Pakistan went to the top of the MRF Tyres ICC Men’s ODI Team Rankings with a win in Karachi in the fourth ODI against New Zealand.
Pakistan are the new No.1 team in men’s ODIs after a massive win over New Zealand in the fourth ODI of the bilateral series in Karachi. The hosts, who now lead 4-0 in the series that has one game to go, have 113 rating points, and edge Australia and India by decimal points.
Pakistan, who were fifth with 106 rating points in the ODI rankings before the start of the series, were in top form as they chased down tall targets in the first two ODIs.
They went on to win the third ODI in Karachi by 26 runs to move to third in the points table behind Australia and India, going ahead of England and New Zealand in the process.
In the fourth ODI on Friday, a century from Babar Azam, his 18th in the format, and contributions from others helped Pakistan post a tall total of 334.
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Babar became the fastest to 5000 ODI runs in the process, reaching the milestone in his 96th ODI innings. The record was previously held by Hashim Amla, who achieved the feat in 101 innings.
Player
Innings taken to 5000 ODI runs
Babar Azam
96
Hashim Amla
101
Viv Richards
114
Virat Kohli
114
David Warner
115
However, to remain at the top of the rankings at the conclusion of the series, Pakistan will have to make this a clean sweep by winning the fifth and final ODI on Sunday.
A loss in the final ODI will see them slipping back to No.3 and Australia reclaiming their No.1 ranking. New Zealand will remain at the fifth spot irrespective of the result of the final game.
Pakistan will also remain on top if the fifth match is abandoned or yields a no-result. (Icc.cricket.com)
New Delhi: India logged 379 new coronavirus infections, while the active cases rose to 3,177, according to the Union Health Ministry data updated on Thursday.
The death toll stands at 5,30,776 with one fatality reported by Maharashtra, the data updated at 8 am stated
The Covid case tally was recorded at 4.46 crore (4,46,89,072).
The national COVID-19 recovery rate has been recorded at 98.80 per cent, according to the ministry website.
The number of people who have recuperated from the disease surged to 4,41,55,119, while the case fatality rate was recorded at 1.19 per cent.
According to the ministry’s website, 220.64 crore doses of Covid vaccine have been administered in the country so far under the nationwide vaccination drive.
Delhi BJP chief Virendra Sachdeva, MPs Parvesh Verma and Manoj Tiwari, former Union Minister Vijay Goel participate in the protest along with other party leaders and workers demanding Delhi deputy CM Manish Sisodia’s resignation (IANS)
New Delhi: The Delhi BJP staged a protest here demanding Delhi Deputy Chief Minister Manish Sisodia’s resignation in a snooping case.
Although the BJP wanted to stage the protest outside the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) headquarters, they were stopped by a heavy police contingent.
Delhi BJP chief Virendra Sachdeva, MPs Parvesh Verma and Manoj Tiwari, former Union Minister Vijay Goel participated in the protest along with other party leaders and workers.
The BJP protesters were adamant that they will march to reach the AAP headquarters. Some protesters also climbed over police barricades but were stopped.
The protest came a day after the Union Ministry of Home Affairs gave sanction to prosecute Sisodia under the Prevention of Corruption Act in connection with the alleged ‘Feedback Unit (FBU) snooping case’.
Former Rep. Albio Sires spent eight terms in Congress, representing hundreds of thousands of constituents, before calling it quits last year.
For his next job, the New Jersey Democrat is looking to downsize.
Sires is gunning for mayor of West New York, a town with a population of around 53,000 people — more than an order of magnitude smaller than a congressional district. He said he’s often in the grocery store, at the dry cleaner’s, or getting a haircut when people approach him about what’s going on in the community. It’s a lot more intimate than the phone calls, letters and office meetings that form the daily rhythm of life in Congress.
Local office is not a conventional career path after serving in Congress. Some turn to education or end up on cable news. Many land on K Street. But Sires is the latest in a small number of former members of Congress who’ve sought lower office, not a higher one, after leaving Washington on their own terms.
A driving force behind that step is the frustration with gridlock that’s prevalent in Washington — often getting in the way of legislators delivering for their constituents. There may be some of that on the local level, but people are more supportive because “they see you have their best interests at heart,” Sires said.
“I love the local stuff,” he continued. “I can go out on the street, people say, ‘Hey Albio, how’re you doing? You fixed the pothole? You rebuild the parks?’ … In Congress, you don’t see that. In Congress, you’re constantly fighting.”
