Cavaliers acquire Rodney Hood, George Hill in 3-team trade

1:56 PM ET

The Cleveland Cavaliers have acquired Rodney Hood and George Hill in a three-way deal with the Utah Jazz and Sacramento Kings, league sources told ESPN on Thursday.

The Cavaliers will send Iman Shumpert and a 2020 second-round pick via the Miami Heat to the Kings in the deal.

Sacramento acquires Joe Johnson from Utah, who gets Jae Crowder and Derrick Rose from Cleveland, sources said.

NBA trade deadline: Latest news, rumors and possible deals

The Cavaliers have been busy ahead of the 3 p.m. ET deadline. Get the latest intel from around the league right here.

  • Sources: Cavs deal Thomas for Clarkson, Nance

    The Cavaliers are trading Isaiah Thomas, Channing Frye and a first-round pick to the Lakers for Jordan Clarkson and Larry Nance Jr.

  • Sources: Cavaliers trade Wade back to Heat

    The Cavaliers have traded Dwyane Wade back to Miami for a second-round pick on Thursday.

  • it was part of a flurry of deals prior to Thursday’s 3 p.m. ET trade deadline by the Cavaliers, who also traded Isaiah Thomas and Channing Frye to the Lakers for Jordan Clarkson and Larry Nance Jr.

    Cleveland also shipped Dwyane Wade to the Miami Heat, sources told ESPN.

    Hill, whose ability to guard both positions in the backcourt could help the struggling Cavaliers’ defense, had been unhappy with his role with the Kings, whom he signed with last summer after turning down a more lucrative extension offer with the Jazz.

    The 31-year-old point guard is averaging 10.3 points, 2.7 rebounds and 2.8 assists this season.

    Hill’s contract calls for $19 million guaranteed in the 2018-19 season, league sources said. Only $1 million of the $18 million on his 2019-20 contract is guaranteed.

    By shedding his contract, Sacramento now joins a small group of teams with cap space for the summer of 2018. The Kings now have $24 million in room that could increase to $40 million if Shumpert and Garrett Temple opt-out of their contract.

    Shumpert has an $11 million option and Temple has an $8 million option for next season.

    The Kings also are acquiring Bruno Caboclo from the Toronto Raptors in exchange for Malachi Richardson, league sources told Yahoo! Sports.

    The oft-injured Hood, 25, was averaging a career-high 16.8 points and 2.8 rebounds in his fourth season with the Jazz. He missed seven games earlier this season with a sore left ankle.

    He was fined $35,000 last month for slapping a cellphone out of a fan’s hand while exiting the court in Washington following his second technical foul.

    Rose, the 2009 Rookie of the Year and 2011 MVP while with the Bulls, had struggled to find his way in his only season with the Cavaliers. The 29-year-old has averaged 9.8 points and 1.6 points this season while appearing in just 16 games as he battled injuries and inconsistency.

    Crowder, who joined the Cavs as part of the Thomas deal, shot just 41.8 percent from the field and 32.8 percent from beyond the 3-point arc while averaging 8.6 points this season. With the Jazz, the 27-year-old could come off the bench as the No. 1 option at forward behind Derrick Favors and Joe Ingles.

    Johnson had played a minor role off the bench for the Jazz this season, averaging 7.3 points and 3.3 rebounds per game. The 36-year-old guard is headed to the Kings, who have already stated that they were going to focus on developing their younger talent moving forward.

    Shumpert, who was averaging just 4.4 points and 2.9 rebounds for the Cavs this season, missed Wednesday’s game as he continues to deal with plantar fasciitis in his left foot. He missed 25 games earlier this season after having arthroscopic surgery to correct fluid buildup his left knee.

    ESPN’s Bobby Marks contributed to this report.

    Give me a toy: Florida boy gets trapped in vending machine

    TITUSVILLE, Fla. (AP) – When a young Florida boy wanted a stuffed toy, he crawled inside a claw-style vending machine in the play area of a restaurant to fetch one. And, he got stuck inside the glass-encased structure.

