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Seahawks, WR Jaxon Smith-Njigba reportedly agree to 4-year, $168.6 million extension

The Seattle Seahawks reportedly agreed to a four-year, $168.6 million extension with wide receiver Jaxon Smith-Njigba, according toESPN's Adam Schefter.Smith-Njigba's new contract will make him the highest-paid wide receiver, with him averaging $42.15 million per year.

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The Seahawks extended Smith-Njigba after exercising his fifth-year option on Friday. The team also picked up the fifth-year option for defensive back Devon Witherspoon. The 24-year-old receiver will now be under contract through the 2031 season.

Smith-Njigba is coming off a breakout season with the Seahawks. Last year, he finished with 119 catches for a league-leading 1,793 receiving yards and 10 touchdowns, all career highs and breakingseveral Seahawks franchise records.

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While most of Smith-Njigba's production happened in the first half of the season, he stepped up when the Seahawks needed him most. Despite the Seahawks relying more on Kenneth Walker and the running game during their Super Bowl run, Smith-Njigba had 10 catches for 153 yards and a touchdown in the Seahawks' 31-27 victory over the Los Angeles Rams in the NFC championship. This earned him the Offensive Player of the Year award and first-team All-Pro honors for the first time in his career.

The Seahawks rewarded Smith-Njigba, who was coming off his third NFL season after the team drafted him in the first round out of Ohio State in 2023. After finishing with 63 catches for 628 yards and four touchdowns during his rookie season, Smith-Njigba has posted two consecutive seasons over 1,000 yards despite playing under three different offensive coordinators. He will play for a new offensive coordinator, Brian Fleury, next season afterKlint Kubiak left to become the Las Vegas Raiders' head coach.

With Kubiak's departure andWalker signing with the Kansas City Chiefs, Smith-Njigba and quarterback Sam Darnold are expected to be the Seahawks' main offensive leaders. The team also re-signed 2022 first-round pickoffensive tackle Charles Cross to a four-year, $104.4M deal in January.

With Smith-Njigba extended, the Seahawks are likely to shift their focus toward re-signing Witherspoon. The 25-year-old cornerback has been a key part of the Seahawks' defense under head coach Mike MacDonald.

Last season, Witherspoon had 72 tackles, 1 interception, 1 forced fumble and was named second-team All-Pro. His breakout game came in the Super Bowl, where he recorded four tackles, a sack and pressured New England Patriots quarterback Drake Maye after blitzing from the slot.

Seahawks, WR Jaxon Smith-Njigba reportedly agree to 4-year, $168.6 million extension

The Seattle Seahawks reportedly agreed to a four-year, $168.6 million extension with wide receiver Jaxon Smith-Njigba, ac...
Jude Law's Ex Cat Cavelli Addresses the Chappell Roan Security Drama Involving Their Daughter

Catherine Harding, who also goes by Cat Cavelli, has made a statement regarding the alleged incident between her daughter and Chappell Roan's security guard.

InStyle Credit: Getty

The Gist

  • In an Instagram video, she claimed that the guard "really overstepped a boundary, because he is quite an [sic] intimidating."

  • This comes after her husband, soccer player, Jorginho Frello, alleged that Roan's security guard approach Cavelli and her daughter at a hotel restaurant.

Cat Cavelli has chimed in on the on-going drama surrounding her 11-year-old daughter with exJude Law, Ada, and Chappell Roan's alleged security. According to Cavelli's husband, soccer player Jorginho (real name Jorge Luiz Frello Filho), Ada and Cavelli were recently staying at the same hotel as Roan in Brazil. After Ada walked past Roan's table and looked at the singer, the soccer played claimed, she and her mother were approached by an "extremely aggressive" security guard who left Ada in tears. Now, Cavelli has given her version of events in a new Instagramvideo.

Chappell Roan at the Grammys in 2026.Credit: Getty

"I wanted to say something because I'm getting so many messages about this now and honestly I didn't realize it would get this crazy but a lot of people asked me, 'What actually happened?' and everything else and I know that Chappell has responded saying that it wasn't her security and that she didn't do it," Cavelli began. "So, 100 percent this security guard was not a security guard of the hotel—that is what I can say. He looks after artists, so I don't know if it was her personal security guard but he was with her. That is all I know. Did she send him to do it? Again, I don't know. Look, I would like to hope not but at the same time, I think that you have a responsibility when you are a celebrity to make sure, I guess, that the people who work with you and act on your behalf are acting on your behalf."

