Top DeSantis backer resigns from super PAC amid internal turmoil: ‘Untenable’ environment


The head of Republican presidential candidate and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ super PAC has resigned amid internal turmoil within the organization over its strategy moving forward into 2024.

Chris Jankowski, a veteran operative in Republican politics, submitted his resignation letter, effective immediately, to the board of Never Back Down on Wednesday.

“Never Back Down’s main goal and sole focus has been to elect Governor Ron DeSantis as President. Given the current environment, it has become untenable for me to deliver on the shared goal and that goes well beyond a difference of strategic opinion. For the future of our country, I support and pray Ron DeSantis is our 47th president,” Jankowski said in a statement shared by Never Back Down.

DESANTIS LANDS ENDORSEMENT FROM INFLUENTIAL IOWA EVANGELICAL LEADER IN RACE FOR GOP NOMINATION

Republican Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis

Republican presidential candidate and Florida Governor Ron DeSantis speaks at a Never Back Down campaign event in Keene, New Hampshire, U.S., on November 21, 2023. (REUTERS/Sophie Park/File Photo)

The group has played a significant role in DeSantis’ bid for the presidency since he launched his campaign in May, including raising nine figures to serve as an attack dog and media juggernaut for the governor.

However, the operation has failed to help DeSantis break through the crowded Republican presidential field and be seen as the main challenger to former President Donald Trump’s grip on the GOP. Polls have shown DeSantis consistently in a statistical tie for second place with some of his opponents, fluctuating between former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley and entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy.

According to one recent NBC News report, frustration had been building in the ranks of Never Back Down, which culminated in a heated meeting last week that nearly broke out into a fist fight.

CHRIS CHRISTIE TURNS UP THE HEAT ON HALEY AND DESANTIS AS HE TRIES TO BE THE TRUMP ALTERNATIVE IN GOP 2024 RACE

DeSantis super PAC

New Hampshire resident Ellie Mooney, 44, signs the campaign bus of Republican presidential candidate Florida Governor Ron DeSantis after a Never Back Down campaign event in Keene, New Hampshire, U.S., on November 21, 2023. (REUTERS/Sophie Park)

The report said that Never Back Down’s top consultant, Axiom Strategies CEO Jeff Roe, and longtime DeSantis associate Scott Wagner clashed during the board meeting that resulted in them having to be restrained.

Despite the turmoil, DeSantis’ campaign did see a bright spot on Tuesday when it won the endorsement of influential Iowa Christian leader Bob Vander Plaats.

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Fox has reached out to Never Back Down and the DeSantis campaign for comment.

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



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Charleston, South Carolina elects first GOP mayor since 1870s


  • Charleston, South Carolina elected William Cogswell as its next mayor in Tuesday’s runoff.
  • Cogswell, a Republican, unseated incumbent Democratic Mayor John Tecklenburg by a margin of about two percent.
  • Cogswell is the first Republican elected to the post since George Cunningham, who left office in 1877.

The historic South Carolina city of Charleston has elected its first Republican mayor since the Reconstruction Era.

William Cogswell, formerly a Republican state lawmaker, defeated incumbent Democratic Mayor John Tecklenburg by about 2 percentage points in Tuesday’s runoff, according to the South Carolina Election Commission. Results posted online by the commission showed a 569-vote margin separating the two candidates.

Cogswell, 48, had secured the most votes in the Nov. 7 general election but not a majority, meaning that he and Tecklenburg headed to Tuesday’s runoff.

PRO-TRUMP CANDIDATE BEATS MODERATE DEM IN UTAH SPECIAL ELECTION TO FILL LAST SEAT IN US HOUSE

Charleston’s municipal elections are technically nonpartisan. But Tecklenburg is a well-known figure in the state’s Democratic politics, endorsing Joe Biden in South Carolina’s pivotal 2020 presidential primary.

Cogswell, who served three terms as a Republican in the state House and describes himself as a moderate, earned endorsements from others within South Carolina’s GOP political circles, including Sen. Tim Scott.

Charleston, South Carolina City Hall

This file photo shows City Hall and St. Michael’s Episcopal Church in Charleston, South Carolina, on April 7, 2014. (AP Photo/Bruce Smith, file)

Charleston last elected a Republican mayor in the 1870s, according to historical records from the city and other municipal areas. Republicans including state GOP Chairman Drew McKissick and U.S. Rep. Russell Fry, who served in the state House with Cogswell, celebrated the GOP win in social media posts and statements.

NORTH CAROLINA MAYORAL RACE DECIDED BY COIN TOSS

“We can confidently say that I’m going to be the next mayor,” Cogswell said Tuesday night, as final results came in. “The people have spoken, and we’re ready for a new direction … a new direction that puts labels aside, so that we can find pragmatic solutions to our problems.”

In a concession speech Tuesday night, Teckleburg called his eight years as mayor “the honor of my life” and asked his supporters to rally around the new mayor.

“I’d like to congratulate our new Mayor-Elect William Cogswell … and I’d like to ask each and every Charlestonian, everybody out there, to give him your support,” Tecklenburg said. “When Mayor Cogswell succeeds, Charleston succeeds, and that’s something we’re all in favor of.”

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The City of Charleston has become the second reliably blue area in South Carolina — where Republicans dominate congressional and statewide politics — to choose a Republican mayor in recent years. In 2021, Daniel Rickenmann, a longtime city council member backed by Republicans, was chosen as the mayor of South Carolina’s capital city of Columbia.



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Utah Republican seeking to replace Romney falsified endorsements, pressured lawmakers to support campaign


A Utah Republican seeking to replace retiring GOP Sen. Mitt Romney in the U.S. Senate has been deemed “one hundred percent a liar” by one state lawmaker following his claim that his campaign received endorsements from several elected officials in the state.

Earlier this year, then-Utah state House Speaker Brad Wilson, who announced his campaign for the Senate in September, released a list of more than 60 lawmakers who his campaign said endorsed Wilson in the race. Wilson’s campaign also said last week that it has received endorsements from more than 50 mayors throughout the state.

However, at least a few of those endorsements were not actually given to Wilson’s campaign, according to four officials whose names appeared on the lists and spoke to Fox News Digital about the situation.

Speaking anonymously about the alleged endorsement of Wilson’s campaign, one lawmaker whose name was on the list said he never endorsed the Republican in his race for the Senate. Other officials confirmed to Fox Digital that their names were listed even though they didn’t endorse Wilson’s bid.

UTAH HOUSE SPEAKER JUMPS IN SENATE RACE TO REPLACE ROMNEY: ‘OUR COUNTRY IS NOT ON THE RIGHT PATH’

Brad Wilson, former speaker of the Utah House of Representatives

Brad Wilson (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer/File)

The lawmaker – who requested to remain anonymous out of concern for retaliation from Wilson – said the fiasco with the campaign began this year when Wilson, whose tenure as House speaker concluded last week, called House members and pressured them to donate to him after he launched an exploratory committee to consider running for the seat.

“I think it’s completely inappropriate to call around and ask for donations from members. So, I was put in a position out of the gate where it’s like I say no to our current speaker of the House who still holds and wields all the power,” the lawmaker said. “It’s completely unacceptable and inappropriate.”

The lawmaker, despite being reluctant to make contributions so early in the race, ultimately donated to Wilson’s campaign and “thought that’d be the end of it.”

“Then this letter comes down … saying that I was on a list of legislators that had endorsed him. I’m like, ‘Whoa, I didn’t endorse Brad. I gave him money because he asked for it … he’s speaker of the House,'” the lawmaker told Fox. “I called other legislators, and they said the same thing. They felt like they were put in a tough position where they felt like they had to donate to him.”

Describing it as a “he knows what he’s doing type of situation,” the lawmaker also told Fox that some state House members who didn’t financially support Wilson ended up losing their committee assignments.

Another House member, the lawmaker said, is supporting Riverton Mayor Trent Staggs in the Senate race and ended up in an awkward situation after the representative made a small donation to Wilson and later appeared on the list, which was released in August, prior to Wilson’s campaign announcement.

“It just put everyone in a really tough position, and I don’t think it’s right,” the lawmaker said. “I’m not sure what’s going to happen as we move forward here because he still technically holds a lot of power.”

MORE THAN 60 UTAH REPUBLICANS ENDORSE PRIMARY CHALLENGER TO MITT ROMNEY

former Utah House Speaker Brad Wilson

The undisclosed lawmaker said the false endorsements that ended up on the list are representative of how Wilson has “run things as speaker of the House,” saying that “you don’t cross him” without some type of retaliation. (Brad Wilson)

“To have him be speaker and do that is just unacceptable. I mean, I’m not aware of someone who says they’re going to run and calls while they’re still in power and is gathering up all these bits of, you know, donations and endorsements,” the lawmaker added. “Let’s be real. Brad doesn’t need the money. He is self-funding most of it anyways, and he has tons of it.”

The alleged endorsements for Wilson’s campaign, according to the lawmaker, were “an attempt” by the campaign to show strength early on in the campaign process by listing some House members’ names on the list solely because they gave him a donation he solicited.

“In reality, they weren’t endorsements. They were just people who were scared,” the lawmaker said. “I’ve seen the same thing with the mayoral races or mayors around the state. They’re also saying, ‘I didn’t endorse him, but he put my name on a list.'”

The lawmaker said the false endorsements that ended up on the list are representative of how Wilson has “run things as speaker of the House,” saying that “you don’t cross him” without some type of retaliation.

