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McMaster revives Trump-backed push to oust Biden kingmaker from Congress

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South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster, a top Trump ally and fellow Republican, announced Thursday that he is convening the state legislature in Columbia, South Carolina, starting Friday for a special session to «address the state budget and congressional districts» in his largely Republican state.
«I have issued an Executive Order calling the General Assembly back for an extra legislative session to address the state budget and congressional districts beginning Friday, May 15, at 11:00 AM,» McMaster wrote on X.
The move comes amid intraparty Republican tensions over the Trump-backed effort to redraw the state’s congressional map — a push that could threaten the tenure of longtime Democratic Rep. James Clyburn, the man credited with reviving former President Joe Biden’s 2020 campaign.
Senate Majority Leader Shane Massey, R-Edgefield, and four other senators earlier this week joined Democrats to defeat a proposal that would have allowed the chamber to vote on redistricting after the South Carolina legislative session closed Thursday.
The roadblock came hours after President Donald Trump warned he is «watching closely» the redistricting effort. Trump’s message came a week after five Indiana Republican state senators who in December helped sink congressional redistricting in the solidly red Midwestern state were ousted by Trump-backed challengers in GOP primaries.
Proponents of the South Carolina redraw hope that the new map will ultimately rid the state’s congressional delegation of its lone Democrat, while advising lawmakers to move the primary for House members to August.
SOUTH CAROLINA REPUBLICANS DEFY TRUMP, TANK REDISTRICTING, FOR NOW
Clyburn, the octogenarian Orangeburg, South Carolina, lawmaker considered a kingmaker in Palmetto State Democratic politics — and credited with reviving then-candidate Biden’s floundering campaign with his endorsement in 2020 — may not be long for Capitol Hill, as a redraw would almost certainly redistribute the state’s heavy Republican advantage across its seven districts.
President Joe Biden awarded the Medal of Freedom to Rep. James Clyburn during a ceremony in the East Room of the White House in Washington, D.C., on May 3, 2024. (Kevin Dietsch / Getty Images)
Clyburn said he remains confident he can win re-election even under a new map.
«I don’t know why people think I could not get re-elected if they redistrict South Carolina,» Clyburn said in a CNN interview. «I have a district that’s about 45 percent African American. I have no idea what the number will be after the legislature finishes, but whatever that number is, I will be running on my record and America’s promise.»
Massey argued in a floor speech that following Trump’s lead on redistricting would run counter to the interests of the Palmetto State.
«South Carolina has always punched above their weight,» Massey said. «Doing this will diminish that influence.»
But he also acknowledged that he will likely face political payback from Trump and the president’s allies.
TRUMP TARGETS RED STATE REPUBLICAN LAWMAKERS IN PUSH FOR CONGRESSIONAL REDISTRICTING
«There are likely consequences for me, personally, taking the position that I am right now,» Massey said. «I’m comfortable with that. I may not like it, but I’m comfortable with it. … My conscience is clear on this one.»
The recent Callais decision at the Supreme Court — which eliminated Louisiana’s race-conscious map that provided for two largely minority-heavy Democratic strongholds — has already spurred action in Tennessee, Alabama and Mississippi, and with Clyburn’s district itself reportedly the product of a George H.W. Bush Justice Department request regarding racial makeup, its days may be numbered.
The DOJ in 1992 recommended creating a majority-Black district in South Carolina, and Clyburn swiftly won the seat upon the retirement of fellow Democratic Rep. Robin Mooneyhan Tallon of Hemingway, according to a Government Printing Office publication on Black Americans in Congress.

