghan migrant shouting "Allahu Akbar" while gunning down two members of the National Guard. Their vision is a borderless utopia where radicals roam free, eroding the melting pot into a balkanized nation at its sunset. Looking at these trends from a macro level, do they portend a future of strong, cohesive nations? Absolutely not. Without a serious reversal of our recent path, the Western world will continue to deteriorate into lawless, fractured states in decline. A majority of Americans want to reverse course, and that desire fueled Donald Trump to his two presidential election victories. America must take a stand against grim scenario through immigration freezes, ironclad vetting, and assimilation mandates. Deport radicals, defund pandering NGOs, and reclaim our traditions. The West's generosity helped sustain the world, and now it is being exploited to tear down our once-great societies. Resist these anti-borders policies at all costs, or follow Australia's trajectory. Our future depends on it.
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Претседателот на Србија, Александар Вучиќ изјави дека руската страна и една голема компанија преговараат околу Нафтната индустрија на Србија (НИС), но дека официјален Белград не учествува во тие преговори. „Мислам дека преговорите се приближуваат кон крајот меѓу руската страна и една голема компанија“, изјави Вучиќ на 16 декември, без да прецизира за која компанија станува збор. НИС е под американски санкции поради мнозинското руско сопствеништво. Претседателот на Србија, гостувајќи на...
Претседателот на Србија, Александар Вучиќ изјави дека руската страна и една голема компанија преговараат околу Нафтната индустрија на Србија (НИС), но дека официјален Белград не учествува во тие преговори. „Мислам дека преговорите се приближуваат кон крајот меѓу руската страна и една голема компанија“, изјави Вучиќ на 16 декември, без да прецизира за која компанија станува збор. НИС е под американски санкции поради мнозинското руско сопствеништво. Претседателот на Србија, гостувајќи на...
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(The Center Square) — Maine is moving to limit cooperation with federal immigration agents after Democratic Gov. Janet Mills allowed a "sanctuary" state proposal to become a law without her signature. Mills announced her decision on the legislation, approved earlier this year by the Democratic-controlled Legislature, in an op-ed in which she decried the Trump administration's crackdown on undocumented immigrants. She said while the bill is "imperfect ... the times call for it" and that her administration "cannot turn a blind eye to ICE's unacceptable actions." "Under any other president, this may be acceptable, but under this Trump administration, it has become a broad and dangerous promise that Maine will not make," Mills wrote. Mills also announced that she repealed an executive order issued in 2011 by then-Republican Gov. Paul LePage which called for fostering more cooperation between state and federal officials on immigration enforcement. Republicans blasted Mills for not vetoing the bill, saying it will make the state less safe and potentially impact millions of dollars in federal grant funding the state receives from the federal government, with the Trump administration threatening to freeze funding for "sanctuary" states and communities. Limiting cooperation between Maine law enforcement and federal authorities - a longstanding tradition due to Maine's extensive foreign border - shows a reckless disregard for public safety and will put Maine's public at risk," the Maine House Republican caucus said in a statement. "By restricting law enforcement access to individuals already in custody, this law shields criminals and weakens efforts to prevent violent crime." Currently, Maine isn't considered a "sanctuary" state, but several communities have local laws aimed at preventing local police from acting as immigration agents or enforcing federal immigration laws, which are both civil and criminal in nature. Democrats who pushed the bill through the Legislature say allowing local police to cooperate with ICE operations makes communities less safe because it dissuades people from reporting crime for fear of deportation. They claim the new law won't restrict federal officials from apprehending dangerous criminals in the state. "When the Legislature enacted this bill last June, we made it clear that defining the boundaries between state law enforcement and federal immigration authorities was critical to safeguarding our communities," state Rep. Deqa Dhalac, a South Portland Democrat and primary sponsor of the bill, said in a statement. "This new law will protect the dignity, due process and public safety of all who call our state home." The Maine Sheriffs' Association was among law enforcement groups that opposed the legislation, saying the move would violate federal laws and are "not in the best interest of public safety" in the state. If the Trump administration decides to challenge the new law, it would likely be up to the next governor to defend it. Mills, who is seeking the Democratic party's nomination to challenge incumbent Republican Sen. Susan Collins in next year's election, steps down from the governor's office at the end of the year because of term limits. Last month, Maine border control officials say they apprehended an "unprecedented" number of individuals over the past year even as illegal crossings along the U.S.-Canada border plummet. The U.S. Customs and Border Protection's Houlton Sectorsaid of the 725 individuals apprehended included members of criminal gangs like MS-13, SATG, and Tren de Aragua, as well as an individual with an Interpol Red Notice for murder. Nationwide, illegal border crossings in 2025 plunged to the lowest level since 1970 following an aggressive immigration crackdown by the Trump administration, according to the Department of Homeland Security.
