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Subcontractors say they’re owed millions, face financial ruin, after helping build Obama Presidential Center

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CHICAGO — The Obama Presidential Center was billed as a lasting legacy to former President Barack Obama, and its construction was touted as an ambitious model built with aggressive goals for minority-owned and local businesses.

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But now, some of the very subcontractors who helped build the 19.3-acre campus on Chicago’s South Side say they are facing financial ruin as they race to recover millions of dollars they claim remain unpaid ahead of the center’s grand opening Friday. Overall construction costs were reported to be $830 million in 2021, and have likely climbed past the $1 billion mark.

A Fox News Digital investigation identified multiple construction firms claiming losses ranging from hundreds of thousands of dollars to tens of millions. The allegations cut against one of the Center’s defining goals: helping minority-owned businesses and local contractors grow through one of Chicago’s highest-profile construction projects. Several of the complaints reviewed by Fox News Digital come from firms that were supposed to benefit from that mission.

Among them is Adamson Plumbing, whose owner Mike Owen says is nearly $4 million in the red after years of work on the project.

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«That is a hole that no subcontractor, small business can survive,» Owen said.

OBAMA PRESIDENTIAL CENTER’S $470M SAFETY NET UNDER SCRUTINY AS SUBCONTRACTORS SAY THEY’RE OWED MILLIONS

African American Contractors Association President Omar Shareef (left) and Adamson Plumbing President and Owner Mike Owen (right) are shown alongside the Obama Presidential Center in Chicago. Both men raised concerns about payment disputes involving contractors and subcontractors who worked on the project. (Michael Dorgan/Fox News Digital; Fox Flight Team)

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Subcontractor owners interviewed by Fox News Digital described what they characterized as a chaotic work environment marked by repeated design changes, rework, scheduling disruptions, extensive oversight and years-long compensation disputes that still remain unresolved.

Several also described what they viewed as a wall of silence surrounding the project, with some declining to speak publicly or requesting anonymity because of confidentiality agreements or fears of professional retaliation.

The allegations emerge days after a Fox News Digital investigation reported that the Obama Foundation’s reserve fund — originally promoted as a $470 million financial safeguard intended to help protect taxpayers if the project encountered financial trouble — remains funded at roughly $1 million.

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Nearly $4 million in the red

Standing outside the center on a gloomy Friday afternoon, Owen flipped through spreadsheets and financial records that he said documented millions of dollars in losses tied to the project.

Owen said the project stretched on for years longer than anticipated, forcing his company to absorb millions of dollars in labor and overhead costs as work demands changed and expanded.

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He said the losses have drained the company’s reserves, created uncertainty for employees and could ultimately force layoffs. Owen also said the years-long effort to recover what he believes is money owed has taken a significant toll on his mental health.

«I haven’t had eight hours or six hours sleep in over a year,» Owen said. «I’m cooked emotionally. I feel like an aluminum can that’s been thrown in front of a steamroller. We’re crushed. And I have to fight for my company and for my people.»

OBAMA PRESIDENTIAL CENTER JOB LISTINGS PUSH ‘ANTI-RACISM’ PLEDGE AHEAD OF OPENING

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Mike Owen holding documents outside the Obama Presidential Center.

Mike Owen, president and owner of Adamson Plumbing, reviews documents outside the Obama Presidential Center in Chicago. (Michael Dorgan/Fox News Digital)

As the center prepares for a star-studded pre-opening celebration on Thursday featuring performers including Bruce Springsteen, Stevie Wonder and John Legend, Owen said it has been difficult to watch the buildup and soft-opening events take shape over the past few weeks while his company struggles financially.

«It was kind of hard seeing some local and national celebrities high-fiving and back-slapping here about the work that’s been done,» Owen said. «The backdrop of a coming celebration is kind of hard to swallow for me and for some of my peers at the moment.»

Owen, whose company is not minority-owned, said he decided to speak publicly only after months of failed efforts to recover losses he attributes to the project.

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«As for me and my company, I’m at the end of my rope and I see no other choice than to have to tell my story,» Owen said. «This is not to embarrass anybody, but this is just to make sure that the truth gets told out here of what has happened to the companies that poured their heart and soul into getting this job complete and operational.»

He said unnecessary rework, delays and more than 100 change-order requests left his company absorbing millions of dollars in additional costs.

