‘Total lie’: Trump campaign, GOP lawmakers blast report claiming he called Milwaukee a ‘horrible city’


Republicans are coming to the defense of former President Trump after a social media firestorm erupted over a report claiming he disparaged the location of the Republican National Convention during his visit to Capitol Hill.

A Punchbowl News reporter claimed that while speaking to lawmakers in Washington, D.C., on Thursday, Trump said, “Milwaukee, where we are having our convention, is a horrible city.”

The report prompted an immediate response from the Trump campaign and Republicans, who said they were in the room when the comment was made and that Trump’s quote was taken out of context.

“Wrong,” Trump campaign spokesperson Steven Cheung posted on X. “Total bulls—. He never said it like how it’s been falsely characterized as. He was talking about how terrible crime and voter fraud are.”

TRUMP TRAVELS TO DC TO MEET WITH CONGRESSIONAL REPUBLICANS, SPEAK WITH NATION’S TOP BUSINESS EXECUTIVES

Milwaukee and Trump

Milwaukee skyline, photographed from the lakefront on Sept. 13, 2018, and former President Trump. (Raymond Boyd/Anna Moneymaker)

Several Republican lawmakers who were in the room when Trump made the statement, some of whom represent districts in Wisconsin, also said the comment was taken out of context.

“I was in the room. President Trump did not say this. There is no better place than Wisconsin in July,” Rep. Bryan Steil, R-Wis, said in a statement.

TRUMP SET TO MEET WITH GOP LAWMAKERS IN DC: ‘PUT THIS COUNTRY BACK ON PATH TO GREATNESS’

Trump applauded by senators

Former President Trump is applauded by Senate Republicans before giving remarks to the press at the National Republican Senatorial Committee building in Washington, D.C., on Thursday. (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

Rep. Jim Banks, R-Ind., also said he was present during the remarks and that the former president “never disparaged Milwaukee.”

“I was in the meeting. President Trump never disparaged Milwaukee. Just another Democrat hoax,” Banks wrote in a post on X.

“Another classic example of s—– reporting by a Democratic Party shill pretending to be a journalist. Lies busy omission. @realDonaldTrump was specifically referring to the CRIME RATE in Milwaukee,” another Wisconsin representative, Rep. Derrick Van Orden, R-Wis., posted on X.

Fiserv Forum is seen with the Milwaukee skyline in 2020

Fiserv Forum, home of the NBA’s Milwaukee Bucks and site of the 2024 GOP convention. (AP Photo/Morry Gash, File)

“In a desperate attempt to get likes, Fake News Jake Sherman — who wasn’t even in the room — falsely claimed that President Trump called Milwaukee a ‘horrible city,’” the Trump campaign said in a press release Thursday afternoon. “It’s a total lie.”

“President Trump was explicitly referring to the problems in Milwaukee, specifically violent crime and voter fraud.”

Democrats weighed in on the matter as well, including President Biden, who posted on X, “I happen to love Milwaukee.”

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

“Milwaukee makes the greatest beer, brats, and motorcycles in the world,” Wisconsin Democratic Sen. Tammy Baldwin posted on X. “It’s home to some of our most vibrant communities, hardest workers, and is a part of what makes Wisconsin the best state in the nation. Donald Trump wouldn’t understand even if a jury told him so.”

“The GOP wants to enjoy Milwaukee’s hospitality while they host their convicted felon wannabe dictator coronation party – but behind closed doors, Trump and his DC cronies are insulting Milwaukee while they plot to suppress Milwaukeeans’ votes & rip away their freedoms,” Wisconsin Democratic Party Chair Ben Wikler posted on X. “Fight back.”

Sherman pushed back on those who questioned his reporting in several follow-up posts on X. 

“Trump absolutely said it – undoubtedly,” Sherman posted. “People hear what they want. This is familiar to all who have covered Trump or Trump-adjacent stories for the last 10 or so years.”



Source link

Trump, Youngkin meet for first time as GOP eyes winning Virginia in November


Former President Donald Trump and Republican Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin met this week. They discussed efforts to flip Virginia red in the 2024 presidential election, Fox News Digital has learned. 

Two sources with knowledge of the meeting told Fox News Digital on Thursday that Trump and Youngkin had discussed recent polling showing Trump neck-and-neck with President Biden in the Old Dominion State, after Biden won the state by 10 points in 2020. The meeting included discussions on how Trump can pull ahead of Biden as the election cycle further intensifies. 

The pair also discussed the issues of energy, inflation and trade. The meeting is described as a first ever between the 45th president and Youngkin, who was elected governor in the state’s 2021 election. 

Youngkin is the state’s first Republican governor since Bob McDonnell’s tenure from 2010 to 2014. 

YOUNGKIN CALLS OUT PENTAGON’S PLAN TO GIFT CHINA MILLIONS WITH ROOFTOP SOLAR PANELS

former President Trump and Gov. Glenn Youngkin smile for photo

Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin and former President Donald Trump meet ahead of 2024 election.  (Trump campaign)

Virginia has voted for Democrats in each presidential election since President Barack Obama’s first campaign for the White House in 2008. Virginia, which is home to many who work in neighboring Washington, D.C., has not been considered a battleground state in the 2024 election, but recent polling indicates that it could play out to being a tighter than anticipated race. 

Youngkin has previously said that Virginia “is in play” and could deliver a win to Trump come November. 

“I think Virginia is in play. Let’s just remind ourselves – Joe Biden won Virginia by 10 points in 2020. I ended up winning by two the next year. What we’ve demonstrated is commonsense conservative policies work, and Virginians appreciate that,” Youngkin said in an interview with radio host and Fox News contributor Guy Benson last month. The governor reiterated those comments in a Fox News Digital interview last week.

Back in 2020, Biden won the state by 10 points over Trump. During the 2016 election, when former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton faced off against Trump, the Democratic Party also claimed victory over Virginia, with Clinton earning 49.8% of the vote to Trump’s 44.4%. 

A Fox News poll published earlier this month shows the 45th president and Biden with 48% support each in a deadlocked match-up in the Old Dominion State. 

YOUNGKIN DECLARES ‘INDEPENDENCE FROM CALIFORNIA’ AS VIRGINIA EXITS EMISSIONS PACT

In a multi-candidate race, Biden stands at 42%, and Trump at 41%, with Democrat-turned-independent Robert K. Kennedy at 9% and Green Party candidate Jill Stein and independent Cornel West each at 2%.

Glenn Youngkin at outside lectern speaking

Gov. Glenn Youngkin of Virginia joins fellow Republican governors at a news conference to criticize President Biden’s energy policy, on June 3, 2024, at an oil refinery in Chalmette, Louisiana.  (Fox News – Paul Steinhauser)

Youngkin captured the governor’s office in 2021, thanks in part to Trump’s backing, although Youngkin and Trump had never met in person.

Republicans also won the races for Virginia lieutenant governor and attorney general in the party’s first statewide victories in a dozen years. They also flipped the state House, and the victories in a state that had trended blue over the previous decade energized Republicans nationwide.

Last November, however, Democrats won back the majority in the state House and defended their control of the state Senate in a setback for Youngkin, who had led the Republican charge on the campaign trail even though his name wasn’t on the ballot.

FOX NEWS POLL: BIDEN, TRUMP IN A DEAD HEAT IN VIRGINIA

“To even be having this conversation today, I think fully reflects the change in view about not only the strength that Donald Trump would bring to the presidency, but the weakness that Joe Biden has demonstrated,” Youngkin told Fox News’ MacCallum in an interview this month. 

“We have economic weakness, we have national security weakness, we have chaos at the border, we have energy weakness, and Americans and Virginians are ready for a change. That’s why I do think states that in 2016 were not in play, I think can be in play this year. It’s still early days, but this strength from President Trump, not only in Virginia but around the country, is clear, and I think Virginians and Americans are ready for change.”

Gov. Glenn Youngkin with US flag in background

Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin addresses the crowd during an early voting rally on Sept. 21, 2023, in Petersburg, Virginia. Youngkin says the proposed budget he will soon unveil for the next two fiscal years will include an increase in state spending on early learning and childcare programs. Youngkin said in a speech on Dec. 7 that the central aim of the proposal is to ensure that the end of federal pandemic-era funds used to expand those initiatives doesn’t leave families in the lurch. (AP Photo/Steve Helber, File)

KEY BATTLEGROUND TIPS TO TRUMP, ACCORDING TO LATEST POLL

Looking ahead to this autumn’s elections, Youngkin noted that he has “fully endorsed” Trump and said, “We’re going to enthusiastically campaign in order to win this thing.”

Former President Donald Trump pointing with left arm extended

Former U.S. President Donald Trump gestures to the crowd at a campaign event on July 1, 2023, in Pickens, South Carolina. (Sean Rayford/Getty Images)

There was plenty of speculation last year that Youngkin would potentially launch a White House run of his own, but the governor has kept his focus squarely on his home state. The source with knowledge of Youngkin’s meeting with Trump told Fox News Digital that the pair did not discuss his possibility as a running mate.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

When asked in a previous interview about the possibility of a 2028 White House run, Youngkin pivoted and said his priority is “to be the best governor I possibly can in the Commonwealth, and I gotta tell you, I love this job. We have made huge progress, and I’ve got almost another two years to continue to do for Virginia what Virginians hired me to do.”



Source link

Fani Willis tells church congregation she’s ‘thriving’ despite critics’ attempts to ‘humiliate’ her


Embattled District Attorney Fani Willis spoke at a Georgia church Thursday, telling a boisterous group of congregants she is “thriving” despite her critics’ attempts to “humiliate” her. 

The Fulton County DA is at the center of the sweeping case against former President Trump and 18 co-defendants for alleged efforts to overturn the 2020 election. Trump was indicted by Willis in August. Earlier this year, co-defendants accused Willis of having an “improper” affair with special prosecutor Nathan Wade, whom she hired to help prosecute the case. 

Trump and several other defendants are in the Georgia Court of Appeals attempting to have Willis disqualified from the case, citing a conflict of interest. Willis is also under investigation by two state legislative committees and by federal lawmakers. 

