- Passengers swim to shore after Cessna 402B makes emergency landing in sea
- French government activates extreme heat plan amid renewed heatwave
- Deaths and suicides highlight conditions in New Jersey State Prison
- Second boat linked to B.C. charter before fatal sinking raises rescue concerns
- Democrats position themselves to replace Graham Platner as Senate nominee in Maine
- Firefighters battle blaze at Essex industrial unit amid water supply issues
- British man, 88, dies after intervening in mugging of wife in Tenerife
- EU finance ministers discuss Spain’s €850 billion joint borrowing proposal
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The Elections are on Sunday the 23rd of Feb 2025
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Passengers swim to shore after Cessna 402B makes emergency landing in sea
Get you up to speed: Passengers forced to swim to shore after plane makes emergency landing | News World
A Cessna 402B operating a scheduled domestic flight crashed into the sea near Lafiteau, Haiti, during an emergency landing. The pilot and two passengers exited the aircraft safely, swam to shore, and received immediate assistance, with all reported to be in a stable condition.
Aviation authorities and ZED Airlines’ technical team have initiated a full inquiry into the incident, though no details regarding a mechanical failure have been made public. The aircraft, a Cessna 402B built in 1972, is currently under assessment to determine its condition.
A spokesperson for ZED Airlines expressed relief that there were “no human losses to regret” following the incident, emphasising their priority for passenger and crew safety. Aviation authorities have initiated a full inquiry into the matter, with further updates expected as the investigation progresses.
What remains unclear — The inquiry has not provided initial details on a possible mechanical failure of the aircraft.
Passengers swim to shore after Cessna 402B makes emergency landing in sea
Frightened passengers had to swim ashore after a plane crashed into the sea during an emergency landing.
The Cessna 402B was operating a scheduled domestic flight when the pilot performed a water landing shortly before midday on Wednesday.
The pilot and two passengers exited the light aircraft safely after crash-landing in the sea. They swam to shore and were able to get help immediately.
A spokesperson for Haitian carrier ZED Airlines said they were relieved that no one died.
The Dominican-registered plane was flying a domestic route within Haiti at the time.

The plane was headed towards Port-au-Prince (Picture: Jam Press)
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The twin-engine turboprop, registration HI-1056 and operated by ZED Airlines on flight 6502, came down in coastal waters near Lafiteau in Haiti.
It had departed Cap-Haitien bound for the Haitian capital, Port-au-Prince. Footage showed the aircraft in the water close to Ibo Beach, with the passengers wading through the shallows towards the shore.
Local responders assisted the survivors, who are reported to be in a stable condition.

The three passengers had to swim to shore (Picture: Jam Press)
Aviation authorities and the airline’s technical team have launched a full inquiry, with no initial details released on a possible mechanical failure.
The 1972-built aircraft’s condition is still being assessed.
ZED Airlines described passenger and crew safety as its absolute priority and said further updates would be issued in due course.
They said the incident ended without tragedy thanks to the pilot’s expert handling and swift response on the ground. The investigation continues.
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French government activates extreme heat plan amid renewed heatwave
French government activates extreme heat plan amid renewed heatwave
The French government activated an “Orsec extreme heat plan” for nine departments facing a red heat alert due to an impending heatwave.
Over 25,000 hectares have been burned in France so far this year, double the area from the same period last year, highlighting the escalating threat of wildfires.
“There have been consultations, exchanges and work carried out,” stated government spokesperson Maud Bregeon regarding the activation of the “Orsec extreme heat plan.”
French government activates new ‘extreme heat’ Orsec plan as temperatures rise

The French government took the unprecedented step of activating an “Orsec extreme heat plan” on Friday for departments facing a renewed heatwave that is forecast to stretch into next week.
The “Orsec extreme heat plan” was activated in the departments subject to a red heat alert and applies to Morbihan (56), Ille-et-Vilaine (35), Mayenne (53), Sarthe (72), Loire-Atlantique (44), Vendée (85), Maine-et-Loire (49), Vienne (86) and Deux-Sèvres (79).