OBAMA PRESIDENTIAL CENTER SLAMMED FOR PROMOTING ‘FAR-LEFT’ AGENDA ON PUBLIC LAND

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The Obama Foundation, Obama’s private nonprofit organization that oversees the construction, told Fox News Digital that it paid Lakeside Alliance as the project’s construction manager and that Lakeside was responsible for hiring, managing and paying subcontractors working on the center.

The Obama Foundation also said it has no outstanding disputed charges with Lakeside Alliance — a joint venture involving multiple construction companies — and no contractural relationship with Lakeside’s subcontractors.

Lakeside Alliance said projects of this scale are inherently complex and that outstanding project matters often continue long after construction ends. The alliance said approximately 475 contractors worked on the project, generating significant opportunities for local tradespeople and businesses, and that it remains committed to working through outstanding matters to successfully close out the project.

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Neither Lakeside Alliance nor the Obama Foundation directly disputed allegations from some subcontractors that they incurred losses while working on the project.

Fears of speaking out

Advocates for Black subcontractor firms say those companies have been muzzled by a non-disclosure agreement and a reluctance to speak publicly because of the prestige surrounding the project in Obama’s adopted hometown, a Democratic stronghold, as well as concerns that speaking out could jeopardize payments.

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«They are scared to death about talking about it,» Omar Shareef, the president of the African American Contractors Association, told Fox News Digital outside the center on a recent Saturday. The group advocates for Black-owned construction businesses and was founded by Shareef in 1989.

«I’ve never seen this happen since I’ve been in business,» Shareef said. «The building does look nice, but the fact doesn’t matter that they’re not paying our damn contractors.»

Fox News Digital independently interviewed several contractors who described similar concerns.

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Construction vehicle parked outside the Obama Presidential Center.

Construction equipment is seen outside the Obama Presidential Center in Chicago ahead of the campus opening. (Michael Dorgan/Fox News Digital)

Shareef said several Black subcontractor owners began privately approaching him about six months ago, claiming significant losses tied directly to the project. The concerns are particularly notable, he said, because the project was publicly promoted as an opportunity for minority-owned businesses and local workers.

«The promise was that this project was going to uplift minority contractors and uplift the community,» Shareef said. «What sense is celebrating Juneteenth if our Black contractors are not getting their money?»

«Some of the people have put their mortgages up, they’re going to lose their bonding… they are going to lose their relationship with their supplier as well as their banker.»

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Shareef said that being in the red not only puts them at financial risk, but it also makes it harder for them to secure future projects. Shareef said his group plans on staging a protest outside the center on Thursday at 10 a.m. CT.

«That’s a bad signal to put out the fact that seven to eight to maybe 10 of our contractors in our community are going to be eliminated from doing business because of the debt that they incurred on this particular project,» he said. «If they would have known it was a Trojan horse or a Pandora’s box, I don’t know if they would have raced as much as they did to be a part of it.»

Fox News Digital has not independently corroborated the claim that these subcontractors will be forced out of business as a result of their work on the Obama Presidential Center project.

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WATCH: Black subcontractors at Obama Presidential Center still seeking payment as Juneteenth opening nears, advocate says

Local companies on the brink

One minority-owned subcontractor owner told Fox News Digital his company was up to $2.5 million in the red but declined to speak publicly, citing non-disclosure agreements and ongoing efforts to resolve disputes. The owner said the contract for the job was originally expected to last 24 months but ultimately stretched to about five years.

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Fox News Digital was unable to independently verify the company’s claimed losses. Shareef said the owner told him the same story but the owner wouldn’t provide Shareef with documents due to the NDA.

The largest publicly known dispute tied to the project involved II in One Concrete, a Black-owned firm that was part of the Concrete Collective — a joint venture that also included Trice Construction and W.E. O’Neil Construction — that was responsible for major structural concrete work across the campus.

The Concrete Collective filed claims exceeding $40 million, alleging it incurred substantial additional costs while working on the Center. The dispute later became entangled with a widely publicized racial racial discrimination lawsuit that brought national attention to diversity, equity and inclusion issues surrounding the project.

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McGee alleged the project’s structural engineer unfairly blamed his company for delays and cost overruns and that the criticism contributed to the rejection of Concrete Collective’s compensation claims.

Defendants denied wrongdoing and disputed the allegations, arguing that portions of the concrete work had to be repaired or replaced because of cracking and other deficiencies. The owner of II in One Concrete declined to comment for this story. The case docket reflects that the case remains pending.

