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A una semana de recibir el alta, el papa Francisco pidió vivir la cuaresma como «un tiempo de curación»

Al cumplir una semana desde que fue dado de alta en el policlínico Gemelli, donde estuvo internado 38 días por una grave neumonía en los dos pulmones, el papa Francisco se expresó a través de un texto escrito que fue difundido en el Ángelus que habitualmente reza desde el palacio Apostólico a miles de fieles en la plaza de San Pedro. Allí pidió que “vivamos esta Quaresma como un tiempo de curación». Se refería a las celebraciones previas a la Pascua, que este año se celebra el 20 de abril.
Ya se anunció que ese día el pontífice dará personalmente una bendición “urbi et orbi” (a la ciudad de Roma y al mundo).
Como hace siempre en el rezo del Angelus, el Papa reiteró: “Continuamos a orar por la paz, en la martirizada Ucrania, en Palestina, Israel, Líbano, Republica Democrática del Congo y Myanmar, que tanto sufre por el terremoto”.
Francisco dijo demás: “Sigo con preocupación la situación en Sud Sudán. Renuevo mi llamado a todos los líderes para que pongan el máximo empeño por bajar la tensión en el país».
Con relación a Sudan, donde la guerra continúa “a cobrarse víctimas inocentes”, el pontífice argentino auspició que se inicien “lo antes posible” nuevas negociaciones capaces de asegurar una solución duradera que haga frente a la espantosa catástrofe humanitaria”.
Francisco señaló también que “gracias a Dios también hay acontecimientos positivos” y citó como ejemplo el reciente acuerdo fronterizo entre Kirguistán y Tayiquistán, considerado clave para la estabilidad en el Asia Central”.
El Papa concluyó el Angelus con un mensaje “a María, madre de la misericordia, para que ayude a la familia humana a reconciliarse en la paz”.
El Secretario de Estado del Vaticano, cardenal Pietro Parolín, dijo en una entrevista que “el Papa no dejó nunca de gobernar la Iglesia” durante su hospitalización en el Gemellii mientras que en su actual convalecencia “sigue tomando decisiones sobre los asuntos importante y delega los rutinario a sus colaboradores.”
Parolín dijo al “Corriere della Sera” que “incluso en los días más difíciles de su hospitalización, que gracias a Dios ya pasaron, el Papa veía los expedientes que se le presentaban con cuestiones de importancia, los leía y decidía en consecuencia”.
El secretario de Estado, al frente de la Curia Romana, agregó que el Papa “necesita estar tranquilo y no cansarse demasiado”. “Se le presentan asuntos que solo él puede y debe decidir. El gobierno de la Iglesia está en sus manos”.
Destacó que “sin embargo hay más cuestiones rutinarias sobre los que los colaboradores de la Curia pueden proceder, incluso sin consultarlo, basándose en indicaciones ya recibidas previamente y en las normas vigentes”.
“No todo tiene que pasar por el Papa. Tiene sus colaboradores en la Curia a los que él mismo da instrucciones a seguir y el poder de tomar determinadas decisiones”.
El cardenal Parolín señaló que “en casos especiales pueden delegarse otros poderes, como para las ceremonias de canonización de los santos, cuando es el Papa quien debe pronunciar la fórmula que formaliza el proceso “aunque si es necesaria también esta puede delegare a un colaborador que la pronuncia en nombre del pontífice”.
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El drama de un salvadoreño deportado por Donald Trump a una cárcel de Nayib Bukele suma otra pesadilla: lo echarían de EE.UU. a Uganda

Una pesadilla tras otra
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DNC chair demands Dems stop ‘bringing a pencil to a knife fight’ at fiery summer meeting

