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Tuesday, May 13, 2025

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4-year-old accidentally shoots 1-year-old sibling at home in Texas

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Authorities said that a young child accidentally shot their 1-year-old sibling at a residence near Houston on Tuesday.

The pre-schooler, about 4 years old, “found an unsecured pistol at home” and used it to shoot the toddler, according to Harris County Sheriff Ed Gonzales.

He said in social media posts shared Tuesday evening that the toddler sustained injuries that did not appear to be life-threatening, and had been taken to a hospital for treatment.

The toddler was apparently shot in the leg, CBS affiliate KHOU reported. Citing comments from deputies at the Harris County Sheriff’s Office, the station said later on Tuesday night that the toddler had undergone surgery at the hospital and was recovering. The toddler is expected to be okay, the station reported.

An investigation is underway to determine how the child was able to find a loaded gun and fire it. Investigators will also investigate whether adults were in the home with the 4-year-old and the toddler at the time of the shooting. The Harris County District Attorney’s Office will work with a grand jury to decide if any charges will be filed in connection with the incident.

As of May 6, there were at least 113 unintentional shootings by children in the U.S., resulting in 47 deaths and 68 injuries nationwide, according to the nonprofit organization Everytown for Gun Safety. In 2022, the organization tracked at least 354 unintentional shootings by children, which resulted in 157 deaths and 212 injuries. Those numbers were down from the year before when 167 people were killed and another 248 were injured in at least 396 accidental shootings where a child fired the gun, according to the nonprofit.

Mayor Turner announces details of FY 2024 fiscally sound, balanced budget

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Mayor Turner discusses ARPA Funding during the budget news conference
Mayor Sylvester Turner announced details of the proposed FY ’24 budget today, describing it as a fiscally sound spending plan that provides a strong fund balance reserve and prepares Houston for the future,The proposed budget for all funds totals $6.2 billion and represents Mayor Turner’s eighth and final budget. It is balanced with the strongest fund balance reserve in recent history, placing the City in the best fiscal position to address future economic uncertainties.

The proposed General Fund budget of $2.9 billion reflects an increase in spending of $120 million or 4.3 percent from the FY2023 current Budget of $2.8 billion.

The increase in spending is primarily driven by:

  • Pay increases for all employee groups including 3 percent for municipal employees, 3 percent for police, and 6 percent for fire totaling $51 million. The 6 percent fire pay raise included in this budget represents the third-year of an 18 percent cumulative pay raise valued at $115 million.
  • $47 million increase in transfers to the Dedicated Drainage Street and Renewal Fund (DDSRF), or Rebuild Houston, to support streets and drainage projects in the CIP, coupled with a decrease in debt service of $7 million, for a net increase of $40 million for pay-as-you-go and debt.
  • $160 million in ARPA funding to further address the reduction in revenues due to the public health emergency. *noteeven in the absence of the ARPA funding, the City would have been able to balance the FY2024 budget by drawing down from the fund balance.
  • An additional $11.3 million transfer to the Maintenance Renewal and Replacement Fund to address deferred maintenance for a total of $42.9 million.
  • OPEB trust contribution – $8 million General Fund – $10 million including all funds

Additionally, the mayor’s plan fully funds the Budget Stabilization Fund representing more than $20 million, and does not include any deferrals, one-time land sales, or fund balance drawdown.

Public safety remains at the forefront of the mayor’s budget priorities, fully funding five (5) cadet classes for the police and four (4) for the fire department. Under Mayor Turner’s leadership, HPD has recruited and hired 2,200 police officers, making him the mayor with the second-highest hiring rate of police officers.

“I am proud to say that I will leave to the next mayor a budget that is better than it has been in a long time, much stronger than when I came into office in Jan. 2016. We are better today than we were yesterday, and we’ll be better tomorrow than we are today,” said Mayor Turner.

Encuentro This Saturday!

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Creating A Brighter Future For Houston Since 1977.

Encuentro

The Native American Roots of Texas Mexican Food

Saturday, May 20th, 6 PM – 7:30 PM

MECA TBH | Jensen Dr, Houston, TX 77003

This event is FREE to attend and open to the public, however registration is required.

Encuentro explores the impact, native history, and unique flavor profile of Texas Mexican food, also called Comida Casera, the home-style cooking of Mexican American families of South Texas and Northeastern Mexico (see map that outlines this unique culinary region).