BUREAUCRATS HIDE TRUE PRICE OF OBAMA PRESIDENTIAL CENTER AS TAXPAYERS HIT WITH INFRASTRUCTURE BILL

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Worker performing landscaping work outside the Obama Presidential Center.

A worker tidies landscaping outside the Obama Presidential Center in Chicago ahead of the facility’s opening. (Michael Dorgan/Fox News Digital)

Court records also show that at least two minority-owned subcontractors that worked on the project later sought Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, according to documents viewed by Fox News Digital. The filings do not establish that the Obama Presidential Center caused those financial difficulties.

Glass Management Services, which supplied glass for the project, filed for Chapter 11 protection in 2024 and later told the bankruptcy court it was preparing litigation related to the Obama Presidential Center that it said could yield millions of dollars in damages. Fox News Digital is not aware that such litigation has been filed and the allegations have not been tested in court. Its owner declined to speak.

Vision Painting & Decorating Services, another subcontractor that worked on the project, also filed for Chapter 11 protection in 2024 while listing the Obama Presidential Center contract in its bankruptcy schedules. Court filings reviewed by Fox News Digital do not state whether the company viewed the project as contributing to its financial difficulties. Fox News Digital was unable to get in touch with its owner.

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Another subcontractor owner who worked on the project, told Fox News Digital that the job caused significant financial strain on his company too and he described the experience as a «nightmare» and one of the most difficult projects he had encountered.

He filed a mechanic’s lien for around $145,000, documents show, which was eventually paid to him, but he said his company was still down $200,000 for the project. A mechanic’s lien is a legal tool that companies file when they say they are owed money for construction work they completed.

«Literally, I’ve been doing this for 35 years, and it was the worst-run job I’ve ever been on,» the subcontractor owner said.

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The Obama Presidential Center viewed from a Chicago street.

A view of the Obama Presidential Center from a nearby roadway in Chicago. (Michael Dorgan/Fox News Digital)

He described repeated delays, extensive oversight and what he considered unnecessary construction requirements that forced contractors to spend additional time and money completing work.

«The stuff that they made everybody do was so over-the-top ridiculous,» the owner said.

That view was echoed by Owen, who said his company was forced to redo portions of the Center’s stormwater system at a cost of nearly $900,000, expenses he believes should have been reimbursed. Owen said the work was unnecessary and pointed to correspondence reviewed by Fox News Digital in which Chicago’s chief plumbing inspector later wrote that Adamson’s original method complied with city code requirements.

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Owen also provided records showing his firm submitted more than 100 change-order requests — requests for additional compensation for work performed beyond the original scope of the project — during construction. He said the unusually high number reflected constant revisions, rework and delays.

Owen said the company has been trying to recover money it says it is owed from parties involved and has not filed a lawsuit. Fox News Digital reviewed correspondence showing that Adamson’s attorney wrote to project representatives regarding the dispute.

Meanwhile, two additional companies filed mechanics’ liens for around $400,000 and $75,000 respectively. Fox News Digital was unable to contact company officials and it is not known if the liens have been paid.

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Promise vs. reality

The concerns are particularly notable because the Obama Presidential Center was built around one of the most ambitious efforts to increase participation by minority-owned businesses and workers from historically underserved communities.

The Obama Foundation committed to awarding 50% of subcontracting packages to diverse vendors — nearly double Chicago’s goals for minority- and women-owned businesses — while requiring 35% of workforce hours to come from targeted South and West Side communities. Foundation officials said the effort was intended to serve as a model for future development projects and help create a pipeline of workers and contractors for projects across Chicago.

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The Obama Foundation estimated the Center would generate as many as 5,000 direct, indirect and induced jobs during and after construction.

Split image showing the Obama Presidential Center in Chicago and former President Barack Obama.

A split image shows the Obama Presidential Center in Jackson Park on Chicago’s South Side and former President Barack Obama. Questions have been raised about the center’s endowment funding and long-term financial safeguards as the project prepares to open. (Fox News Flight Team; Angelina Katsanis-Pool/Getty Images)

To deliver the project, the foundation hired Lakeside Alliance — a consortium led by Turner Construction and four Black-owned firms: UJAMAA Construction, Powers & Sons Construction, Brown & Momen and Safeway Construction. The partnership was frequently highlighted by the Foundation as evidence of the project’s commitment to minority-owned businesses and local economic opportunity.

