INTERNACIONAL
Tras los bombardeos rusos, Volodimir Zelensky afirmó que Europa “necesita su propia defensa antibalística” para terminar la guerra

El presidente de Ucrania, Volodimir Zelensky, pidió este martes a Europa desarrollar sistemas propios de defensa antibalística y solicitó a Estados Unidos continuar con el suministro de misiles para los sistemas Patriot. Su reclamo surgió tras una ofensiva rusa con drones y misiles contra territorio ucraniano.
En un mensaje difundido en redes sociales tras los ataques, Zelensky advirtió que la ofensiva confirma la intención de Rusia de mantener este tipo de operaciones mientras Ucrania no cuente con protección suficiente ante misiles balísticos. “Un ataque a gran escala y una declaración absolutamente clara de Rusia: si Ucrania no está protegida contra ataques con misiles balísticos y otros, estos ataques continuarán”, afirmó.
El mandatario también subrayó la necesidad de que Europa avance en el desarrollo de capacidades propias de defensa aérea. “Europa necesita su propia defensa antibalística para que esta guerra pueda finalmente llegar a su fin”, indicó.
Además, remarcó la importancia de mantener la asistencia estadounidense para los sistemas Patriot. “La asistencia de Estados Unidos en el suministro de misiles para los sistemas Patriot es absolutamente necesaria. Contamos con el apoyo de nuestros socios y con respuestas efectivas al ataque de hoy”, sostuvo.
Según las autoridades ucranianas, Rusia lanzó durante la noche 656 drones y 73 misiles. Los principales objetivos fueron Kiev, Dnipró, Poltava, Kharkiv y Zaporizhzhia. La ofensiva causó víctimas mortales, daños en edificios residenciales e incendios, especialmente en la capital, donde se reportaron operaciones de rescate para localizar personas atrapadas bajo los escombros. Otras regiones también registraron fallecidos, heridos y destrucción de viviendas.
En paralelo a las declaraciones de Zelensky, el ministro de Asuntos Exteriores de Ucrania, Andriy Sybiga, señaló que la magnitud de la ofensiva demuestra que Moscú carece de alternativas militares para modificar el curso de la guerra y recurre a ataques masivos contra ciudades ucranianas.
“La única razón del ataque nocturno horroroso de Rusia contra Ucrania con 656 drones y 73 misiles, que mató al menos a 12 personas, incluidos niños, e hirió a cientos de civiles, es que Putin es un criminal de guerra y perdedor que no tiene cartas que jugar excepto el terror”, expresó Sybiga en redes sociales.
El canciller sostuvo que los bombardeos no alterarán la situación militar sobre el terreno y aseguró que Rusia enfrenta dificultades en el frente. “Moscú está perdiendo en el campo de batalla. Ningún número de misiles puede cambiar esto”, afirmó.
La Fuerza Aérea ucraniana comunicó que las defensas antiaéreas destruyeron o neutralizaron 40 misiles y 602 drones durante la ofensiva. Sin embargo, varios proyectiles alcanzaron zonas urbanas y objetivos civiles en distintas regiones.

Sybiga pidió a los aliados de Ucrania adoptar medidas concretas para fortalecer la defensa aérea del país. “Exhorto a los socios a actuar, no solo a condenar. Hay pasos concretos que se pueden tomar”, señaló. Entre las iniciativas planteadas, reclamó el uso de recursos del Fondo Europeo de Paz para financiar la compra de sistemas y misiles Patriot adicionales, así como avanzar en la coalición antibalística y aumentar la inversión en capacidades de largo alcance para Ucrania.
El canciller también solicitó intensificar la presión sobre Rusia a través de nuevas sanciones, prohibiciones de viaje para combatientes, el uso pleno de activos congelados y medidas de aislamiento. Además, reclamó avances en el proceso de integración de Ucrania a la Unión Europea mediante la apertura de nuevos capítulos de negociación.
Sybiga vinculó cualquier avance diplomático a un aumento de la presión internacional sobre Moscú. “Los terroristas en Moscú deben darse cuenta de que sus ataques brutales no los llevarán a ninguna parte. Que el precio por su régimen solo aumentará. Que la única salida para Putin es poner fin inmediatamente a esta guerra”, afirmó. Insistió en que los esfuerzos orientados a una solución negociada requieren acciones concretas contra Rusia. “Los esfuerzos de paz solo tendrán éxito cuando estén respaldados por una presión real sobre Moscú”, concluyó.
(Con información de AFP y AP)
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From reality TV to city hall? Trump-backed Spencer Pratt soars in LA mayor race as Californians vote

