Locking it up: Biden clinches 2024 Democrat presidential nomination during Tuesday’s primaries


It was never in doubt, but President Biden is officially the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee.

Biden formally clinched his party’s 2024 nomination Tuesday, as Georgia, Mississippi and Washington state held primaries.

With no major challengers remaining, Biden and former President Trump were on course to collect all or nearly all the delegates up for grabs in Tuesday’s contests, putting each of them over the top and making them the presumptive Democratic and Republican presidential nominees.

WHERE THE 2024 PRESIDENTIAL NOMINATION RACES STAND

Biden returns to New Hampshire after primary squabble

President Biden speaks at a policy event in Goffstown, N.H. The trip was Biden’s first to New Hampshire in nearly two years. (Fox News/Paul Steinhauser)

The president and his predecessor in the White House will formally become the two major party nominees this summer, as the Republicans and the Democrats host their national nominating conventions in July and August, respectively.

Biden had 1,872 delegates as of Tuesday morning. The president, who swept 14 of 15 contests last week on Super Tuesday, needed 1,968 to clinch renomination.

BIDEN, TRUMP, SWEEP SUPER TUESDAY CONTESTS AS THEY MOVE CLOSER TO CLINCHING NOMINATIONS

Georgia, where polls closed at 7 p.m., has 108 delegates up for grabs. Thirty-five Democratic delegates are at stake in Mississippi, with another 92 in Washington state.

BIDEN IN new hampshire

President Biden, left, speaks to supporters during a visit to a campaign field office Monday, March 11, 2024, in Manchester, N.H. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

Trump, who is expected to clinch the GOP nomination later Tuesday evening, had 1,078 delegates at the start of the day. He needs 1,215 to lock up the nomination.

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Fifty-nine GOP delegates are up for grabs in Georgia, with 40 at stake in Mississippi and 43 in Washington state. Nineteen more delegates are up for grabs in Hawaii, which holds a Republican presidential caucus later in the evening. 

Donald Trump wins big on Super Tuesday

Former President Trump speaks at a Super Tuesday election night party March 5, 2024, at Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Fla.  (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

Trump swept 14 of the 15 GOP Super Tuesday primaries and caucuses, which moved him much closer to officially locking up the 2024 Republican presidential nomination. And Trump’s last rival for the nomination, Nikki Haley, dropped out of the race the day after Super Tuesday.

Biden, who served nearly four decades as a senator from Delaware before stepping down to assume the vice presidency for eight years under President Obama, defeated Trump four years ago to win the White House.

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

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



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Texas House Republican introduces bill to prevent noncitizens from serving as election administrators


FIRST ON FOX: Rep. August Pfluger, R-Texas, has introduced a measure to prevent noncitizens from serving as election administrators ahead of the 2024 presidential election.

Named the “No Foreign Persons Administering Our Elections Act,” the measure, if successful, would prohibit state and local jurisdictions from hiring individuals who are not U.S. citizens, including illegal immigrants, to administer an election for federal positions.

“Foreign agents have no place overseeing our sacred democratic process,” Pfluger, a member of the House Homeland Security Committee, told Fox News Digital.

“My legislation aims to ensure that only American citizens have the honor and responsibility of serving as election administrators,” he added. “No foreign influence should taint the integrity of our voting system.”

GOP EFFORT TO STOP ILLEGAL IMMIGRANTS BEING COUNTED FOR HOUSE DISTRICTS, ELECTORAL COLLEGE SHOT DOWN IN SENATE

August Pfluger, elections

Named the “No Foreign Persons Administering Our Elections Act,” Texas GOP Rep. August Pfluger’s measure prohibits state and local jurisdictions from hiring individuals who are not U.S. citizens, including illegal immigrants, to administer an election for federal positions. (Getty Images)

Pluger’s bill comes after Kelly Wong, an immigrant from Hong Kong who is not a U.S. citizen, was appointed to serve on the San Francisco Elections Commission. Wong’s appointment to the position was made possible after San Francisco passed a measure in 2020 removing the citizenship requirement to serve on city boards, commissions and advisory bodies.

Wong, an immigrant rights advocate who came to the U.S. from Hong Kong in 2019 to pursue a graduate degree, was sworn in at a ceremony in San Francisco City Hall.