Beneath that alliance sat dozens of subcontractors responsible for carrying out the actual work, from plumbing and HVAC systems to painting, insulation, glass installation and concrete construction. Many of the complaints reviewed by Fox News Digital came from firms operating at that subcontractor level.

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The foundation said many subcontractors used the project to grow their businesses and noted that it implemented accelerated payment schedules, advance payments and a 15-day payment cycle to help support smaller firms. The foundation also said it worked with Lakeside Alliance to identify subcontractors in need of financial assistance and, when appropriate, provide additional support.

A landmark project

Whatever the outcome of those disputes, the center itself is nearing completion and preparing to open its doors to the public.

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For many Chicago residents, the project remains a source of pride and a long-awaited investment in the city’s South Side. For some of the subcontractors who helped build it, however, the approaching opening date represents a shrinking window to resolve payment disputes they say have lingered for years.

The subcontractor tension was largely absent from the excitement surrounding the center over a recent weekend, when local residents touring the campus told Fox News Digital they were impressed by the sprawling development and its 220-foot-tall granite-clad museum tower.

Many posed with a statue of the former president and first lady and stopped to read slogans displayed on the perimeter fence, including «Bring Change Home» and «A Home For Action.» Several described the project as a fitting tribute to Obama, who first rose to prominence as a community organizer before becoming the nation’s first Black president.

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Drone shot of the Obama Presidential Center in Jackson Park on Chicago's South Side

The Obama Presidential Center in Jackson Park on Chicago’s South Side will open this week. (Fox Flight Team)

The center sits in historic Jackson Park, one of Chicago’s most iconic public parks. The Obama Foundation secured the site through a 99-year lease with the city for a one-time fee of just $10.

Once open, the campus will serve as the headquarters of the Obama Foundation and host leadership programs, community initiatives and public events.

It will feature a branch of the Chicago Public Library, a digitized presidential library — though it will not be a traditional presidential library with physical papers — an auditorium, an indoor sports facility, a playground and expansive green outdoor spaces.

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Roadway view of the Obama Presidential Center in Chicago.

A pedestrian crosses a street near the Obama Presidential Center in Chicago ahead of the campus opening. (Michael Dorgan/Fox News Digital)

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Despite the financial losses, Owen said he still takes pride in the finished product.

«I’ve heard the criticisms of the design out here and maybe from an outsider’s perspective, it might not be your cup of tea, but I can tell you the interior of this presidential center is quite beautiful and it’s something to be proud of,» Owen said.

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«And we are still proud to have been part of this job. We just wish it would have gone a different way financially.»

Fence banner showing Barack Obama outside the Obama Presidential Center.

A fence banner featuring former President Barack Obama is displayed outside the Obama Presidential Center in Chicago. (Michael Dorgan/Fox News Digital)

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Equipos rotos y médicos exhaustos: el sistema de salud de Cuba está al borde del colapso

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En una sala de un instituto especializado de La Habana donde reciben atención pacientes con cáncer de mama, Rosa Valentina Pérez espera hace semanas una tomografía para diagnosticar la causa de la pérdida de movilidad en sus piernas.

Los hospitales de la capital no cuentan con servicio de tomografía a causa de desperfectos y estos exámenes se concentran en un instituto donde un único equipo atiende los casos de la ciudad y de otras provincias.

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«Ustedes no pueden imaginar lo que es tener estos dolores, saber que te está mermando la vida y saber que te están diciendo ‘vamos a ver cuándo se puede’» hacer el estudio, dice a la AFP Pérez, postrada en una cama del Instituto de Oncología y Radiobiología (INOR).

Cuando esta mujer de 64 años nació, la revolución encabezada por Fidel Castro (1926-2016) impulsaba un sistema de salud gratuito y accesible presentado durante décadas como una de sus mayores conquistas sociales.

Incluso en la crisis de los años 1990, tras el colapso soviético, el modelo sobrevivió. Sin embargo, la pandemia de covid-19, el endurecimiento de las sanciones estadounidenses y la escasez de combustible agravada por el bloqueo de Washington desde enero lo han llevado al límite.

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El gobierno ha concentrado los recursos en programas prioritarios como cáncer, cardiología, nefrología y atención materno-infantil.

Aún así, esos programas están hoy entre los más afectados por falta de medicamentos, deterioro tecnológico, apagones y éxodo de personal hacia sectores mejor remunerados.