Spencer Pratt responds to Newsom’s Bass endorsement, calls them ‘alleged criminal partners’
Kayleigh McEnany discusses Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass’s controversial Los Angeles homelessness program, highlighting reports of $418 million spent with only 10% effectively getting people off the streets. Spencer Pratt criticizes the alleged corruption, calls out the abuse of dogs on Skid Row, and details his faith-driven mission to make Los Angeles a safer city for mothers and children. Pratt’s mayoral campaign is surging in recent polls against Bass.
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Republicans are aiming to break longtime losing streaks by taking first steps toward winning elections for governor and Los Angeles mayor as voters in Democrat-dominated California head to the polls on Tuesday.
Meanwhile, President Donald Trump’s clout over the GOP will once again face a ballot box test, in a gubernatorial showdown in Iowa, while the Hawkeye State’s Democratic Senate nomination is the latest battle between the establishment and progressive wings of the party.
California and Iowa are two of the six states holding primary contests from coast to coast during the first week of June, in elections that will impact November’s midterms, when the GOP’s slim Senate and razor-thin House majorities will be up for grabs.
The election arguably grabbing the most headlines nationally is in Los Angeles, where it’s been three decades since a Republican won a mayoral contest in the nation’s second most populous city. Spencer Pratt, a reality TV star and online influencer-turned-mayoral candidate, is gaining traction, thanks in part to his populist pitch and viral videos.
THE CELEBRITY ENDORSEMENTS BOOSTING SPENCER PRATT IN THE LOS ANGELES MAYOR SHOWDOWN
Los Angeles mayoral candidate Spencer Pratt hosted a campaign «block party» event on May 20, 2026, in Los Angeles, California. (Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)
Pratt, a Republican running as an independent in the left-leaning city, is backed by Trump. His rise is also fueled in part by his well-known status as one of the victims who lost their homes in last year’s devastating wildfires, when over 17,000 homes in Los Angeles County were destroyed, as well as his right-leaning focus on homelessness, crime and government accountability in a city long run by Democrats.
«I keep saying I become the mayor because of moms. Moms are getting me elected. Moms do not feel safe in Los Angeles. Not just feel safe, they are not safe. Nobody’s safe really in LA unless you’re the drug dealer. The drug dealers and the people giving them the needles, the city, our taxpayer money, the needle givers, they’re safe, the meth pipe givers. They’re safe. Everyone else is not safe in LA,» Pratt argued this past weekend in an interview on Fox News’ «Saturday In America with Kayleigh McEnany.»
Pratt is targeting Mayor Karen Bass, a former Democratic congresswoman seeking a second four-year term steering Los Angeles. Bass, who has been endorsed by former Vice President Kamala Harris, a former California senator and state attorney general, as well as the state’s two Democratic senators, Adam Schiff and Alex Padilla, last week landed term-limited Gov. Gavin Newsom’s backing.
IS THERE A ‘GROWING REVOLT’ AGAINST CALIFORNIA’S ONE-PARTY RULE?

Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass campaigns ahead of Tuesday’s primary election as she seeks a second term in office. (Louise Barnsley for Fox News Digital)
Bass is attempting to fend off challenges from the right from Pratt and on the left from progressive City Council member Nithya Raman. If no candidate tops 50% in Tuesday’s nonpartisan mayoral election, the top two finishers will face off in November.
In the race for governor, a whopping 61 candidates are running to succeed Newsom in steering the nation’s most populous state and the world’s fourth-largest-economy.
But heading into the jungle primary, where all candidates regardless of party affiliation appear on the same ballot, with the top two finishers advancing to the general election, only a handful of contenders have a good chance of making the cut.
Among them are Democrats Javier Becerra and Tom Steyer and Republican Steve Hilton.
Becerra, a former longtime congressman and California attorney general who later served as a Cabinet secretary in former President Biden’s administration, would become the first Latino Golden State governor in modern history. Steyer, meanwhile, is a billionaire hedge fund founder turned environmental activist who unsuccessfully ran for his party’s 2020 presidential nomination.
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Hilton is a one-time British political strategist turned American conservative commentator and former Fox News Channel host who is backed by Trump.
Also in the race is Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco, a Republican. Hilton and Bianco are both hoping to become the first California Republican win a gubernatorial election since then-Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s 2006 re-election two decades ago.
Bianco has argued that he’s the most conservative candidate in the race.
But Hilton, in an interview on Fox News’ «The Big Weekend Show,» reiterated his argument that «Chad is just too far behind. He can’t make it into the top two. So every vote for him actually helps the Democrats. We have got to make sure of this. We can’t let this opportunity for change slip away.»
Democratic candidates former Democratic Rep. Katie Porter, San Jose Mayor Matt Mahan, former Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa and state Superintendent of Public Instruction Tony Thurmond, are among the other better-known contenders.

Democratic candidates Antonio Villaraigosa, Katie Porter, Tom Steyer and Xavier Becerra and Republican candidates Steve Hilton and Chad Bianco participate in a California gubernatorial debate at East Los Angeles College Auditorium in Monterey Park, Calif., on May 5, 2026, ahead of the June 2 primary elections. (Frederic J. Brown / AFP via Getty Images)
Former Vice President Kamala Harris and Sen. Alex Padilla mulled launching Democratic bids for governor, but both last year announced they would take a pass. That resulted in the lack of a clear Golden State gubernatorial frontrunner for the first time in more than a quarter century.
And the race was overshadowed for much of last year, as the devastation from the LA wildfires and Trump’s immigration raids grabbed headlines in California.
But the showdown for governor entered the spotlight earlier this year when one of the leading candidates, Democratic Rep. Eric Swalwell, dropped out of the race and then resigned from Congress following a political implosion after facing multiple allegations of sexual assault and misconduct that he continues to deny.
Swalwell’s exit from the race opened the door for first Steyer and then Becerra to rise in the polls. Steyer shelled out more than $200 million of his own money to blanket the airwaves and the internet with ads.
Bianco, who launched his campaign for governor in April of last year, was among the top contenders in the race until Trump’s endorsement of Hilton in early April blunted his momentum.
Iowa showdowns
In Iowa, the retirements of Republican Gov. Kim Reynolds and GOP Sen. Joni Ernst along with the rough political midterm climate facing Republicans, have Democrats optimistic they can flip the seats in a one-time battleground state that turned red the past decade.
Trump, who carried Iowa by 13 points in his 2024 presidential election victory, last week weighed in on the competitive GOP gubernatorial primary,
The president endorsed Rep. Randy Feenstra in a race that also includes entrepreneur and private school co-founder Zach Lahn, who is backed by the influential conservative group Turning Point USA, state Rep. Eddie Andrews, former state Rep. Brad Sherman and former state administrative services director Adam Steen.

President Donald Trump, right, last week endorsed Republican Rep. Randy Feenstra in Tuesday’s GOP gubernatorial primary in Iowa. (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images; Cody Scanlan/The Register/USA Today Network)
The winner will face Democratic state Auditor Rob Sand, who is unopposed in his primary. Sand is the only Democrat currently elected to statewide office.
The brute force of the president’s endorsement power and the immense grip he has on the Republican Party has been on display in GOP primaries the past month, with his candidates ousting incumbents he targeted in showdowns in Indiana, Louisiana, Kentucky and Texas.
Republican Rep. Ashley Hinson of Iowa is the overwhelming frontrunner to secure her party’s Senate nomination in the race to succeed retiring Ernst.
Hinson, a former TV news anchor who is in her third term representing Iowa’s 2nd Congressional District, is facing a long-shot challenge from former state senator and former U.S. Senate candidate Jim Carlin. Hinson is backed by Trump, Senate Majority Leader Sen. John Thune, the National Republican Senatorial Committee, which is the campaign arm of the Senate GOP. Hinson, who in 2020 flipped a Democratic-held seat that covers the northeastern portion of Iowa, is seen as a rising star in the party.

