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‘Stop the clock’: GOP, Dems come together to end Daylight Saving over health, economic risks

In 1957, rockabilly singer Bob Ehret repeated, «We’ve got to stop the clock, baby; to spend more time with you» – and in a Senate Commerce Committee hearing, lawmakers from both sides of the aisle strongly considered the benefits of doing so, in a way.
Chairman Ted Cruz, R-Texas, said Daylight Saving was grounded in good-faith efforts to reduce energy consumption, but that instead it has led to increased auto accidents in the dark, workplace issues, and objections from the agriculture sector that relies on early-morning sunlight.
«We find ourselves adjusting our clocks… springing forward and falling back in the fall. For many Americans, this biannual ritual is a minor inconvenience… But when we take a closer look at the implications of changing the clocks, its impact on our economy, our health and our everyday lives, we can see that this practice is more than an annoyance,» Cruz said.
«The idea was simple. Fewer hours of darkness meant less electricity consumption for lighting and heating.»
TRUMP’S DAYLIGHT SAVINGS PLAN
Sen. Ted Cruz speaks during a Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing in Washington on March 8, 2022. (Eric Lee/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
However, unlike the early 1900s, when the U.S. economy was heavily reliant on energy consumption tied to daylight hours, today’s effects from sunrise and sunset timings are «de minimis,» he said.
Cruz, along with Massachusetts neurology physician Dr. Karin Johnson, spoke about the health concerns associated with changing the time twice a year and with the permanence of Daylight Saving Time, versus Standard Time.
«Research has shown that the abrupt shift in time, especially the spring transition when we lose an hour of sleep,» Cruz said, as Johnson spoke about the effects on people’s circadian rhythm, vascular system and sleep deprivation.
The panel also hosted an official from the National Golf Course Owners Association, as he and other lawmakers spoke of the increased revenue from evening tee times and other tourist activities only possible during daylight hours.

In a Senate Commerce Committee hearing, Chairman Ted Cruz and lawmakers from both sides of the aisle strongly considered the costs of Daylight Saving Time. (Ap/Getty)
On the Democratic side, Sen. Lisa Blunt-Rochester of Delaware agreed that it was time to consider a «permanent time for our country.»
She noted a bill from then-Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., to abolish DST stalled in the House.
«This body [then] took a harder look at how time changes work state-by-state,» she said.
«What works in my home state of Delaware may not work in Washington state, but I know I speak for many Americans when I say it’s time. It’s time to figure this out.»
‘I CAN’T SLEEP BECAUSE OF RACING THOUGHTS AT NIGHT — HOW CAN I STOP THEM?’: ASK A DOCTOR
Witnesses to the hearing noted that it is indeed southern states like Florida and Texas where the negative effects of a permanent Daylight Saving Time would be most felt.
Sen. Edward Markey, D-Mass., spoke about his work shifting Daylight Saving Time twice to help assuage some of the issues that were brought up each time, including better guaranteeing trick-or-treating happens at worst at dusk.
Markey quipped that his decades-long work on this issue earned him the nickname «the Sun King.»
«We need to stop the clock,» Blunt-Rochester said. «We know that changing the clock disrupts sleep, which can lead to negative health outcomes. Several studies have noted issues with mood disturbances increase hospital admissions, and even heart attacks and strokes.»
Lock The Clock movement founder Scott Yates testified about the flawed history of DST, noting a time during the 1970s energy crisis that the Nixon administration briefly made DST permanent.
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Nixon signed the law in December 1973 while embroiled in Watergate – but it took effect the first week the following year – Jan. 6, 1974.
«So you can imagine, the worst Monday of the year already is the one after the holiday break where you have to go back to school and everything – to have an extra hour of sleep robbed away right before that. You can understand why it was so unpopular and why it was repealed,» Yates said, noting that months later, Nixon resigned.
The burglary by the «Plumbers» at the Watergate Hotel also notably occurred during nighttime hours.
«So maybe – if we had more daylight, the Watergate break-in doesn’t happen,» Cruz quipped in response.
«And history would be different.»
Politics,Ted Cruz,Texas,Delaware,Republicans,Senate Democrats
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Ecuador: el narcotráfico y el crimen organizado se meten en la política y financian campañas electorales

