Cuba-born rep says emotional 1st return in 64 years with Gitmo CODEL left him ‘amped-up’ to see it liberated

EXCLUSIVE: Rep. Carlos Gimenez returned to his homeland of Cuba over the weekend for the first time in 64 years, saying he is now “more determined than ever” to see the island liberated from dictatorship. Gimenez, R-Fla., the only Cuban-born member of Congress, joined a congressional delegation (CODEL) to the U.S.-managed Guantánamo Bay military base there, and noted the rest of the nation is still run by the iron-fisted communist government that took over when President Fulgencio Batista was overthrown by Fidel Castro in 1959. The Gimenez family – Carlos Sr., Mitzi, Carlos and Mitzi Ann – left the country when the future Miami fire chief, Miami-Dade County mayor and congressman was just 6 years old. “Now that I visited the only free part of Cuba, I want to make sure that the rest of the island is also free from this communist tyranny,” Gimenez said in an exclusive interview with Fox News Digital. EXCLUSIVE: VENEZUELAN OPPO LEADER JOINS CUBA-BORN REP TO LAUD TRUMP AFTER BIDEN’S MADURO OIL DEAL CANCELED “I was already amped up. Now I’m really amped up. … I’ve always wanted it (to see Cuba liberated), but now I kind of made a pledge that I’m not going to go back until the entire island is free.” The congressman said his memories of Cuba remain in “20-second” video snippets in his memory and that his feelings about Cuba started welling up when he first caught the outline of the island from the plane taking the lawmakers to Guantánamo Bay. “It dawned on me it was the first time I’d seen it in nearly 65 years – how beautiful it is – it’s just a place that is so special; and to have, really, a group of thugs and dictators and oppressors ruin it – I was somewhat emotional, but then that turned to anger.” Gimenez said he could envision his grandparents living in Oriente Province – which borders Guantánamo Province. CUBA’S MEDDLING IN US ELECTIONS A ‘BADGE OF HONOR’ TO SOME TARGETED CRITICS The lawmaker was born in Havana but said he lived half of each year on a ranch in Manzanillo, Oriente – only a few dozen miles west of Guantánamo Bay, and on the opposite end of the island from the capital city. “There are certain memories that just pop back in my head and have for a long, long time. And so all those came back again – I was grateful to go back. And it was emotional. But it also, I guess, incentivized me more.” However, visiting his hometown remained out of the question on the CODEL – as Gimenez described the potentially deadly security barrier between Guantánamo Bay and the rest of Cuba. While East Berlin had Checkpoint Charlie, and North and South Korea have the DMZ restricting movement, the border between Guantánamo Bay and mainland Cuba is fortified with hundreds of thousands of landmines planted by the regime. Representatives of the Cuban government tend to meet on a monthly basis with their U.S. counterparts at a bunker near Guantánamo Bay, but only for base management purposes rather than diplomacy, according to Gimenez. The lawmaker learned that in the past few months, there have been no such meetings. TOP REPUBLICAN CALLS USSS DIRECTOR’S ‘SLOPED ROOF’ DEFENSE ‘FINAL STRAW’: I’M 70 AND ‘COULD RUN AROUND IT ALL DAY’ The CODEL, led by Rep. Mike Rogers of Alabama, chair of the House Armed Services Committee, followed an executive order from President Donald Trump directing illegal immigrant criminals to be detained at Gitmo under ICE supervision. Rogers said in a statement the CODEL met with U.S. service members assigned to the base as well as the law enforcement officials in charge of “facilitating the removal of some of the worst criminals.” “Border security is national security, and I’m proud of the role the Department of Defense has played in protecting our nation and ending the invasion at our southern border,” Rogers said. Just over a dozen of the 780 total non-illegal-immigrant detainees since 2002 remain at Gitmo. In 1966, Cuban workers at the base were given a choice, Gimenez said: either go back to Cuba-proper, or remain working on-base for life. About 40 of those workers are still alive in Gitmo, unable to return to their homes in the rest of Cuba. Many are in their 80s, and there is an assisted living facility for those of advanced age that remain on base, he said. Gimenez has long advocated for a peaceful yet decisive end to the seven-decade dictatorship now led by Miguel Díaz-Canel, the handpicked successor of the late Raúl Castro, who had previously taken over from his brother. CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP A democratic Cuba could be the best friend to the U.S. in the Caribbean region, Gimenez said. Having Cuba under its current constitution sitting only 90 miles off the famous Southernmost Buoy in Key West is also of national security concern, many in Florida believe. With Trump at the helm and a renewed, revamped foreign policy and national security focus, Gimenez said in the interview that “all of the pieces are in place” to move more swiftly toward ushering-in a democratic Cuba once more. “It’s a question of will. I certainly have the will — this is the time. Now is the time,” he said Monday. “I just want to make sure that whatever I can do to make it happen.”