Cavelli was referring to a statement that Roan made on her Instagram Stories: "I didn't even see, I didn't even see a woman and a child like … no one came up to me, no one bothered me, like I was just sitting at breakfast in my hotel," said Roan of the incident. "I think these people were staying at the hotel as well. So, the fact that, like a security guard, who was—I did not ask the security guard to go up and talk to this mother and child, I did not."

Cat Cavelli spoke about what happened with Chappell Roan.Credit: Cat Cavelli/Instagram

Cavelli explained that they had traveled to Brazil to see Roan's show, although they later skipped it. As for her daughter's behavior in the hotel restaurant, she said, "She didn't have her phone, she didn't try to take a picture, she didn't approach her. She literally didn't do anything. She just looked at her."

As for the security guard's behavior, Cavelli said, "For me, I feel like it really overstepped a boundary, because he is quite an intimidating … he is very large. So for him to come over to a table with just a woman and her daughter eating breakfast to kind of berate and scold us and say that he was going to complain and tell me that I should be teaching my daughter to be better, and that she's badly educated, and we should respect people's privacy, and we should not harass people, and all of these other things."

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Cavelli concluded that she was "shocked" by the security guard's behavior and that she hopes "if it wasn't [Roan], that she learns to not allow the people that work for her to treat people like this. That's the end of it."

Cavelli's statement comes after her husband shared a similar account on his Instagram Stories. "During breakfast, the artist walked past their table," he wrote. "My daughter, like any child, recognized her, got excited, and just wanted to make sure it was really her. And the worst part is she didn't even approach her. She simply walked past the singer's table, looked to confirm it was her, smiled, and went back to sit with her mum. She didn't say anything, didn't ask for anything."

He then detailed how a "large security guard" allegedly approached Cavelli and Ada's table and "began speaking in an extremely aggressive manner to both my wife and my daughter, saying that she shouldn't allow my daughter to 'disrespect' or 'harass' other people."

Roan, in addition to claiming she had no direct connection to the security guard, added in her statement: "I do not hate people who are fans of my music. I do not hate children—that is crazy."

Cat Cavelli, Jorginho, and their children.Credit: Cat Cavelli/Instagram

She went on, "I'm sorry to the mother and child that someone was assuming something, that you would do something, and that … if you felt uncomfortable, that makes me really sad. You did not deserve that."

Read the original article onInStyle

Jude Law's Ex Cat Cavelli Addresses the Chappell Roan Security Drama Involving Their Daughter

Catherine Harding, who also goes by Cat Cavelli, has made a statement regarding the alleged incident between her daughter...
Visuals show the damaging aftermath of severe flooding in Hawaii

Footage and photos capture the aftermath ofcatastrophic floodingin Hawaii, deemed the worst in two decades.

USA TODAY

It comes after severe rain and damaging winds that resulted in evacuation orders, more than 200 rescues,power outagesand enough damage that could cost over $1 billion, officials said.

Video shows a Coast Guard officer looking for signs of distress in the murky water in affected neighborhoods. According to HawaiiNewsNow, Honolulu Mayor Rick Blangiardi spoke on thewidespread damageto residents' homes.

"Like everybody and anybody, I'm grateful that so far everybody's alive, but I recognize the fact that a lot of homes have been destroyed," Blangiardi said, per the outlet.

"A lot of people's lives are going to be upended from the standpoint of the challenge of what they're going to have to do going forward, and we're just all going to have to dig in," he continued.