«La línea tecnológica del programa de cáncer hoy está afectada en más de su 50%», comenta Zholem Jorge Isaac, director nacional de Electromedicina, servicio que se encarga de mantener y reparar las tecnologías médicas.

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Describe un sistema obligado a funcionar con equipos envejecidos, piezas difíciles de adquirir por las sanciones estadounidenses, y tecnologías parcialmente operativas.

Además, los constantes cortes eléctricos en la isla dañan las baterías de los equipos.

– Médicos frustrados –

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En el INOR, principal centro oncológico de Cuba, 1.200 pacientes esperan radioterapia. El 80% de la tecnología para diagnóstico y tratamiento está obsoleta o averiada.

«Ponemos medicamentos que a veces no tenemos cómo evidenciar que esté realizando el efecto que creemos (…) porque no tenemos el reactivo o el equipo para monitorizarlo», dice el doctor Luis Eduardo Martín, director del instituto.

Luis Alexis Duncan, especialista en electromedicina, transporta monitores para su reparación en el Taller del Instituto de Cardiología y Cirugía Cardiovascular de La Habana. Foto AFP

La crisis golpea incluso a los niños, prioridad dentro del programa oncológico.

Mariuska Forteza, jefa de Oncopediatría, asegura que hemogramas rutinarios, esenciales para pacientes de quimioterapia, no pueden realizarse con la frecuencia necesaria.

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«Es muy frustrante que tú sepas que puedes salvar al niño, lograr una supervivencia mejor, y no lo puedes hacer porque estás atada de manos», lamenta. La tasa de supervivencia infantil por cáncer cayó del 85% al 65%, según datos oficiales.

En un servicio como el oncológico cada equipo averiado requiere respuesta inmediata, lo que mantiene en constante alerta a los ingenieros.

«A veces tengo que venir al hospital a las 12 de la noche o a las 2 de la madrugada para reparar un equipo y que el paciente pueda empezar su tratamiento», cuenta Alexis Amado Domínguez, jefe de electromedicina.

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Gracias a reparaciones e innovaciones mantienen operativo el acelerador lineal del centro, el único que funciona en la isla, clave para la radioterapia de muchos tipos de cáncer.

En el Instituto de Cardiología y Cirugía Cardiovascular la falta de «altas tecnologías» obliga a los médicos a hacer diagnósticos solamente con evaluación clínica, estetoscopio y electrocardiograma, reconoce el doctor José Esteban Abreu.

Según él, el número de cirugías cardiovasculares cayó de 400 en 2018 a un centenar en la actualidad. Además, 130 pacientes esperan un implante de marcapaso.

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«Siempre inventando»

En el taller del hospital, el técnico Luis Alexis Duncan intenta mantener operativo un parque tecnológico obsoleto.

«Siempre inventando, trabajando, innovando, porque no podemos esperar que se pare un servicio», afirma rodeado de equipos de anestesia, circulación extracorpórea y monitores a la espera de reparación o despiece para reutilizar componentes.

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Un especialista en equipos electromédicos trabaja en el taller provincial de La Habana. Foto AFP

Pero la inventiva no siempre basta. En el taller de La Habana donde se reparan el 80% de los equipos médicos de la capital, incubadoras y ventiladores para neonatos permanecen apilados a la espera de repuestos.

«La ventilación en neonatología está por debajo de lo que La Habana necesita», explica el técnico Dariel Alexis Díaz.

El taller dispone del único kit de calibración para un modelo de ventiladores neonatales existente en el país y hace malabares cuando provincias ubicadas en extremos opuestos de Cuba lo necesitan al mismo tiempo.

«Acortar la vida»

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La escasez de personal agrava la situación. Médicos, enfermeros y técnicos han abandonado el sector ante salarios insuficientes.

En la unidad de hemodiálisis del hospital Hermanos Ameijeiras, 72 pacientes dependen de 13 riñones artificiales obsoletos, de los cuales solo 11 funcionan. Además, los insumos llegan con retraso y las enfermeras no dan abasto.

Una mujer permanece sentada en el Instituto de Oncología y Radiobiología de La Habana. Foto AFP

Según la jefa de Nefrología, Iamara Castro, algunas sesiones de hemodiálisis se redujeron de cuatro a dos horas para distribuir recursos limitados y «no sobreexplotar el único personal que tenemos».

«Cuando usted acorta el periodo del tiempo de hemodiálisis, está acortando la vida», lamenta.