“There have been consultations, exchanges and work carried out,” government spokesperson Maud Bregeon told French broadcaster TF1.
Nine departments in the west of France were placed on red alert for extreme heat on Friday while 72 are under an orange alert, national weather forecaster Météo France said.
The red heatwave warning will be extended to 24 departments, including all the departments of Ile-de-France, on Saturday at 12:00, the forecaster said.
The Orsec plan is an emergency response and relief mechanism for exceptional events, and has generally been activated in the case of natural disasters such as floods.
Wildfires burn twice as much land as last year
Wildfires have scorched twice as much land in France so far this year as in the same period last year, an official said on Friday.
The European nation is facing its third heatwave since May, with a part of western France under the more severe heat warning on Friday and fires raging in several parts of the country over the past week.
It is the latest such deadly episode of extreme weather, whose increasing frequency in recent decades scientists have linked to man-made climate change.
“Since the beginning of the year, we have recorded a little over 8,000 fire outbreaks in our country, affecting an estimated burnt area of more than 25,000 hectares (250 square kilometres),” director general of civil security Julien Marion said.
“That is roughly double what had been recorded last year by the same date,” he added.
France’s High Council for Climate on Thursday warned that the country’s policies to tackle global warming were “insufficient.”
“We are entering a dangerous zone,” warned one of its experts, Valerie Masson-Delmotte.
“Our infrastructure, our land-use planning, our ecosystems, and the management of our economic activities and sociocultural practices have evolved based on a climate that no longer exists.”
The country recorded more than 2,000 excess deaths during the June heatwave, and 300 during the high temperatures in late May, according to official figures.
The government on Friday said it would be opening so-called “cooling centres” for vulnerable members of the population such as the elderly or homeless.
Six thousand of the planned 30,000 air conditioning units promised to the country’s hospitals have been delivered and installed, government spokeswoman Maud Bregeon said on Friday.
France has more than 2,900 health facilities, according to figures from last year.
High temperatures are expected to continue until Bastille Day, France’s national public holiday, on 14 July, according to the Meteo-France national weather service.
Additional sources • AFP
Deaths and suicides highlight conditions in New Jersey State Prison
Get you up to speed: Death, silence, and survival inside New Jersey State Prison
Peter Rusch was found dead after an apparent suicide in New Jersey State Prison, where he had been previously known to struggle with mental health issues. This incident highlights ongoing concerns about the frequency of suicides within the prison system, particularly in segregated confinement areas.
New Jersey State Prison facilities, particularly the 7-Wing—built in the 1840s and noted for its deteriorating conditions—have seen a rise in suicides, with at least 13 reported between 2018 and 2024. The New Jersey Department of Corrections stated that it conducts thorough investigations for each death in custody, though public scrutiny remains limited.
In a statement, the New Jersey Department of Corrections confirmed the suicides of Peter Rusch, Mark Todd, Andrei Goumonov, and Timma Kalidindi, asserting that it “prioritises the safety, dignity, and care of every individual in our custody” and promising thorough investigations of each incident. Following these deaths, the department faces growing scrutiny and calls for reform, as concerns about the mental health support and overall treatment of inmates intensify.
What remains unclear — It is not specified what specific measures, if any, the New Jersey Department of Corrections will implement in response to the rising number of suicides in state prisons.
Deaths and suicides highlight conditions in New Jersey State Prison
Warning: This story contains descriptions of suicide, which some readers may find disturbing. If you or a loved one is experiencing suicidal thoughts, help and support are available. Visit Befrienders Worldwide for more information about support services.
New Jersey — Death in prison is treated like part of life, but it shouldn’t be.
People die behind bars the way they die on the outside: from illness, age, accidents, violence and suicides. But prison introduces another category that rarely gets much attention: institutional death.
Institutional deaths include fatalities produced both by bodies failing and by systems breaking minds.
History teaches us about dungeons and gulags, about people who vanished into cells and were never seen again. Americans like to believe those stories belong to distant places, authoritarian states, foreign regimes, and the uncivilised past, but not in the modern United States. Not in a constitutional democracy. Not in a country built on law and rights.