President Joe Biden, left, Rep. James Clyburn, right. (Mandel Ngan/Getty Images)
Clyburn is also reportedly a relative of the previous Black South Carolina congressman, Republican George Washington Murray, who served in the 1890s.
The 85-year-old recently signed documents to make his run for re-election official, quipping that he is in good health and simply celebrating the 47th anniversary of his 39th birthday soon.
If redistricting fails and Clyburn is able to run again, he will join a growing list of octogenarian — and some nonagenarian — lawmakers who remain bullish about their political prospects.
The oldest sitting member is Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, who is 92, while elderly lawmakers facing re-election in 2026 besides Clyburn include Rep. Hal Rogers, R-Ky., who is 88, and Rep. Maxine Waters, D-Calif., who is 87. Sen. James Risch, R-Idaho, is 83 and running for re-election, which would make him 89 at the end of his next term.
Four of the leading South Carolina Republicans running for governor this year, Lt. Gov. Pam Evette, Attorney Gen. Alan Wilson, and Reps. Nancy Mace and Ralph Norman, earlier this week criticized the redistricting setback in the state Senate.
Evette called McMaster’s move «a critical step for President Trump and the people of South Carolina.»
And Wilson said, «South Carolina has the opportunity to lead, and lawmakers should move quickly to pass new maps before the June primary.»
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Alabama convened a special session earlier in May that House Speaker Nathaniel Ledbetter, R-Rainsville, correctly predicted would force the courts to rule on the validity of a special-case redistricting referendum there.
Tennessee successfully redrew its map, which is likely to result in the ouster of longtime Shelby County Democratic Rep. Steve Cohen, while Mississippi hit a snag in its own efforts after Gov. Tate Reeves pumped the brakes on a Callais-spurred effort to boot former House Jan. 6 Committee Chairman Bennie Thompson in the Delta.
Republican state senators in Louisiana on Thursday advanced a plan to eliminate one of the state’s two majority-Black congressional seats ahead of the midterms.
Louisiana’s state House will likely vote on the map next week. The state holds its primary on Saturday, but the state’s congressional primaries are being postponed until November.
midterm elections, congress, south carolina, governors, republicans elections, democrats, politics
INTERNACIONAL
Margaret Press se jubiló como programadora informática y lo que hizo después cambió la forma de resolver crímenes

Margaret Press imaginaba que su jubilación estaría dedicada a una vida tranquila. Después de pasar gran parte de su carrera como programadora informática, pensaba disfrutar de la lectura y profundizar una de sus grandes pasiones: reconstruir árboles genealógicos.
Sin embargo, una idea inesperada cambió por completo su rumbo y la convirtió en una de las figuras más reconocidas de la genealogía genética forense, una disciplina que combina análisis de ADN e investigación familiar para identificar personas y aportar pruebas en causas criminales.
Gracias a esa combinación de tecnología, bases de datos genéticas y una enorme capacidad para rastrear vínculos familiares a lo largo de generaciones, Press comenzó a colaborar en la resolución de casos que durante años habían permanecido sin respuestas.
De programadora informática a referente de la genealogía genética
Margaret Press creció en Los Ángeles, California, y comenzó a interesarse por la genealogía a los 15 años gracias a su abuela. Más adelante estudió lingüística y desarrolló una extensa carrera en el mundo de la informática como programadora de software.
Además de trabajar en tecnología, también escribió novelas policiales y relatos de misterio, una experiencia que terminaría siendo muy útil para su futura labor como investigadora.
Tras jubilarse, se instaló en el norte de California para estar cerca de su familia y planeaba dedicar su tiempo libre a la lectura y a investigar árboles genealógicos. Pero una novela despertó una pregunta que cambiaría su vida: ¿era posible utilizar las herramientas de genealogía genética para identificar personas fallecidas cuya identidad se desconocía? Margaret Press, la mujer que cambió la forma de resolver crímenes. (Foto: BBC)
Hasta ese momento, las pruebas de ADN con fines genealógicos se utilizaban principalmente para conocer el origen familiar o encontrar parientes biológicos. Press comprendió que esa misma información podía tener un enorme valor en investigaciones judiciales.
En 2017, junto con la genealogista forense Colleen Fitzpatrick, fundó el DNA Doe Project, una organización sin fines de lucro dedicada a identificar restos humanos desconocidos mediante genealogía genética.
Qué es la genealogía genética y cómo ayuda a resolver crímenes
La genealogía genética combina el análisis de ADN con la investigación tradicional de árboles familiares.
El proceso comienza con una muestra genética obtenida de una víctima sin identificar, una persona desaparecida o, en algunos casos, de un sospechoso. Ese perfil se compara con bases de datos de personas que compartieron voluntariamente su ADN para investigaciones genealógicas.