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MINNEAPOLIS, MN – As Democrats hunger for more forceful pushback against sweeping and controversial moves by President Donald Trump and Republicans, the party’s national chair stressed that it’s time to «stand up and fight.»
And in a fiery speech Monday, Democratic National Committee (DNC) chair Ken Martin argued that the president is acting as «a dictator-in-chief» and that Trump’s second administration is «facism dressed in a red tie.»
«We are the only thing standing in his way,» Martin emphasized as he addressed the more than 400 elected party officials from all 50 states and seven territories, as the summer meeting kicked off at a downtown hotel in his hometown of Minneapolis, Minnesota.
«Are you ready to take back our country from the wannabe-king in the White House,» he asked the audience, to loud cheers.
AMID PLUNGING POLLS, ANEMIC FUNDRAISING, DEMOCRATS LOOK TO REBOUND AT PARTY’S SUMMER MEETING
Democratic National Committee chair Ken Martin addresses party members at the DNC’s summer meeting, on Aug. 25, 2025 in Minneapolis, Minnesota (Paul Steinhauser – Fox News )
Martin, pointing to the forceful response by Democrats to moves this summer by Trump and Republicans to create more right-leaning U.S. House seats in states across the country through rare mid-decade congressional redistricting ahead of next year’s midterm elections, said that he’s «sick and tired of this Democratic Party bringing a pencil to a knife fight.»
«We cannot be the only party that plays by the rules anymore,» he urged.
Democratic Party leaders and officials face a multitude of problems as they try to escape the political wilderness.
The party is trying to escape the political wilderness after last year’s elections, when Democrats lost control of the White House and the Senate and fell short in their bid to win back the House majority. And Republicans made gains with voters who make up key parts of the Democratic Party’s base.
DNC CHAIR TELLS FOX NEWS PARTY HAS HIT ‘ROCK BOTTOM’
But the situation has only worsened for the Democrats in the 10 months since last year’s election setbacks.
The Democrats’ brand is deeply unpopular, especially with younger voters, as the party’s poll numbers continue to drop to all-time lows in national surveys.
The DNC faces a massive fundraising deficit at the hands of the rival Republican National Committee (RNC), fueled in part by major party donors cutting back their contributions as they express their frustrations with the national party committee.
New voter data first reported last week by the New York Times showed Democratic Party registration plunging while GOP sign-ups were on the rise in the 30 states that register voters by party.
«There’s no doubt that … we have work to do,» Martin acknowledged in a sit-down interview this summer with Fox News Digital.
But seeing a silver lining, he added that «when you hit rock bottom, there’s only one direction to go, and that’s up, and that’s what we’re doing.»
On Monday, amid talk that Democrats remain divided over a slew of policy and political issues, Martin highlighted that «in this big tent party of ours, we are unified towards one single goal, to stop Donald Trump and put this country back on track.»
LONGTIME TRUMP ALLY TAKES OVER CHAIRING REPUBLICAN NATIONAL COMMITTEE
Sen. Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota took aim at talk of the party’s divisions.
Klobuchar rejected the «we suck club» label and said «we’re not getting into it when they try to divide us on every single issue online. Complaining about each other to each other – it isn’t how we win again.»
Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz took aim at media reports of the party’s divisions, saying «it boggles my damn mind that in the midst of a military takeover of our cities and the attempt to go into others, the flaunting of the rule of law, the coolness and the unconstitutional nature of the way they’re attacking our neighbors, that the press finds the need to talk about, ‘oh, there’s a division in the Democratic Party.’»
«There’s a division in my damn house, and we’re still married, and things are good,» Walz said. «That’s life. That’s life. We are strong. We are strong because we challenge each other.»