But it’s becoming more and more common for people to die behind bars in the US. According to the Sentencing Project, only 9,000 people were serving life without parole in the US in 1992. By 2003, thanks to “tough-on-crime” policies and the declining use of the death penalty, that number had more than tripled, and by 2024, that number had ballooned to 56,245 people.
Moreover, nearly two million people are currently incarcerated, up from 360,000 in the 1970s. The tough-on-crime policies enacted by Democrats and Republicans alike — abandoning parole and using longer sentences and mandatory minimum sentences — have quietly converted punishment into a process of human expiration, where people are locked away until they die.
But some don’t wait to die. They kill themselves instead.
Suicide reflects a deeper rupture. It is not merely the end of a life, but the collapse of meaning — a point where suffering becomes total, and the future disappears. It means people have stopped trying to make their way home, made the final surrender, and abandoned hope and their own humanity.
Inside prison, that surrender is often met with indifference from guards and administrators.
Having been in prison since 2005, I have tangled with that hopelessness myself. Luckily, I have family and friends who keep me grounded, but not everyone is so blessed.
![Deaths and suicides highlight conditions in New Jersey State Prison WTX News An illustration of the type of speakers convey the Code 66 call for suicide attempts in New Jersey State Prison [Jawaher Al-Naimi/WTX News]](https://wtxnews.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/07/speaker-1782054108.jpg)
An illustration of the type of speakers that convey Code 66 calls for suicide attempts in New Jersey State Prison [Jawaher Al-Naimi/WTX News]An illustration of the type of speakers that convey Code 66 calls for suicide attempts in New Jersey State Prison [Jawaher Al-Naimi/WTX News]
Calling Code 66
In New Jersey State Prison, suicide is common enough that the institution has its own language for it: “Code 66” is the emergency call for a suicide or suicide attempt.
When I arrived here, a Code 66 was rare. It was something people only whispered about. Today, it is broadcast casually over the prison PA system, sometimes multiple times a week. That’s how frequent suicide attempts are made here.
In 2025 alone, at least three men died by suicide inside New Jersey State Prison, where I lived before transferring to East Jersey State Prison earlier this year. They included Mark Todd on the mental health unit 2FF, Peter Rusch in lockup, and Andrei Goumnov in the protective custody unit 3DD. The year before, Timma Kalidindi took his life on another unit.
And those were just the ones I heard about.
There were 13 suicides in New Jersey state prisons from 2018 to 2024, and half occurred in disciplinary housing units, according to the administration.
When a death happens inside, whether naturally or by suicide, the area is locked down. No one can leave or enter until the body is taken away.
The body is then removed, their property is cleared, and their name disappears from the count sheets. The deceased man becomes a rumour. A whisper. A story told by hospital porters, employees who help when there’s an emergency or remove bodies when someone dies.
A common phrase is: “He went out in the black bag.”
A sealed body bag. Zippered. Black. Final.
The system moves on.
We do not.
![Deaths and suicides highlight conditions in New Jersey State Prison WTX News An inmate who was struggling with mental health issues was still so kind as to hand over his slippers for Tariq to use while showering at New Jersey State Prison [Jawaher Al-Naimi/WTX News]](https://wtxnews.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/07/slippers-1782054271.jpg)
An inmate who was struggling with mental health issues was still so kind as to hand over his slippers for Tariq to use while showering at New Jersey State Prison [Jawaher Al-Naimi/WTX News]An inmate who was struggling with mental health issues was still so kind as to hand over his slippers for Tariq to use while showering at New Jersey State Prison [Jawaher Al-Naimi/WTX News]
The man next door
I first met Peter Rusch in October 2022 on North Compound, Unit 2-B Right. I had just been transferred there after a tactical search team (TST) raid on my housing unit. Employees had gotten a tip that I had a contraband item, and since staff generally don’t approve of my writing — often about the injustices of prison — they jumped at the chance to put me in administrative segregation, or ad-seg, basically solitary. I arrived with nothing but the clothes on my back.
