Ukrainian refugees, wounded soldiers hope for US aid as funding’s stalled


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Over $113 billion in U.S. tax dollars have already been sent to help Ukraine fight off the Russian invasion. But an additional $60 billion in aid is stalled in Congress and defense officials warn Ukraine is running out of resources.

In Ukraine, there is a shortage of soldiers, ammunition and confidence that Western aid will come soon. Tens of thousands of soldiers and civilians have died or lost limbs in the war. 

Twenty-five-year-old Oleksandr Bazilevych has only his right arm left. A Russian grenade exploded near him last September as he was helping a wounded friend reach a medic. He wasn’t surprised when he lost his limbs. 

“It could be even worse,” Bazilevych says as he sits in a Minnesota rehabilitation and prosthetic treatment clinic. Other organizations told him it would be impossible to help him. Then he found the Protez Foundation.

PUTIN WARNS THE WEST THAT RUSSIA IS ‘READY’ FOR NUCLEAR WAR: ‘WEAPONS EXIST IN ORDER TO USE THEM’

a doctor helps a man in a wheel chair with his new prosthetic arm

“It’s pretty hard. You cannot see your family. You don’t understand what will happen to you, how it’s going and what will be next,” Oleksandr Bazilevych says about his time in the Ukrainian army.  (Mills Hayes)

Ukrainian American Dr. Yakov Gradinar was living in Minnesota and working as a prosthetist when the war started two years ago. He and his business partner and CEO, Yury Aroshidze, have now opened up three clinics, with another on the way in Kyiv, Ukraine.  

“They get much better quality of prosthetic care,” Gradinar said about the over 160 Ukrainian soldiers, civilians, and children they’ve brought to the U.S. “They get [a] break from sirens from all this pressure from war.”

A man sits over zoom talking with a reporter

The Protez Foundation takes amputee cases that nobody could help with in Ukraine. Dr. Yakov Gradinar says over 40% of the soldiers they fit for prosthetics return to the front line to fight. (Mills Hayes)

The nonprofit says over 60,000 Ukrainians are in need of prosthetics. Their waiting list is over 1,500 people long. 

Bazilevych says joining the military was the right decision at the time, despite only having one limb left.

“We want civilization in our country. We want freedom in our country, not like in Russia,” Bazilevych said. 

U.S. NATIONAL DEBT TRACKER: SEE WHAT AMERICAN TAXPAYERS (YOU) OWE IN REAL TIME

Twenty-seven-year-old Ninel Nosachova fled Ukraine at the start of the war. She and her family were refugees in Germany for months as she finished her education for physical therapy. Nosachova felt like she wasn’t doing enough to help her country. 

“People my age are fighting and protecting my country. I need to join. I need to protect my country, and then I saw this foundation on [the] internet,” Nosachova said. 

For the past eight months, she’s been working as a volunteer physical therapist at the Protez Foundation, helping soldiers who fought for her freedom walk again. But she worries about the future of her country without more U.S. aid.  

“We don’t have a lot of resources for the fighting and if the USA will not help us, we will die,” Nosachova said. 

photo of a ukrainian woman sitting on a workout bench in a rehab center in the US

Ninel Nosachova, who goes by Nellie, said she’s nervous to return to her home country because she says people have changed, grown angrier, and some of her friends have died in the war. (Mills Hayes)

Resources are running out as additional aid is stalled in Congress, with Republican lawmakers insisting new funds be linked to action against illegal border crossings.

Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin emphasized Tuesday at a meeting of Ukraine allies that the U.S. “will not let Ukraine fail.” 

The latest Pew Research Center poll shows that over 30% of Americans say the U.S. is providing too much aid to Ukraine.

The national debt, which measures what the U.S. owes its creditors, increased to $34.54 trillion. The Congressional Budget Office indicates that the national debt will grow to an astonishing $54 trillion in the next decade. Should that debt happen, it could risk America’s economic standing in the world. 

Ukrainian-American Walter Anastazievsky is the refugee services director at the Ukrainian American Community Center in Minneapolis. His parents and grandparents fled Ukraine after WWII and he felt like this was an opportunity to give back. 

“I’ve literally had someone say, ‘Oh I thought the war was over.’ Pay attention, because people are suffering,” Anastazievsky said. 

Anastazievsky estimates the center has helped over 1,000 refugees get access to housing, health care and employment. 

US SENDING UKRAINE $300 MILLION IN WEAPONS DESPITE LACKING FUNDS TO REPLENISH ITS OWN STOCKPILES 

A refugee service director sits in a chair talking to a reporter

Refugee services director Walter Anastazievsky isn’t holding his breath for more funding from Congress. “It’s anyone’s guess what’s going to happen in Washington,” Anastazievsky said. (Mills Hayes)

Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., met with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Monday. He promoted former President Trump’s plan for a loan to Ukraine, rather than aid, to continue supporting the country in the war with Russia

“I think Ukraine needs assistance in any form that it can get. Ideally, it would be a continuation of the kind of assistance that the U.S. and other countries have been providing,” Anastazievsky said. “I don’t know that Ukraine is in a position to reject aid regardless of how it’s structured.”

Back in Ukraine, Dr. Gradinar is opening another Protez Foundation clinic in Kyiv. The demand for high-quality, free prosthetics is high. 

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As a Ukrainian American, Gradinar says he understands the need for taxpayers to know how their money is being spent in Ukraine. But he says Russia’s desire to take over the world is “scary for the 21st century.” He says Ukrainians want to be free of corruption and have a democracy like the U.S. 

“Tell me who’s going to be elected in United States as the next president? We don’t know,” Gradinar said. “Tell me who’s going to be elected in Russia president election. Everybody knows.”



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Trump aims to level playing field in fundraising battle with Biden as GOP billionaires come to the rescue


Former President Donald Trump significantly trails President Biden in the crucial dash for campaign cash, but he is hoping to level the playing field with the formation of a joint fundraising committee with the Republican National Committee (RNC).

The committee, titled the Trump National Committee JFC, filed a statement of organization on Wednesday with the Federal Elections Commission.

Trump, who clinched the GOP presidential nomination last week and is now the Republican Party’s 2024 presumptive nominee, has taken control of the RNC and installed allies in the national party committee’s top leadership positions.

The move comes as Trump aims to catch up to Biden in the fundraising race.

FIRST ON FOX: DONALD TRUMP’S FUNRAISING HAUL LAST MONTH

Trump is expected to clinch the GOP presidential nomination on March 12

Republican presidential candidate former President Donald Trump gestures at a campaign rally Saturday, March 9, 2024, in Rome, Georgia. (AP Photo/Mike Stewart) (AP Photo/Mike Stewart)

According to the latest filings this week with the Federal Election Commission, Biden’s re-election campaign outraised the Trump campaign by a two-to-one margin last month and enjoyed a $71 million to $34 million cash-on-hand advantage as of the end of February.

The fundraising reports from both Biden and Trump didn’t include details on the myriad of other joint fundraising committees the two White House titans are also relying on to haul in campaign cash. Filings covering those fundraising ventures will be made public late next month.

THE POWER OF TRUMP’S GOP PRIMARY ENDORSEMENT HAILED AS ‘MOST POWERFUL’

Meanwhile, the Democratic National Committee outraised the Republican National Committee by nearly $6 million last month. The DNC reported $26.5 million in its coffers at the end of February, compared to $11.3 million cash-on-hand for the RNC.

President Biden campaigns in Nevada and Arizona - two crucial western battleground states

President Joe Biden speaks at the Washoe Democratic Party Office in Reno, Nev., Tuesday, March 19, 2024. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin) (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

Biden’s campaign taunted Trump over the fundraising figures.

“If Donald Trump put up these kinds of numbers on ‘The Apprentice,’ he’d fire himself,” Biden campaign communications director Michael Tyler said in a statement. 

One reason Trump faces such a large deficit to Biden is that the president has been able to raise money in conjunction with the DNC and Democratic state parties across the country.

The new joint fundraising committee set up by the Trump campaign and the RNC will allow them to similarly coordinate among themselves and with state GOP chapters from coast to coast.

“It’s definitely going to help,” Republican Jewish Coalition CEO Matt Brooks told Fox News. “It also gives a tactical advantage. It makes it easier in terms of some of the execution on some of the joint events. So, I think it’s a win, win.”  

Trump is also expected to get a boost early next month from some of the wealthiest Republicans in the country.

That’s when some of the biggest donors in the GOP, some of whom stayed on the sidelines or supported the former president’s rivals during the recently concluded primary season, will host a fundraising event to be held April 6 in Palm Beach, Florida.

Billionaire investor and hedge fund founder John Paulson is hosting the top-dollar fundraiser, Fox News has confirmed.

The “Inaugural Leadership Dinner” will be held at Paulson’s Palm Beach home, which isn’t too far from Trump’s Mar-a-Lago club and resort.

Word of the gathering is a further sign of the coalescing of much of the Republican donor class around Trump, now that he’s clinched the GOP nomination and is the party’s presumptive presidential nominee. A source in the former president’s political orbit called the fundraiser a “come home to Trump” moment.

“We are receiving an overwhelming amount of support from donors.” Paulson said in a statement.

Former US President and Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks during a Buckeye Values PAC Rally in Vandalia, Ohio, on March 16, 2024.

Former US President and Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks during a Buckeye Values PAC Rally in Vandalia, Ohio, on March 16, 2024.  (KAMIL KRZACZYNSKI/AFP via Getty Images)

Among those listed as co-chairs of the fundraiser are hedge fund billionaire Robert Mercer and his daughter Rebekah Mercer. They were major boosters of Trump in 2016 but mostly sat out the former president’s 2020 re-election campaign.

Also on the list of co-chairs are oil magnate Harold Hamm; hotelier and space entrepreneur Robert Bigelow; and casino giant Steve Wynn, and Todd Ricketts, a co-owner of the Chicago Cubs, a member of the TD Ameritrade board of directors and former RNC finance chairman.

Trump has long had strained relations with some in the Republican Party’s donor class, but he has worked hard in recent months to improve relations. He’s hosted some of these major contributors in recent weeks.

“There’s no question that most of the major donors who were with DeSantis or Haley are coming on board and rallying around the president. I think everybody realizes what’s at stake in the 2024 elections,” Brooks, who has close ties to the Republican donor class, told Fox News.