San Francisco Election Commission President Robin Stone recently told Fox News Digital, “I support the Board of Supervisors’ authority and decision to appoint Kelly Wong to the Elections Commission. What’s more, as public officers of the City, we respect the law and will of San Francisco voters, who removed the citizenship requirement for commissioners in 2020.”

‘SHOCKING’ CALIFORNIA BILL TO PROTECT VIOLENT ILLEGAL IMMIGRANTS FROM DEPORTATION DRAWS FIERCE BACKLASH

Non-citizen Kelly Wong was sworn in to the San Francisco Elections Commission at City Hall last month. (China News Service/Contributor)

The Republican crackdown on the influence noncitizens may have on U.S. elections is an effort that Democrats have largely defeated in recent history.

Earlier this month, a move by Senate Republicans to stop noncitizens, including illegal immigrants, from being counted on the census for the purposes of apportionment for House seats and the Electoral College was shot down after the measure failed to gain the support of a single Democrat.

Sen. Bill Hagerty, R-Tenn., moved to include an amendment, attached to the $460 billion spending package, that would require the Census Bureau to include a citizenship question in any future census, and then bar anyone who isn’t a U.S. citizen from being counted for purposes of congressional district and Electoral College apportionment.

Florida voter

Earlier this month, a move by Senate Republicans to stop noncitizens, including illegal immigrants, from being counted on the census for the purposes of apportionment for House seats and the Electoral College was shot do (Octavio Jones/Getty Images)

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While the bill would also exclude legal immigrants on temporary visas and green cards from the census, the move has been undertaken explicitly to stop illegal immigrants from being counted amid millions of new arrivals at the southern border. It’s similar to a Trump-era effort to include a citizenship question on the 2020 census. Trump’s effort sparked widespread criticism and condemnation from Democrats and left-wing immigration groups who argued that a citizenship question was unlawful and was designed to help Republicans in future elections.

Fox News’ Gabriel Hays and Adam Shaw contributed to this report.





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GOP lawmaker reveals ‘perverse implication’ of Robert Hur’s argument on Trump ‘deterrent effect’


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A House GOP lawmaker targeted former Special Counsel Robert Hur over what he called a “perverse implication” that the current prosecution of former President Donald Trump at least partially factored into Hur’s decision not to recommend charges for President Biden.

Hur testified before House lawmakers on Tuesday in a lengthy and, at times, heated hearing on his report — the product of a monthslong investigation into Biden’s handling of classified documents

Rep. Kevin Kiley, R-Calif., took issue with a part of Hur’s report that downplayed the “deterrent effect” of charging Biden, both because of “little risk he will reoffend” and that “future presidents and vice presidents are already likely to be deterred by the multiple recent criminal investigations, and one prosecution, of current and former presidents and vice presidents for mishandling classified documents.”

HUR TESTIFIES BIDEN ‘WILLFULLY RETAINED CLASSIFIED MATERIALS,’ BUT PROSECUTORS ‘HAD TO CONSIDER’ MENTAL STATE

Kevin Kiley, Robert Hur

Rep. Kevin Kiley, left, accused ex-Special Counsel Robert Hur, right, of implying President Biden did not need to be charged partially because deterrence of future leaders mishandling classified documents can be achieved by the prosecution of former President Trump. (Getty Images)

Kiley argued during the hearing, “The perverse implication here is that the administration, by the very terms of your analysis, actually made it less likely that the president would face charges by [Special Counsel Jack Smith] bringing an indictment [against Trump].”

“I’ll stand by the way and the specific terms in which I characterize my assessment of deterrence value of a case under the principles of federal prosecution,” Hur told him just minutes earlier.

Kiley stood by his argument in a brief interview with Fox News Digital on Tuesday afternoon, explaining, “It’s the implication that is perverse, because it means that Biden sort of lowered his chances of facing charges when the administration brought charges against former President Trump.”

Trump has pleaded not guilty to multiple charges stemming from Smith’s federal investigation into alleged election interference. The U.S. Supreme Court has agreed to review whether Trump has presidential immunity from prosecution in the case.

