Cillian Murphy and Barry Keoghan smile in new look from ‘Peaky Blinders’ set

ROBERT VIGLASKY/Netflix

Cillian Murphy and Barry Keoghan are all smiles in a new photo from the Peaky Blinders film set.

The pair, co-starring in the upcoming Peaky Blinders movie, grinned together while dressed in the show's traditional flat caps and long coats in a new photo released by Netflix on Thursday.

In the upcoming film, Murphy reprises his role as British gangster Tommy Shelby. In August, it was announced that Keoghan joined the cast of the highly anticipated movie.

Netflix also announced that production has wrapped for the movie, which is described by the streamer as an "epic continuation of the multi-award-winning, six-season gangster saga."

Along with Murphy and Keoghan, the cast includes Dune alum Rebecca Ferguson, Reservoir Dogs actor Tim Roth and Boiling Point actor Stephen Graham.

Murphy portrayed the gangster for six seasons between 2013 and 2022. He stars in the new film for Netflix, which was written by show creator Steven Knight and was directed by series veteran Tom Harper.

Peaky Blinders was set in Birmingham, England, between 1919 and 1934 and centered on Tommy and his family making a name for themselves on the mean streets of England.

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Trump threatens government shutdown unless debt limit demand met, blames Biden if it happens

Mustafa Yalcin/Anadolu via Getty Images

(WASHINGTON) -- President-elect Donald Trump on Thursday took credit for killing the House Republican-proposed government funding bill, telling ABC News there will be a government shutdown unless Congress eliminates or extends the limit on government borrowing.

"We're not going to fall into the debt ceiling quicksand," Trump said in an exclusive phone interview. "There won't be anything approved unless the debt ceiling is done with."

Trump said he is concerned that if government borrowing reaches the limit set by the debt ceiling, it could lead to an economic depression. Under current law, the federal government would hit its borrowing limit sometime in the spring of 2025, during the first months of the second Trump presidency. Trump said he wants it taken care of now, while Joe Biden is president.

"By doing what I'm doing, I put it into the Biden administration," Trump said. "In this administration, not in my administration."

"The interesting thing is, [the debt ceiling] possibly means nothing, or it means [the] depression of 1929," Trump added. "Nobody really knows. It means nothing, but psychologically it may mean a lot, right? In other words, it doesn't have a real meaning other than you've violated something. And that may be just, one day, half a story, or it may lead to the depression of 1929 and nobody wants to take the chance, except the Democrats."

Congress must pass a funding bill by Friday night to avoid a shutdown of major federal services.

Trump said he is more concerned about the debt ceiling, which was not part of the spending bill rejected by the House on Wednesday after Trump and ally Elon Musk weighed in, than he is in the level of government spending.

"I don't mind the spending for the farmers and for disaster relief from North Carolina, etc., but that's all," he said, referring to $100 billion in disaster relief aid and $10 billion in assistance to farmers.

When asked about concerns about a potential shutdown, the president-elect reiterated there will be a shutdown if the debt ceiling isn't addressed, and claimed it would be Biden's fault.

"Shutdowns only inure to the person who's president," Trump said. "That's what I tried to teach [former House Speaker] Kevin McCarthy, but I obviously didn't do a very good job [with] a shutdown because he kept giving them extensions into my territory, a shutdown only hurts or inures to the person who happens to be president."

As for House Speaker Mike Johnson's fate, Trump said, "If he's strong, he'll survive it. If he's strong, he will survive it."

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Two killed and three injured in West Texas derailed freight train

PECOS (AP) — Two Union Pacific employees were killed and three people were injured when a freight train collided with a tractor-trailer and derailed in a small West Texas city, authorities said Thursday.

The train derailed around 5 p.m. Wednesday in Pecos after the collision at a railway crossing, authorities said. Union Pacific, based in Omaha, Nebraska, said Thursday that two employees had been killed. Pecos Police Chief Lisa Tarango said the other injuries were minor.

The hazardous materials that were being carried on the train included lithium ion batteries and air bags, but none were released in the derailment, city officials said.

Leaked diesel fuel was contained, officials said.

Ronald Lee, emergency services chief for Reeves County, said that some of those injured were in the Chamber of Commerce building, which was damaged in the derailment. He said damage to the building was “significant enough” that officials have advised that no one enter until an engineer can inspect it.