More news:Cuba begins restoring power after second grid collapse in a week

<p style=A flooded neighborhood in Waialua on the north shore of Oahu, Hawaii is seen during a crew flyover with a MH-65 Dolphin helicopter assigned to Coast Guard Air Station Barbers Point in Kapolei, on March 20, 2026. Officials in Hawaii on March 20 ordered some 4,000 people living near an aging dam on the island of Oahu to evacuate the area immediately, following severe rains that have battered the region. The century-old Wahiawa dam, located in the north of Hawaii's third largest island, which is home to the state capital Honolulu, "is at imminent risk of failure," the local emergency management agency warned.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> A washed out road on Oahu, Hawaii is seen on March 21, 2026 filmed by US Army HH-60 Black Hawk crew from the 25th Combat Aviation Brigade. Officials in Hawaii on March 20 ordered some 4,000 people living near an aging dam on the island of Oahu to evacuate the area immediately, following severe rains that have battered the region. The century-old Wahiawa dam, located in the north of Hawaii's third largest island, which is home to the state capital Honolulu, An aerial view of a washed out road on Oahu, Hawaii is seen on March 21, 2026 filmed by US Army HH-60 Black Hawk crew from the 25th Combat Aviation Brigade. Officials in Hawaii on March 20 ordered some 4,000 people living near an aging dam on the island of Oahu to evacuate the area immediately, following severe rains that have battered the region. The century-old Wahiawa dam, located in the north of Hawaii's third largest island, which is home to the state capital Honolulu, A washed out road on Oahu, Hawaii is seen on March 21, 2026 filmed by US Army HH-60 Black Hawk crew from the 25th Combat Aviation Brigade. Officials in Hawaii on March 20 ordered some 4,000 people living near an aging dam on the island of Oahu to evacuate the area immediately, following severe rains that have battered the region. The century-old Wahiawa dam, located in the north of Hawaii's third largest island, which is home to the state capital Honolulu, A flooded neighborhood in Waialua on the north shore of Oahu, Hawaii is seen during a crew flyover with a MH-65 Dolphin helicopter assigned to Coast Guard Air Station Barbers Point in Kapolei, on March 20, 2026. Officials in Hawaii on March 20 ordered some 4,000 people living near an aging dam on the island of Oahu to evacuate the area immediately, following severe rains that have battered the region. The century-old Wahiawa dam, located in the north of Hawaii's third largest island, which is home to the state capital Honolulu, The remains of a house pushes against a bridge in Waialua on northern Oahu. Officials in Hawaii on March 20 ordered some 4,000 people living near an aging dam on the island of Oahu to evacuate the area immediately, following severe rains that have battered the region. The century-old Wahiawa dam, located in the north of Hawaii's third largest island, which is home to the state capital Honolulu, Floodwater surrounds houses in Waialua on northern Oahu. Officials in Hawaii on March 20 ordered some 4,000 people living near an aging dam on the island of Oahu to evacuate the area immediately, following severe rains that have battered the region. The century-old Wahiawa dam, located in the north of Hawaii's third largest island, which is home to the state capital Honolulu, Residents stand on a tractor as they are evacuated in Waialua on northern Oahu. Officials in Hawaii on March 20 ordered some 4,000 people living near an aging dam on the island of Oahu to evacuate the area immediately, following severe rains that have battered the region. The century-old Wahiawa dam, located in the north of Hawaii's third largest island, which is home to the state capital Honolulu, People stand with rescue boards in floodwater near a truck as evacuation efforts take place on the island of Oahu. Officials in Hawaii on March 20 ordered some 4,000 people living near an aging dam on the island of Oahu to evacuate the area immediately, following severe rains that have battered the region. The century-old Wahiawa dam, located in the north of Hawaii's third largest island, which is home to the state capital Honolulu, A person stands on a roof surrounded by floodwater as evacuation efforts take place on the island of Oahu. Officials in Hawaii on March 20 ordered some 4,000 people living near an aging dam on the island of Oahu to evacuate the area immediately, following severe rains that have battered the region. The century-old Wahiawa dam, located in the north of Hawaii's third largest island, which is home to the state capital Honolulu, Residents are rescued as evacuation efforts take place on the island of Oahu. Officials in Hawaii on March 20 ordered some 4,000 people living near an aging dam on the island of Oahu to evacuate the area immediately, following severe rains that have battered the region. The century-old Wahiawa dam, located in the north of Hawaii's third largest island, which is home to the state capital Honolulu, A truck on a road near buildings is surrounded by floodwater as evacuation efforts take place on the island of Oahu. Officials in Hawaii on March 20 ordered some 4,000 people living near an aging dam on the island of Oahu to evacuate the area immediately, following severe rains that have battered the region. The century-old Wahiawa dam, located in the north of Hawaii's third largest island, which is home to the state capital Honolulu, People wearing reflective vests walking in floodwater as evacuation efforts take place on the island of Oahu. Officials in Hawaii on March 20 ordered some 4,000 people living near an aging dam on the island of Oahu to evacuate the area immediately, following severe rains that have battered the region. The century-old Wahiawa dam, located in the north of Hawaii's third largest island, which is home to the state capital Honolulu,

See floodwaters overwhelm communities across Hawaii

A flooded neighborhood in Waialua on the north shore ofOahu, Hawaiiis seen during a crew flyover with a MH-65 Dolphin helicopter assigned to Coast Guard Air Station Barbers Point in Kapolei, on March 20, 2026. Officials in Hawaii on March 20 ordered some 4,000 people living near an aging dam on the island of Oahu to evacuate the area immediately, following severe rains that have battered the region. The century-old Wahiawa dam, located in the north of Hawaii's third largest island, which is home to the state capital Honolulu, "is at imminent risk of failure," the local emergency management agency warned.

