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Hispanos y Messi disparan la popularidad del fútbol en Estados Unidos, según Nielsen

Messi
Fotografía cedida por el Inter Miami CF donde aparece el astro argentino Lionel Messi mostrando su camiseta número 10 del club, durante una rueda de prensa el 17 de agosto de 2023 en la sede del equipo en Fort Lauderdale, Florida (EE. UU.). (Foto: EFE/Inter Miami )

La llegada del astro argentino Leo Messi al Inter Miami en 2023 y la creciente influencia de las audiencias hispanas han disparado no solo la popularidad del fútbol, sino que está transformando la cultura deportiva en Estados Unidos, según un informe divulgado este martes por la consultora Nielsen.

El estudio ‘Fanáticos: El libro de las jugadas de Nielsen sobre audiencias hispanas, deportes y compromisos con los medios’ detalla, entre otros aspectos clave, que la final de la Copa América 2024 atrajo a más de 12 millones de espectadores en EE. UU., de los cuales el 53 % eran hispanos, lo que la convierte en la más vista en la historia del país.

También la final de la Liga de Campeones de la UEFA del pasado 1 de junio entre el Real Madrid y el Dortmund, con victoria del primero, estableció un récord, con 9,5 millones de espectadores, de los cuales el 40 % eran latinos, según el análisis a cargo de Inteligencia Diversa.

Las audiencias hispanas están calando con fuerza la cultura deportiva en Estados Unidos, y el ‘efecto’ Messi no es ajeno a este fenómeno.

La llegada de Messi al combinado de Miami y el aumento de un 300 % de la audiencia en EE. UU. durante su partido debut marcó «un momento crucial en la evolución de los deportes estadounidenses» y «redefinió la cultura deportiva estadounidense dominante», según el informe.

La presencia de Messi está trascendiendo los límites del fútbol como «deporte nicho» seguido principalmente para aficionados hispanos, hasta el punto que hoy atrae a una audiencia más amplia que incluye a jóvenes y espectadores no hispanos, agrega.

El primer partido que jugó Messi también impulsó un aumento del 270 % de la audiencia en los canales de Univision y TUDN y de un 32 % del total de minutos de televisión vistos un sábado sin partido en vivo de fútbol.

Según los datos de audiencia de Nielsen, el porcentaje de espectadores hispanos en los últimos tres torneos de la Copa América ha pasado del 73 % al 53 %, lo cual no significa que ha descendido el número de hispanos viéndolo, sino que este torneo «ha ganado popularidad entre los espectadores no hispanos», impulsada por el «entusiasmo de los fanáticos hispanos».

Y el partido en el que la Selección Nacional Femenina de Fútbol de Estados Unidos ganó la medalla de oro en los Juegos Olímpicos de París, tras derrotar a Brasil, alcanzó el récord de nueve millones de espectadores en Estados Unidos.

Un éxito de audiencia que Nielsen atribuye, en parte, «al entusiasmo de una creciente base de seguidores hispanos».

Pero el creciente apetito por el fútbol no se detuvo ahí. A los récords históricos de audiencia hispana en la final de la Copa América y la Liga de Campeones de la UEFA se les suma un aumento del 354 % de audiencia latina en el campeonato femenino de baloncesto de la NCCA entre 2021 y 2024.

En cuanto al peso de la población hispana en la demografía y economía de este país, el informe apunta que esta comunidad ha superado los 65 millones (19 % de la población), fue responsable del 71 % del crecimiento de la población estadounidense entre 2022 y 2023 y su poder adquisitivo alcanzó en 2023 los 3,4 trillones de dólares.

Las audiencias totales en Estados Unidos de eventos deportivos tradicionalmente arraigados en la cultura hispana están creciendo: las finales de la Clausura de la Liga MX aumentaron un 74 % entre 2016 y 2023, y un 9 % entre 2021 y 2023.

Según Nielsen, para los amantes de los deportes, el fanatismo es mucho más profundo que el resultado final.

«Dentro de los grupos minoritarios, los deportes también pueden proporcionar una manera natural de una inmersión en la cultura local, fortalecer las comunidades y fomentar una mejor representación mediática tanto para los atletas que juegan como para los fanáticos que los apoyan».

Shapiro administration launches virtual substance use disorder training series, helping employers create recovery-friendly workplaces

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Program underscores multi-agency commitment during National Recovery Month to raise awareness that people can and do recover from substance use disorders.

Harrisburg, PA – The Pennsylvania Department of Labor & Industry (L&I) and the Department of Drug and Alcohol Programs (DDAP) today announced the availability of a free, virtual training series to help employers create and maintain recovery-friendly workplaces. In partnership with Penn State College of Medicine, the training series, titled “Shatter the Stigma: Supporting Recovery in the Workplace ECHO,” will educate employers on valuable tools to support employees in recovery from substance use disorders (SUD), provide strategies to reduce stigma in the workplace, and help prevent unnecessary terminations. 