(The Center Square) — Maine is moving to limit cooperation with federal immigration agents after Democratic Gov. Janet Mills allowed a "sanctuary" state proposal to become a law without her signature. Mills announced her decision on the legislation, approved earlier this year by the Democratic-controlled Legislature, in an op-ed in which she decried the Trump administration's crackdown on undocumented immigrants. She said while the bill is "imperfect ... the times call for it" and that her administration "cannot turn a blind eye to ICE's unacceptable actions." "Under any other president, this may be acceptable, but under this Trump administration, it has become a broad and dangerous promise that Maine will not make," Mills wrote. Mills also announced that she repealed an executive order issued in 2011 by then-Republican Gov. Paul LePage which called for fostering more cooperation between state and federal officials on immigration enforcement. Republicans blasted Mills for not vetoing the bill, saying it will make the state less safe and potentially impact millions of dollars in federal grant funding the state receives from the federal government, with the Trump administration threatening to freeze funding for "sanctuary" states and communities. Limiting cooperation between Maine law enforcement and federal authorities - a longstanding tradition due to Maine's extensive foreign border - shows a reckless disregard for public safety and will put Maine's public at risk," the Maine House Republican caucus said in a statement. "By restricting law enforcement access to individuals already in custody, this law shields criminals and weakens efforts to prevent violent crime." Currently, Maine isn't considered a "sanctuary" state, but several communities have local laws aimed at preventing local police from acting as immigration agents or enforcing federal immigration laws, which are both civil and criminal in nature. Democrats who pushed the bill through the Legislature say allowing local police to cooperate with ICE operations makes communities less safe because it dissuades people from reporting crime for fear of deportation. They claim the new law won't restrict federal officials from apprehending dangerous criminals in the state. "When the Legislature enacted this bill last June, we made it clear that defining the boundaries between state law enforcement and federal immigration authorities was critical to safeguarding our communities," state Rep. Deqa Dhalac, a South Portland Democrat and primary sponsor of the bill, said in a statement. "This new law will protect the dignity, due process and public safety of all who call our state home." The Maine Sheriffs' Association was among law enforcement groups that opposed the legislation, saying the move would violate federal laws and are "not in the best interest of public safety" in the state. If the Trump administration decides to challenge the new law, it would likely be up to the next governor to defend it. Mills, who is seeking the Democratic party's nomination to challenge incumbent Republican Sen. Susan Collins in next year's election, steps down from the governor's office at the end of the year because of term limits. Last month, Maine border control officials say they apprehended an "unprecedented" number of individuals over the past year even as illegal crossings along the U.S.-Canada border plummet. The U.S. Customs and Border Protection's Houlton Sectorsaid of the 725 individuals apprehended included members of criminal gangs like MS-13, SATG, and Tren de Aragua, as well as an individual with an Interpol Red Notice for murder. Nationwide, illegal border crossings in 2025 plunged to the lowest level since 1970 following an aggressive immigration crackdown by the Trump administration, according to the Department of Homeland Security.