Hawaii governor provides residents with an update

A series of low-pressure systems has struck Hawaii in March. They're a winter phenomenon, often calledkona lows or kona storms, for the Hawaiian word "kona" for leeward.

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The winter storms typically impact the leeward side of the islands that are usually sheltered from tradewinds and intense rains, according to Steven Businger, a professor in the meteorology department at the University of Hawaii.

In a statement Sunday night, March 22, Hawaii Gov. Josh Green said that state operations will resume amid recovery efforts. Public schools will also reopen, except for those damaged.

"Throughout this storm, we saw neighbors helping neighbors, communities stepping up, and our emergency teams working tirelessly to keep everyone safe," Green said.

"I want to thank our essential workers and partners for their incredible dedication — and I am deeply grateful to the people of Hawaiʻi for looking out for one another during this challenging time."

Photos show Hawaii flooding aftermath

People stand with rescue boards in floodwater near a truck as evacuation efforts take place on the island of Oahu. Officials in Hawaii on March 20 ordered some 4,000 people living near an aging dam on the island of Oahu to evacuate the area immediately, following severe rains that have battered the region. The century-old Wahiawa dam, located in the north of Hawaii's third largest island, which is home to the state capital Honolulu, "is at imminent risk of failure," the local emergency management agency warned. The remains of a house pushes against a bridge in Waialua on northern Oahu. Officials in Hawaii on March 20 ordered some 4,000 people living near an aging dam on the island of Oahu to evacuate the area immediately, following severe rains that have battered the region. The century-old Wahiawa dam, located in the north of Hawaii's third largest island, which is home to the state capital Honolulu, "is at imminent risk of failure," the local emergency management agency warned. An aerial view of a washed out road on Oahu, Hawaii is seen on March 21, 2026 filmed by US Army HH-60 Black Hawk crew from the 25th Combat Aviation Brigade. Officials in Hawaii on March 20 ordered some 4,000 people living near an aging dam on the island of Oahu to evacuate the area immediately, following severe rains that have battered the region. The century-old Wahiawa dam, located in the north of Hawaii's third largest island, which is home to the state capital Honolulu, "is at imminent risk of failure," the local emergency management agency warned. A washed out road on Oahu, Hawaii is seen on March 21, 2026 filmed by US Army HH-60 Black Hawk crew from the 25th Combat Aviation Brigade. Officials in Hawaii on March 20 ordered some 4,000 people living near an aging dam on the island of Oahu to evacuate the area immediately, following severe rains that have battered the region. The century-old Wahiawa dam, located in the north of Hawaii's third largest island, which is home to the state capital Honolulu, "is at imminent risk of failure," the local emergency management agency warned.

Contributing: Dinah Voyles Pulver ,Jeanine Santucci, USA TODAY

Taylor Ardrey is a news reporter for USA TODAY. You can reach her at tardrey@usatodayco.com.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Hawaii flooding damage and aftermath can be seen in photos, video

Visuals show the damaging aftermath of severe flooding in Hawaii

Footage and photos capture the aftermath ofcatastrophic floodingin Hawaii, deemed the worst in two decades. It ...
Top architectural and historic preservation groups sue Trump over Kennedy Center plans

A consortium of the nation's top architectural and historic preservation groups is targeting President Donald Trump's plans totemporarily close and extensively renovatethe Kennedy Center, filing a new lawsuit Monday that asks a federal judge to indefinitely halt the project.

CNN A person and a dog walk in front of the Kennedy Center in Washington, DC on January 10, 2026. The Washington National Opera announced on January 9 that it would move its performances from the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts which has been its home since 1971. Artists have cancelled performances at Washington's premier performing arts center to protest its renaming to include US President Donald Trump. (Photo by Mandel NGAN / AFP via Getty Images) - Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images

The complaint filed at a federal court in Washington, DC, takes aim at the process, which bypassed approvals from Congress and key commissions and therefore violates historic preservation laws, the groups contend.

It comes just days after the arts center's board of trustees, which is stacked with Trump loyalists,unanimously approved plansfor a two-year closure that will begin in July, marking the latest effort to impose the president's style and cultural tastes in the nation's capital. A judge is already weighing aseparate challengeto Trump's plans by a Democratic congresswoman who serves as an ex-officio member of the board.