Sires is seeking a completely different scale of job than a few other mayoral hopefuls among his former colleagues, like now-Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass, who left Congress to run for mayor, or Rep. Jesus “Chuy” Garcia (D-Ill.), who’s running for mayor of Chicago. Those posts have constituencies well into the millions.
Local politics are a calling for some after they leave the Capitol. Former Rep. Kathy Dahlkemper (D-Pa.), who lost her reelection race in 2010, went on to a long tenure as the Erie County, Pa., executive. But it’s a more common step for people who have lost and still want to continue in politics. More rare is a step like the one Republican Todd Platts took. Another former Pennsylvania representative, he retired from Congress and is now a judge on the York County Court of Common Pleas after running for and winning a seat.
Former Rep. Chris Jacobs (R-N.Y.), who retired from Congress last year, has had his name floated for executive in his state’s Erie County. But he told The Buffalo News it’s unlikely he’ll run because he wants to focus on “my private business and my volunteer things.”
Sires was previously mayor of West New York from 1995 through 2006, before he was elected to Congress. He said he didn’t necessarily see himself getting back into local politics after he left Washington earlier this year, but he was encouraged to do so by constituents who urged him to run upon his return.
The nonpartisan election takes place in May, and the five candidates with the most votes are elected to the town commission, which then chooses the mayor among them. Current West New York Mayor Gabriel Rodriguez is leaving the position to run for the state Assembly.
The filing deadline is in March, and Sires’ competition includes a slate of candidates led by Commissioner of Public Affairs Cosmo Cirillo, as well as Felix Roque, another former mayor of the town.
For some diving back in, it’s because they have legislative priorities at the local level that they want to tackle — but the relative bipartisanship compared to Washington doesn’t hurt, either.
“I’ve never looked at Congress as such an upgrade,” Sires said. “I always looked at the best era I had was serving the people of my community and doing things for the people in my community. Sometimes the party gets in the way.”
A want to return to local office is a sentiment that former Rep. David Skaggs (D-Colo.) also shared. He’s in the running for a vacant Colorado state House seat — potentially a homecoming for Skaggs, who retired from Congress in 1999. Prior to serving in the House, he was a three-term member of the state House in the 1980s, including spending two terms as minority leader.
It’s more common for state legislators to run for higher office — and much more rare the other way around.
“I’d like to think that the experience I’ve had and the energy I still have can make a contribution at the state level,” Skaggs said.
This is not a campaign he’s spent months planning out. The night before the Colorado legislative session began earlier this month, Democratic state Rep. Tracey Bernett announced her resignation, some weeks after the Boulder County District Attorney charged her with felony counts of attempting to influence a public servant, forgery and providing false information about residence, as well as misdemeanors for perjury and procuring false registration.
But a state-level comeback is an idea Skaggs had in his head for years, inspired by Ohio Democrat Tom Sawyer, who was elected to the House in 1986, along with Skaggs. Redistricting following the 2000 census altered the lines of his district, and he ultimately lost reelection to his ninth term in 2002 to Tim Ryan in the primary. Sawyer ran for the House again in 2006, but lost in the primary to Betty Sutton. He then successfully ran for the state’s Board of Education that fall.
The following year, Sawyer was appointed to the Ohio State Senate, where he served until 2016.
“That’s always been an interesting proposition in my mind of what one might do to still apply whatever political and legislative skills have come my way,” Skaggs said.
Most recently, Skaggs is a senior adviser at Dentons law firm. He previously was chair of the Board of the Office of Congressional Ethics, executive director of the Colorado Department of Higher Education and executive director of the Center for Democracy and Citizenship at the Aspen Institute and then the Council for Excellence in Government.
Still, he said it’s not common for former members of Congress to talk about what they want to do once they leave the Capitol. “I think for most of us who have left that place, you’re sort of preoccupied with getting on with the rest of your life and something else. … There’s a certain prejudice about not looking back.”
Skaggs has at least five other challengers, including Kitty Sargent, who serves on the Boulder Valley School District, Louisville City Councilmember Kyle Brown and Jenn Kaaoush, co-director of a nonprofit that provided support following the 2021 Marshall Fire. The vacancy committee will hold a meeting at the end of the month to select Bernett’s successor.
Skaggs, who was a founding co-chair of the House Bipartisan Retreats while in Congress, said he’s looking forward to a collegial environment in the statehouse — one that’s absent from Washington lately.
“Especially these days with so much dysfunction in Washington, state legislatures may be a much more productive and interesting place to be if you really want to change things,” he said.
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( With inputs from : www.politico.com )