Peter was living in the cell next to mine. I could see him when we were both outside our cells and speak to him through the walls. He was tall and thin, with long dark brown hair and a scraggly beard, with glasses perched on his face. He reminded me of Shaggy from Scooby Doo. He seemed to know everyone on the unit. He had been in ad-seg for months, I learned later — but never knew why — which was hard on a guy like Peter, who was widely known to have mental health issues. I’d heard that he also tried to commit suicide before.
Two things stood out about Peter immediately: his kindness towards other incarcerated men, and his hostility towards the staff.
When I was first brought onto the unit, I had no shower slippers, only sneakers. After two days, I finally got permission to shower. I stood there, uncertain, unsure how I was supposed to step into a communal shower with my only shoes.
An officer shrugged. “You wanna get in or what?”
From the next cell, Peter called out, “Give him my shoes.”
The officer refused. Peter cursed at him. Eventually, the officer opened the hatch and allowed Peter to pass his slippers through the port.
Later, after I returned from the shower, Peter softened his voice. “You good, big bro?” he asked. “They are a**holes. Don’t worry about it. Let me know if you need anything.”
Lending me his slippers was a small and ordinary kindness, the kind that becomes rare in places designed to erase it.
You good, big bro? … Don’t worry about it. Let me know if you need anything.
by Peter Rusch, a former fellow inmate
The next day, Peter was scheduled for kiosk access, a minor privilege in closed custody units that allows a man to send emails or download a song. However, the officers never came to escort him to the kiosk. So, he began shouting to get their attention. Hours passed. Shift change was approaching. An officer finally appeared and told him it was too late.
Peter argued and asked for a supervisor. The officer refused.
Peter then asked for mental health treatment, and the officer laughed.
“I want to kill myself,” Peter said clearly.
Instead of doing something to help him, the officer shut off the water to Peter’s cell by closing the valve in the plumbing closet.
Peter responded by banging on his door. In lockup, banging spreads. One man starts, others join. The metal clanging echoes. Sound becomes pressure, and anxiety fills the air. It is a collective scream without words.
Then it went quiet.
Shortly after, a sergeant arrived, and she knocked on Peter’s door. There was no response. She opened the side slot and said there was “something around his neck”.
“He’s turning a colour,” she said. “Code 66!” she called to the staff.
Officers rushed in, and medical staff followed. When his cell door was opened, Peter was unconscious but alive. They cut him down. He regained consciousness and screamed. A struggle followed as he was dragged from the cell. I could hear loud thumps and people struggling. Officers pinned him to the floor. A restraint chair was brought in, and a sergeant produced a camera to record the footage.
They strapped him down and rolled him out after a struggle.
I stood in my cell and watched a mentally ill man who had shown me nothing but kindness be treated like an animal. I left the unit the next day.
![Deaths and suicides highlight conditions in New Jersey State Prison WTX News An illustration of a body bag being removed among the cells at New Jersey State Prison [Jawaher Al-Naimi/WTX News]](https://wtxnews.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/07/bodybag2-1782053930.jpg)
An illustration of a body bag being removed among the cells at New Jersey State Prison [Jawaher Al-Naimi/WTX News]An illustration of a body bag being removed among the cells at New Jersey State Prison [Jawaher Al-Naimi/WTX News]
The release that never came
Almost a year and a half later, I learned that “Code 66” was called for Peter again. This time, it was on the 7-Wing, another area used for segregated confinement.
The 7-Wing sits deep inside the West Compound. Built in the 1840s, it is the oldest functioning prison structure in the country and is supposed to be condemned due to rusting cells and toxic lead pipes. There are no windows in the cells, and the lack of circulation means inmates suffer from heat in the summer and bitter cold in the winter. The conditions have been documented in local news stories for decades — dungeon-style architecture in a modern prison.
Peter Rusch was found dead that day. He had hanged himself again. This time, there was no revival. His body was put into the black bag.
I later learned that Peter was supposed to have been released. There was a pending charge — a delay — that he didn’t understand, which was postponing his release for an unknown period of time. But Peter believed he was going home. He waited and asked questions, growing more confused and frustrated by the delays.