Resolvieron uno de los asesinatos más antiguos de Estados Unidos utilizando genealogía genética (Foto: Archivo).
Cuando aparecen coincidencias con familiares, los especialistas reconstruyen árboles genealógicos mediante registros civiles, censos, certificados de nacimiento, matrimonios y otros documentos históricos hasta reducir las posibilidades e identificar a una persona.
Finalmente, esa hipótesis se confirma mediante métodos tradicionales, como nuevas pruebas de ADN, registros oficiales o entrevistas con familiares.
Esta metodología permitió avanzar en investigaciones que permanecían estancadas desde hacía décadas y abrió una nueva etapa en la ciencia forense.
Leé también: ¿Moda o productividad? La razón por la que los programadores caminan con sus notebooks abiertas
Los casos que parecían imposibles y que Margaret Press ayudó a resolver
Uno de los trabajos más conocidos del DNA Doe Project fue la identificación de “Buckskin Girl”, una joven asesinada en Ohio en 1981 cuya identidad permaneció desconocida durante 37 años.
En 2018, gracias al análisis de ADN y a la reconstrucción de su árbol familiar, los investigadores lograron determinar que se trataba de Marcia King.

El estudio de Press permitió identificar a Marcia L. King, de 21 años, asesinada en Ohio en 1981. (Foto; BBC)
Otro caso que marcó a Press fue el de Lompoc Jane Doe, una mujer encontrada sin vida en California en 1969. Ese misterio fue uno de los que despertó su interés por aplicar la genealogía genética a investigaciones forenses y terminó impulsando la creación del DNA Doe Project.
También colaboró en el avance del caso Bear Brook, uno de los expedientes criminales más complejos de Estados Unidos, en el que esta técnica permitió identificar víctimas y aportar información clave para la investigación.
Cómo una programadora terminó revolucionando las investigaciones forenses
El trabajo de Margaret Press va mucho más allá del análisis de ADN. Su tarea consiste, sobre todo, en reconstruir historias familiares, conectar generaciones y encontrar relaciones que permitan descubrir la identidad de personas desconocidas.
Su experiencia en informática resultó fundamental. La capacidad para organizar grandes volúmenes de información, detectar patrones y analizar datos complejos terminó convirtiéndose en una herramienta decisiva para sus investigaciones.
Con el tiempo, ese conocimiento adquirido durante décadas frente a una computadora terminó ayudando a resolver algunos de los casos más difíciles de la ciencia forense moderna. Como resumió la propia Press en una entrevista con la BBC, “fue una manera de cerrar el círculo”.
árbol genealógico, adn, crimenes, Los Ángeles
INTERNACIONAL
Lindsey Graham’s final act reverberates in Senate as sister is urged to “keep pedaling»