Dan Eberhart, an oil drilling chief executive officer and a prominent Republican donor and bundler who raised big bucks for Trump’s 2020 re-election campaign but who backed DeSantis in the 2024 nomination race, is back supporting Trump and is attending the April 6 fundraiser.

“There’s still hesitation, but many big donors are coming around now that the nomination process is over,” Eberhart told Fox News. 

Meanwhile, two top Trump allies – businessman and New York Jets owner Woody Johnson, who served as the former president’s ambassador to the United Kingdom, and Wilbur Ross, who was Trump’s Secretary of Commerce – are also listed on the fundraising invitation.

Those attending the fundraiser are expected to donate from $250,000 and up to over $800,000.

Three former 2024 GOP presidential primary rivals who’ve all backed Trump since ending their bids – Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina, North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum, and multi-millionaire biotech entrepreneur and culture wars crusader Vivek Ramaswamy – are listed as “special guests” at the fundraiser.

Tim Scott is a potential Trump running mate

Republican presidential candidate former President Donald Trump listens as Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C., speaks at a primary election night party at the South Carolina State Fairgrounds in Columbia, S.C., Saturday, February 24, 2024. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik) (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)

A source in the former president’s political orbit said that South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem, who along with Scott is considered a potential 2024 Trump running mate, may also attend the fundraiser.

The joint fundraising committee filing and the Palm Beach fundraiser come as Trump not only aims to catch up to Biden in the 2024 fundraising race, but as the former president also struggles to pay his mounting legal bills, with just seven and a half months to go until the November election.

Trump’s latest filings with the FEC indicate the strain his multiple criminal and civil cases are putting on his campaign.

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Save America, the Trump-aligned political action committee that he’s been using to pay his legal bills, spent more than it raised last month, with nearly all the expenditures going to cover the former president’s legal costs.

Trump is also scrambling to fork over a $454 million bond to comply with a New York court ruling in a civil fraud case that he and his sons engaged in a decade-long conspiracy to lie about the value of the Trump Organization’s assets.

Eberhart told Fox News that among top-dollar donors, “the big concern is Trump’s legal bills and how their money will be used.” 

“There’s going to be some among the big donors who will choose to give to independent expenditure groups rather than to Trump directly because of the legal expenses issue,” he predicted. 

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 eyes putting Trump-era migrant policy in place on northern border: ‘Remain In Canada’


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FIRST ON FOX: House Republicans are looking to echo a key Trump-era border policy, which kept migrants out of the U.S. for the duration of their immigration hearings, at the northern border with Canada – amid a sharp increase in apprehensions.

The “Remain in Canada Act,” introduced by Rep. Brian Babin, R-Texas, would duplicate the Remain-in-Mexico program – officially called the Migrant Protection Protocols – at the northern border. 

MPP was launched during the Trump administration and expanded across the border in 2019 as migrant encounters rose to what were then historic highs. The program saw court tents set up across the border, and migrants had to wait in Mexico for their asylum hearings rather than being released into the interior.

TEXAS CAN KEEP ARRESTING ILLEGAL MIGRANTS WHILE BIDEN CHALLENGE PROCEEDS, ABBOTT SAYS

migrants seen in wooded border area

Migrants at the northern border. (Customs and Border Protection)

Conservatives have credited the policy with ending the “pull factor” of release into the U.S. which they believe has encouraged migrants to make the journey north. Currently, migrants are frequently released into the interior to wait for their court hearings, which may be up to eight years away.

The Biden administration abolished the program, saying it was ineffective and left migrants in treacherous conditions in Mexico. Instead, it has pushed for initiatives to speed up asylum processing, including funding for immigration judges and a rule to bring the wait time down to a matter of months and allowing asylum officers to make final determinations on claims.

But, while there has been focus on the crisis at the southern border, the northern border has also seen a significant increase in encounters, going from 27,180 in FY 21 to more than 189,000 in FY 23.

BLACKBURN LEADS GOP PUSH TO RE-ESTABLISH TRUMP’S REMAIN IN MEXICO POLICY 

Brian Babin, Texas Republican, in blue coat, orange and gray tie

Rep. Brian Babin has introduced the legislation. (Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)

The head of the Swanton Sector said in November that agents have seen a 550% increase in apprehensions, with migrants arriving from 79 different countries. The top five countries from which migrants originated were Mexico, India, Venezuela, Haiti and Romania.

Babin, who co-chairs the House Border Security Caucus, accused the Biden administration of an “intentional mass-replacement effort” and said something must be done as America’s borders are “overrun.” He said a 2023 agreement between the U.S. and Canada to return migrants back to Canada had failed to lower encounters.

“Under President Trump, we had the most secure borders seen in decades. President Trump’s ‘Remain in Mexico’ policy worked to mitigate unlawful entry, secure the southern border, and hold Mexico accountable,” he said in a statement to Fox News Digital. “My new bill, the Remain in Canada Act, will implement the same policy at the northern border.” 

“Instead of blindly allowing parolees into our nation, my bill will add an important tool to stop illegal immigration: ensuring illegal entrants or asylum seekers coming from Canada are not allowed to freely roam our country and burden American taxpayers,” he said.

The nine co-sponsors on the bill include Reps. Andy Biggs., R-Ariz., Mary Miller, R-Ill., Andy Ogles, R-Tenn., and Keith Self, R-Texas.

black and white image of migrants crossing border

Migrants are seen crossing the northern border. (Customs and Border Protection)

The bill comes as immigration is looking to be a top 2024 issue, as the migrant crisis moves into its third year and the administration battles with Republicans over how to solve it.

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Republicans have called on the administration to re-implement Trump-era policies – including Remain-in-Mexico – while the Biden administration has called for the passage of more funding and reforms, including in a recent bipartisan Senate proposal, to fix what it says is a “broken” immigration system.



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State’s largest police union makes major endorsement in 2024 presidential race


EXCLUSIVE: The largest police union in the state of Florida announced Thursday which presidential candidate it will back in the November general election.

Florida Police Benevolent Association (PBA) President John Kazanjian declared his organization will be supporting former President Trump over President Biden and other third-party candidates, arguing Trump is the right person to handle the many crises facing the nation, according to a letter shared with Fox News Digital.

“It’s no secret that over the past four years, under the current administration, America has regressed. Law enforcement officers are leaving their jobs in record numbers throughout this country, crime is rising in our major cities, and over 8 million migrants have entered this country, putting a heavy and untenable strain on the ability of local municipalities to effectively maintain public safety and provide essential services to the citizens of this country,” Kazanjian wrote.

CONSERVATIVE GROUPS UNLEASH MASSIVE INVESTMENT FOR BATTLEGROUND STATE’S ‘LARGEST EVER’ VOTE-BY-MAIL PROGRAM

“This November, America is once again at a critical juncture. The choice we make in electing the next president of the United States will have a lasting impact on our nation for generations to come. And for us, the choice is crystal clear. On behalf of the 30,000 members of Florida’s largest law enforcement union, the Florida PBA is proud to once again endorse you for president of the United States,” he added.

Kazanjian also praised what he said were the successes of Trump’s administration, and said that another term for the former president would mean police would be defended, and the border crisis would be addressed.

“Moving forward, we will ask all of our 30,000 members, their friends and family, and all Floridians, who love and respect law enforcement, to cast their ballots in support of President Donald J. Trump. Together we’ll make America great again,” he wrote.

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Biden, Trump

President Biden and former President Donald Trump (Getty Images)

The Florida PBA’s endorsement of Trump comes as murder rates in big cities across the country are on the rise — including in places like Washington, D.C., Memphis and New Orleans — despite FBI statistics showing overall lower crime rates nationwide. Retail theft rates have also been on the rise in some areas, prompting many businesses to shutter stores due to the losses.

The organization decided last summer to back their state’s governor, Ron DeSantis, in the Republican primary before he ultimately dropped out following the Iowa caucuses in January.

Trump became his party’s presumptive nominee following the exit of former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley from the race and victories in the Georgia, Mississippi and Washington primaries on Mar. 12.

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



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Term limits, preventing leader ‘monarchy’ become top concerns in post-McConnell GOP


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Setting limits on a leader’s reign and avoiding unilateral decision-making have emerged as chief concerns among Senate Republicans as they prepare to tap a new head in November following Minority Leader Mitch McConnell’s announcement of his plan to step down after his term ends in 2025. 

“We have operated as a monarchy,” Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, said of leadership during his more than 10 years in Congress. 

Republican senators expressed optimism following a GOP conference meeting on Wednesday regarding their desires for the next era of leadership. Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., claimed, “mission accomplished,” following the gathering. 

GOP SENATOR TO REVEAL FINDINGS AFTER INVESTIGATION INTO TRANSGENDER SPORTS AS BIDEN PUSHES TITLE IX CHANGE

Johnson led a letter to GOP Conference Chairman Sen. John Barrasso, R-Wyo., earlier this month requested the meeting to develop goals for the party as it begins to look for a next leader. In an interview after the announcement by McConnell, R-Ky., with Fox News Digital, Johnson noted his frustration with the conference’s lack of collaboration under the current leadership. 

Mitch McConnell

Senate Republicans are preparing to tap a new head in November after Minority Leader Mitch McConnell announced his plan to step down after his term ends in 2025. (Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

This concern was echoed by various other party members, including Cruz, Sens. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., and Rick Scott, R-Fla. 

“I want someone who is going to talk to members. I want somebody who is going to listen to members and not be bubble wrapped and stay in their office,” Hawley told Fox News Digital on Wednesday. 

Cruz said he hopes to see “a conference that doesn’t just follow the whims of a leader doing whatever he or she wants, but rather that reflects the views of the majority of the conference.”

SCHUMER REFUSES NETANYAHU REQUEST TO SPEAK TO DEMOCRATS

Term limits for Republican leaders were touched on during the conversation after Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, who is running for the head role, threw his support behind “a conference vote to change the rules” to institute them earlier this month. A number of other Republican senators have since expressed support for the idea. 

According to Hawley, McConnell had “a few things to say” during the meeting. Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., noted that the minority leader reiterated to conference members his opinion on term limits for the position. McConnell notably came out against Cornyn’s proposal prior to the discussion, telling reporters, “Well, we have term limits now. They’re called elections.” 

Sen. Josh Hawley

Sen. Josh Hawley speaks during a Senate hearing on Capitol Hill, Feb. 28, 2023. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)

“I had a contest myself during my last election as leader,” he said, in reference to a challenge by Scott in 2022. 