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The Bad River Band of Lake Superior Chippewa filed a lawsuit Tuesday against the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, challenging the corps’ decision to grant a permit allowing the oil company Enbridge to reroute its Line 5 pipeline around the tribe’s reservation in northern Wisconsin The lawsuit, filed in the Washington D.C. federal circuit court, […]
The Bad River Band of Lake Superior Chippewa filed a lawsuit Tuesday against the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, challenging the corps’ decision to grant a permit allowing the oil company Enbridge to reroute its Line 5 pipeline around the tribe’s reservation in northern Wisconsin The lawsuit, filed in the Washington D.C. federal circuit court, […]
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Cerca de 26,9 milhões de pessoas que trabalharam com carteira assinada em 2024 poderão sacar R$ 33,5 bilhões do abono salarial de fevereiro a agosto do próximo ano. O Conselho Deliberativo do Fundo de Amparo ao Trabalhador (Codefat) aprovou nesta terça-feira (16) o calendário do Programa de Integração Social (PIS) e do Programa de Formação do Patrimônio do Servidor Público (Pasep) em 2026. As consultas sobre o direito ao abono salarial, incluindo data, valor e banco para saque, começarão no dia 5 de fevereiro e poderão ser realizadas pelo Aplicativo da Carteira de Trabalho Digital, pelo Portal Emprega Brasil, ou pelo telefone 158 do Ministério do Trabalho e Emprego. Notícias relacionadas: Lote extra de R$ 156,4 milhões do abono salarial será pago hoje. Os trabalhadores da iniciativa privada recebem o PIS, pago pela Caixa Econômica Federal. Servidores públicos, empregados de estatais e militares têm direito ao Pasep, pago pelo Banco do Brasil. Como ocorre tradicionalmente, os pagamentos serão divididos em seis lotes, baseados no mês de nascimento, no caso do PIS, e no número final de inscrição, no caso do Pasep. O saque iniciará nas datas de liberação dos lotes e acabarão em 30 de dezembro de 2026. Após esse prazo, será necessário aguardar a convocação especial do Ministério do Trabalho e Emprego. A partir do próximo ano, o abono salarial será liberado nos dias 15 de cada mês, de fevereiro a agosto, mesmo nos casos em que a data cair em fim de semana e feriados. O Codefat fixou as datas de forma definitiva, eliminando a necessidade de aprovação do calendário a cada ano. VEJA O CALENDÁRIO APROVADO: Nascidos em Recebem a partir de Recebem até Janeiro 15/2/2024 30/12/2024 Fevereiro 15/3/2024 30/12/2024 Março e abril 15/4/2024 30/12/2024 Maio e junho 15/5/2024 30/12/2024 Julho e agosto 15/6/2024 30/12/2024 Setembro e outubro 15/7/2024 30/12/2024 Novembro e dezembro 15/8/2024 30/12/2024 Fonte: Codefat Quem tem direito Tem direito ao benefício o trabalhador inscrito no PIS/Pasep há, pelo menos, cinco anos, e que tenha trabalhado formalmente por, no mínimo, 30 dias no ano-base considerado para a apuração, com remuneração mensal média de até R$ 2.765,93. Também é necessário que os dados tenham sido informados corretamente pelo empregador na Relação Anual de Informações Sociais (Rais). O valor do abono é proporcional ao período em que o empregado trabalhou com carteira assinada em 2022. Cada mês trabalhado equivale a um benefício de R$ 135,08, com períodos iguais ou superiores a 15 dias contados como mês cheio. Quem trabalhou 12 meses com carteira assinada receberá o salário mínimo cheio, previsto para R$ 1.621 no próximo ano, segundo a Lei de Diretrizes Orçamentárias de 2026 . Mudança de regra Até 2025, o abono salarial beneficiava quem recebia até dois salários mínimos com carteira assinada. Com o pacote de corte de gastos aprovado pelo Congresso no fim de 2024, a partir do próximo ano, o teto de enquadramento passará a ser corrigido pela inflação, crescendo menos que o salário mínimo. A mudança, na prática, introduz uma regra de transição que pretende reduzir o total de trabalhadores com direito ao abono salarial. O teto de enquadramento se distanciará de dois salários mínimos até que, em 2035, o abono do PIS/Pasep seja pago apenas a quem recebe até 1,5 salário mínimo. Pagamento Trabalhadores da iniciativa privada com conta corrente ou poupança na Caixa receberão o crédito automaticamente no banco, de acordo com o mês de seu nascimento. Os demais beneficiários receberão os valores por meio da poupança social digital, que pode ser movimentada pelo aplicativo Caixa Tem. Caso não seja possível a abertura da conta digital, o saque poderá ser realizado com o Cartão do Cidadão e senha nos terminais de autoatendimento, unidades lotéricas, Caixa Aqui ou agências, também de acordo com o calendário de pagamento escalonado por mês de nascimento. O pagamento do abono do Pasep ocorre via crédito em conta para quem é correntista ou tem poupança no Banco do Brasil. O trabalhador que não é correntista do BB pode efetuar a transferência via TED para conta de sua titularidade via terminais de autoatendimento e portal www.bb.com.br/pasep ou no guichê de caixa das agências, mediante apresentação de documento oficial de identidade. Até 2020, o abono salarial do ano anterior era pago de julho do ano corrente a junho do ano seguinte. No início de 2021, o Codefat atendeu a recomendação da Controladoria-Geral da União (CGU) e passou a depositar o dinheiro somente dois anos após o trabalho com carteira assinada.