AOC ‘going on the offense’ to rally red-district voters against Trump: report

A progressive member of “the Squad” is reportedly planning to hold anti-Trump rallies in red districts in an effort to mobilize voters against the president. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., will organize events in red districts across Pennsylvania and New York to go “on the offense” against President Donald Trump’s second term, The Associated Press reported. The New York rallies come after Trump received 43% of the state’s vote in the 2024 election, a 6-percentage-point increase after capturing 37% of the Empire State vote in 2020. “You look around — who else is doing it? No one,” Ocasio-Cortez said of efforts to protest the Trump agenda, according to AP. “My hope is that the dam will break in terms of Democrats going on the offense … We need to take the argument directly to the people.” FORMER ILLEGAL IMMIGRANT AIDE TO AOC SELF-DEPORTS TO COLUMBIA AMID QUESTIONS ABOUT EMPLOYMENT: REPORT The solo rallies come in addition to the Democrat’s plans to join Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., on what is being called the “Stop Oligarchy Tour,” protesting the president’s agenda. SOCIAL MEDIA EXPLODES AFTER ‘CRINGE’ TIKTOK VIDEO OF AOC, HOUSE DEMS GOES VIRAL: ‘COULDN’T GET ANY LAMER’ “It’s not about whether Bernie should or shouldn’t be doing this. It’s about that we all should,” Ocasio-Cortez said. “But he is unique in this country, and so long as we are blessed to have that capacity on our side, I think we should be thankful for it.” The report comes after Ocasio-Cortez, a longtime Trump critic, called on Democrats to host town halls in GOP-heavy districts to push back against the president’s agenda following his joint address to Congress on Tuesday. “We need to be creatively organizing in Republican districts. And I don’t want to hear, OK, Republicans don’t listen. They are afraid of this. I’m telling you,” Ocasio-Cortez said in an Instagram live. “If you’re near a Republican, if you are in a Republican district and your Republican is not hosting a town hall, it’s time to do community town halls,” the congresswoman said. “It’s time to do community teachings. It’s time to do community town halls. It is time to start advertising their absence.” Ocasio-Cortez specifically called on Democrats to organize in the districts of Reps. Nicole Malliotakis, R-N.Y., Mike Lawler, R-N.Y., and Jeff Van Drew, R-N.J. Fox News Digital reached out to Ocasio-Cortez and Sanders for comment but did not immediately receive a response. Fox News’ Michael Dorgan contributed to this report.
Freedom Caucus member Anna Paulina Luna joins AOC to push 10% credit card interest rate cap

In a seemingly peculiar bipartisan alliance, conservative House Freedom Caucus member Rep. Anna Paulina Luna, R-Fla., and Congressional Progressive Caucus member Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., teamed up to push a measure that would cap credit card interest rates at 10%. “The annual percentage rate applicable to an extension of credit obtained by use of a credit card may not exceed 10 percentage points, inclusive of all finance charges,” the proposal stipulates. Responding to a post on X that labeled Luna and her left-leaning compatriot “strange bedfellows,” the GOP congresswoman noted, “I would argue it isn’t strange at all. Most people agree insane credit card interest rates are predatory.” WHAT WOULD BE THE IMPACT OF A CREDIT CARD INTEREST RATE CAP? Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., and Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., put the proposal forward in the Senate last month. Trump floated the idea of a temporary cap on credit card interest during a campaign speech last year. BERNIE SANDERS, JOSH HAWLEY TEAM UP ON TRUMP PLEDGE TO SLASH CREDIT CARD RATES TO 10% “And while working Americans catch up, we’re going to put a temporary cap on credit card interest rates. We’re gonna cap it at around 10%. We can’t let them make 25 and 30%,” he said. “We’re making that pledge more than a talking point by introducing legislation to protect working people from remaining trapped under mountains of debt,” Ocasio-Cortez said of Trump’s pledge, according to the congresswoman’s press release about the proposed legislation. OLDER AMERICANS AMASSING CREDIT CARD DEBT TO COVER EXPENSES, AARP FINDS CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP “For too long, credit card companies have abused working class Americans with absurd interest rates, trapping them in an almost insurmountable amount of debt,” Luna said, according to the press release. “We need a fair solution – and that means getting rid of the status quo and putting a reasonable cap on interest rates.”