Wills addressed the congregation at the Sixth Episcopal District of the African Methodist Episcopal Church (AME) for the Georgia AME’s Annual Planning Meeting, saying she is “thriving” despite the “attacks” on her.

FANI WILLIS FILES ‘LAST DITCH EFFORT’ TO DISMISS THE APPEAL TO HAVE HER DISQUALIFIED FROM TRUMP’S GEORGIA CASE

Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis

Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis arrives to speak after winning the Democratic primary May 21, 2024, in Buckhead, Ga.  (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson)

“The Black woman in America is the most unprotected person in our society,” she said. “I spend no time thinking about” what her critics say, Willis said. 

“I’m too busy celebrating our fineness, our beauty, our success, our wisdom, but, most of all, our hearts, to be bothered by attacks from anyone. See, that’s why they mad. Because why they over there running they mouth, I’m over here paying them no mind, thriving.

“I live the experience of a Black woman who is attacked and oversexualized,” Willis said later. She also said some of her critics mispronounce her name in an effort to “humiliate” her.

The Georgia Court of Appeals on Oct. 4 will hear arguments by Trump’s team that Willis should be disqualified, alleging she financially benefited from Wade’s roughly $600,000 payout for his special prosecutor work through vacations he and Willis would share.

Both Wade and Willis denied they were in a romantic relationship prior to his hiring and that the couple would split the costs of their shared travels. Willis said she reimbursed Wade for her share of the trips in cash. 

GEORGIA PROSECUTOR FANI WILLIS APPEALS AFTER JUDGE DROPS MULTIPLE TRUMP CHARGES

Nathan Wade

Former special prosecutor Nathan Wade arrives before Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis speaks after winning the Democratic primary May 21, 2024, in Buckhead, Ga. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson)

Willis and Wade insisted their relationship started in 2022 after Wade was hired. But they contradicted testimony from Robin Yeartie, a former “good friend” of Willis and past employee at the DA’s office. 

Yeartie said she had “no doubt” that Willis and Wade’s relationship started in 2019, after the two met at a conference. 

In a CNN interview Wednesday night, Nathan Wade said the only thing he regretted about his relationship with the DA was “the timing of it.”

Wade’s interview was bizarrely interrupted when CNN anchor Kaitlin Collins asked, “Just to clarify, when did the romantic relationship between the two of you start?” 

“Yeah, so, we get into … there’s been this effort to say that these exact dates are at issue and these exact dates,” Wade said before his eyes turned to the side. 

“I’m getting signals here,” Wade then told Collins, looking away to others in the room.

TRUMP’S APPEAL TO DISQUALIFY FANI WILLIS FROM GA CASE GETS OCTOBER HEARING DATE

Fani Willis in court

Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis during a hearing in the case of the State of Georgia v. Donald John Trump at the Fulton County Courthouse March 1, 2024, in Atlanta.  (Alex Slitz-Pool/Getty Images)

With cameras still rolling, Wade had his microphone removed and stepped to the corner with his consultant to talk privately before returning to his seat moments later. 

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Collins revisited her question about the timeline of Wade’s affair with Willis, and his answer shifted drastically.

“I believe that the public has through the testimony and other interviews, the public has a clear snapshot that this is clearly just a distraction. It is not a relevant issue in this case, and I think we should be focusing on more of the facts in the indictment of the case,” Wade said. 

Fox News Digital’s Joseph A. Wulfsohn contributed to this report.



Source link

James Carville sounds off on Dems hemorrhaging support of Latino male voters: ‘We’re gonna f—in lose ’em!’


Democratic political strategist James Carville shared his concern about Democrats losing minority voters, namely Latino Americans, ahead of the 2024 election cycle, pointing fingers at “preachy females” in the party.

Carville’s commentary came during an appearance on Donny Deutsch’s “On Brand” podcast, shedding light on the Democrats’ “huge male problem” among “communities of color.”

“We have a huge male problem all across the board, but particularly, I hate this term, but I’ll use it, ‘communities of color,’ as if all people that are not white are the same. It’s stupid,” Carville said.

JAMES CARVILLE REGRETS THAT BIDEN IS RUNNING, WORRIES YOUNGER GENERATION UNINTERESTED IN POLITICS

James Carville Joe Biden

James Carville suggests President Biden shouldn’t listen to the far left during a podcast appearance with Donny Deutsch.  (Jason Kempin/Getty Images for Politicon, left; Ron Sachs/CNP/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Carville explained that the party’s “male problem” was exasperated by “preachy females,” sharing that they are “too much.”

 “And I do think, and people got a little upset with me when I told The New York Times, I think Democratic culture has too many preachy females. It’s too much,” he said. 

“‘Don’t eat hamburgers, don’t watch football, wear a condom.’ Like, man, sh–, leave me alone, OK? I’ve got a god—n life to lead,” Carville said. “You know, a guy works at a tire repair shop in suburban Atlanta, motherf—er’s working 50 hours a week, making $16.50 an hour, and he wants to watch the football game, and he wants to smoke dope and drink beer.”

JAMES CARVILLE DEMANDS MORE ‘SLANTED COVERAGE’ OF TRUMP, SLAMS NEW YORK TIMES

Carville said that the narrative that they are “slothful” frustrates minority voters.

“And then everybody’s telling him he’s slothful, and they reject that sh–,” he added. “I just think some of it is this cosmopolitan condensation, if you will. Like, you need to lead the kind of life we lead, not the kind of life you lead, and it p—es people off.”

Trump at Trump Tower after conviction

Former President Trump leaves after addressing members of the media following the verdict in his hush-money trial at Trump Tower, May 31, in New York City.  (Getty Images)

Deutsch told Carville that where Democrats are struggling, Trump seems to excel.

Carville agreed, adding, “We’re gonna lose Hispanic males. We’re gonna f—in’ lose ’em.”

YOUNG BLACK VOTERS IN PHILADELPHIA TRASH BIDEN AND TRUMP AS ‘BOTH LIARS,’ ‘DIRTY:’ ‘NEITHER CANDIDATE IS GOOD’

“That’s on that male-female issue,” Deutsch said. “That’s on … very much, they want to see, this is a generalization, but strong dominant male in a household.”

Trump Biden

Former President Trump and President Biden are set to square off on Election Day. (Brendan Smialowski/AFP via Getty Images)

Recent polls have showed minority voters appearing to sour on President Biden

The surveys, released in May by the New York Times, Siena College and the Philadelphia Inquirer, show Trump with the lead in five of the six key battleground sates where he was narrowly defeated by Biden four years ago. 

Especially concerning for Democrats is the polls found Biden leading Trump among Black voters 63% to 23%, which would be a sharp drop from the 87% of Black voters who supported Biden in 2020, and helped him flip Georgia and other swing states. 

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

If the results stand on Election Day, Trump winning more than 20% of the Black vote would be the highest level of backing by Black voters of a GOP presidential candidate in generations. 

Fox News’ Elizabeth Heckman contributed to this report.





Source link

RNC opens Latinos for Trump field office in battleground Pennsylvania


The Republican National Committee opened a Latino Americans for Trump field office in Berks County, Pennsylvania, Wednesday, with former Governor of Puerto Rico Luis Fortuno and Republican nominee for U.S. Senate Dave McCormick on the stump, appealing to Hispanic voters on the border and inflation. 

The office opening in Reading came days after the Trump campaign relaunched its Hispanic coalition, committed to re-electing former President Trump this November. Founded as Latinos for Trump during the 2020 election, the campaign announced the relaunch ahead of a Trump rally in Las Vegas Sunday. 

Trump lost battleground Pennsylvania to President Biden by just 1.17% of the vote in 2020. In Berks County, where the RNC field office just opened, Trump beat Biden by just under 17,000 votes. 

“We wanted to identify Latinos with Americans,” Jaime Florez, Hispanic communications director for the Trump Campaign, told Fox News in an interview about the relaunch. “We are Americans. We have been in this country. We vote in the country. We are citizens. … We’re not here for a couple of years, and then we go back to our countries. No, we came here to stay.

TRUMP RALLY DRAWS SWING STATE VOTERS ANGRY OVER ‘SHAM’ CONVICTION: ‘BIGGEST SCAM EVER’

“President Reagan used to say that Hispanics are Republicans. They just don’t know it. Well, we’re finding out.” Florez added. “Democrats took us for granted for way too long and made us promises that they never fulfilled.”

trump voter

One woman at the event told Fox News Digital she is becoming a citizen and voting for Trump. (Fox News)

National polls indicate that young, Black and Hispanic voters are embracing the Republican Party amid concerns over inflation. A Fox News poll conducted in May 2024 found 17% of Hispanic voters said the economy is their single deciding issue in the 2024 election. 

DAVE mccormick

Pennsylvania Senate candidate Dave McCormick spoke to voters at the event. (Fox News)

KEY BATTLEGROUND TIPS TO TRUMP, ACCORDING TO LATEST POLL

From politicians to Pennsylvanians, two issues were top of mind at the RNC office opening on Wednesday — the economy and the border. 

“Everyone is hurting. Really,” former Governor of Puerto Rico Luis Fortuno told Fox News in an exclusive interview. “Most people are hurting, and they want change. The Republican Party is the only party that can bring about that change just to make sure that we keep more of our hard-earned money, that we protect the family and our communities and that we stand strong as a country.”

Fortuno emphasized the need to elect Republicans up and down the ballot this November, telling Pennsylvanians — in English and Spanish — to vote for U.S. Senate Candidate Dave McCormick. Emphasizing his business background, Fortuno said McCormick understands the weight of inflation Pennsylvanians feel on a daily basis. 

PA voter

A Pennsylvania voter talked to Fox News at the Latino Americans for Trump opening.  (Fox News)

Speaking with reporters after his remarks at the office opening, McCormick said he’s vying for every Pennsylvanian’s vote and sees an opportunity to connect with the Latino community over shared policy concerns.