Cerca de 26,9 milhões de pessoas que trabalharam com carteira assinada em 2024 poderão sacar R$ 33,5 bilhões do abono salarial de fevereiro a agosto do próximo ano. O Conselho Deliberativo do Fundo de Amparo ao Trabalhador (Codefat) aprovou nesta terça-feira (16) o calendário do Programa de Integração Social (PIS) e do Programa de Formação do Patrimônio do Servidor Público (Pasep) em 2026. As consultas sobre o direito ao abono salarial, incluindo data, valor e banco para saque, começarão no dia 5 de fevereiro e poderão ser realizadas pelo Aplicativo da Carteira de Trabalho Digital, pelo Portal Emprega Brasil, ou pelo telefone 158 do Ministério do Trabalho e Emprego. Notícias relacionadas: Lote extra de R$ 156,4 milhões do abono salarial será pago hoje. Os trabalhadores da iniciativa privada recebem o PIS, pago pela Caixa Econômica Federal. Servidores públicos, empregados de estatais e militares têm direito ao Pasep, pago pelo Banco do Brasil. Como ocorre tradicionalmente, os pagamentos serão divididos em seis lotes, baseados no mês de nascimento, no caso do PIS, e no número final de inscrição, no caso do Pasep. O saque iniciará nas datas de liberação dos lotes e acabarão em 30 de dezembro de 2026. Após esse prazo, será necessário aguardar a convocação especial do Ministério do Trabalho e Emprego. A partir do próximo ano, o abono salarial será liberado nos dias 15 de cada mês, de fevereiro a agosto, mesmo nos casos em que a data cair em fim de semana e feriados. O Codefat fixou as datas de forma definitiva, eliminando a necessidade de aprovação do calendário a cada ano. VEJA O CALENDÁRIO APROVADO: Nascidos em Recebem a partir de Recebem até Janeiro 15/2/2024 30/12/2024 Fevereiro 15/3/2024 30/12/2024 Março e abril 15/4/2024 30/12/2024 Maio e junho 15/5/2024 30/12/2024 Julho e agosto 15/6/2024 30/12/2024 Setembro e outubro 15/7/2024 30/12/2024 Novembro e dezembro 15/8/2024 30/12/2024 Fonte: Codefat Quem tem direito Tem direito ao benefício o trabalhador inscrito no PIS/Pasep há, pelo menos, cinco anos, e que tenha trabalhado formalmente por, no mínimo, 30 dias no ano-base considerado para a apuração, com remuneração mensal média de até R$ 2.765,93. Também é necessário que os dados tenham sido informados corretamente pelo empregador na Relação Anual de Informações Sociais (Rais). O valor do abono é proporcional ao período em que o empregado trabalhou com carteira assinada em 2022. Cada mês trabalhado equivale a um benefício de R$ 135,08, com períodos iguais ou superiores a 15 dias contados como mês cheio. Quem trabalhou 12 meses com carteira assinada receberá o salário mínimo cheio, previsto para R$ 1.621 no próximo ano, segundo a Lei de Diretrizes Orçamentárias de 2026 . Mudança de regra Até 2025, o abono salarial beneficiava quem recebia até dois salários mínimos com carteira assinada. Com o pacote de corte de gastos aprovado pelo Congresso no fim de 2024, a partir do próximo ano, o teto de enquadramento passará a ser corrigido pela inflação, crescendo menos que o salário mínimo. A mudança, na prática, introduz uma regra de transição que pretende reduzir o total de trabalhadores com direito ao abono salarial. O teto de enquadramento se distanciará de dois salários mínimos até que, em 2035, o abono do PIS/Pasep seja pago apenas a quem recebe até 1,5 salário mínimo. Pagamento Trabalhadores da iniciativa privada com conta corrente ou poupança na Caixa receberão o crédito automaticamente no banco, de acordo com o mês de seu nascimento. Os demais beneficiários receberão os valores por meio da poupança social digital, que pode ser movimentada pelo aplicativo Caixa Tem. Caso não seja possível a abertura da conta digital, o saque poderá ser realizado com o Cartão do Cidadão e senha nos terminais de autoatendimento, unidades lotéricas, Caixa Aqui ou agências, também de acordo com o calendário de pagamento escalonado por mês de nascimento. O pagamento do abono do Pasep ocorre via crédito em conta para quem é correntista ou tem poupança no Banco do Brasil. O trabalhador que não é correntista do BB pode efetuar a transferência via TED para conta de sua titularidade via terminais de autoatendimento e portal www.bb.com.br/pasep ou no guichê de caixa das agências, mediante apresentação de documento oficial de identidade. Até 2020, o abono salarial do ano anterior era pago de julho do ano corrente a junho do ano seguinte. No início de 2021, o Codefat atendeu a recomendação da Controladoria-Geral da União (CGU) e passou a depositar o dinheiro somente dois anos após o trabalho com carteira assinada.