Peter didn’t get answers, and he spiralled.
Peter’s placement on 7-Wing made no sense. He had a documented history of severe mental illness — I often overheard his appointments with mental health professionals and witnessed his first suicide attempt. He was what the 2000 Isolated Confinement Restriction Act (ICRA) classifies as “vulnerable population”. By policy, men like him are not supposed to be housed in extreme isolation environments like the 7-Wing.
But policy is paper, and prison is practice.
![Deaths and suicides highlight conditions in New Jersey State Prison WTX News A empty cell is the haunting reminder of lives lost at New Jersey State Prison [Jawaher Al-Naimi/WTX News]](https://wtxnews.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/07/empty-cell-1782054740.jpg)
This illustration shows an empty cell, a haunting reminder of lives lost at New Jersey State Prison [Jawaher Al-Naimi/WTX News]This illustration shows an empty cell, a haunting reminder of lives lost at New Jersey State Prison [Jawaher Al-Naimi/WTX News]
‘Despair has me by my throat’
Like Peter, Jim Smith* has attempted suicide more than once. But he is still alive.
A Native American from Colorado, Jim has been incarcerated for nine years and held in New Jersey State Prison since 2019. He is serving a life sentence.
“NJDOC and the hardship that’s been placed on me,” he said, when I asked what drove him to try killing himself.
Jim has been diagnosed with depressive disorder, antisocial personality disorder, and substance use disorders. He has sought and been given mental health treatment in prison. But he has also been placed in isolation for fighting.
He complained to me about being far away from his children — his family rarely visit because the distance from the Dakotas to New Jersey is so far. But he also said that his phone calls and letters often go unanswered.
“My stress level is major,” he said. “What bothers me the most is that I am far away from my kids and family.”
“This hardship is overtaking the hope,” he said. “Despair has me by my throat.”
Jim does not speak in abstractions. His pain is an accumulation of negatives. Distance. Isolation. Silence. Disconnection. Neglect.
When I asked what he would want to change, his answer was small and devastatingly simple: “If I was treated fairly here.”
He wants more Native cultural programming. More recognition. More presence. Something that acknowledges identity instead of just managing bodies.
Jim is still alive, but he is living inside the same architecture that killed Peter.
But policy is paper, and prison is practice.
by Tariq MaQbool
Bearing the silence
Deaths like Peter’s should lead to scrutiny, investigation, and accountability. But it seems to me that too many men vanish in the system — both before and after death.
Sometimes it seems like these tragedies are met with nothing more than paperwork.
All too often, incarcerated men die in custody, and the institution carries on without any structural changes.
That’s largely because the public never sees the black bag.
But we do. Inside these walls, we experience the codes. We hear the calls. We watch the removals. We live with the silence that follows.
In a statement, the New Jersey Department of Corrections confirmed that Peter Rusch, Mark Todd, Andrei Goumonov, and Timma Kalidindi died by suicide. It said it “prioritizes the safety, dignity, and care of every individual in our custody” and that “every death is thoroughly investigated”.
* Jim Smith is a pseudonym meant to protect the privacy of the inmate.
Second boat linked to B.C. charter before fatal sinking raises rescue concerns
Get you up to speed: Second boat was with B.C. charter before fatal sinking, raising rescue questions
A fishing boat sank off the coast of Vancouver, leading to six people being lost at sea and now feared drowned. A rescue operation was underway, successfully saving four others.
The rescue operation involved multiple vessels and coordinated efforts from local authorities. Investigators are working to ascertain the circumstances surrounding the incident, with no official timeline for when updates may be available.
The British Columbia government has expressed its condolences to the families of those lost, and a full investigation into the incident has been launched. Authorities have warned local fishermen about the hazardous conditions at sea and urged them to adhere to safety protocols while they assess the situation.
What remains unclear — Authorities have not identified the circumstances leading to the sinking of the fishing boat.