The new case was brought by eight groups, including the National Trust for Historic Preservation, the American Institute of Architects, the DC Preservation League, and the American Society of Landscape Architects. They're asking a judge to pause "any further work on the Project" until the government completes a standard review and consultation processes with Congress, the Commission of Fine Arts, the National Capital Planning Commission, and the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation, among other entities, according to a draft of the complaint obtained by CNN.

The groups are represented by a trio of law firms that are already involved in other cases related to Trump's development in Washington: his sprawlingEast Wing ballroomaddition, his attempt topaint the Eisenhower Executive Office Buildingwhite, and his efforts to redevelop theEast Potomac Golf Links.

The Kennedy Center requires significant maintenance, as outlined in a 2021 comprehensive building plan obtained by CNN that estimated more than $250 million was required for projects such as drainage and waterproofing improvements, exterior wall repair, and roof replacement. Congress approved $257 million for the center last year as part of Trump's "Big Beautiful Bill."

Trump announced in February that after an extensive "one-year review," the arts institution would need to close for roughly two years for the renovations, which, he said "will produce a much faster and higher quality result."

He subsequently suggested that the projectcould be dramatic— a demolition effort short of a teardown, but one so severe that it would leave the Washington building's steel "fully exposed."

Portraits of President Donald Trump, first lady Melania Trump, Vice President JD Vance and second lady Usha Vance are seen inside the Hall of Nations at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, DC, in February. - Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post/Getty Images

A source close to the center told CNN at the time that Trump has very specific ideas about what he wants to do to the building, and those ideas — which have not been publicly released — don't align with the complex's current state.

Documents provided to the board of trustees ahead of last week's closure vote did not provide new information on what the renovations would entail that necessitated a full closure of the center, which will have significant impact on staffing, bookings and donors. The documents obtained by CNN included that 2021 review, an eight-page report from 2022 on soffit failure on the building's exterior, and minutes from a March 2 "Buildings and Grounds" subcommittee meeting.

"Major infrastructure needs include HVAC and chilled water systems, electrical infrastructure, structural and concrete deficiencies, service tunnel conditions, waterproofing, roof and steel degradation, and life-safety systems. A full shutdown is the most efficient and cost-effective path to complete the work properly," the meeting minutes said, adding that "approximately 75 to 175 of the Center's roughly 300 employees" would be impacted.

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The plaintiffs are concerned the renovation will be much more extensive than the administration has publicly telegraphed.

"We're concerned that, as with the White House East Wing, the potential scope of planned changes is understated and will result in irreparable loss," said Carol Quillen, president of the National Trust for Historic Preservation, which is also suing Trump over his ballroom project.

Judy Chesser, chair of the Committee of 100 for the Federal City, added: "Without public input and congressional approval as required by law, the Administration's statements that its intentions are only to 'enhance' the Center are not reassuring but are cause for alarm."

'Masterwork of modern architecture'

Plans for a National Cultural Center, a public auditorium in Washington, DC, began during the Eisenhower administration, and President John F. Kennedy was instrumental in fundraising for the space. After Kennedy's assassination, President Lyndon B. Johnson signed a law renaming the project for Kennedy, and it ultimately opened in 1971. The building was designed by architect Edward Durell Stone, who unveiled its plans alongside the Kennedys in a national broadcast on NBC in 1962,according tothe Library of Congress.

The Kennedy Center has been regarded as "a masterwork of modern architecture" and "one of the most significant modern buildings in the Washington, DC, area," said Liz Waytkus, the executive director of Docomomo US, a modern architecture nonprofit.

Its exterior has stayed largely the same since its 1971 opening, until last fall, when Trump oversaw the painting of its gold-bronze columns white.

"It looks so much better. Before they had the steel painted gold, and the gold was very cheap. … We got rid of the gold columns, which was always terrible — they looked cheap and they looked fake," Trump said as he convened the building's board last week.

The next major change came in December, when the board voted to rename it the "Trump Kennedy Center," installingnew signagebearing the president's name just one day later. That move is also beingchallengedin court as part of Democratic Rep. Joyce Beatty's lawsuit.

The president, who waselected chairman of the boardlast year, has also overseen major programmatic and leadership changes to the center, leading to slumping ticket sales and majorartists pulling outof planned appearances, which some saw as driving the desire to temporarily close.

Trump has been unhappy with some of the negative publicity around the Kennedy Center, announcing this month he planned toreplace its president, longtime allyRichard Grenell, with Matt Floca, its vice president of facilities operations.

Correction: This article has been corrected to attribute a quote to Liz Waytkus.