«Employment plays a crucial role in stabilizing recovery and mitigating the effects of the opioid crisis,» said L&I Secretary Nancy A. Walker. «By equipping employers with the knowledge and tools to foster supportive work environments for individuals in recovery, we can not only reduce turnover and training costs but also retain valuable skills within our workforce. This approach supports both the well-being of individuals in recovery and the long-term stability and productivity of the employer.”

The launch of the training series coincides with National Recovery Month, which is an annual recognition observed throughout the month of September to highlight the gains made in the lives of individuals living in recovery from SUD and show that every day, people can and do recover from the disease of addiction. The 2024 National Recovery Month theme is “Recovery is For Everyone: Every Person, Every Family, Every Community.” 

“I applaud the Department of Labor & Industry for addressing stigma head on. We know that, unfortunately, stigma still casts a shadow over people battling substance use disorder and programs like this will help reverse that trend,” said DDAP Secretary Dr. Latika Davis-Jones. “We know there is still work to be done, and we are looking forward to seeing the results of this new partnership the Shapiro Administration has forged to do the critical work of stigma reduction in the workplace.” 

Project ECHO – Extension for Community Healthcare Outcomes – is funded by the U.S. Department of Labor through the Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (WIOA) Grant, with funding totaling more than $214,000. Through Project ECHO, L&I and Penn State College of Medicine aim to help employers improve employee well-being, increase productivity, and ultimately strengthen the Commonwealth’s workforce.

“Our Project ECHO team is honored to partner with L&I in supporting individuals with OUD by providing their employers with essential education, resources, and research-driven solutions,” said Project ECHO Director Jennifer L. Kraschnewski, MD, MPH. «As a result of this funding, an expanding network of over 180 employers across the Commonwealth will have an opportunity to learn from experts and peers in the field to ultimately enhance recovery outcomes and strengthen workplace well-being.”  

The program will be offered twice a month, starting in September through December 2024 and again in February through May 2025. Through virtual lectures, presentations, and training sessions, employers can learn more about recovery-friendly workplaces from healthcare providers and experts in addiction medicine, social work, human resources, and law enforcement. The virtual sessions occur bi-monthly from 8 AM to 9 AM.

In partnership with Penn State Harrisburg’s Douglas W. Pollock Center for Addiction Outreach and Research, The Public Good Projects (PGP), and Shatterproof, the Department of Drug and Alcohol Programs is proud to offer the Life Unites Us campaign, an evidence-based approach to reducing the stigma of opioid use disorder (OUD).

Life Unites Us launched in September 2020 and utilizes social media to spread stories of individuals and their family members battling OUD, hosts webinars sharing tools and information to effectively reduce stigma and maintains an interactive data dashboard detailing the campaign’s progress.

More information and dates can be found in the series flyer here. To register, visit Shatter the Stigma: Supporting Recovery in the Workplace ECHO Registration (psu.edu).

For more information on the Pennsylvania Department of Labor & Industry, please visit the website or follow L&I on FacebookTwitter and LinkedIn

DCNR to host programs for girl scouts love state parks weekend

DCNR

Harrisburg, PA – Department of Conservation and Natural Resources (DCNR) State Parks Director John Hallas today announced more than 35 programs highlighting the partnership between Girl Scouts USA and state park systems later this month.


DCNR will host programs at 25 state parks Friday, September 13 through Sunday, September 15 as a part of the 6th Annual Girl Scouts Love State Park weekend. The weekend of events is a national initiative to connect Girl Scouts with unique outdoor experiences at their local state parks.


“We are excited to partner with Girl Scouts USA to engage Girl Scouts across Pennsylvania and help connect them to our wonderful state parks,” Hallas said. “Girl Scouts help prepare young people for the future in so many ways, including creating their own outdoor adventures and developing a lifelong appreciation for nature and the outdoors. I am hopeful that these programs help build stronger connections for young people interested in nature, as well as building new connections for scouts.”

This year’s program offers outdoor recreation programs such as archery, stand up paddle boarding, geocaching, and hikes; natural resource learning such as stream studies, wildflower walks, and animal investigations; active tours, including mill and museum tours. State parks are also looking to connect scout troops with volunteer opportunities.

Girl Scouts USA teaches scouts to discover, connect, and take action by participating in fun activities through the Girl Scout Leadership Experience:

  • Discover that they can better solve problems and overcome challenges
  • Develop leadership skills, build social bonds, and are happier overall
  • Become team players and care more about protecting our environment

Pennsylvania state parks have participated in Girl Scouts Love State Parks weekend since the inception of the program in 2019.