Public Panel Event: The general public is invited to the Encuentro closing event on the evening of May 20th featuring a scholar & film panel, with audience Q&A, at 6:00 pm – 7:30 pm, with entertainment starting at 5:30 pm. The celebrity chefs will interact with the scholar panelists and with the audience.

Reserve Your Tickets Now!
Chef, food author and filmmaker, Adán Medrano, will be joining us at Encuentro: The Native American Roots of Texas Mexican Food this Saturday, May 20th!

Adán Medrano is a food author, chef and filmmaker researching the indigenous food and cooking of south Texas and northeastern Mexico. Over 23 years, he worked throughout Latin America, Europe and Asia, and during his travels came to recognize the cultural importance of food.

Watch his video by clicking this link or the photo!

Watch Video on Facebook

MECA’s work to provide year-round, high quality arts education, social services and vigorous academic support is made possible by generous contributions from the following donors:

Chilling call: How scammers are cloning voices

 A young woman is warning others about the dangers of AI after her family was targeted by scammers.

“It’s really traumatizing, it really did traumatize us,” said Payton Bock.

Bock shared the warning on TikTok recently and spoke with Fox 8 News because the person was never caught, and law enforcement says many more of these AI scammers could be out there.

“It could get really crazy really soon,” said Bock.

Here’s how this scam happened.

While Bock was at work her parents received a phone call from a man who claimed he had been in a car accident with their daughter.

The man said Payton couldn’t find her insurance card and that he was going to harm her if they didn’t give him money.

Both of Payton’s parents are street savvy and she says would never fall for such a scam except for what happened next.

“He said he was gonna kill me and that he had me in the back of his truck,” said Payton.

Her parents demanded to hear her voice… and did!

“It was literally my voice telling them ‘Mom I don’t want to die’ like I’m scared and I’m crying. It was a crazy situation,” said Payton.

The perpetrator had cloned Payton’s voice with AI.

According to Vipin Chaudhary, Chair of Computer and Data Sciences at Case Western Reserve University, three seconds is all it takes for someone to clone a person’s voice using artificial intelligence.

A voice can then be made to say anything, in any language and with any number of emotions.

“Yes, it’s very easy to fake a person from an audio perspective,” said Chaudhary, “I can have me talk in Chinese and it will be as if I’m talking so the technology is pretty amazing, and we are moving towards video so you will have videos of any of us which will be fake.”

Chaudhary says “AI is exploding” so fast it’s challenging for even experts to keep up with advances, which can be both good and bad.

“The pace is amazing,” said Chaudhary, “There is both good and bad, I think it’s how you use it, it’s a technology so it’s how we set up regulations that is going to dictate so that the bad is limited.”

In response to the AI scam, the Cleveland FBI offered these tips to anyone receiving a suspicious call.

First, they suggest an attempt to contact the person mentioned by the scammer to confirm their safety and whereabouts.

Next report it to local law enforcement.

And if the caller demands money, gift cards, cryptocurrency or other assets, call the FBI.

Payton’s family had tried to reach her, but she was busy at work.

It wasn’t until the police tracked her down that they realized it was a scam.

“I called my mom, and it was like the most frantic answer… I could just feel her pain,” said Bock.

That day Payton began sharing her real-time location with her parents through their smartphones and she recommends others do too.

She also suggests having a family password and hopes the technology will be better regulated soon.

“They don’t know the code word so they can’t AI generate the code word and have it be very specific,” said Bock, “I mean If this AI was only being used for good there wouldn’t be a need for rules, but all of this negative stuff is coming from it it’s just too scary, and the risk is too high.”

China condena a cadena perpetua a un ciudadano estadounidense acusado de espionaje

Un ciudadano estadounidense de 78 años fue condenado a cadena perpetua por un tribunal chino acusado de espionaje.

John Shing-Wan Leung, también residente permanente en Hong Kong, fue declarado culpable de espionaje y condenado a cadena perpetua este lunes por el Tribunal Popular Intermedio de la ciudad oriental de Suzhou, según un comunicado publicado en la cuenta de redes sociales del tribunal.

Leung fue detenido el 15 de abril de 2021 por las autoridades de seguridad del Estado en Suzhou, provincia de Jiangsu, según el breve comunicado, que no ofrecía detalles sobre los cargos que se le imputaban.