BIDEN RETAINED RECORDS RELATED TO UKRAINE, CHINA; COMER DEMANDS ‘UNFETTERED ACCESS’ AMID IMPEACHMENT INQUIRY

Joe Biden talking at podium, making a fist

Hur said in his interview Biden came off as ‘a sympathetic, well-meaning, elderly man with a poor memory.’ (SAUL LOEB/AFP via Getty Images)

“I think there’s a lot here that’s fairly troubling,” Kiley said. “That’s why I wanted to sort of bring it to light. I didn’t know, maybe, even if Mr. Hur had really thought that through, that particular implication.”

“I think that really, broadly, the report was well done. I think that particular factor was not thought through as carefully as it should be.”

Meanwhile, Fox News contributor and Georgetown University law professor Jonathan Turley argued that the section of the report suggesting Biden himself was at “little risk” of reoffending is not an accurate conclusion on deterrence. 

SPECIAL COUNSEL CALLS BIDEN ‘SYMPATHETIC, WELL-MEANING, ELDERLY MAN WITH A POOR MEMORY,’ BRINGS NO CHARGES

Donald Trump

Former U.S. President Donald Trump was charged over mishandling classified documents by Special Counsel Jack Smith. (Sean Rayford/Getty Images)

“The finding seems inherently in conflict with the acknowledgment that Joe Biden continued to remove classified material over 40 years since he was a senator,” Turley said. “There was no evidence of deterrence despite repeated warnings given to him by counsel and staff. If anything, that record shows a certain habitual violation of well-known rules on the handling of classified material.”

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Hur found that Biden did willfully mishandle classified materials but did not recommend charges, citing, in part, that he came off “as a sympathetic, well-meaning, elderly man with a poor memory,” and that “it would be difficult to convince a jury that they should convict him — by then a former president well into his eighties — of a serious felony that requires a mental state of willfulness.”

Fox News Digital reached out to the Justice Department but did not immediately hear back.



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‘Uncommitted’ Dems could wage another double-digit protest vote against Biden in this blue state primary


The push by voters in the Democratic presidential primaries protesting President Biden over the bloodshed in Gaza moves Tuesday to Washington state.

That’s where the “uncommitted” vote may once again reach double digits, as a form of protest against the president’s support of Israel in its six-month war with Hamas.

After the “uncommitted” ballot box discontent reached 13% in Michigan late last month, and topped out at 19% in Minnesota and 29% in Hawaii last week, activists have been urging voters in Washington state to keep the pressure on Biden to reach a cease-fire to end the fighting in Gaza.

CLICK HERE FOR THE LATEST FOX NEWS REPORTING, ANALYSIS, AND OPINION ON THE ISRAEL-HAMAS WAR

Michigan Primary voting returns

Natalia Katie places a sign on the podium for the group “Listen to Michigan,” which asked voters to vote uncommitted instead of for President Biden, in Dearborn on Feb. 27, 2024. (Getty Images)

Washington state, along with Georgia and Mississippi, hold Democratic and Republican presidential primaries on Tuesday. But Washington is the only one with an “uncommitted” option on the ballot.

And while Washington doesn’t have a large Arab American population similar to Michigan and Minnesota, it’s long been one of the centers of the anti-establishment progressive movement.

BIDEN, TRUMP, EXPECTED TO FORMALLY LOCK UP MAJOR PARTY PRESIDENTIAL NOMINATIONS ON TUESDAY

The war in Gaza was triggered on Oct. 7, when Hamas terrorists, in a brutal attack, killed over 1,200 Israelis, including women and children. Israel responded by attacking Gaza, which Hamas has long controlled, with airstrikes and an ensuing ground invasion. Hamas says over 31,000 Palestinians, including women and children, have been killed in the fighting.

Joe Biden SOTU

President Biden speaks during a State of the Union address at the U.S. Capitol on Thursday, March 7, 2024. (Al Drago/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

While Washington has supported Israel since the fighting first erupted, Biden in last week’s primetime State of the Union address turned up his pressure on Israeli leader Benjamin Netanyahu to allow increased humanitarian assistance into Gaza and pursue a two-state solution once the war was over.

But it’s likely that many ballots in Washington – which votes by mail – were already cast ahead of the president’s address last Thursday.

It may be a while before the final vote in Washington’s primary is tabulated.

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Election officials say they expect about half of the vote to be counted and reported when polls close on Tuesday night. But it may take until the end of the week for the final vote to be reported.