Railroad safety has been in the spotlight ever since a Norfolk Southern train derailed in East Palestine, Ohio, in early 2023, spilling a cocktail of toxic chemicals and catching fire. Regulators urged the industry to improve safety and members of Congress proposed a package of reforms, but railroads haven’t made many major changes to their operations and the bill has stalled.

Eddie Hall, national president of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen union that represents engineers, said in a statement that the derailment is “a reminder that much more needs to be done to make railroading safer.”

The derailment, he said, “should serve as a wake-up call to legislators to improve rail safety.”

Images from the site of the crash in Pecos show that the train was hauling metal shipping containers that were stacked two high.

Pecos, which has a population of about 13,000, is located about 200 miles (321 kilometers) east of El Paso.

Tarango said the clean-up was underway. The National Transportation Safety Board sent a team to investigate.

Officials searching for man considered ‘armed and dangerous’

NACOGDOCHES– The Nacogdoches County Sheriff’s Office is searching for a man who violated his parole and is considered ‘armed and dangerous.’

According to our news partner, KETK, Ray Allen Drgac, 68, was out on parole for an aggravated kidnapping from 1994. The Nacogdoches sheriff’s office said he’s violated his parole. Officials said that Drgac is around 5 foot and 7 inches tall and that they consider him to be armed and dangerous.

Anyone with information on his location is asked to call Nacogdoches County dispatch at 936-559-2607.

Ted Cruz defends F-35 after Elon Musk calls jet a waste

FORT WORTH – The Fort Worth Star-Telegram reports that Texas Sen. Ted Cruz defended Lockheed Martin’s F-35 in a recent interview following billionaire Elon Musk’s call to stop funding program. Musk, who has been tapped to lead President-elect Donald Trump’s new Department of Government Efficiency with Vivek Ramaswamy, has criticized the Fort Worth-built fighter jet. In recent posts on his social media company X, Musk said Lookheed Martin’s F-35 program should “stop,” calling it the “worst military value for money in history that is the F-35.” In another post, he said “manned fighter jets are obsolete in the age of drones.” Cruz addressed Musk’s criticisms and expressed support for the program in an interview with WFAA, the Fort Worth Star-Telegram’s media partner.

Cruz said he’s a “big fan” of the F-35. The fighter jet gives provides the U.S. an “enormous advantage against our adversaries,” Cruz said, in the interview that aired on Sunday’s “Inside Texas Politics.” Musk is correct that the country needs to be investing in next generation technology, like hypersonics, drones and drone technology, Cruz said. “There’s a lot of advanced weaponry that we need to be investing in, but I think the F-35 gives us an advantage over every one of our enemies across the globe,” Cruz said. “And if there’s one thing the last four years have shown with the mess of foreign policy that Joe Biden and Kamala Harris created, is that we live in a dangerous world, and we need to be prepared to defend ourselves, and I think the F-35 is a hugely important part of doing that.” Musk, who owns X, Tesla and SpaceX, and Ramaswamy, a billionaire and former Republican presidential candidate, are tasked with recommending federal spending cuts to Trump. The Star-Telegram has reached out to spokespersons at Tesla and Space X seeking Musk’s comment on Cruz’s remarks.

Harmful gas billowing from Texas and New Mexico comes mostly from smaller leaks

MIDLAND COUNTY(AP) – The blob on the satellite image is a rainbow of colors. An analyst digitally sharpens it and there, highlighted in red, is the source: a concrete oil pad spewing methane.

In the 75,000-square-mile (194-square-kilometer) Permian Basin straddling Texas and New Mexico, the most productive oil and gas region in the world, huge amounts of the powerful greenhouse gas escape from wells, compressor stations and other equipment.

Most efforts to reduce emissions have focused on so-called “super emitters” like the one in the satellite image, which are relatively easy to find with improving satellite imaging and other aerial sensing.

Now researchers say much smaller sources are collectively responsible for about 72% of methane emissions from oil and gas fields throughout the contiguous U.S. These have often gone undetected.

“It’s really (important to) approach the problem from both ends because the high-emitting super emitters are important, but so are the smaller ones,” said James Williams, a post-doctoral science fellow at the Environmental Defense Fund and lead author on a new study that took a comprehensive look at emissions within the nation’s oil and gas basins.