Hay solo dos cosas que unen hoy a los ecuatorianos: la pasión por la Tri, la selección de fútbol que está a un paso de clasificar al Mundial 2026, y el creciente temor por la inseguridad.
En Ecuador se produce hoy una muerte violenta por hora. La penetración del narcotráfico y el crimen organizado cambió la vida de los casi 18 millones de ecuatorianos, en especial en el violento corredor costero y el puerto de Guayaquil y sus alrededores. Las matanzas, tiroteos, asesinatos, extorsiones, motines carcelarios, secuestros y amenazas se convirtieron en una rutina desoladora. El país tiene hoy la tasa de crímenes por 100.000 habitantes más elevada de la región: 38,8, según la organización estadounidense Insight Crime. En algunas zonas supera los 100.
Leé también: Tensión en Ecuador tras la reelección de Noboa: el correísmo denuncia “listas” para perseguir a opositores
En comparación, la Argentina tiene un índice de 3,8. En su peor momento, en 2022, Rosario tocó más de 22, aunque las cifras oficiales indican una baja sustancial desde entonces hasta situarse en poco más de 6.
Pero hay una línea roja que el narco y las bandas criminales cruzaron hace tiempo en Ecuador: la irrupción en la política y en especial en el financiamiento de las campañas electorales, como la que acaba de concluir con la reelección del presidente centroderechista Daniel Noboa en el balotaje del domingo 13 de abril.
Hoy, los grupos delincuenciales no solo dominan un vasto territorio, sino también gozan del control de municipios en “zonas calientes” y hay fuertes sospechas de la penetración en la política provincial y nacional. Los nombres de las bandas son conocidos: Los Choneros, Los Lobos, Los Tiguerones… Luchan entre sí por el control del territorio y reciben el apoyo de carteles mexicanos, colombianos y hasta de la mafia calabresa (N´drangheta) y de los Balcanes.
“Hoy tienes todos los elementos presentes en la campaña (electoral reciente) ante la inacción del Estado. Avanza el financiamiento narco. El país vive una situación de narco política activa que la vamos a ver más en 2027″, en las próximas elecciones de medio término, dijo el analista Mauricio Alarcón, director ejecutivo de Fundación Ciudadanía y Desarrollo y contacto de Transparencia Internacional en Ecuador, en una charla de la que participó TN en Quito.
Cómo fue creciendo el financiamiento del crimen organizado en las campañas electorales de Ecuador
Todos en Ecuador coinciden en cuándo “se jodió” el país, pero no en el “por qué”. En el imaginario colectivo, la línea temporal se sitúa en la salida del expresidente Rafael Correa, hoy exiliado en Bruselas tras ser condenado a ocho años de cárcel por corrupción, en 2017, después de una década en el poder.
El correísmo, el gran derrotado de las recientes elecciones, responsabiliza a los gobiernos “liberales” que le siguieron. Pero desde la derecha afirman que simplemente con la salida de Correa cayeron los “acuerdos” con el crimen organizado. Incluso, algunos referentes y analistas, en distintas conversaciones “en off” con TN, sostuvieron que la Revolución Ciudadana de Correa dio la orden de provocar revueltas en las cárceles y expandir la violencia para hostigar a las administraciones de Lenin Moreno (2017-21), Guillermo Lasso (2021-23) y Daniel Noboa, que acaba de ser reelecto para un nuevo período hasta 2029.
Soldados revisan el permiso de un arma hallada en un vehículo durante un control de seguridad del ejército en Guayaquil (Foto de archivo: AP/Martín Mejía)
Noboa le declaró la guerra al narco y el crimen organizado, sacó el ejército a las calles y proclamó el estado de conmoción y excepción en gran parte del territorio nacional. Incluso, antes de ser reelecto con más del 55% de los votos ante su rival correísta, Luisa González, le pidió ayuda a Donald Trump y contactó al polémico empresario y exmilitar estadounidense Erik Prince, fundador de la empresa de seguridad privada Blackwater, ahora llamada Academi, para sumarlo al plan de seguridad. La empresa tuvo varias denuncias de violaciones a los derechos humanos en Irak.
Pero el fenómeno de la narcopolítica comenzó a gestarse mucho antes de la salida de Correa del poder, hace más de una década. Para Alarcón, el narcotráfico y el crimen organizado vienen penetrando las campañas electorales desde 2013, cuando aún gobernaba la izquierda.
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“Ese año detectamos la presencia del narcotráfico y el crimen organizado financiando cierto tipo de campañas. Eran aportes pequeños que generaron un vínculo. Pero nos contestaron que era un fenómeno leve y estaba bajo control”, contó.
En las elecciones secundarias de dos años después, esa participación “fue mucho más importante para controlar gobiernos locales. Hemos detectado aportes de redes de corrupción”, dijo Alarcón. Entonces la respuesta de las autoridades fue similar.
En los comicios generales de 2017, prosiguió el representante de Transparencia Internacional en el país, “ya detectamos no solo financiamiento, sino presencia en listas. Hubo abogados de narcos como candidatos y nuevos caciques locales (involucrados en el crimen organizado) encabezando listas”, indicó.
En 2019, en las elecciones seccionales, siempre según Alarcón, la situación se agravó. “A nivel local, las organizaciones narcos y del crimen organizado ya tenían estructura propia en poderes locales”, detalló. La respuesta oficial no cambió.
Militares patrullan una zona de Guayaquil (Foto: AFP)
La penetración de estos grupos delincuenciales siguió avanzando dos años después. “En 2021, en las presidenciales, se denunció el financiamiento anómalo de la campaña de Andrés Araúz (candidato correísta a la presidencia). Identificamos a ciertos elementos activos en redes de narcos que fueron electos”, dijo.
Según señaló, poco después hubo dos candidatos procesados por la justicia por supuestos vínculos con bandas criminales.
Pero en la práctica poco cambió. En las elecciones seccionales de 2023, afirmó Alarcón, hubo “candidatos narcos haciendo transmisiones en Facebook Live”. En las imágenes, según precisó, se los veía “entregando fajos de billetes a la gente. Varios alcaldes llegaron (al poder municipal) gracias a este modus operandi”, señaló.
“Hoy tienes todos los elementos presentes en la campaña (electoral reciente) ante la inacción del Estado. Avanza el financiamiento narco. El país vive una situación de narco política activa que la vamos a ver más en 2027″, en las próximas elecciones de medio tiempo, aseguró.
Por qué avanza el narco en Ecuador
Para Alarcón, el narcotráfico y el crimen organizado se nutren del abandono del Estado en las zonas más postergadas y “calientes” del país.
“En algunos lugares le dan licencia total ante la ausencia del Estado. La gente le agradece al narco las obras públicas en zonas de Esmeralda, en la frontera con Colombia, en Sucumbíos y Orellana. Están muy contentos. El narco genera una fuente de ingresos. Mucha gente dice: ´es eso o nos morimos de hambre´”, comentó.
Ese escenario genera una dependencia total entre la ciudadanía y el crimen organizado en zonas violentas del país. “Hay gente que paga contenta la vacuna (impuesto obligatorio) porque el narco les da seguridad”, señaló.
Según el experto, Ecuador vive hoy “una ficción de guerra”. Noboa asegura que en 2024 bajó en forma significativa el índice de asesinatos. Pero “el primer trimestre de 2025 fue el período más violento desde la recuperación democrática. Se registra una muerte violenta por hora. Estamos superando a México y Honduras. Antes (durante el correísmo) convivíamos pacíficamente con el narco y eso nos daba una falsa sensación de seguridad”, concluyó Alarcón.
Ecuador, Daniel Noboa
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Fierce Israel critic launches Senate bid in Michigan high-stakes 2026 midterm race