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It was 2:35 am et Sunday.
The phone rang, yanking me out of deep slumber.
Calls like these are never good.
In the split second before I answered the phone, my mind traveled to the obvious place for any journalist who covers Capitol Hill and gets a call at that hour.
LINDSEY GRAHAM, SOUTH CAROLINA SENATOR WHO ROSE FROM SMALL-TOWN ROOTS TO GOP POWER BROKER, DIES AT 71
Former U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham hugs his sister Darline Graham Nordone on June 1, 2015, in South Carolina. (Jessica McGowan/Getty Images)
Surely it was about former Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY).
McConnell has been out of service and nowhere to be found for weeks — after being hospitalized with an unspecified illness. The internet was rife with conspiracy theories and conjecture. And, considering the dearth of information, I suspected the worst.
My longtime colleague Jodie Curtis was on the line when I picked up. Jodie is a senior figure at Fox, forced into weekend overnight assignment editor duty because of an illness. Jodie calling to tell me that Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) was dead.
«Graham?» I asked incredulously. «Not McConnell?»
Emerging from my stupor, I instinctively presumed this might be about the infirm, Kentucky Republican. You’d have better odds presuming that overnight call was about McConnell than hitting an exacta wheel at Churchill Downs.
My instincts immediately kicked in.
What if this was psy-ops by the Russians, Chinese or Iranians. A rouse. A hoax. A hack.
I told my colleague to just wait a moment while we confirmed. It would be easy to get this wrong.
Back in the 1990s, lawmakers «killed» comedian Bob Hope on the House floor, prematurely announcing his death during special orders speeches. Yours truly – and everyone else in Washington – prematurely reported the death of the late Rep. Stephanie Tubbs-Jones (D-OH). She suffered from a catastrophic brain aneurism. Yet after they removed the Congresswoman from life support, she continued to live for a few hours before dying.
However, it became clear that Lindsey Graham was indeed dead. I was quickly on the air. When asked about the shock of Graham passing, I invoked a Native American adage: Death comes. And it’s always out of season.
Lindsey Graham was gone. But who would succeed him on Capitol Hill?
Think all in the family. At least for now.
Sens. Katie Britt (R-AL) and Tim Scott (R-SC) both implored the late senator’s kid sister Darline Graham to follow her brother. President Trump believed it would be a fitting tribute to the senator. So did South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster (R) – who was in charge the appointment.
«It’s my honor to ask his sister to finish his work now,» said McMaster.
Darline Graham is a political neophyte. Lindsey Graham adopted his sister after their parents died – and Darline was a teenager.
«Lindsey has always been there for me. And now I will be there for him,» said now Sen. Darline Graham (R-SC).
Lindsey Graham was his sister’s caretaker. Now she’s the caretaker of his Senate seat until January.
But who’s next?
South Carolina has a small Congressional delegation. Rep. Joe Wilson (R-SC) quickly excluded himself from the immediate running, noting the importance of remaining in the House. Plucking one of South Carolina’s House GOP members and appointing them to the Senate is a problem for the narrow Republican majority. The Constitution bars appointments to the House. So McMaster would have diminished the GOP’s slim majority had he picked a House member to fill in for Lindsey Graham. It would take months to conduct a special election to fill the vacant House seat.
Appointing Darline Graham solves that problem.
Reps. Russell Fry (R-SC), Nancy Mace (R-SC) and Ralph Norman (R-SC) are all interested in running for the full term. South Carolina will hold a snap primary in mid August. The winner will face Democrat Annie Andrews in November. Lindsey Graham had just secured the Republican nomination for a fifth term last month.
President Trump’s influence will play an outsized role in who gets the nod. He’s already singled out Fry.
But the election will look a little different this fall. November will mark the first time since the mid-1950s that either Lindsey Graham or late, legendary Sen. Strom Thurmond (R-SC) isn’t on the ballot in the Palmetto State.
The Senate met for the first time Monday afternoon since Graham’s passing.
«Lord, we remember with gratitude his commitment to the responsibilities entrusted to him and the many ways he sought to serve the people of this country. Give comfort, strength and peace to his family, friends, colleagues and all who mourn his passing,» prayed Senate Chaplain Barry Black.
The Senate shrouded Graham’s desk with a black cloak. A bouquet of white roses rested on the desk, signifying a new beginning without a Senate titan.
«The halls of the Senate already feel empty without him,» said Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-SD).
‘THIS IS NOT NORMAL’: AOC UNLOADS ON MCCONNELL’S PROLONGED ABSENCE