    Thankfully, off-duty firefighter Jeremy House was also having dinner at the Beef O’Brady’s restaurant in Titusville, on Florida’s Atlantic coast. He yelled for someone to call 911 and his colleagues from a nearby fire station joined him in rescuing the boy named Mason.

    “He went in, but obviously he couldn’t come back out the same way,” Battalion Chief Gregory Sutton told The Associated Press.

    Mason sat atop the stuffed toys while firefighters took just 5 minutes to get him out.

    Sutton says the boy was embarrassed, but wasn’t in distress. And the machine sustained minimal damage.

    Trump’s National Prayer Breakfast speech infused with God-and-country references

    President Trump delivered a God-and-country-infused speech Thursday at the National Prayer Breakfast, appealing to Americans who believe in Christian nationalism — the belief that God has a uniquely Christian purpose for the United States.

    “We can all be heroes to everybody, and they can be heroes to us,” Trump said, “as long as we open our hearts to God’s grace, America will be free, the land of the free, the home of the brave and the light to all nations.”

    The National Prayer Breakfast is a massive ecumenical gathering put on annually by a group of Christians who want to focus on a shared admiration of Jesus. Every president since Dwight D. Eisenhower has attended the event, which draws several thousand people from around the world, especially evangelicals, who have proved strong supporters of the Trump administration.

    At last year’s breakfast, Trump vowed to end the Johnson Amendment, a provision in the tax code that prevents nonprofit organizations such as churches from endorsing or opposing political candidates. It would take an act of Congress to repeal the measure, but attempts by Republican leaders to do so last year were unsuccessful.

    This year Trump made no policy promises at the Washington Hilton gathering. His speech was also much more scripted than last year’s, in which he joked about how the ratings of Trump’s former reality TV show, “The Apprentice,” had fallen with former California governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, a Trump critic, as host.

    This speech followed the line of previous presidents who highlight faith as a part of America’s history and tradition, but Trump spent the bulk of his speech telling stories of Americans who sacrificed for others.

    “America is a nation of believers, and together we are strengthened by the power of prayer,” Trump said.

    Trump noted that God is mentioned four times by the Founding Fathers in the Declaration of Independence. Our currency declares “In God We Trust,” he pointed out, and our Pledge of Allegiance states, “We are one nation, under God.”

    The words “praise be to God” are etched on top of the Washington Monument, Trump noted, “and those same words are etched in the hearts of people.”

    “Our rights are not given to us by men, our rights are given to us from our creator,” he said. “No matter what, no earthly force can take those rights away.”

    In some ways, Trump’s speech fit the types of prayer breakfast speeches given by presidents in the past, said John Fea, a professor of history at Messiah College. Trump spoke about the role America has to play to create a more just world, an idea President Barack Obama would have promoted, as well.

    “There are Christians both on the left and the right who see America as a force for good,” Fea said.

    However, Trump went a bit further, he said, where American exceptionalism was implied. “This is something that gets the Christian right … very excited,” Fea said.

    “We see the Lord’s grace,” Trump said, through acts of generosity and service from teachers, police and others who do good deeds. When Americans are able to live by their convictions to speak openly of faith, Trump said, “our nation can achieve anything at all.”

    Trump’s message focused on the inspiring stories of people who have gone through struggle but held onto hope and faith. Trump highlighted the Islamic State’s torture of Christians, Jews, religious minorities and “countless Muslims.” He also noted the story of North Korean defector Ji Seong-ho who was badly injured and recently attended Trump’s State of the Union address. Trump said Ji would recite the Lord’s Prayer to keep from losing hope.

    “Let us resolve to find the best within ourselves,” Trump said.

    He hinted at a desire to “worship without fear,”  a nod to religious freedom concerns, an issue that resonates with many evangelicals.