National Review founder, conservative icon Bill Buckley honored on new US Postal Service stamps

The U.S. Postal Service unveiled a new postage stamp Thursday featuring conservative icon William F. Buckley, Jr., the founder of the conservative editorial magazine National Review. Buckley, a leading voice for the modern conservative movement, founded National Review in 1955 to publish conservative commentary and analysis focused on politics, current events and culture. The magazine still exists today and publishes 12 magazines annually, in addition to its daily news site. The stamp features a graphite and charcoal portrait of Buckley, drawn by Dale Stephanos, according to the U.S. Postal Service. Historian George Nash described Buckley as “arguably the most important public intellectual in the United States in the past half century” in 2008 following Buckley’s death. “For an entire generation he was the preeminent voice of American conservatism and its first great ecumenical figure,” Nash wrote in National Review. The magazine forged together several ideological branches and provided an outlet for views including free-market capitalism, libertarianism, traditionalism and anti-communism, according to the Bill of Rights Institute. WILLIAM F. BUCKLEY: RIGHT FROM THE START In addition to spearheading National Review, Buckley also hosted the Emmy Award–winning television program “Firing Line” from 1966 to 1999, which became well-known for its ideological diversity of guests ranging from former President Ronald Reagan, former UK Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, economist Friedrich Hayek, scholar Noam Chomsky and liberal author Gore Vidal. “The success and long run of Firing Line proved that there was a place on television for civilized debate between conflicting ideologies that could entertain and inform the American public,” according to Stanford University’s Hoover Institution. The public policy think tank, led by former Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice, houses a massive videotape collection of “Firing Line’s” more than 1,500 episodes, in addition to program preparation materials, photographs, transcripts and sound recordings. Buckley, a devout Catholic, also authored dozens of books, including “God and Man at Yale: The Superstitions of ‘Academic Freedom,’” published in 1951, about his experience attending Yale University. The book offered a harsh assessment of Yale’s secular academic climate, and Time magazine cited it in 2011 as one of the top 100 “best and most influential” books written in English since 1923. JAMES ROSEN: BILL BUCKLEY AND THE DEATH OF ‘TRANS-IDEOLOGICAL’ FRIENDSHIPS New York Times columnist David Brooks, who launched his career as an intern with National Review, wrote after Buckley’s death in 2008 that Buckley’s “greatest talent was friendship,” and that the conservative icon was an avid writer of letters. CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP “His second great talent was leadership,” Brooks wrote in the New York Times. “As a young man, he had corralled the famously disputatious band of elders who made up the editorial board of National Review. He changed the personality of modern conservatism, created a national movement and expelled the crackpots from it.” “He loved liberty and felt it must be constrained by the invisible bonds of the transcendent order,” Brooks wrote.
Ahead of Holi, Ramzan Friday prayers, Delhi police tighten security, to use drone surveillance, identify THESE areas as sensitive

Security has been stepped up at over 100 locations across the national capital ahead of Holi festival and Ramzan’s Friday prayers. The upcoming Holi festival coincides with Friday prayers during the holy month of Ramzan.