ARMY VET PREDICTS FIRST RED FLIP OF NORTH CAROLINA DISTRICT SINCE 1883, CITING BIDEN-ERA MALAISE

Republican values are very much aligned with many in the Latino community,” McCormick told reporters. “It’s essentially the idea of creating an economy and creating an environment that allows people to pursue the American dream. Industrious, hard-working, want the best thing for their children and an economy where small businesses can prosper and create jobs, where they can raise their kids in communities that are safe. I think that lines up very well with the principles of the Republican Party.”

Pennsylvanians are seeing Latino Americans shift to the Republican Party. 

They’ve been duped all these years by the Democrats,” Kathy, a retired voter from Reading, told Fox News Wednesday. “They’ve been told, ‘Oh, we’ll do this for you. We’ll do that for you.’ And they’re only using them. They don’t do anything for them, for the minorities.”

District 157 Candidate for the Pennsylvania House of Representatives Regina Mauro echoed Kathy’s sentiment that Democrats have failed Latinos in an interview ahead of the office opening. 

Donald Trump arrives to Trump Tower after being found guilty

Donald Trump arrives to Trump Tower May 30, 2024, after being found guilty on 34 counts of falsifying business records in the first degree. (Felipe Ramales for Fox News Digital)

They see the weakness of the current leadership,” Mauro told Fox News of the political shift in Latino voters. “Latinos, we like strong leaders. So, whether it’s the situation domestically or with foreign policy, economically, we’ve been extremely disappointed. … We need peace. We need more stability” 

Mauro said common sense is driving “Trumplicans,” whom she described as minority voters formerly of the Democratic Party, to turn away from President Biden and embrace former President Trump. 

I’m a first-generation American,” Mauro said of the frustration felt by legal immigrants. “My parents, my whole family came from Cuba. A lot of Hispanics take offense to having the one line for legal immigrants where they spend a lot of money and years to do the right thing, the respectful thing like you would for any other country. Just to see, Democrat politicians that are catering to foreigners to come through the border, to just, in essence, skip the line.”

Joe Biden talking at podium, making a fist

President Biden speaks at Abbotts Creek Community Center during an event to promote his economic agenda in Raleigh, N.C., Oct. 18, 2024.  (Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images)

Hispanic voters have seen a revolving door of presidential campaigns vying for their vote this election cycle as Trump, Biden and even Robert F. Kennedy Jr. are competing for young, Black and Hispanic votes. The Biden campaign launched Latinos con Biden-Harris in March to “engage and mobilize Latino voters, communities, and leaders across the country.”

Donald Trump

Former President Trump attends a rally June 9, 2024, in Las Vegas. (Eric Thayer for The Washington Post via Getty Images)

“Donald Trump does not care about the Latino community,” Biden-Harris 2024 Pennsylvania Hispanic media press secretary Nemesis Mora said in a statement to Fox News on the “Latino Americans for Trump” office opening. 

“He’s spent his entire adult life vilifying us, and his entire time in office making our communities worse off. … The truth is, Donald Trump has failed Latinos and our families, while President Biden has actually delivered real results for Pennsylvanians, like lowering health care costs, creating good-paying jobs resulting in the lowest Latino unemployment ever and making historic investments leading to Latino small businesses opening at the fastest rate in a decade. That’s why this November Latinos in Pennsylvania will send Trump back to Mar-a-Lago.”

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

The Biden campaign has 24 offices and more than a hundred staffers on the ground in Pennsylvania. President Biden and Vice President Harris visited Pennsylvania more than 10 times in the first five months of the year. Trump has visited Pennsylvania three times this year, most recently ahead of the primary election in April where he endorsed McCormick.



Source link

Trump endorses blue state Republican Senate candidate who does not support the former president


Join Fox News for access to this content

You have reached your maximum number of articles. Log in or create an account FREE of charge to continue reading.

By entering your email and pushing continue, you are agreeing to Fox News’ Terms of Use and Privacy Policy, which includes our Notice of Financial Incentive.

Please enter a valid email address.

EXCLUSIVE — Former Gov. Larry Hogan of Maryland, a vocal Republican critic of Donald Trump who’s aiming to flip a Democrat-held Senate seat in his blue state, apparently has the support of the former president.

“I’d like to see him win. I think he has a good chance to win. I would like to see him win. And we’ve got to take the majority,” Trump said Thursday in an exclusive interview with Fox News as he pointed to the Maryland Senate race. It’s one of a handful that may determine if the GOP wins back the Senate chamber.

Hogan, a popular former two-term governor, is running against Democrat Angela Alsobrooks, the executive of Prince George’s County, Maryland, in the race to succeed retiring Democratic Sen. Ben Cardin.

TRUMP MEETS FOR THE FIRST TIME EVER WITH THIS REPUBLICAN GOVERNOR

Larry Hogan wins GOP Senate nomination in Maryland

Former two-term Gov. Larry Hogan of Maryland celebrates his victory in the 2024 Maryland Republican Senate primary in Annapolis, Md., May 14, 2024 (Fox News/Paul Steinhauser)

The former Maryland governor, who has said he won’t vote for Trump in November’s presidential election, stood out from most other Republicans for publicly calling for the guilty verdicts late last month in the former president’s criminal trial to be respected.

Before Trump was convicted on 34 felony counts in the first trial of a former or current president in the nation’s history, Hogan took to social media to say, “Regardless of the result, I urge all Americans to respect the verdict and the legal process. At this dangerously divided moment in our history, all leaders — regardless of party — must not pour fuel on the fire with more toxic partisanship.

TRUMP’S GRIP ON GOP REMAINS FIRM AS HIS ENDORSED CANDIDATES SWEEP PRIMARIES

“We must reaffirm what has made this nation great: the rule of law.”

Minutes later, Trump campaign senior adviser Chris LaCivita, a veteran Republican consultant, responded to Hogan’s social media post, writing, “You just ended your campaign.”

On Thursday, as Trump was leaving Capitol Hill after meetings with congressional Republicans, he was asked by Fox News if he would support Hogan.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

“We have to straighten out our country. So, I’d like to see him when he’s somebody that can win. I would. I know other people made some strong statements, but I can just say from my standpoint, I’m about the party and I’m about the country. And I would like to see him win,” the former president said.

Trump says he hopes anti-Trump Republican Larry Hogan wins the Maryland Senate race

Former President Trump, the presumptive GOP nominee, speaks with reporters at the National Republican Senatorial Committee, Thursday, June 13, 2024, in Washington, alongside, from left, Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla.; Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis.; Sen. John Barrasso, R-Wyo.; Sen Roger Marshall, R-Kan. Sen. JD Vance, R-Ohio; and Sen. Steve Daines, R-Mont. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

Asked if he is endorsing Hogan, Trump responded that “nobody’s asked me that. But essentially I would be endorsing. Yeah.”

Hogan campaign senior adviser Mike Ricci, asked for a response to the former president’s comments, told Fox News that “Gov. Hogan has been clear he is not supporting Donald Trump just as he didn’t in 2016 and 2020.”

Fox News’ James Levinson contributed to this report 

Get the latest updates from the 2024 campaign trail, exclusive interviews and more at our Fox News Digital election hub.



Source link

Experts predict inflation election trouble for Biden: ‘Too late’ to fix


Economy experts are predicting trouble for President Biden as the nation draws closer to the November general election, leaving little time for his administration to fix the stubbornly high inflation plaguing Americans.

Inflation currently sits at 3.3% year over year, according to Department of Labor statistics. Although down from a near-record high of 9.1% in June 2022, it’s still higher than at any point in the last decade prior to Biden taking office.

The U.S. Federal Reserve announced Wednesday it would maintain the federal funds rate range at 5.25% to 5.5%, where rates have held steady since last July, an expected decision considering inflation rose less than predicted for the 12 months ending in May and the core Consumer Price Index rose a better than expected 3.4%. 

TRUMP RALLY DRAWS SING STATE VOTERS ANGRY OVER ‘SHAM’ CONVICTION: ‘BIGGEST SCAM EVER’

Donald Trump, Jerome Powell, Joe Biden

Former President Donald Trump, Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell and President Joe Biden. (Getty Images)

Fed Chair Jerome Powell said that the report builds confidence that inflation is moving toward the 2% target but said more evidence is needed before the central bank begins easing policy. 

Economist Peter Morici conceded the report was “certainly good news” for Biden, but said “prices are still up, and it’s only one report.” He also pointed to factors that influenced the report as not being pocket book issues for most Americans. 

“[The report] was driven largely by energy prices falling. In the services sector, inflation is still very robust … Housing and the cost of shelter are rising 5% per year,” he said, adding that energy prices are subject to fluctuation and could look very different in a month.

“The underlying sources of inflation that trouble the Fed are still present. The Fed will not be able to cut interest rates a lot this year if at all. Even if it does, it will come too late to give much help to Joe Biden.”

BIDEN CAMP JABS AT TRUMP’S ‘FAILED’ BUSINESS RECORD AS FORMER PRESIDENT LOOKS TO SWAY NATION’S TOP CEOS

Peter Morici

Economist Peter Morici during an appearance on Fox News. (Fox News)

Joseph LaVorgna, an economist who served as chief of former President Trump’s economic counsel, told Fox he didn’t think inflation was going to come down, but also said, prior to the report, that the Fed “doesn’t want a quick reaction.”

“If I was advising the president, I’d want to do things to get inflation as low as possible,” he said. “The administration, I would argue, has pursued policies that have made the inflation situation unfortunately worse.” 

“Never in the history of the economy have we ever run budget deficits above 5% of GDP with unemployment under 4%. That is a recipe for high inflation, which is what we have,” he said. “I’m concerned the only way we’re going to get inflation down, at least to where the guidelines are set where people aren’t feeling the pain of higher prices, unfortunately, is a recession.”

Dr. Arthur Laffer, an economist who served both the Reagan and Trump administrations, said he couldn’t predict how the economy and inflation would affect the overall results of the upcoming election, but argued the Biden administration had broken the major “kingdoms” of economics, namely by going in the wrong direction on taxes, government spending, monetary policy, regulation and trade.