Visit DCNR’s website for more information about Pennsylvania’s 124 state parks, and check out DCNR’s Calendar of Events for events on public lands.​

Cerca de 200 activistas medioambientales fueron asesinados en todo el mundo en 2023

asesinados
Al menos 196 personas defensoras de la tierra y el medioambiente fueron asesinadas en el mundo a lo largo de 2023, aunque el número real podría ser incluso mayor, según reveló este martes un informe de la organización Global Witness. (Foto: EFE)

Al menos 196 personas defensoras de la tierra y el medioambiente fueron asesinadas en el mundo a lo largo de 2023, aunque el número real podría ser incluso mayor, según reveló este martes un informe de la organización Global Witness.

De acuerdo con los datos esgrimidos por el estudio «Voces desaparecidas: la eliminación violenta de los defensores de la tierra y el medioambiente en el mundo», entre 2012 y 2023 se contabilizaron un total de 2.106 asesinatos de líderes ecologistas a nivel global, con América Latina a la cabeza en el número de homicidios el año pasado, con 166, lo que supuso un 85 % del total de las muertes.

Por segundo año consecutivo, Colombia lideró la trágica lista, con 79 activistas asesinados en 2023, seguida por Brasil (25), México (18) y Honduras (18), siendo este último el país que registró más homicidios per cápita a nivel mundial en el último año y la nación con mayor número de casos registrados desde 2012, con un total de 149.

Al menos 196 personas defensoras de la tierra y el medioambiente fueron asesinadas en el mundo a lo largo de 2023, aunque el número real podría ser incluso mayor, según reveló este martes un informe de la organización Global Witness. (Foto: EFE)

Además, desde Global Witness advirtieron de la vulnerabilidad de los activistas provenientes de pueblos indígenas y afrodescendientes, que concentraron un 49 % del total los ataques mortales, y así como de las mujeres, que supusieron un 12 % del total de homicidios.

El informe también dilucidó que, aunque existen dificultades a la hora de establecer relaciones entre un homicidio y unos intereses empresariales concretos, el mayor móvil industrial detrás de las muertes fue la minería, con 25 casos de personas asesinadas tras oponerse a operaciones mineras en 2023, de los cuales 23 también sucedieron en América Latina.

En un comunicado, la autora del informe y asesora medioambientalista de Global Witness, Laura Furones, calificó los datos de homicidios de «escandalosos» e instó a los gobiernos a tomar medidas contundentes para proteger a los activistas y abordar las causas de la violencia que experimentan.

«Las personas activistas y sus comunidades son esenciales en cualquier labor para prevenir y reparar los daños y perjuicios causados por las industrias nocivas para el medioambiente. No podemos permitirnos la pérdida de más vidas y no lo toleraremos», expresó Furones.

Asimismo, el documento indicó que en otras zonas del mundo como el Reino Unido, la Unión Europea y los Estados Unidos, cada vez se usa más la legislación para «atacar» a los ecologistas y se les imponen condenas más duras.

Al menos 196 personas defensoras de la tierra y el medioambiente fueron asesinadas en el mundo a lo largo de 2023, aunque el número real podría ser incluso mayor, según reveló este martes un informe de la organización Global Witness. (Foto: EFE)

También detectó que en Asia hay una tendencia ascendente en los ataques no letales como método de suprimir el activismo, siendo el acoso judicial el más utilizado junto a las desapariciones forzosas, contabilizando siete casos solo en Filipinas contra activistas que se enfrentaron a intereses relacionados con la propiedad de terrenos y la protección ambiental.

En concreto, entre los casos estudiados, Global Witness hizo hincapié en el de los activistas filipinos Jhed Tamano y Jonila Castro, que fueron secuestrados durante varios días en septiembre de 2023 por un grupo de hombres armados -y apoyados por el Ejército- por intentar paralizar la construcción de un nuevo aeropuerto en la capital del país, Manila.

«Continuaremos luchando contra el silenciado sistemático de los defensores de medioambientales y de la tierra y de su trabajo», concluye el informe, que subrayó que es probable que sus hallazgos no reflejen la verdadera magnitud del problema, pues muchos de los asesinatos no se denuncian por miedo a represalias y solo un pequeño número de los casos acaban con los autores rindiendo cuentas y haciéndose justicia para sus familiares.

Governor Shapiro signs executive order re-establishing Pennsylvania office of gun violence prcvention led by Lt. Governor Austin Davis to create safer Communities

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(Foto: Ilustrativa/Pexels)

Governor Josh Shapiro updates Executive Order issued by Governor Tom Wolf to bring together State Agencies, Stakeholders, and Members of Law Enforcement

Office of Gun Violence Prevention will create a Gun Violence Prevention Plan for the Commonwealth and a One-Stop-Shop Gun Violence Data Dashboard 

This announcement builds on the 2024-25 bipartisan budget, which included funding for more State Police Cadets and increased state investments in evidence-based Violence Prevention Programs at PCCD 


“I’ve spoken to too many Pennsylvanians who’ve lost loved ones to gun violence – that’s why today, my Administration took real action to re-establish and resource Pennsylvania’s Office of Gun Violence Prevention,” said Governor Shapiro. “Under Lieutenant Governor Davis’ leadership at PCCD, we will bring together public safety and public health experts, gun violence survivors and advocates, and leaders from state and local agencies to address and prevent gun violence across the Commonwealth. We’re going to continue to work together to ensure that every Pennsylvanian can be safe and feel safe in their communities – and have the real freedom that comes when you can walk down the street in your community without worrying about gun violence.” 

