Archive November 1, 2025

Media, Money & Zohran Mamdani

We examine the rise of Zohran Mamdani, a candidate for mayor of New York City, in this special episode of The Listening Post. Mamdani, a democratic socialist and outspoken critic of the Israeli genocide in Gaza, has received hostility from both the political donor class and the democratic establishment in the US. Particularly relentlessly has the press been questioning Mamdani’s progressive policies as well as his nationality and immigrant identity.

Mamdani has a global following, leads in the polls, and is a digital native. His victory would have a significant impact on the Democratic Party all over New York City.

In this episode, Mamdani is shown how the media and the wealthy political elite attempted to discredit him and how, despite all odds, he built a movement off of their criticism.

Contributors:

Third Way senior director of communications, Kate de Gruyter

Citations Needed co-host Adam Johnson on the podcast.

Bad Faith host, Briahna Joy Gray, on the podcast

Consultant, Vocable Communications, Jon Paul Lupo

Presenter: Richard Gizbert

Kebbi ADC Faction Cautions Suspended Members Against Parading As Exco

A branch of the African Democratic Congress (ADC) in Kebbi State has warned individuals or organizations against acting as party leaders in the state.

Abdulrazak Abubakar, the chairman of the faction, issued the warning at a press conference on Saturday in Birnin Kebbi.

Abubakar claimed that Sufiyanu Bala and others, who were previously suspended by the party, have continued to act as ADC executives. Alhaji Sule Iko was also suspended for Sufiyanu’s parading as the party chairman, he continued.

Senator Katung from Southern Kaduna drops PDP for APC.

Sufiyanu Bala and Sule Iko are no longer members of the ADC, according to Abdulrazak, citing a court order that prevents Sufiyanu Bala from posing as a party leader.

The African Democratic Congress (ADC) official said, “A High Court sitting in Kebbi State has issued an interim injunction restraining three of its state executive committee members from posing as members.”

Serbian students lead powerful memorial for railway disaster anniversary

Disgraced Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs ‘working in laundry room’ US in prison

Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs, a star in the new prison where he was relocated to, has accepted a job as the director of laundry in the new facility in New Jersey. He is in charge of washing and drying the clothes of inmates.

Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs appears to be settling into prison life with apparent ease as he has now landed himself a job working in the laundry room. The shamed rapper, 55, who was sentenced to more than four years for transportation to engage in prostitution, is now responsible for washing and drying of dirty clothes from his fellow inmates.

This is a far cry from the former multi-millionaire who commanded the respect from the world over due to his global music empire.

Sean is scheduled to spend the rest of his 50-month jail sentence at the Federal Correctional Institution (FCI) in Fort Dix, New Jersey, earlier this week.

His new job, according to US media outlet TMZ, will surprise you in the least because he claimed he was so used to having employees do his daily basic tasks, such as charging his phone.

FCI Fort Dix is a low security facility and said to have better conditions than MDC Brooklyn, where Sean had been behind bars since his arrest on various sex crime charges in September last year.

Due to the facility’s access to drug rehab programs, his legal team had requested that he be relocated to the facility in New Jersey.

In a court filing from the time, his attorney Teny Geragos wrote in response that “we strongly advise the Bureau of Prisons that Mr. Combs be placed at FCI Fort Dix in order to address drug abuse issues and maximize family visitation and rehabilitative efforts.”

Early this month, the Bad Boy Records founder complained about the conditions at MDC.

The former star allegedly woke up with a knife to his throat when he had a terrifying incident at the prison, according to close friend Charlucci Finney.

He reportedly had a knife in his throat when he woke up in an interview with the Daily Mail. I’m not sure if he confronted him or the guards arrived, but it did happen.

He thinks the alleged attack was intended to intimidate him rather than physically harm him, though. Sean would have suffered if this guy had intended to harm him, he added. His throat would only be cut off with a weapon, which would then be used to kill him. It was probably meant to say, “Next time you ain’t going to be so lucky. ” Fear is everywhere. However, Sean won’t work with him. Sean is a Harlem native.