    In recent years, many evangelical leaders have shifted away from talk of a coalescing into a “moral majority” or taking back a Christian nation into a resigned acknowledgment of the loss of battles like same-sex marriage, according to Seth Dowland, an associate professor of religion at Pacific Lutheran University. “The battleground has shifted to ‘We have to defend religious freedom,’ which they mean: a particular set of evangelical priorities,” Dowland said. Trump has seized on these concerns when he has advocated for things like a repeal of the Johnson Amendment.

    “It ends up looking more like a special pleading for a particular type of Christianity or nationalism,” Dowland said. “You don’t hear the same tones of universal religious freedom from previous presidents.”

    While Trump says things many evangelicals want to hear, he doesn’t weave in the kind of insider evangelical language George W. Bush was skilled at including in his speeches as president, Dowland said. Trump makes no secret of his lack of religiosity and rarely attends church, he notes.

    “He pulls out religious messages when they seem advantageous to him, but it doesn’t strike me as a core feature of his rhetoric,” Dowland said. “Trump’s understanding of what Christians want is transactional, like a lot of things for him. This is what he thinks they want from him.”

    The keynote speaker Thursday was Rep. Steve Scalise (R-La.), the House majority whip who was shot in the hip last year in Alexandria, Va., during a practice for Congress’s annual charity baseball game. Scalise, who went through several surgeries and returned to Congress 15 weeks later, has said that the shooting gave him a “renewed faith.”

    “It’s only strengthened my faith in God, and it’s really crystallized what shows up as the goodness in people,” he said in his first address to Congress after he returned in September. Scalise, who is Catholic, said that when he was lying on the field, the first thing he did was pray.

    Several media reports earlier this week falsely suggested that Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Carson Wentz, who has spoken about how faith helped him cope with a knee injury that cut his National Football League season short, was supposed to speak in place of Vice President Pence, who headed to Asia this week for the Olympic Games.

    The National Prayer Breakfast is put on by the Fellowship Foundation, which was long run by Doug Coe, who died last year. Now the event is organized by a team of seven people who nominate about five potential speakers to congressional bipartisan co-chairmen who usually select the featured speaker, said Bob Hunter, a member of the foundation who has long helped with the breakfast.

    The speeches are not supposed to be political, Hunter said ahead of the breakfast, but some speakers, including presidents, have made them so in the past.

    “Each president presents a different set of problems,” Hunter said.

    Some of the keynote addresses have drawn attention for politicizing the event. The most famous example, Hunter suggested, was when Mother Teresa, a nun and missionary in India, spoke forcefully against abortion in front of then-President Bill Clinton and first lady Hillary Clinton, who support abortion rights. A speech that upset a lot of people, he noted, was from now-Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Ben Carson, who openly criticized Obama in front of him.

    “People make speeches that are inappropriate. They can get political a little bit, but that always goes against what they’re asked to do,” Hunter said. “It’s very clear they are not to make it political.”

    The committee that handles the prayer breakfast is made up of Protestants and Catholics, and members make a point of inviting people from different faiths to the event.

    Past keynote speakers have included musician Bono; television producer Mark Burnett and his wife, actress Roma Downey; and former British prime minister Tony Blair. Last year, the keynote speaker was Barry Black, the first African American and the first Seventh-day Adventist chaplain of the Senate.

    This article has been updated since it was published with the contents of Trump’s speech and with quotes from historians. 

    Julie Zauzmer contributed to this report.

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    House leaders scramble to win support for budget deal ahead of midnight deadline

    Congressional leaders worked Thursday to muscle through a sweeping two-year bipartisan budget deal that would add more than a half-trillion dollars in federal spending as the clock ticked toward a midnight shutdown deadline.

    The Senate is expected to start voting on the legislation Thursday afternoon, but the tougher task will be getting it through the House. Both conservative Republicans and liberal Democrats were balking after the deal was unveiled Wednesday — the former angry about the spending jolt, the latter fuming about the lack of protections for young immigrants at risk for deportation under the Trump administration.