“One hundred percent a liar,” the lawmaker added of Wilson.

In addition to the state lawmaker, three other elected officials in the state confirmed to Fox News Digital that they did not endorse Wilson’s campaign and were seemingly shocked to see their names on the lists.

In a statement to Fox News Digital, a spokesperson for Wilson’s campaign said, “It’s sad our opponents are spending Thanksgiving agonizing over Brad’s endorsement list, but the fact is Brad Wilson has over one hundred Republican endorsements from every corner of Utah, many times more than all the other candidates in the race combined.”

Asked whether it was appropriate for Wilson to solicit donations during his speakership, Wilson’s campaign responded, “Brad has consistently smashed fundraising records in this race because, like any strong campaign, he’s been asking his friends and allies to chip in to support his campaign.”

In September, following Romney’s announcement that he would not be seeking reelection to the upper chamber in 2024, Wilson told Fox News Digital that a “number of factors” played into his decision to enter the Senate race.

Senator Mitt Romney being questioned by press

Sen. Mitt Romney, R-Utah, announced in September that he is not seeking reelection in 2024 and called for “a new generation of leaders.” (Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

“One is just the overwhelming support we’ve had from everyone in the state — from elected officials to grassroots support. Just a lot of people encouraging us to run, whether it’s been support in terms of wanting to go out and knock on doors or get supporters on board [with] financial support. I mean, that’s been overwhelming,” he said.

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“At the end of the day, our country is not on the right path, and we all know it. People feel like Utah is on the right path, and I feel like I’ve got a lot and a tremendous amount to offer in terms of being able to go back to Washington, D.C., as a conservative, as a conservative fighter, and representing Utah’s values back in the U.S. Senate,” Wilson, a businessman and graduate of Weber State University who has represented Utah’s 15th District in the State House since January 2011, added at the time.



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Chris Christie criticizes Nikki Haley, Ron DeSantis for not targeting Trump


As he aims to be the last challenger standing against former President Donald Trump in the race for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination, Chris Christie’s turning up the volume on two other rivals.

Christie’s amplifying criticism of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and former U.N. ambassador and former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley is for not vigorously targeting Trump, who remains the faraway front-runner for the GOP nomination as he makes his third straight White House run.

“Ron DeSantis and Nikki Haley have not made the case against him. They refuse to make the case against him. They’re scared to make the case against him,” Christie charged in a Fox News Digital interview on the campaign trail in New Hampshire.

And Christie, a very vocal Republican critic of Trump, touted that “the one thing people say about me is I’m not.”

POPULAR GOP GOVERNOR IN A CRUCIAL PRIMARY STATE TEAMS UP WITH CHRISTIE, HALEY AND DESANTIS

Christie, Haley, DeSantis, Ramaswamy, Scott on stage

Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, businessman Vivek Ramaswamy and Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C., stand on stage before the third GOP presidential primary debate on Nov. 8. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell)

DeSantis and Haley are currently battling for second place in the latest national surveys in the 2024 Republican race and in the most recent surveys in Iowa, whose caucuses lead off the GOP nominating calendar. 

As Christie runs a second time for the White House, he’s once again concentrating most of his time and resources on New Hampshire, which holds the first primary in the Republican schedule and votes second after Iowa. Christie is currently in third place in New Hampshire polls, far behind Trump and slightly trailing Haley.

Christie placed all his chips in his campaign for president eight years ago in the Granite State. However, his campaign crashed and burned after a disappointing and distant sixth-place finish in New Hampshire, far behind Trump, who crushed the competition in the primary, boosting him toward the nomination and eventually the White House. 

CHRISTIE VOWS TO ‘CONFRONT’ TRUMP IF FORMER PRESIDENT DOESN’T DEBATE

Christie became the first among the other GOP 2016 contenders to endorse Trump and for years was a top outside adviser to the then-president and chaired Trump’s high-profile commission on opioids. However, the two had a falling out after Trump’s unsuccessful attempts to overturn his 2020 election loss to President Biden. In the past three years, Christie has become one of the harshest Trump critics in the Republican Party.

Chris Christie in New Hampshire

Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, who’s running a second time for the Republican presidential nomination, held a round table discussion with Salvation Army leaders in Derry, New Hampshire, on Nov. 21. (Paul Steinhauser/Fox News)

Christie, who for months has pledged to seek out and confront Trump on the campaign trail, said “I think the one person Donald Trump doesn’t want to have a one-on-one with is me.”

“He’s not afraid of Nikki Haley,” Christie argued. “And he certainly made his feelings about Ron DeSantis known. He doesn’t look like he’s very intimidated by him. But the fact is, you don’t hear him saying that stuff about me. He doesn’t want to be on that stage with me.”

DESANTIS LANDS THE ENDORSEMENT OF A TOP EVANGELICAL LEADER IN IOWA 

Christie teamed up Monday night at a town hall in Nashua, New Hampshire, with Republican Gov. Chris Sununu, who also joined Haley and DeSantis on the campaign trail in the Granite State this week. 

Sununu, a popular governor who’s also an outspoken Trump critic, has said he’ll make an endorsement in the GOP nomination race sometime after Thanksgiving, and that it’s down to Haley, DeSantis or Christie.

Asked about the case he’s making to Sununu, Christie told Fox News: “who does he want standing across from Donald Trump when this gets down to a one-on-one? Who does he think can take him on in a direct way? Who’s been saying the same things as Chris Sununu has been saying for the last couple of years about Donald Trump, trying to move the party in a new direction? And I think I’m the person who has the clearest, strongest voice on that.”

Chis Christie and Chris Sununu in New Hampshire

Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie (right) teamed up with New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu (center) at a town hall in Nashua. (Paul Steinhauser/Fox News)

Christie said that he needs to do “well” in New Hampshire’s primary to be successful in his long-shot bid for the 2024 nomination. Asked to define what “well” means, Christie answered, “No. I can’t define it. I’ll know it when I see it and we’ll see what it looks like.”

“If I don’t think I’ve done well enough, I’d get out,” Christie emphasized. “I’m not somebody who’s going to linger here. This is hard work, and you’ve got to get up out of bed every morning and feel like you have a chance to win. And if that moment comes where I don’t feel like I have a chance to win, I’m not going to elongate a campaign just for the sake of doing it.”

But he added: “I’m convinced that I’m going to do very well here. And I’m going to be the last one standing against Donald Trump and I’m going to take this right to the convention because he’s going to be convicted of federal crimes of interference of our election process this spring.”

CHRISTIE JEERED AS HE TELLS TRUMP SUPPORTERS THEY ‘FEAR THE TRUTH’ AT FLORIDA REPUBLICAN GATHERING

Chris Christie and Donald Trump

Former Republican New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie told Fox News Digital he believes former President Donald Trump will be convicted of “federal crimes of interference of our election process this spring.” (Getty Images)

Trump has made history as the first former or current president to be indicted for a crime, but his four indictments – including in federal court in Washington, D.C. and in Fulton County court in Georgia on charges he tried to overturn his 2020 presidential election loss – have only fueled his support among Republican voters.

Christie’s a longtime friend of Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, dating back to their days as fellow governors. Manchin, a moderate Democrat in a heavily red state, announced earlier this month that he wouldn’t seek re-election to the Senate next year and instead is mulling a potential third-party run for the White House.

“Joe and I had dinner together about ten days ago in D.C. It was great to see him,” Christie shared. “We had a great dinner together on his boat in the Potomac. He’s been a great friend for 14 years now, and I suspect that whatever happens in the upcoming year, we’re going to continue to be great friends.”

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But Christie ruled out teaming up with Manchin in any possible third-party presidential bid.

“I’m committed to winning the Republican nomination for president. I have no interest in being a third-party candidate,” Christie told Fox News. “Joe can do whatever it is he wants to do. Everyone’s got to make their own decision. My decision is the only interest I have is being the Republican nominee for president because I think that’s the best chance I have to win.”

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



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DeSantis expected to land the endorsement of influential Iowa evangelical leader in race for GOP nomination


The influential evangelical leader of a top social conservative organization in Iowa endorsed Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis on Tuesday.

Bob Vander Plaats, president and CEO of The Family Leader organization, announced his endorsement of DeSantis in an interview with Bret Baier at 6 p.m. on Fox News’ “Special Report.”

“We need to find somebody who can win in 2024,” Vander Plaats said, pointing to the 2022 midterms, where an anticipated “red wave” never materialized for most of the country. DeSantis, however, won re-election in Florida by a wide margin.

GAME ON IN IOWA AS DESANTIS AND HALEY BATTLE FOR SECOND PLACE BEHIND TRUMP

Vander Plaats’ endorsement did not come as much of a surprise. 

“We’re hopeful that we’re able to secure that endorsement,” DeSantis told reporters Tuesday during the first of two campaign stops in New Hampshire, the state that holds the first primary and second overall contest in the GOP nominating schedule, after Iowa’s lead-off caucuses.

The Florida governor, along with 2024 GOP White House rivals, former ambassador and former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley and biotech entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy, appeared with Vander Plaats on Friday at a Family Leader presidential forum in Des Moines, Iowa.

DeSantis, Ramaswamy, and Haley share personal stories at Iowa evangelical forum

Ron DeSantis, Vivek Ramawamy and Nikki Haley join The Family Leader president and CEO Bob Vander Plaats at a candidate forum in Des Moines, Iowa, on Nov. 17, 2023. (Fox News – Paul Steinhauser)

“I think that if you saw that Family Leader forum, clearly his folks there gravitated to me. I don’t think there’s any question about that. We have a good relationship,” DeSantis said.