Second boat linked to B.C. charter before fatal sinking raises rescue concerns

Six people were lost at sea — now feared drowned — and a rescue operation was underway that saved four others, after a fishing boat sank off the coast of Vancouver.
Democrats position themselves to replace Graham Platner as Senate nominee in Maine
Get you up to speed: Here’s who’s vying to replace Graham Platner as Maine Democratic Senate nominee
Graham Platner suspended his Senate campaign following a woman’s accusation of sexual assault, prompting Democrats in Maine to seek potential replacements for the upcoming election against GOP Senator Susan Collins. The Maine Democratic Party will select a nominee by July 27 after Platner officially files to withdraw from the race.
The Maine Democratic Party has until July 27 at 5 p.m. to select a replacement for Graham Platner following his withdrawal from the Senate race. Numerous Democrats, including Shenna Bellows and Troy Jackson, have expressed interest in the nomination, while the party announced plans to hold a nominating convention, with further details yet to be disclosed.
Graham Platner’s suspension of his Senate campaign has triggered intense interest among Maine Democrats, with several individuals, including Shenna Bellows and David Costello, announcing their candidacies to replace him. The Maine Democratic Party will convene a nominating convention by July 27 to select a replacement candidate ahead of the November election against GOP Sen. Susan Collins.
What remains unclear — The specific details of the nominating process for Platner’s replacement by the Maine Democratic Party have yet to be announced.
Democrats position themselves to replace Graham Platner as Senate nominee in Maine
Washington — Graham Platner’s move to suspend his Senate campaign after a woman accused him of sexual assault has prompted a mad dash in Maine, as Democrats position themselves as possible replacements to take on GOP Sen. Susan Collins in November.
After Platner officially files paperwork to withdraw, the Maine Democratic Party will have until July 27 at 5 p.m. to select a replacement. The party announced it would hold a nominating convention, with details on the process forthcoming.
While some have made clear they aren’t interested, including Rep. Jared Golden and actor Patrick Dempsey, a growing list of Democrats are making their interest clear.
Here’s who’s vying to replace Platner on the ballot:
Shenna Bellows
Maine Secretary of State Shenna Bellows quickly jumped into the race for the Democratic Senate nomination. She said in a social media post she has taken on “tough fights for working people” throughout her career, and added: “I’m not stopping now.”
Bellows, 51, sought the governor’s mansion earlier this year, but she fell short in last month’s Democratic primary. The native of Hancock, Maine, previously served in the state Senate and as executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Maine. She is the first woman to serve as secretary of state.
It’s Bellows’ second run for Senate. In 2014, she won the Democratic nomination to challenge Collins, but lost in the general election by almost 37 percentage points.
During her gubernatorial campaign, Bellows advocated for more affordable housing and a statewide freeze on property tax increases for Maine residents, paid for by doubling property tax rates for non-resident homes.
Bellows raised just under $1.8 million during her campaign for governor. Because of Maine’s ranked-choice voting system, Bellows and two other primary candidates — former state Senate President Troy Jackson and former state House Speaker Hannah Pingree — endorsed each other. Pingree ended up winning the Democratic nomination.
Bellows, like most of the candidates now seeking to replace Platner, pushed him to drop out of the race shortly after he was accused of sexual assault. She called the allegations — which Platner has denied — “extremely serious.” She said on X that while Platner “ignited a powerful movement to challenge the status quo, given the seriousness of the allegations, he needs to step down.”
David Costello
A native of Bangor and former government official in Maine and Maryland, David Costello previously ran against Platner for the Democratic Senate nomination, and said that if Platner dropped out, “I’m back in.”
Costello won 8.1% of the vote in last month’s primary, trailing Platner (72.1%) and Maine Gov. Janet Mills (19.2%), who had suspended her campaign but remained on the ballot. He was also the Democratic nominee in the 2024 Maine Senate race, though the winner of that race — incumbent Sen. Angus King, an independent — caucuses with Democrats.
Costello raised just over $30,000 from donors and lent his campaign more than $100,000 during this year’s Senate run.
Valli Geiger
State Rep. Valli Geiger, a close ally of Platner’s, has indicated interest in replacing him on the ballot.