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WASHINGTON — U.S. senators left a closed-door meeting Tuesday with Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth and Secretary of State Marco Rubio split over the Trump administration’s strikes on alleged drug-running vessels near Venezuela, particularly an early September follow-up strike that killed two survivors clinging to boat wreckage. Hegseth and Rubio delivered the all-member briefings to […]
WASHINGTON — U.S. senators left a closed-door meeting Tuesday with Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth and Secretary of State Marco Rubio split over the Trump administration’s strikes on alleged drug-running vessels near Venezuela, particularly an early September follow-up strike that killed two survivors clinging to boat wreckage. Hegseth and Rubio delivered the all-member briefings to […]
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Sign up for Chalkbeat Tennessee’s free newsletter to keep up with statewide education policy and Memphis-Shelby County Schools. Memphis-Shelby County Schools board members are suing the Shelby County Election Commission over 2026 election changes that would cut short more than half of the board’s terms. Those five members — chair Natalie McKinney, Stephanie Love, Towanna Murphy, Tamarques Porter, and Sable Otey — filed the lawsuit with Shelby County Chancery Court on Dec. 15. The district board as a whole is also listed as a plaintiff. In an emailed statement Tuesday, Administrator of Elections Linda Phillips said she is “aware of and disappointed” that the school board is suing the Shelby County Election Commission. “The Shelby County Election Commission works to ensure elections are properly administered, but does not decide which elections are placed on the ballot,” Phillips said. MSCS officials and affected board members did not respond to requests for comment. The full board reset was pushed through by Shelby County commissioners in October, despite constitutionality concerns from local officials, including the mayor. State lawmakers made the local election realignment possible through legislation passed last spring. Supporters of the reset argued aligning all board elections with other county elections could reduce administrative costs and boost voter turnout, which has historically been low for school board elections. But the state law and commission decision came amid ongoing calls for greater accountability for the MSCS board following the ouster of former Superintendent Marie Feagins. This fall, board members argued the reset was a retaliatory effort that essentially nullified local voters’ decisions. Board members unanimously voted in November to hire a lawyer to determine the legality and constitutionality of putting all nine seats on the ballot in 2026. The lawsuit was filed just a week before school board candidates can formally pull petitions for 2026 candidacy ahead of the May party primaries. This is a developing story that will be updated. Bri Hatch covers Memphis-Shelby County Schools for Chalkbeat Tennessee. Reach Bri at bhatch@chalkbeat.org.
Sign up for Chalkbeat Tennessee’s free newsletter to keep up with statewide education policy and Memphis-Shelby County Schools. Memphis-Shelby County Schools board members are suing the Shelby County Election Commission over 2026 election changes that would cut short more than half of the board’s terms. Those five members — chair Natalie McKinney, Stephanie Love, Towanna Murphy, Tamarques Porter, and Sable Otey — filed the lawsuit with Shelby County Chancery Court on Dec. 15. The district board as a whole is also listed as a plaintiff. In an emailed statement Tuesday, Administrator of Elections Linda Phillips said she is “aware of and disappointed” that the school board is suing the Shelby County Election Commission. “The Shelby County Election Commission works to ensure elections are properly administered, but does not decide which elections are placed on the ballot,” Phillips said. MSCS officials and affected board members did not respond to requests for comment. The full board reset was pushed through by Shelby County commissioners in October, despite constitutionality concerns from local officials, including the mayor. State lawmakers made the local election realignment possible through legislation passed last spring. Supporters of the reset argued aligning all board elections with other county elections could reduce administrative costs and boost voter turnout, which has historically been low for school board elections. But the state law and commission decision came amid ongoing calls for greater accountability for the MSCS board following the ouster of former Superintendent Marie Feagins. This fall, board members argued the reset was a retaliatory effort that essentially nullified local voters’ decisions. Board members unanimously voted in November to hire a lawyer to determine the legality and constitutionality of putting all nine seats on the ballot in 2026. The lawsuit was filed just a week before school board candidates can formally pull petitions for 2026 candidacy ahead of the May party primaries. This is a developing story that will be updated. Bri Hatch covers Memphis-Shelby County Schools for Chalkbeat Tennessee. Reach Bri at bhatch@chalkbeat.org.