“As I travel across the Commonwealth, I am reminded daily of the devastating impact that gun violence is having across our communities. That’s why I’m proud of the bipartisan state budget, which includes more resources for community-based programs and a new statewide program to fund afterschool programs that can provide kids with learning and enrichment opportunities in a safe, supportive environment,” said Lieutenant Governor Austin Davis. “We’re taking a comprehensive approach to make Pennsylvania communities safer and Governor Shapiro’s Executive Order re-establishing an Office of Gun Violence Prevention at PCCD is one more piece of that puzzle. I look forward to the important work this office will take on, starting with a listening tour in the coming weeks to hear from community members on gun violence-related issues, which will inform the work of the Office.” 

 

Pennsylvania’s investments in public safety, including PCCD’s Violence Intervention and Prevention (VIP) grant program for community-based programs to address and prevent gun violence at the local level, have made a significant impact on decreasing homicides across the state in recent years. In 2023, homicides decreased by 16 percent across Pennsylvania compared to 13 percent nationally, and 29 out of Pennsylvania’s 67 counties saw declines in homicides. Additionally, Philadelphia’s homicides decreased 23 percent in 2023 compared to the prior year and are down 36 percent so far in 2024. 

While progress has been made, too many Pennsylvanians are still impacted by gun violence – more than 1,600 Pennsylvanians die as a result of gun-related injuries in Pennsylvania each year and Pennsylvania’s firearm fatality rate is significantly higher than surrounding states.  

Pennsylvania’s OGVP, which was one of the first of its kind when established in 2019, will bring together state agencies working on gun violence prevention to create one comprehensive, coordinated strategy for the Commonwealth to reduce gun deaths, injuries, and crime. The Office, which will be led by a Director reporting to PCCD’s Executive Director, will use evidence-based practices to improve existing state programs and implement new violence prevention initiatives. 

Under the Governor’s Executive Order, the OGVP will: 

  • Convene an advisory group of national, state, and community violence prevention experts, survivors of gun violence, health and behavioral care practitioners, members of law enforcement, and other state agencies;
  • Develop a gun violence prevention plan for the Commonwealth; including a multi-faceted approach to address youth gun involvement and gun violence and addressing the intersections of gun violence with domestic violence;
  • Partner with the Pennsylvania Departments of Health (DOH) and Human Services (DHS), Pennsylvania State Police (PSP), and other Commonwealth entities to create and maintain a comprehensive online Gun Violence Data Dashboard and resource hub to track gun violence deaths, nonfatal gun-related injuries, and overall trends in crime and violence and serve as a “one-stop-shop” for data and research on gun violence in Pennsylvania;
  • Apply for non-state funding to support research, analysis, and implementation of effective gun violence prevention strategies;
  • Work with PCCD’s Office of Victims’ Services to improve services and support for gun violence victims, building on the agency’s Resources for Victims of Gun Violence Initiative; and
  • Collaborate with DOH’s Division of Violence Prevention, DHS, and other key stakeholders to increase awareness of firearm safety practices like safer storage.

In 2023, the White House’s Safer States Initiative encouraged states to establish a state-level Office of Gun Violence Prevention to coordinate new policies, programs, and resources across state agencies and with local and federal partners. The OGVP will work closely with the White House Office of Gun Violence Prevention and other states and local jurisdictions with related offices.  

The OGVP builds on the 2024-25 bipartisan budget signed into law by Governor Shapiro, which invested in four new state trooper cadet classes, doubled funding for the Nonprofit Security Grant Fund at PCCD, and increased resources for other vital community violence prevention programs, provided funding for more after-school learning opportunities for young people, and increased funding for domestic violence services at DHS and PCCD’s Victim’s Compensation Assistance Program. 

These historic investments will help to address and prevent violence in our communities, but there is still more work to be done. During his budget address, Governor Shapiro called on the General Assembly to pass significant gun reform legislation, which passed the Pennsylvania House in a bipartisan manner last year

Philadelphia man sentenced to 21 years in prison for series of armed carjackings targeting elderly

Philadelphia

PHILADELPHIA.– United States Attorney Jacqueline C. Romero announced that Alex Askew, 20, of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, was sentenced today by United States District Court Judge Timothy J. Savage to 21 years’ imprisonment, three years of supervised release, restitution of $36,183.61, and an $800 assessment in connection with a series of armed carjackings targeting mainly elderly victims in Philadelphia and Upper Darby in September of 2022.