    House Speaker Paul D. Ryan (R-Wis.) expressed confidence Thursday that the bill, which delivers a military funding boost sought by the GOP alongside increases in domestic spending favored by Democrats, would pass.

    “There is widespread agreement in both parties that we have cut the military too much, that our service members are suffering as a result, and that we need to do better,” he said.

    The bill’s impact goes well beyond the Pentagon, however — renewing several large health-care programs, suspending the national debt limit for a year, and extending billions of dollars of expiring business tax breaks. The cost of those provisions exceeds $560 billion, though lawmakers included some revenue-raising offsets, such as increases in customs fees and a sell-off from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve.

    In comparison, the 2009 fiscal stimulus bill passed at the bottom of a global recession under President Barack Obama was estimated to cost $787 billion over 10 years. Republicans uniformly opposed that measure in their clamor for fiscal restraint in the face of growing deficits _ demands largely drowned out now in the Trump era.

    This spending bill, proposed amid an economic boom, could be the last major piece of legislation passed before November’s midterm elections, barring a breakthrough on a thorny immigration debate.

    Ryan, who wrote several deficit-cutting Republican budgets before becoming speaker, sought to tamp down fears that the bill could further explode the nation’s fiscal imbalance by amping up spending without spelling out offsetting cuts or revenue-raisers.

    Discretionary spending — the funding Congress doles out on a year-to-year basis for the Pentagon as well as for programs such as transportation, medical research and national parks — is not the main driver of the national debt, he argued, but rather “entitlement” programs such as Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid, which are left largely untouched by the pending deal.

    “The military is not the reason we’ve got fiscal problems, it is entitlements,” he said, adding, “You get entitlement reform, you can solve a lot of these problems.”

    Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) and Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) walk to the Senate floor in the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday. (Shawn Thew/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock)

    But the massive spending bill, coming less than two months after Republicans pushed through a tax cut that stands to slash federal revenue by a trillion dollars or more over a decade, has given plenty of Republicans heartburn.

    “We did a great thing with the tax cut bill, and it will ultimately make revenue go up dramatically, but we’re dramatically increasing spending before we even get the benefits of the tax cuts, so it’s a bit depressing, actually,” said Rep. Louie Gohmert (R-Tex.), a member of the hard-right House Freedom Caucus, which took an official position against the bill Wednesday.

    Ryan suggested in a radio interview Thursday that he would be able to deliver a majority of Republicans — about 120 votes — meaning about half of the 193 Democrats might be necessary to pass the deal. That could be a tough sell among House Democrats, who are livid that their demands for protections for “dreamers” — immigrants brought to the United States as children now living in the country illegally — were not made part of the deal.

    House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) delivered a record-breaking eight-hour speech on the House floor Wednesday centered on the immigration issue, demanding assurances that immigration legislation would be debated in the House before the fiscal deal was agreed to.

    Ryan on Thursday delivered a new version of his previous pledges, saying “we are committed to getting this done” — but not without conditions. “We will bring a solution to the floor, one the president will sign,” he said.

    Democratic leaders have sharply rejected the outlines of an immigration bill put forth by the White House, leaving the prospects for a bill deeply unsettled.

    While Pelosi’s speech was a potent gesture of support for the dreamers, she did not appear willing to whip her caucus against the budget deal. She was among the top leaders who negotiated the accord, and she has spoken positively about its domestic spending increases and other provisions.

    Pelosi reiterated Thursday that she would personally vote against the bill but would not publicly urge her colleagues to vote against it.

    “I’m just telling people why I’m voting the way I’m voting,” she told reporters, adding, “I fought very hard for many of the things that are in there, and I think that it’s a good bill.”

    She is under fierce pressure from the liberal core of her caucus, who fear that Democrats are on the cusp of letting their biggest point of leverage slip away.

    “I’m thankful to her for giving the speech, I applaud her for giving the speech,” Rep. Luis V. Gutiérrez (D-Ill.), a leader on immigration policy, said of Pelosi on Wednesday. “Now, tomorrow, I want her to use the same kind of tenacity and muscle and perseverance to stop the Democrats from folding.”