Former President Donald Trump, the commanding frontrunner for the Republican nomination as he makes his third straight White House run, was invited but declined to attend the forum. Trump also skipped a similar presidential forum hosted by the Family Leader in July.

DESANTIS, HALEY, RAMASWAMY, GET PERSONAL AS THEY SIT SIDE-BY-SIDE

Vander Plaats, who has long had a rocky relationship with Trump and who has argued that it is time for new conservative leadership, said the former president’s “absence communicates a lot to our base.”

“There’s definitely a shot that the former president can be beat here,” Vander Plaats told Fox News Digital in an interview last week.

Former President Donald Trump in IowA

Former President Donald Trump speaks during a rally, Saturday, Nov. 18, 2023, in Fort Dodge, Iowa. (AP Photo/Bryon Houlgrave)

Pointing to Vander Plaats, DeSantis on Tuesday noted, “Bob has been somebody that’s been very vocal that Donald Trump is not going to be the way forward, not going to be able to get the job done, particularly as a lame duck president.”

In a major boost for DeSantis – who has staked his campaign on winning in Iowa — the Florida governor landed the endorsement earlier this month of Gov. Kim Reynolds, who is very popular among Hawkeye State Republicans. Reynolds’ backing helped DeSantis alter a negative narrative.

COULD THIS IOWA EVANGELICAL LEADER’S ENDORSEMENT PUT  DENT IN TRUMP’S COMMANDING LEAD?

Vander Plaats, who has repeatedly showered praise on DeSantis this year, told Fox News last week that the Reynolds endorsement of the Florida governor “will weigh in on my discernment. But that won’t make my endorsement.” 

DeSantis to land the backing of a major evangelica leader in Iowa

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis speaks at a town hall in Manchester, New Hampshire, hosted by the DeSantis-aligned super PAC Never Back Down, on Nov. 21, 2023. (Fox  News – Paul Steinhauser)

DeSantis, pointing to the backing from Iowa’s governor, numerous state lawmakers and officials, and the probability of a Vander Plaats endorsement, highlighted that “to have so many members of the Iowa legislature, to have the governor, and then to have Bob and his network. That’s going to be a pretty powerful machine and we’re going to turn all that on. Or they’ll turn that on. And we’re going to go there and do that.”

DeSantis predicted “that these first two states are going to totally upend the conventional wisdom.” 

Taking a shot at some of his rivals, DeSantis argued that Republican primary voters “certainly don’t want to fall in line behind an establishment candidate who’s not going to be able to make any big changes. And I think that’s true for most of the people who are running against us in the primary.”

Vander Plaats is a top social conservative leader in a state where evangelical voters play an outsized role in Republican politics. Vander Plaats backed former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee in 2008, former Sen. Rick Santorum of Pennsylvania in 2012, and Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas in 2016 – all three of whom went on to win the Iowa caucuses, but failed to capture the GOP presidential nomination.

Ahead of Friday’s forum, Trump’s political allies have dismissed the importance of a Vander Plaats endorsement.

Ron DeSantis lands the endorsement of the Family Leader's Bob Vander Plaats

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis arrives at the Family Leader’s Thanksgiving Family Forum, Friday, Nov. 17, 2023, in Des Moines, Iowa. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)

A recent memo from veteran Republican pollster Tony Fabrizio, who among other things conducts surveys for the Trump-aligned super PAC Make America Great Again Inc., argued that a Vander Plaats endorsement would have “no significant impact” on the caucuses.

Pointing to polling he conducted in September, Fabrizio charged that “while the DeSantis camp will try and spin that a Vander Plaats endorsement will revive their sputtering and shrinking campaign, cold hard data tells a much different story.” 

WITH CLOCK TICKING TOWARDS FIRST VOTES IN THE GOP PRESIDENTIAL NOMINATION RACE, THIS CANDIDATE REMAINS IN THE DRIVER’S SEAT

When asked about the criticism, Vander Plaats told Fox News that “my endorsement means one vote. Beyond that, we’ll see what happens.”

However, he added, “I think their obsession with my endorsement probably would indicate that they’re more fearful of it than they should be.”

The Democratic National Committee described Vander Plaats as a “far-right extremist” and argued that his endorsement “is the ultimate kiss of death for Ron DeSantis’ sinking campaign and guarantees DeSantis will never be the Republican nominee.”

“Vander Plaats’ endorsement should come as no surprise – both he and DeSantis share the same desire to ban abortion and rip away freedoms from millions of women,” DNC national press secretary Sarafina Chitika charged in a statement.

Nikki Haley lands an unexepcted endorsement from a social conservative leader in Iowa

Former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley speaks at a town hall in Newton, Iowa, on Nov. 17, 2023. (Fox News – Paul Steinhauser)

A couple of hours before Friday’s Family Leader presidential forum in Des Moines, Haley landed a surprise endorsement from another social conservative leader in Iowa.

As Haley was taking questions from the audience at a town hall in Newton, Iowa, Marlys Popma, the former Iowa GOP executive director and former president of the Iowa Right to Life, stood to speak.

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“I was an undecided voter when I walked in here today, and I am no longer an undecided voter,” Popma said, as many in the crowd applauded. “I just want to tell Nikki that I wholeheartedly support you.”

The big question going forward is whether the Reynolds and Vander Plaats endorsements of DeSantis, and the surprise backing of Haley by Popma, can make a dent in Trump’s commanding lead over the rest of the field.

Nicole Schlinger, a longtime Iowa-based strategist with close ties to evangelicals, argued that endorsements only go so far.

“I think what matters more to Iowa caucus goers than anything is meeting with the candidates and getting their questions answered about their policy positions,” she told Fox News. “Endorsements, whether it’s the governor or Bob Vander Plaats, can shine a light on the campaign, and then it’s up to the candidate to seal the deal.”

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



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Utah special election


Voters in Utah are heading to the polls Tuesday for a special election to determine which party will fill the last remaining open seat in the U.S. House of Representatives.

The election, to be held in Utah’s 2nd Congressional District, was triggered by the resignation of former Republican Rep. Chris Stewart, who left Congress in September due to his wife’s unspecified illness.

Republican Celeste Maloy, who served as Stewart’s chief legal counsel in Congress, won a three-way primary election that month, and is facing off against Democrat state Sen. Kathleen Riebe, a self-described moderate.

BIDEN USES TRUMP’S OWN WORDS AGAINST HIM IN BID TO RECAPTURE THIS MAJOR VOTING BLOCK FOR DEMS IN 2024

Celeste Maloy and Kathleen Riebe

From left to right: Utah congressional candidates Celeste Maloy, a Republican, and Kathleen Riebe, a Democrat. (AP/Utah Senate)

As a candidate, Maloy has touted her roots growing up in rural southern Utah, of which the district covers a vast portion, and has leaned into her support of former President Donald Trump, arguing the numerous ongoing prosecutions against him are politically motivated.

“It’s exciting that we’re going to have somebody come out of this primary that represents rural and southern Utah. I think it’s time for that, and everybody’s ready for it,” Maloy said following her primary win.

However, Riebe has argued the race is a pickup opportunity for Democrats, and has leaned on her experience as a school teacher while making the case that people in the district “are ready for a change.”

TRUMP TO REMAIN ON COLORADO BALLOT AFTER JUDGE REJECTS 14TH AMENDMENT CHALLENGE TO ELIGIBILITY

Utah Rep. Chris Stewart addresses supporters at an election night party

Then-Rep. Chris Stewart, R-Utah, talks to supporters during an election night party on June 28, 2022, in South Jordan, Utah. (AP Photo/George Frey)

In an interview with Deseret News in August, Riebe expressed concern over the nation’s rising debt, and vowed to join the fiscally conservative Blue Dog Coalition if elected.

“Coming to a very rational decision and having very moderate ideas, I think that is what serves us best,” she told the outlet.

Maloy is currently the heavy favorite to win the special election given Stewart’s double-digit margin of victory in the six elections he was the Republican nominee for the district, going back to 2012.

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Capitol Dome

The U.S. Capitol is seen lit by the morning sun. (Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc)

A Democrat win would weaken Republicans’ already slim majority, while a win for the GOP would provide some extra cushion for close votes.

Polls close at 8:00 p.m. local time, and 10:00 p.m. ET.

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



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House GOP subpoenas DOJ prosecutor who allegedly tried to shield Biden during federal probe into son Hunter


Republicans on the House Judiciary Committee have issued a subpoena for a top Justice Department prosecutor investigating Hunter Biden who allegedly tried to shield President Biden from certain questions, inquiries and search warrants related to the investigation, Fox News Digital has learned.

According to the subpoena, which Fox News Digital reviewed Tuesday, Assistant U.S. Attorney Lesley Wolf has been ordered to appear before the committee on Dec. 7 at 10:00 a.m. ET at the Rayburn House Office Building in Washington, D.C.

Wolf first began facing scrutiny earlier this year amid allegations from FBI whistleblower testimony that she limited questions and inquiries about the president and blocked search warrants because she was worried about “optics” during the years-long probe.