BIDEN TAKES HEAT FROM SWING STATE DEMOCRAT OVER HIGH GAS PRICES PLAGUING CONSTITUENTS: ‘DISAPPOINTING’

Laffer Economist

Arthur Laffer speaks after US President Donald Trump presented him with the Presidential Medal of Freedom at the White House in Washington, DC, on June 19, 2019. (JIM WATSON/AFP via Getty Images)

“When I look at the Five Kingdoms — taxation, he moves in the wrong direction. Government spending? He moved in the wrong direction. Sound money? He moved in the wrong direction. Regulation is way moved in the wrong direction, especially in energy, but in other things too. On trade? He moved in the wrong direction,” Laffer said. 

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

“I can’t imagine an administration more at odds with what should be done, and the consequences are very, very clear,” he added. “The employment population is not quite back up to where it was prior to the pandemic. Price levels are way up. Interest rates — I could just go on and on. That’s the way I would look at him objectively, as an economist. [Biden] just doesn’t know economics and nor does his administration.”

When it came to the election, however, Laffer said you’d “have to get out your Ouija board.”

Fox Business’ Nora Colomer contributed to this report.

Get the latest updates from the 2024 campaign trail, exclusive interviews and more at our Fox News Digital election hub.



Source link

Trump talks about his potential VP pick


Join Fox News for access to this content

You have reached your maximum number of articles. Log in or create an account FREE of charge to continue reading.

By entering your email and pushing continue, you are agreeing to Fox News’ Terms of Use and Privacy Policy, which includes our Notice of Financial Incentive.

Please enter a valid email address.

Former President Trump said he has “sort of a pretty good idea” of who his vice presidential running mate will be but will probably announce his selection during this summer’s Republican National Convention. 

Trump spoke with Fox News’ Aishah Hasnie at the Washington D.C., headquarters of the Republican National Committee on Thursday following meetings with the National Republican Senatorial Committee.

He was asked if his pick was present at any of the meetings.

TRUMP RILES UP FIERY SWING STATE CROWD IN FIRST RALLY SINCE NEW YORK CONVICTION

Donald Trump interview

Aishah Hasnie spoke with President Trump at the RNC HQ in Washington, DC on June 13, 2024 following his meetings at the NRSC. (Fox News)

“Probably. I don’t want to go, but I think (it) will probably get announced during the convention,” Trump said. “During the convention. There were some good people and, we have some very good people.”

The convention will be held from July 15-18 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Trump said that Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin, a Republican, could be on the short list. 

“And I think I could consider that,” he said. “Yes. I haven’t been asked that question, but he would be on that list.”

Hasnie also asked Trump about his thoughts on President Biden as a father following Hunter Biden‘s conviction on federal gun charges. 

“Well, I think it’s a very serious thing,” Trump said. “I understand that whole subject. I understand it pretty well because I’ve had it with people who have it in their family,” referring to the younger Biden’s history of drug addiction. 

BIDEN CAMP JABS AT TRUMP’S ‘FAILED’ BUSINESS RECORD AS FORMER PRESIDENT LOOKS TO SWAY NATION’S TOP CEOS

President Biden says he won't pardon Hunter

Joe Biden, left, and his son Hunter Biden. (Getty Images)

“It’s a very tough thing. It’s a very tough situation for a father,” he added. “It’s a very tough situation for a brother or sister. And it goes on and it’s not stopping. Whether it’s alcohol or drugs or whatever it may be. It’s a tough thing. And so that’s a tough moment for the family. It’s a tough moment for any family involved in that.”

Hunter Biden was convicted last week of three felony charges related to the purchase of a revolver in 2018 when he lied on a federal gun-purchase form by saying he was not illegally using or addicted to drugs.

Biden has said he will not use his presidential powers to appeal his son’s conviction. He’s also said in the past that he was proud of his son and that he believes he did nothing wrong. 

Hogan Maryland

Then-Republican Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan speaks at an annual leadership meeting of the Republican Jewish Coalition, Friday, Nov. 18, 2022, in Las Vegas.  (AP Photo/John Locher)

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

“As I said last week, I am the President, but I am also a Dad. Jill and I love our son, and we are so proud of the man he is today,” Biden said after the verdict. “So many families who have had loved ones battle addiction understand the feeling of pride seeing someone you love come out the other side and be so strong and resilient in recovery.”

Later in his interview, Trump said he hadn’t been asked to endorse former Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan, a Republican, for the U.S. Senate. Hogan endorsed Nikki Haley over Trump and did not endorse him during the 2016 and 2020 presidential elections. 

“Yeah, I’d like to see him win,” Trump said. “I think he has a good chance to win. I would like to see him win.”



Source link

Trump sells Senate Republicans on plan to win over workers in closed-door meeting


Former President Trump’s closed-door meeting with Republican senators was dominated by his pitch for a new policy position that could win over workers in key swing states ahead of the close November election.

“What I think President Trump did sell us all on is don’t tax” tips, Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., told Fox News Digital following the afternoon meeting at the National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC) headquarters in Washington, D.C.

“He thinks it’s a great example of how working people in this economy just can’t get ahead,” Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., said.

TOOL TO STOP ILLEGAL IMMIGRANT EMPLOYMENT COMES TO SENATE AS BORDER CRISIS RAGES

Donald Trump

Former President Trump, a Republican presidential candidate, arrives to speak during a campaign rally at Sunset Park in Las Vegas June 9, 2024.  (Jim Watson/AFP via Getty Images)

According to several GOP senators, the discussion on ending taxes on servers’ tips took up much of the meeting.

“It’s actually a darn good idea,” Johnson remarked, noting he was unsure about it at first. “One of the reasons he’s doing this [is] because the Biden administration is taking on onerous reporting regulations. They want to make sure they get every tax, every little penny of tip. And this [is] just a total break from that.”

RIOTER VANDALISM TARGETED AFTER DC STATUES DEFACED: ‘LONG LIVE HAMAS’

ordering at a restaurant

Tipped workers have to report their tipped wages and pay taxes on them. (iStock)

Trump introduced the proposal at a Nevada rally earlier this week, where many workers rely on tips to make their living, especially with Las Vegas’s tourism industry. 

“For those hotel workers and people that get tips, you’re going to be very happy. Because when I get to office, we are going to not charge taxes on tips,” he said. 

The former president told the Republican lawmakers Thursday he got the idea from a waitress who expressed the difficulty that reporting standards had posed. 

FBI DIRECTOR WRAY PRESSED ON 8 ISIS-LINKED BORDER CROSSERS RELEASED INTO US

Landmark Las Vegas sign

“Welcome to Fabulous Las Vegas” greets visitors to Sin City as they drive northward on Las Vegas Boulevard South. (Kerry J. Byrne/Fox News Digital)

“I think it’s a very symbolic group of folks, and some of the waitresses there in Vegas felt like they’re being targeted by the IRS. And, boy, it is just really tough out there from an inflation standpoint,” Sen. Roger Marshall, R-Kan., told Fox News Digital. 

A number of GOP senators, including Johnson and Marshall, came away from the afternoon meeting in support of the proposal. 

‘DESTRUCTION OF DUE PROCESS’: RAND PAUL LEADS DOZENS OF SENATORS CONDEMNING TRUMP ‘SHOW TRIAL’ IN NY

Donald Trump at rally

Former President Trump, a Republican presidential candidate, points to the teleprompter and says it’s not working as he speaks during a campaign rally at Sunset Park in Las Vegas June 9, 2024. (Jim Watson/AFP via Getty Images)

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

The new tax policy would directly target workers who rely on tips at a time when Americans maintain unfavorable opinions on the state of the economy. Gallup found Americans’ assessments of economic conditions were the worst they had been since November 2023, with 46% rating it as poor and only 22% saying it is “excellent” or “good.” 

Nevada, in particular, is considered within reach for Trump in the general election. In the latest Fox News Poll, Trump defeated President Biden, 50% to 45%. In the 2020 election, Biden won the state, 50.06% to 47.67%. The swing state is one of several that could decide the outcome of the November matchup. 





Source link

Trump rips DOJ as ‘no good bastards,’ calls Biden ‘dope’ in closed-door House GOP meeting: sources


Former President Trump gave a wide-ranging speech to House Republicans on Thursday, lashing out at his political enemies and praising his allies.

Trump in particular criticized the prosecutions against him, calling the Department of Justice (DOJ) “dirty, no good bastards,” according to two sources in the room.

One GOP lawmaker told Fox News Digital that Trump touted the fundraising and popularity boost he got from his various state and federal criminal charges.

“He said, ‘They had a saying that we’re going to indict this guy into the White House,’” the GOP lawmaker said.

TRUMP RILES UP FIERY SWING STATE CROWD IN FIRST RALLY SINCE NEW YORK CONVICTION

Donald Trump and Joe Biden

Former President Trump criticized his successor on policy and personality in a closed-door meeting with House Republicans. (Getty Images)

The GOP lawmaker said Trump also called President Biden the “worst president in history.”

Sources also told Fox News that Trump referred to Biden as a “dope.”

Multiple House Republicans said the meeting went well, and that Trump touched on many topics, including military, trade and abortion policies.

Rep. Eric Burlison, R-Mo., told Fox News Digital that Trump blamed Biden for the presence of Russian warships in Cuba.

WATCH: TRUMP RALLYGOERS REVEAL WHO THEY WANT AS VICE PRESIDENT

Speaker Mike Johnson

Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., invited Trump alongside the other House GOP leaders. (Getty Images)

“What was really on his mind today is the fact that Russia has submarines right off the coast of the United States, and he’s just, he’s really upset… and he should be. I’m concerned. We all should be concerned that we’ve got a president that is, that’s so weak that he’s allowed for [this],” Burlison said.

Rep. Mike Garcia, R-Calif., said Trump hit Biden for the White House’s threat to veto this year’s defense policy bill, which includes a pay raise for members of the military.

BIDEN CAMP JABS AT TRUMP’S ‘FAILED’ BUSINESS RECORD AS FORMER PRESIDENT LOOKS TO SWAY NATION’S TOP CEOS

“That’s a winning issue from a presidential race perspective,” Garcia said. “The fact that Biden has now tripled down on this veto threat… President Trump should just be banging Biden over the head every day on the fact that you are not willing to give our troops a pay raise.”