El tribunal también confiscó bienes personales por valor de 500.000 yuanes (US$ 71.797), añadió el comunicado.

Las autoridades chinas y los medios de comunicación estatales no han revelado anteriormente ninguna información sobre la detención de Leung ni sobre el proceso judicial que condujo a su condena. En China, los casos relacionados con la seguridad del Estado suelen tratarse a puerta cerrada.

El portavoz de la embajada de EE.UU. en Beijing respondió a una petición de CNN, diciendo: “Somos conscientes de estos informes. El Departamento de Estado no tiene mayor prioridad que la seguridad de los ciudadanos estadounidenses en el extranjero. Debido a consideraciones de privacidad, no tenemos más comentarios”.

La condena de Leung se produce en un momento en que las relaciones entre Beijing y Washington se encuentran en su punto más bajo en medio siglo, en medio de una rivalidad cada vez más intensa en materia de comercio, tecnología, geopolítica y supremacía militar.

También se produce cuando funcionarios estadounidenses y chinos están reanudando sus compromisos de alto nivel desde que una disputa sobre un presunto globo espía chino echara por tierra los esfuerzos por recomponer los lazos a principios de este año.

Leung es uno de los cada vez más ciudadanos extranjeros que se han visto atrapados en la creciente represión del espionaje en China bajo el liderazgo de Xi Jinping.

En marzo, las autoridades chinas detuvieron a un empleado japonés de Astellas Pharma en Beijing por presunto espionaje, el decimoséptimo ciudadano japonés detenido en China desde que se introdujo la ley contra el espionaje en 2017.

En otro caso sonado, dos canadienses –el exdiplomático Michael Kovrig y el empresario Michael Spavor– fueron detenidos por China durante casi tres años.

Su arresto por cargos de espionaje a finales de 2018 se produjo poco después de que Canadá detuviera a la empresaria china y ejecutiva de Huawei Meng Wanzhou por una orden de detención de Estados Unidos relacionada con los negocios de la compañía en Irán.

Beijing negó en repetidas ocasiones que sus casos fueran una represalia política, pero los dos hombres fueron, no obstante, puestos en libertad el mismo día en que Canadá permitió a Meng regresar a China.

El mes pasado, China aprobó una amplia enmienda a su ya arrolladora ley contra el espionaje, que entrará en vigor el 1 de julio.

La nueva legislación amplía la definición de espionaje, que pasa de abarcar los secretos de Estado y la inteligencia a cualquier “documento, dato, material u objeto relacionado con la seguridad y los intereses nacionales”, e incluye los ciberataques contra órganos del Estado o infraestructuras críticas de información.

Fiery crash in northern Mexico leaves at least 26 dead after passenger van and freight truck collide

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A fiery highway crash in northern Mexico left at least 26 people dead Sunday, authorities said, after a passenger van and a freight truck collided.

Prosecutors and police in the northern border state of Tamaulipas said the death toll was a preliminary count because of the sheer volume of the wreckage and the fire that consumed the van and the freight trailer. The cab that had been pulling the freight trailer was not found at the scene, suggesting the driver might have uncoupled it and fled.

The accident occurred on a highway near the state capital, Ciudad Victoria, which sits about 214 miles south of McAllen, Texas, and the cause was under investigation, officials said.

Reuters cited the Tamaulipas’ public security ministry as having said two vehicles crashed about half an hour outside the state capital and then caught fire.

Local media reported many of the victims might be members of an extended family returning from an outing, but authorities did not confirm that, according to the Associated Press.

In the past, high death tolls in similar crashes in Mexico have often been blamed on overloaded vehicles linked to migrant smuggling.

A source at the Tamaulipas prosecutors’ office told Reuters that authorities had not confirmed whether the driver of the truck fled the scene or was killed in the wreck.

The source reportedly added that the passengers of the van, believed to be from a private transportation business, included children. The deceased victims are all thought to be Mexicans as national identification cards have been recovered from the scene.

Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas claimed on CNN’s “State of the Union” on Sunday that over the previous two days, U.S. Border Patrol had experienced a 50% drop in the number of encounters with illegal immigrants versus what they were experiencing earlier in the week before Title 42 expired at midnight on Thursday.