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O Supremo Tribunal Federal (STF) chegou nesta terça-feira (16) a marca de 29 condenados à prisão nas ações penais da trama golpista ocorrida durante o governo do ex-presidente Jair Bolsonaro. Somente dois réus foram absolvidos. A Primeira Turma finalizou hoje o julgamento do Núcleo 2 e decidiu condenar mais cinco réus. Entre setembro e novembro deste ano, o colegiado condenou mais 24 réus, que pertenciam aos núcleos 1, 3 e 4. Notícias relacionadas: Trama golpista: por unanimidade, STF condena cinco réus e absolve um. Réus do Núcleo 2 da trama golpista recebem penas entre 8 e 26 anos . Moraes vota por condenar mais 5 réus da trama golpista e absolver um. O Núcleo 5 é formado pelo réu Paulo Figueiredo, neto do ex-presidente da ditadura João Figueiredo. Ele mora dos Estados Unidos, e não há previsão para o julgamento. O general de Exército Estevam Theófilo, que foi denunciado no Núcleo 3, e Fernando de Sousa Oliveira, delegado de carreira da Polícia Federal (PF) e ex-diretor de Operações do Ministério da Justiça, réu do Núcleo 2, foram os únicos absolvidos por falta de provas. Até o momento, somente os réus do núcleo 1, formado pelo ex-presidente Jair Bolsonaro e mais sete réus, tiveram as condenações executadas. Os demais núcleos ainda estão em fase de recurso. Confira a lista de condenados Núcleo 1 – Data da condenação: 11/9 Jair Bolsonaro, ex-presidente da República: 27 anos e três meses Walter Braga Netto, ex-ministro e candidato à vice na chapa de 2022: 26 anos; Almir Garnier, ex-comandante da Marinha: 24 anos; Anderson Torres, ex-ministro da Justiça e ex-secretário de segurança do Distrito Federal: 24 anos; Augusto Heleno, ex-ministro do Gabinete de Segurança Institucional (GSI): 21 anos; Paulo Sérgio Nogueira, ex-ministro da Defesa: 19 anos; Alexandre Ramagem, deputado federal e ex-diretor da Agência Brasileira de Inteligência (Abin): 16 anos, um mês e 15 dias; Mauro Cid, ex-ajudante de ordens de Bolsonaro: 2 anos em regime aberto e garantia de liberdade pela delação premiada. Núcleo 2 - Data da condenação: 16/12 Mário Fernandes, general da reserva do Exército: 26 anos e seis meses de prisão; Silvinei Vasques, ex-diretor da Polícia Rodoviária Federal (PRF): 24 anos e seis meses de prisão; Marcelo Câmara, ex-assessor de Bolsonaro: 21 anos de prisão; Filipe Martins , ex-assessor de Assuntos Internacionais do ex- presidente Jair Bolsonaro: 21 anos de prisão; Marília de Alencar, ex-diretora de Inteligência do Ministério da Justiça: 8 anos e seis meses de prisão. Núcleo 3 - Data da condenação: 18/11 Hélio Ferreira Lima, tenente-coronel: 24 anos de prisão; Rafael Martins de Oliveira, tenente-coronel: 21 anos de prisão; Rodrigo Bezerra de Azevedo, tenente-coronel: 21 anos de prisão; Wladimir Matos Soares, policial federal: 21 anos de prisão; Sérgio Ricardo Cavaliere de Medeiros , tenente-coronel: 17 anos de prisão; Bernardo Romão Correa Netto, coronel: 17 anos de prisão; Fabrício Moreira de Bastos, coronel: 16 anos de prisão; Márcio Nunes de Resende Júnior, coronel: 3 anos e cinco meses de prisão; Ronald Ferreira de Araújo Júnior, tenente-coronel: um ano e onze meses de prisão. Núcleo 4 - Data da condenação: 21/10 Ângelo Martins Denicoli, major da reserva do Exército: 17 anos de prisão; Reginaldo Vieira de Abreu, coronel do Exército: 15 anos e seis meses de prisão; Marcelo Araújo Bormevet, policial federal: 14 anos e seis meses de prisão; Giancarlo Gomes Rodrigues, subtenente do Exército: 14 anos de prisão; Ailton Gonçalves Moraes Barros, major da reserva do Exército: 13 anos de prisão; Guilherme Marques de Almeida, tenente-coronel do Exército: 13 anos e seis meses; Carlos Cesar Moretzsohn Rocha, presidente do Instituto Voto Legal: 7 anos e seis meses de prisão.