Republican Rep. Ashley Hinson of Iowa sits for a Fox News Digital interview in Washington, D.C., on Sept. 4, 2025. She is running in the 2026 race to succeed retiring GOP Sen. Joni Ernst. (Paul Steinhauser – Fox News)
The Republican-controlled seat in Iowa is a top target for Democrats and the race is one of about a dozen crucial showdowns in this year’s midterm elections that will determine whether the Republicans hold on to their current 53-47 majority in the chamber.
Hinson will face off in the general election against the winner of an expensive and contentious Democratic Senate primary between state Rep. Josh Turek, a Paralympian, and state Sen. Zach Wahls.
Wahls, a progressive who Republicans have likened to New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani, has the backing of liberal champion Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts. Turek, the more moderate Senate contender who flipped a GOP-held Iowa House seat in 2022, is backed by former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg. He also has the tacit support of longtime Senate Democratic leader Sen. Chuck Schumer of New York and Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee Chair Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand. And VoteVets, an establishment-aligned outside group, has spent big bucks on behalf of Turek.
Primaries in Iowa’s 1st and 3rd Congressional Districts will set up general election showdowns in crucial GOP-held seats that Democrats are aiming to flip.
Other showdowns
It’s the same story in New Jersey’s 7th Congressional District, another purple seat Democrats are eyeing as they try to regain the House majority.
The Republican incumbent, Rep. Tom Kean Jr., has been in the national headlines after being absent from Congress and the campaign trail for three months due to a «a personal medical issue.»
In New Mexico, the race to succeed term-limited Democratic Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham is taking top billing.
Former Rep. Deb Haaland, who served as Interior Secretary in former President Joe Biden’s administration and made history as the nation’s first Native American woman to serve as a Cabinet secretary, who’s to make history again as the first Native American woman elected as governor. She faces off against Bernalillo County District Attorney Sam Bregman. Three major Republicans are seeking their party’s gubernatorial nomination.
Montana voters will select nominees in Tuesday’s primary to replace departing Republican incumbent Sen. Steve Daines.

Former U.S. District Attorney Kurt Alme is running for the GOP Senate nomination in Montana, in the race to succeed retiring GOP Sen. Steve Daines. (Alme Campaign)
The senator and Trump are backing former U.S. Attorney Kurt Alme, who jumped into the race in March immediately after Daines announced his retirement just ahead of the state’s filing deadline, in what appeared to be a carefully choreographed move. Alme faces two longshot rivals for the nomination.
Former state Rep. Reilly Neill appears to be the frontrunner for the Democratic nomination in the solidly Republican state.
The Republican and Democratic nominees will face off in the general election against former University of Montana president Seth Bodnar, who is running as an independent and has outraised everyone else in the race.
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In GOP-dominated South Dakota, Gov. Larry Rhoden faces a crowded and competitive field as he seeks a full term as governor.
Rhoden was lieutenant governor in early 2025 when he assumed the top job after then-Gov. Kristi Noem stepped down to become Department of Homeland Security secretary in the Trump administration.
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INTERNACIONAL
Rusia lanzó un nuevo ataque masivo con 656 drones y 73 misiles contra Ucrania: al menos 11 muertos y decenas de heridos

