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Iran rejects Trump demands despite ‘significant progress’ in nuclear talks

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Talks between Iran and the U.S. wrapped up in Geneva Thursday as officials cited «significant progress» and announced a next meeting set for Vienna within days.

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Yet despite senior U.S. officials describing the third round as «positive,» per Axios, Iranian state television also reported that Tehran will continue enriching uranium and rejected proposals to transfer it abroad.

According to The Associated Press , the reports claimed Iran would also push for the lifting of international sanctions — signaling it is not prepared to meet President Donald Trump’s demands.

The negotiations were carried out primarily indirectly, with Omani Foreign Minister Badr al-Busaidi relaying messages between the two sides.

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Oman’s Foreign Affairs’ Minister Badr bin Hamad al-Busaidi gives a thumbs up as he leaves his hotel to reach Oman’s ambassador residency for new round of talks between the United States and Iran to address Iran’s nuclear program. (Fabrice COFFRINI / AFP via Getty Images)

In a post on X, al-Busaidi confirmed that the round had concluded and said discussions would resume soon.

«We have finished the day after significant progress in the negotiation between the United States and Iran,» he said on X.

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«We will resume soon after consultation in the respective capitals. Discussions on a technical level will take place next week in Vienna. I am grateful to all concerned for their efforts: the negotiators, the IAEA, and our hosts, the Swiss government,» al-Busaidi said.

There was no immediate public statement from U.S. or Iranian officials after the session.

LEAVITT SAYS TRUMP CHOOSES DIPLOMACY FIRST FOR IRAN, BUT REMAINS ‘WILLING TO USE’ LETHAL FORCE IF NECESSARY

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Jared Kushner, Steve Witkoff, and Sayyid Badr Al Busaidi seated at a round table.

Special envoy Steve Witkoff (C) and Jared Kushner (L) meet with Oman’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Sayyid Badr bin Hamad Albusaidi (R) in Geneva, Switzerland, to discuss ongoing diplomatic negotiations on Thursday, Feb. 26, 2026. (Oman Ministry of Foreign Affairs/X)

Trump’s special Middle East envoy, Steve Witkoff, attended the three-hour negotiations with Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi.

IAEA Director General Rafael Grossi was also involved, with Iranian officials presenting a draft proposal for a potential nuclear agreement with the U.S., which has key demands.

Iran insists it has the right to enrich uranium and has appeared to refuse to negotiate over other issues, including its long-range missile program and support for armed groups such as Hamas and Hezbollah.

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TRUMP ADMIN RAMPS UP ‘MAXIMUM PRESSURE’ IRAN SANCTIONS AHEAD OF NEW ROUND OF NUCLEAR TALKS

Iran's Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei

Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei pictured  sitting next to a senior military official in Iran. (Getty Images)

Trump, meanwhile, insists on a deal to curb Iran’s nuclear program. In his State of the Union address Feb. 24, the president said he prefers a diplomatic solution.

«My preference is to solve this problem through diplomacy, but one thing is certain: I will never allow the world’s number one sponsor of terror, which they are by far, to have a nuclear weapon,» the president said. «Can’t let that happen.»

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As the Geneva talks unfolded Thursday, Ali Shamkhani, a senior adviser to Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, also wrote on X that if the main U.S. concern is preventing a nuclear weapon, that stance «aligns» with Khamenei’s fatwa and Iran’s defensive doctrine.

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He added that Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi has «sufficient support and authority» to come to a final agreement in the talks.

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The development came as the U.S. continues assembling military assets, including a fleet of aircraft and warships in the Middle East.

Fox News Digital has reached out to the White House for comment.

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Witkoff warns Iran is ‘a week away’ from 'bomb-making material' as Trump weighs action



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Dems block DHS funding after GOP rejects their counter, Thune says Schumer ‘going in circles’

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Senate Democrats blocked a last-minute attempt by Republicans to end the Homeland Security shutdown after the GOP rejected their «unserious» counteroffer. 

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Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., forced a vote on the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) funding bill after swiftly killing Democrats’ offer earlier Wednesday afternoon. He accused their latest counter as «not even close to being real.» 

«They know better,» Thune said. «They’re asking for things that have already been turned down. So it just seems like they’re going in circles.»

The spur-of-the-moment test vote on Wednesday was designed to see whether Republicans could splinter any support from Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and Senate Democrats’ unified front to support their own framework to reopen the agency, which Democrats already rejected on Tuesday. 

