Fearsome heavyweight Moses Itauma has drawn comparisons to a young Mike Tyson by knocking out one opponent after another.
The 21-year-old Itauma (13-0, 11 KOs) doesn’t waste time. None of his last nine opponents have made it through two rounds. Indeed, Dillian Whyte — a former world title contender — didn’t last two minutes.
A world title shot seems not far off — a potential showdown with Oleksandr Usyk, who holds three major belts, already has fans buzzing though the Ukrainian has downplayed it — but his next challenge comes Saturday night when he faces Jermaine Franklin Jr. in Manchester in a scheduled 10-round fight.
Franklin (24-2, 15 KOs) is considered Itauma’s toughest test yet. The 32-year-old American took former two-time world champion Anthony Joshua the distance three years ago. That defeat came just over four months after his only other loss — to Whyte by majority decision, also in 12 rounds.
“I feel like Jermaine Franklin is the final piece of the puzzle. So, when I get asked about other fighters, that’s not going to happen if I don’t get through Jermaine Franklin," Itauma said at Thursday's press conference.
A 6-foot-2 (1.89-meter) British southpaw, Itauma combines power with elite hand speed and footwork. Only twice in his career — he turned pro three years ago in a debut KO victory that lasted just 23 seconds — has he failed to win by stoppage. Both of those were six-round bouts in 2023.
Still, two of his recent opponents — Mariusz Wach in 2024 and Mike Balogun last year — are in their 40s. Whyte is 37.
“People are wondering if I’ve got a chin or people are wondering if I can go the distance," Itauma said. “Jermaine Franklin, that’s what he’s known for, he’s known for taking people the distance, giving them tough fights. He’s 32 years old. This isn’t a washed up has-been.”
Franklin, a native of Saginaw, Michigan, has won three straight bouts since his loss to Joshua in April 2023.
Naturally, he doesn’t see himself as simply a durable punching bag for Itauma.
“I feel disrespected but it’s part of the game, I’m used to the politics, I’m used to the tricks everybody does," Franklin said. "I’m just ready to fight.”
The bout was originally scheduled for January but was delayed because Itauma sustained an injury, reportedly a biceps tear.
His father is Nigerian and his mother is from Slovakia, where Itauma was born. They moved to southeast England — Chatham in Kent — when he was young. Racism was one of the reasons they moved, he said last year.
“Times have changed but growing up ... the Slovak people weren’t used to seeing people of color. It was hard,” Itauma said at a press conference in Nigeria last October.
“My brothers experienced it more only because they went to school. When we moved out of Slovakia, (I) wasn’t really old enough for me to experience it but my brothers definitely experienced it. My dad just said we’re packing our bags and we’re going to London — or Kent."
Itauma said he's a forgiving person and that he still returns to Slovakia each year to spend Christmas with his mother's side of the family.
"I’ve still got love for the country but it definitely was tough growing up there.”
Trash talking is part of the game in big-time boxing. It's not really Itauma's thing, though. In a promotional face-to-face with Whyte, he asked Whyte to take off his sunglasses. Itauma said he wanted to see if he was looking at “a wolf or a sheep.” The scary part for Whyte was that Itauma seemed genuinely interested in the answer.
In the first round of their fight in Saudi Arabia, Itauma dropped Whyte with a barrage of punches and casually walked to the neutral corner while the referee counted. Job done.
The fight at Co-op Live Arena is available on DAZN. The undercard is expected to begin at 5 p.m. local time (1 p.m. ET). The ringwalks for Itauma and Franklin are expected at 11 p.m. local time (7 p.m. ET).
AP boxing: https://apnews.com/boxing
FILE - Australia's Demsey McKean is knocked down by Britain's Moses Itauma in their heavyweight boxing fight in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, Saturday, Dec. 21, 2024. (AP Photo/Frank Augstein, File)
FILE - Britain's Moses Itauma, center, celebrates after beating Australia's Demsey McKean in their heavyweight boxing fight in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, Saturday, Dec. 21, 2024. (AP Photo/Frank Augstein, File)
FILE - Britain's Moses Itauma, left, lands a blow on Australia's Demsey McKean in their heavyweight boxing fight in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, Saturday, Dec. 21, 2024. (AP Photo/Frank Augstein, File)
WASHINGTON (AP) — Thea Price anticipated changes under the second Trump administration, but she never expected her life to be thrown into such disarray.
Along with the 300 other employees of the United States Institute of Peace, Price was fired, rehired and then fired again as part of President Donald Trump's crusade to shrink the federal government, a chaotic effort that cut tens of thousands of jobs and shrank or dismantled entire agencies.
One year later, many of those impacted are left wondering whether their pain was worth it.
"Nobody was prepared for the complete destruction,” said Price, a former program operations manager. “And for what?”
The Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE, led by then-Trump adviser Elon Musk, instigated purges of federal agencies with the expressed mission of rooting out fraud, waste and abuse.
USIP, a congressionally funded independent nonprofit, became a symbol of the upheaval. DOGE staffers entered the USIP building early last year, setting off a battle over who controls the institute, which later saw Trump plant his name on its Washington headquarters.
The blow to its workers came on March 28, 2025, when they were fired, a decision a judge later reversed and then another one reinstated — whiplash that still weighs on the former staffers.
A year on, DOGE's toll on people’s lives is clear — what was actually saved in the process of upending them is not.