Al menos 11 personas murieron y decenas resultaron heridas durante una nueva ola de ataques rusos contra distintas regiones de Ucrania en la madrugada de este martes, según informaron autoridades ucranianas. La ofensiva incluyó el lanzamiento de 73 misiles y 656 drones contra varios puntos del país, con Kiev, Dnipró, Poltava, Kharkiv y Zaporizhia entre los principales objetivos.
La Fuerza Aérea de Ucrania indicó que las defensas antiaéreas destruyeron o neutralizaron 40 misiles y 602 drones. Sin embargo, las autoridades reportaron impactos de 30 misiles balísticos, tres misiles de crucero y 33 drones en al menos 38 ubicaciones. Además, restos de drones interceptados cayeron en otras 15 zonas.
La capital ucraniana concentró parte de los ataques más severos. El jefe de la administración militar de Kiev, Timor Tkatchenko, confirmó que “se confirmó la muerte de cuatro personas en Kiev” y señaló que al menos 29 personas resultaron heridas, entre ellas dos niños. Horas antes, había advertido a la población que “el enemigo está atacando con misiles balísticos”.
El Servicio Estatal de Emergencias de Ucrania elevó posteriormente el balance de la capital a 58 heridos, incluidos tres menores. Los bombardeos causaron daños en edificios residenciales y otras infraestructuras civiles en ocho distritos de la ciudad.
Uno de los episodios más graves ocurrió en el distrito de Podil, donde un edificio residencial sufrió un colapso parcial tras un ataque ruso. El alcalde de Kiev, Vitali Klitschko, afirmó que el inmueble fue alcanzado por un ataque de tipo “doble golpe”, una táctica que consiste en lanzar un segundo proyectil contra el mismo objetivo poco después del primero.
Tkatchenko advirtió que los equipos de rescate buscaban posibles sobrevivientes entre los escombros. “Los informes preliminares indican que hay personas atrapadas bajo los escombros”, escribió en Telegram.
En el distrito de Podilskyi, un edificio de nueve plantas sufrió daños en sus pisos superiores y varias personas quedaron atrapadas bajo los restos de la estructura. Las tareas de rescate continuaban durante la madrugada mientras la alerta aérea seguía vigente. En Solomianskyi, los daños alcanzaron edificios residenciales de 20 y 24 plantas.
Las autoridades también informaron que un presunto impacto de misil provocó un incendio en un edificio residencial de 24 pisos en el distrito de Shevchenkivskyi. Otro fuego afectó a un inmueble de nueve plantas en Podil tras la caída de restos de proyectiles sobre el techo.
Además de los edificios residenciales, los ataques alcanzaron una clínica médica y provocaron la caída de escombros dentro del predio de un jardín de infantes. También se registraron cortes de energía en tres distritos de la capital.
En la región central de Dnipropetrovsk, las autoridades reportaron al menos seis muertos y 36 heridos después de los ataques contra la ciudad de Dnipró. Según el Servicio Estatal de Emergencias, un segundo bombardeo impactó cuando los rescatistas llegaban al lugar de una explosión previa, lo que provocó la muerte de un integrante de los equipos de emergencia.
El jefe de la administración militar regional, Oleksandr Ganja, señaló que “el balance del ataque ruso contra Dnipró sigue aumentando” mientras continuaban las tareas de evaluación de daños.
En Kharkiv, otra de las principales ciudades del este ucraniano, al menos 14 personas resultaron heridas. Las autoridades reportaron daños en viviendas, garajes y vehículos. Un edificio residencial de dos plantas y parte de un bloque de apartamentos de cuatro pisos sufrieron destrucción, mientras varias personas quedaron atrapadas bajo los escombros.
El alcalde de la ciudad, Igor Terekhov, informó que Kharkiv fue “atacada por 15 drones y dos misiles”, según un mensaje difundido a través de Telegram.
Las explosiones se extendieron durante gran parte de la noche. Días antes, el presidente ucraniano, Volodímir Zelensky, había advertido sobre la posibilidad de una nueva ofensiva rusa de gran escala. En un mensaje dirigido a la población el lunes por la noche, sostuvo que “las advertencias de inteligencia sobre ataques rusos siguen vigentes. Es posible un ataque masivo; lo han preparado”.
La nueva ofensiva se produjo en medio de una escalada de operaciones entre ambos países. Según Zelensky, las fuerzas ucranianas atacaron 15 refinerías rusas entre enero y mayo, acciones que, de acuerdo con el mandatario, afectaron el 40% de la principal capacidad de refinación de petróleo de Rusia.
Por su parte, autoridades rusas informaron un incendio en la refinería de Ilski, ubicada en la región de Krasnodar, en el sur del país. El cuartel general operativo regional indicó que el fuego comenzó después de un ataque con aeronaves no tripuladas.
(Con información de AFP y AP)
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Marine combat veteran bets big on Hispanic outreach in bid to flip Dem-held House seat