Former Sen. Lindsey Graham attends a press conference on border security at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C. on December 7, 2023. (Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)
Well wishers left notecards and flowers outside Graham’s office in the Russell Senate Office Building.
Senators praised Graham’s tenacity.
«He didn’t want to just argue about things. He wanted to actually solve things,» said Sen. James Lankford (R-OK) on Fox.
Even until the end.
Over the weekend, Graham appeared to forge a deal on a Russia sanctions measure.
«This could be well, this could well be the end of the war in Ukraine. It could put all the pressure on Russia to finally end their illegal war of aggression,» predicted Sen. Angus King (I-ME).
Lindsey Graham first won a seat in Congress in 1994 as part of the «Republican Revolution.» That’s the historic class which flipped control of the House for the first time in 40 years. Graham and Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman Roger Wicker (R-MS) are the only members from that 1994 class still serving in Congress.
Graham earned a national profile barely four years after arriving in Washington. House GOP leaders tapped Graham to serve as one of the House «managers,» prosecuting articles of impeachment for President Clinton in the Senate.
«Impeachment is not about punishment,» argued Graham before the Senate in January, 1999. «Impeachment is about cleansing the office.»
Three years after that, Graham left the House. He became one of 100 in the Senate. But his colleagues conceded that the institution felt hollow at just 99.
«I am comforted by the knowledge that in the end, he has just changed his address. And that one day, Mr. President….» said Thune on the floor, pausing for ten seconds. «We will laugh together again.»
The Leader’s voice then cracked as he fought back tears.
«Mr. President, I yield the floor,» Thune whispered.
By Tuesday afternoon, Darline Graham became the 2,022nd senator in American history. But the first to immediately succeed her brother.
«He always said that his greatest accomplishment was the way that Darline turned out,» said Britt.
«I’m glad that there will be another Sen. Graham and that Darline will serve with us,» said
Sen. Chris Coons (D-DE). «That’ll allow for some continuity.»
Graham’s passing leaves a Congressional chasm.
«It will be difficult to pass anything without Sen. Graham because he’s been such a significant voice in the Senate,» said Sen. Cynthia Lummis (R-WY).
It’s unclear if any of that will fall to the Senate’s newest member.
LINDSEY GRAHAM’S SISTER CARRIES ON LATE SENATOR’S WORK, BECOMING SOUTH CAROLINA’S FIRST FEMALE SENATOR

Darline Graham Nordone speaks during a press conference outside the governor’s South Carolina State House office in Columbia. (Grant Baldwin/Getty Images)
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Darline Graham joined her brother’s side when he briefly ran for President in 2015. She says Lindsey taught her how to ride a bike while growing up.
«He would hold on to the bicycle as I pedaled. And he’d run along beside of me. Give me a big push and shout ‘Keep pedaling! Keep pedaling!’ said the new senator. » And then he was the one who comforted me when I stopped pedaling and fell off the bicycle.»
Today, Darline Graham is again hopping onto that bicycle to finish Lindsey Graham’s term.
You can almost hear the late senator, in his «upstate» twang shouting to his sister «Keep pedaling! Keep pedaling!»
lindsey graham, mitch mcconnell, senate elections, politics, south carolina
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Guatemala: Envían a prisión a joven de 19 años por el secuestro del odontólogo Julio Martínez