McConnell’s office pointed to those remarks when reached by Fox News Digital but declined to comment further.

While McConnell has served as party leader since being first elected to the post in 2007, elections for it have been held for each new Congress every two years. 

While these concerns were aired at the meeting, the conversation was ultimately cordial and constructive, according to senators who attended. 

SENATE DEMOCRATS COULD SPOIL BIDEN’S MUSLIM JUDICIAL NOMINEE OVER ‘DEEPLY CONCERNING’ TIES

There was no headbutting between conference members, multiple Republicans claimed. Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C., joked it was “a little disappointing, actually.” 

Scott, who has not been shy about his criticisms of McConnell and the leadership apparatus, agreed that the conversation was good. “I think there’s agreement that we need to figure out how to work together,” he said. Scott has expressed his interest in a potential run for leader but hasn’t made anything official. 

Senator Rick Scott

Sen. Rick Scott leaves the Senate Republicans lunch in the U.S. Capitol on Nov. 15, 2022. (Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)

The two candidates already in the running are Cornyn and Sen. John Thune, R-S.D. Both men took backseat roles during the meeting, per senators inside. Thune’s office shared, prior to the meeting, that the conversation was going to be a listening session for him. 

Numerous Republican senators indicated their belief that such meetings would be taking place much more often as they head into a new Congress after November. “I think it was the beginning of what I think is going to be a pretty regular conversation between now and November,” said Rubio.

BIPARTISAN SENATORS SHARE TIKTOK CONCERN FOLLOWING ‘POWERFUL’ NATIONAL SECURITY BRIEFING

Cruz and Sen. Mike Braun, R-Ind., echoed this feeling. “All along you could have done it with just five senators,” the latter told Fox News Digital about requesting the meeting. “I didn’t know that. No one ever told us.”

According to Cruz, these meetings didn’t take place before, “because Republican leadership was not interested in the views of the conference.”

Ted Cruz during Senate hearing

Sen. Ted Cruz attends a Senate Judiciary Committee markup in the Hart Building on May 11, 2023. (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)

Candidates didn’t share whether they were coming to decisions on who to support for leader, but Hawley revealed he plans to support Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., for conference chair. He said this is due to Cotton’s support as the Missouri senator worked to pass his legislation to compensate victims of radiation. Hawley even suggested Cotton should switch his bid and run for leader instead. “Maybe Tom ought to run for the leader,” he said, adding, “we need people who actually get it and who are going to listen to members.” 

The Republican additionally predicted several more Republicans would join the leader race, without suggesting names.  

When prompted, National Republican Senatorial Committee Chairman Steve Daines, R-Mont., reiterated, “I don’t aspire to be the leader,” despite speculation. 

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“I aspire to get the majority back,” he said. 

In an interesting development, former President Trump, who has demonstrated his wide-ranging influence over the Republican Party both inside and out of Congress, was not mentioned during the meeting, said Hawley. “When I was in there, which was for most of it, I didn’t hear him mentioned one time,” he recalled. 



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RFK Jr racks up $1.4M debt with private security firm as Biden ignores plea for Secret Service protection


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Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s presidential campaign racked up $1.4 million in debt to a private security firm, while the Biden administration has repeatedly denied his requests for Secret Service protection. 

According to their latest filing with the Federal Election Commission on Wednesday, Kennedy’s campaign raised $3.1 million in February but spent $2.8 million that same month. That is not including the $1.4 million the Kennedy campaign also owes to Gavin De Becker and Associates, the private security firm owned by De Becker, a security specialist and longtime friend of Kennedy, according to Politico. 

Not including withstanding debt, the campaign paid just over $200,000 last month for security services and related travel expenses, raising the total paid to Gavin de Becker & Associates to more than $2 million. 

Meanwhile, De Becker has donated millions in what he deemed both contributions and “bridge funding” to the pro-Kennedy super PAC American Values 2024. According to a separate FEC filing by the political action committee on Wednesday, De Becker donated another $4 million last month. That accounts for nearly all the total $4.1 million American Values 2024 reported garnering in February. 

CRUZ DEMANDS ANSWERS FROM MAYORKAS ON DENIAL OF SECRET SERVICE PROTECTION FOR RFK JR

Kennedy hosts fireside chat in New York

Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. hosts a fireside chat with rapper and producer Eric B. at The Gentleman’s Factory on Feb. 18, 2024 in New York City. (John Nacion/Getty Images)

De Becker has become the largest donor to the super PAC, second to Republican mega-donor Tim Mellon, Politico reported. 

Despite having raised nearly $28 million since kicking off his presidential campaign in April 2023, Kennedy has spent heavily. At the end of February, the campaign reported $5 million in cash on hand. Biden’s campaign reported $71 million in cash on hand at the end of February, and former President Trump’s campaign reported $33.5 million in cash on hand, Wednesday’s FEC filings show. 

Kennedy has assailed Biden for having rejected at least three requests for U.S. Secret Service protection while on the 2024 campaign trail. His father, former U.S. senator, U.S. Attorney General and presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy, was assassinated in 1968, and his uncle, former President Kennedy, was assassinated in 1963,

Kennedy campaign fliers

A view of pamphlets while Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. hosts a fireside chat with Eric B. at The Gentleman’s Factory on Feb. 18, 2024, in New York City. ( John Nacion/Getty Images)

RFK JR TRESPASSER INCLUDED IN SECRET SERVICE RISK ASSESSMENT MONTHS BEFORE DHS DENIED PROTECTION: SOURCE

As recently as December, Biden’s Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas deemed that Secret Service protection for Kennedy “is not warranted at this time,” according to a letter obtained by Deseret News. According to Kennedy, that was despite several documented death threats against him. 

In late October, a man was arrested twice for trespassing at Kennedy’s home twice in the same day. 

Kennedy at New York food pantry

Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. visits the First Baptist Church Food Pantry on Feb. 17, 2024 in New York City. His campaign pays for security protection. (John Nacion/Getty Images)

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The suspect, Jonathan Macht, was listed in a Secret Service risk assessment as part of the candidate’s first request for protection in June, sources told Fox News Digital at the time. The assessment deemed Kennedy was at elevated risk, but the Democrat turned independent presidential candidate’s request for protection was still denied by Homeland Security. 

Fox News’ Brooke Singman contributed to this report.



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AOC resurrects ‘Green New Deal’ moniker for public housing bill


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Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., will resurrect her “Green New Deal” terminology with a new housing bill she plans to announce Thursday, according to Politico.

Ocasio-Cortez will announce the “Green New Deal for Housing” alongside Sen. Bernie Sanders I-Vt., who is sponsoring the legislation in the Senate. She says the bill will focus largely on public housing, arguing that private housing is no longer realistic for many Americans.

“For a long time, we could pass a tax incentive here or there and say, ‘Hey, we’ve got a great housing policy,’” Ocasio-Cortez told Politico. “And everyday people … were supportive because there was still that dream and that idea that ‘I’m going to be buying a home soon … that’s within the horizon for me.’ Right now, we have an entire generation — that is ascending into becoming the most powerful electorate, the largest electorate — for which that is decades away.”

The legislation’s central change would be to repeal the Faircloth Amendment, which for decades has prevented the Department of Housing and Urban Development from funding new public housing.

HUNTER BIDEN’S EX-BUSINESS PARTNER TONY BOBULINSKI SLAMS HIM FOR ‘RUNNING AWAY’ FROM HOUSE OVERSIGHT COMMITTEE

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-NY., will resurrect her “Green New Deal” terminology with a new housing bill she plans to announce Thursday, according to Politico.

“No housing conversation is complete without a conversation around public housing,” Ocasio-Cortez added. “We in the United States have lived under the scourge of the Faircloth amendment for decades, and that has helped precipitate — and contributed to — the housing crisis that we are living in today. A major part of our housing problem is a supply problem.”

JOE BIDEN IS ‘THE BIG GUY,’ TONY BOBULINSKI SAID DURING ‘UNSHAKEABLE’ TESTIMONY AMID IMPEACHMENT INQUIRY

The legislation comes several years after Ocasio-Cortez’s first attempt at a “Green New Deal,” which sought to reshape the conversation around clean energy use and emissions in the U.S. That bill was dead on arrival in Congress, as is likely to be the case with her latest effort.

Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee Chairman Bernie Sanders (I-VT)

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez will announce the “Green New Deal for Housing” alongside Sen. Bernie Sanders, pictured here, who is sponsoring the legislation in the Senate. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

President Biden’s administration wished the effort well in a Thursday statement but shied away from endorsing the legislation.

AOC SAYS TRUMP ‘WILLING TO SELL THE COUNTRY FOR A DOLLAR’ AS LAWMAKERS REACT TO POTENTIAL PROPERTY SEIZURES

“As he laid out in his State of the Union address and again this week in Nevada, President Biden is laser focused on lowering housing costs for owners and renters alike,” a White House spokesman told Politico when asked about the bill. “We welcome ideas from members of Congress to build on our strong agenda.”

Joe Biden talking at podium, making a fist

President Biden’s administration wished the effort well in a Thursday statement, but shied away from endorsing the legislation. (SAUL LOEB/AFP via Getty Images)

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Ocasio-Cortez and Sanders are expected to announce the legislation at an event on Capitol Hill later Thursday.



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Biden rakes in $21 million as cash lead over Trump continues to grow


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President Biden raked in another $21 million in donations in February, extending his cash lead over former President Trump and the Republican National Committee.

Combined with the Democratic National Committee, Biden has a war chest of $97.5 million, of which over $70 million belongs to the campaign. Trump and the RNC have less than half that at $44.8 million, according to Politico.

The Biden campaign plans to use its deep pockets to flood Trump with ads in swing states across the country, much as Trump attempted to do to Biden in 2020.

This year’s data is a stark inversion of the last election cycle, where Trump entered March 2020 with an overwhelming financial advantage over the Biden campaign. That year, Trump and the RNC boasted a war chest of $225 million, while Biden and the DNC had a paltry $20 million, according to the New York Times.

LOCKING IT UP: TRUMP CLINCHES 2024 REPUBLICAN PRESIDENTIAL NOMINATION DURING TUESDAY’S PRIMARIES

President Joe Biden

President Biden raked in another $21 billion in donations in February, extending his cash lead over former President Trump and the Republican National Committee. (ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS/AFP via Getty Images)

Trump nearly matched Biden’s fundraising in February, bringing in just over $20 million.