The 70-year-old told WMTW that Platner was supporting her bid. But she later clarified that she is one of “several people” who have supported Platner and with whom he was speaking.
A nurse and resident of the coastal town of Rockland, Geiger has served in the state Legislature for three terms.
Troy Jackson
Former state Senate President Troy Jackson also threw his name into the mix and filed with the Federal Election Commission for a Senate exploratory committee.
Jackson, a fifth-generation logger from the tiny northern Maine town of Allagash, told the Bangor Daily News he is the “best person” to replace Platner.
The 58-year-old has been active in Maine politics since 2002, serving in the Maine House of Representatives and the Maine Senate, where he was president from 2018 to 2024.
Before Jackson positioned himself as a potential Senate candidate, he was eyeing the governor seat. He came in third in the Democratic primary this past June after raising around $1 million.
Supported by Platner and independent Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont in his gubernatorial bid, Jackson billed himself as a progressive candidate who would focus on affordable housing and lowering property taxes. In an MS NOW interview, Jackson called himself a “pickup truck progressive.”
Jackson and Sanders’ ties go back a decade, with Jackson working on his 2016 presidential campaign. Sanders said Jackson would “stand with working-class families against the enormous power of the monied interests.” Some former Platner allies have argued Jackson should succeed Platner.
Earlier in his political career, Jackson held socially conservative views on some issues, including abortion and same-sex marriage, though he has shifted to the mainstream of the Democratic Party since then and attributed some of his prior stances to the views of his rural northern Maine constituents.
Jackson urged Platner to withdraw, writing on X that there is “no place in our politics for sexual violence.”
Dan Kleban
Dan Kleban, a co-founder of the Maine Beer Company, announced that he’s running to replace Platner, and made it official with an FEC filing.
Kleban, 49, briefly ran for Senate last year before suspending his campaign in October and endorsing Mills. His original campaign was built around Maine’s economy and affordability, combined with environmental issues. Like Platner, Kleban is a newcomer to elected politics, but the craft brewery that he founded with his brother in 2009 is well known.
Since suspending his Senate campaign, he has stayed vocal about Maine’s politics on social media, and he condemned the allegations against Platner, calling them “horrifying and completely disqualifying.”
“Mainers deserve a Senator who will fight for them against the DC establishment while also doing what’s right,” he said.
During his initial Senate run last year, Kleban gave almost $215,000 of his own money to his campaign and raised another $244,000 from donors, according to federal records. He spent almost all of his campaign cash during his run.
Paige Loud
Paige Loud, a 29-year-old social worker, filed to run for Senate shortly before Platner ended his campaign. After he dropped out, Loud wrote on social media that “Mainers deserve more than a hand-picked replacement whose morality only kicked in at the last minute.”
Loud ran in the Democratic House primary for Maine’s 2nd Congressional District last month, coming in fourth place with 10.4% of the vote. She contributed around $30,000 to her own campaign and raised about $17,000.
Nirav Shah
Nirav Shah, the former director of the Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention, also announced that he’s interested in becoming the Senate nominee, after coming in second in the state’s Democratic gubernatorial primary last month.
“Establishment politicians have failed us,” Shah said on X. “To defeat Susan Collins, we need an outsider who is not afraid to take on the broken system she has spent decades upholding.”
As Maine’s CDC director starting in 2019, Shah navigated the COVID-19 pandemic in the Pine Tree State and has touted the state’s fast vaccine rollout. Shah went on to serve as principal deputy director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention under the Biden administration.
A Wisconsin native, Shah has degrees in law and medicine from the University of Chicago, and previously worked in public health in Illinois and Cambodia.
In his gubernatorial bid, Shah’s platform centered on “fixing housing, funding healthcare, feeding kids, and fueling growth — all while fighting the overreaches of the Trump administration.”
During his gubernatorial campaign, Shah raised more than $1 million. He contributed around $100,000 to his campaign, state campaign finance records show.
Shah — who called for Platner to drop out of the race — said in a campaign launch news conference that there is “very little light” between him and Platner on matters of policy, but he “would not accept an endorsement from Graham, nor have I sought one.”