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A congressional candidate in New Mexico is betting that his Hispanic ties — and military background — are just the thing historically Democratic voters will need to go Republican in the fall.
«I connect with them on that level. They wanted somebody with law enforcement or military experience, which, you now know, I have both,» Greg Cunningham said, referring to the Hispanic community in the state’s 2nd Congressional District.
«One of the reasons that I decided to run — that I feel so strongly about this is, you know, Hispanic culture is at its core a conservative culture.»
Cunningham’s hope that the GOP can win over the Hispanic vote, a historically Democratic voting bloc, continues longstanding efforts from Republicans to flip the script among minorities, especially in fringe districts that could decide the balance of power in 2026.
GOP congressional candidate Greg Cunningham, left, pictured next to a ‘Latinos for Trump’ sign, right. (Fox News; Yi-Chin Lee/Houston Chronicle via Getty Images)
That’s especially true in New Mexico’s 2nd Congressional District — currently held by Rep. Gabe Vasquez, D-N.M.
It’s one of thirteen that voted for President Donald Trump in 2024, but that sent a Democratic representative to Congress anyway. The Cook Political Report indicates the district «leans» Democratic, despite a D+0 rating.
Cunningham, who became the default GOP candidate after a lone primary challenger dropped out in April, will be the first new GOP candidate voters will consider since 2018. Former Rep. Yvette Herrell, who has been the candidate since then, last lost in 2024 by 4.2% to Vasquez.
Cunningham believes his background is uniquely suited to the challenges of the district.
A Marine reconnaissance veteran who served in combat, Cunningham joined the Albuquerque Police Department, spent years on patrol and narcotics, worked as a DEA task force officer on federal drug and cartel cases and later operated in undercover roles before transitioning into private security.
TRUMP MAKES PLAY FOR BLUE-LEANING STATE AS HE BRIEFLY DETOURS FROM THE BATTLEGROUNDS

DEA agents and police officers stand near a white command vehicle on a Los Angeles street after federal arrests related to drug trafficking on May 6, 2026. (Jae C. Hong/AP Photo)
«I love Yvette Herrell, but I am a different person in every way, shape, and form. And what I bring to CD2 and to this race is exactly what we need,» Cunningham said.
Specifically, Cunningham believes that his background will help address high levels of crime and narcotics that have persisted despite lowered levels of illegal immigration.
«The human invasion portion of that equation is solved. The law enforcement, human trafficking, narcotics trafficking, all of those challenges are the same exact challenges that I faced when I worked down there 20 years ago. Nothing has changed,» Cunningham said.
But more than his practical knowledge and experience, Cunningham said he hopes to appeal to values central to the Hispanic community.
«We value our families, we value our culture, we value our faith. And so, I think when you take Republican or Democrat, take the donkey or the elephant out of it, and you start speaking to people on a core level, who are you?» Cunningham said.
HOUSE GOP RUSHES TO COURT CRITICAL VOTING BLOC WHILE FACING UPHILL MIDTERM BATTLE

The American flag and the New Mexico state flag fly side by side at the New Mexico Museum of Art in Santa Fe, N.M. (Robert Alexander/Getty Images)
«We all want the very same things,» he added.
New Mexico is roughly 50% Hispanic, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.
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Like all Democratic strongholds and competitive districts, Cunningham believes half the battle will be convincing voters that Republicans can secure the seat in the first place.
«I just have to convince [New Mexico’s 2nd Congressional District] why we can win this,» Cunningham said.
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