    But there were indications that many House Democrats were unwilling to stand in the way of other party priorities to secure an immigration deal. Rep. Marcia L. Fudge (D-Ohio) predicted the budget agreement would pass “overwhelmingly” on a bipartisan vote.

    “I can’t go home to tell health centers that have already been handing out pink slips I didn’t vote for this, and they gave you money for a permanent fix to your problem,” she said. “I can’t go home and say to union people: Look, they’re going to try to take care of your pension problem, but I didn’t vote for it. It just doesn’t make any sense.”

    Democrats in the Senate have been similarly timid about using the fiscal deadline to push for action on immigration. After a brief three-day shutdown centered on the immigration issue last month, most voted to reopen the government after winning a pledge to debate the issue in the Senate.

    Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) and Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) announced the fiscal agreement Wednesday.

    Under the deal, existing spending limits would be raised by a combined $296 billion through 2019. Those caps were put in place in 2011 after a fiscal showdown between Obama and GOP congressional leaders, who demanded spending austerity.

    Bipartisan deals raised the caps in 2013 and 2015, and the new agreement is the first to be struck under unified Republican control of the White House and both chambers of Congress.

    The agreement includes an additional $160 billion in uncapped funding for overseas military and State Department operations, and about $90 billion more would be spent on disaster aid for victims of recent hurricanes and wildfires. Tax provisions would add another $17 billion to the cost of the bill.

    Some of the funding is reserved for programs favored by lawmakers of both parties: research conducted by the National Institutes of Health, for instance, as well as transportation and water infrastructure. Also included are extensions of tax breaks that could add billions of dollars more to the cost of the bill.

    The bill also includes a provision suspending the federal debt limit until March 1 of next year — after November’s midterm elections.

    The Children’s Health Insurance Program would be extended through 2028, and the federal fund for community health centers would see a two-year extension. The bill also abolishes the Independent Payment Advisory Board, a body established in the 2010 Affordable Care Act with the power to reduce the payments Medicare makes to health providers.

    The legislation setting out the deal is expected to contain yet another deadline, March 23, giving congressional appropriators time to negotiate the fine details of funding agencies for the remainder of 2018.

    Trump gave the accord a strong endorsement in a Wednesday tweet, saying it would give Defense Secretary Jim Mattis “what he needs to keep America Great” and calling on lawmakers of both parties to “support our troops and support this Bill!”

    But influential conservative organizations such as the Heritage Foundation and the Club for Growth railed against the spending boost Wednesday. Leaders of advocacy groups funded by brothers Charles and David Koch said in a statement that the deal was “a betrayal of American taxpayers and a display of the absolute unwillingness of members of Congress to adhere to any sort of responsible budgeting behavior.”

    Many Republican lawmakers did not see their vote in those terms. Rep. Charlie Dent (R-Pa.), who chairs an appropriations subcommittee and pushed for months for a broad spending accord, said the deal would get lawmakers off a “treadmill” of short-term funding patches.

    “Frankly, it will free up time for us to deal with other issues,” he said. “It provides for stability, certainty, predictability, and that’s not a small thing.”

    Rep. Bill Flores (R-Tex.), a past chairman of the Republican Study Committee, a conservative bloc that routinely pushed for spending cuts, said Wednesday that he was inclined to vote for the deal. The benefit of the Pentagon funding boost, he said, outweighed the risk of increasing nondefense spending

    “A lot of us as conservatives, we’re having to go through this internal debate,” he said. “I think once everybody just kind of sits down rationally and says, ‘What happens if I vote yes?’ You know, that’s a better path for us to be on than if I vote no and then all of a sudden Nancy Pelosi is telling Paul Ryan what she needs. So I think it’s pretty simple.”

    Ed O’Keefe contributed to this report.