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Top architectural and historic preservation groups sue Trump over Kennedy Center plans

A consortium of the nation's top architectural and historic preservation groups is targeting President Donald Trump...
If Cuba falls, who steps in? Castro dynasty shadows island's future

PresidentDonald Trumpsignaled this week that the United States could take action on Cuba, raising new questions about what would happen if mounting pressure triggers a political shift on the island.

Fox News

The warning comes as Cuba faces one of its most severe internal crises in decades, with a collapsing economy, widespread blackouts and fuel shortages straining the regime's ability to govern. The situation has worsened as shipments of subsidized fuel from Venezuela have declined, cutting off a key energy lifeline.

But as pressure builds from both inside and outside the island, experts say the central question is not who could replace President Miguel Díaz-Canel — it's that there is no clear successor at all.

Trump Touts Us Has 'Tremendous' Amount Of Venezuelan Oil, Vows To 'Take Care' Of Cuba After Iran Focus

"Cuba's leadership vacuumis the result of a system that has spent decades making sure no independent leadership can exist in the first place," Melissa Ford Maldonado, AFPI director of the Western Hemisphere Initiative, told Fox News Digital.

She added that the regime has "controlled communication, restricted the gathering of people, surveilled its own people, killed press freedom, criminalized dissent and ultimately made a powerful opposition force highly unlikely."

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"Who replaces Díaz-Canel is more symbolic than anything else," Sebastián A. Arcos, interim director of the Cuban Research Institute at Florida International University, told Fox News Digital.

Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel

Arcos said Díaz-Canel "has very little power," describing him as a figure installed to project a younger image without altering the system.

"The key person continues to be Raúl Castro," he said, referring to the 94-year-old former Cuban leader.

That dynamic, analysts argue, explains why even a dramatic shift — whether driven by internal collapse or external pressure — may not immediately produce a new leader.

And yet a small group of insiders, technocrats and opposition figures are seen as potential players in any transition — though none represent a clear or unified alternative.

The Sound Of Freedom: Cuba's Regime Is Running Out Of Time — Now The Us Must Act

A relatively unknown figure to most Cubans, Óscar Pérez-Oliva Fraga has quietly risen through the ranks.

The 54-year-old electronics engineer serves as deputy prime minister and minister of foreign trade and foreign investment, and is the great-nephew of Fidel and Raúl Castro.

"He's part of the family," Arcos said, underscoring how even emerging figures remainembedded within the same ruling network.

Arcos said his rapid rise makes him one of the more plausible faces of a controlled transition.

"He might be a good technocrat… based on the standards of the Castro system," he said.

But any such move would likely be cosmetic. "They might take Díaz-Canel down and replace him with someone like Pérez-Oliva… as a gesture… but it doesn't change anything," Arcos said, explaining it would be a technocratic reshuffle designed to ease pressure, not reform the system.

Trump Administration Pressed To Close Cuba Embargo Loophole As Oil Set To Run Out Within Days

Raúl Castro's son, Alejandro Castro Espín, represents the regime's security backbone.

A longtime intelligence official, he is closely tied to Cuba's internal security apparatus and the inner circle of power, according to El País.

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While not publicly positioned as a successor, his influence underscores how power remains concentrated within the Castro family and military-linked elite, which experts say could lead to a hardline continuity scenario rooted in security control.

Manuel Marrero Cruz

Prime Minister Manuel Marrero Cruz remains one of the most visible figures in Cuba's current leadership.

But Arcos noted that Marrero's tenure is deeply tied to the country's economic collapse. "He's been there during this dramatic decline… so he's closely associated with the catastrophe," he said.

Experts cited by El País similarly assess that figures like Marrero are unlikely to represent meaningful change, and that he represents continuity tied to the current crisis, with little credibility for reform.

Cuba's Minister of Public Health Roberto Morales Ojeda

As a senior Communist Party official, Roberto Morales Ojeda represents the regime's institutional core. His power lies within the party apparatus, enforcing loyalty and ideological control.

Like other insiders, he is seen as part of the continuity model rather than a break from it.

Cuba Is Approaching Its Berlin Wall Moment — America Must Help Them Break Through

Rosa Maria Paya, Cuban dissident and activist

While regime insiders dominate succession discussions, opposition figures remain largely outside the island.

Rosa María Payá, a prominent activistand founder of Cuba Decide, has emerged as a leading voice for democratic change from exile.