Shah told WTX US News that Maine Democrats are “feeling a thousand emotions all at once” following the allegation against Platner and the campaign shake-up.
“The one I would say is overriding is the eagerness and the commitment to defeating Susan Collins in the fall,” Shah said.
Jordan Wood
Jordan Wood, who previously sought the Senate seat last year before dropping out to run in a House race, announced he’s hoping to replace Platner on the ballot.
Wood, a 36-year-old native of Lewiston, Maine, previously worked as chief of staff to Democratic Rep. Katie Porter before founding an organization focused on combating election denialism. He launched his campaign for Senate last year before pivoting to run for a House seat to replace moderate Democratic Rep. Jared Golden in Maine’s red-leaning 2nd Congressional District, where he fell short last month.
In a post on X, Wood touted his work to “get big money out of politics and end corruption in Washington.”
“If I am a nominee for Senate, I’ll lead the fight to pass Medicare for All, pass sweeping anti-corruption reform, and stand up to Trump’s lawlessness,” he said.
During his House bid, Wood raised more than $5 million from donors and lent $400,000 to his campaign, the vast majority of which he spent during the campaign, according to FEC data.
In:
Firefighters battle blaze at Essex industrial unit amid water supply issues
Get you up to speed: Fire tears through industrial unit in area with ‘limited water supply’ | News UK
A massive fire broke out at an industrial unit in Nine Ashes, northeast of Epping, soon after 11pm, with twelve fire crews responding to the scene. Firefighters are battling the blaze with limited water supplies, while residents have been advised to keep windows and doors shut due to ongoing smoke and the risk of exploding cylinders.
Emergency crews are currently scaling down operations at the industrial site in Nine Ashes, with eight crews anticipated to remain on scene for several hours. The ongoing heatwave in Essex, with temperatures set to rise to 30C, complicates firefighting efforts amid limited water supplies.
Residents near the Nine Ashes fire site have been advised to keep their windows and doors shut to mitigate smoke inhalation risks as crews manage the blaze with limited water resources. Station Manager Scott Fretton indicated that fire services will scale down operations from twelve to eight crews, anticipating a prolonged presence at the scene due to ongoing challenges posed by weather conditions.
What remains unclear — It is not confirmed whether any injuries have occurred as a result of the fire.
Firefighters battle blaze at Essex industrial unit amid water supply issues
Firefighters have been tackling a blaze in Essex with ‘limited water supplies’ after flames engulfed an industrial unit.
A massive fire broke out at the site housing industrial units, vehicles and mobile homes in Nine Ashes, northeast of Epping.
Twelve crews descended on the site on Woolmongers Lane shortly after 11pm yesterday as the alarm was raised.
Dramatic footage shows one of the barns going up in flames as the fire raged inside it, appearing to contain farming or industrial cylinders.
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Residents are urged to keep windows and doors shut today as smoke continues to billow into the air and the surrounding areas.
Some cylinders could also explode as they burn, causing loud bangs, the firefighters warned.
Station Manager Scott Fretton, from Essex Fire and Rescue Service, said: ‘Crews have worked really hard with a limited water supply to surround the fire and we’re now in a position to start scaling this incident down. We’ll scale it down to eight crews initially and we anticipate being here for several hours.
‘You might see lots of smoke as it starts to get lighter throughout the morning and hear some bangs coming from the scene as there are cylinders involved.
‘If you live in High Ongar near Woolmonger Lane, please keep your windows and doors shut.’
Crews in the area face gruelling weather conditions today as the sun rises, with temperatures expected to climb to 30C in Chipping Ongar.
By 9am, mercury is set to hit 25C.
A week-long heatwave has been gripping Essex, London and the South East, with no significant rainfall forecast for at least another week before the weather turns cooler and thundery.
It comes after a huge fire broke out at an old Debenhams building in Edinburgh yesterday morning.
The iconic Victorian building was gutted in the blaze, which ripped through the roof and top floors, while the rest of the building was black and charred.
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