NEW POLL REVEALS AMERICANS TRUST DONALD TRUMP OVER BIDEN TO LEAD THE US AS PRESIDENT

“Americans know that they were better off with President Trump four years ago than with Crooked Joe Biden and his disastrous policies,” Trump campaign communications director Steven Cheung told Fox News Digital on Wednesday. “We need a return to America First policies that successfully kept our country safe and supercharged the economy for all Americans.”

Trump supporters Mar-a-Lago

Trump nearly matched Biden’s fundraising in February, bringing in just over $20 million. (Eva Marie Uzcategui/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Trump officially became the presumptive Republican presidential nominee earlier this month after victories in Georgia, Mississippi and Washington state primaries. Biden also secured his party’s nomination earlier this month.

BIDEN VS. TRUMP IS FORCING AMERICANS TO CONFRONT THE AGE ISSUE. BUT NO ONE WILL ANSWER ONE BIG QUESTION

The November contest between Biden and Trump is the first rematch in a White House race since 1956, when Republican President Dwight D. Eisenhower defeated Democratic former Illinois Gov. Adlai Stevenson when they faced off a second time.

(The November contest between Biden and Trump is the first rematch in a White House race since 1956, when Republican President Dwight D. Eisenhower defeated former Democratic Gov. Adlai Stevenson of Illinois when they faced off a second time.)

The latest Fox News Poll from earlier this month had Trump leading Biden in a head-to-head match up.

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Meanwhile, a separate new ABC/Ipsos poll found that more respondents trust Trump – at 36% – over Biden at 33%. About 30% of respondents said they would not trust either candidate.



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GOP senator to unveil findings on female athlete ‘helplessness’ in transgender sports fight


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FIRST ON FOX: A report detailing the “helplessness” felt by female students due to biological males, or transgender women, participating with their female sports teams was to be released Thursday after a congressional investigation into proposed Title IX changes by the Biden administration.

Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-La., the ranking member on the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP), is expected to release the findings of the committee staff’s investigation into the proposed changes and their effect on female sports in a letter to his committee colleagues. The investigation included interviews with dozens of people, including female athletes and coaches, parents, industry experts, doctors and representatives from higher-education institutions, Cassidy said.

NRSC, STEVE DAINES BACK TRUMP IN SCOTUS AMICUS BRIEF, WARN OF ‘SLIPPERY SLOPE’ FOR FUTURE PRESIDENTS

Protest to save womens sports

Demonstrators cheer during the speaking program at the “Our Bodies, Our Sports” rally for the 50th anniversary of Title IX at Freedom Plaza on June 23, 2022 in Washington, DC. The rally, organized by multiple athletic womens groups was held to call on U.S. President Joe Biden to put restrictions on transgender females and “advocate to keep womens sports female.” (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

Title IX is designed to prevent sex-based discrimination in education and related activities that are recipients of federal money.

Last year, President Biden’s administration proposed a rule that would expand Title IX to include gender identity along with biological sex. The term “gender identity” is used to describe by which gender an individual chooses to identify. 

“They feel helpless,” Cassidy told Fox News Digital in an interview on Wednesday, describing the feelings he heard from female athletes.

“This is kind of a theme that we got: ‘Why am I even trying? I don’t have any hope whatsoever,'” he said.

OBAMA, PELOSI TO RALLY FOR BIDEN ON OBAMACARE ANNIVERSARY

The HELP committee report details the story of a woman at Roanoke College in Salem, Virginia, who described her motivational decline following the addition of a transgender woman, who was biologically male, to her swim team.

“It felt unfair and demotivating … to even want to try [or] to want to swim better,” the unnamed female athlete is quoted as saying.

Sixteen of 17 female swimmers on the team ultimately penned a letter to the athletic director in which they relayed “feeling manipulated and scared.”

CUBA PROTESTERS DEMAND FOOD, ELECTRICITY AS RUBIO SAYS NATION ON ‘VERGE OF COLLAPSE’ FROM MARXIST POLICIES

“Our lives have been consumed by this issue. We cannot think about our classes as we sit in lectures, we cannot enjoy our practices,” the women wrote.

Cassidy during a hearing

Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-La., speaks during a confirmation hearing for Secretary of Veterans Affairs nominee Denis McDonough. (Sarah Silbiger/Pool via AP)

The report summarizes the similar testimony of a female cyclist at Fort Lewis College in Durango, Colorado: “I’ve wondered what’s the point in even racing,” she is quoted as saying.

Two members of the women’s swim team at the University of Pennsylvania, which became a headline-generating subject during transgender swimmer Lia Thomas’s domination in the sport, recalled feeling that their school was prioritizing Thomas over them.

JUDGE ORDERS FBI TO HAND OVER TRANS SCHOOL SHOOTER AUDREY HALE’S MANIFESTO

“Our voices as women were completely silenced,” they said. “If we wanted privacy and safety and equality, then we were bigots. This has roots in misogyny, and allowing this to go on is misogynistic.”

“This is not bigotry,” Cassidy said, noting that those interviewed for the investigation did not have anything against transgender individuals.

Roanoke College swim team

Members of the Roanoke College women’s swim team attend a press conference. (OutKick)

“These people we interviewed stressed they’ve got nothing against transgenders as a group,” he said.

Riley Gaines, a former NCAA champion swimmer at the University of Kentucky, told the committee that female competitors were never warned about having to share their locker room with biological males, with male anatomy, at the 2022 NCAA Championship. When she realized that was the case, Gaines said she “experienced feelings of betrayal.” When she questioned the policy, she said the attitudes of officials were “if women feel uncomfortable with this, they should feel apologetic” and that they are ultimately those who should seek counseling to overcome it.

Since experiencing this, Gaines, an OutKick contributor and host for “Gaines for Girls,” has become an advocate for protecting women’s sports.

Riley Gaines and Lia Thomas

Riley Gaines, right, now a spokesperson for the Independent Women’s Forum, famously tied transgender swimmer Lia Thomas, left, for fifth place in the 200 freestyle finals at the NCAA Swimming and Diving Championships in 2022. (Brett Davis-USA TODAY Sports)

According to Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona, the proposed Title IX rule change was because “Every student should be able to have the full experience of attending school in America, including participating in athletics, free from discrimination.” 

“Being on a sports team is an important part of the school experience for students of all ages,” he said at the time of the rule’s announcement. 

GOP SENATOR RIPS BIDEN’S ‘GUN-GRABBING’ DOJ FOR TAKING NEARLY 2 YEARS TO ANSWER FOR CONTROVERSIAL POLICY

But Cassidy pushed back on this, saying this rule is “the death of Title IX.”

“I find it ironic the Biden administration talks about the mental health of the transgender individuals as a reason why they’re pushing those,” he said.

“They’re totally ignoring the mental health and the feelings of fairness of the women who are competing,” the senator said. 

Cassidy said that, alternatively, “We are trying to actually uphold the original intent of Title IX” by ensuring women are given a fair shot in relation to men.

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On Wednesday, Cassidy and fellow HELP member Sen. Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala., penned letters to the NCAA and Cardona to inquire about the policies on transgender participation and their enforcement as well as official communications on the controversial subject.

Neither the Department of Education nor the NCAA provided comments when contacted by Fox News Digital.



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IL GOP Rep. Bost fends off primary challenge, is nominated for 6th term


U.S. Rep Mike Bost has won the Republican nomination in southern Illinois after a hard-fought primary battle with former state Sen. Darren Bailey.

Bailey, the 2022 GOP nominee for Illinois governor, challenged the five-term incumbent, claiming he was not conservative enough for the district that encompasses virtually the entire bottom one-third of the state. He sought the endorsement of former President Donald Trump, but Trump chose Bost.

ILLINOIS REPUBLICAN CONGRESSIONAL CANDIDATES FIGHT FOR FAVOR OF TRUMP SUPPORTERS

Bost thanked Trump during a speech to supporters late Tuesday where he claimed victory. He emphasized the need for party unity.

UNITED STATES – DECEMBER 6: Rep. Mike Bost, R-Ill., is seen on the House steps of the U.S. Capitol on Tuesday, December 6, 2022.  (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)

“I don’t compromise my morals, but this nation is built on finding common ground,” he said.

Bailey, 57, attempted to capitalize on the shift to the right in the 12th District after the 2020 Census. A Marine Corps veteran, the 63-year-old Bost is chairman of the House Committee on Veterans’ Affairs and has seats on the Agriculture and Transportation and Infrastructure committees. He made the case that seniority, know-how and relationships he’s developed allow him to provide better constituent service and move legislation helpful to the district more readily than a newcomer who needs “on-the-job training.”

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Bost is widely expected to win in November when he will face Democrat Brian Roberts, a Carbondale attorney.



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Trump campaign responds in force after Biden cracks down on gas cars, vows ‘Day One’ reversal


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FIRST ON FOX: Former President Trump’s campaign heavily criticized the Biden administration’s newly finalized regulations targeting gas-powered cars on Wednesday, vowing to overturn the action.

In a statement to Fox News Digital, the Trump campaign said the climate regulations — unveiled by the White House and the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) on Wednesday — would force Americans to buy expensive electric vehicles (EV) and reduce consumer choice. The campaign further vowed that Trump would immediately strike down the regulations if he bests President Biden in their election rematch later this year.

“Joe Biden’s extreme electric vehicle mandate will force Americans to buy ultra-expensive cars they do not want and cannot afford while destroying the U.S. auto industry in the process,” Trump campaign national press secretary Karoline Leavitt told Fox News Digital in a statement. “This radical policy is anti-jobs, anti-consumer and anti-American.”

“It will destroy the livelihoods of countless U.S. autoworkers while sending the U.S. auto industry to China. President Trump will reverse Joe Biden’s extreme electric vehicle mandate on Day One.”

VULNERABLE HOUSE DEM BUCKS PARTY ORTHODOXY, BLASTING HIS STATE’S PROPOSED EV MANDATE

Donald Trump wearing a red make america great again hat

Former President Trump said he would immediately overturn President Biden’s tailpipe emissions rules designed to push electric vehicles, his campaign said Wednesday. (Sean Rayford/Getty Images)

The statement comes months after Trump took aim at the Biden administration’s climate agenda over its impact on blue-collar rank-and-file autoworkers. During the United Auto Workers strike last year, the former president said the best interests of American workers were his “number one concern,” and that a forced EV transition would destroy the U.S. auto industry.