WATCH: WHITE HOUSE ISSUES STERN DEFENSE OF BIDEN’S ‘STAMINA’ ON 81ST BIRTHDAY AMID GROWING AGE CONCERNS

One whistleblower, Gary Shapley Jr., who was the supervisor of the investigation at the IRS, said that “at every stage” of the Hunter Biden probe, decisions were made that “had the effect of benefiting” the president’s son.

Shapley made a number of damning allegations that cast doubt over the legitimacy of the years-long investigation, and lobbed critical accusations at Wolf.

According to Shapley, Wolf worked to “limit” questioning related to President Biden and apparent references to Biden as “dad” or “the big guy.”

TRUMP MEDICAL REPORT RELEASED AS BIDEN FACES CONCERNS OVER AGE, HEALTH

Hunter Biden White House

Hunter Biden looks on during the annual Easter Egg Roll on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, U.S. April 18, 2022. (REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst)

Wolf allegedly said there was “no specific criminality to that line of questioning” relating to President Biden, which Shapley said “upset the FBI.”

In October 2020, Wolf reviewed an affidavit for a search warrant of Hunter Biden’s residence, and “agreed that probable cause had been achieved,” Shapley testified. However, Shapley said Wolf ultimately would not allow a physical search warrant on the president’s son.

Shapley said Wolf determined there was “enough probable cause for the physical search warrant there, but the question was whether the juice was worth the squeeze.”

WATCH: WHITE HOUSE ISSUES BRUTAL RESPONSE TO BIDEN’S ‘INAPPROPRIATE’ NICKNAME GIVEN BY ANTI-ISRAEL CRITICS

Joe and Hunter Biden

Joe and son Hunter Biden. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)

Wolf allegedly said that “optics were a driving factor in the decision on whether to execute a search warrant,” Shapley said, adding that Wolf agreed that “a lot of evidence in our investigation would be found in the guest house of former Vice President Biden, but said there is no way we will get that approved.”

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Wolf also allegedly tipped off Hunter Biden’s legal team ahead of a planned search of his storage unit.

Fox News Digital has reached out to the DOJ for comment.



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Group trying to remove Trump from Colorado ballot appeals loss to state Supreme Court


A group that is trying to remove former President Donald Trump from being featured on Colorado’s primary ballot for the 2024 presidential election has filed an appeal to the state’s Supreme Court in an effort to overturn a ruling made last week that said he is to remain on the ballot.

The appeal challenges Colorado 2nd Judicial District Court Judge Sarah Wallace’s 100-plus page ruling Friday, which found Trump engaged in an “insurrection” by inciting the Capitol riot on Jan. 6, 2021, but that the 14th Amendment’s “insurrectionist ban” does not apply to Trump since the presidency is not an “office.”

The Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW) and six Colorado voters filed the lawsuit in September, calling on Trump to be removed from the ballot under Section 3 of the 14th Amendment, known as the disqualification clause.

Donald Trump speaking

Former President Donald Trump speaks to a crowd of supporters at Fort Dodge Senior High School on Nov. 18, 2023, in Fort Dodge, Iowa. (Jim Vondruska / Getty Images)

VOTER WARNS ‘WE ARE WATCHING DEMOCRACY FALL’ UNDER BIDEN ADMINISTRATION

The clause states that no person shall hold any office if they have “previously taken an oath as a member of Congress, or as an officer of the United States” or if they have “engaged in insurrection or rebellion against the United States.”

Wallace dismissed the lawsuit, ruling that the 14th Amendment does not apply to the presidency, and ordered the secretary of state to put Trump on the primary ballot.

The decision came after a Michigan judge ruled Wednesday in a similar lawsuit that Trump would also remain on that state’s primary ballot, which followed the Minnesota Supreme Court and a federal judge in New Hampshire previously dismissing other challenges.

In a statement released by CREW on Tuesday, the group said the judge’s finding that Trump engaged in an insurrection was hugely significant.

JUDGES SIGNAL THEY MAY LOOSEN TRUMP GAG ORDER IN FEDERAL ELECTION INTERFERENCE CASE

Wallace and Trump split image

Colorado District Judge Sarah B. Wallace and former President Donald Trump (AP Images)

“We are planning to build on the trial judge’s incredibly important ruling that Donald Trump engaged in insurrection, and we are ready to take this case as far as necessary to ensure that Donald Trump is removed from the ballot,” said Noah Bookbinder, the president of CREW.

“We always knew this case would end up before the Colorado Supreme Court and have been preparing for that from the beginning.”

Trump campaign spokesperson Steven Cheung on Friday called the case “another nail in the coffin of the un-American ballot challenges.”

“These cases represent the most cynical and blatant political attempts to interfere with the upcoming presidential election by desperate Democrats who know Crooked Joe Biden is a failed president on the fast track to defeat,” Cheung said.

Some experts believe the Colorado case may ultimately reach the U.S. Supreme Court.

Special Counsel Jack Smith

Special counsel Jack Smith (Al Drago / Bloomberg via Getty Images / File)

Trump has also been indicted in special counsel Jack Smith’s investigation into the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol riot and alleged interference in the 2020 election. However, Smith has not charged Trump with inciting an insurrection.

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He also faces criminal charges in Georgia, New York and from Smith’s separate investigation into his alleged mishandling of classified documents.

Trump has pleaded not guilty to all charges, which include conspiracy to defraud the United States, conspiracy to obstruct an official proceeding, obstruction of and attempt to obstruct an official proceeding and conspiracy against rights.

Trump is the first former president in United States history to face criminal charges.

Fox News’ Brandon Gillespie, Brooke Singman and Anders Hagstrom contributed to this report.



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White House quietly deletes webpage showing how taxpayers fund union activities


The White House Office of Personnel Management (OPM) quietly deleted a webpage tracking how much official time federal employees spend working on labor union tasks.

The OPM, which oversees federal employment and recruiting, removed both the webpage and reports assembled over the past two decades analyzing how much taxpayer money is spent funding union activities. Additionally, OPM appears to have stopped assembling official time reports, which have historically been published every few years during the past four presidential administrations since 1998.

“If federal employees are going to be legally permitted to engage in union work while on-the-clock, the very least taxpayers are owed is an accurate accounting of the associated costs,” Maxford Nelson, the director of research and government affairs at free market think tank Freedom Foundation, told Fox News Digital. 

“While the past four presidential administrations — two Democrat and two Republican — have documented and reported on the scope and cost of taxpayer-funded union time across the federal workforce every 1-2 years, the Biden administration has yet to do so even once,” he added. “Were a new analysis to be conducted, it would almost certainly show that more federal employees are spending more of their workday than ever away from their posts working on union business.” 

REPUBLICANS WARN BIDEN ADMIN’S FOREIGN FARM WORKER RULE IS ‘GIVEAWAY TO BIG LABOR’

President Joe Biden

President Biden has vowed to be the most pro-worker and pro-union President in American history. (Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

The most recent OPM analysis of official time use was conducted in 2019 under the Trump administration. The report showed that federal employees with taxpayer-funded salaries spent 2.6 million hours working on union chores, costing American taxpayers about $135 million.

In a statement to Fox News Digital, an OPM spokesperson said the webpage and past official time reports were deleted as part of a website reconfiguration. However, the spokesperson failed to say when or if the site would be restored, and it remains unclear if any other webpages were impacted by the apparent months-long reorganization. 

BIDEN USES TRUMP’S OWN WORDS AGAINST HIM IN BID TO RECAPTURE THIS MAJOR VOTING BLOCK FOR DEMS IN 2024

“The Civil Service Reform Act of 1978 provides official time to federal employees to conduct certain union activities in recognition that unions have a statutory obligation to represent all bargaining unit members, regardless if they pay dues,” an OPM spokesperson told Fox News Digital. 

“Previous reports on official time are not currently available because OPM is reorganizing our website to improve navigation and customer experience.”

President Biden UAW speech

President Biden delivers remarks about the economy before the United Auto Workers Union on Nov. 9. (OLIVIER DOULIERY/AFP via Getty Images)

Meanwhile, the amount of time devoted to union tasks on federal taxpayer-funded salaries has likely experienced a sharp increase since President Biden took office. In May 2018, former President Trump issued an executive order limiting the amount of official time that could be used across the federal workforce to the extent permitted by law, an action Biden immediately repealed upon taking office in January 2021. 

And the Biden administration has broadly made promoting greater union membership a top priority. The White House Task Force on Worker Organizing and Empowerment announced in March that OPM’s efforts to increase the number of federal workers in a labor union have led to an additional 80,000 workers unionizing since 2021, a 20% increase.

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“Unfortunately, the Biden administration not only reversed Trump-era rules designed to minimize taxpayer-funded union time, but appears to be actively working to prevent the public from easily accessing past government research documenting how much time federal employees spend working for a union and what that lost time costs taxpayers,” Nelson told Fox News Digital.

“Instead, the Biden administration is spotlighting and celebrating its efforts to get more federal employees to join unions and to give these private special interest groups even more control over the already sclerotic federal bureaucracy. This administration’s contempt for taxpayers is palpable.”



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Social media reaction to flaming Biden birthday cake



A social media firestorm erupted over President Biden’s fiery birthday cake that was lit with 81 candles.

Biden continued making history Monday, marking another year as the oldest sitting American president at the age of 81.

A photo was posted on the president’s X account featuring his flaming treat that was immediately burned by social media users for its “carbon emissions” and being a “fire hazard” given the amount of candles.

“As Biden celebrates his birthday —America represents the cake. Regardless of whether you are Republican, Democrat or Independent we are all feeling the heat from Biden’s failed policies,” commentator Mehek Cooke posted. 