The Biden campaign, in response to the “uncommitted” vote in recent weeks, has highlighted that “the President believes making your voice heard and participating in our democracy is fundamental to who we are as Americans.”

And the campaign has noted that Biden “shares the goal for an end to the violence and a just, lasting peace in the Middle East. He’s working tirelessly to that end.”

Palestinians look at destruction

Palestinians look at the destruction after an Israeli strike in Deir al Balah, Gaza Strip, on Jan. 14, 2024. (AP Photo/Adel Hana)

Both Biden and former President Donald Trump are all but certain to officially clinch their respective party presidential nominations on Tuesday night.

With no major challengers left, both Biden and Trump are expected to collect all or nearly all the delegates up for grabs in Tuesday’s contests, putting each of them over the top and making them the Democratic and Republican presumptive presidential nominees.

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



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Ex-Trump aide sued by Hunter Biden wants Biden-appointed judge off laptop case, fears ‘2020 all over again’


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Garrett Ziegler, a one-time aide to former President Trump who is being sued by Hunter Biden for publishing the contents of his infamous laptop, is seeking to have a judge who was appointed by President Biden removed from the case. Ziegler argues that the outcome of the lawsuit not only has implications for the congressional impeachment inquiry, but also the 2024 election. 

In a recent motion in U.S. District Court for Central California, Ziegler’s attorney, Robert Tyler, requested that Judge Hernán D. Vera recuse himself from the case because his “impartiality will be reasonably questioned.” Vera made donations to Joe Biden’s campaign for president in 2020. He also was appointed to his position by President Biden just three months before Hunter Biden filed the lawsuit against Ziegler and one day after then-House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., announced a presidential impeachment inquiry had commenced in Congress. 

Tyler emphasized that he is not arguing against Vera’s integrity and assumes the court system assigned the judge to Hunter Biden’s lawsuit at random. 

“But there’s something called forum shopping that lawyers do,” he told Fox News Digital. “And here’s a case where our client resides in Illinois, he has no contact with California such that California should have any jurisdiction over this case, yet Hunter Biden’s lawyers filed this lawsuit to the Central District of California just shortly after Judge Vera’s appointed.” 

Fox News Digital reached out to Biden’s legal team for comment on Tuesday.

HUNTER BIDEN SUES FORMER WH AIDE FOR ALTERING, PUBLISHING ‘PORNOGRAPHIC’ PHOTOS FROM LAPTOP HE DENIES IS HIS

Hunter Biden on Capitol Hill

Hunter Biden arrives on Capitol Hill for a deposition with House Judiciary and Oversight Committees on Feb. 28, 2024. (Craig Hudson for The Washington Post via Getty Images)

The relief requested in Hunter Biden’s complaint would prevent and inhibit the public, media and Congress from accessing highly relevant evidence to the impeachment inquiry of President Biden, the motion says. Ziegler’s attorney further argued that Vera must recuse himself from the case “because the district court rulings in this case may affect the impeachment inquiry along with the future presidency of Joseph Biden, toward which Judge Vera made a financial investment and for which Judge Vera has an obvious interest and affinity.” 

“The availability of the information from the Hunter Biden laptop is incredibly important so that we don’t have 2020 all over again where somehow the Biden laptop is brushed under the rug and ignored or worse yet, it’s censored,” Tyler told Fox News Digital on Tuesday, referring to how the Hunter Biden laptop story was dismissed as “Russian disinformation” by a large portion of the media and suppressed by social media platforms. “That’s important I think not only to the presidential impeachment inquiry but also to the election.” 

Tyler’s motion criticizes how Hunter Biden filed the lawsuit against Ziegler, his company – Marco Polo USA – and 10 unidentified associates in September 2023, in the middle of his father’s re-election campaign and nearly three years after the dissemination of files emanating from the laptop he “abandoned” at a Delaware computer repair shop. The repair shop owner turned the laptop over to the FBI on or around October 2019 after discovering its “disturbing materials,” the motion notes.