Addressing methane is important because it accounts for about one third of all greenhouse gas emissions that contribute to climate change.

Tackling methane emissions in the Permian is especially challenging because there are more than 130,000 active well sites owned by everyone from family operators to international conglomerates, experts said. Each site can have multiple oil wells.

“The Permian is in many ways the most complicated basin in the world; it’s incredibly dense there … with big, small and everything in between,” said Steve Hamburg, chief scientist at the Environmental Defense Fund.

What’s more, pipelines, processing and other activities often are owned by different companies — with tens of thousands of points where methane might escape, either through leaks or intentional venting.

An Israeli company that used satellite data and artificial intelligence to look for leaks in Midland County, Texas, the heart of the Permian Basin, found 50 separate plumes emanating from 16 of 30 sites it monitored. Most were bleeding over 4,500 kilograms of harmful gas per hour and five exceeded 10,000, far above the Environmental Protection Agency’s super emitter threshold of 100 kg/hr.

But the biggest surprise, “was seeing a lot of small emissions in this very crowded place … so close to each other, so close to an area where people actually live,” said Omer Shenhar, vice president of product at Momentick, which provides satellite-based monitoring to oil and gas companies.

Methane traps over 80 times more heat close to the Earth than carbon dioxide does, ton for ton. What’s more, concentrations have almost tripled since pre-industrial times.

A powerful new satellite called MethaneSAT that launched this year will be able to detect small emissions over wide areas that other satellites can’t. Researchers will also be able to track methane over time in all the world’s major oil-producing basins.

“We’ve never had that,” said the EDF’s Hamburg, who leads the project.

Although the satellite cannot pinpoint those smaller sources, “you don’t need to” because operators on the ground can find the sources, Hamburg said.

In the U.S., oil and gas companies will be required to routinely look for leaks at new and existing sites, including from wells, production facilities and compressor station under a new EPA rule.

The rule also phases out the practice of routinely burning off excess methane, called flaring, and requires upgrading devices that leak methane.

States have until 2026 to develop a plan to implement that rule for existing sources.

Oil and natural gas companies also would have to pay a federal fee per ton of leaked methane above a certain level under a final rule announced last month by the Biden administration, although the incoming Trump administration could eliminate that.

Methane — the primary component of natural gas — is valuable commercially, yet many operators in the Permian regard it as a nuisance byproduct of oil production and flare it because they haven’t built pipelines to carry it to market, Duren and Hamburg said.

Neither the Permian Basin Petroleum Association nor the U.S. Oil & Gas Association responded to requests for comment.

Riley Duren, CEO of the nonprofit Carbon Mapper, who was not involved in the study, said it’s always important to tackle super emitters because they have such an outsize impact. They are often fleeting but not always. Some continue for weeks, months or years.

Everything adds up.

“I think … what percentage of the total comes from a large number of small sources versus super emitters is less important than what do you do with the information,” said Duren. There are “literally thousands and thousands of pieces of equipment and they can blow a leak at any time.”

Undiagnosed disease in Congo may be linked to malaria: Africa CDC

pawel.gaul/Getty Images

(NEW YORK) -- A deadly, undiagnosed disease that has been spreading in one region of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) may be linked to malaria, health officials said Thursday.

As of Dec. 14, the latest date for which data is available, 592 cases have been reported with 37 confirmed deaths and 44 deaths under investigation, according to the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC), the public health agency of the African Union.

Over the last week, 181 samples from 51 cases were tested in a laboratory, Dr. Ngashi Ngongo, Africa CDC chief of staff, said during a Thursday press briefing.

Laboratory testing showed 25 out of 29 tested were positive for malaria. Additionally, rapid testing showed 55 out of 88 patients were positive for malaria.

Ngashi said there are two hypotheses: The first is that the undiagnosed disease is severe malaria "on a background of malnutrition and viral infection" and the second is the disease is a viral infection "on a background of malaria and malnutrition."

Malaria is a serious disease caused by a parasite that infects a certain type of mosquito, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Most people contract malaria after being bitten by an infected mosquito.