BIDEN’S BIRTHDAY BLUES: WHITE HOUSE APPEARS TO DOWNPLAY SPECIAL DAY, CRITICS SAY AGE IS MORE THAN A NUMBER

“Joe Biden is so old, his birthday cake is a fire hazard,” conservative communicator Steve Guest wrote alongside the viral image.

“Joe Biden pictured with inflation,” Stephen L. Miller joked. 

TRUMP MEDICAL REPORT RELEASED AS BIDEN FACES CONCERNS OVER AGE, HEALTH

“There’s a portal to hell on a plate in front of him” said radio host Dana Loesch.

“The candles on President Biden’s birthday cake seemed to cast more light than his policies and leadership have over the past 3 years. America is in desperate need of clear, strong leadership, not the diminishing approach we’ve been witnessing,” one individual wrote.

“Anybody tracking the carbon emissions from Biden’s birthday cake?” said Larry O’Connor.

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“I thought this was a parody account at first glance. That pic wasn’t the best idea,” another social media user said.

“TONIGHT: Biden has bonfire in the White House to celebrate his 81st birthday,” an account belonging to the Republican National Committee posted on X.

“Is there anything he doesn’t set on fire?” Fox News contributor Lisa Boothe posted on X.

Biden’s birthday comes amid increased concerns over the president’s age and whether he will be able to complete another full term if re-elected in 2024. The age concerns come at the same time multiple polls have shown Biden trailing former President Trump in a head-to-head matchup, with many voters expressing the opinion that Biden’s age is a factor.

The White House did not respond to a request for comment from Fox News Digital.



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Was the impact of abortion on this year’s election results overstated?


For Republicans, this month’s off-year elections were anything but a success. 

The results in gubernatorial and legislative showdowns as well as in some high-profile referendums gave Democrats a big shot of adrenalin while potentially serving as a warning sign for the GOP looking ahead to the 2024 elections for president and control of Congress.

Apparently hurting Republicans for a second straight year at the ballot box was the combustible issue of legalized abortion.

TOP TAKEAWAYS FROM 2023 ELECTIONS

Abortion on the ballot in Ohio on Election Day 2023

People gather in the parking lot of the Hamilton County Board of Elections as others arrive for early in-person voting in Cincinnati on Nov. 2, 2023. (AP Photo / Carolyn Kaster)

“We do have to talk about abortion,” Republican National Committee Chair Ronna McDaniel has been saying since the election results this month.

McDaniel said GOP candidates “are not responding to the lies of the Democrats on abortion. We have to come out and very vocally say where we stand.”

The month’s election results were the latest in a slew of statewide victories for abortion rights since the blockbuster move last year by the Supreme Court’s conservative majority to overturn the landmark, nearly half-century-old Roe v. Wade ruling, which had allowed for legalized abortions nationwide.

AS TRUMP PICKS UP PACE IN IOWA, WILL HE FACE BLOWBACK OVER HIS ABORTION COMMENTS?

The decision moved the divisive issue back to the states. And it’s forced Republicans to play plenty of defense in elections across the country. A party that’s nearly entirely “pro-life” has had to deal with an electorate in which a majority of Americans support at least some form of abortion access.

Democrats made abortion a major part of their messaging in Kentucky’s gubernatorial showdown, in Virginia’s legislative contests, in a state Supreme Court race in battleground Pennsylvania, and in an Ohio referendum on codifying abortion rights. And Democrats chalked up wins in all of those states.

Apparently hurting Republicans for a second straight year at the ballot box was the combustible issue of legalized abortion. (AP Photo / Rogelio V. Solis / File)

But veteran Republican strategist and Fox News contributor Karl Rove, who masterminded former President George W. Bush’s two White House victories and served as his top White House political adviser, says the effect of abortion on this month’s elections is overblown.

HALEY SEARCHES FOR COMMON GROUND ON COMBUSTIBLE ISSUE OF ABORTION

“Abortion might have helped Democrats sometimes, but the issue is hardly a silver bullet,” Rove wrote last week in a Wall Street Journal opinion piece.

And taking aim at the political weaknesses of President Biden, Rove said that “as Virginia showed, as long as Mr. Biden is the face of the party, pro-life candidates can make gains on Democratic turf if they frame the abortion issue with care.”

But Democrats see the issue of abortion as a continued “mobilizing” factor to energize their base and attract crucial swing or moderate voters going forward.

Veteran strategist and Democratic National Committee member Maria Cardona pointed to last year’s midterms, in which the Democrats overperformed, and told Fox News that the 2023 results “were similar to what happened in 2022 when everybody was predicting a red wave.”

Looking ahead to next year’s contests, Cardona predicted that abortion “is going to continue to be an incredibly mobilizing issue.”

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Longtime GOP strategist David Kochel noted that abortion remains “a terrible problem” for Republicans.

“They’re out of step with where the country is” on the issue, he said.

Kochel, a veteran of numerous presidential and statewide campaigns in Iowa, acknowledged that Republicans are “not going to win on abortion” and urged GOP candidates to “fight where they can win – on the economy, foreign policy, competence.”

McDaniel, talking to Fox News Digital and other news organizations the night after this month’s elections, said Republicans need to more forcefully push back on Democrat attacks over where they stand on abortion.

“If a lie is up against you with $30 million behind it, and you do not respond, that lie becomes the truth, and that’s the Democrats’ playbook, and our candidates have to respond on TV,” she said.

“As a suburban woman who’s heading the party, we have to talk about abortion,” McDaniel added. “If we do not get up on TV and define ourselves on this issue and allow the Democrats to do it for us, it’s a losing strategy.”

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



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Maryland hate crime task force member claimed babies murdered by Hamas were ‘fake,’ compared Israel to Nazis


A member of a Maryland task force aimed at combating hate crimes published numerous antisemitic social media posts, including claiming that the babies brutally murdered in the Oct. 7 Hamas attack were “fake,” and comparing the nation of Israel to Nazi Germany.

Zainab Chaudry, an anti-Israel activist who serves as the director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations’ (CAIR) Maryland office, made the posts in the weeks following Hamas’ attack, which saw more than 1,200 people killed, including children and babies, as well as numerous rapes and destruction of property.

“I will never be able to understand how the world summoned up rage for 40 fake Israeli babies while completely turning a blind eye to 3,000 real Palestinian babies,” Chaudry wrote in a Facebook post dated Oct. 26.

WATCH: WHITE HOUSE ISSUES BRUTAL RESPONSE TO BIDEN’S ‘INAPPROPRIATE’ NICKNAME GIVEN BY ANTI-ISRAEL CRITICS

CAIR's Zainab Chaudry

Zainab Chaudry speaks during a press conference at the Muslim Community Center in Silver Spring, Maryland on February 16, 2015. (JIM WATSON/AFP via Getty Images)

“[T]hat moment when you become what you hated most,” Chaudry wrote in an Oct. 17 post, including two photos of the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin, Germany, one showing it lit up with the Israeli flag in solidarity with Israel following the attack, and another from a ceremony in 1936 when it was decorated with the flag of Nazi Germany during the Olympics that year.

In another post from Nov. 6, Chaudry appeared to suggest the mere existence of Israel as a nation was the cause of the ongoing war, writing it was an “inconvenient fact.” She included an image of the words “it all started in 1948,” the year Israel was founded as a nation.

Others from the weeks following the attack showed Chaudry sharing a quote celebrating “martyred Palestinians,” and a post citing what appeared to be an Islamic prophesy that said “garrisons who defend the lands of Islam will be in Ashkelon,” an Israeli city north of the Gaza Strip.

DEMOCRATIC SOCIALIST MEMBERS OF CONGRESS HAVE NOT CONDEMNED VIOLENT ANTI-ISRAEL PROTEST TARGETING OWN PARTY HQ

Zainab Chaudry Facebook post

Zainab Chaudry, a member of the Maryland Commission on Hate Crime Response and Prevention, made numerous antisemitic social media posts following the Oct.7 Hamas attack. (Zainab Chaudry/Facebook)

Despite the posts, Chaudry has maintained her place on the Maryland Commission on Hate Crime Response and Prevention, a position for which she was nominated by Democrat Maryland Attorney General Anthony Brown in August.

The commission’s goal, according to Brown’s office, is to address hate crime incidents across Maryland, and to “communicate and promote understanding of diverse perspectives in a positive and meaningful way.”

Brown’s spokesperson, Jennifer Donelan, told Fox News Digital that “the views and opinions of any individual Commission member do not reflect those of either the Maryland Commission on Hate Crime Response and Prevention or the Attorney General.”

BIDEN’S APPROVAL RATING SINKS OVER ISRAEL-HAMAS WAR; SUPPORT FOR TRUMP IN 2024 RISES: POLL

Zainab Chaudry Facebook post

Chaudry compared Israel to Nazi Germany after sharing photos from Berlin of the Nazi flag hanging from the Brandenburg Gate in 1936 and a recent one of the location lit up with the Israeli flag. (Zainab Chaudry/Facebook)

“We understand that there are many viewpoints regarding current events in the Middle East. The Commission will do its best to explore the impact of those events on our community, and to determine how best to address escalations in hate and bias incidents across the state,” she said, explaining that the Commission would “develop policies and protocols governing its work” and how its members engage on the issues. 