Border Patrol agents recorded 6,300 encounters on Friday and another 4,200 on Saturday, compared with a daily average of more than 10,000 shortly before Title 42 ended.

MONEYWATCH United Airlines pilots picket for higher pay before busy summer travel season: “Time for the company to step up”

As experts forecast record-breaking summer travel numbers, pilots from United Airlines arranged picket lines at major airports on Friday as they push for higher pay.

The pilots, who fly for one of the world’s biggest airlines, have been working without a raise for more than four years while negotiating with airline management over a new contract.

Even though the pressure is building, the United pilots are unlikely to strike anytime soon. Federal law makes it very difficult for unions to conduct strikes in the airline industry, and the last walkout at a U.S. carrier was more than a decade ago.

The coast-to-coast protests by United pilots come on the heels of overwhelming strike-authorization votes by pilots at American Airlines and Southwest Airlines. United pilots could be the next to vote, according to union officials.

Pilots at all three carriers are looking to match or beat the deal that Delta Air Lines reached with its pilots earlier this year, which raised pay rates by 34% over four years.

Top scale at United for a captain is $369 an hour on two-aisle planes, called “widebodies,” which are generally used on international flights, and $297 an hour on “narrowbodies” such as Boeing 737s. Airline pilots fly an average of 75 hours per month, according to the Labor Department.

APTOPIX United Pilots Picketing

United has proposed to match the Delta increase, but that might not be enough for a deal.

“We still have a long ways to go to resolve some of the issues at the table,” said Garth Thompson, chair of the United wing of the Air Line Pilots Association.

Thompson said discussion about wages has been held up while the two sides negotiate over scheduling, including the union’s wish to limit United’s ability to make pilots work on their days off.

United spokesman Joshua Freed said, “We’re continuing to work with the Air Line Pilots Association on the industry-leading deal we have put on the table for our world-class pilots.”

Pilots argue that United should reward them for helping the airline survive the coronavirus pandemic.

“We made quite a few sacrifices during the pandemic, and we feel it is now time for the company to step up to the plate and to give us a contract, acknowledging the sacrifices and the contributions that we have made,” said pilot Arzu Delp, as he picketed at San Francisco International Airport.

The Delta contract that United pilots are using as their starting point will cost Delta $7.2 billion over four years. All airlines are dealing with rising labor costs, which could show up in the price of a ticket, but fares are also set by supply and demand, notes Blaise Waguespack, who teaches airline management and marketing at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University.

Giselle Ascione, a United passenger in San Francisco, said the airlines are making a lot of money, and “the pilots as well as the attendants should be paid. It’s common sense.”

Even if the airlines and their unions fail to reach agreements quickly, strikes are unlikely in the next few months — when millions of Americans hope to fly over summer vacation. Under U.S. law, airline and railroad workers can’t legally strike, and companies can’t lock them out, until federal mediators determine that further negotiations are pointless.

The National Mediation Board rarely declares a dead end to bargaining, and even if it does, there is a no-strikes “cooling-off” period during which the White House and Congress can block a walkout. That’s what President Bill Clinton did minutes after pilots began striking against American in 1997. In December, President Joe Biden signed a bill that Congress passed to impose contract terms on freight railroad workers, ending a strike threat.

The last strike at a U.S. carrier occurred at Spirit Airlines in 2010.

Thompson, the union leader at United, said his pilots “will continue to work in 2023” despite challenges including an “aggressive” summer flight schedule.

Over the years, airline workers have conducted job actions that fell short of a strike but disrupted flights anyway. A federal judge fined the American Airlines pilots’ union $45 million for a 1999 sickout that crippled the airline’s operations, although the amount was later reduced. In 2019, a federal judge ordered unions representing American’s aircraft mechanics to stop what the airline termed an illegal work slowdown.

Arthur Wheaton, director of labor studies at Cornell University, said Congress would not permit an airline strike because of the economic harm it would cause, but unhappy pilots could still cause disruptions in other ways.

“They always have ‘work to rule.’ They could say, ‘We’re not working any overtime,'” Wheaton said. “I don’t anticipate the pilots trying to screw up travel for everybody intentionally, but bargaining is about leverage and power … having the ability to do that can be a negotiating tactic.”

Airlines are vulnerable to work-to-rule protests because they depend on finding pilots and flight attendants to pick up extra shifts during peak travel periods.