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz took aim at media reports of the party’s divisions at the annual DNC summer meeting, saying, «There’s a division in my damn house, and we’re still married, and things are good,» saying (Paul Steinhauser – Fox News)
Walz, who served as then-Vice President Kamala Harris’ running mate on the Democrats national ticket last summer and autumn, slammed Trump as «petty as hell.»
And he said Americans wake each morning to «a man child crying about whatever’s wrong with him.»
Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison told the audience that he and fellow Democratic state attorneys general who’ve fought the Trump administration in court have «sued this dude 44 times and we’ll sue him 44 more and 44 more after that.»
«We have sued Trump for gender-affirming care. We are not going to scapegoat the transgender community.» Ellison highlighted.
While the 2024 election has faded in the rearview mirror, Republicans have been relentless in characterizing Democrats as extreme leftists.
Former RNC chair Michael Whatley, who formally stepped down last week as he runs for the Senate, argued in a Fox News Digital interview last week that the Democrats «are moving further and further and farther to the left. They are walking away from Main Street right now. They are beholden to left-wing radical woke policies.»
«They haven’t learned a single thing from their election losses in 2024,» Whatley claimed.
RNC communications director Zach Parkinson, responding to Monday’s DNC session, told Fox News that «under Ken Martin’s leadership, Democrats have sunk to their lowest approval rating in 35 years, the DNC is still paying off millions in debt from Kamala Harris’ failed campaign, and Martin himself is actively supporting a communist for mayor of New York City. As Republicans, we think he is doing a fantastic job, and we fully endorse him to stay on as DNC Chair.»
The «communist» reference points to Democratic socialist Zohran Mamdani, the Democrats’ nominee in this year’s New York City mayoral election.
But despite all the problems and setbacks facing the Democrats, they have enjoyed some victories of late.
Democrats have scored a slew of off-year and special election wins, ahead of next year’s midterm elections, when the GOP will be defending its majorities in the House and Senate as the party in power will likely face historical political headwinds.
Democrats have also landed some top recruits – former Gov. Roy Cooper in North Carolina and former Sen. Sherrod Brown in Ohio, in two of the most crucial 2026 Senate races.
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And while the Democratic Party’s poll numbers are in the gutter, the approval and favorable ratings for Trump and the GOP are nothing to brag about. Plus, polls indicate that the so-called ‘Big Beautiful Bill,’ which is the Trump-inspired massive Republican domestic policy, tax cuts and spending law, remains unpopular with Americans.
«We’ve already won, this year, 38 special elections…..We’re winning all across this country, including in many places that haven’t gone blue in generations,» Martin touted.
And he said that «not all of these elections make national news, but I know that every race matters. Every inch of ground that we gain matters. Every single inch.»
democratic party,republicans elections,democrats elections,midterm elections,donald trump,tim walz,politics
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Australia boots Iranian diplomats after alleging Islamic Republic behind recent antisemitic attacks

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The Australian government says it is expelling two Iranian diplomats after alleging that the Islamic Republic was behind at least two antisemitic attacks in Sydney and Melbourne.
Speaking to reporters, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said the country’s main domestic spy agency, ASIO, had «gathered enough credible intelligence to reach a deeply disturbing conclusion.»
«The Iranian government directed at least two of these attacks,» Albanese said, referring to recent attacks on a Sydney restaurant and a Melbourne synagogue. «Iran has sought to disguise its involvement but ASIO assesses it was behind the attacks.»
The Australian government informed Iran’s ambassador to Australia shortly before Albanese’s announcement that they would be expelled. It also withdrew Australian diplomats posted in Iran to a third country.
ANTISEMITIC ATTACKERS VIOLENTLY TARGET SYNAGOGUE, ISRAELI RESTAURANT IN AUSTRALIA
Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese announces that Australia will recognize a Palestinian state at a press conference in Canberra, Monday, Aug. 11, 2025. (Mick Tsikas/AAP Image via AP)
Antisemitic incidents in both Melbourne and Sydney rose steeply following the Oct. 7, 2023 massacre in Israel that triggered Israel’s ongoing offensive on Gaza.
The prime minister also said Australia plans to designate Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps as a terrorist organization.

A member of the Jewish community recovers a Torah scroll from the Adass Israel Synagogue on December 06, 2024 in Melbourne, Australia. (Asanka Ratnayake/Getty Images)
The move comes after Australia announced earlier this month that it plans to recognize Palestinian statehood at the United Nations General Assembly in September.

A general view of the Iranian Embassy in Canberra, Australia, Friday, Feb. 10, 2023. (Lukas Coch/AAP Image via AP)
The announcement triggered a scathing response from Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu who accused Australia of betraying Israel.
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«History will remember Albanese for what he is: A weak politician who betrayed Israel and abandoned Australia’s Jews,» Netanyahu said.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
israel,iran,australia,middle east
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