Musk set a target of $2 trillion in savings. The DOGE website says it has saved about $215 billion through job cuts, contract and lease cancellations and asset sales, as well as grant rescissions.
More than 260,000 workers left federal service due to Trump administration initiatives in 2025, according to the Office of Management and Budget, including reductions in force, early retirement, deferred resignations and a hiring freeze.
“President Trump was given a clear mandate to eliminate waste, fraud and abuse from the federal government,” said White House spokesperson Davis Ingle when asked how much was saved. "In just a year, he has made significant progress in making the federal government more efficient to better serve the American taxpayer.”
Organizations that have examined elements of the DOGE operation, along with the Government Accountability Office, a congressional watchdog of how taxpayer dollars are spent, have not been able to pinpoint how much was saved, or lost, by the reform efforts. Many challenge the Republican administration's numbers.
Dominik Lett, a budget analyst at the Cato Institute, a libertarian think tank, said there were basic mistakes on the DOGE pages tracking savings, leading him to believe the numbers were too high. He said Cato and other organizations have shied away from trying to arrive at a number because of the complexity of the moves.
“Who is getting fired matters. How they’re getting fired, will there be lawsuits?” was among the questions Lett has. Even terminating leases and contracts wasn’t as simple as it sounds.
In the end, he said, “we don’t know how much DOGE has saved.”
In her analysis of media reports and public sources, Elaine Kamarck, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution think tank, found that about 25,000 people who were fired were rehired because they were deemed to be essential.
“What DOGE did is it cut so big and so deep and so randomly that when the Cabinet secretaries came in, and Elon Musk was gone, they realized that they had to bring some of these people back,” Kamarck said.
With that, Kamarck estimated the savings might hit between $100 billion and $200 billion, though final figures remain highly uncertain.
A GAO analysis found layoffs in the Education Department’s civil rights division may have cost $38 million, with employees paid months after termination.
The impacts of DOGE’s work are the subject of ongoing litigation. More than a dozen lawsuits have been filed against the Trump administration for DOGE’s actions over the past year, which challenge everything from the cancellation of grants, mass firings and buyouts, to access to sensitive U.S. Treasury data and payment systems, to the closure of massive federally funded programs.
Musk, in an interview with conservative influencer Katie Miller, said last December that his efforts leading DOGE were only “somewhat successful” and he would not do it again.
Created by Congress during the Reagan administration, USIP was meant to promote peace and prevent global conflict. At the time it was shuttered, the institute operated in more than two dozen conflict zones, including Pakistan and Afghanistan.
Employees watched as DOGE dismantled another organization, the U.S. Agency for International Development. Then, DOGE staffers showed up multiple times at USIP and ultimately took over the headquarters. Most of the institute's board and the acting president were fired.
On the evening of March 28, 2025, termination notices began showing up in employees' personal emails. Within two hours, most of the 300-plus staffers were gone.
USIP leaders and employees sued, arguing it was independent of the executive branch. A federal judge ruled Trump had acted outside his authority, in a decision that restored control of the institute and reinstated workers with backpay — though few returned as operations resumed gradually.
In June, an appeals court stayed that decision. And for the second time, the staff was fired.
The case is suspended now, awaiting a U.S. Supreme Court decision in another personnel-related case, which could expand the president’s control over federal agencies that have long been considered independent of the executive branch.
Depending on that decision and what the appeals court does, the staff could be due back pay and benefits again, despite not having worked for months.
While the original iteration of DOGE has dissipated from the public view, its presence is still felt in parts of the government. High-ranking DOGE officials have been hired as permanent staffers in federal agencies, including at the Treasury Department.
For the people who worked at USIP, the past year has been a whirlwind.
Some have found jobs, but many have faced headwinds in a market flooded with skilled labor. Some meet regularly and update one another on job searches and the suspended court cases they still hope might revive their former employer.
Price came off maternity leave one day before she was fired. When she was fired for the second time, she and her husband, who had lost his job as a contractor at a museum when his project’s funding was cut, lived on their reserves and applied for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, which took months to be approved.
She was forced to use a food pantry when the government shutdown last year stopped her SNAP payments. After filing dozens of job applications, her family left the capital region and moved to the Seattle area.
She now works for a nonprofit that focuses on affordable housing. It is meaningful, but she misses the institute, its mission and her team.
Liz Callihan, who worked in communications at USIP, has applied for 140 jobs since being fired. She often wonders why her former professional home, with a noble mission and a relatively small annual budget of $50 million, became a target of DOGE.
“I absolutely ask myself every day what all this was for,” she said.
Associated Press writer Fatima Hussein contributed.
FILE - Thea Price, top right, whose family is moving away from the Washington region and back to her hometown of Seattle after losing their jobs and relying on savings and food assistance programs like SNAP, poses for a photo on a playground with her husband Nikita and 10-month old boy Nikolai, in Arlington, Va., Nov. 7, 2025. (AP Photo/Nathan Ellgren, file)
FILE - The headquarters for the U.S. Institute of Peace near the National Mall are seen, June 10, 2025, in Washington. (Pablo Martinez Monsivais, File)
FILE - U.S. Institute of Peace employees hold an impromptu celebration on the steps of the U.S. Institute of Peace, May 19, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Gary Fields, file)
FILE - President Donald Trump's name is seen on the U.S. Institute of Peace building, Dec. 4, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci, File)