“Just as we urge others to do, the Commission will identify ways in which we can foster productive and empathetic dialogue amongst ourselves that leads to mutual understanding. We, like the rest of the world, must first talk to one another and, most importantly, listen to one another as we work toward the goals of peace and tolerance,” she added.

When reached for comment, Chaudry told Fox News Digital that the “Nazi post” was originally shared “by a close Jewish friend,” before going on to accuse the Israeli government of wanting to commit genocide against Palestinians.

NYU CANCER DOCTOR SUES HOSPITAL, SCHOOL OVER PRO-ISRAEL POSTS, SAYS HE’S A ‘SACRIFICIAL LAMB’

Zainab Chaudry Facebook post

Chaudry claimed the mere existence of Israel as a nation was the cause of the ongoing war, writing it was an “inconvenient fact” that tension had been building up since 1948. (Zainab Chaudry/Facebook)

“The Israeli prime minister has analogized the bombing of Gaza to an ancient biblical story about the total genocide of a city, [and] declared that there are no innocent civilians in Gaza, the Israel defense minister has justified starving Palestinian civilians by calling them ‘human animals,’ the Israeli military spokesman has said that the aim of their bombing campaign is destruction rather than accuracy. Multiple Israeli ministers have called for the ethnic cleansing of Gaza, with one even calling the ongoing war a ‘Nakba 2023,'” she said.

“I strongly and unapologetically condemn Benjamin Netanyahu’s far-right, racist government for repeatedly making such genocidal threats towards the Palestinian people and killing over 13,000 Palestinians in Gaza, most of them women and children murdered in their homes. Unlike many of the Israeli government’s most extreme supporters, I recognize that killing any civilians is wrong, which is why my office has repeatedly condemned the killing of both Israeli and Palestinian civilians,” she said. 

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“There is no conflict between condemning the Israeli government’s genocidal war crimes overseas and standing up against all forms of hate here at home, including antisemitism, Islamophobia and anti-Palestinian racism. False smears from anti-Palestinian and anti-Muslim extremists will not stop me from standing up for justice here and abroad,” she added.

Fox News Digital has reached out to CAIR for comment.



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White House issues stern defense of Biden’s ‘stamina’ on 81st birthday amid growing age concerns


White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre issued a stern defense of President Biden’s “stamina” on Monday, his 81st birthday, when questioned over the growing concerns surrounding his age.

“I would put the president’s stamina, the president’s wisdom, ability to get this done on behalf of the American people against anyone, anyone on any day of the week,” Jean-Pierre told Fox News’ Mark Meredith during the White House press briefing in response to a question about former Obama adviser David Axelrod raising the issue of Biden’s age.

Earlier this month, Axelrod suggested it may be “wise” for Biden to drop out of the 2024 presidential race on the heels of a brutal poll that found him losing to former President Donald Trump by up to 10 points in five battleground states.

TRUMP MEDICAL REPORT RELEASED AS BIDEN FACES CONCERNS OVER AGE, HEALTH

Karine Jean-Pierre and President Biden

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre and President Joe Biden. (Getty Images)

Biden’s “biggest liability” with voters is his age, Axelrod said. While he should be “proud of his accomplishments,” the country had too much at stake to risk losing to Trump in the next election, he argued.

Axelrod doubled down on the criticism earlier in the day Monday, even after Biden reportedly called him “a prick.”

“I don’t care about them thinking I’m a prick — that’s fine,” Axelrod told New York Times columnist Maureen Dowd. “I hope they don’t think the polls are wrong, because they’re not.”

WATCH: WHITE HOUSE ISSUES BRUTAL RESPONSE TO BIDEN’S ‘INAPPROPRIATE’ NICKNAME GIVEN BY ANTI-ISRAEL CRITICS

Former Obama Adviser David Axelrod

David Axelrod speaks onstage at the Mainstage Talk: Ending the Stigma: From Silence to Solutions during Project Healthy Minds’ World Mental Health Day Festival 2023 at Hudson Yards on October 10, 2023 in New York City. (Bryan Bedder/Getty Images for Project Healthy Minds)

However, Jean-Pierre told Fox during the briefing that there was “no alarm” going on behind the scenes at the White House despite those age worries.

“No, there’s no alarm happening behind the scenes. I can only speak behind the scenes here. There is no alarm happening behind the scenes. And I’m certainly not going to comment on everybody who has something to say,” she said.

“Also, it’s just not my job. It’s not my job to think through or to tell people what to think. Right? Whether it’s the American people out there or a, you know, political analyst, or as your question is about David Axelrod, it’s just not my place to speak to that,” she said. 

BIDEN USES TRUMP’S OWN WORDS AGAINST HIM IN BID TO RECAPTURE THIS MAJOR VOTING BLOCK FOR DEMS IN 2024

President Joe Biden

President Joe Biden delivers remarks during a joint press conference with Prime Minister of the United Kingdom Rishi Sunak in the East Room of the White House on June 08, 2023, in Washington, DC. (Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)

Jean-Pierre went on to say that the White House’s perspective is that it wasn’t about Biden’s age, but rather his “experience.”

“That’s what we believe. And, as they say, the proof is in the pudding. The president has used his experience to pass more bipartisan legislation in recent time than any other president. That’s just a fact. That is something we have seen this president do, and that’s because of his experience … So what we say is we have to judge him by what he’s done, not by his numbers,” she added.

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Fox News’ Hanna Panreck contributed to this report.



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Biden mocked after confusing pop music stars during turkey pardoning joke: ‘Impeachable offense’


Social media erupted Monday after President Biden botched a joke that appeared to be targeting young voters due to their unrivaled enthusiasm for the pop music stars referenced.

Biden, who was kicking off his 81st birthday during the annual White House turkey pardoning, appeared to confuse Taylor Swift and Beyonce, while also appearing to incorporate another popular singer into the mix.

“Now just to get here, Liberty and Bell had to beat some tough odds in the competition. They had to work hard, show patience, and be willing to travel over 1,000 miles,” Biden said, before attempting to compare the turkeys traveling to D.C. to getting a ticket to a concert — though it is unclear which hit tour he intended to reference. “You could say even harder than getting a ticket to the Renaissance tour or, or, or Britney’s tour, she’s down, it’s kinda warm in Brazil right now.”

“This is an impeachable offense,” NRCC Communications Director Jack Pandol wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter, joking about Biden’s blunder.

BIDEN’S SUPPORT FROM GEN Z ERODES AS AGE BECOMES CRITICAL ISSUE: ‘HE’S OUT OF TOUCH WITH BASICALLY EVERYBODY’

President Biden Speaking

President Biden has faced questioned about his age and mental capacity since taking office after making a series of gaffes during speeches and events.  (Fox News)

“What is Biden talking about?” the Republican National Committee’s research account posted alongside a clip of the remarks.

Biden appeared to either make a comparison to Beyonce’s “Renaissance World Tour” or Taylor Swift’s “Eras Tour” — as he initially said “Renaissance” but then suddenly began talking about the weather in Brazil where Swift’s latest show was held. The president also mentioned “Britney” in his attempted joke, which some Twitter users have translated as being Britney Spears.

“81-year-old Joe Biden, attempting to not appear ancient, mixes up Beyoncé, Taylor Swift and Britney Spears,” OutKick founder Clay Travis posted.

KAMALA HARRIS REACTS TO ROUGH BIDEN POLLS: ‘WE’RE GOING TO HAVE TO EARN OUR RE-ELECT’

“Grandpa Joe is trying to be hip and edgy again,” another user wrote.

United States President Joe Biden speaks during the National Thanksgiving Turkey Ceremony at the White House in Washington DC, United States on November 20, 2023. (Celal Gunes)

“Words cannot describe the experience of seeing the leader of the free world ‘pardon’ a large bird,” another user wrote. “Biden tried to make a Taylor Swift joke (something involving how far the turkeys travelled to get to Washington), but badly mangled it, calling her “Britney.”

Other users highlighted the president turning 81.

“Joe Biden has no idea what he’s talking about. He attempts a joke about how difficult it is to get tickets to see Beyonce but calls her ‘Brittany.’ He then follows up that gaffe by confusing Beyonce (‘Brittany’) with Taylor Swift. He turned 81 today,” Citizen Free Press said.

Biden said Monday’s event was the “unofficial start of the holiday season” and was a time to “share joy and gratitude and a little bit of fun.”

“This is the 76th anniversary of this event. And I want you to know, I wasn’t there, the first one,” Biden said, taking a dig at his age. He went on to say that Americans will “gather with the people we love and the traditions that each of us have built up in our own families” this week.

Biden’s comment comes after a NBC News poll found former President Donald Trump was leading Biden in a hypothetical 2024 match-up

Biden, Axelrod

President Biden has reportedly called David Axelrod a “prick” in private, according to Politico’s Jonathan Martin.  (Left:  Chris Kleponis/CNP/Bloomberg via Getty Images, Right:  (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images))

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Former Obama adviser David Axelrod warned earlier this month that Biden’s “age issue” was consistent in polling and said that it was the “one thing” the Biden team “can’t reverse.”

“The one number in the polling that was concerning, and in the CNN poll that followed after The New York Times poll, had to do with age, and that is one thing you can’t reverse no matter how effective Joe Biden is behind the scenes,” Axelrod said. “In front of the camera, what he’s projecting is causing people concerns, and that is worrisome.’



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Judges signal they may loosen Trump gag order in federal election interference case


A gag order against former President Donald Trump in a federal election interference case is being weighed by a three-judge panel after they heard arguments in a federal appeals court in Washington, D.C., on Monday.