Askew was charged by superseding indictment in April of 2023, and on February 21, 2024, he pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit carjacking, three counts of carjacking, three counts of using a firearm in relation to a crime of violence, and one count of attempted carjacking.

The defendant and others committed three carjackings and one attempted carjacking, all with firearms, during the course of the conspiracy that took place between September 6, 2022, and September 12, 2022. The incidents detailed are as follows:

  • On September 6, 2022, in the afternoon, Askew and two others committed two carjackings within minutes of one another and blocks away. In the first carjacking, Askew was one of three people to brandish a firearm at three victims aged 60 to 80 years old parking their vehicle on the 800 block of North 26th Street in Philadelphia. In the course of stealing their Mitsubishi SUV, Askew and others threatened to kill them. The same group used the stolen Mitsubishi to drive to the 2600 block of Brown Street minutes later where they pointed a black firearm at a woman parking her Kia Sportage. They demanded her keys before fleeing in both stolen cars.
  • The next day in the evening, on September 7, 2022, Askew and others threatened a 66-year-old woman at gunpoint in the course of stealing her Acura SUV. The victim had just parked in front of her home on Wilde Avenue in Upper Darby late at night when a male with a firearm pointed a gun at her and demanded her keys. The offenders stole the victim’s purse and fled in her vehicle.
  • In the late afternoon of September 11, 2022, Askew and others threatened a 71-year-old woman at gunpoint as she parked in the alleyway behind her home on Brunswick Avenue in Upper Darby. Askew and another male demanded the keys but fled the scene without her vehicle when the victim screamed and ran towards her home.

“Alex Askew is 20 years old and was just sentenced to 21 years in prison,” said U.S. Attorney Romero. “Anyone who’s out there committing carjackings, or even contemplating it, needs to think long and hard about whether stealing a car for a few hours or days is worth spending decades of your life behind bars. The public shouldn’t have to fear being ambushed by armed criminals every time they get in or out of their car. That’s why we and our law enforcement partners are committed to prosecuting these violent crimes and why they carry such significant sentences.”

“Carjacking is a serious and dangerous crime, and as this case shows, even a youthful offender like Askew can be sentenced to serious federal prison time for carjacking,” said Eric DeGree, Special Agent in Charge of ATF’s Philadelphia Field Office. “The fact that the defendant and accomplices targeted vulnerable elderly community members makes their crime spree even more reprehensible. Preventing and prosecuting carjacking remains a high priority, and as in this case, we will work with our partners in the Philadelphia Carjacking Task Force to track down the perpetrators across jurisdictions, whenever and wherever they act.”

“I want to thank U.S. Attorney Romero for her collaborative efforts to hold violent criminals accountable by bringing them to justice.” said Delaware County District Attorney Jack Stollsteimer. “In Delaware County, our Project Safe Neighborhoods partnership is a force multiplier for the men and women of law enforcement working courageously every day to keep our communities safe.”

“We will not tolerate violent crime in our community,” said Upper Darby Police Superintendent Timothy Bernhardt. “Alex Askew’s actions were not only dangerous but unacceptable, and we remain committed to hold accountable anyone who threatens the safety of our residents. We extend our gratitude to the U.S. Attorney’s Office, particularly U.S. Attorney Jacqueline C. Romero, for their partnership and dedication in prosecuting this individual. Together with our law enforcement partners, we will continue to work tirelessly to protect our town and ensure that those who commit crimes face justice.”

“The sentence handed down today serves as a powerful reminder that the Philadelphia Police Department, alongside our law enforcement partners, will not tolerate violent crime in our city, especially crimes that target our most vulnerable citizens,” said Philadelphia Police Commissioner Kevin J. Bethel. “These brazen carjackings were not only a threat to public safety but also a violation of the sense of security every individual deserves. I commend the dedication of our officers – and the collaboration across our partner agencies – that brought this individual to justice. We remain committed to ensuring the safety of all Philadelphians through decisive and strategic actions.”

This case is part of Project Safe Neighborhoods (PSN), a program bringing together all levels of law enforcement and the communities they serve to reduce violent crime and gun violence, and to make our neighborhoods safer for everyone. On May 26, 2021, the department launched a violent crime reduction strategy strengthening PSN based on these core principles: fostering trust and legitimacy in our communities, supporting community-based organizations that help prevent violence from occurring in the first place, setting focused and strategic enforcement priorities, and measuring the results.

The case was investigated by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, the Delaware County District Attorney’s Office Criminal Investigation Division, the Upper Darby Township Police Department, and the Philadelphia Police Department, and is being prosecuted by Special Assistant United States Attorneys Brian Doherty and Sandra M. Urban.

Philadelphia man who scarred, nearly blinded ex-girlfriend in public chemical attack convicted at trial

Philadelphia

PHILADELPHIA – United States Attorney Jacqueline C. Romero announced that Victor Ortiz, 47, of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, was convicted Friday at trial of stalking, seriously injuring, and permanently disfiguring a woman with whom he had a previous relationship.