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DHS DEAL IN LIMBO AS DEMOCRATS DEMAND TOUGHER ICE CRACKDOWN DESPITE GOP COMPROMISE

Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., told Fox News Digital that it was Democrats’ far-left base that was preventing them from reopening DHS.   (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

But like the five times prior, the latest attempt was blocked by nearly every Senate Democrat.

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Republicans are sticking by their initial offer, which would carve out Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) funding in exchange for reopening other agencies under the Homeland Security umbrella, including the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) and the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), among others.

Republicans were already fuming that Democrats did not take the deal, noting that sidelining immigration enforcement funding was one of their key demands. They also charged that Schumer and his caucus were backing away from previously negotiated positions.

Still, Senate Democrats are pushing for stringent reforms to ICE, including requiring judicial warrants for agents and banning DHS agents from wearing masks. Those provisions were among nine total demands added to the GOP framework. Those asks, in particular, have been firm red lines for Republicans throughout the shutdown.

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SENATE REPUBLICANS MOVE TO REOPEN DHS WITH NEW PLAN, WAIT FOR DEMOCRATIC BUY-IN

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and Democrats rejected Republicans’ latest deal to reopen DHS and have promised a counteroffer with reforms in return.  (Alex Wong/Getty Images)

Republicans have also consistently argued that if Democrats want reforms, they must be willing to fund immigration enforcement.

Schumer pushed back on the Senate floor shortly after announcing he had sent Republicans the latest offer, calling their accusations «bad faith» that «will only slow things down.»

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«In fact, over the weekend, Democrats had constructive conversations in person with our Republican colleagues,» Schumer said. «They — the Republican colleagues — conceded that some of the reforms, verbally, that we have been looking for, they said these make sense.»

«We thought there might be a path forward on some of the ways to reform ICE and to get some of the things everybody knows ought to be in federal legislation,» he continued. «We thought there had been some progress. But then Republicans sent us their offer yesterday, and it contained none of what had been talked about.»

But Sen. Bernie Moreno, R-Ohio, who was part of the White House meeting that produced the DHS framework, accused Democrats of «backing up.»

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CORNYN TARGETS LAWMAKERS’ AIRPORT FAST PASS AS TSA LINES GROW DURING DHS SHUTDOWN

Bernie Moreno referencing a government shutdown sign while questioning Markwayne Mullin during a hearing.

Sen. Bernie Moreno, R-Ohio, references a government shutdown sign while questioning Sen. Markwayne Mullin, R-Okla., during his DHS confirmation hearing in the Dirksen building on Wednesday, March 18, 2026. (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc. via Getty Images)

«If you really want to cut to the chase — take all the [expletive] aside — here’s where we’re at,» Moreno said. «Democrats made an offer. Want to know what the offer is? They don’t want us to deport anybody who entered this country illegally or overstayed their visa unless that person committed a serious crime. That’s what they want. That’s obviously insane, because that’s the base that they deal with.»

Thune also argued that Republicans and the Trump administration have given Democrats much of what they wanted, including replacing former DHS Secretary Kristi Noem with newly confirmed Secretary Markwayne Mullin, ramping down immigration operations in Minnesota, and providing several other reforms.

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Some Democrats want additional guardrails on how funding in the GOP framework would be handled — specifically to prevent money from being shifted within the agency and redirected to immigration operations.

Thune said there could be some room for that concession but reiterated that Democrats’ other demands were «unserious.» He also said there was «no point» in Republicans offering another counterproposal.

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«This is, honestly, retreading ground that we’ve been treading for weeks,» Thune said.

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EN VIVO: El régimen de Irán lanzó un ataque con misiles contra Israel: al menos 6 heridos

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La guerra de Irán acelera la colaboración entre las empresas tecnológicas emergentes y el ejército estadounidense

Por primera vez, a los pilares habituales del sector militar-industrial, como Lockheed Martin y Boeing, se suman los gigantes tecnológicos emergentes Palantir, Anthropic y Anduril para ayudar a mantener en funcionamiento la maquinaria bélica estadounidense

La guerra de Irán acelera la colaboración entre las empresas tecnológicas emergentes y el ejército estadounidense (REUTERS)
La guerra de Irán acelera la colaboración entre las empresas tecnológicas emergentes y el ejército estadounidense (REUTERS)

La guerra en Medio Oriente ha puesto de relieve la alianza recién descubierta entre el sector tecnológico y el ejército estadounidense tras décadas de relaciones tensas, demostrando una sinergia que los inversores ven como una mina de oro potencial.