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Uno de sus pacientes, Nelson Companioni, de 81 años, dice que más de una vez temió no poder completar una sesión debido a fallas técnicas.

«Este mismo equipo ha tenido serias dificultades con una bombita que tiene detrás y usted ve a las enfermeras arrodilladas allí dándole golpes para que eche a andar», dice. Para la doctora Castro, si el sector de la salud aún se «mantiene en pie» es gracias «al valor humano».

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WATCH: Dem gov mocked for criticizing ‘tribal’ politics amid redistricting push: ‘Hypocrisy knows no bounds’

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Maryland Democratic Gov. Wes Moore is facing criticism for condemning rising «tribal» politics while continuing to push a redistricting effort that opponents say would eliminate the state’s sole Republican congressional seat.

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Moore, a rising Democratic star who is being floated as a possible 2028 presidential candidate, gave an Independence Day speech in which he described American history as «powerful,» «painful» and «complex.»

Speaking in the Maryland State House, where George Washington resigned his military commission in 1783, Moore proclaimed that «too many feel that our politics has become tribal, that our political system once felt like a gift, but the politics of today feel like a grift.»

In response, Haven Shoemaker, the top state attorney for Maryland’s Carroll County, remarked to Fox News Digital that «Gov. Moore is proof positive that hypocrisy knows no bounds.»

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WATCH: MARYLAND DEMS DEFEND ‘BIG TENT’ PARTY AS NEW YORK SOCIALIST SURGE FUELS DEM DIVIDE

Democratic Govs. Kathy Hochul, of New York, Wes Moore, of Maryland, and Tim Walz, of Minnesota, speak to members of the media outside the White House on July 3, 2024. (Yuri Gripas/Abaca/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

«On the basis of what you would have to characterize as tribalism, he is going to convene a special session of the Maryland General Assembly to redistrict Maryland’s only Republican congressman out of office. Sounds like tribalism to me,» said Shoemaker.

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Maryland General Assembly leaders announced they will meet for a special session beginning on Aug. 3 to consider a constitutional amendment on congressional redistricting, affiliate Fox 45 reported. The special session follows months of pressure from Moore and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., on Maryland Democrats to advance a congressional redistricting plan that would likely eliminate the state’s lone Republican-held district.

The earlier effort to pass the redistricting bill had fizzled out largely due to Maryland Senate President Bill Ferguson, a Democrat who called the proposed map «objectively unconstitutional» and expressed his worry that «the downside risk to Democrats is catastrophic.»

Afterward, Moore notably did not endorse Ferguson in his primary race despite the senator being one of the highest-ranking Democrats in the state.

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After the special session announcement, Moore said in a statement that «for months, I have said that inaction is not an option and we cannot sit on the sidelines while voting rights, fair representation, and the foundations of our democracy come under attack across the country.»

TRUMP FOE WINS CRUCIAL DEM PRIMARY AS 2028 PRESIDENTIAL SPECULATION SWIRLS

Bill Ferguson

Senate President Bill Ferguson speaks as Maryland lawmakers convene for a new session on Jan. 8, 2025, in Annapolis, Maryland. (Jonathan Newton/for The Washington Post via Getty Images)

«I appreciate the General Assembly’s continued conversations and the agreement to come back to finish the work,» he said, adding, «My administration will work closely with the General Assembly as they consider legislation to ensure our state has the tools necessary to protect voters and defend fair representation.»

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Meanwhile, Shoemaker, who previously served nine years in the Maryland House of Delegates, even holding the role of minority whip, accused Moore of being caught up in national politics while Marylanders are «fleeing in droves.»

«His record as governor is abysmal,» he said, adding, «Since he became governor, almost four years ago, all that he’s done is really tried to position himself to run for president.»

Shoemaker also took issue with Moore’s critique of American nationalism during his July 4th address.

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Moore remarked that «today there are those who will use patriotism to justify pulling books from schools and rewriting history until it comforts those in power. In reality, that’s not patriotism; that’s nationalism.»

The governor continued that «nationalism is not an extension of patriotism; they are not interchangeable. There’s a difference, and that does matter.»

Shoemaker responded that «patriotism means that you love your country,» while in his view nationalism «means that your country is exceptional.»

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«It’s pretty clear to me that neither Gov. Moore nor the ultra-progressives generally think that America is exceptional, and I think that’s incredibly sad,» he said.