Social media explodes at Sanders for hosting trans musician who sang ‘pure evil’ song at anti-Trump rally

Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders’ anti-Trump, anti-oligarch tour of the U.S. is under fire for hosting a transgender singer who performed a song with lyrics described as “pure evil,” and mocking God and Jesus. “The song specifically attacks Christianity with mentions of Easter and God’s son,” Conservative activist Robby Starbuck posted to X over the weekend. Sanders is in the midst of a “Fighting Oligarchy” tour in areas of the country where the 2024 race proved competitive for Democrats, including in battleground states such as Wisconsin and Michigan. The self-described Democratic socialist senator traveled to Kenosha, Wisconsin, on Friday and was joined by transgender singer Laura Jane Grace, who performed an anti-Christian song on stage before Sanders thanked the musician for performing. BERNIE SANDERS SEETHES US HAS BECOME ‘OLIGARCHIC SOCIETY’ FOLLOWING TRUMP SPEECH The song is titled “Your God (God’s D—),” with lyrics mocking Christianity, Easter Sunday and Jesus through sexually explicit language. Clips of the video, including on Grace’s Instagram page, circulated across social media over the weekend. BERNIE SANDERS REJECTS JAMES CARVILLE’S CALLS FOR DEMOCRATS TO ‘PLAY DEAD’ Critics and conservatives slammed Sanders and the musician for the performance of the song on social media, including taking issue with the Vermont senator for personally thanking the singer in his remarks during the event. “Wow. AFTER the anti-Christian ‘performance’ at his event, @BernieSanders thanked the trans singer that performed this hateful, evil song,” Starbuck posted in another X post. “If he attempts to apologize, just know his first instinct was to thank the singer after he sang it.” “This is who the Democrats are now. Pure evil,” Starbuck added on X. Grace gained notoriety in the early 2000s as the lead singer of the punk rock band Against Me!. The musician came out as transgender in 2012 during an interview with Rolling Stone. BERNIE SANDERS ‘FLIPS OUT’ WHEN PRESSED ON 4-DAY WORK WEEK PROPOSAL Fox News Digital reached out to Sanders’ office and the musician’s publicity team for comment on the performance and subsequent outrage but did not immediately receive responses. Sanders delivered a response speech to President Donald Trump’s address to a joint session of Congress on March 4, when he railed that the U.S. has become an “oligarchic society” under the Trump administration. “The Trump administration is not hiding it,” Sanders said in a streamed response to Trump’s address. “The Trump administration is a government of the billionaire class by the billionaire class, and for the billionaire class. Notwithstanding some of their rhetoric, this is a government that could care less about ordinary Americans and the working families of our country. My friends, we are no longer moving toward oligarchy. We are living in an oligarchic society.”
Dems weaponize Medicaid anxiety in bid to take down Trump-backed federal funding plan

Democrats are accusing Republicans of trying to gut federal health care programs with their plan to avert a partial government shutdown. The bill, a rough extension of current federal funding levels called a continuing resolution (CR), is expected to get a House-wide vote on Tuesday. It will need to pass the Senate and be signed by President Donald Trump by the end of Friday, March 14 to avoid federal programs getting shuttered and tens of thousands of employees furloughed. Trump has called on all Republican lawmakers to support the bill. Democrats, however, have unleashed a staunch opposition campaign against the legislation. It is a stark departure from political tradition that normally sees liberal lawmakers vote by the dozens to avoid a government shutdown. DEMOCRATS PRIVATELY REBUKE PARTY MEMBERS WHO JEERED TRUMP DURING SPEECH TO CONGRESS: REPORT Democratic leaders have in particular accused Republicans of trying to harm funds for Medicare and Medicaid with the bill – something the GOP has denied. “The partisan House Republican funding bill recklessly cuts healthcare, nutritional assistance and $23 billion in veterans benefits. Equally troublesome, the legislation does nothing to protect Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid, while exposing the American people to further pain throughout this fiscal year. We are voting No,” read a joint statement by House Democratic leaders released on Saturday night. The trio of leaders – House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., House Minority Whip Katherine Clark, D-Mass., and House Democratic Caucus Chair Pete Aguilar, D-Calif, – sent a letter to lawmakers bashing the CR on Friday, before the text was released. “House Democrats would enthusiastically support a bill that protects Social Security, Medicare, veterans health and Medicaid, but Republicans have chosen to put them on the chopping block to pay for billionaire tax cuts,” they wrote. “We cannot back a measure that rips away life-sustaining healthcare and retirement benefits from everyday Americans as part of the Republican scheme to pay for massive tax cuts for their wealthy donors like Elon Musk. Medicaid is our red line.” A senior House GOP aide accused House Democrats of “intentionally misleading the American people.” “Their pre-baked statements are disingenuous,” the senior aide told Fox News Digital. “The Democrats came out against the bill before there was