Drivers rescued from flooded Denver roads
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 07:37:23 GMT
DENVER (KDVR) — Roads in Denver were flooded Tuesday night as severe thunderstorms moved across the metro area.Denver Fire performed a swift water rescue in the area of 38th Avenue and Fox Street, according to the department. Crews were able to get people to safety, but they were still on the scene around 8:40 p.m. Live updates: Tracking severe weather in Denver area 38th and Fox is the same place where cars were submerged last week in fast-rising water from a downpour.And similar to last week, Interstate 25 was again flooded on Tuesday at West 23rd Avenue. That's the same place where floodwaters on Thursday snarled rush-hour traffic and pushed mud and debris on the road.Cameras from the Colorado Department of Transportation showed vehicles traveling on the flooded road on Tuesday night. Flooding was also visible on I-25 at westbound Interstate 70.Flooding on Interstate 25 at West 23rd Avenue in Denver (Credit: Colorado Department of Transportation)Warning: Don't drive onto floode...Russia’s put the genie back in the bottle — or has it?
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 07:37:23 GMT
Jamie Dettmer is opinion editor at POLITICO Europe.Nothing to see here — now move along, please.A little over a week after the 36-hour insurrection of Yevgeny Prigozhin and his Wagner Group mercenaries, this seems to be the line adopted by the Kremlin, its propagandists and supporters.The politicians and functionaries who remained ominously silent and kept their heads down as the shock rebellion unfolded are now all rallying, flocking to President Vladimir Putin and praising his sagacity, while seeking to trivialize Wagner’s military contribution in the war on Ukraine.“If there had been people like Putin at the helm of the state in 1917 and 1991, there would have been no revolution and no collapse of the USSR,” declared Vyacheslav Volodin, chairman of Russia’s lower house of parliament, the Duma. Putin has emerged even stronger, he opined on Telegram.Meanwhile, Andrey Kartapolov, chair of the Duma’s defense committee, was quoted by the state-run TASS news agency as saying ther...Paul Ovenden
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 07:37:23 GMT
A former Sunday newspaper journalist with an eye for a story, Ovenden runs a team of Labour researchers and mischief-makers who place attack stories in national outlets. As the party’s director of attack and rebuttal, he is responsible for its punchy digital ads, which have generated significant attention and controversy. His role over the next year in taking the fight to the Tories ahead of the election will be critical.Check out the full Power 40 — London class of 2023 list, and read the Letter from the Editors for an explanation of the thinking behind the ranking.William Hague
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 07:37:23 GMT
One of the Conservative Party’s most respected older heads, former Conservative leader Hague has operated as Rishi Sunak’s de facto mentor since the latter’s arrival on the political scene in 2015, helping Sunak secure his old parliamentary seat in North Yorkshire when he retired from the House of Commons. The two men remain extremely close and Hague — now a Tory peer — has been known to roll the pitch for policy ideas in his must-read weekly column in the Times.Check out the full Power 40 — London class of 2023 list, and read the Letter from the Editors for an explanation of the thinking behind the ranking.Feargal Sharkey
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 07:37:23 GMT
The former lead singer of The Undertones has gone from punk frontman to standard bearer for the campaign to prevent water companies pumping sewage into U.K. waters. Leveraging his star power, Sharkey has helped keep the issue on the political agenda, making frequent appearances on television and in newspaper columns to take the water companies and government to task. It also doesn’t hurt that he is willing to pick very public fights with Conservative MPs on Twitter, to the delight of his near 200,000 social media followers.Check out the full Power 40 — London class of 2023 list, and read the Letter from the Editors for an explanation of the thinking behind the ranking.Miriam Cates
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 07:37:23 GMT
Despite only being elected to parliament in 2019, Cates is seen as a rising star on the Conservative right as a result of her willingness to push back against her own party. As one of the leading rebels on the Online Safety Bill, the Penistone and Stocksbridge MP has impressed supporters by strong-arming the government into making several big concessions and has shown she is more than willing to use the press to criticize the direction of her party. Controversially, the former teacher has also criticized the move to extend free childcare at the expense of more traditional family policy.Check out the full Power 40 — London class of 2023 list, and read the Letter from the Editors for an explanation of the thinking behind the ranking.Deborah Mattinson
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 07:37:23 GMT
Labour’s driving electoral mission under Keir Starmer has been to win back the so-called Red Wall seats swept up by Boris Johnson’s Conservatives. A pollster who literally wrote the book on why the opposition party lost those voters in 2019, Mattinson — a veteran of the election-winning New Labour years — was recruited as Starmer’s director of strategy in 2021. In his office, she’s been influential in putting green policies at the front and center of Labour’s vision for Britain.Check out the full Power 40 — London class of 2023 list, and read the Letter from the Editors for an explanation of the thinking behind the ranking.Siobhan Baillie
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 07:37:23 GMT
A member of the 2019 intake of Conservative MPs, Baillie made her mark this year through a successful backbench campaign to improve the government’s childcare provision. The MP for Stroud delightedly dubbed herself “chief pest” of the Treasury when, after coordinating months of public and private pressure, Chancellor Jeremy Hunt announced 30 hours of free childcare a week for under-fours in England at March’s Budget. Baillie said the measures, framed as a way to support women back into the labor market, went even further than she had expected — always a sign that the government may have alighted on a politically useful idea.Check out the full Power 40 — London class of 2023 list, and read the Letter from the Editors for an explanation of the thinking behind the ranking.Beeban Tania Kidron
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 07:37:23 GMT
Kidron, a film-maker-turned-peer, was warning of the digital dangers facing young people before most elected politicians. She has used her seat in the House of Lords to great effect, chalking up big wins pushing (and securing) regulation to prevent the exploitation of children’s data being exploited in ways that undermine their safety and wellbeing. She has been a successful thorn in the side of the many ministers who have been in charge of the Online Safety Bill, constantly pressing them to go further in toughening up the legislation.Check out the full Power 40 — London class of 2023 list, and read the Letter from the Editors for an explanation of the thinking behind the ranking.Lucy Noakes
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 07:37:23 GMT
Noakes is officially Deputy Prime Minister Oliver Dowden’s media special adviser, but when it comes to the inner workings of government she “sees everything, hears everything and knows everything,” according to one ex-official. Now based in the Cabinet Office like her boss, she worked on the Sunak leadership campaign and so remains close to key figures in No.10. Has been a loyal lieutenant for Dowden, who is Sunak’s bestie.Check out the full Power 40 — London class of 2023 list, and read the Letter from the Editors for an explanation of the thinking behind the ranking.Latest news
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