As a music producer, Charlucci worries about his close friend because he worries that his reputation will make him a target for his fellow prisoners. Charlucci acknowledged in the same interview that Sean has kept quiet about his daily struggles because he doesn’t worry about his family.

But due to his convictions, according to the pal, anything related to sex crimes is a worry. He claimed that prisoners take that sort of crime “personal” as they see it as it could have been a member of their family that was coerced into doing crimes.

It is referred to as “prison justice” in the prison system. We are not talking about a regular person, he said. We’re referring to Diddy.

Continue reading the article.

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Rivers Flood Committee Seeks FG’s Intervention

The Federal Government’s dredge of the heavily silted Orashi River, which has been identified as a major cause of repeated floods in at least four local government areas, is a need for the state’s Rivers State Flood Prevention and Management Committee.

Prof. Ngozi Odu, the committee’s chairman and Deputy Governor of Rivers State, made the appeal during a press briefing at the Government House in Port Harcourt, where she also disclosed that the committee’s full operations were resumed following the opening of its intervention fund account.

She explained that during the transition from emergency to democratic governance, the account had been temporarily frozen.

The committee, which was established during the time of crisis and was previously led by the then-Secretary to the State Government (SSG), is now led by Prof. Odu, who is currently the SSG’s vice chairman.

One of its three operational stages, which includes advocacy/prevention, mitigation, and post-flood intervention, is now in its mitigation phase, according to Prof. Odu, who reactivated the committee about five weeks ago.

She disclosed that meetings have already been held with leaders of the region’s most prone to flooding, including Ahoada West, Ahoada East, Ogba/Egbema/Ndoni (ONELGA), and parts of Abua/Odual.

Prof. Odu announced the committee’s next steps, stating that members would travel to flood-affected communities to meet with victims and begin distributing aid to residents both in their homes and internally displaced.

She added that the previous committee already used about 80% of the intervention funds for important projects like the removal of IDP camps, the installation of boreholes, and the purchase of non-perishable relief supplies that are currently housed in the Pathfinder barracks of the Nigerian Navy Ship (NNS).

The committee would work with local government chairmen to ensure an equitable distribution of relief items, particularly to those who choose to stay in their communities rather than relocate to IDP camps, according to the Deputy Governor.

In terms of urban flooding, Prof. Odu noted that the majority of flash floods in Port Harcourt and other cities were brought on by refuse dumps and building construction along water channels.

She emphasized that residents as well as the Federal, State, and Local Governments must be held accountable for their actions.

Read more about the Oyo government’s donation of four operating vehicles to the Ibadan Airport.

She claimed that all LGAs have been mandated to establish 13-man flood control committees to oversee tasks like clogged drains, repairs to culverts, and community sanitation in order to promote local response.

Additionally, Prof. Odu made it known that the Head of Service and the Secretary to the State Government (SSG), who serves as the committee’s vice chairman, will send a delegation to visit the family that recently lost two children in a flood-related incident, to offer condolences and offer support.

The Deputy Governor led the committee’s and journalists through an inspection of the relief materials in preparation for immediate distribution to the affected communities following the briefing.

Why England fans should not lose Ashes hope despite ODI series defeat

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Having doubts now is understandable.

That sinking feeling when you wake up and check the score. The deflation of a leg stump knocked back with the clock barely beyond midnight.

Another sleepless night. Another disappointment.

When those feelings return before England have even reached Australian shores, after capitulations against the cuddly New Zealanders rather than the fiercest enemy, you can be forgiven for wavering.

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Tests are different challenge to ODIs

From Mount Maunganui to Wellington, plus a loss in Hamilton in between, England’s batting failings against the Black Caps were undeniably a concerning trend.

Yes, captain Harry Brook lost all three tosses to expose those batters to the worst of conditions on at least two occasions.

Yes, New Zealand’s 50-over side, with their 93% win ratio at home since 2019, provide one of the toughest challenges in world sport.