El Juzgado de Mayor Riesgo B de Guatemala ligó a proceso a Andrés Alcázar Crespo, de 19 años, quien es señalado dentro del caso de secuestro del odontólogo Julio Amílcar Martínez Murillo, ocurrido en 2025.
El joven continuará en prisión preventiva en la cárcel Mariscal Zavala hasta que se realice la audiencia de etapa intermedia, prevista para el 29 de septiembre, acusado del delito de plagio o secuestro en grado de cómplice.
Según la información presentada por el Ministerio Público (MP), Alcázar Crespo habría adquirido cinco tarjetas SIM utilizadas para efectuar las llamadas en las que se exigió a la familia de la víctima un rescate de Q5 millones (más de medio millón de dólares).
Durante la audiencia de primera declaración que se llevó a cabo este miércoles 15 de julio, la Fiscalía sostuvo que esas tarjetas se emplearon para negociar la liberación del profesional, quien fue privado de libertad mientras se trasladaba a su clínica en la capital guatemalteca y aún sigue desaparecido.
El juez señaló que la resolución se dicta conforme al artículo 320 del Código Procesal Penal, aunque no se aceptó el grado de participación solicitado por el MP y decidió imputarlo únicamente como cómplice del delito de secuestro.
Durante la diligencia, Andrés Alcázar argumentó la pérdida de su billetera, en donde se encontraba Documento Personal de Identificación (DPI), el cual, según la ley guatemalteca, debe de presentar para comprar las tarjetas SIM. Esta medida se tomó desde 2013, con el propósito de reducir las extorsiones.

En su intervención, aseguró: “Sé que se me acusa por comprar cinco chips o SIM. Yo no hice ninguna de esas acciones; aunque un pariente, un familiar, un ser querido o un amigo me lo hubiera pedido, yo no lo hubiera hecho. No hago ese tipo de favores”.
Para justificarlo, el señalado afirmó que en 2025 perdió su DPI en dos ocasiones, la primera vez el 29 de abril, cuando extravió su billetera con la identificación y la licencia de conducir, y la segunda el 12 de diciembre, tras dejar su mochila en un baño durante una sesión de fotografías navideñas, pero no presentó pruebas como las denuncias correspondientes en la Policía Nacional Civil o en el Ministerio Público.
La Fiscalía interrogó a Alcázar Crespo sobre su relación con otros implicados en el expediente y solicitó información sobre su cuenta de Instagram. No obstante, el acusado reiteró que lleva una vida enfocada en el estudio y la actividad deportiva, y se describió como una persona descuidada con sus pertenencias, aunque rechazó que ese hecho pueda ser utilizado para implicarlo en un delito.
“Yo de verdad he tratado de hacer las cosas bien, me dedico al estudio. Paso la mayor parte del tiempo haciendo ejercicio. Sé que soy muy descuidado con mi billetera, pero eso no me hace ningún delincuente”, expresó ante el juez.
Andrés Alcázar Crespo, de 19 años, señalado como cómplice en el secuestro del odontólogo guatemalteco Julio Amílcar Martínez Murillo, niega la acusación y justifica que perdió su billetera con sus documentos personales en dos ocasiones. (Soy502)
Alcázar Crespo fue capturado el 9 de julio en la Ciudad de Guatemala. Es el sexto detenido en el caso del secuestro del odontólogo. Según la Policía Nacional Civil integra la estructura a la que ahora identifican como “Escorpión”.
El caso se remonta al 28 de mayo de 2025, cuando Julio Martínez fue secuestrado y su familia recibió llamadas exigiendo el pago del rescate. En agosto de ese año, la Fiscalía contra el Delito de Secuestro realizó varios allanamientos que terminaron con la captura de cinco personas vinculadas a la estructura criminal.

Entre los sindicados, figura Julio Leonardo Alejandro Girón Castañeda, señalado como líder del grupo y amigo de la víctima, quien habría vigilado al odontólogo antes del secuestro. También fueron detenidos Juan Ubaldo Tzun Castillo, Julio Oswaldo Tzun, Paola Isabel de Tzun y Carlos Antonio González González, este último identificado como el negociador de la banda. Una mujer, identificada como Quiñónez Corado, permanece prófuga.
El pasado 28 de mayo, el mismo juzgado envió a juicio a los cinco primeros implicados por el delito de plagio o secuestro. Según las fuentes citadas, la audiencia de etapa intermedia para Andrés Alcázar definirá si el caso avanza a juicio oral y público.
Guatemala,Odontólogo,Secuestro,Julio Amílcar Martínez Murillo,Andrés Alcázar Crespo
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