VIRGINIA DEMOCRATS UPHOLD STATE’S EV MANDATE DESPITE GROWING OPPOSITION: ‘DEFY COMMON SENSE’

Meanwhile, under the regulations unveiled Wednesday, the federal government will enforce the most stringent tailpipe emissions restrictions ever finalized beginning with model year 2027 light-duty and medium-duty vehicles. Those regulations are slated to progressively ramp up through 2032, forcing most new car purchases to be battery electric and plug-in hybrid within that time frame.

In one “low cost” model EPA outlined in the rule, administration officials said automakers would be forced to ensure 56% of light-duty car sales are battery electric and another 13% are hybrid by 2032, meaning nearly 70% of new cars would be zero-emissions or low-emissions by then.

The Biden administration is set to introduce restrictive tailpipe standards to push EV proliferation.

President Biden said the regulations ensure the U.S. meets his goal of 50% of new car sales being electric by 2030. (Stephen Maturen/Getty Images | David Paul Morris/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

“Three years ago, I set an ambitious target: that half of all new cars and trucks sold in 2030 would be zero-emission,” Biden said in a statement after the regulations were posted Wednesday. 

“I brought together American automakers. I brought together American autoworkers,” he said. “Together, we’ve made historic progress. Hundreds of new expanded factories across the country. Hundreds of billions in private investment and thousands of good-paying union jobs. And we’ll meet my goal for 2030 and race forward in the years ahead.”

130+ HOUSE, SENATE REPUBLICANS JOIN FORCES IN OPPOSITION OF BIDEN’S UPCOMING EV MANDATE

The EPA regulations, though, were immediately blasted by the energy industry, farm groups, consumer advocates and Republican lawmakers who vowed to pursue legislation aimed at overturning the rules.

Hummer EVs

Hummer EVs are seen on the production line at the General Motors “Factory Zero” electric vehicle assembly plant in Detroit. (Reuters/Jonathan Ernst/File Photo)

According to the Alliance for Automotive Innovation, an association that represents major automakers, 9.3% of total car purchases in the U.S. last year were electric or plug-in hybrids — up from 7% in 2022. That uptick was driven largely by purchases in California and urban areas where the majority of EV purchases are made. 

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At the same time, EVs remain far more expensive than traditional, gas-powered cars. Even factoring in generous federal and state subsidies, the average cost of an EV is about $52,500, while the average subcompact car costs $24,000.

The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment when contacted by Fox News Digital. 



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Fox News Politics: Bidens under fire


Welcome to Fox News’ Politics newsletter with the latest political news from Washington D.C. and updates from the 2024 campaign trail. 

What’s happening?

-Texas and the Biden administration continue to go to blows over the border

-GOP lawmaker claims Republicans ‘don’t have the guts’ to impeach Biden

-Trump proposes a national compromise on abortion 

Bidens under fire

House Republicans are holding a hearing into allegations of influence peddling within President Biden’s family and have been questioning two former associates of Hunter Biden, Tony Bobulinski and Jason Galanis.

“Joe Biden has repeatedly claimed that he was not involved Hunter Biden’s, Jim Biden’s, or any other Biden family business deals. Today our witnesses have proved otherwise,” Rep. Nancy Mace said at the conclusion of her questioning.

The hearings got heated as Republicans grilled the witnesses about the Biden family, and Democrats taunted the GOP about having no evidence. They also attempted to shift the narrative to show former President Trump was the true abuser of presidential power. Members from opposing parties squabbled over which side’s witness was more untrustworthy — Galanis, testifying from a federal prison about Biden family dealings, or Lev Parnas, who also spent time in prison, and testified that he helped Rudy Giuliani construct false information about alleged Biden family corruption in Ukraine.

Tony

Tony Bobulinski, a former business associate of Hunter Biden, speaks to reporters at a hotel in Nashville, Tennessee on October 22, 2020.  (Mandel Ngan/AFP via Getty Images)

White House

BORDER BATTLE: Texas, Biden admin head back to appeals court over immigration law dispute …Read more

‘DELUSIONAL’: Biden finalizes crackdown on gas cars, forcing more than 50% of car sales to be electric …Read more

‘COERCION AND COLLUSION’: Biden social media censorship case ‘most important First Amendment suit’ in nation’s history, AG says …Read more

Capitol Hill

GUT CHECK: GOP lawmaker says Republicans ‘don’t have the guts’ to impeach Biden …Read more

NETANYAHU INVITE: House Republicans may invite Netanyahu to address Congress amid rift with Biden, Democrats …Read more

DATA SECURITY: House votes to keep sensitive American data out of hostile countries’ hands …Read more

‘METASTASIZED’: Iranian threats to US have ‘metastasized’ as proxies employ tactics targeting homeland: House hearing …Read more

‘DEEP CONCERN’: Bipartisan senators share TikTok concern following ‘powerful’ national security briefing …Read more

Trump and Pence

Former President Donald Trump and former Vice President Mike Pence.  (Getty Images)

Tales from the Campaign Trail

GET IN LINE: Trump has message for Pence, other Republicans who refuse to endorse him …Read more

NATIONAL COMPROMISE: Trump suggests he would support abortion ban at around 15 weeks of pregnancy …Read more

EXIT STAGE RIGHT: Biden awkwardly walks away during campaign rally as he sees baby he ‘couldn’t resist’ …Read more

FIRST ON FOX: Bernie Moreno touts historically ‘powerful’ Trump endorsement after Ohio primary win, previews Day 1 agenda …Read more

CALIFORNIA RUNOFF: California special election to replace McCarthy heads to runoff, extending House GOP vacancy another 2 months …Read more

Across America

NOT HAPPENING: Judge won’t sanction Michael Cohen for citing fake cases in AI-generated legal filing …Read more

‘NO TIME TO WASTE’: Ex-Trump officials launch forum to oppose left-leaning European policies ‘infiltrating’ U.S. …Read more

‘PRACTICAL IMPOSSIBILITY’: NY AG asks court to ignore Trump claim that posting $464M bond is ‘practical impossibility’ …Read more

‘WATERFRONT PROPERTY’: Jared Kushner defends call for Palestinians to build ‘waterfront property’ instead of terror tunnels in Gaza …Read more

‘UNLAWFUL’: Republican rips Biden’s ‘gun-grabbing’ DOJ after it took nearly two years to answer for controversial policy …Read more

GOP ‘FIXATES’?: Critics hammer Politico headline claiming GOP fixated on Biden’s ‘messy Afghanistan withdrawal’ …Read more

‘CHAOS & CONFUSION’: Sheriff slams Biden administration for abandoning Texas on border, says it’s ‘no longer U.S.-Mexico border, but ‘U.S.-world border’ …Read more

‘KID IN A CANDY STORE’: Former inmate tells Riley Gaines male ‘opportunists’ are using trans policies get into female prisons …Read more

Subscribe now to get Fox News Politics newsletter in your inbox.

Get the latest updates from the 2024 campaign trail, exclusive interviews and more on FoxNews.com.



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Popular ex-GOP governor trounces two Dem rivals in blue state Senate showdown: poll


Could a longtime deep blue state provide Republicans a path to winning back the Senate majority in November’s elections?

A new poll suggests the answer may be yes.

Former Republican Gov. Larry Hogan of Maryland holds double-digit leads over both of his potential Democratic rivals in his home state’s Senate race, a Washington Post/University of Maryland poll released on Wednesday indicates.

Hogan, whose surprise announcement last month that he would launch a Senate campaign rocked the campaign world, tops Democratic Rep. David Trone 49%-37% if the general election were held today, according to the survey.

MARYLAND SHOCKER: FORMER GOVERNOR MAKES SURPRISE CAMPAIGN ANNOUNCEMENT

Republican. Larry Hogan in N.H.

Then-Gov. Larry Hogan, a Republican, speaks with Fox News Digital  in Manchester, New Hampshire, on July 11, 2022. (Paul Steinhauser/Fox News)

And the poll indicates that Hogan leads the other major Democrat running for their party’s Senate nomination — Prince George’s County Executive Angela Alsobrooks — by a 50%-36% margin.

TRUMP ENDORSEMENT BOOSTS MORENO TO VICTORY IN GOP SENATE PRIMARY IN OHIO

But the survey, which was conducted March 5-12, also indicates that by a 20-point margin, Maryland voters say they’d prefer if the Democrats retained control of the Senate.

Rep. David J. Trone, D-Md., delivers remarks at Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Library in Washington, D.C., on April 24, 2023. (Brian Stukes/Getty Images)

In the race to succeed retiring Democratic Sen. Ben Cardin, the poll indicates Trone leads Alsobrooks 34%-27% in their party’s primary on May 14, with nearly 4 in 10 Democratic voters undecided.

SIX KEY SENATE SEATS REPUBLICANS AIM TO FLIP IN NOVEMBER 

Trone, the co-founder and co-owner, along with his brother, of the successful alcohol retailer Total Wine & More, has vastly outspent Alsobrooks to date in the Democratic Senate primary.

Angela Alsobrooks speaking at podium

Prince Georges County Executive Angela Alsobrooks delivers the State of the County Budget Address and officially unveils the fiscal year 2024 proposed budget at the Samuel Riggs IV Alumni Center in College Park, Maryland, on March 15, 2023. (Marvin Joseph/Washington Post via Getty Images)

Hogan, a vocal GOP critic of former President Donald Trump, won election and re-election in 2014 and 2018 as governor in a state where Democrats outnumber Republicans by a roughly 2-to-1 margin.

Hogan, a successful business leader before entering politics, seriously mulled a run for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination and made numerous trips in 2022 to New Hampshire, the state that holds the first primary in the GOP nominating calendar.

But in March of last year, Hogan announced he wouldn’t seek his party’s presidential nomination.

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During his last year as governor, Republican leaders in the nation’s capital and in Maryland heavily courted Hogan to run for the Senate in the 2022 midterm elections against Democratic Sen. Chris Van Hollen.

But Hogan declined, saying in a news conference in February of that year that “as I have repeatedly said, I don’t aspire to be a United States senator.”

Larry Hogan

Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan practices his farewell address at the Maryland State House in Annapolis on Jan. 10, 2023.  (Michael Robinson Chávez/The Washington Post via Getty Images)

But fast-forward two years, and Hogan is now running for the open seat in a state where it’s been nearly four decades since a Republican served in the Senate.

Hogan, who steered Maryland in a bipartisan way, left office with high approval and favorable ratings. And the new poll indicates he remains popular, with a 64%-23% favorable/unfavorable rating.