Two additional sources who spoke with Fox News Digital said Trump also urged Republicans to hone an effective message on abortion, warning that it had “cost” the GOP in previous elections. 

Mike Garcia

Rep. Mike Garcia,  R-Calif., said Trump advocated for his plan to give pay raises to service members. (Getty Images)

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

He said the issue was “too important to ignore” and accused Democrats of having “radical” positions on late-term abortion, the sources said.

Fox News Digital reached out to the White House and the Trump campaign for comment.

Fox News’ Aishah Hasnie contributed to this report



Source link

Republican proposes bill in response to Biden’s ‘decline on full display’


FIRST ON FOX: The White House would have to notify Congress when the president takes a drug that could alter his alertness, judgment or mood under a bill proposed Thursday by a Tennessee Republican.

“Joe Biden’s embarrassing outbursts of anger and incomprehensible speeches mirror the incalculable damage his policies have had on our nation,” Rep. Andy Ogles told Fox News Digital Thursday. 

“Frequently slurred speech, abnormally long pauses and the inability to string together five words in a coherent sentence have put Biden’s mental and physical decline on full display,” he said. “It is unfair to the American people for the White House to be occupied by someone who is literally incapable of speaking.”

Ogles said his bill — the No Juicing Joe Act — came about because the White House “has refused” to test Biden’s cognitive abilities “because they know he will fail miserably.” Biden is scheduled to debate former President Trump, the GOP nominee, later this month.

BIDEN’S ‘PERPETUAL STATE OF CONFUSION’ ON FULL DISPLAY IN NORMANDY AMID RISING COGNITIVE QUESTIONS

left: President Biden; right: Rep. Andy Ogles, R-Tenn.

Rep. Andy Ogles is introducing a bill he’s titled the No Juicing Joe Act  (Chip Somodevilla/Staff I Michael M. Santiago/Staff)

“The president, whose office is the most powerful on earth, must be accountable to the people, and it’s Congress’s duty to ensure accountability,” Ogles said. 

Presidents past have grappled with health issues that sometimes involve treatments with drugs affecting their behavior, Ogles noted, such as President John F. Kennedy’s treatment by Dr. Max Jacobson, known as “Doctor Feelgood,” and Woodrow Wilson’s post-stroke incapacitation, which led to the 21st Amendment.

In an emailed statement to Fox News Digital, White House spokesperson Andrew Bates said, “It’s telling that Republican officials are unable to stop announcing how intimidated they remain by President Biden’s State of the Union performance.

“But after losing every public and private negotiation with President Biden — and after seeing him succeed where they failed across the board, ranging from actually rebuilding America’s infrastructure to actually reducing violent crime to actually outcompeting China — it tracks that those same Republican officials mistake confidence for a drug.”

BIDEN WHITE HOUSE URGED DEMOCRATS TO CALL BACK WALL STREET JOURNAL AS IT REPORTED ON PRESIDENT’S MENTAL ACUITY

Joe Biden D-Day photos

The Republican National Committee’s research division posted several videos on X Thursday that appeared to show President Biden in a “perpetual state of confusion.” (Fox News)

Last week, the Republican National Committee (RNC) research division posted several videos on X that appeared to show President Biden in “a perpetual state of confusion” following his recent speech in Normandy to commemorate the 80th anniversary of D-Day.

The RNC research account, which is managed by former President Trump’s campaign and the RNC, rattled off several posts on X of the president in Normandy, with one video showing Biden bending down at one point, seeming to be uncertain whether it was time to sit down.

Questions about Biden’s mental acuity also circulated last week after The Wall Street Journal’s bombshell report that interviewed 45 lawmakers and administration officials about Biden’s mental performance.

Biden, 81, is the oldest person to hold the presidency and has faced skepticism from voters and Republican lawmakers about his ability to do his job. Many Republicans and even some Democrats said the president showed his age in private meetings.

BIDEN DISPLAYS SIGNS OF DECLINE IN PRIVATE MEETINGS WITH CONGRESSIONAL LEADERS: REPORT

Andy Ogles in halls of Congress

Rep. Andy Ogles, R-Tenn., leaves the U.S. Capitol April 20, 2023. (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)

Most of the people interviewed by the outlet who were critical of Biden’s performance were Republicans, although some Democrats said the president showed his age in several exchanges. These interviewees participated in meetings with Biden or were briefed on them contemporaneously, including administration officials and other Democrats who did not express concerns about how the president handled the meetings.

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

White House officials, however, dismissed many of the accounts from people who have met with the president or been briefed on those meetings, saying such criticisms were motivated by partisan politics.

Fox News Digital’s Landon Mion contributed to this report. 



Source link

Ohio election demonstrates Dem edge among key voters


Tuesday’s special election in Ohio to fill a vacant U.S. House seat showed off a Democratic advantage in high-engagement voters, with the district swinging roughly 20 points in Democrats’ favor, compared to previous elections.

While Republican state Sen. Michael Rulli defeated his Democratic opponent Michael Kripchak by just under 10 points in the special election for Ohio’s Sixth Congressional District, it was a disappointing margin in a district that had been won by outgoing Rep. Bill Johnson, R-Ohio., by more than 30 points just two years ago.

“It looks like state Sen. Michael Rulli (R) is on track for a significant underperformance in tonight’s #OH06 special election,” Cook Political Report Senior Editor Dave Wasserman said on X as the results rolled in, noting that former President Donald Trump had carried the same district by 29 points in 2020.

TRUMP RILES UP FIERY SWING STATE CROWD IN FIRST RALLY SINCE NEW YORK CONVICTION

left-right photo split of President Biden and former President Trump, respectively

Left: President Biden. Right: Former President Donald Trump. (Getty Images)

The result could be seen as a confusing one for many political observers, with Ohio as a state trending more towards Republicans in recent elections, and the Sixth Congressional District having been a safe haven for the GOP for over a decade.

But the result highlights a growing problem for Republicans nationally ahead of this year’s general election, Wasserman notes, pointing out that Democrats have a growing enthusiasm edge as November approaches.

“Turnout in #OH06 looks abysmal, and as we’ve seen in tons of specials/polls, Dems have a growing advantage w/ the highest-engagement voters,” Wasserman said on X.

Michael Rulli, R-Ohio, at campaign event

Ohio State Sen. Michael Rulli. (Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)

Wasserman’s comments come on the heels of Cook Political Report’s “swing state polling project” conducted last month, which looked into the swing states of Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin and divided voters into three groups.

WATCH: TRUMP RALLYGOERS REVEAL WHO THEY WANT AS VICE PRESIDENT

The first group, whom the report called “high-engagement” voters, features those who “voted in all four of the past four federal elections or voted in the 2022 midterms if they registered after 2020.” The middle tier features voters whom the report called “low/mid-engagement” voters, or those who “skipped at least one of the past four federal elections.” The last group contained new registrants since 2020, which can include those that moved between states.

The report found a growing “participation gap” in presidential preferences, with President Biden holding a four point edge among “high engagement” voters, or those most likely to vote on election day. Trump, meanwhile, held a 10 point lead among “low-mid engagement” voters and newly registered voters.

Such a gap could play a role in tightly contested swing states, with “high-engagement voters” representing the majority of the electorate.

President Joe Biden at lectern

President Joe Biden speaks at a campaign event at Pullman Yards on March 9, 2024, in Atlanta, Georgia. (Megan Varner/Getty Images)

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP 

Ohio, which has traditionally been a swing state but was won comfortably by Trump in the last two elections, looks once again to be trending toward Trump in November. According to the latest Real Clear Politics Polling Average, the former president holds a 10-point lead on Biden in the state.



Source link

Tool to stop illegal immigrant employment comes to Senate as border crisis rages


FIRST ON FOX: Senate Republicans are attempting to get E-Verify technology required for businesses nationwide in a bid to crack down on employing illegal immigrants amid the crisis at the southern border

Sen. Mitt Romney, R-Utah, was joined by fellow Sens. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., Bill Cassidy, R-La., James Lankford, R-Okla., and JD Vance, R-Ohio, to introduce a bill that would require employers to confirm the eligibility of prospective employees to work in the U.S. prior to hiring them. 

According to the lawmakers, requiring the E-Verify technology for companies across the country will remove a key incentive for illegal immigration. 

FBI DIRECTOR WRAY PRESSED ON 8 ISIS-LINKED BORDER CROSSERS RELEASED INTO US

Mitt Romney

Sen. Romney and other Republicans are looking mandate E-Verify for employment nationwide to disincentivize illegal immigration.

“President Biden’s last-ditch effort to limit asylum is too little, too late,” Romney said in a statement to Fox News Digital, referring to the president’s recently announced executive actions designed to address the border crisis. 

“Millions of illegal immigrants have already flooded into our country under his watch, and his executive order falls short in stopping widespread illegal employment. By requiring all employers to use E-Verify, our legislation would ensure that businesses only hire legal workers – eliminating a key driver of illegal immigration and protecting jobs for hardworking Americans,” Romney said. 

‘DESTRUCTION OF DUE PROCESS’: RAND PAUL LEADS DOZENS OF SENATORS CONDEMNING TRUMP ‘SHOW TRIAL’ IN NY

Biden’s executive order will temporarily suspend non-citizen entries across the southern border once the average number of border encounters passes 2,500 people per day over a period of seven days, according to his administration.

DHS CHIEF MAYORKAS QUESTIONED ON REPORTS OF ‘MASS AMNESTY’ FOR ASYLUM SEEKERS

Migrants storm the gate at the border in El Paso

A group of migrants attempts to enter the U.S. illegally by rushing a border wall, March 21, 2024. (James Breeden for New York Post / Mega)

The suspension would be in effect until there has been an average of less than 1,500 encounters at the border for two weeks.

Per Cotton, “American workers today compete against millions of illegal immigrants for too few jobs – that’s unfair. Ending the black market for illegal labor will open up jobs for Americans. Our legislation will take the necessary steps to make sure every potential employer is hiring only legal workers.” 

DURBIN ATTEMPT TO FORCE SUPREME COURT ETHICS VOTE BLOCKED AMID ALITO CONTROVERSY

President Joe Biden

Biden has blamed Republicans for the ongoing issue at the southern border. (Ting Shen/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Cassidy added, “E-Verify protects employees and employers. It is an essential tool in controlling immigration and protecting Americans’ jobs.” 