A former Michigan public health official and Democratic candidate for governor entered the race for the state’s open U.S. Senate seat on Thursday in what could be one of the most watched races in the 2026 midterm elections.
Abdul El-Sayed, 40, is the second Democrat to put his name in the running to replace Democratic Sen. Gary Peters, who is not seeking reelection.
El-Sayed, a prominent figure in a movement that was highly critical of support for Israel in the 2024 election cycle, aims to set himself apart from the other Democratic candidates in the race to replace Peters, state Sen. Mallory McMorrow.
McMorrow has said she would vote against Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., retaining his leadership position should she prevail in the primary and general election to represent the battleground state in the upper chamber of Congress.
However, El-Sayed held back criticism of Schumer.
«Anybody who tells you that they’re going to unilaterally oppose one potential candidate without knowing who the alternative is, is either unnuanced or unsophisticated,» El-Sayed told Politico. «So I want to know who is available, who is actively seeking the leadership. I’ll make a decision from there.»
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Michigan Democratic then-gubernatorial candidate Abdul El-Sayed campaigns with support from New York Democrat Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez at a rally on the campus of Wayne State University on July 28, 2018, in Detroit. (Bill Pugliano/Getty Images)
«What we need right now is somebody who’s willing to take the fight directly to Trump and Musk, but then also knows how to rebuild a version of our federal government that better serves working people after the carnage that Musk and Trump are going to leave behind, and I think I offer that,» he told Politico.
Other Democrats considering a run to replace Peters include U.S. Rep. Haley Stevens and Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel.
El-Sayed was active in the «uncommited movement,» a group of anti-Israel, traditionally Democratic voters in Michigan, a critical swing state, who threatened to withhold support from then-President Joe Biden, and then then-Vice President Kamala Harris, over the administration’s stance on Gaza. He did say he would back whoever was the eventual Democratic choice for the presidential ticket to oppose now-President Donald Trump, according to Politico.
The Israel-Hamas war exposed deep divisions within the Democratic Party last election cycle, and there is concern the conflict could again make for a messy Senate Democratic primary in Michigan if the American Israel Public Affairs Committee intervenes. The powerful pro-Israel lobby group financially backed Stevens in 2022, when redistricting forced a competitive primary run against fellow Democrat, Rep. Andy Levin.
«Everybody is unified around leadership that reminds the Democratic Party that we ought to be the party of peace and justice, that we ought not to be the party sending bombs and money to foreign militaries to drop bombs on other people’s kids in their schools and their hospitals, when our kids need more, our hospitals and schools need more, and we should be spending that money here at home,» El-Sayed told Politico.