even text.” Trump, for his part, has said multiple times that he does not want Congress touching Medicaid but has left the door open to cutting “waste, fraud and abuse,” a line that has been repeated by Republican lawmakers. It is worth noting that yearly congressional appropriations, which are covered by the CR, largely do not touch mandatory government expenditures like Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security. Those programs need to be altered in the federal budget – which Republicans are also working on right now via the reconciliation process. However, the legislation does not address expected payment cuts coming to doctors who treat Medicare patients, a facet that’s given some interest groups like the American Medical Association (AMA) pause. GOLDMAN SACHS HIGHLIGHTS TARIFF WARS WINNERS AND LOSERS “Physicians across the country are outraged that Congress’s proposed spending package locks in a devastating fifth consecutive year of Medicare cuts, threatening access to care for 66 million Medicare patients,” AMA Chair Bruce A. Scott said on the group’s website. It is possible the bill will still get some Democratic votes, likely from lawmakers in competitive districts wary of being blamed for a government shutdown. Republicans will need to shoulder the burden largely themselves, however, in Monday evening’s expected vote to advance the bill through the House Rules Committee. If it passes, then the bill will have to see a House-wide procedural vote known as a “rule vote,” which generally falls along partisan lines. The final House vote on the bill is expected sometime Tuesday afternoon. The 99-page legislation released over the weekend largely keeps government spending flat at fiscal year (FY) 2024 levels until the beginning of FY 2026 on Oct. 1. The bill allocates an additional $8 billion in defense spending to mitigate national security hawks’ concerns, while non-defense spending that Congress annually appropriates would decrease by about $13 billion. There are also some added funds to help facilitate Immigrations and Customs Enforcement operations. Cuts to non-defense discretionary spending would be found by eliminating some “side deals” made during FRA negotiations, House GOP leadership aides said. Lawmakers would also not be given an opportunity to request funding for special pet projects in their districts known as earmarks, another area that Republicans are classifying as savings. It allows Republican leaders to claim a win on no meaningful government spending increases over FY 2025.
Dem governor to headline major fundraiser in key presidential primary state stoking 2028 speculation

In a move that is sure to spark 2028 speculation, the New Hampshire Democratic Party on Monday announced that Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker this spring will headline their largest annual fundraiser. Pritzker, the two-term governor of blue state Illinois, will deliver the keynote address at the New Hampshire Democrats’ McIntyre-Shaheen 100 Club Dinner on April 27 in Manchester, the state’s largest city. The governor, a member of the Pritzker family that owns the Hyatt hotel chain and who has started several of his own venture capital and investment startups, is seen as a potential contender for the 2028 Democratic Party presidential nomination. And trips to New Hampshire – which for over a century has held the first primary in the race for the White House – are seen as an early indicator of a politician’s interest in running for the presidency in the next election. The 60-year-old Pritzker has been one of his party’s leaders in opposing President Donald Trump’s second-term agenda. THESE ARE THE DEMOCRATS WHO MAY RUN FOR THE WHITE HOUSE IN 2028 Pritzker, along with Colorado Gov. Jared Polis, late last year launched a group called Governors Safeguarding Democracy, in order to resist the Trump administration. Their move came in the wake of last November’s elections, when the Democrats lost the White House and their Senate majority, and failed to win back control of the House of Representatives. HEAD HERE FOR THE LATEST FOX NEWS REPORTING AND OPINION ON JB PRITZKER In recent weeks, Pritzker has amplified his verbal attacks on Trump and his administration. The release from the New Hampshire Democratic Party noted that “Pritzker is known for his ability to provide strong leadership in tough times, something we need now more than ever.” ILLINOIS REPUBLICANS TURN UP THE VOLUME ON PRITZKER Longtime New Hampshire Democratic Party chair Ray Buckley, pointing to the Illinois governor’s progressive record of accomplishment, emphasized that the governor “is an example of why Democrats should govern all across this country – because they deliver.” Pritzker, who is not prevented by term limits from running for re-election in 2026, has yet to say if he’ll make a bid for a third term steering Illinois. The governor is also no stranger to New Hampshire. He headlined the 2022 New Hampshire Democratic Party convention, and he returned last September, to campaign on behalf of Vice President Kamala Harris, the party’s 2024 presidential nominee. Pritzker made multiple stops, including addressing union members at the New Hampshire AFL-CIO’s annual Labor Day breakfast. Pritzker, who led a successful effort to host the 2024 Democratic National Convention in Chicago, was also among the potential 2028 White House contenders to speak during the convention week at the New Hampshire Democratic Party delegation’s daily breakfast.