Regardless of the legal hurdles to a walkout, unions believe that strike votes give them leverage during bargaining, and they have become more common. A shortage of pilots is also putting those unions in particularly strong bargaining position.

Chicago-based United has roughly 14,000 pilots, and the union expects at least 2,000 will picket Friday at 10 airports from Newark, New Jersey, to Los Angeles. The union is also distributing leaflets that highlight the pilots’ desire for better work-life balance in their scheduling but make no mention of pay.

James Baker: Gun laws that Republicans can support

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As someone who learned to hunt wild game at my father’s elbow, and who continues to prowl after wild turkeys, quail and elk at the age of 93, two things about guns are crystal clear to me. First, I maintain strong passions for firearms and the outdoors and, just as importantly, a healthy respect for both. But second, in the face of a seemingly daily barrage of mass shootings like the recent one in Allen, Texas, it is evident our country is suffering a tragic epidemic of gun violence that has veered out of control.

The numbers are overwhelming. At a time when modern medicine is finding ways to reduce cancer, heart disease and other causes of death, our nation is experiencing an upward spiral in firearm fatalities. Since 2000, such deaths have increased by 55 percent to 44,310 last year. The toll of American civilians who have suffered gun-related deaths during the past 50 years is more than the 1.35 million U.S. soldiers who died during all our wars combined.

When all firearms-related deaths are combined (accidental, suicide and homicide), they become one of the nation’s 15 biggest killers. Sadly, the most vulnerable among us are the biggest victims. In 2021, firearms were the leading cause of death for U.S. children and teens, accounting for nearly 19 percent of deaths of those 18 or younger.

With the carnage seemingly out of control, it is little wonder a recent Gallup poll indicates Americans’ dissatisfaction with U.S. gun laws has risen to 63 percent, the highest since Gallup began tracking national gun policies in 2001. Although demand for change comes largely from Democrats and independents, 44 percent of Republicans are dissatisfied with gun laws as well. Absent new laws, that public dissatisfaction will only increase as the death toll mounts.

Such public sentiment is one reason Congress passed a bipartisan bill last summer — the first major federal gun safety legislation since the assault weapons ban of 1994, a law that expired after 10 years. Last year, Republicans and Democrats hammered out the new legislation in the aftermath of mass shootings in a Buffalo, New York supermarket and an elementary school in Uvalde. The law established background checks for gun purchasers younger than 21, further criminalized arms trafficking and provided millions of dollars for states to implement red flag laws and other crisis intervention programs.

James A. Baker, III, the 61st U.S. secretary of state, and President Jimmy Carter. 

Though the new law did not go far enough to reduce gun violence, it was a promising first step towards the development of further legislation. Additional steps should be considered that might be able to attract bipartisan support, including:

A ban on armor-piercing bullets, the kind that are opposed by police chiefs around the country.

A longer waiting period — or a “cooling off period” — for the purchase of a handgun.

Further strengthening background checks for all gun purchasers, and not just those younger than 21.

At the same time, and most important of all, Congress should increase resources that go to mental health services because mental health is clearly and directly related to our escalating levels of gun violence. Mass shootings, in particular, often appear associated with psychological maladies. This is not to excuse the perpetrators. Rather, it is a call to marshal the resources at our disposal to stop senseless killings before they occur.

Any approach, of course, will demand bipartisan support. This is not only important because our current system requires a 60-vote majority in the Senate. But also because, absent wide support, any laws passed now might well be rescinded once the partisan balance of power inevitably shifts.

Getting to a bipartisan deal will not be easy, particularly under the dysfunctional political climate in our country. A sensible middle ground will be needed to thread the difficult partisan needle.

I worked for three wise U.S. presidents — George H.W. Bush, Ronald Reagan and Gerald Ford. All were men with great respect for the freedom provided by the Second Amendment. They understood that our Constitution is a precious safeguard for those worried that “they’re going to take our guns away.” But they also understood that our nation has had gun laws throughout its history. And all favored reasonable restrictions.

10/20/1994 - (L-R) Former President George HW Bush, former Secretary of State James Baker, former President Gerald Ford, Charles Duncan Jr. and Rice University president Malcolm Gillis help break ground for the James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy at Rice.

Some will say that Americans may just have to get used to the gun violence that plagues our nation. There are too many guns in this country, they will say, to put the genie back in the bottle. We should reject such pessimism.