Abdul El-Sayed speaks during a coronavirus public health roundtable with presidential candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders on Monday, March 9, 2020. (Erin Kirkland/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
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El-Sayed ran for governor in 2018 as a progressive Democrat and was endorsed by Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y.
He came in second in the Democratic primary, losing to Gretchen Whitmer by more than 20 points and beating now-U.S. Rep. Shri Thanedar by more than 12 points. Whitmer went on to win the general election and is in the midst of a second term. She cannot run again because of term limits.
A resident of Ann Arbor, El-Sayed recently served as director of the Department of Health, Human and Veterans Services in Wayne County, home to Detroit. Before that, he was the public health director of the city after it declared bankruptcy in 2013.
El-Sayed cautioned Democrats against learning the «wrong lessons» from their defeats.

Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders participates in a coronavirus public health roundtable with healthcare professionals, including Abdul El-Sayed, left, as he campaigns on March 9, 2020, in Detroit. (Scott Olson/Getty Images)
«If you cut corners and trim your message, and you triangulate to the least common denominator, you can find something that’s perfectly inoffensive to everyone, and the problem with that is that you’re not actually saying anything,» he told Politico.
El-Sayed said he met with the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee on Tuesday. He told Politico that it was his «understanding» that the Senate Democrats’ campaign arm would not get involved in the primary. If that happens, that deviates from how the DSCC previously acted to clear the field of potential primary candidates to make for an easier primary victory for then-Rep. Elissa Slotkin. Now-Sen. Slotkin, D-Mich., easily won the primary over Hill Harper, and then won the general election.
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El-Sayed is also the second candidate this week to launch a campaign to replace Peters. On the Republican side, former U.S. Rep. Mike Rogers launched his bid on Monday after losing the Senate race last year by 19,000 votes to Democrat Slotkin.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Michigan,Senate,Senate Democrats,Bernie Sanders,Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
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US man hijacks small plane in Belize, stabs 3 people before he’s shot dead

Authorities at the Philip S.W. Goldson International Airport (P.G.I.A.) say they were alerted to a U.S. man who was hijacking a small plane in Belize on Thursday.
The man stabbed two passengers and a pilot, before one of the stabbed passengers fatally shot him, according to officials in Belize and the United States. The passenger was licensed to carry a firearm and later turned his weapon over to the police.
«We are praying for him,» Chester Williams, Belize police commissioner, told reporters. «He’s our hero.»
YOUNG AMERICAN TOURISTS’ CAUSE OF DEATH REVEALED AFTER THEY WERE FOUND ‘MOTIONLESS’ AT BEACH RESORT
A view of the Philip S.W. Goldson International Airport in Belize City, taken on April 17, 2025. (JOSE A. SANCHEZ/AFP via Getty Images)
Williams identified the hijacker as Akinyela Taylor and said he was a U.S. military veteran, a report by The Associated Press said. U.S. officials could not confirm the Belize police commissioner’s statement that Taylor was a military veteran.
The air flight Cessna Caravan V3HIG from Corozal to San Pedro had 14 passengers and 2 crew members onboard, the statement from P.G.I.A. said.
A full emergency was declared immediately after the incident started and the aircraft circled in random directions for approximately two hours until finally landing safely at the P.G.I.A., according to a statement by the Belize Airport Concession Company.
ATLANTA BUS HIJACKING SUSPECT HAD 19 PRIOR ARRESTS, MENTAL ILLNESSES, FAMILY SAYS

Tourists queue at the Tropic Air counter at Philip S.W. Goldson International Airport in Belize City on April 17, 2025. (JOSE A. SANCHEZ/AFP via Getty Images)
U.S. State Department spokesperson Tammy Bruce said at a news briefing in Washington that officials were still gathering information about what occurred.
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«Horrifying,» she said. «We are grateful, I think all of us are, that it did not turn into a mass casualty event with, I believe, over a dozen people on the plane. Clearly we know a few details. We don’t know much more.»
U.S. officials said they did not know the motive for Taylor’s hijacking but were working with Belizean authorities to determine what happened.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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