Most cases of malaria occur in sub-Saharan Africa, but it also occurs in parts of Oceania and in parts of Central and South America and Southeast Asia.

Malaria can be deadly if is not diagnosed and treated quickly, the CDC said.

What we know about the disease

The disease first appeared in a remote area in the province of Kwango, in the southwestern part of the DRC on the border with Angola, according to Africa CDC.

The first case was documented on Oct. 24. Patients have been experiencing flu-like symptoms including fever, headache, coughing and difficulty breathing as well as anemia, Africa CDC said during a press briefing earlier this month.

A plurality of cases, or 42.7%, have occurred in children under 5 years old. This age group also has the largest number of deaths, with 21 so far, data from Africa CDC shows. Children between ages 5 and 9 make up the second highest number of cases

Africa CDC said in a post on X earlier this month that it took five to six weeks after the first case was reported for local authorities to alert the national government, highlighting "gaps in Africa's disease detection systems: limited surveillance, testing delays & weak lab infrastructure."

-ABC News' Youri Benadjaoud contributed to this report.

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First trailer for new ‘Superman’ movie out now: Watch here

Warner Bros. Pictures

The first teaser trailer for the upcoming James Gunn-directed Superman film was released on Thursday.

The teaser from DC Studios gives fans their first taste of what to expect in the film starring David Corenswet as Clark Kent/Superman and Rachel Brosnahan as Lois Lane.

DC Studios teased the trailer ahead of its release with a new look at Corenswet in full superhero gear on Monday and a new look at Brosnahan's intrepid reporter on Wednesday.

Gunn first announced he was taking on the project in March 2023. He shared a photo with the cast of the upcoming film earlier this year, following a table read.

Along with Corenswet and Brosnahan, the upcoming film will also star Nicholas Hoult as Superman's archnemesis Lex Luthor, Skyler Gisondo as Jimmy Olsen, Sara Sampaio as Eve Teschmacher and María Gabriela de Faría as Angela Spica/The Engineer.

The cast also includes Isabela Merced, who plays Hawkgirl; Edi Gathegi, who plays Mister Terrific; Anthony Carrigan, who plays Metamorpho; Nathan Fillion, who plays Guy Gardner/Green Lantern; and Wendell Pierce, who plays Daily Planet Editor-in-Chief Perry White.

Pruitt Taylor Vince and Neva Howell play Clark's adoptive human father and mother, Jonathan and Martha Kent, respectively. Alan Tudyk is also cast in an undisclosed role.

Superman is set to premiere July 11, 2025.

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Two earthquakes in Harrison County Thursday

Two earthquakes in Harrison County Thursday
UPDATE:A second earthquake registering 2.6 magnitude hit on the shore of Caddo Lake near the Longhorn Army Ammunition Plant. This was just south of the first event shortly after lunchtime Thursday.

HARRISON COUNTY – The U.S. Geological Survey has reported that a 3.3 magnitude earthquake happened near Uncertain in Harrison County on Thursday. According to our news partner KETK, the earthquake reportedly struck at 6:15 a.m. on Thursday 5 kilometers beneath Caddo Lake near Uncertain, on the Texas side of the Texas-Louisiana border. According to the USGS, the quake was reportedly felt in Shreveport and Longview.

Senate Republicans weigh in on new government funding challenges as clock ticks

Alex Wong/Getty Images

(WASHINGTON) -- As President-elect Donald Trump's comments tanking House Speaker Mike Johnson's short-term government funding bill sent House Republicans into a tailspin Wednesday night, Senate Republicans were left to try to make sense of the remaining pieces.

Congress must act to fund the government by midnight on Friday or risk a shutdown. With the House back at the drawing board, the clock is ticking.

The nature of government funding bills means that the Senate is usually in a wait-and-see posture until the House acts. That's particularly true this time around, where Johnson has to wrangle his slim House majority into passing legislation that Trump will find palatable before the Senate decides whether they can accept it.

The looming funding deadline means that the Senate will in all likelihood be forced to stomach whatever Johnson manages to pass through the House unless it is so unacceptable that Senators are willing to shut the government down over it. Democrats still run the Senate for a few more days, and the 60-vote threshold in the Senate makes compromise essential.

During late votes Wednesday night, Senate Republicans weighed in on the current government funding situation with a little more than 48 hours until a shutdown.