Las aerolíneas asiáticas aumentan sus rutas a Europa a raíz de la guerra

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Un avión de Cathay Pacific se desplaza por la pista del Aeropuerto Internacional de Hong Kong (REUTERS/Tyrone Siu)
Un avión de Cathay Pacific se desplaza por la pista del Aeropuerto Internacional de Hong Kong (REUTERS/Tyrone Siu)

Las principales aerolíneas asiáticas incrementaron sus rutas hacia Europa en el último mes, buscando consolidarse como alternativa en las conexiones intercontinentales ante la creciente inestabilidad en Medio Oriente, región que hasta el inicio de la guerra en Irán funcionaba como centro de la conexión aérea global.

Aunque las grandes compañías del Golfo Pérsico, como Emirates, Qatar Airways y Etihad Airways, con base en Dubái, Doha y Abu Dhabi respectivamente, continúan operando, han debido modificar sus servicios con cancelaciones y suspensiones frecuentes en respuesta a los ataques iraníes en la región.

Otras aerolíneas asiáticas, que no dependen del tránsito por Oriente Medio, aprovechan la situación para reforzar su posición en el mercado, compensar el aumento del precio del combustible y ganar cuota frente a sus competidores.

Cathay Pacific, con sede en Hong Kong, anunció nuevas suspensiones de vuelos a Dubái, Riad y Tel Aviv, y al mismo tiempo reforzó sus conexiones con Europa mediante la incorporación de viajes adicionales entre Hong Kong y París y Zúrich.

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Israel confirmó que un soldado murió en un combate en el sur del Líbano

Israel confirmó que un soldado murió en combates en el sur del Líbano (@idfonline)
Israel confirmó que un soldado murió en combates en el sur del Líbano (@idfonline)

El sargento Ori Greenberg, de 21 años, que prestaba servicio en el batallón de reconocimiento de la Brigada Golani, cayó en combate en el sur del Líbano, según confirmó el Ejército de Israel el jueves por la mañana.

Atacan un petrolero operado por Turquía en el Mar Negro

Buques comerciales, incluidos petroleros, esperan en un fondeadero en el Mar Negro (REUTERS/Umit Bektas/Foto de archivo)
Buques comerciales, incluidos petroleros, esperan en un fondeadero en el Mar Negro (REUTERS/Umit Bektas/Foto de archivo)

Un petrolero operado por una compañía turca fue atacado la madrugada del jueves en el Mar Negro, posiblemente por un vehículo de superficie no tripulado, según informó el ministro de Transportes de Turquía, Abdulkadir Uraloglu.

“Puedo decir que un buque con bandera extranjera, operado por una compañía turca, que había cargado petróleo crudo procedente de Rusia, informó de una explosión en su sala de máquinas pasada la medianoche a nuestro centro de llamadas de emergencia”, declaró el ministro en una entrevista televisiva.

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Uraloglu señaló que se cree que la sala de máquinas fue el objetivo específico del ataque y que no fue ejecutado por un dron, sino por un vehículo de superficie no tripulado a nivel del agua.

Al menos dos muertos y tres heridos en Emiratos Árabes Unidos tras la interceptación de un misil

Dos personas murieron y otras tres resultaron heridas en Abu Dhabi el jueves tras la caída de escombros provocada por la interceptación de un misil balístico. La Oficina de Prensa de Abu Dhabi informó que el incidente tuvo lugar en la carretera Sweihan, donde varios vehículos resultaron dañados.

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Las identidades de los fallecidos no han sido confirmadas hasta el momento. Las autoridades instaron al público a confiar en fuentes oficiales y a no difundir información no verificada.

El ejército de Estados Unidos informó que atacó a más de 10.000 objetivos militares en Irán desde el inicio de la guerra

En un mensaje en video de tres minutos, el jefe del Comando Central, el almirante Brad Cooper, indicó que los bombardeos dañaron o destruyeron más de dos tercios de las instalaciones iraníes dedicadas a la producción de misiles, drones y armamento naval

El ejército de Estados Unidos informó que atacó a más de 10.000 objetivos militares en Irán desde el inicio de la guerra (REUTERS)
El ejército de Estados Unidos informó que atacó a más de 10.000 objetivos militares en Irán desde el inicio de la guerra (REUTERS)

El jefe del Comando Central de Estados Unidos (CENTCOM), el almirante Brad Cooper, informó este miércoles que las fuerzas estadounidenses atacaron más de 10.000 objetivos militares en Irán desde el inicio del conflicto el 28 de febrero.