Trump admin tackling Biden ‘backlog’ of campus antisemitism complaints: ‘Immediate priority’

The Trump administration is moving to investigate as an “immediate priority” outstanding allegations of antisemitism and violence on college campuses across the U.S. after canceling roughly $400 million in federal grants and contracts to Columbia University “due to the school’s continued inaction in the face of persistent harassment of Jewish students.” The U.S. Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights (OCR) said the Biden administration “accumulated a backlog of complaints” across universities after the Hamas terrorist attacks on Israel in October 2023. “Over 140 complaints alleging antisemitic harassment and violence were filed with the Biden Education Department,” Craig Trainor, acting assistant secretary for the OCR, told Fox News Digital Monday. “The Biden OCR political leadership, however, left well over 70 of those complaints unreviewed. Right now, OCR is investigating over 90 complaints filed and conducting five directed investigations involving antisemitic harassment and violence and is expeditiously reviewing the Biden backlog to open more cases and hold institutions and individuals who engaged in unlawful discriminatory conduct accountable,” Trainor said. DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION LAUNCHES ‘ENDDEI’ PORTAL FOR PARENTS, STUDENTS, TEACHERS TO REPORT DISCRIMINATION The Trump administration’s investigation of antisemitic allegations is in line with the president’s executive orders cracking down on antisemitic harassment of Jewish students since the Hamas-Israel conflict. As part of the orders, a multi-agency Task Force to Combat Antisemitism was created, making Columbia’s grant funds its first target. “American institutions of higher education erupted with antisemitic harassment and violence that denied Jewish students their right to equal access to learning, school activities, and campus facilities,” Trainor said in a statement released Friday. “Many college and university presidents took little or no credible action, and the Biden Education Department’s OCR political leadership inexplicably accumulated a backlog of complaints.” “For the relatively few complaints actually resolved, the prior administration’s assistant secretary signed off on toothless resolution agreements that provided little to no remedy for Jewish students to this day,” Trainor said. “The Trump administration will not permit antisemitic protesters and antagonists to take over campus facilities and terrorize Jewish students and staff with impunity.” Linda McMahon, Trump’s secretary of education, visited Columbia University on Friday to discuss concerns about ongoing antisemitic allegations on campus with school leaders. HOUSE EDUCATION CHAIR BACKS TRUMP MOVE TO ABOLISH FEDERAL AGENCY “Americans have watched in horror for more than a year now, as Jewish students have been assaulted and harassed on elite university campuses – repeatedly overrun by antisemitic students and agitators. Unlawful encampments and demonstrations have completely paralyzed day-to-day campus operations, depriving Jewish students of learning opportunities to which they are entitled,” McMahon said in a statement last week. “Institutions that receive federal funds have a responsibility to protect all students from discrimination. Columbia’s apparent failure to uphold their end of this basic agreement raises very serious questions about the institution’s fitness to continue doing business with the United States government.” DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION CANCELS ANOTHER $350M IN ‘WOKE’ SPENDING FOR CONTRACTS, GRANTS Over the weekend, an activist who led protests and encampments on the Columbia University campus for months was arrested by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents. “We will be revoking the visas and/or green cards of Hamas supporters in America so they can be deported,” Secretary of State Marco Rubio wrote in a post on X.
Lalit Modi shares photo from Vanuatu after citizenship snub: ‘Must put on your…’

Earlier, Vanuatu PM directed the Citizenship Commission to cancel the passport issued to Lalit Modi.