Many say they weren't happy with Johnson's original proposal

Despite the challenges now facing Congress to finish up work on government funding, there are a number of Senate Republicans who concede they weren't happy with the House proposal that Johnson put forward on Tuesday. Some are pleased that Trump got involved to encourage changes.

"This is supposed to be a CR that extends the status quo. And it's supposed to be lean and mean," Sen. John Kennedy, R-LA said. "Well, I mean, it may have been mean, but it wasn't lean. And what I think we're going to have to do to get it passed is go back to a real CR, which is just an extension of the status quo."

Sen. Mike Rounds, R-SD, said all of the "crap" that was attached to the House CR was "very very disappointing to me."

He signaled a willingness to support a clean CR with disaster relief.

There appears to be some eagerness to re-open discussion about a path forward, but the time is running out, and there are now a number of very thorny issues that will require a lot of negotiation with very little time.

Southern State Republicans draw the line at disaster relief

As House Republicans go back to the drawing board to try to satiate Trump's demands, it's clear they'll have to balance them against all-out insistence from many Senate Republicans that billions in disaster relief remain tacked to this bill.

Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham, whose home state of South Carolina was deeply impacted by Hurricane Helene, said he will vote against a funding bill that doesn't include relief for his and other affected states.

He called it a "moral imperative to get money into the system."

"We've got to have the disaster relief. I can't go home and play like it didn't happen," Graham said. "To anybody who thinks that disaster relief is pork, come to where I live and see what happened in my state in North Carolina and Georgia."

Sen. Thom Tillis, R-NC, whose home state was affected by both Hurricane Helene and Hurricane Milton, said he'd do everything in his power to slow down the passage of any government funding bill that doesn't include funding for relief.

"I feel very strongly. [If] we don't get disaster in the bill I'll do everything to keep us there until we do," Tillis said.

Tillis said he spoke with VP-Elect Vance Wednesday and said Vance "gets" the importance of disaster aid.

"JD gets it. I spoke with him this afternoon. He understands the need to get disaster follow-up in there," Tillis said. "Most people, at least JD and others, believe that we have to do the disaster supplement."

Republicans open to debt limit hike, but skeptical about accomplishing it on this timeline

Trump complicated government funding matters significantly with an eleventh-hour push to include a hike to the federal debt limit in this package. It has left some Republicans unclear on a path forward.

"I don't think he's wrong," Sen. John Kennedy, R-LA, said when asked if Trump's debt limit proposal was helpful. "But it complicates the matter."

That's an understatement.

Debt limit negotiations have in prior years taken months upon months to carefully weave together. A number of Senate Republicans conceded tonight that while they'd support raising the debt limit in this bill, getting to yes on it in the tiny window of time left will be a real challenge.

"I don't know how we do that," Sen. Mike Rounds, R-SD, said. "I mean, I'm open to ideas on it but I don't know how we do that."

Graham said he'd leave decisions about the debt limit to Trump but conceded that Democratic buy-in would be necessary to do it.

"I don't know how this plays into things. I do know this, we don't want to default. There are a lot of Republicans who will never vote to raise the debt ceiling for ideological reasons," Graham said.

Sen. John Cornyn, R-TX, acknowledged that getting all Republicans on board a debt limit hike would be a challenge.

"I don't know if Republicans are going to vote for that, particularly the Freedom Caucus, so I guess we'll take it one step at a time," Cornyn said.

Tillis also acknowledged that Democrats would have to buy into a plan to hike the debt limit. And with the deadline to do so still months off, he said he was unsure what would inspire Democrats to participate in eleventh-hour negotiations on the issue.

"I just think there's got to be something more to it than a demand that it get in, because again there's no burning platform," Tillis said.

Calls with Trump

Sen. Josh Hawley, R-MO, said he spoke to Trump just before he issued his original statement today that discouraged Republicans from supporting the short-term government bill put forward by Johnson.

Hawley said that Trump thought Speaker Johnson's CR was a "total disaster."

Hawley criticized Johnson for what he said was "clearly" not reading Trump into the negotiation process of the bill.

"I made this point to him, to the president that is, about the House Leadership. I mean, is this going to be the norm? Is this how we're going to operate? They're going — is this going to be the standard that we are setting?"