    Charleston, SC Black Lives Matter Leader Dies After Being Shot in Louisiana

    Muhiyidin D’Baha speaks during a meeting with North Charleston, S.C., City Council on April 9, 2015, about the killing of Walter Scott by a North Charleston police officer. (Chuck Burton/AP Images)

    A Charleston, S.C., Black Lives Matter leader—who made headlines last year after being seen jumping over yellow police tape in an attempt to snatch a Confederate flag—has died after being shot in New Orleans.

    Muhiyidin d’Baha, whose legal name was Muhiyidin Moye, died Tuesday morning, the New Orleans Police Department confirmed, according to Live5News.

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    Police say that the 32-year-old activist sustained a gunshot wound to the thigh and was rushed to a hospital where he later died of his wounds.

    “The incident is the subject of an active and ongoing investigation,” officials said.

    Camille Weaver, a niece, said that police said that d’Baha was shot in the leg while riding his bike through the city around 1 a.m. Weaver said that he tried to ride five more blocks after the shooting.

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    A vigil celebrating the activist was held at North Charleston City Hall, where family and friends spoke out about the sudden loss.

    “We are lost right now,” d’Baha’s sister Kimberli Duncan said. “But we are going to find our way.

    “This was his passion; he did it from the heart. He was loving, he was funny, he was smart, but it bothered him, the injustice just bothered him, and it never rested well with him,” Duncan added, speaking of her brother’s activism. “He took it on as a personal battle.”

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    The family of Walter Scott, the unarmed black man who was shot in the back while running away from now-former South Carolina Police Officer Michael Slager, remembered d’Baha as someone who was continually fighting for justice on their behalf.

    Slager was ultimately sentenced to 20 years in prison.

    “I thank God for placing him here to be the soldier that he is, that he was,” Anthony Scott, Walter Scott’s brother, told Live5News.

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    Live5News reports that New Orleans police have yet to identify a suspect.

    D’Baha caught national attention back in February 2017 after he jumped past police yellow tape and attempted to drag a Confederate flag away from members of the South Carolina Secessionist Party in an incident that was caught on a live broadcast and quickly circulated across social media.

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    The morons waving the losing flag were protesting a speech given by Bree Newsome, who of course is known for climbing up a flagpole on the grounds of the South Carolina Statehouse and removing the Confederate flag from its place on the grounds mere days after white supremacist murderer Dylann Roof killed nine black worshippers in 2015.

    A GoFundMe has been set up to help d’Baha’s family with funeral expenses. In 17 hours, more than 459 people have contributed, more than doubling the $7,500 goal.

    Trump: Newly released FBI texts are ‘bombshells’

    President TrumpDonald John TrumpTillerson: Russia already looking to interfere in 2018 midterms Dems pick up deep-red legislative seat in Missouri Speier on Trump’s desire for military parade: ‘We have a Napoleon in the making’ MORE on Wednesday highlighted newly released texts from FBI agents who suggested President Obama wanted updates on the Hillary ClintonHillary Diane Rodham ClintonOvernight Cybersecurity: Tillerson proposes new cyber bureau at State | Senate bill would clarify cross-border data rules | Uber exec says ‘no justification’ for covering up breach Grassley to Sessions: Policy for employees does not comply with the law ‘Homeland’ in the Trump era tackles the ‘deep state’ MORE email investigation.

    “NEW FBI TEXTS ARE BOMBSHELLS!” Trump tweeted.

    Fox News reported that texts between FBI agent Peter Strzok and FBI attorney Lisa Page included an exchange about preparing talking points on the Clinton email probe for then-FBI Director James ComeyJames Brien ComeyGrassley to Sessions: Policy for employees does not comply with the law Protecting the special counsel is an American duty Bannon likely to meet next week with Mueller: report MORE to give to Obama, who “wants to know everything we’re doing.”

    The pair also worked on special counsel Robert MuellerRobert Swan MuellerSasse: US should applaud choice of Mueller to lead Russia probe MORE‘s team investigating Russia’s interference in the 2016 election, and whether Trump’s campaign was involved.