Las bolsas europeas vuelven al terreno negativo ante mensajes contradictorios sobre el fin de la guerra

Un gráfico del índice bursátil alemán DAX se ve en la bolsa de Fráncfort, Alemania. 24 de marzo de 2026 (REUTERS/Tilman Blasshofer)
Un gráfico del índice bursátil alemán DAX se ve en la bolsa de Fráncfort, Alemania. 24 de marzo de 2026 (REUTERS/Tilman Blasshofer)

Los futuros de las principales bolsas europeas retroceden este jueves, mientras el precio del petróleo vuelve a subir en medio de mensajes contradictorios entre Estados Unidos e Irán sobre posibles negociaciones para poner fin al conflicto bélico.

Según datos de mercado recogidos por EFE, a las 7:30 horas (6:30 GMT), los futuros de la Bolsa de Fráncfort caen un 0,96%, los de París un 0,71% y los de Londres un 0,43%. Los futuros del índice Euro Stoxx 50, que agrupa a las 50 firmas más capitalizadas de la zona euro, bajan un 0,84%. En Estados Unidos, los futuros de los principales indicadores también anticipan una jornada en rojo, con descensos del entorno del 0,5%.

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En paralelo, el precio del crudo brent para entrega en mayo se incrementa un 2,44% en el mercado de futuros de Londres, hasta los 104,69 dólares por barril, después de que Irán rechazara el plan estadounidense para poner fin a la guerra. De igual manera, el petróleo de Texas (WTI), referencia en EE.UU., sube un 2,24% antes de la apertura oficial del mercado, hasta los 92,52 dólares por barril.

La negativa de Irán a aceptar el plan de alto el fuego propuesto por Estados Unidos impacta nuevamente en los mercados, tras varias jornadas positivas para la renta variable. Los inversores también analizan la propuesta del Parlamento iraní para aprobar una ley que permita cobrar peaje a los buques que transiten por el estrecho de Ormuz, un paso estratégico por el que circula el 20 % del petróleo mundial.

En Asia predominan las pérdidas: el Nikkei de Tokio cede un 0,68%; la Bolsa de Shanghái baja un 1,17%; y el Hang Seng de Hong Kong pierde un 1,99%.

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El euro baja a 1,155 dólares. La onza troy de oro cae un 1,95%, hasta 4.433,6 dólares. El bitcóin baja un 1,83% y cotiza en 70.000,31 dólares.

Asciende a seis la cifra de heridos en los ataques de Irán contra Israel

El ejército israelí informó que sus defensas aéreas respondieron el jueves a ataques con misiles lanzados desde Irán, que, según los servicios médicos, dejaron seis personas levemente heridas y causaron algunos daños materiales.

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Un portavoz del servicio médico de emergencias Magen David Adom indicó que los paramédicos atendieron a seis personas con heridas leves provocadas por las explosiones, actualizando la cifra anterior de dos heridos.

El jueves por la mañana, un portavoz de la MDA declaró a la radio pública que varias casas en la ciudad central de Kafr Qassem resultaron dañadas. El alcalde, Haitham Taha, afirmó que los daños fueron causados por municiones en racimo.

El estrecho de Ormuz permaneció paralizado durante la tercera semana de la guerra

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Mapa infográfico del Estrecho de Ormuz, mostrando Irán, Omán y EAU, con tráfico de buques, profundidades del agua y relieve, destacando zonas estratégicas.
Una infografía detalla cómo la geografía del Estrecho de Ormuz, con sus 25 millas de ancho en el punto más estrecho y características como aguas poco profundas y terreno montañoso, representa desafíos significativos para la navegación y la seguridad militar en la región. (Imagen Ilustrativa Infobae)

Según el servicio de inteligencia marítima Windward, a pesar del cierre del estrecho, hay 686 barcos en el Golfo Pérsico. La mayoría de las embarcaciones, cerca de 400, se encuentran en el Golfo de Omán.

Windward afirmó que esta acumulación sugiere que “muchos operadores han optado por mantener su posición fuera del estrecho de Ormuz en lugar de comprometerse de inmediato con un cambio de ruta de larga distancia”.