ABC News asked Hawley if Trump expressed frustration with Johnson specifically, and Hawley said "yes."

But that was refuted by Sen. Markwayne Mullin, R-OK.

"I have spoken to the president several times today. I would not classify, I would not classify it as being frustrated with the Speaker," Mullin said.

Mullin said that it was articulated to Johnson for "awhile" that Trump wanted a debt limit hike.

"He does want the debt limit included in whatever package they put forth, but he's as far as being upset, I absolutely do not agree with that.

The Musk factor

Senators seemed to downplay the significance of Elon Musk's influence on the current situation. Musk took to his social media platform X to repeatedly slam the Johnson-backed bill on Wednesday.

"I think there are people putting too much weight on Musk or anybody else opining. I think there were structural challenges to begin with," Tillis said. "These outside influences have an impact, but I think that that came from within not from without. I've seen some of the reports about how Elon basically vetoed it. I'm sure his voice weighed in, but it had, it clearly had a structural problem before anybody opined on it."

Hawley, when asked about Musk's weighing in, seemed to push concerns aside.

"As somebody who doesn't like the CR, I welcome the criticism," Hawley said.

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Teamsters president to rally with workers as Amazon strike set to go into 2nd day

Amazon workers in New York striking Thursday morning. Image via WABC.

(NEW YORK) -- Workers affiliated with the Teamsters began striking at Amazon facilities across the country Thursday morning -- in what the union calls the largest strike in history against the online shopping giant less than a week before Christmas.

In a news release Thursday evening, the union said "thousands of Teamsters" were taking part in the strikes at facilities in New York City, Atlanta, Southern California, San Francisco and Illinois, but did not provide specific numbers. Later, the union said Teamsters President Sean O'Brien would join striking members at a facility in the City of Industry, California, on Friday as the strike was set to enter its second day.

In addition, the Teamsters said local unions were also picketing "hundreds" of Amazon Fulfillment Centers nationwide.

Amazon said the strike was not expected to impact operations and claimed the strikes were being attended by outside organizers.

“What you see here are almost entirely outsiders—not Amazon employees or partners—and the suggestion otherwise is just another lie from the Teamsters," an Amazon spokesperson said in a emailed statement a few hours after the strikes began Thursday morning. "The truth is that they were unable to get enough support from our employees and partners and have brought in outsiders to come and harass and intimidate our team, which is inappropriate and dangerous. We appreciate all our team’s great work to serve their customers and communities, and are continuing to focus on getting customers their holiday orders.”

Overall, nearly 9,000 Amazon workers, across 20 bargaining units, have affiliated with the powerful International Brotherhood of Teamsters, the union said. The striking workers represent less than 1% of the company's 1.5 million employees worldwide, including 800,000 in the United States.

The Teamsters, announcing the move earlier this week, billed it as the "largest strike against Amazon in U.S. history" and said it came after Amazon refused to bargain with workers organized with the Teamsters.

The union said workers are picketing for higher wages, improved benefits and safer work conditions.

"If your package is delayed during the holidays, you can blame Amazon's insatiable greed," O'Brien said in a statement Thursday announcing the strike. "We gave Amazon a clear deadline to come to the table and do right by our members. They ignored it."

In a statement to ABC News, an Amazon spokesperson said the Teamsters illegally coerced workers to join the union.

"For more than a year now, the Teamsters have continued to intentionally mislead the public – claiming that they represent 'thousands of Amazon employees and drivers'. They don't, and this is another attempt to push a false narrative," Amazon spokesperson Kelly Nantel said in a statement Thursday. "The truth is that the Teamsters have actively threatened, intimidated, and attempted to coerce Amazon employees and third-party drivers to join them, which is illegal and is the subject of multiple pending unfair labor practice charges against the union."

The spokesperson said the company has increased the starting minimum wage for workers in fulfillment centers and transportation employees by 20% and in September increased average base wage to $22 per hour.

The announced strike by the Teamsters comes after workers at several Amazon facilities authorized the walkout.

The facility in New York City's Staten Island was Amazon's first-ever unionized warehouse. Workers there have said the company has refused to recognize the union and negotiate a contract after workers there voted to unionize in 2022.