The Republican bill would raise penalties for those who violate employment paperwork or hire unauthorized alien workers. However, the implementation would be phased in over a period of 18 months in order to allow smaller businesses to comply with the law. 





Source link

Rioter vandalism targeted after DC statues defaced: ‘Long Live Hamas’


FIRST ON FOX: Statue vandalism is being eyed for harsher punishment after a pro-Hamas rally in Washington, D.C., saw statues defaced. 

Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., wants to enforce mandatory minimum prison sentences on people who vandalize and deface statues on federal property. 

The senator introduced the Saving Treasured Artifacts Through Uniform Enforcement (STATUE) Act on Thursday, which would do just that. 

‘DESTRUCTION OF DUE PROCESS’: RAND PAUL LEADS DOZENS OF SENATORS CONDEMNING TRUMP ‘SHOW TRIAL’ IN NY

Sen. Tom Cotton

Sen. Tom Cotton introduced a bill to enforce mandatory minimum sentences for vandals who deface statues on federal land. (Getty Images)

“Any protestor who defaces statues of America’s heroes must face the full extent of the law. As Joe Biden seeks to appease the pro-Hamas wing of the Democratic Party, it’s clear his administration won’t do anything to punish the protestors who defaced the area around the White House recently. The Senate should take up my legislation to punish these pro-Hamas lunatics,” Cotton said in a statement to Fox News Digital. 

DHS CHIEF MAYORKAS QUESTIONED ON REPORTS OF ‘MASS AMNESTY’ FOR ASYLUM SEEKERS

If passed, the bill would prohibit anyone from willfully injuring or destroying, or attempting “to injure or destroy, a structure, plaque, statue, or other monument on public property.” Anyone convicted of doing so would be subject to a fine of at least $1,000 and imprisoned for at least five years, but no more than 10. 

Cotton’s bill comes after a recent rally in the nation’s capital outside the White House, which included pro-Hamas demonstrators who defaced statues. In Washington, D.C.’s Lafayette Square, protesters vandalized statues as they protested the Biden administration’s policy towards Israel and the war in Gaza.

DURBIN ATTEMPT TO FORCE SUPREME COURT ETHICS VOTE BLOCKED AMID ALITO CONTROVERSY

statue defaced

Anti-Israel protesters deface a statue in Washington D.C., on June 8, 2024. (FNTV)

Statues of former President Jackson riding a horse and Comte de Rochambeau, who was a commander in the French army and helped America fend off the British in the Revolutionary War, were among the defaced park infrastructure. 

Messages scrawled on the statues included, “free Gaza” and “free Palestine,” in addition to “Death to AmeriKKKa” and even statements of support for terrorist group Hamas, such as “Long live Hamas” and “Muslim 4 Hamas.”

LINDSEY GRAHAM REQUESTS FULL SENATE BRIEFING ON ISIS BORDER THREAT AFTER TERRORIST BUST

Senator Tom Cotton

Sen. Tom Cotton suggested the Department of Justice should investigate the rally as it did Jan. 6, 2021. (Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Following the weekend rally, Cotton called on the Department of Justice to conduct an investigation into it in the fashion it did for the Capitol riot on Jan. 6, 2021. 

“I expect the Department of Justice to use every technique against them that it used against grandmas in MAGA hats on Jan. 6. And if it doesn’t now, it will next year,” he wrote on X.





Source link

‘Destruction of due process’: Rand Paul leads dozens of senators condemning Trump ‘show trial’ in NY


FIRST ON FOX: Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., led 28 other Republicans in a scathing rebuke of Attorney General Merrick Garland and the New York “show trial” against former President Trump.

“The conviction of President Trump in Manhattan is nothing short of the evisceration of the American judicial process,” the lawmaker wrote in a Wednesday letter. “In their zeal to imprison Donald Trump, Democrat prosecutors successfully dissolved the constitutional protections afforded to defendants and the barriers that protect every American from the abuses of arbitrary rule.”

DHS CHIEF MAYORKAS QUESTIONED ON REPORTS OF ‘MASS AMNESTY’ FOR ASYLUM SEEKERS

Donald Trump, Sketch of Judge Juan Merchan, Rand Paul, AG Merrick Garland

Sen. Rand Paul, center, led 28 other Republicans condemning the New York trial against former President Trump, upper left, in a letter to Attorney General Merrick Garland, right. (Getty Images, Reuters)

The majority of the Senate Republican conference signed onto the condemnation, including all three contenders for GOP leader in the next Congress, Minority Whip John Thune, R-S.D., and Sens. Rick Scott, R-Fla., and John Cornyn, R-Texas. 

Trump was found guilty of 34 counts of falsifying business records by a New York jury last month in a controversial trial, during which he was subject to a gag order. 

The lawmakers claimed the former president’s right to due process was violated in the process of his trial. 

DURBIN ATTEMPT TO FORCE SUPREME COURT ETHICS VOTE BLOCKED AMID ALITO CONTROVERSY

“Even if we disregard Judge Juan Merchan’s financial contributions to Democratic candidates and causes, the prosecutors were permitted to convert alleged time-lapsed business records misdemeanors into felonies because the records violations were supposedly in furtherance of a second crime. Yet, even after the jury rendered its verdict, we do not know what constitutes that specific second crime,” Paul wrote. 

LINDSEY GRAHAM REQUESTS FULL SENATE BRIEFING ON ISIS BORDER THREAT AFTER TERRORIST BUST

Donald Trump sits in the courtroom during his hush money trial

Former President Trump sits in the courtroom during his hush money trial at Manhattan Criminal Court in New York City on May 21, 2024. (Michael M. Santiago/PoolAFP via Getty Images)

He further pointed the finger at President Biden’s administration, calling it “complicit in the destruction of due process of law.”

The Republicans accused the trial of marking “the attempt to imprison a leader of the loyal opposition,” further condemning it for threatening “the existence of due process of law, without which a constitutional republic dedicated to the protection of individual liberty is not possible.”

BIDEN PUSHED TO REVOKE AL JAZEERA CREDENTIALS AFTER ISRAELI HOSTAGE REPORTEDLY FOUND IN JOURNALIST’S HOME

Rand Paul speaks to reporters on Capitol Hill

Sen. Rand Paul claimed the trial violated former President Trump’s due process. (Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)

Trump is expected to seek an appeal in the case. His sentencing is scheduled for July 11, just days before the Republican National Convention. 

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

The former president will be on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., on Thursday to meet with both House and Senate Republicans. 

The Department of Justice did not provide comment to Fox News Digital. 





Source link

Biden to sign 10-year security agreement with Ukraine at G-7 summit


President Biden plans to kick off this year’s G-7 summit in Italy by signing a 10-year security agreement between the U.S. and Ukraine, the White House said.

Biden will sign the document alongside Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. The deal will ensure the U.S. continues to provide Ukraine with military equipment and weapons as the country continues to fend off Russian invasion.

The deal would not be binding once Biden leaves office, however, and former President Trump would be able to reverse the deal if he is elected in November.

“We want to demonstrate that the U.S. supports the people of Ukraine, that we stand with them, and that we’ll continue to help address their security needs not just tomorrow but out into the future,” National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan told reporters on Air Force One.

PUTIN’S FLEET OF WARSHIPS IN CUBA IS DIRECT WARNING TO BIDEN, EXPERTS SAY

Biden shakes hands with Zelenskyy in Paris

President Biden, right, plans to kick off this year’s G-7 summit in Italy by signing a 10-year security agreement between the U.S. and Ukraine. (AP/Evan Vucci)

“If Vladimir Putin thinks that he can outlast the coalition supporting Ukraine, he’s wrong,” Sullivan added.

Republicans on Capitol Hill have grown increasingly skeptical of America’s continued funding for Ukraine. Several have called for more scrutiny of how the funds are being spent, while others have called for funding to be cut off entirely.

Trump himself has also demanded that Europe step up its support for Ukraine, lessening the load on the U.S.

“Why can’t Europe equalize or match the money put in by the United States of America in order to help a country in desperate need?” Trump wrote in April.

Donald Trump arrives to Trump Tower after being found guilty

Former President Trump has demanded that Europe take a larger role in funding Ukraine’s defense against Russia. (Felipe Ramales for Fox News Digital)

He clarified that Ukraine’s “survival and strength” was important to the U.S. but that it should be of greater concern to Europe.

2 ARRESTED IN GERMANY FOR ALLEGED PLOT TO SABOTAGE US MILITARY FACILITIES ON BEHALF OF RUSSIA

“GET MOVING EUROPE!” Trump added. “In addition, I am the only one who speaks for ‘ME’ and, while it is a total mess caused by Crooked Joe Biden and the Incompetent Democrats, if I were President, this War would have never started!”

Volodymyr Zelenskyy

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has signed security agreements with some 15 countries, including the U.S. (AP Photo/Evgeniy Maloletka)

Russia invaded Ukraine in late February 2022. In the immediate months following, Ukraine saw widespread support from Western allies. However, that support has waned as the war drags on with no clear victory in sight.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Biden and Zelenskyy will hold a joint press conference after signing the deal Thursday.



Source link

Hillary Clinton endorses Squad member Jamaal Bowman’s Democratic challenger in competitive House primary


Hillary Clinton on Wednesday endorsed the Democratic challenger running against vulnerable progressive Squad member Rep. Jamaal Bowman, D-N.Y., in a competitive House primary in New York. 

In a post on X, Clinton threw her support behind Westchester County Executive George Latimer. 

“With Trump on the ballot, we need strong, principled Democrats in Congress more than ever. In Congress, @LatimerforNY will protect abortion rights, stand up to the NRA, and fight for President Biden’s agenda—just like he’s always done,” she wrote. “Make a plan to vote by June 25th!” 

In response to Clinton’s backing, Latimer said, “Her voice gives even more momentum to our grassroots campaign, which keeps gaining strength because we stand strongly and honestly for our values and for our belief in delivering meaningful results for the communities we serve,” Politico reported. 