During the two-and-a-half hours of arguments, the appeals court judges appeared skeptical of both sides on whether to reinstate an order from a trial judge that prevented Trump from making inflammatory comments against prosecutors, potential witnesses and court staff.

Cecil VanDevender, a lawyer with Special Counsel Jack Smith’s office, argued that a gag order is necessary to prevent intimidation and threats against participants in the case where Trump is accused of scheming to overturn the 2020 election.

Meanwhile, Trump lawyer John Sauer urged the court to revoke the order.

NEW YORK JUDGE LIFTS TRUMP GAG ORDER IN CIVIL FRAUD TRIAL OVER FREE SPEECH CONCERNS

trump campaign event

A federal appeals court heard arguments Monday on whether to reinstate a gag order against Donald Trump in the federal case charging him with plotting to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

The court did not immediately rule, but the outcome of Monday’s arguments will set parameters on what Trump, as both a criminal defendant and the leading candidate for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination, can and cannot say as the trial date nears. 

The judges hearing the case include Cornelia Pillard and Patricia Millett, both appointees of former President Barack Obama, and Brad Garcia, who joined the bench earlier this year after being nominated by President Biden.

Donald Trump

A prosecutor argued that a gag order is necessary to prevent intimidation and threats against participants in the case. (AP Photo/Eric Gay, File)

U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan first imposed the partial gag order Oct. 17, blocking Trump from making statements targeting Smith, his staff, witnesses and court personnel. 

TRUMP GAG ORDER IN ELECTION CASE IS ‘UNCONSTITUTIONAL’: LAW PROFESSOR

The order was later put on hold pending a previous appeal from the former president before being reinstated by Chutkan on Oct. 29.

The order does not prevent Trump from airing general complaints about the case, and Chutkan has said the former president is still allowed to assert his claims of innocence and that the case is politically motivated.

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Trump has continued to deny any wrongdoing in the case, and has argued that it is part of an effort to prevent him from winning the presidency in 2024. He has also sharply criticized those involved in the case, including Smith, whom he often refers to as “deranged.”

Fox News’ Jake Gibson, Brandon Gillespie and The Associated Press contributed to this report.



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Sununu teams up with Haley, DeSantis, Christie, as he decides on ’24 endorsement


HOOKSETT, N.H. – Republican Gov. Chris Sununu’s the busiest politician on the presidential campaign trail in the crucial primary state of New Hampshire this week, and he’s not even running for the White House.

Sununu teamed up on Monday afternoon with former ambassador to the United Nations and former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley at a town hall in Hooksett.

On Monday evening, he’ll join former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, who’s making his second bid for the GOP presidential nomination, at a town hall in Nashua.

And on Tuesday, he’ll team up with Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis for a campaign event in Manchester, New Hampshire’s largest city.

GAME ON IN IOWA AS DESANTIS AND HALEY BATTLE FOR SECOND PLACE BEHIND TRUMP 

Sununu introduces Haley at New Hampshire town hall

Gov. Chris Sununu introduces former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley at a town hall in Hooksett, New Hampshire, on Nov. 20, 2023. (Fox News – Paul Steinhauser)

Sununu said he’ll endorse one of those three candidates when he decides on whom he’ll back in the 2024 Republican presidential race sometime after Thanksgiving.

“I’m not endorsing anyone yet,” the governor told reporters after the conclusion of the Haley event. “Nikki’s done a great job. She’s been really pounding the pavement… Her message seems to resonate.”

WITH CLOCK TICKING TOWARDS FIRST VOTES IN THE GOP PRESIDENTIAL NOMINATION RACE, THIS CANDIDATE REMAINS IN THE DRIVER’S SEAT

Sununu told Fox News Digital that his endorsement would be much more than just a one-day announcement.

“If I get behind a candidate, I’m going to get behind a candidate,” he emphasized.

And he later added that he’d put muscle behind his endorsement, “110%.”

Ron DeSantis teams up with Chris Sununu in New Hampshire

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis campaigns with GOP Gov. Chris Sununu on Aug. 19, 2023, in Londonderry, New Hampshire. (Fox News – Paul Steinhauser)

“That’s the fun part. Are you kidding? I’m not going to do an endorsement and sit on my hands. When I do an endorsement, it’s going to be a six-, seven-, eight-, nine-week push, whatever it is, to really make sure folks know where we are. I tend to not leave anything on the table,” he emphasized.

And Sununu, who’s won election and re-election to four two-year terms as New Hampshire governor, said he’d help whichever candidate he backed “put together a ground game. I think we know how to do it pretty well here.”

HALEY, DESANTIS, RAMASWAMY, SHARE PERSONAL, EMOTIONAL STORIES

But he’s also tempered expectations that his endorsement might move the needle in the Granite State, telling Fox News last month that “I’m never a big believer that endorsements matter as much as the press think they do.”

Asked if he could see himself serving in a potential Haley, DeSantis or Christie Cabinet, Sununu told Fox News on Monday that “I don’t need anything out of Washington. I just want a great candidate and great president and I think there’s a huge opportunity for that. No, nothing for me. I’m ready to go get a real job.”

Christie and Sununu team up on the campaign trail in New Hampshire

Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie teams up with Gov. Chris Sununu at a town hall in Merrimack, New Hampshire, on Nov. 9, 2023. (Fox News – Deirdre Heavey)

The governor, who flirted with a White House run of his own before announcing in early June that he wouldn’t launch a 2024 campaign, has been a vocal GOP critic of former President Donald Trump, who remains the commanding frontrunner for the Republican nomination as he seeks to win back his old job.

“He’s got a floor, but he’s also got a ceiling,” Sununu said as he pointed to Trump’s large lead in the latest New Hampshire polls. “And when you look at the fact that well over 50% of the Republican core-based voter wants somebody else, the fact that in New Hampshire you can have independents that come out – I believe in record numbers – most of which won’t vote for yesterday’s news in terms of Donald Trump.”

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And the governor emphasized that “these candidates have a lot of opportunity to make up a lot of ground quickly.”

New Hampshire’s secretary of state announced last week that the date of the primary will be Jan. 23, eight days after the Iowa caucuses, which lead off the GOP presidential nominating calendar.

New Hampshire holds the first presidential primary

A sign outside the State House in Concord, New Hampshire, marks the state’s cherished century-old, first-in-the-nation presidential primary status. (Fox News – Paul Steinhauser )

Granite State voters are known for traditionally being late deciders when it comes to their state’s treasured first-in-the-nation presidential primary.

As for when New Hampshire voters will decide whom they’ll back for president, the governor said, “They always make them after Thanksgiving, and I think this year even later than normal.”

“I think a lot of folks are just going to wait and see where this thing goes in late December and early January and make up their minds,” Sununu added.

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



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Trump medical report released as Biden faces concerns over age, health


Former President Donald Trump’s personal physician has released his medical report, giving the former president a clean bill of health and praising his recent weight loss and improved diet.

The report, released Monday by Dr. Bruce Aronwald, who has served as Trump’s physician since 2021, comes as concern over President Biden’s health continues to grow ahead of the 2024 presidential election, specifically regarding his age and cognitive ability. 

Trump’s physician said the former president’s performance on cognitive exams was “exceptional.” The report was notably released on Biden’s 81st birthday.

WATCH: WHITE HOUSE ISSUES BRUTAL RESPONSE TO BIDEN’S ‘INAPPROPRIATE’ NICKNAME GIVEN BY ANTI-ISRAEL CRITICS

split screen images of President Biden (Left) and Donald Trump (Right)

President Biden and former President Donald Trump. (Fox News)

“I am pleased to report that President Trump’s overall health is excellent. His physical exams were well within the normal range and his cognitive exams were exceptional. In addition, his most recent extensive laboratory analysis remains well within normal limits and was even more favorable than prior testing in some of the most significant parameters, most likely secondary to weight reduction,” Aronwald wrote.

He wrote that Trump’s cardiovascular studies were “normal,” that all of his cancer screenings came back negative, and that he had “reduced his weight through an improved diet and continued daily physical activity, while maintaining a rigorous schedule.”

“It is my opinion that President Trump is currently in excellent health, and with his continued interest in preventative health monitoring and maintenance, he will continue to enjoy a healthy active lifestyle for years to come,” Aronwald added.

BIDEN USES TRUMP’S OWN WORDS AGAINST HIM IN BIDE TO RECAPTURE THIS MAJOR VOTING BLOCK FOR DEMS IN 2024

President Joe Biden talking to crowd

President Joe Biden speaks during an event at the Nash Community College in Rocky Mount, North Carolina, on June 9, 2023. (BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP via Getty Images)

A recent NBC poll indicated 59% of registered voters have “major concerns” about Biden’s physical and mental health as he eyes a second term, with an additional 27% having either “moderate” or “minor” concerns.

Another poll released last month found 76% of voters agreed Biden is “too old” to serve another term.

Additionally, Republicans have increasingly said Biden does not have the “cognitive ability” to serve another four years, including Rep. Ronny Jackson, R-Texas, the former White House physician for Presidents Obama and Trump.

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“He’s got these people that surround him that are inappropriately encouraging him to continue to run because it builds up who they are and what they do. But our border, our wars overseas, our economy, you know, it’s just a disaster right now. And he just can’t do the job. And it’s just on display every day that he’s not capable of doing this job anymore,” Jackson warned during an appearance on Fox & Friends on Monday.