The National Labor Relations Board officially certified the union representing workers at the facility, but Amazon has appealed that ruling.

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Putin says West’s air defenses have ‘no chance’ against Russian ballistic missile

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(LONDON) -- Russia's war on Ukraine dominated the opening stages of President Vladimir Putin's annual marathon press conference on Thursday, with the Russian leader also addressing issues including future relations with President-elect Donald Trump and the situation in Syria.

Among the questions was how Moscow would deal with the incoming Trump administration given Russia was in a "weaker position."

In response, Putin said he had not spoken to Trump for four years but was ready for a meeting. "You would very much like Russia to be in a weakened position, but I hold a different point of view," he said.

"If I ever meet with the newly-elected president, Mr. Trump, I am sure we'll have something to talk about," Putin said.

Discussing the ongoing war in Ukraine, Putin claimed that the Oreshnik intermediate-range ballistic missile recently used to strike the Ukrainian city of Dnipro cannot be intercepted by Western air defense systems.

Western technology, he said, "stands no chance" against the missile.

Putin even suggested arranging "an experiment or a duel" in which Russia would select a target for an Oreshnik strike in Kyiv and Ukraine would set up its Western-supplied air defenses to intercept the missile.

"It will be interesting for us," Putin said.

The president repeated his threat to target "decision-making centers" in Ukraine. Moscow's "list of priority targets includes military facilities and military-industrial complex facilities," Putin said.

The president also said that Russian forces are making progress on the battlefield and that Ukrainian troops would be ejected from positions in Russia's western Kursk region, though did not offer an estimate of how long that would take.

The Tuesday assassination of Russian Lt. Gen. Igor Kirillov in Moscow, Putin said, was a "terrorist" attack. "This murder was perpetrated by a method that is dangerous to the life of many people," he said.

"The Kyiv regime has repeatedly committed such terrorist crimes against a large number of citizens of the Russian Federation," Putin said. "And it is now doing so in the Kursk region, where they are shooting at civilians and are killing journalists in other Russian territories."

Nonetheless, Putin said Russia is ready to negotiate an end to the war "without preconditions."

"Politics is the art of compromise, Russia has always been ready for negotiations," Putin added, repeating past allegations that former British Prime Minister Boris Johnson undermined a possible peace deal early in the war.

Asked if Russia would grant political asylum to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, Putin suggested "the West will take him in." But, he added, "if he suddenly appeared out of nowhere… no one is refused in Russia."

Putin was also asked about missing U.S. journalist Austin Tice -- who disappeared in Syria 12 years ago. Putin said he would raise the issue with former Syrian President Bashar Assad, now living in exile in Russia having been toppled by a rebel offensive earlier this month.

Tice's mother has reportedly written to Putin asking for help in finding Tice, who is now the subject of a major search effort by the U.S. with assistance from regional allies and the new rebel-led authorities in Syria.

Putin said he has not seen Assad in Moscow since he was granted asylum there, but he will raise the issue of Tice's whereabouts.

"I promise that I will definitely ask this question," he said. "I can also ask questions to people who control the situation."

The president also said that Assad's fall was not a defeat for Moscow, which through 14 years of civil war was a key backer of the toppled president's regime. Putin suggested that the "overwhelming majority" of regional nations support Russia's retention of military bases in the country.

Israel, he said, is the prime benefactor of recent developments. "We hope that Israel will leave Syria someday, but now it is bringing additional troops there, there is a feeling that it is going to strengthen there," Putin said.

"There will be many problems, Russia is on the side of international law and on the side of Syria," he added.

ABC News' Anastasia Bagaeva, Tanya Stukalova and Fidel Pavlenko contributed to this report.

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Trump backs House GOP accusation Liz Cheney tampered with Jan. 6 committee witness

Mike Kline (notkalvin)/Getty Images

(WASHINGTON) -- Republican Rep. Barry Loudermilk, chairman of the House Administration's subcommittee on Oversight, in a new report suggests former GOP Rep. Liz Cheney should be investigated for alleged criminal witness tampering, claiming she played an "integral role" shaping key witness testimony before the Jan. 6 committee investigating the attack on the U.S. Capitol by a pro-Trump mob.