O Supremo Tribunal Federal (STF) chegou nesta terça-feira (16) a marca de 29 condenados à prisão nas ações penais da trama golpista ocorrida durante o governo do ex-presidente Jair Bolsonaro. Somente dois réus foram absolvidos. A Primeira Turma finalizou hoje o julgamento do Núcleo 2 e decidiu condenar mais cinco réus. Entre setembro e novembro deste ano, o colegiado condenou mais 24 réus, que pertenciam aos núcleos 1, 3 e 4. Notícias relacionadas: Trama golpista: por unanimidade, STF condena cinco réus e absolve um. Réus do Núcleo 2 da trama golpista recebem penas entre 8 e 26 anos . Moraes vota por condenar mais 5 réus da trama golpista e absolver um. O Núcleo 5 é formado pelo réu Paulo Figueiredo, neto do ex-presidente da ditadura João Figueiredo. Ele mora dos Estados Unidos, e não há previsão para o julgamento. O general de Exército Estevam Theófilo, que foi denunciado no Núcleo 3, e Fernando de Sousa Oliveira, delegado de carreira da Polícia Federal (PF) e ex-diretor de Operações do Ministério da Justiça, réu do Núcleo 2, foram os únicos absolvidos por falta de provas. Até o momento, somente os réus do núcleo 1, formado pelo ex-presidente Jair Bolsonaro e mais sete réus, tiveram as condenações executadas. Os demais núcleos ainda estão em fase de recurso. Confira a lista de condenados Núcleo 1 – Data da condenação: 11/9 Jair Bolsonaro, ex-presidente da República: 27 anos e três meses Walter Braga Netto, ex-ministro e candidato à vice na chapa de 2022: 26 anos; Almir Garnier, ex-comandante da Marinha: 24 anos; Anderson Torres, ex-ministro da Justiça e ex-secretário de segurança do Distrito Federal: 24 anos; Augusto Heleno, ex-ministro do Gabinete de Segurança Institucional (GSI): 21 anos; Paulo Sérgio Nogueira, ex-ministro da Defesa: 19 anos; Alexandre Ramagem, deputado federal e ex-diretor da Agência Brasileira de Inteligência (Abin): 16 anos, um mês e 15 dias; Mauro Cid, ex-ajudante de ordens de Bolsonaro: 2 anos em regime aberto e garantia de liberdade pela delação premiada. Núcleo 2 - Data da condenação: 16/12 Mário Fernandes, general da reserva do Exército: 26 anos e seis meses de prisão; Silvinei Vasques, ex-diretor da Polícia Rodoviária Federal (PRF): 24 anos e seis meses de prisão; Marcelo Câmara, ex-assessor de Bolsonaro: 21 anos de prisão; Filipe Martins , ex-assessor de Assuntos Internacionais do ex- presidente Jair Bolsonaro: 21 anos de prisão; Marília de Alencar, ex-diretora de Inteligência do Ministério da Justiça: 8 anos e seis meses de prisão. Núcleo 3 - Data da condenação: 18/11 Hélio Ferreira Lima, tenente-coronel: 24 anos de prisão; Rafael Martins de Oliveira, tenente-coronel: 21 anos de prisão; Rodrigo Bezerra de Azevedo, tenente-coronel: 21 anos de prisão; Wladimir Matos Soares, policial federal: 21 anos de prisão; Sérgio Ricardo Cavaliere de Medeiros , tenente-coronel: 17 anos de prisão; Bernardo Romão Correa Netto, coronel: 17 anos de prisão; Fabrício Moreira de Bastos, coronel: 16 anos de prisão; Márcio Nunes de Resende Júnior, coronel: 3 anos e cinco meses de prisão; Ronald Ferreira de Araújo Júnior, tenente-coronel: um ano e onze meses de prisão. Núcleo 4 - Data da condenação: 21/10 Ângelo Martins Denicoli, major da reserva do Exército: 17 anos de prisão; Reginaldo Vieira de Abreu, coronel do Exército: 15 anos e seis meses de prisão; Marcelo Araújo Bormevet, policial federal: 14 anos e seis meses de prisão; Giancarlo Gomes Rodrigues, subtenente do Exército: 14 anos de prisão; Ailton Gonçalves Moraes Barros, major da reserva do Exército: 13 anos de prisão; Guilherme Marques de Almeida, tenente-coronel do Exército: 13 anos e seis meses; Carlos Cesar Moretzsohn Rocha, presidente do Instituto Voto Legal: 7 anos e seis meses de prisão.