Fox News’ Taylor Penley contributed to this report.



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White House responds to nickname Biden given by pro-Palestinian protesters


The White House issued a brutal response Monday to what it said was the “inappropriate” nickname President Biden has been given by critics of his support for Israel amid its war with Hamas terrorists.

Dubbed “Genocide Joe,” Biden has increasingly become the target of far-left protests across the country, including by some in his own party accusing him of supporting an effort to wipe out Gaza and the Palestinian people. 

“We’re not worried about nicknames and bumper stickers. I mean, it’s First Amendment free speech. The president’s focused on … making sure that we can continue to support Israel as they fight a terrible terrorist group, Hamas,” National Security Council spokesman John Kirby initially told New York Post reporter Steven Nelson, who asked him for a response to the nickname during the White House press briefing.

DEMOCRATIC SOCIALIST MEMBERS OF CONGRESS HAVE NOT CONDEMINED VIOLENT ANTI-ISRAEL PROTEST TARGETING OWN PARTY HQ

Joe Biden and John Kirby

President Joe Biden and National Security Council Coordinator for Strategic Communications John Kirby. (Getty Images)

Kirby then shifted his response to blast those using the term “genocide” in a context outside of referring to the express goal of Hamas: the complete eradication of Jews.

“People can say what they want on the sidewalk, and we respect that. That’s what the First Amendment is about. But this word genocide is getting thrown around in a pretty inappropriate way by lots of different folks,” he said. 

“What Hamas wants, make no mistake about it, is genocide. They want to wipe Israel off the map. They’ve said so publicly on more than one occasion, in fact, just recently. And they’ve said that they’re not going to stop,” he said, adding that attacks like that of Oct. 7 would continue to happen “again and again and again.”

BIDEN USES TRUMP’S OWN WORDS AGAINST HIM IN BID TO RECAPTURE THIS MAJOR VOTING BLOCK FOR DEMS IN 2024

Hamas terrorists in Gaza

Palestinian Hamas terrorists are seen during a military show in the Bani Suheila district on July 20, 2017, in Gaza City, Gaza. (Chris McGrath/Getty Images)

Kirby acknowledged that there had been “too many” civilian deaths within Gaza as a result of military action, but that Israel was “not trying to wipe the Palestinian people off the map.”

“Israel’s trying to defend itself against a genocidal terrorist threat. So if we’re going to start using that word, fine, let’s use it appropriately,” he said.

Kirby’s comments come just over a week after tens of thousands of anti-Israel protesters descended on the White House, demanding a cease-fire in the war but refusing to denounce Hamas for its civilian-targeted brutality. 

BIDEN’S APPROVAL RATING SINKS OVER ISRAEL-HAMAS WAR; SUPPORT FOR TRUMP IN 2024 RISES: POLL

Rashida Tlaib at protest

Rep. Rashida Tlaib, D-Mich., addresses attendees as she takes part in a protest calling for a ceasefire in Gaza outside the U.S. Capitol, in Washington, U.S., October 18, 2023. (REUTERS/Leah Millis)

“Genocide Joe needs to halt his actions immediately and realize that he’s going to face massive opposition from Democrat voters next election,” one protester told Fox News at the demonstration.

Earlier this month, Rep. Rashida Tlaib, D-Mich., a member of the far-left “Squad,” accused Biden of “complicity” in the deaths of Palestinian children via his support for Israel.

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“Your silence is deafening. Your complicity is even worse,” Tlaib wrote in an Instagram post directed toward Biden. “A whole generation of children is being wiped out in front of us.”



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goldman | Fox News


A Democrat congressman is walking back a comment he made against former President Trump over the weekend that sparked a social media firestorm.

“Yesterday on TV, I mistakenly used the wrong word to express the importance for America that Donald Trump doesn’t become President again,” Rep. Daniel Goldman of New York posted on X on Monday. 

“While he must be defeated, I certainly wish no harm to him and do not condone political violence. I apologize for the poor choice of words.”

Goldman was referring to a comment he made over the weekend while discussing Trump’s actions on January 6.

‘SMUG’ DEMOCRAT MOCKED FOR ‘ACCIDENTALLY’ ADMITTING BIDEN DID TALK BUSINESS WITH HUNTER: ‘EPIC FAIL’

Rep. Dan Goldman in a house office building

Rep. Dan Goldman, D-N.Y., insisted President Biden has “restored the integrity of Department of Justice.”  (Jon Michael Raasch/Fox News)

“His rhetoric is really getting dangerous,” Goldman said during an interview with President Biden’s former press secretary Jen Psaki on her MSNBC show.

“More and more dangerous. We saw what happened on January 6th, when he used his inflammatory rhetoric now, and his recent truth social post is incredibly, incredibly scary for anyone that might be trying to work in government. And it is just unquestionable at this point that man cannot see public office again. He is not only unfit, he is destructive to our democracy, and he has to be eliminated.”

BIDEN HAS ‘RESTORED THE INTEGRITY’ OF JUSTICE DEPARTMENT, HOUSE DEMOCRAT TELLS ABC

Former President Donald Trump

Former U.S. President Donald Trump  (Sean Rayford/Getty Images)

Goldman’s comment drew criticism on social media from conservatives pointing out that the congressman was using “dangerous rhetoric” himself.

“Sometimes they slip and say the quiet part out loud,” radio host Mike Ghallager posted on X.

“I hope Speaker Johnson censures this nut job!!!,” pro-Trump operative Alex Bruesewitz posted on X. 

Rep. Dan Goldman

Rep. Dan Goldman, D-N.Y., has been a staunch critic of former President Trump. (Getty Images)

“By using his own ‘logic,’ Goldman should never see public office again,” Trending Politics co-owner Collin Rugg posted on X.

Several conservatives on social media didn’t accept Goldman’s clarification including Twitchy Managing Editor Sam Janney.

“You knew exactly what you were doing and what you were saying … you are only walking this back because you don’t like being held accountable for your own words,” Janney posted on X. “We see you.”

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In a statement to Fox News Digital, Trump campaign spokesperson Steven Cheung said, “Democrats have been calling for violence against President Trump and his supporters since 2016.”

“This is not new or surprising rhetoric,” he added.



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US Republicans praise new ‘anarcho-capitalist’ Argentine president


Republican lawmakers in the U.S. are heaping well-wishes on Argentina’s newly elected president, a self-described “anarcho-capitalist” they say poses an “existential threat to progressives.”

Javier Milei has been compared to former President Donald Trump for his bombastic ways. He’s promised to slash government spending in Argentina by 15% and replace the country’s currency with the U.S. dollar, among other reforms.

Right-wing U.S. officials were quick to praise his victory on Sunday. Elected Democrats were largely silent, however.

“Here’s the most compelling reason why American progressives detest Javier Milei: If Argentina can elect a government with a mandate to restrain and downsize government, so can we,” Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, said after the win. “It’ll work there. And then here. That, my friends, is an existential threat to progressives.”

PINK FLOYD’S ROGER WATERS DENIED HOTEL RESERVATIONS IN SOUTH AMERICA AFTER ANTISEMITISM ACCUSATIONS

Milei celebrating

Javier Milei won the presidential election in Argentina, South America’s second-largest economy. (AP Photo/Natacha Pisarenko)

Rep. Mike Collins, R-Ga., praised him, “Congratulations to President-elect [Milei]. Hopefully, this will be the first of many wins for freedom and democracy against socialism in Latin America.”

House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Mike McCaul, R-Texas, called Milei’s win “decisive” and said, “I look forward to a promising new chapter for this bilateral relationship in addressing rampant corruption, Chinese encroachment, and other shared priorities together.”

ARGENTINA ELECTION SHOWDOWN AS LIBERTARIAN OUTSIDER LOOKS TO TAKE DOWN ESTABLISHMENT CANDIDATE

Trump also congratulated him on his TruthSocial page, “Congratulations to Javier Milei on a great race for President of Argentina.”

Mike Lee

Sen. Mike Lee during a nomination hearing in Washington, D.C., on May 17, 2023. (Cheriss May/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

“The whole world was watching! I am very proud of you. You will turn your Country around and truly Make Argentina Great Again!” Trump wrote.

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., and Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., also extended well-wishes. 

Milei, a libertarian economist, campaigned on a platform pushing smaller government in order to achieve economic success. He has made public appearances wielding a chainsaw as a symbol of his desire to cut spending. 

FORMER ROCKER NICKNAMED ‘ARGENTINE TRUMP’ GAINS ELECTION STEAM WITH ANTI-SOCIALIST MESSAGE

Argentina, South America’s second-largest economy, is currently in the middle of a crippling economic crisis. Inflation in the month of October shot past 140% there. 

In addition to calling for a drastic overhaul of Argentina’s government, including abolishing the Central Bank, Milei is also a climate change skeptic and has called to outlaw abortion.

Donald Trump wearing a red make america great again hat

Former President Trump congratulated Milei on his TruthSocial page. (Sean Rayford/Getty Images)

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An interview clip of Milei, which has been widely shared on social media and has become emblematic of his campaign, reportedly translates him as saying, “You can’t give s— leftards an inch… If you think differently, they will kill you.”

Among the only congratulatory messages from a Democratic official came from U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken.

“We congratulate [Milei] on his election as President of Argentina. We look forward to continuing bilateral cooperation based on shared values and interests,” Blinken said in a statement.



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