President-elect Donald Trump posted early Wednesday morning on his social media platform that "Liz Cheney could be in a lot of trouble based on the evidence obtained by the subcommittee, which states that 'numerous federal laws were likely broken by Liz Cheney, and these violations should be investigated by the FBI."

Earlier this month, Trump, speaking about Jan. 6 committee members, said on NBC's "Meet the Press" that, "for what they did, honestly, they should go to jail."

The House GOP report released Tuesday marks not only the latest effort by House Republicans to discredit the Jan. 6 committee, but also a possible preview of its oversight efforts in the next session of Congress beginning in January.

Cheney's name appears in the report more than 120 times, excluding the table of contents, going line-by-line to blast her participation as vice chair of the Jan. 6 committee.

"Without authority and against House Rules -- the role of ranking member, Congress itself must right its former wrongs and declare this appointment of Representative Cheney invalid now," the report states.

The report alleges that as Cheney participated in the investigation, she colluded with Cassidy Hutchinson, the former Trump White House aide, about her testimony describing then-President Trump's efforts to overturn the 2020 presidential election.

The report contends that Cheney not only "backchannelled" with Alyssa Farah Griffin, a former Trump White House aide and a host of ABC's "The View," to get Hutchinson to change her narrative but also communicated with her "directly for days." After that, the report alleges that Cheney also convinced Hutchinson to fire her attorney, Stefan Passantino.

"According to text messages, that appear to be from the encrypted messaging app "Signal," between Hutchinson and Farah Griffin obtained by the Subcommittee, Cheney agreed to communicate with Hutchinson through Farah Griffin," the subcommittee said.

"It is unusual -- and potentially unethical -- for a Member of Congress conducting an investigation to contact a witness if the Member knows that the individual is represented by legal counsel," the report states. "This appears to be precisely what Representative Cheney did at this time, and within a matter of days of these secret conversations, Hutchinson would go on to recant her previous testimony and introduce her most outlandish claims."

"What other information was communicated during these phone calls may never be known, but what is known is that Representative Cheney consciously attempted to minimize her contact with Hutchinson in her book, and the most likely reason to try to bury that information would be if Representative Cheney knew that it was improper and unethical to communicate with Hutchinson without her counsel present," the report states.

"It must be emphasized that Representative Cheney would likely have known her communications without the knowledge of Hutchinson's attorney were illicit and unethical at that time," the report said. Farah Griffin indicated as much ... in her ... message to Hutchinson ... when she wrote that Representative Cheney's "one concern" was that as long as Hutchinson was represented by counsel, "she [Cheney] can't really ethically talk to you [Hutchinson] without him [Passantino]." 

Despite Representative Cheney's initial hesitation, the Subcommittee uncovered evidence of frequent, direct conversations between Hutchinson and Representative Cheney without Passantino's knowledge, and also through their intermediary Farah Griffin."Cheney responded in a statement stressing the testimony "was painstakingly" presented in thousands of pages of transcripts, made public along with a "highly detailed and meticulously sourced 800-page report."

"Chairman Loudermilk's 'Interim Report' intentionally disregards the truth and the Select Committee's tremendous weigh of evidence, and instead fabricates lies and defamatory allegations in an attempt to cover up what Donald Trump did," Cheney wrote. "Their allegations do not reflect a review of the actual evidence, and are a malicious and cowardly assault on the truth."

Cheney also did not back off her role and the committee's findings.

"January 6th showed Donald Trump for who [he] really is – a cruel and vindictive man who allowed violent attacks to continue against our Capitol and law enforcement officers while he watched television and refused for hours to instruct his supporters to stand down and leave," she noted. "The January 6th Committee's hearings and report featured scores of Republican witnesses, including many of the most senior officials from Trump's own White House, campaign and Administration."

Farah Griffin also disputed the GOP report's conclusions.

"This report is full of inaccuracies and innuendo," she said in a statement. "The report wrongly states - and without any evidence - that I acted as an intermediary between Cassidy Hutchinson and Liz Cheney for "a month." That is not true, and these messages demonstrate the full extent of my involvement. Further, these messages weren't 'obtained' by the Committee - they were requested by the Committee and voluntarily handed over to the Committee. I believe in Congressional oversight, whether it be the January 6th investigation or this inquiry."

Trump has denied any wrongdoing in relation to Jan. 6.

 

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