But with four Ashes bankers in England’s top five – and the fifth a possible starter in Jacob Bethell – they returned only one innings above 34 between them across three matches.

Bethell, Brook, Ben Duckett, Jamie Smith and Joe Root batted 15 times collectively in the 50-over series and together had nine single-figure scores.

No-one would call that ideal.

“It’s a different form of the game and it’s a completely different kind of challenge that we’re going to be confronted with as well,” said coach Brendon McCullum, denying batters would be scarred by the 3-0 series sweep heading into the Ashes.

At no point have England been in New Zealand because they see it as the optimal way to prepare for five Tests in Australia.

These fixtures were part of their wider schedule, dictated by those with a grip on the purse strings and who sign broadcast deals.

England have, instead, tried to make the most of the cramped schedule and ease players back into action after a post-summer break.

Steve Smith’s Sheffield Shield century appeared ominous, but fellow Australia middle-order batter Travis Head is also battling through white-ball matches against India, with no score above 30 in four attempts.

Had Root stroked New Zealand’s medium-fast pacers for a century in front of Aotearoa’s grass banks, few would have said it mattered when it came to facing Mitchell Starc and Josh Hazlewood in the Perth cauldron with a different ball.

The reverse must also be true.

“Jamie Smith, Joe Root and Ben Duckett, they’ll be better for the run, too,” McCullum said.

Confidence much higher in Test squad

The batting issues are also not without wider context.

England have lost six of their past seven bilateral series in 50-over cricket in a shocking and concerning run that goes back to the start of the 2023 World Cup.

They lost all 10 wickets in each match of this series, meaning their tally now stands at 18 such failures in 34 ODIs since the start of that tournament in India.

Brook and McCullum have made decent progress with the T20 side – victory against New Zealand prior to the ODIs meant they have won seven of eight completed T20s since Brook took charge at the start of the summer – but the downward turn of the 50-over side is proving far harder to correct.

An assessment made by the New Zealander after the Champions Trophy exit in March still holds true.

“We weren’t able to withstand the pressure and we weren’t able to navigate our way through,” he said. “I felt we lacked confidence.

“In Test cricket, in the last little while, the confidence levels of that unit are very high and [we have] the ability to execute the game plan and the style of cricket we want to.”

In Test whites these players have comfort in their roles and the team’s clarity. That still eludes McCullum in 50-over cricket.

Smith, who made 18 runs from 24 balls across the series, is the batter that looks the most uncertain.

He appears a natural fit when playing the role of dynamic-yet-correct ball-striker in whites but is too often reckless as an ODI opener.

It is hard not to feel for Smith, who had not batted in England’s top three before February.

After his side fell to 33-5 in first ODI, Brook questioned whether his batters could have “gone harder” but that has rarely been England’s problem.

Their powerplay run-rate in ODIs has been 6.58 in the past 12 months – the highest of any team in this period. That charge has been countered by the loss of 36 wickets in 17 innings, which is the worst record around.

For Smith a return to the Test middle order, away from the swing and seam of the new ball, will offer relief.

Duckett will not be as fortunate but will be reunited with opening partner Zak Crawley.

Their partnership and an Ashes battle may be what is needed to relight the fire inside England’s Bazball attack dog in chief.

The Stokes factor

England Test captain Ben Stokes during a training sessionGetty Images

McCullum was also asked at the Champions Trophy how he would ensure white-ball pain does not bleed into the Test side – an issue he now faces after bringing greater alignment between the two squads.

McCullum pointed to the importance of the “skills of your leaders” and it is there where England turn once again.

Test captain Ben Stokes has been in New Zealand over recent weeks but has stayed away from Brook’s squad, instead visiting family and training at his first club Sydenham Cricket Club in Christchurch.

While Brook has made an impressive start to his reign, the return of England’s talisman will bring a lift to any that need it.

England disappointed in New Zealand but with a flight to Perth and three weeks within the arms of the captain who makes them feel most at home, there remains plenty of hope for the Ashes.

Related topics

  • England Men’s Cricket Team
  • The Ashes
  • Cricket