AOC SLAMMED FOR SAYING ‘FALSE ACCUSATIONS’ OF ANTISEMITISM ARE ‘WIELDED AGAINST PEOPLE OF COLOR’

Hillary Clinton sits on stage at Vital Voices event in DC

Hillary Rodham Clinton speaks on stage during Vital Voices 3rd Annual Global Festival on May 30, 2024 in Washington, DC.  (Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images for Vital Voices Global Partnership)

The endorsement came despite Bowman earlier in the day raising racism allegations against Latimer during an interview with Politico conducted in suburban Mount Vernon, N.Y.

Bowman during House Education subcommittee hearing

Rep. Jamaal Bowman, D-NY, speaks during a hearing with subcommittee members of the House Education and the Workforce committee in the Rayburn House Office Building on May 8, 2024, in Washington, DC.  (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

‘SQUAD’ MEMBER DEFENDS ‘RIVER TO THE SEA’ PHRASE INTERPRETED AS CALLING FOR ‘EXTERMINATION’ OF JEWS

“He’s in the pocket of Republican billionaires who want to take our voting rights, our reproductive rights, affirmative action and who are racist,” Bowman reportedly told Politico of Latimer. “And he also is not just anti-Black racist, he’s anti-Muslim racist.”

During a debate hosted by Spectrum-News Tuesday, Latimer accused Bowman of neglecting residents in parts of Westchester County and the Bronx who are White or Asian. 

George Latimer on Westchester County government website

Westchester County Executive George Latimer is running in the Democratic primary against incumbent Rep. Jamaal Bowman.  (Westchester County )

“You don’t mention people who are not Black or brown. There’s a whole district, Jamaal, that you’ve ignored and the district knows you’ve ignored it,” Latimer said. 

The primary face-off in New York’s 16th Congressional District comes amid divisions within the Democratic Party, as far-left progressives staunchly oppose Israel’s war in Gaza launched in response to the Oct. 7 terrorist attacks by Hamas militants. Latimer receives backing from the pro-Israel AIPAC, and Latimer’s supporters have accused Bowman of trafficking anti-Semitic tropes and conspiracy theories. 

CLICK TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Bowman, competing for a third term, is supported in the race by fellow Democratic “Squad” members, including Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and House Minority Leader Rep. Hakeem Jeffries, both of New York. High-profile Sens. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., and Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., also are backing Bowman.



Source link

Biden camp jabs at Trump’s ‘failed’ business record as former president looks to sway nation’s top CEOs


FIRST ON FOX: President Biden’s re-election campaign is attempting to set the narrative surrounding former President Trump’s business experience as the latter preps to sway leaders of the nation’s top companies during an event with major CEOs later Thursday.

Fox Business host Larry Kudlow will interview Trump before nearly 100 CEOs at the highly anticipated Business Roundtable event in Washington, D.C., where the former president will try to win over their support less than five months from the November general election, likely touting his decades of experience leading a major company.

Team Biden, however, wants those business leaders to view a different side of Trump that they say is evidenced by that very experience.

BIDEN TAKES HEAT FROM SWING STATE DEMOCRAT OVER HIGH GAS PRICES PLAGUING CONSTITUENTS: ‘DISAPPOINTING’

Donald Trump, Joe Biden

Former President Donald Trump and President Joe Biden. (Getty Images)

“Donald Trump couldn’t run a lemonade stand, let alone our country. He is a fraud, a crook, and a failed businessman and president who left America in economic ruin,” Biden campaign spokesperson James Singer told Fox News Digital ahead of the event. 

“Donald Trump’s chaos hurt workers, small businesses, and families across America. The choice is clear: Joe Biden has created a booming economy for all Americans, with rising wages, more than 15 million new jobs, and stock market highs, and is building an economy for the future,” he added.

The campaign pointed to Trump’s various casino and hotel bankruptcies, as well as a number of other failed business ventures, such as his airline and university. It also argued his proposed policies relating to the economy and inflation would hurt Americans, citing commentary from some experts.

EXCLUSIVE: WAR VETERAN SAM BROWN VOWS TO DELIVER FOR AMERICANS ‘CRUSHED’ BY BIDEN’S POLICIES AFTER MAJOR WIN

Trump casino

A sign marks the Trump Plaza Hotel and Casino May 8, 2004 in Atlantic City, New Jersey. (Craig Allen/Getty Images)

In arguing for Biden as an alternative to Trump, the campaign pointed to the unemployment rate being at near-historic lows and rising wages, although real wages do remain lower than when the president took office. 

The campaign cited lower inflation rates, which are down from historic highs earlier in his presidency, and a reduction in overall violent crime rates across the country. It also touted the creation of more than 15 million jobs, although many of those jobs were in place under the Trump administration and reappeared as businesses reopened following the pandemic.

Trump campaign spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt hit back at the attack, blasting Biden’s campaign for continuing “to deny that inflation is hurting the American people, proving how out of touch Joe Biden is with reality.”

“Biden has done nothing but make life more expensive, and he’s offering zero solutions to bring down the cost of living — as a matter of fact, Biden has doubled down on his plan to raise taxes and take MORE money from working families,” she told Fox.

WATCH: TRUMP RALLYGOERS REVEAL WHO THEY WANT AS VICE PRESIDENT

Trump Plaza

Trump Plaza neon sign in front of casino in Atlantic City, NJ (Joe Sohm/Visions of America/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)

“President Trump built a billion-dollar real estate empire and employed thousands of people before creating the greatest economy in history as the 45th President of the United States with no inflation, cheap gas, and record-low unemployment, interest, and mortgage rates,” she said. 

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

“President Trump is the businessman and strong leader that we need to end Joe Biden’s nightmare economy and make America wealthy again — and that’s one of the many reasons why President Trump is crushing Joe Biden in the polls,” she added.

White House Chief of Staff Jeff Zients is expected to speak at the roundtable on behalf of Biden since the president departed for Italy to attend the G7 Summit on Wednesday, Axios reported.

Get the latest updates from the 2024 campaign trail, exclusive interviews and more at our Fox News Digital election hub.



Source link

Potential candidates for Supreme Court under a second Donald Trump term


WASHINGTON — Donald Trump made history in 2016 when, as a presidential candidate, he issued an initial list of 11 people he would use as a “guide” for potential Supreme Court nominees, to allay concerns he would not choose conservative judges. He added to those lists while president, which included his three high court candidates: Justices Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett.

He was the first major presidential candidate to telegraph his political strategy so clearly on a tea-leaves topic that is fraught with uncertainty.

Sources close to the presumptive GOP nominee say he again plans to release a similar list in coming weeks or months. As he did eight years ago, Trump will be emphatic, saying he would only choose from the new slates of candidates if there is a Supreme Court vacancy.

As he did during his first election campaign and as president, Trump has been consulting with conservative legal voices, including those from the Federalist Society and the Heritage Foundation. He has also spoken with GOP members of Congress to seek their input, say sources close to the former president.

TRUMP ENDORSEMENT IN BATTLEGROUND STATE ANOTHER VICTORY FOR SENATE REPUBLICAN CAMPAIGN CHAIR

Former President Trump greeting a crowd.

Former President Trump gives a speech in Las Vegas. (Madeline Carter/Las Vegas Review-Journal/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)

The level of serious consideration for any individual candidate remains a highly flexible, amorphous standard, given Trump’s reputation for shifting political views and strategies.

Trump’s large number of federal judicial appointments (245) in his first term would give him a deep bench of candidates to possibly serve on the Supreme Court, including a number who clerked for Justices Clarence Thomas and Brett Kavanaugh as well as the late Antonin Scalia.

Sources say that professional pedigree would be an important factor to Trump, since all three of his high court picks also clerked there (Gorsuch and Kavanaugh for Justice Anthony Kennedy, Barrett for Scalia). 

What follows is an unofficial list of potential candidates for the Supreme Court by Trump. It was compiled from a number of sources, including officials within his inner circle, and Republican political and legal circles.

His team is still compiling a public list that remains in flux, but these are some of the names being considered: 

TRUMP PLEDGES TO ELIMINATE TAXES ON TIPS FOR SERVICE WORKERS DURING LAS VEGAS RALLY

Trump giving a talk.

Former President Trump gives a speech at a rally in Waukesha, Wisconsin. (Scott Olson/Getty Images)

Judge Amul Thapar, U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit, chambers in Covington, Kentucky

Born 1969. Thapar was the first federal district court judge of South Asian descent, whose family emigrated from India. Trump interviewed him personally in 2017 for the Scalia vacancy while still a district judge, then became the president’s second judicial pick when elevated to the appeals court. He was later interviewed by the president for the 2018 high court seat filled by Kavanaugh. Thapar would have the enthusiastic support of his home state senator, Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky. Thapar was previously a U.S. attorney.

Judge James Ho, 5th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals, Dallas

Born 1973. A former Justice Thomas law clerk and former Texas solicitor general, Ho was appointed to the federal bench in 2018. Born in Taiwan, his parents immigrated to California when he was a child. If nominated, he would be the first Asian-American justice. In October remarks at the Heritage Foundation, Ho urged his conservative bench colleagues to “get comfortable” with criticism over their rulings, speaking out against “fair-weather originalism” over that judicial philosophy.

Judge Gregory Katsas, D.C. Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals, Washington

Born 1964. Add him to the list of onetime Justice Thomas law clerks who could make a Supreme Court short list. A former Trump White House deputy counsel, he was appointed to the high-profile appeals court in 2017, where Thomas, Scalia, Kavanaugh and Chief Justice John Roberts all once served. His age may be a potential drawback if the president is seeking someone younger who would presumably carve a longer legacy on the bench.

Judge Neomi Rao, D.C. Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals, Washington

Born 1973. Rao grew up in Detroit, the daughter of Indian immigrant physicians. Like her D.C. Circuit colleague Katsas, Rao was a Justice Thomas law clerk. After working as a private attorney and law professor, she was nominated by Trump to the federal appeals court seat held by now-Justice Kavanaugh.