Can we get rid of gun violence in one fell legislative swoop? Of course not. But to help stem the rising tide of gun violence, we can and should take practical, pragmatic steps — both those directly related to firearms and those related to mental health.

James A. Baker, III, was the nation’s 61st Secretary of State and 67th Secretary of the Treasury.

Migrants on Mexico-US Border Face Frustration with Asylum App, Pandemic-era Limits

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Tens of thousands of migrants massed on Mexico’s border with the United States are facing pandemic-era limits on asylum known as Title 42. However, this issue has been rarely discussed among them. Instead, their focus has been on a new U.S. government mobile app that grants 1,000 people daily an appointment to cross the border and seek asylum while living in the U.S. The app, called CBPOne, has been an exercise in frustration for many, with demand far outstripping available slots. This has been a test of the Biden administration’s strategy of coupling new legal paths to entry with severe consequences for those who don’t.

Teresa Muñoz, 48, who abandoned her home in the Mexican state of Michoacan after a gang killed her husband and beat her, has been trying for a month to gain entry through the app while staying in a Tijuana shelter with her two children and 2-year-old grandson. She stated that “You start to give up hope but it’s the only way.” Meanwhile, Manuel Sanches, 40, and other Venezuelan migrants have been trying and failing to secure an immigration appointment on CBPOne. He said that they might head back if they can’t get appointments.

For those who have made it to the U.S., some are exhausted and penniless. Victor Blanco, a 32-year-old from Venezuela, lost nearly everything while swimming across a river in Colombia. Blanco is now waiting at a bus station in Brownsville, Texas, to start a new life in the U.S. However, others remain at overcrowded processing centers. Gloria Chaves, chief patrol agent of Rio Grande Valley sector, stated that “We are holding about 5,000 people and my capacity is about 4,600.”

The situation highlights the frustration and difficulties faced by migrants seeking asylum in the U.S. The pandemic-era limits on asylum known as Title 42 have added to the challenges, while the new CBPOne app has become a source of hope and frustration for many. The Biden administration’s strategy of offering new legal paths to entry while imposing severe consequences for those who don’t has also been put to the test. The overcrowding at processing centers further underscores the need for a comprehensive and humane approach to immigration policy.

Elon Musk nombra a Linda Yaccarino como nueva CEO de Twitter

Elon Musk, quien recientemente adquirió Twitter, anunció que la publicista Linda Yaccarino de NBCUniversal será la nueva CEO de la red social.

El anuncio lo realizó con un tuit en el que dio la bienvenida a Yaccarino, quien es conocida pues en NBCUniversal ayudó a lanzar un servicio de transmisión con publicidad Peacock y ha supervisado eventos en vivo como el Super Bowl y los Juegos Olímpicos.

“Linda Yaccarino se centrará principalmente en las operaciones comerciales mientras que me centraré en el diseño de productos y nuevas tecnologías”, puntualizó Musk.

Musk compró Twitter por 44 mil millones de dólares en octubre pasado e indicó que solo estaría a cargo por un tiempo limitado para completar la revisión organizacional que pensó que la compañía necesitaba para prosperar. Musk se quejó de tener “demasiado trabajo” y dormir en la sede de Twitter en San Francisco mientras implementaba cambios radicales.

En diciembre, Musk preguntó a sus seguidores de Twitter si debería dejar el cargo de director ejecutivo y el 57.5 por ciento dijo que sí. 

De cualquier modo, Musk se mantendrá como presidente ejecutivo después de la transición.

Recientemente, el multimillonario cambió el nombre corporativo de la matriz de Twitter a X Holdings, una entidad que será la matriz de todos sus negocios.

¿Quién es Linda Yaccarino?

Linda Yaccarino es presidenta de publicidad global y asociaciones de NBCUniversal Media.

Se unió a NBCUniversal en 2011, luego de pasar casi dos décadas en Turner Boradcasting.

En NBCUniversal, ayudó a lanzar el servicio de transmisión con publicidad Peacock y supervisó eventos en vivo como el Super Bowl y los Juegos Olímpicos.

Yaccarino también lideró asociaciones con una variedad de empresas de tecnología, incluidas Snapchat, YouTube y, por supuesto, Twitter. The Wall Street Journal informó anteriormente sobre las conversaciones con Yaccarino.