The survey also indicates that Trone and Alsobrooks are not well known among many Maryland voters.

Democrats currently control the U.S. Senate with a 51-49 majority, but Republicans are looking at a favorable Senate map this year, with Democrats defending 23 of the 34 seats up for grabs. 

Three of those seats are in red states that Trump carried in 2020 — Ohio, Montana and West Virginia, where Democrat Sen. Joe Manchin is not running for re-election.

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



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Maine regulators considering adoption of California EV use standards


Maine environmental regulators are set to decide whether the state will join a growing number of states adopting new standards designed to grow the use of electric vehicles.

The rules, which originated in California, would require an increasing percentage of new light-duty vehicles to be zero emission vehicles every year. The new standards would start with 51% in 2028 and grow to 82% by 2032.

The Maine Board of Environmental Protection is set to vote on the proposal Wednesday in a vote that has been anticipated for weeks. The proposal has encountered a mixed reception in Maine, where some have said it would speed up the already-growing adoption of electric vehicles.

TRUMP CAMPAIGN RESPONDS IN FORCE AFTER BIDEN CRACKS DOWN ON GAS CARS, VOWS ‘DAY ONE’ REVERSAL

“Consumers in Maine are already rapidly adopting electric vehicles,” said Sarah Krame, staff attorney with Sierra Club Environmental Law Program, in testimony. “Demand is so strong that lack of supply has been a major constraint on Maine residents looking to purchase EVs, with waitlists several months long for certain models.”

Opponents of the proposal, including prominent state Republicans, have described the move as wrong for the state’s economy and geography, and said it would heap costs onto consumers.

Electric vehicles

FILE – Electric vehicles are lined up for sale as an alternative to gas-powered cars at Walker Motors, a Ford dealership, in Montpelier, Vt., Monday, June 16, 2008. The neighboring state of Maines environmental regulators are set to decide, Wednesday, March 20, 2024, whether the state will join a growing number of states adopting new standards designed to grow the use of electric vehicles. (AP Photo/Toby Talbot, File)

“Extremists seem to think that only 6% of consumers want EVs because the government hasn’t forced them to buy one. The truth is this plan isn’t feasible because of Maine’s geography and infrastructure,” said House Republican Leader Billy Bob Faulkingham late last year.

A dozen states have adopted the electric vehicle standards, and 17 states have adopted all or part of California’s low-emission and zero-emission vehicle regulations, according to the California Air Resources Board. The proposals have found support in Democratically-controlled states.

Meanwhile, sales of electric vehicles have begun to slow. The Biden administration announced new emissions standards on Wednesday that could boost the industry.

Transportation is a major contributor to Maine’s greenhouse gas emissions, and Democratic Gov. Janet Mills has made tackling climate change a major piece of her tenure.

The state received hundreds of comments about the electric vehicle proposal in advance of Wednesday’s meeting. The Alliance for Automotive Innovation, a trade group that represents car manufacturers, testified in support of the proposal.

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The proposal might still need to clear more hurdles, as state lawmakers are considering legislation that could allow them to ultimately make the final decision.



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AOC takes heat over ‘RICO is not a crime’ comment in Biden impeachment probe hearing


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Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., grilled Hunter Biden ex-associate Tony Bobulinski about ‘exactly’ what crimes President Biden is guilty of committing in a heated exchange at an impeachment hearing on Wednesday.

“Is it your testimony today that you personally witnessed President Joe Biden commit a crime?” AOC asked while staring down Bobulinski. 

However, before Bobulinski could even answer, he was cut off by the animated progressive representative, repeating the same question to him. 

“How much time do I have to go through it?,” Bobulinski shot back, listing off a number of crimes and alleging the president committed a RICO violation and was involved in financial corruption regarding his business dealings with his son Hunter.

HUNTER BIDEN’S EX-BUSINESS PARTNER TONY BOBULINSKI SLAMS HIM FOR ‘RUNNING AWAY’ FROM HOUSE OVERSIGHT COMMITTEE

A split image with AOC and Tony Bobulinski at the Biden impeachment hearing

AOC and Tony Bobulinski got into a headed exchange in which the progressive congresswoman claimed “RICO is not a crime.” (Getty Images)

“What is the crime sir, specifically,” AOC demanded. 

“You asked me to answer the question. I answered the question. RICO, you’re obviously not familiar with. Corruption statutes. FARA,” Bobulinski replied.

“Excuse me, sir. Excuse me, sir. RICO is not a crime. It is a category,” AOC defiantly exclaimed.

“It’s a category of crimes that you are then charged under,” Bobulinski said before AOC began talking over him.

JOE BIDEN IS ‘THE BIG GUY,’ TONY BOBULINSKI SAID DURING ‘UNSHAKEABLE’ TESTIMONY AMID IMPEACHMENT INQUIRY

Joe Biden, Tony Bobulinski, Hunter Biden split image

Former Hunter Biden business partner Tony Bobulinski, center, testified before the House Oversight Committee on Wednesday about the Biden family’s alleged “influence peddling.” (Getty Images)

“It’s funny, in this committee room — everyone’s not here — there are over 18 lawyers that went to law school. I’ll leave it up to you guys to define the statute,” Bobulinski fired back before being cut off again.

AOC continued to talk over Bobulinski, exclaiming “I reclaim my time!”

She then went on to scold Republicans over the impeachment inquiry, accusing them of spending 15 months “lost in the desert” without proof that President Biden committed “a high crime or misdemeanor.”

TONY BOBULINSKI ATTORNEY ACCUSES OVERSIGHT DEMS OF ‘GASLIGHTING,’ FALSE SMEARS AGAINST HUNTER BIDEN ASSOCIATE

AOC during a news conference

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., got into a heated exchange with ex-Biden family business associate Tony Bobulinski in which she claimed “RICO is not a crime.” (Photo by Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

AOC’s claim that RICO is not a crime quickly became a hot topic on social media, with Republicans needling the congresswoman for her comment. 

“And, of course… AOC’s favorite network has her back after she completely and totally embarrassed herself by arguing that RICO is not a crime,” Fox News contributor Joe Concha wrote on X.

“AOC broken in Hunter Biden hearing. So broken in fact, she claims RICO isn’t a crime. Well… empty the jails! Oh and for the record, all the defendants in the Georgia case brought by Fani Willis falls under RICO. Ooops,” Rep. Wesley Hunt (R-Texas) wrote on X.

AOC SAYS TRUMP ‘WILLING TO SELL THE COUNTRY FOR A DOLLAR’ AS LAWMAKERS REACT TO POTENTIAL PROPERTY SEIZURES

RICO refers to the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, which targets dishonest business activities such as money laundering as well as organized crime.

Former President Donald Trump currently faces a RICO case in Georgia over the 2020 election. 

The Republican-led House Oversight Committee took to X to disprove AOC’s claim, writing, “(HINT: RICO is a federal law codified at 18 U.S.C. §§ 1961-68).”

Bobulinski has criticized the president’s son for “running away” from the American people after he declined to appear for the congressional hearing.

Bobulinski has also previously testified that President Biden “enabled” Hunter Biden to sell access to America’s “most dangerous adversaries,” including China and Russia. 

In his statement, Hunter Biden’s former business partner called for “truth and transparency” to prevail.

WALL STREET VETERAN MARTY DOLAN EXPLAINS WHY HE’S RUNNING TO UNSEAT AOC: ‘ENOUGH IS ENOUGH’

Tony Bobulinski, a former associate of Hunter Biden, talks with reporters before the presidential debate.

Tony Bobulinski, a former associate of Hunter Biden, talks with reporters before the presidential debate, Thursday, Oct. 22, 2020, in Nashville.  (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

“Joe Biden and Hunter Biden, along with countless members of Congress, keep claiming that they are ‘fighting for our Democracy.’ Why don’t we as a nation agree to fight for the truth!” Bobulinski said. “Nearly three-quarters of the American people believe the country is headed in the wrong direction, and I can’t blame them. Truth and transparency would help expose the rot at the center of our political system and begin to fix what ails us.”

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President Biden has continued to ask Congress to close the impeachment investigation and denied allegations of any wrongdoing.

Fox News’ Brooke Singman, David Spunt and Lawrence Richard contributed to this report.



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The top 5 moments from House Oversight hearing into Biden family’s ‘influence peddling’


Two former business associates of Hunter Biden testified publicly on Capitol Hill on Wednesday as congressional Republicans pushed forward with their impeachment inquiry against President Biden, leading to several tense and revealing moments.

Tony Bobulinski, a U.S. Navy veteran who formerly served as Hunter Biden’s business partner, appeared publicly for the House Oversight Committee hearing. Jason Galanis, another Hunter Biden business associate who is serving a 14-year prison sentence, testified virtually from Federal Prison Camp, a minimum-security prison for male inmates in Montgomery, Alabama. 

Democrats invited Lev Parnas, who was sentenced to 20 months for violations connected to campaign finance, wire fraud and making false statements, to testify about his work with Rudy Giuliani on Ukraine.

GOP LAWMAKER SAYS REPUBLICANS ‘DON’T HAVE THE GUTS’ TO IMPEACH BIDEN

Joe Biden, Tony Bobulinski, Hunter Biden split image

Former Hunter Biden business partner Tony Bobulinski, center, testified before the House Oversight Committee Wednesday about the Biden family’s alleged “influence peddling.” (Getty Images)

‘Blatant lies’: Bobulinski accuses Hunter Biden of lying under oath

Bobulinski said Wednesday that Hunter Biden lied under oath while speaking to lawmakers earlier this year about his father’s involvement in his business dealings.

Questioning Bobulinski, Rep. Jason Smith, R-Mo., said, “During his deposition, Hunter Biden repeatedly testified under oath that his father was not involved in his business in any capacity and that there wasn’t even a connection between his father and his businesses. Here is just one example, quote, ‘I just state for the record one more time, under oath and under penalty of perjury, my father has never been involved in my business. I have never asked my father to be involved in my business. My father has never benefited from my business, and I have never asked anyone or my father to do anything for the benefit of anyone I’ve ever done business for.’

“Yet the Ways and Means Committee released a WhatsApp message that was provided by the IRS whistleblowers showing that Hunter Biden wrote on July 30, 2017, quote, ‘I’m sitting here with my father, and we would like to understand why the commitment made has not been fulfilled. I’m sitting here waiting for the call with my father.’ Moreover, you testified that Hunter was not shy about his ability to get his father on the phone. And Devin Archer testified that there were multiple instances in which Hunter placed his dad on speaker phone.