On the morning of May 4, 2022, the defendant had pursued his ex-girlfriend as she walked to her office in Philadelphia. Before she reached the building, the defendant threw soda ash, a caustic substance, on the victim’s face and torso. His attack temporarily blinded her in the left eye and caused severe pain and permanent scarring on her body.

Investigators subsequently found that the defendant had attached a GPS device to the victim’s vehicle so that he could monitor her location and follow her. After law enforcement officials discovered the device, the defendant was caught on camera attempting to install a second GPS device on the victim’s vehicle in July 2022.

The defendant is scheduled to be sentenced on December 17 and faces a maximum possible sentence of 20 years’ incarceration.

“Victor Ortiz needed to take ‘no’ for answer,” said U.S. Attorney Romero. “But rather than moving on when a relationship ended, he targeted, stalked, and viciously assaulted his ex-partner, causing horrendous physical pain and emotional trauma. My office will continue to work with our law enforcement colleagues to get justice for stalking victims and take the dangerous offenders who terrorized them off the street.”

“HSI is dedicated to protecting individuals from dangerous predators such as Victor Ortiz,” said Acting Special Agent in Charge of HSI Philadelphia Sara Bay. “Our excellent partnership with the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania allows us to hold these criminals responsible for their crimes and obtain justice for their victims.”

The case was investigated by Homeland Security Investigations and the Philadelphia Police Department and is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorneys Michael R. Miller and Angella Middleton.

The Harris-Trump debate becomes the 2024 election’s latest landmark event

Harris
In this combination photo, Democratic vice presidential candidate Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., speaks during a debate, Oct. 7, 2020, in Salt Lake City, left, and Republican presidential candidate former President Donald Trump speaks during a debate, June 27, 2024, in Atlanta. (Photo: AP)

Kamala Harris and Donald Trump will meet for the first time face-to-face Tuesday night for perhaps their only debate,high-pressure opportunity to showcase their starkly different visions for the country after a tumultuous campaign summer.

The event, at 9 p.m. Eastern in Philadelphia, will offer Americans their most detailed look at a campaign that’s dramatically changed since the last debate in June. In rapid fashion, President Joe Biden bowed out of the race after his disastrous performance, Trump survived an assassination attempt and bothsides chose their running mates.

Harris is intent on demonstrating that she can press the Democratic case against Trump better than Biden did. Trump, in turn, is trying to paint the vice president as an out-of-touch liberal while trying to win over voters skeptical he should return to the White House.

Trump, 78, has struggled to adapt to Harris, 59, who is the first woman, Black person and person of South Asian descent to serve as vice president. The Republican former president has at times resorted to invoking racial and gender stereotypes, frustrating allies who want Trump to focus instead on policy differences with Harris.

The vice president, for her part, will try to claim a share of credit for the Biden administration’s accomplishments while also addressing its low moments and explaining her shifts away from more liberal positions she took in the past.

The debate will subject Harris, who has sat for only a single formal interview in the past six weeks, to a rare moment of sustained questioning.

“If she performs great, it’s going to be a nice surprise for the Democrats and they’ll rejoice,» said Ari Fleischer, a Republican communications strategist and former press secretary to President George W. Bush. «If she flops, like Joe Biden did, it could break this race wide open. So there’s more riding on it.”

Tim Hogan, who led Sen. Amy Klobuchar’s debate preparations in the 2020 Democratic presidential primaries, said Harris, a former California attorney general, would bring a “prosecutor’s instincts to the debate stage.”

“That is a very strong quality in that setting: having someone who knows how to land a punch and how to translate it,» Hogan said.

The first early ballots of the presidential race will go out just hours after the debate, hosted by ABC News. Absentee ballots are set to be sent out beginning Wednesday in Alabama.

Trump plans to hit Harris as too liberal

Trump and his campaign have spotlighted far-left positions she took during her failed 2020 presidential bid. He’s been assisted in his informal debate prep sessions by Tulsi Gabbard, the former Democratic congresswoman and presidential candidate who tore into Harris during their primary debates.

Harris has sought to defend her shifts away from liberal causes to more moderate stances on fracking, expanding Medicare for all and mandatory gun buyback programs — and even backing away from her position that plastic straws should be banned — as pragmatism, insisting that her “values remain the same.” Her campaign on Monday published a page on its website listing her positions on key issues.

The former president has argued a Harris presidency is a threat to the safety of the country, highlighting that Biden tapped her to address the influx of migrants as the Republican once again makes dark warnings about immigration and those in the country illegally central to his campaign. He has sought to portray a Harris presidency as the continuation of Biden’s still-unpopular administration, particularly his economic record, as voters still feel the bite of inflation even as it has cooled in recent months.

Trump’s team insist his tone won’t be any different facing a female opponent.