Entre el 15 y el 22 de marzo, solo se observaron 16 travesías de buques con su Sistema de Identificación Automática (AIS) activado en el estrecho de Ormuz.

Un ataque iraní dejó dos heridos y causó daños en la ciudad israelí Kfar Qasim

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La ciudad central de Kfar Qasim resultó dañada por lo que parecen ser submuniciones provenientes de la ojiva de una bomba de racimo, tras el último ataque con misiles balísticos lanzado por Irán, según informó un corresponsal de Times of Israel.

Equipos de rescate se desplazaron rápidamente al lugar. El hospital Magen David Adom informó que atendió a un hombre y una mujer, ambos de 55 años, que resultaron heridos tras una explosión ocurrida luego de que una pequeña bomba impactara contra un edificio en el centro de la ciudad.



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Florida AG warns NFL: Drop affirmative action ‘Rooney Rule’ or face legal consequences

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FIRST ON FOX: Florida’s chief law enforcement officer announced Wednesday he will warn NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell that the NFL’s longstanding «Rooney Rule» mandating interviews for minority and ethnically diverse candidates is illegal in the Sunshine State.

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The rule, named for late Pittsburgh Steelers owner Dan Rooney, who chaired the NFL’s Diversity Committee, went into effect in 2003 after Black coaches Tony Dungy and Dennis Green were fired the previous season despite strong win-loss records.

Attorney General James Uthmeier’s state hosts three teams — the Jacksonville Jaguars, Tampa Bay Buccaneers and Miami Dolphins — and the AG invoked the latter.

INVESTIGATION OF NIKE’S DEI PRACTICES COULD HAVE MAJOR NATIONWIDE IMPACT ON HIRING, SAYS ALAN DERSHOWITZ

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NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell before a game between the Denver Broncos and the Indianapolis Colts at Empower Field At Mile High Dec. 15, 2024, in Denver, Colo. (Michael Owens/Getty Images)

«As a Floridian, I wish the Miami Dolphins well with their new head football coach. As Florida’s chief legal officer, however, I write with a word of caution to the NFL on its race-and-sex-based hiring policies,» he wrote in a letter to Goodell obtained by Fox News Digital.

Goodell must, in turn, confirm no later than May 1 that the NFL will no longer enforce the Rooney Rule or any variation of it or face civil rights enforcement actions.

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«As applied in Florida, the NFL’s ‘Rooney Rule,’ which governs the hiring of certain team executives and coaches, brazenly violates Florida law. So, too, do the NFL’s related ‘diversity’ initiatives,» the letter adds.

Uthmeier told Fox News Digital the NFL drafts players based on merit and should do the same in the front office.

«NFL teams are not going to hire an offensive lineman based on his race. So, why should hiring for positions off the field be based on illegal DEI quotas?» he said.

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«DEI is discriminatory and illegal. The NFL doesn’t get special treatment, and any business operating in Florida is required to comply with Florida law. Good coaches are judged on wins, not the color of their skin.»

WATCHDOG GROUP EXPOSES IDAHO COLLEGES’ ALLEGED SCHEME TO SIDESTEP NEW DEI LAW

Art and Dan Rooney and Roger Goodell

Pittsburgh Steelers owners Art Rooney II and Dan Rooney stand with NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell in Arlington, Texas, in 2011. (Doug Pensinger/Getty Images)

Uthmeier noted in his letter that expansions of the Rooney Rule now include women as a categorized qualifying minority and criticized provisions awarding third-round draft picks to teams that develop minority talent into GMs or head coaches as well as requiring the employment of a female or minority coach as an offensive assistant.

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Uthmeier argued that Florida law bars employers from making hiring or workplace decisions based on protected characteristics such as race or sex, including any practices that could limit opportunities for certain groups.

«The Rooney Rule and its offshoots require precisely what Florida law forbids. They require teams to limit, segregate, and classify applicants for certain employment and training opportunities because of race and sex. And they do so in a way that tends to deprive applicants of opportunities for employment,» he wrote.

Trevor Lawrence diving toward the end zone while holding a football during a game at EverBank Stadium.

Trevor Lawrence (16) of the Jacksonville Jaguars scores a touchdown against the Kansas City Chiefs during the fourth quarter at EverBank Stadium Oct. 6, 2025, in Jacksonville, Fla. (Megan Briggs/Getty Images)

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Uthmeier told Goodell, «The Rooney Rule and its offshoots are illegal in Florida.»

Fox News Digital reached out to the NFL for comment.

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