
-
SFWJ / Medcana Announces Strategic Expansion Into Australia With Acquisition of Cannabis Import and Distribution Licenses
-
F1 success is 'like cooking' - Ferrari head chef Vasseur
-
Cycling mulls slowing bikes to make road racing safer
-
Macron invites foreign researchers to 'choose France'
-
Klopp 'happy' in new job despite Real Madrid rumours: agent
-
Alcaraz into Barcelona semis as defending champion Ruud exits
-
Vance meets Italy's Meloni before Easter at the Vatican
-
Evenepoel returns with victory in Brabantse Pijl
-
Maresca confident he will survive Chelsea slump
-
Mob beats to death man from persecuted Pakistan minority
-
Lebanon says one killed in Israeli strike near Sidon
-
Arsenal's Havertz could return for Champions League final
-
US officials split on Ukraine truce prospects
-
Client brain-dead after Paris cryotherapy session goes wrong
-
Flick demands answers from La Liga for 'joke' schedule
-
'Maddest game' sums up Man Utd career for Maguire
-
Trial opens for students, journalists over Istanbul protests
-
Gaza rescuers say Israeli strikes kill 24 after Hamas rejects truce proposal
-
'Really stuck': Ukraine's EU accession drive stumbles
-
'Not the time to discuss future', says Alonso amid Real Madrid links
-
74 killed in deadliest US attack on Yemen, Huthis say
-
Southgate's ex-assistant Holland fired by Japan's Yokohama
-
Vance meets Meloni in Rome before Easter at the Vatican
-
Ryan Gosling to star in new 'Star Wars' film
-
Hamas calls for pressure to end Israel's aid block on Gaza
-
Russia says Ukraine energy truce over, US mulls peace talks exit
-
58 killed in deadliest US strike on Yemen, Huthis say
-
Museums rethink how the Holocaust should be shown
-
Three dead after deadly spring storm wreaks havoc in the Alps
-
No need for big changes at Liverpool, says Slot
-
Bloody Philippine passion play sees final performance of veteran 'Jesus'
-
New US envoy prays, delivers Trump 'peace' message at Western Wall
-
Postecoglou sticking around 'a little longer' as Spurs show fight in Frankfurt
-
US threatens to withdraw from Ukraine talks if no progress
-
Tears and defiance in Sumy as Russia batters Ukraine border city
-
Russia rains missiles on Ukraine as US mulls ending truce efforts
-
Tokyo leads gains in most Asian markets on trade deal hopes
-
Two missing after deadly spring snowstorm wreaks havoc in the Alps
-
'War has taken everything': AFP reporter returns home to Khartoum
-
US strikes on Yemen fuel port kill 38, Huthis say
-
Slegers targets Lyon scalp in pursuit of Arsenal European glory
-
'Defend ourselves': Refugee girls in Kenya find strength in taekwondo
-
China's manufacturing backbone feels Trump trade war pinch
-
Sri Lankans throng to Kandy for rare display of Buddhist relic
-
Chinese vent anger at Trump's trade war with memes, mockery
-
Heartbroken Brits abandon pets as living costs bite
-
Mongolian LGBTQ youth fight for recognition through music, comedy
-
Cash crunch leaves Syrians queueing for hours to collect salaries
-
Lyon left to regroup for Champions League bid after painful European exit
-
Unravelling Real Madrid face Athletic Bilbao Liga test

Trump renews call for end to seasonal clock changes
President Donald Trump on Friday repeated his call for an end to the "costly" custom of moving clocks back one hour every autumn, which he said was imposing an unnecessary financial burden on the United States.
"The House and Senate should push hard for more Daylight at the end of a day," Trump urged the US Congress in a Truth Social post.
"Very popular and, most importantly, no more changing of the clocks, a big inconvenience and, for our government, A VERY COSTLY EVENT!!!"
The summer clock, known as Daylight Saving Time, was adopted by the federal government during World War I but was unpopular with farmers rushing to get produce to morning markets, and was quickly abolished.
Many states experimented with their own versions, but it wasn't reintroduced nationwide until 1967.
The issue has become a pet subject for Trump, who appealed in December for more light in the evenings, but he has at times appeared confused by the terminology.
The demand would mean a permanent change to DST, whereas in December he pledged to get Republicans working on the opposite goal -- abandoning DST.
"The Republican Party will use its best efforts to eliminate Daylight Saving Time, which has a small but strong constituency, but shouldn't," he said then.
In 2022 the Senate, then controlled by Democrats, advanced a bill that would bring an end to the twice-yearly changing of clocks, in favor of a "new, permanent standard time."
The Sunshine Protection Act called for moving permanently to DST, to usher in brighter evenings, and fewer journeys home in the dark for school children and office workers.
The bill never made it to then-president Joe Biden's desk, as it was not taken up in the Republican-led House.
The bill was introduced in 2021 by a Republican, Florida Senator Marco Rubio, who is now Trump's secretary of state. He said studies had shown a permanent DST could benefit the economy.
Either way, changing to one permanent time would put an end to Americans pushing their clocks forward in the spring, then setting them back an hour in the fall.
Colloquially the practice is referred to as "spring forward, fall back."
The clamor has increased in recent years to make DST permanent especially among politicians and lobbyists from the Northeast, where frigid conditions are normal in the early winter mornings.
Rubio said the United States sees an increase in heart attacks and road accidents in the week that follows the changing of the clocks.
Any changes would be unlikely to affect Hawaii and most of Arizona, the Navajo Nation, American Samoa, Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico and the US Virgin Islands, which do not spring forward in summer.
F.Dubois--AMWN