Judge Barbara Lagoa, 11th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals, Miami

Born 1967. Former Florida Supreme Court justice, the first Hispanic woman and the first Cuban-American woman on that bench. A finalist for the 2020 Supreme Court vacancy that went to Justice Barrett.

Kate Comerford Todd, former deputy White House counsel

Born 1975. Another former Justice Thomas law clerk, she was given serious consideration for the 2020 high court vacancy that went to Justice Barrett. At the time, Todd was a key Trump White House adviser on judicial selection, among other areas. Now a private attorney, she could play another prominent role in a Trump administration, but her lack of judicial experience may be a drawback. Described as smart, principled, with a strong “originalist” view of the Constitution.

JORDAN PETERSON SAYS HE’S BAFFLED BY ‘DEGREE OF ANIMOSITY’ TOWARD TRUMP BY ‘ELITIST LEFTIST TYPES’

The Supreme Court building.

The Supreme Court in Washington, D.C. (MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images)

Judge Lawrence Van Dyke, 9th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals, Reno, Nevada

Born 1972. A former Nevada and Montana solicitor general who worked for his family’s Montana construction business while in college. His supporters say that as a private attorney, Van Dyke did pro bono work for both the conservative Alliance Defending Freedom and the progressive ACLU. His 2019 Senate confirmation to the appeals court was contentious, with the nominee tearfully denying claims he was and would be unfair as a judge to the LGBTQ+ community. 

Judge Britt Grant, 11th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals, Atlanta 

Born 1978. Former justice on the Georgia Supreme Court. Prior to her state appointment in 2017, Grant served as the Georgia solicitor general and as a private attorney. She served as law clerk to then-Judge Brett Kavanaugh of the D.C. Circuit. He swore her in to her current post in August 2018 during his own high court confirmation.

Judge Kyle Duncan, 5th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals, Baton Rouge, Louisiana

Born 1972. The Louisiana native worked in the state’s attorney general’s office and was then general counsel of the conservative Becket Fund for Religious Liberty. As a private attorney, he represented 15 states before the Supreme Court that had prohibited same-sex marriage. The high court ultimately ruled such laws unconstitutional. Duncan’s views on LGBTQ+ rights were a major source of contention at his Senate confirmation hearings for the appellate court seat in 2018.

Judge Andrew Oldham, 5th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals, Austin, Texas

Born 1978. Former law clerk to Justice Alito, and served as general counsel to Republican Texas Gov. Greg Abbot before assuming his federal judicial seat.

Judge Kevin Newsom, 11th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals, Birmingham, Alabama

Born 1972. A former Justice David Souter law clerk, Newsom was Alabama’s solicitor general before joining the federal bench. 

Judge Joan Larsen, 6th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals, Ann Arbor, Michigan

Born 1968. A former law clerk to Justice Scalia, she delivered one of the tributes at his memorial service in March 2016. She served in the Justice Department office that produced the legal justifications for the enhanced interrogation techniques, including waterboarding, that critics have called torture. Larsen was previously on the Michigan Supreme Court before becoming a federal appellate judge in 2017. A finalist for the high court in 2018 and 2020, Trump teased to Fox News four years ago he was considering “a great one from Michigan” and later said she was “very talented.” The seat ultimately went to Justice Barrett.

Fun fact: As a college student, Larsen volunteered for Democrat Joe Biden’s 1988 presidential candidacy – “stuffing envelopes, making phone calls,” as she recalled – but her current conservative credentials are little in doubt.

TRUMP ANNOUNCES MAJOR ENDORSEMENT IN CRUCIAL BATTLEGROUND SENATE RACE

David Ryan Stras at a hearing in the Senate.

David Ryan Stras at the confirmation hearing in the Senate Judiciary Committee. (Bill Clark/CQ Roll Call)

Judge David Stras, 8th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals, Minneapolis

Born 1974. Served on the Minnesota Supreme Court and believed to be the first Jewish member of the state’s high court. Stras, too, clerked for Justice Thomas and once headed the Institute for Law and Justice, a well-respected academic think tank on public policy and judicial politics. Nominated in 2017 to sit on the appeals court.

Kristen Waggoner, Alliance Defending Freedom CEO, president and general counsel

Born 1972. Prominent conservative legal advocate whose faith-based organization has won 15 cases before the Supreme Court. That includes the Masterpiece Cakeshop litigation over the right of private business owners to refuse their artistic services that might violate their “sincerely-held” religious beliefs, including opposing same-sex marriage. Waggoner is a Washington state native.

Judge Allison Jones Rushing, 4th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals, Asheville, North Carolina

Born 1982. The North Carolina native was a law clerk for then-Judge Gorsuch and later Justice Thomas. She, too, was considered for the 2020 high court vacancy.

Judge Patrick Wyrick, U.S. District Court for Western Oklahoma, Oklahoma City

Born 1981. Prior to his appointment in 2019, the Atoka, Oklahoma, native served on the state’s highest court and as the state’s solicitor general.  

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Sens. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., and Mike Lee, R-Utah

A few members of Congress typically get mentioned on these lists, often as a political courtesy, especially to those senators that would vote on any nomination. Frequently mentioned are two members of the Senate Judiciary Committee. Cotton is an outspoken Trump supporter and a vocal advocate for gun rights and immigration reform. Lee may have the best credentials of any lawmaker to be a justice: a former appellate and constitutional lawyer, both in Utah and Washington, who twice clerked for Alito on both the federal appeals court and later the Supreme Court. The relative youth of both senators (Cotton is 47 and Lee is 52) would ensure either could serve many years on the high court and bring a unique, politically charged dynamic to it.



Source link

Trump travels to DC to meet with Congressional Republicans, speak with nation’s top business executives


Former President Trump will travel to the nation’s capital on Thursday to take part in a series of meetings with Republicans from both the House and Senate, and attend an event with top business executives in America.

The former president’s meetings with congressional Republicans will be “looking ahead at the policies that will save the nation,” a senior Trump campaign official told Fox News Digital.

Such policies, according to the campaign official, include “Trump’s commitment to protecting seniors with no cuts to Social Security or Medicare, policies that actually secure our border and make our communities safe again, an America first foreign policy that reclaims peace through strength and world leadership, and economic policies of lower taxes that reignite the vibrant Trump economy we had just a few years ago.”

With less than five months to go before Election Day, Trump will kick off his Thursday morning at the Capitol Hill Club – a popular members-only haunt for House Republicans in Washington, D.C., that also serves as home to the Republican National Committee (RNC) and the National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC) – around 9:30 a.m.

TRUMP TO MEET WITH HOUSE, SENATE REPUBLICANS IN DC THIS WEEK

Mitch McConnell, Donald Trump, Mike Johnson

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, left, former President Trump and House Speaker Mike Johnson (Getty Images)

An invitation sent to senior House GOP aides on Tuesday morning, obtained by Fox News Digital, showed that Trump is coming on a joint invitation from House leaders – Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., Majority Leader Steve Scalise, R-La., Majority Whip Tom Emmer, R-Minn., and House GOP Conference Chair Elise Stefanik, R-N.Y.

House GOP leaders have been almost completely in lockstep with Trump since Johnson took the speaker’s gavel in late October. Multiple sources previously told Fox News Digital that Johnson keeps Trump in the loop before announcing major House agenda items.

Trump and the GOP lawmakers will “discuss growing the House Republican majority and the 2025 legislative agenda,” Johnson’s office told Fox News Digital.

Following his meeting with House Republicans, which will be closed to the press and take place amid a House Judiciary Committee hearing to examine Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s “political prosecution of President Trump,” the former president will take part in a discussion with top business leaders.

Trump will attend and speak at an event hosted by Business Roundtable, an association of more than 200 CEOs of America’s leading companies. There, he will make his case for a more prosperous economy should he receive a second term in the White House.

The off-the-record discussion, which is scheduled to start at 11:15 a.m., will be steered by FOX Business host Larry Kudlow, who served as the director of the National Economic Council in the Trump administration from 2018 to 2021.

Donald Trump

Former President Trump speaks during a campaign rally at Sunset Park in Las Vegas on June 9, 2024. (Jim Watson/AFP via Getty Images)

White House chief of staff Jeff Zients will also be in attendance for the roundtable discussion, speaking on behalf of President Biden while he travels overseas for the G-7 Summit in Italy.

TRUMP-BACKED PRIMARY CANDIDATES RUN THE TABLE, PROVING HIS POWER IN THE PARTY: ‘WITH HIM 110%’

After the roundtable event, Trump will meet with Senate Republicans at 12:30 p.m.

A Trump campaign source told Fox News Digital that Trump’s meeting with Republicans from the upper chamber will be closed to the press and take place at the National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC) headquarters.

Senate GOP Conference Chair John Barrasso’s office confirmed to Fox News Digital on Monday that Trump would address Senate Republicans this week.

“I’ve invited President Trump to meet with members of our Republican Conference,” Barrasso, R-Wyo., wrote to fellow Senate Republicans in a message obtained by Fox News Digital. “I believe it will be helpful to hear directly from President Trump about his plans for the summer and to also share our ideas for a strategic governing agenda in 2025.”

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., who endorsed Trump’s bid to take back the White House in March, said Wednesday that he would be in attendance for the meeting and that the former president has “earned the nomination by the voters” for the 2024 presidential election. It’ll be the first time the two high-profile Republicans have met since December 2020.

After the gathering concludes, Trump and Senate Republicans are expected to speak to members of the press.

Trump at Trump Tower after conviction

Former President Trump leaves after addressing members of the media following the verdict in his New York trial at Trump Tower on May 31, 2024. (Getty Images)

Trump’s visit comes as he continues to shape his own presidential re-election and GOP races across the country, just weeks ahead of the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

The former president’s trip also comes as he continues to face a steady stream of legal battles. The deadline for Trump’s legal team to file any post-trial motions in New York v. Trump is set for the end of the day Thursday.

After meeting with congressional Republicans on Thursday, Trump will have another sitdown with Johnson and NRCC Chairman Richard Hudson, R-N.C., from his Mar-a-Lago resort on Monday, a source familiar with planning told Fox News Digital.

Fox News’ Liz Elkind, Julia Johnson, and Brooke Singman contributed to this update.





Source link