“Mr. Bobulinski, was Hunter Biden telling the truth when he testified under oath that his father was never involved in any of his business dealings?” Smith asked.

Bobulinski responded, “No, he was not. Those are all blatant lies.”

Bobulinski claims President Biden’s son, brother committed ‘perjury’

During Wednesday’s hearing, Bobulinski said Hunter Biden and Jim Biden, the president’s brother, committed perjury.

Bobulinski, who claimed that Hunter Biden “lied throughout his testimony” in a transcribed interview to the House Oversight Committee in February, provided what he believed to be one example of Hunter Biden’s “perjury.”

Hunter Biden “lied to the committee on important details concerning his money demands and threats to [the] CEFC” in text messages on July 30 and July 31 in 2017, according to Bobulinski.

“He leveraged his father’s presence next to him in that infamous text to strong-arm CEFC to pay Hunter immediately,” Bobulinski said.

Additionally, Bobulinski claimed Wednesday that James Biden, the president’s brother, “also lied extensively throughout his transcribed interview on Feb. 21 and perjured himself.”

“An example of that, on page 100 of his transcript, Jim is asked specifically, ‘Do you recall having a meeting with Hunter Biden, Tony Bobulinski and Joe Biden?'”

“Jim’s response: ‘Absolutely not,'” Bobulinski added.

Later in the hearing, Bobulinski claimed James Biden admitted to him during a 2017 meeting that the Biden family was able to conduct its business despite the president’s high profile because of “plausible deniability.”

james biden

James Biden in Washington, D.C., on Feb. 21. (Jim Watson/AFP)

Committee Democrats, Republicans spar over which party’s witnesses are more credible

Democratic and Republican members sparred during Wednesday’s hearing over which party’s witnesses were more credible.

Democrat Eleanor Holmes Norton, who represents Washington, D.C., began by noting Galanis’ conviction for financial crimes, saying he is serving a lengthy sentence at a federal prison.

She was followed by ranking member Jamie Raskin, D-Md., who also noted Galanis’ convictions but also attacked Bobulinski for offering “a lot of rhetoric and a lot of hot air but absolutely no facts” that would warrant impeaching President Biden.

“Nobody on their side can even tell us what is the impeachable high crime and misdemeanor, which suggests that they are moving in the direction of criminal referrals, and they should start by looking at their own witnesses,” Raskin said.

Committee Chairman James Comer, R-Ky., pushed back by reminding Norton and Raskin “the witness, Mr. Galanis, was partners with Hunter Biden.”

“That’s why he’s here. We have their partners. You could have invited partners, but you invited this guy,” Comer said, motioning toward Parnas, a former aide to Giuliani.

The members began speaking over each other before Comer moved on to Rep. Glenn Grothman, R-Wis., for his questioning.

Grothman began by noting that Parnas was also convicted of crimes and sentenced to federal prison.

JASON GALANIS

Former Hunter Biden business associate Jason Galanis, inset, testified from prison to House lawmakers working on the President Biden impeachment inquiry. (Facebook | AP)

FORMER HUNTER BIDEN ASSOCIATES TESTIFY PUBLICLY IN NEXT PHASE OF IMPEACHMENT INQUIRY

Bobulinski targets Democratic Rep. Ro Khanna, says he ‘begged’ him to look at phone evidence

Bobulinski said Wednesday he “begged” Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., and his staff to sit down with him to review the text message evidence he had on his Blackberry cellphone regarding the alleged wrongdoings by members of the Biden family.

Bobulinski’s comments came after Khanna refused to question him and spoke only to Parnas.

“If you noticed, Congressman Khanna scurried out of here very quickly, and I’m actually disgusted as I sit here that he didn’t address me based on the fact that I’m sitting here in front of the world trying to testify to the truth,” Bobulinski said shortly after Khanna’s time expired.

“I have messages I’m willing to produce to both the Democrats and the Republicans that Ro Khanna sent to me saying, ‘You have always demonstrated to me that you’re nothing but honest with the highest integrity individual,'” Bobulinski said. “I was begging for him to go CNN and tell the world in October 2020.”

“I have extensive emails with Congressman Ro Khanna in 2021 and 2022, where I begged him and his staff to sit down with me and look at my BlackBerry phones that the Democrats are so focused on, to hire forensics experts and go through all of the factual information I had,” he added. “So, the fact that he did not even address me and then scurried out of here is disgusting to me.”

In a statement to Fox News Digital about the matter, Khanna said, “I have reviewed extensive information presented to the committee on this matter. I have always respected Tony’s past service to our nation as I value anyone who wears the uniform, and I will continue to take my duty seriously on the committee and review all the evidence.”

Regarding Bobulinski’s claim that he had spoken to the California lawmaker about the evidence, a Khanna spokesperson told Fox, “Tony reached out a few times, and Rep. Khanna was always gracious because he respects Tony’s service, but made it clear that any evidence would have to be reviewed through committee procedure.”

Democrat taunts GOP committee chairs to hold Biden impeachment vote

Rep. Jared Moskowitz, D-Fla., challenged Comer and Judiciary Committee Chairman Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, to hold a vote on impeaching Biden during Wednesday’s hearing, claiming they would do so if they had truly found enough evidence he committed high crimes and misdemeanors.

The exchange took place after Moskowitz asked Bobulinski if he felt Biden had committed high crimes and misdemeanors and should be impeached.

“I believe with all the evidence he’s gathered, yes, he’s proven that Joe Biden has committed high crimes and misdemeanors,” Bobulinski said.

Moskowitz went on to ask Bobulinski if he felt Comer and Jordan had proven Biden committed high crimes and misdemeanors. “I know that he committed high crimes and misdemeanors. I was involved and saw them happen,” Bobulinski responded.

“My point is that the chairman has not yet moved for that. And, so, look, chairman, we got, like, 3½ minutes here. I mean, let’s just do the impeachment,” Moskowitz facetiously suggested. “I mean, why continue to waste millions of dollars of taxpayers’ money if we’re going to impeach because you believe you’ve shown he’s committed a high crime and misdemeanor?”

Moskowitz went on to mockingly motion for a vote, asking Jordan or Comer to second that vote, but neither did.

Jordan responded that the committees under GOP leadership don’t do “snap impeachments,” referencing the one Democrats undertook against President Donald Trump in 2019.

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In announcing the hearing earlier this month, Comer invited Hunter Biden to testify publicly, per the first son’s repeated requests. Through his attorney, Abbe Lowell, Hunter rejected the invitation.

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





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Conservative artist collared for pizza protest outside New York City Hall


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“F*** you Mayor Adams!”

Those are the defiant words of conservative artist and activist Scott LoBaido seconds before he was driven away in a police van after being cuffed for protesting new pizza-making rules in New York City.

Seconds earlier, LoBaido had hurled several pizza slices over a fence and into the grounds of New York City Hall to protest the new environmental rules which will require wood and coal-fired stoves to cut carbon emissions by 75%. 

The mandate requires affected pizzeria owners to install a filter, then hire an engineer to regularly inspect the carbon emissions.

NEW YORK CITY TAKING A SLICE OUT OF ICONIC PIZZA SHOPS WITH NEW GREEN RULE

Scott LoBaido, a conservative artist and activist Scott LoBaido, was taken into custody Wednesday for flinging pizza slices onto the grounds of New York City Hall to protest new emissions rules. (John M. Mantel for Fox News Digital)

LoBaido, a Staten Island resident and enthusiastic Donald Trump supporter, says that the rule is just the latest example of government overreach and will impose unnecessary costs on struggling pie-makers and bakers. He says that New York City Mayor Adams should be focused on more pressing issues like illegal immigration and migrant crime instead of targeting small business owners with Draconian rules.

“This invasion of illegal aliens that are beating the cops up, raping, killing and slaughtering,” LoBaido said to a small group of supporters and a media scrum that had assembled outside the location before his demonstration.

“He’s worried about pizza because he hates the small business owner. He hates you New Yorkers,” he added. 

LoBaido then compared the pizza-throwing act to that of the Boston Tea Party of 1773, where colonists in Massachusetts dumped 342 chests of tea imported by the British East India Company into the harbor at Griffin’s Wharf. The move was a demonstration aimed toward Britain for imposing taxes on colonists without them having representation in parliament.

“Those Bostonians loved their tea. They worshiped their tea. That’s all they had some of them and they sacrificed and threw it in the harbor,” LoBaido roared.

“And that’s what we’re doing here today. You gotta make sacrifices to make history, to make f***ing change. And that’s what us New Yorkers are here to do, we’re New Yorkers period.”

NEW YORK CITY TAKING A SLICE OUT OF ICONIC PIZZA SHOPS WITH NEW GREEN RULE

LoBaido and another man then grabbed several slices of pizzas from pie boxes stacked outside City Hall. 

As they walked to the fence with pie slices in hand, a group of police officers race after them – and once they hurled the pizzas into City Hall they were collared by NYPD officers. 

“How is he being arrested for littering, littering is a fine,” another man could be heard saying. “This mayor is corrupt… this is not an arrestable offense and you guys should be ashamed of yourselves for following his orders,” the man barks.

The pair were then put into an NYPD minivan.

Prior to the protest, LoBaido had said he was going to feed pigeons with the pizza. It is not illegal to feed pigeons, but a violation or summons may be issued for failing to clean up unsanitary conditions that result from the activity.

Scott LoBaido taken into custody Wednesday for flinging pizza slices onto the grounds of New York City Hall

LoBaido shouts out “F–k you Mayor Adams!” (John M. Mantel for Fox News Digital)

The NYPD tells Fox News Digital that the pair were not arrested or charged.

Some city businesses have already coughed up more than $600,000 for new smoke-eating systems in anticipation of the expected mandate, the New York Post reports. About 130 Big Apple businesses will be affected by the new rule, the publication reports.

LoBaido had been calling on pizzeria owners and bakeries throughout the city to join him in the protest to push back against the rule, but it appears few backed him up.

The New York City Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) rule, which will take effect April 27, applies to restaurants with cook stoves installed before May 2016. Advocates of the plan argue that carbon emissions from the ovens are helping cause the earth to warm. Fox News Digital reached out to the mayor’s office for a statement but did not immediately receive a response. 