“President Trump is going to be himself,” senior adviser Jason Miller told reporters during a phone call Monday.

Gabbard, who was also on the call, added that Trump “respects women and doesn’t feel the need to be patronizing or to speak to women in any other way than he would speak to a man.”

His advisers suggest Harris has a tendency to express herself in a “word salad” of meaningless phrases, prompting Trump to say last week that his debate strategy was to “let her talk.”

The former president frequently plows into rambling remarks that detour from his policy points. He regularly makes false claims about the last election, attacks a lengthy list of enemies and opponents working against him, offers praise for foreign strongmen and comments about race, like his false claim in July that Harris recently “happened to turn Black.”

Harris wants to argue Trump is unstable and unfit

The vice president, who has been the Biden administration’s most outspoken supporter of abortion access after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in 2022, is expected to focus on calling out Trump’s inconsistencies around women’s reproductive care, including his announcement that he will vote to protect Florida’s six-week abortion ban in a statewide referendum this fall.

Harris was also set to try to portray herself as a steadier hand to lead the nation and safeguard its alliances, as war rages in Ukraine more than two years after Russia’s invasion and Israel’s war with Hamas in Gaza drags on with no end in sight.

She is likely to warn that Trump presents a threat to democracy, from his attempts in 2020 to overturn his loss in the presidential election, spurring his angry supporters to attack the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, through comments he made as recently as last weekend. Trump on social media issued yet another message of retribution, threatening that if he wins he will jail “those involved in unscrupulous behavior,” including lawyers, political operatives, donors, voters and election officials.

Harris has spent the better part of the last five days ensconced in debate preparations in Pennsylvania, where she participated in hours-long mock sessions with a Trump stand-in. Ahead of the debate, she told radio host Rickey Smiley that she was workshopping how to respond if Trump lies.

“There’s no floor for him in terms of how low he will go,” she said.

El segundo caballero Douglas Emhoff pasó el fin de semana en Pensilvania cortejando a los latinos

Douglas Emhoff
El segundo caballero Douglas Emhoff con el honorable Miguel Cardona (Foto: RRSS)

El esposo de Kamala Harris, Douglas Emhoff, estuvo el pasado domingo en Wayne y Norristown, siguiendo con su recorrido para apoyar la campaña demócrata a la presidencia en Pensilvania. El evento sirvió para lanzar una jornada de visitas puerta a puerta que están sucediendo en todo el estado. Su visita en el estado clave, sucedió a la víspera del inminente debate que la vicepresidenta Kamala Harris tendrá el martes en Filadelfia, en el que espera argumentar su propuesta frente al expresidente Donald Trump.

Antes del inicio del Mes Nacional de la Herencia Hispana, a lo largo de todo el fin de semana, la campaña movilizó a miles de votantes en unos 500 eventos en todo Pensilvania donde hay una creciente población latina que puede votar. Las acciones incluyeron campañas de visitas puerta a puerta, llamadas telefónicas y otros eventos organizados con la participación de destacados activistas y representantes del partido. Muchos voluntarios de la comunidad recorrieron el área de tras el lanzamiento en la oficina de campo de Norristown

En los distintos eventos, varios de los oradores coincidieron en sus duras críticas al Proyecto 2025 de Trump, en el que se incluye prohibir el aborto a nivel nacional, hacerles recortes a la seguridad social y al Medicare, a la vez de aumentar los costos en más de $3,900 cada año para las familias de Pensilvania, según denuncia la campaña demócrata.

La vicepresidenta Harris ha venido insistiendo en sus eventos, que busca “que cada persona tenga la oportunidad no solo de sobrevivir, sino de prosperar”.

Kamala Harris en campaña con Tim Walz, para tratar de ganar el crucial estado de Pensilvania. (Foto: AP/Julia Nikhinson)

Dentro de los oradores invitados durante esta campaña estuvieron las congresistas Mary Gay Scanlon (D-PA-05), Madeleine Dean (D-PA-04), Joanna McClinton, presidenta de la Cámara de Representantes de Pensilvania, Jamilia Winder y Neil Makhija, comisionados del Condado de Montgomery, PA, Jason Salus, presidente de los demócratas de Montgomery y Emily Dalgleish, organizadora local.

Un día antes, Emhoff y el honorable Dr. Miguel Cardona visitaron el sábado Allentown, para movilizar a la comunidad latina en nombre de la campaña Harris-Walz, junto con los copresidentes de Latinos con Harris-Walz de Pensilvania: el alcalde de Allentown Matt Tuerk, la concejala de la ciudad de Filadelfia Quetcy Lozada, el representante estatal Danilo Burgos y la concejala de la ciudad de Lancaster Janet Diaz.

En Allentown, el segundo caballero ofreció un discurso sobre el compromiso de la vicepresidenta Harris y el gobernador Walz con la comunidad latina, incluyendo la reducción de impuestos para la clase media, la reducción de los costos de los alimentos, la vivienda y los medicamentos recetados, y el alivio de la deuda médica para millones de estadounidenses.