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(The Center Square) – With health care premiums for millions of Americans set to spike in 2026, congressional leaders say they have exhausted all options to cushion the blow. Republicans tanked Democrat’s bill that would have prevented the pandemic-era enhancements to the Obamacare Premium Tax Credit from expiring. Senate Democrats have voted down any health care plan that does not include an extension of the enhanced subsidies, and are set to do so again if House Republicans’ health bill reaches the upper chamber. As Congress prepares to leave for Christmas, Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., expressed some optimism that the parties could reach a compromise when they return in January. “Our views on healthcare and the Democrat views on healthcare are very different. And I think that’s a difficult challenge that we have to figure out how to overcome,” Thune told reporters Tuesday. “But if they’re willing to accept changes that actually would put more power and control and resources in the hands of the American people and less of that in the pockets of insurance companies, I think there’s a path forward.” Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., however, said “the damage has been done,” indicating opposition to any bill other than Democrats’ $83 billion three-year extension of the subsidies that doesn't include changes to reduce fraud. “We always want to work with people who will lower health care costs, but if the Republicans want to do something, they have until January 1st to pass the one bill that can get it done: our bill,” Schumer said Tuesday. A recent Government Accountability Office report uncovered systemic fraud risk and confirmed fraud in the enhanced subsidies. More than 90% of office's fake applicants received coverage, with GAO noting that “agents and brokers have a financial incentive to maximize enrollments” under the existing tax credit system. Many rank-and-file lawmakers in both chambers have put forward compromise legislation as negotiations among leadership have failed. A bipartisan group of 35 lawmakers in the House are pushing for a vote this week on legislation that would extend the subsidies but include targeted reforms. Schumer declined to say whether Democrats would again shut down the government when funding runs out on Jan. 31 if their health care demands are not met.
(The Center Square) – With health care premiums for millions of Americans set to spike in 2026, congressional leaders say they have exhausted all options to cushion the blow. Republicans tanked Democrat’s bill that would have prevented the pandemic-era enhancements to the Obamacare Premium Tax Credit from expiring. Senate Democrats have voted down any health care plan that does not include an extension of the enhanced subsidies, and are set to do so again if House Republicans’ health bill reaches the upper chamber. As Congress prepares to leave for Christmas, Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., expressed some optimism that the parties could reach a compromise when they return in January. “Our views on healthcare and the Democrat views on healthcare are very different. And I think that’s a difficult challenge that we have to figure out how to overcome,” Thune told reporters Tuesday. “But if they’re willing to accept changes that actually would put more power and control and resources in the hands of the American people and less of that in the pockets of insurance companies, I think there’s a path forward.” Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., however, said “the damage has been done,” indicating opposition to any bill other than Democrats’ $83 billion three-year extension of the subsidies that doesn't include changes to reduce fraud. “We always want to work with people who will lower health care costs, but if the Republicans want to do something, they have until January 1st to pass the one bill that can get it done: our bill,” Schumer said Tuesday. A recent Government Accountability Office report uncovered systemic fraud risk and confirmed fraud in the enhanced subsidies. More than 90% of office's fake applicants received coverage, with GAO noting that “agents and brokers have a financial incentive to maximize enrollments” under the existing tax credit system. Many rank-and-file lawmakers in both chambers have put forward compromise legislation as negotiations among leadership have failed. A bipartisan group of 35 lawmakers in the House are pushing for a vote this week on legislation that would extend the subsidies but include targeted reforms. Schumer declined to say whether Democrats would again shut down the government when funding runs out on Jan. 31 if their health care demands are not met.
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ترامپ از بی بی سی شکایت کرد و خواستار غرامت ده میلیارد دلاری شد
ترامپ از بی بی سی شکایت کرد و خواستار غرامت ده میلیارد دلاری شد
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Житло визнаватимуть «безгосподарним», якщо власника «неможливо встановити», або у разі відсутності «дійсних документів» про власника. Таке майно вилучатиметься на користь окупаційних адміністрацій
Житло визнаватимуть «безгосподарним», якщо власника «неможливо встановити», або у разі відсутності «дійсних документів» про власника. Таке майно вилучатиметься на користь окупаційних адміністрацій
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The Idaho State Board of Land Commissioners presented state leaders with a ceremonial $68.2 million check on Tuesday to celebrate this year’s funding disbursement to the K-12 public school system. Idaho Department of Lands Director Dustin Miller said the $68.2 million funding distribution is a record high amount, due to a combination of increased timber […]
The Idaho State Board of Land Commissioners presented state leaders with a ceremonial $68.2 million check on Tuesday to celebrate this year’s funding disbursement to the K-12 public school system. Idaho Department of Lands Director Dustin Miller said the $68.2 million funding distribution is a record high amount, due to a combination of increased timber […]
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حمایت قاطع سنا از لایحه بودجه دفاعی نهصد میلیاردی آمریکا
حمایت قاطع سنا از لایحه بودجه دفاعی نهصد میلیاردی آمریکا