    Some Republicans argue the new exchange is evidence that Obama was more involved in the Clinton email probe than previously known.

    But the texts were sent in September, roughly two months after Comey announced he would not recommend criminal charges against Clinton for using a personal email server as secretary of State.

    Nevertheless, Trump and his GOP allies have seized on Strzok and Page’s texts as proof that the Russia investigation is politically motivated.

    The two criticized Trump in a series of previously released text messages during the 2016 campaign, but they were also critical of other politicians.

    Democrats accuse Trump of using the texts to undermine special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation, which is looking into whether the president obstructed justice and whether any ties exist between Moscow and his campaign.

    Trump latest tweet came 10 minutes after his daily intelligence briefing was set to begin, suggesting the president was running behind schedule.

    First baby with Down syndrome wins Gerber baby contest

    This year’s Gerber baby is a smiley 18-month-old boy from Georgia — and the first child with Down syndrome to win the contest, the company announced Wednesday.

    A post shared by @gerber on Feb 7, 2018 at 5:53am PST

    “I’m very excited to see how the world reacts,” mom Cortney Warren said on the “Today” show as she held winning son Lucas.

    Lucas, who sported a blue button-down and mini bowtie, loves to wave and play the piano, his dad, Jason, said.

    The Warrens entered the Gerber baby photo contest on a whim, they said, and were shocked when they found out their boy had been chosen from more than 140,000 babies to be the official 2018 Gerber Spokesbaby.

    Since 1928, the charcoal drawing of the original Gerber baby, Ann Turner Cook, has been recognized worldwide. In 2011, the company relaunched the contest to find their next Gerber baby, Today reported.

    The big prize comes with $50,000, which the Warrens say they will put toward Lucas’s education.

    “He’s always been such a good baby. I’ve never met anyone who’s come into contact with Lucas and not smiled,” Cortney said.

    “He’s got that twinkle in his eye, people love it. They always comment on that smile,” she added.

    Bill Partyka, CEO and president of Gerber, said Lucas’s happy expression captured the hearts of his team.

    “Every year we choose a baby who best exemplifies Gerber’s longstanding heritage of recognizing that every baby is a Gerber baby,” he told Today parenting. “This year, Lucas is the perfect fit.”

    Lucas will also be featured on Gerber’s social-media pages.

    Why Trump’s military parade won’t be ‘like the one in France’

    BERLIN — Russian President Vladimir Putin has them. So does North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and French President Emmanuel Macron.

    Now, President Trump wants his own military parade in Washington, with soldiers marching and tanks rolling down the boulevards. Officials told The Washington Post on Tuesday that they have begun planning a grand military parade later this year showcasing the might of America’s armed forces.

    “The marching orders were: I want a parade like the one in France,” a military official who spoke on the condition of anonymity told The Post, which noted that shows of military strength are not typical in the United States. The last of its kind took place in June 1991, when 8,800 U.S. troops and the weapons that helped the United States win the Persian Gulf War against Saddam Hussein were celebrated in Washington.

    But in Europe, defense scholars immediately raised questions about whether Trump’s desired military parade would really fall into the same category as France’s Bastille Day parade, which is held annually and is deeply rooted in the country’s history and values. Although Trump’s parade, like the French one, would feature the nation’s military might, it might send a very different message, some European defense analysts and columnists said.


    Republican Guards marched at the annual Bastille Day military parade on the Champs-Elysees avenue in Paris last year. (Jean-Sebastien Evrard/AFP/Getty Images)

    “For the record: France’s Bastille Day military parade is an old tradition, going back to 1880. Its longevity and popularity have many historical reasons. Probably different from Trump’s motivations,” wrote Sylvie Kauffmann, an editorial director and columnist with the French newspaper Le Monde and a contributing writer to the New York Times, summarizing a widely shared sentiment in Europe on Wednesday.

    Whereas France’s Bastille Day — founded to celebrate the turning point of the French Revolution — has been associated with an annual military parade for more than a century, efforts to combine a similarly patriotic holiday with a military parade in Washington might strike many foreign observers as odd timing. Why now?