"The Cuban opposition is organized, we are present both inside Cuba and in the diaspora, and we have a concrete plan," Rosa María Payá told Fox News Digital. "Cubans do not need to be liberated from the outside and handed a government. We are ready to lead. What we need is for the United States and the international community to ensure that when this regime falls, the opposition has a seat at the table."

"The first priority is political prisoners and guaranteeing basic civil liberties," she described their plan. "They must be released immediately, and that has to be a non-negotiable condition of any agreement. The second is dismantling the repressive apparatus… From there, the plan moves to a transitional government, addressing the humanitarian situation and setting a clear timeline toward free and internationally monitored elections."

Arcos spoke positively about Payá role and the broader opposition movement. "They are honorable, respectful, smart people, who want the best for Cuba," he said. "They're not just seeking power… they're doing this based on a sense of duty."

Protesters stand near a fire outside a Communist Party headquarters in Morón, Cuba during overnight unrest.

Still, analysts caution that the system leaves little room for an opposition-led transition in the near term.

"The reality is that much of Cuba's real opposition no longer lives on the island," Ford Maldonado said, noting that repression has pushed leadership into exile.

Despite speculation around individual names, experts say the real issue is structural.

"If Raúl dies tomorrow, that could open the Pandora's box," Arcos said, suggesting internal power struggles could surface.

Even then, he warned, the regime is unlikely to relinquish control easily after decades in power.

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"There's likely no real path forward that runs through the Castros orthe current regime," Ford Maldonado said.

For now, Cuba's succession question remains unresolved, not because there are no names, but because the system itself was designed to ensure there is no true alternative waiting in the wings.

Original article source:If Cuba falls, who steps in? Castro dynasty shadows island's future

If Cuba falls, who steps in? Castro dynasty shadows island’s future

PresidentDonald Trumpsignaled this week that the United States could take action on Cuba, raising new questions about wha...
North Korea says summit with Japan is off unless Tokyo drops 'its anachronistic' ways

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — The powerful sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un said Monday a summit between her brother and Japanese Prime MinisterSanae Takaichiwon't happen if Japan sticks to "its anachronistic" approach.

Associated Press

Kim Yo Jong'sstatement came after Takaichi told reporters last week that she had informed U.S. President Donald Trump during asummit in Washingtonthat she had "a very strong desire" to meet Kim Jong Un.

"But this is not the one that comes true, as wanted or decided by Japan," Kim Yo Jong said. "In order for the top leaders of the two countries to meet each other, Japan should first be determined to break with its anachronistic practice and habit."

Kim Yo Jong, who is also a senior official, didn't explicitly say what Japan's "anachronistic practice and habit" are. However, in 2024, she said in a statement that North Korea's acceptance of areported offer for a meeting by one of Takaichi's predecessorswould depend on Japan tolerating the North'snuclear weapons programand ignoring its pastabductions of Japanesenationals. The meeting eventually didn't occur.

In her latest statement carried by state media on Monday, Kim Yo Jong said: "I don't want to see the prime minister of Japan coming to Pyongyang." But she still described her rejection as "just my personal position," suggesting she was pressuring Japan to make concessions.

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Observers say North Korea likely aims for better ties with Japan to drive a wedge between the United States and its allies. Meanwhile, Tokyo wants to resolve the cases of Japanese citizens abducted by North Korea during the 1970s and 1980s.

After years of denial, North Korea acknowledged in a 2002 summit between Kim Jong Il, the late father of Kim Jong Un, and then-Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi, that its agents hadkidnapped 13 Japanese. North Korea allowed five of them to return to Japan. Japan believes more people might have been abducted and that some could still be alive.

Koizumi made a second visit to North Korea and met Kim Jong Il again in 2004, the last time the two nations held talks.

Chances for a North Korea-Japan summit remain slim as North Korea refuses to return to diplomacy with the U.S. and South Korea since 2019.Trump,who met Kim Jong Un three times between 2018 and 2019, has repeatedly expressed his intentions of resuming dialogue with Kim, but the North Korean leader suggested he could only return to talks if the U.S. drops "its delusional obsession with denuclearization"of North Korea.

Takaichi said that Trump expressed his support for the immediate resolution of the abductees' cases and that he indicated he would "provide cooperation in various ways" concerning meeting Kim Jong Un.

North Korea says summit with Japan is off unless Tokyo drops 'its anachronistic' ways

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — The powerful sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un said Monday a summit between her brother...
5 worst moments of March Madness Round 2, from Tyler Tanner's miss to Kentucky flop

The top-seeded teams dominated the second round of theNCAA Tournament,with the lone double-digit seed advancing to the Sweet 16 being Texas, one of the most iconic brands in college sports.