Antes de dirigirse al mitin, Emhoff también dio inicio al lanzamiento de una jornada de visitas puerta a puerta en la oficina de campo recientemente inaugurada en Allentown, sumando los esfuerzos de la campaña Harris-Walz en una de las comunidades latinas más amplias del estado de Pensilvania.

El segundo caballero, Douglas Emhoff, durante sus actividades de campaña el fin de semana. (Foto: AP/Michael Pérez)

Durante el evento en una escuela de prevalencia latina, pidió su voto: “Pensilvania, aquí es donde están pasando las cosas, ¿verdad? ¡Necesitamos ganar este estado, y necesitamos ganarlo aquí, en su comunidad!

Allentown, es la ciudad con mayor proporción de votantes hispanos en Pensilvania, el estado clave en la carrera a la Casa Blanca.

Los seguidores coreaban: “cuando luchamos, ganamos”, mientras el honorable Miguel Cardona reivindicaba el arroz con frijoles como algo tan intrínseco al ADN estadounidense como el pastel de manzana, entre los aplausos del público y música de reguetón.

Previamente la campaña demócrata ha hecho varios eventos, principalmente en Filadelfia, pero cada vez toma más fuerza su presencia en Allentown y Reading, respectivamente la tercera y la cuarta ciudad del territorio, que cuentan con una mayoría de población que se identifica como latina, procedente principalmente de Puerto Rico, la República Dominicana, y México. Otras ciudades de menor tamaño, desde las industriales Wilkes-Barre y Scranton, en el norte, a Lancaster y York en el sur, también han visto la llegada de una ola de hispanohablantes. La candidata esta semana después del debate estará visitando algunas de ellas.

Aunque con menos presencia en el territorio, también los republicanos están haciendo énfasis en los latinos de Pensilvania. Hace una semana, el rapero puertorriqueño Anuel AA fue uno de los oradores que dio su apoyo a Trump en un mitin en Johnstown. La campaña republicana abrió en julio una oficina en Reading, donde el 70% de la población se identifica como latina.

El mitin dedicó especial importancia precisamente a abordar cuestiones de interés específico para las distintas comunidades latinas en la audiencia. El puertorriqueño Miguel Cardona recordó a los boricuas -el mayor grupo hispano en Pensilvania- que su candidata quiere arreglar el sistema educativo y el sistema energético en Puerto Rico, mientras que el otro tira rollos de papel higiénico a la multitud después de un huracán, recodando el gesto de Trump durante su visita  a la isla tras el paso del devastador huracán Maria en 2017.

Emhoff también dedicó parte de su recorrido por Allentown a visitar a los voluntarios en una oficina de la campaña, para agradecerles su apoyo y motivarlos.

La oficina del Censo de EE. UU. anuncia apertura de un nuevo centro de datos en Puerto Rico

Puerto Rico
Una persona que responde las preguntas del formulario del Censo. (Foto: EFE/LRC)

San Juan.- La oficina del Censo de EE. UU. anunció este lunes la apertura del nuevo Centro Federal de Datos de Investigación Estadística de Puerto Rico (PR FSRDC, por sus siglas en inglés).

«El establecimiento de una oficina en Puerto Rico es una gran noticia y algo que debemos estar muy contentos porque va a haber mayor acceso a estadísticas para que se pueden utilizar para informar de los temas que afectan a los residentes», explicó en un vídeo publicado en redes sociales el subdirector ejecutivo de la Junta de Supervisión y Administración Financiera para Puerto Rico (JSAF), Arnaldo Cruz.

«Esto es una iniciativa del censo federal donde establecen estas oficinas estadísticas para proveer mayor acceso a los datos que produce el censo, pero no solamente el censo sino otras agencias federales», añadió Cruz.

Cruz indicó que el acceso a los datos del FSRDC mejorará la capacidad estadística de la isla y permitirá a los funcionarios locales, los líderes de la industria y el tercer sector tomar decisiones más precisas basadas en datos.

«Mayor acceso a la información a los investigadores va a permitir que se pueda investigar y que se pueda informar de cuales son los problemas y como se pueden resolver los problemas usando datos», aseveró Cruz.

El FSRDC de Puerto Rico se une a otros 33 centros federales de datos de investigación estadística en el territorio de Estados Unidos.

Estos centros ofrecen a los investigadores cualificados que trabajan en proyectos aprobados un espacio seguro para analizar datos restringidos recopilados por la Oficina del Censo y otras agencias federales asociadas.

Por otro lado, el gobernador de Puerto Rico, Pedro Pierluisi, junto al subsecretario de Comercio de Estados Unidos, Don Graves, anunció la mañana de este lunes una inversión millonaria para rehabilitar un innovador proyecto socioeducativo en San Juan destinado a comunidades vulnerables.