    To White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders, the answer appeared clear Tuesday evening: “President Trump is incredibly supportive of America’s great service members who risk their lives every day to keep our country safe,” Sanders said. “He has asked the Department of Defense to explore a celebration at which all Americans can show their appreciation.”


    U.S. troops marched during the annual Bastille Day military parade on the Champs-Elysees in Paris last year. (Alain Jocard/AFP/Getty Images)

    But a military parade in Washington would likely be perceived as a more timely political message from a single individual to the nation and, indeed, to the world, along the lines of: Look at how strong we (and I) are.

    “People are going to compare it more with Kim Jong Un than with the Champs-Elysees,” said Nicholas Dungan, a France-based senior fellow with the Atlantic Council. “If (a parade is organized due to a) personal desire of Trump, because he sat at the Champs-Elysees, then it becomes political. In France, the parade isn’t political, though. It’s part of this nation.”

    France’s Bastille Day parade, which has persisted through two world wars and a Nazi occupation, has also been used to emphasize a very different message, which could be summarized as: We are only strong together. What Trump may have missed while watching the Paris parade last July was that its organizers have frequently invited foreign troops — from Morocco and India to the United States, Britain and Germany — to march alongside French soldiers or to even lead the procession. Instead of the French flag, French soldiers sometimes carry the European Union flag, even though the political bloc does not have its own army.

    “Especially the decision to invite German troops to the Champs-Elysees involved a lot of symbolism,” said Thomas Gomart, director of the French Institute of International Relations. “In the collective French memory, German troops last marched on the Champs-Elysees in June 1940,” said Gomart, referring to the date when the Nazis occupied Paris. Rather than sending a message of aggression, French leaders have used their annual parade to also set a pacifist agenda.


    French President Emmanuel Macron, right, and President Trump attend the traditional Bastille Day military parade in 2017. (Michel Euler/AP)

    On a continent where Trump has never had many supporters, defense analysts worried on Wednesday whether the president’s possible misunderstanding of military traditions was a sign of a broader problem. “At what point does healthy appreciation for the military turn into unhealthy obsession?” asked German defense expert Marcel Dirsus. Brian Klaas, a fellow at the London School of Economics, referred to Trump’s plan as a “strongman military parade” and  an addition to “Trump’s wannabe despot checklist.”

    Those concerns echoed similar European responses that have emerged throughout Trump’s first year in office. When Trump warned North Korea of “fire and fury” last summer, analysts wondered whether he was aware of the catastrophe that would result from an attack with  nuclear weapons.

    After Trump emphasized the size of his “nuclear button” in January, observers from the United States and elsewhere criticized the remarks as “infantile” and ill-advised.

    “Trump plays with the subject so carelessly and recklessly as if it were some kind of video game,” Aaron David Miller, a fellow at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars who has advised several secretaries of state, said on Twitter. “My head’s exploding.”

    The way Trump discusses nuclear weapons echoes a pattern observed among military officials in the past, researchers have noted. They were referring to a 1985 study by Carol Cohn, who analyzed military remarks that compared nuclear war with “an act of boyish mischief.”

    Cohn said that those kinds of remarks were an expression of a “competition for manhood” and “a way of minimizing the seriousness of militarist endeavors, of denying their deadly consequences.” She concluded that they posed a “tremendous danger” in real life.

    Size appears to have mattered in Trump’s desire to organize a military parade in Washington, too.

    “It was one of the greatest parades I’ve ever seen,” Trump told reporters last year, referring to the Bastille Day celebrations. “It was two hours on the button, and it was military might, and I think a tremendous thing for France and for the spirit of France.”

    He added: “We’re going to have to try to top it.”

    French gendarmerie and police motorcyclists ride in formation down the Avenue des Champs-Elysees during the traditional Bastille Day military parade in Paris. (Reuters)

    James McAuley in Paris contributed to this report.

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