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Texasbeing a"Cinderella" in 2025-26is fitting for where men's college basketball is as a sport amid the name, image and likeness era. The lone double digit seed to reach the Sweet 16 last season was Arkansas, which is led by one of the greatest coaches ever in John Calipari and was riddled with talent.

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No. 12 seed High Point gave its best shot at breaking that mold on Saturday, March 21, before ultimately falling to No. 4 Arkansas 94-88 in a highly competitive game. No. 11 VCU also had a chance to be the latest mid-major to reach the Sweet 16, but was dominated by No. 3 Illinois 76-55.

Only 16 teams remain, with just one weekend before the Final Four returns to Indianapolis. Here's a look at our five worst moments of the NCAA Tournament's second round in 2026:

5 worst moments of NCAA Tournament second round

Tyler Tanner misses game-winning halfcourt shot

Vanderbilt star Tyler Tannernearly made an all-time shotfor the win against No. 4 Nebraska in the second round, but the ball rimmed out after multiple bounces off the backboard and rim.

Tanner was already having a career performance, as he finished with 27 points and four assists with four steals. With 2.2 seconds he caught the inbounds pass on the opposite side of the court beforeheaving it from behind halfcourt,which barely missed and resulted in Vanderbilt's entire bench falling to their knees in disappointment.

Nebraska's Braden Frager hit a game-winning driving layup to hand his school its second-ever NCAA Tournament win and first Sweet 16 appearance. Unfortunately, one of Vanderbilt or Nebraska was headed home after one of the best second-round games in recent memory.

"We were in an inch away from being in the Sweet 16," Vandy coach Mark Byington said. "It's going to take a while for us to get over."

Florida goes home early

Florida was shocked by No. 9 seed Iowain the second round, falling 73-72 after Alvaro Folgueiras hit a game-winning 3-pointer with less than five seconds remaining. It's a brutal finish to the season for the Gators, who played their way back onto the 1-seed line after winning 16 of their last 17 regular-season games.

Florida looked like a top national championship contender, especially with its impressive frontcourt of Alex Condon, Thomas Haugh and Rueben Chinyelu. But sometimes March Madness strikes, and unfortunately it did for Florida before the first weekend came to a close.

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Iowa ended the game on a 7-3 run, which was ultimately the difference in the back-and-forth, highly competitive game.

Kentucky makes the bad kind of history

While Kentucky survived a scare against Santa Clara in the first round, it took a wild shot from Otega Oweh at the buzzer to force overtime. The Wildcats kept within distance of Iowa State in the first half of their game on March 22, before the Cyclones pulled away for a dominant 82-63 win.

Kentucky played sloppy basketballagainst Iowa State, setting a program record for most turnovers (20) in an NCAA Tournament game. The 19-point loss was also Kentucky's largest loss in a March Madness game since 1972.

Second-year coach Mark Pope is facing a pivotal offseason, especially with Oweh exhausting his eligibility.

David Punch's nose

TCU star David Punch took ashot to the face from Duke's Cameron Boozerlate in the second half of a close game on Saturday, March 21, and wasn't the same after returning to the game. Boozer was called for a Flagrant 1 on the play, although Punch was unable to shoot the free-throws as he returned to the bench with blood flowing down his face.

Punch Jr. briefly went to the locker room, missing the remainder of the first half before returning in the final 20 minutes of the game.

TCU trailed 38-34 at halftime, before falling apart and losing 81-58 to Duke to end its season. And despite coming off a 16-point, 13-rebound performance against Ohio State in the first round, he was held to four points on 1-of-10 shooting against the Blue Devils.

High Point's season comes to an end

High Point's program-best season came to an end against No. 4 Arkansas, as it fell 94-88 after winning its first-ever NCAA Tournament game in the first round. The Panthers dominated the regular season, finishing the regular season 30-4 with a Big South Conference Tournament win.

Chase Johnston became the latest March Madness legend after helping High Point to a win over Wisconsin, and Rob Martin channeled his inner-Kemba Walker with 30 points and five assists in High Point's loss to Arkansas.

High Point was putting on for mid-major programs in the NCAA Tournament and hopes to continue its momentum fresh off a respect-earning trip.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:March Madness worst moments of NCAA Round 2, including Tyler Tanner

5 worst moments of March Madness Round 2, from Tyler Tanner's miss to Kentucky flop

The top-seeded teams dominated the second round of theNCAA Tournament,with the lone double-digit seed advancing to the...

 

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