Scott LoBaido picking up pizza with another protestor

LoBaido picking up slices of pizza during his protest. (John M. Mantel for Fox News Digital)

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It is not the first time LoBaido has flung pies onto the grounds of City Hall, the painter carried out the same feat in June protesting the new rules. 

“They handcuffed me for f***ing throwing pizza and feeding the pigeons,” Lobaido told Fox News Digital after being released from custody Wednesday. “Last year, I did it, and they just gave me a summons. This year the mayor made sure that I got cuffed.”

“It’s ridiculous. And what is New York known for? Pizza and Bagels. It’s just it’s insane. It’s bulls***.”



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New York lawmakers expand fracking ban to include liquid carbon dioxide


ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) — New York lawmakers passed a bill Wednesday that would expand the state’s existing fracking ban by blocking natural gas drilling companies from using an extraction method that involves injecting huge amounts of liquid carbon dioxide into the ground.

The state Senate approved the legislation with some opposition from Republican lawmakers. It will now go to Democratic Gov. Kathy Hochul, who is in the midst of state budget negotiations. The state Assembly passed the bill on March 12.

LINKS BETWEEN FRACKING, CANCER IN CHILDREN FOUND IN RECENT PENNSYLVANIA STUDY

New York already banned hydraulic fracturing, which involves using a water-based solution to extract natural gas. But some lawmakers were quick to draft the new legislation after a Texas company sought to lease land in New York for drilling last fall. They said the company, Southern Tier Solutions, is attempting to use a loophole in the existing law by drilling with carbon dioxide instead of water.

Carbon-Dioxide

Beehives adorn the back of the property at Itaska Valley Farm, Wednesday, March 13, 2024, in Whitney Point, N.Y. Joan and Harold Koster, who own the farm, were asked by Texas-based Southern Tier Energy Solutions to lease their land to extract natural gas by injecting carbon dioxide into the ground, which they rejected and are opposed to. (AP Photo/Heather Ainsworth)

Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins told reporters during a news conference Wednesday that while she hasn’t yet discussed the legislation with the governor, she is hopeful that it will be signed into law.

“There’s a concern that if we don’t close this loophole sooner rather than later, it is going to essentially open up the proverbial gateway for further exploration, which is also going to be problematic,” Democratic state Sen. Lea Webb said ahead of the vote. Among thousands solicited by the company were many of Webb’s constituents in the Southern Tier, a region that runs along the border with Pennsylvania.

The region has been eyed by energy companies because of its richness in natural gas, which is trapped underground in large rock formations.

Hydraulic fracturing involves pumping vast amounts of water, sand and chemicals thousands of feet underground, under pressure that is intense enough to break layers of rock containing oil or natural gas deposits so that the fossil fuel can be extracted. Fracking, which is banned in a few states including Vermont and Maryland, can cause earthquakes and has raised concerns about groundwater contamination.

State Sen. Thomas O’Mara, a Republican who voted against the bill, said during floor deliberations that the move to expand the ban on fracking is premature.

“This utopian approach is a train wreck coming down the tracks,” he said.

Southern Tier Solutions says on its website that it wants to use carbon captured from power plants to extract natural gas from inside the Marcellus and Utica Shales, vast rock formations that extend for hundreds of miles.

Company officials and its president, Bryce P. Phillips, have not responded to email and phone requests from The Associated Press. But in past interviews, Phillips has claimed swapping water with liquid carbon dioxide could be more environmentally friendly.

Supporters of the bill and some lawmakers cited concerns that pipelines carrying carbon dioxide for extraction could rupture, leading to poor air quality and major health risks.

They pointed to a 2020 incident in the small town of Satartia, Mississippi, where a pipeline carrying compressed carbon dioxide ruptured, sending over 40 people to the hospital for treatment and prompting more than 300 to evacuate.

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Sandra Steingraber, a retired biologist and anti-fracking activist, applauded the bill’s passage. She argues that drilling of any kind — no matter what type of substance is used — is bad for the environment.

“They took care of this really fast because they recognized how harmful it was,” she said of the lawmakers’ response. “It’s all risk and no reward for New York state pursuing this plan.”



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AOC says Trump ‘willing to sell the country for a dollar’ as lawmakers react to potential property seizures


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Democrats on Capitol Hill don’t have much sympathy for former President Trump as he struggles to come up with a $464 million appeal bond due in less than a week.

“He’s broke, and he’s willing to sell the country for a dollar in order to make whatever he needs for himself,” New York Democrat Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez told Fox News Wednesday.

Trump Mar-a-Lago

Former President Trump has until Monday to secure a nearly half billion dollar appeal bond after a New York judge found him liable of civil fraud. Judge Arthur Engorond ruled that Trump and the Trump Organization deceived banks, insurers and others by overvaluing assets and exaggerating his net worth on paperwork used to deals and secure financing. (Win McNamee/Getty Images)

LEGAL EXPERTS WEIGH IN ON TRUMP’S OPTIONS AFTER FAILURE TO SECURE $464M APPEAL BOND: ‘UNCHARTED TERRITORY’

A New York Appeals Court judge late last month denied the 2024 GOP front-runner’s request to delay payment of the $464 million owed as a result of Attorney General Letitia James’ civil fraud lawsuit.

Trump has until Monday to secure an appeal bond. If he doesn’t, James previously warned that she would move to seize his assets. Those could include prominent New York City properties like Trump Tower and 40 Wall Street.

“A jury of his peers has decided on this case,” said Rep. Jahana Hayes, although there was no jury involved in the trial.

“It’s not in the hands of Congress,” Hayes, a Connecticut Democrat, added. “So I think that people should obey the law.” 

LAWMAKERS REACT TO POTENTIAL TRUMP PROPERTY SEIZURES:

WATCH MORE FOX NEWS DIGITAL ORIGINALS HERE

“If he didn’t want to get his property seized, if he didn’t want to be fined, he shouldn’t have committed crimes,” Rep. Sean Casten, a Democrat from Illinois, said of the civil case.

Trump’s attorneys said in a court filing this week that obtaining a bond “of this enormous magnitude” is “unprecedented for a private company” and a “practical impossibility.”

“It seems very punitive, directed in a political way, and it’s something that seems overwhelming,” Rep. John Moolenaar said.

“I don’t know anyone that could put up that kind of money,” the Michigan Republican added.

Donald Trump Tower in New York City

New York Attorney General Letitia James vowed to seize Trump’s assets if he doesn’t pay the $464 million judgment. (Fox News/Joshua Comins)

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Rep. Michael Cloud said that although he had not read all the details of the former president’s case, the potential seizures rang alarm bells.

“We are seeing a [Department of Justice] that is weaponized, in many ways, against the American people, President Trump being a key target of that,” the Texas Republican said.

To hear more from lawmakers, click here.

Ramiro Vargas contributed to the accompanying video.



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Some Georgia workers would find it harder to become union members under a new bill


ATLANTA (AP) — Georgia lawmakers have made it harder for workers at companies getting state economic incentives to unionize, in what could be a violation of federal law.

The state House voted 96 to 78 Wednesday for Senate Bill 362, which would bar companies that accept state incentives from recognizing unions without a formal secret-ballot election. The measure, which has been backed by Gov. Brian Kemp, now goes to the Republican governor for his signature.

LAKEN RILEY’S ‘HEARTBROKEN’ FATHER ASKS GEORGIA GOVERNOR TO ‘DECLARE AN INVASION’ OF ILLEGAL IMMIGRANTS

The bill would block unions from winning recognition directly from a company — without the additional step of a secret ballot — after signing up a majority of workers, in what is usually known as a card check.

The proposal comes as Georgia is giving billions in economic incentives to electric vehicle manufacturers and other companies.

Brian-Kemp

Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp speaks, Feb. 26, 2024, in Athens, Ga. Georgia lawmakers have made it harder for workers at companies getting state economic incentives to unionize, in what could be a violation of federal law. The state House voted 96 to 78 Wednesday, March 20, for Senate Bill 362, which would bar companies that accept state incentives from recognizing unions without a formal secret-ballot election. The measure, which has been backed by Gov. Kemp, now goes to the Republican governor for his signature.

Union leaders and Democrats argue the bill violates 1935’s National Labor Relations Act, which governs union organizing.

“If this bill passes, there will be a lawsuit and it will cost Georgia taxpayers millions of dollars and the state will lose,” state Rep. Saira Draper, an Atlanta Democrat, said on the House floor Wednesday.

The National Labor Relations Board, the federal agency overseeing union affairs, has declined to comment.

Democrats say the bill is really about making it harder for unions to organize and for companies to accept them. Other Democrats took to the House floor to argue that the bill would harm Georgia businesses by making workers from other states reluctant to move here.

“Why would we do anything to be anti-labor when we need to attract more workers from any source available?” asked Rep. Gregg Kennard of Lawrenceville.

Republicans denied that the bill is anti-labor, saying it aims to protect workers’ privacy. Some, including Kemp, argue that the secret ballot protects workers from being bullied into joining unions.

“Nothing in this bill stops a union from being formed,” said Rep. Soo Hong of Lawrenceville. “We are ensuring that when the state invests state resources to drive job creation that hardworking Georgians who hold those jobs have the agency to determine whether to be represented by a labor union.”

Only 4.4% of Georgia workers are union members, the eighth-lowest rate among states.

Georgia’s bill is modeled after a law passed in Tennessee last year, but there could be similar legislation offered in many other states. The conservative American Legislative Exchange Council is promoting the idea. The national push could also be a response to a decision by the Democratic-controlled NLRB last year that made it easier for unions to organize by card check.

Governors in other Southern states traditionally hostile to organized labor have been speaking out against unions, after the United Auto Workers vowed a fresh push to organize nonunion auto factories after multiple failed attempts.

Alabama Republican Gov. Kay Ivey said her state’s economic success is “under attack.” Henry McMaster, South Carolina’s Republican governor, told lawmakers in the nation’s least unionized state last month that organized labor is such a threat that he would fight unions ” all the way to the gates of hell.”

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Kemp proclaimed his support for the bill in a January speech to the Georgia Chamber of Commerce, echoing the chamber’s own agenda. He said the move would protect workers’ “right to opportunity” from President Joe Biden’s pro-union agenda and outside forces “who want nothing more than to see the free market brought to a screeching halt.”

Alabama and South Carolina are among five states that have passed state constitutional amendments guaranteeing access to secret union ballots. Indiana, like Tennessee, has passed a state law.



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