Moore’s comment also garnered criticism from Maryland Freedom Caucus Chair Matt Morgan, a Republican, who said, «In Moore’s world, if you’re a parent concerned about explicit material in your child’s school library, you’re a nationalist. If you question the revisionist history framework of the 1619 Project and advocate for accurate, honest history, you’re not a patriot. You’re a nationalist.»

«It’s a neat rhetorical trick: reframe the terms, and suddenly anyone who disagrees with you is the villain,» said Morgan.

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In a statement shared with Fox News Digital, the Maryland Freedom Caucus called Moore’s decision to convene lawmakers for a special session for redistricting «a blatant partisan effort to rewrite the Maryland Constitution so Democrats can gerrymander away Rep. Andy Harris’s seat and silence rural and conservative voices.»

«While Maryland families sit around their kitchen tables wrestling with sky-high taxes, crushing energy costs, and a cost-of-living crisis made far worse by Annapolis Democrats, Governor Wes Moore has decided now is the perfect time to call a special session,» said Morgan.

In response to the criticism, Ammar Mousa, a spokesperson for Moore, told Fox News Digital, «Why are Maryland Republicans so against patriotism?»

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BLUE STATE RESIDENTS ‘FLEEING IN DROVES’ AFTER ‘INSANE’ PROGRESSIVE TAKEOVER, SAYS TOP STATE ATTORNEY

Governor Wes Moore speaks on Meet the Press.

Gov. Wes Moore appears on «Meet the Press» in Washington, D.C., on Sept. 7, 2025. (Shannon Finney/NBC via Getty Images)

Shoemaker told Fox News Digital that his own county has been targeted by state leaders for «wanting to have age-appropriate material in public school libraries.»

In 2025, the Maryland State Board of Education reviewed Carroll County’s removal of 20 books from school libraries after parents argued the removals violated Maryland’s Freedom to Read Act, which was signed by Moore in 2024. The State Board ultimately upheld the county’s decision, allowing the books to remain off library shelves.

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«Fighting to keep filth in public schools and public school libraries, or, you know, even revising history to make villains of Founding Fathers who have made our country great by just pointing out their flaws. That seems like moral relativism to me and revisionism at its worst,» said Shoemaker.

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Shoemaker said that it is policies such as these, along with continuously «hiked taxes,» that prompted him to announce he is moving out of the state at the end of his term. He says he is not the only one calling it quits on Maryland under the current leadership.

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«I’ve talked to a lot of people; most of them say that they don’t blame me a bit for fleeing Maryland, and a substantial number of those folks say that they’re right behind me,» he said.

Fox News Digital also reached out to the Maryland State Board of Education for comment.

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El régimen de Irán enterró a Ali Khamenei tras la nueva escalada de enfrentamientos con Estados Unidos

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El régimen de Irán enterró a Ali Khamenei tras la nueva escalada de enfrentamientos con Estados Unidos (REUTERS)

El régimen de Irán dio sepultura este viernes al antiguo líder supremo, Ali Khamenei, en el santuario del Imam Reza, en la ciudad de Mashhad, al término de seis días de ceremonias fúnebres, en una jornada marcada por un nuevo intercambio de ataques entre Estados Unidos y Teherán que elevó otra vez la tensión en Medio Oriente.

El ataúd de Khamenei, cubierto con la bandera iraní, llegó al santuario del Imam Reza, en su ciudad natal, donde una multitud se reunió para participar de las oraciones y despedir al dirigente asesinado el 28 de febrero durante el inicio de la guerra entre Estados Unidos e Israel contra Irán.

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La emisora estatal IRIB confirmó el final de la ceremonia y señaló que “el cuerpo del líder mártir de la Revolución Islámica fue enterrado en la sala conmemorativa del santuario del Imam Reza”.

Las imágenes difundidas por los medios oficiales mostraron la presencia del presidente del Parlamento y principal negociador en las conversaciones con Estados Unidos, Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf; del presidente del Tribunal Supremo, Gholamhossein Mohseni Ejei; y de Mostafa Khamenei, hijo mayor del ex líder supremo. También se observó a varias figuras del régimen llorar junto al féretro.

En cambio, no hubo señales públicas de Mojtaba Khamenei, hijo y sucesor de Ali Khamenei, quien tampoco apareció durante los días previos del funeral. Desde que se anunció su designación, solo difundió declaraciones escritas y, según versiones oficiales, resultó herido durante los ataques del 28 de febrero.

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La emisora estatal IRIB confirmó el final de la ceremonia y señaló que “el cuerpo del líder mártir de la Revolución Islámica fue enterrado en la sala conmemorativa del santuario del Imam Reza” (REUTERS)
La emisora estatal IRIB confirmó el final de la ceremonia y señaló que “el cuerpo del líder mártir de la Revolución Islámica fue enterrado en la sala conmemorativa del santuario del Imam Reza” (REUTERS)

El entierro coincidió con un segundo día consecutivo de ataques entre Washington y Teherán. Funcionarios iraníes informaron que los bombardeos estadounidenses dejaron 17 muertos. Además, los medios estatales señalaron que uno de los ataques alcanzó un tramo de la línea ferroviaria entre Teherán y Mashhad, a unos 55 kilómetros de esta última ciudad.

Según esas informaciones, el ataque obligó al cierre temporal de la línea ferroviaria y los pasajeros continuaron el viaje en autobuses. Los medios estatales también informaron que Estados Unidos atacó el perímetro de la única planta nuclear civil de Irán, en la provincia de Bushehr, de acuerdo con declaraciones del vicegobernador provincial.

Además, reportaron el impacto de un proyectil contra un cuartel general militar en las afueras de Bushehr. Sin embargo, un funcionario de Defensa de Estados Unidos afirmó que las fuerzas estadounidenses no realizaban ataques contra Irán en ese momento.

Por su parte, Irán anunció la reanudación de los ataques contra objetivos estadounidenses en Kuwait, Bahréin y Qatar. Al mismo tiempo, sonaron sirenas de alerta en Jordania, donde el ejército informó que interceptó ocho misiles lanzados desde territorio iraní.

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El ejército iraní aseguró que sus fuerzas atacaron con drones un sistema de misiles Patriot en Kuwait, un sistema de alerta temprana en Qatar y depósitos de combustible en Bahréin como parte de su ofensiva contra bases militares estadounidenses en la región.

Irán anunció la reanudación de los ataques contra objetivos estadounidenses en Kuwait, Bahréin y Qatar (REUTERS)
Irán anunció la reanudación de los ataques contra objetivos estadounidenses en Kuwait, Bahréin y Qatar (REUTERS)

Un funcionario de Defensa de Estados Unidos sostuvo, en cambio, que las decenas de misiles y drones iraníes fueron interceptados o no provocaron daños significativos y que no hubo heridos entre el personal estadounidense.

La tensión en Medio Oriente también aumentó por nuevas declaraciones de las autoridades israelíes. El ministro de Defensa, Israel Katz, afirmó durante una ceremonia militar que Israel está preparado para atacar a Irán por “tercera vez” si fuera necesario y prometió hacerlo “con aún mayor fuerza”.

El primer ministro Benjamin Netanyahu también se refirió a la situación y afirmó: “Nos estamos preparando para cualquier escenario”. La oficina del jefe de gobierno israelí informó además que Netanyahu conversó el jueves con Trump, quien le transmitió información actualizada sobre “las acciones de Estados Unidos en el Golfo”.

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Otro de los focos de tensión permanece en el estrecho de Ormuz, una de las principales rutas para el transporte mundial de petróleo y gas. Teherán insiste en mantener el control sobre esa vía marítima, mientras el paso de buques disminuyó de forma marcada desde el miércoles.

En los últimos días, el ejército iraní atacó al menos tres embarcaciones, hecho que precedió a los extensos bombardeos lanzados por Estados Unidos contra objetivos iraníes desde el martes.

El primer ministro Benjamin Netanyahu también se refirió a la situación y afirmó: “Nos estamos preparando para cualquier escenario” (EFE)
El primer ministro Benjamin Netanyahu también se refirió a la situación y afirmó: “Nos estamos preparando para cualquier escenario” (EFE)

De acuerdo con datos de la empresa de seguimiento marítimo Kpler, el tráfico comercial por el estrecho descendió de forma considerable, en especial sobre la ruta omaní respaldada por la ONU, después de los ataques sufridos por varios buques a comienzos de esta semana.

Como reflejo del clima de máxima tensión, al menos un avión de combate escoltó la aeronave que trasladó el féretro de Ali Khamenei hasta Mashhad, según mostraron imágenes publicadas en el sitio web del líder supremo.

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(Con información de AFP)



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