Biden Laptop Report cover

Ziegler holds his book outside the J. Caleb Boggs Federal Building on Sept. 7, 2023, in Wilmington, Delaware. (Ricky Carioti/The Washington Post via Getty Images)

Hunter Biden’s lawsuit accused Ziegler and others of spreading “tens of thousands of emails, thousands of photos, and dozens of videos and recordings” that were considered “pornographic” on the laptop. The lawsuit describes Ziegler as a “zealot who has waged a sustained, unhinged and obsessed campaign” against the entire Biden family for over two years to “advance his right-wing agenda” and spent hours “accessing, tampering with, manipulating or copying” Hunter Biden’s data with his associates.

GOP REP SPOTLIGHTS 3 KEY PIECES OF EVIDENCE THAT THE BIDEN FAMILY ‘CONTRADICTED’ THEIR BUSINESS COVERUP

The lawsuit seeks a jury trial based on the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act and California’s Comprehensive Computer Data Access and Fraud Act. 

Ziegler’s attorney counters that the former Trump aide and associates “prepared a credible investigative report,” known as the “Report on the Biden Laptop,” not to wage a campaign against Hunter Biden, but to “expose instances of foreign compromise” by Hunter Biden and his father, President Biden, which are “matters of great public interest and concern.” In preparing the report, Ziegler relied on copies of files from the laptop that “had already been widely circulated since at least October 2020 to numerous media outlets,” Tyler wrote. 

Ziegler portrait photo

Garrett Ziegler, author of the “Report on the Biden Laptop,” outside the J. Caleb Boggs Federal Building on Sept. 7, 2023, in Wilmington, Delaware. (Ricky Carioti/The Washington Post via Getty Images)

The motion states that Ziegler’s website with the Biden laptop report has been accessed by over 5 million Americans since its inception in June 2023 and more than 8 million Americans have accessed the free digital version of the report made available in November 2022. 

“Millions upon millions of visitors have come to this website for information,” Tyler said. “The information on this website is not altered except to the extent to black out genitals. Other than that, the content of the website, according to my client, has not been altered or manipulated, and so this information is critical, I believe, to the availability for the public, for the media and for Congress itself to be able to access and determine whether or not this president is one we should bring back in 2024, 2025.”

Tyler noted how Marco Polo provided background research to the House Oversight, Judiciary and Ways and Means Committees related to the Biden impeachment inquiry. 

During a recent House Oversight and Accountability Committee hearing related to Hunter Biden’s refusal to attend a congressional deposition pertaining to his father’s impeachment inquiry, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., presented exhibits of evidence she received directly from Ziegler and other defendants, the motion says. 

Rep. Jamie Raskin, D-Md., then requested that the Democrats on the committee be provided the Biden laptop files. Rep. Anna Paulina Luna, R-Fla., interjected that she can provide every Democrat a copy because “Marco Polo has the actual, entire publication.” 

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“You mentioned you wanted to read some stuff, that would probably be something good to read, the Marco Polo Report,” Chairman Rep. James Comer, R-Ky., added. “It’s public record.” 



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Iowa senator seeks to increase government transparency and end Biden administration’s ‘secret spending’


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FIRST ON FOX: Sen. Joni Ernst, a Republican from Iowa, will introduce a bill on Tuesday that seeks to bar government agencies from concealing details about reported transactions by mislabeling them as “other transaction agreements.” 

The legislation, titled, the Stop Secret Spending Act of 2024, seeks to prevent bureaucratic agencies from using the term “OTA” in reporting their spending to the Government Accountability Office

FORMER SPECIAL COUNSEL TESTIFIES ‘I DID NOT EXONERATE’ BIDEN

OTA’s are defined as “legally binding agreements other than standard contracts and grants that allow for flexible arrangements,” according to the GAO. 

According to the latest data, the current U.S. national debt stands at roughly $34.4 trillion and is increasing by about $1 trillion every 100-day period. 

The legislation would insert the phrase “other transaction agreement” into the list of terms considered “federal awards,” thus requiring various disclosures about the transaction such as the entities involved and the amounts. 

REPUBLICANS EXPOSE ‘WOKE’ ITEMS HIDDEN WITHIN BIDEN’S MASSIVE $7.3 TRILLION BUDGET

Ernst’s new measure geared toward increasing government spending transparency comes during 2024’s Sunshine Week, which celebrates and recognizes the importance of openness in government and the dangers of excessive confidentiality. National Freedom of Information Day falls on March 16. 

In a statement to Fox News Digital, Ernst described it as “disappointing” to need to address this issue during Sunshine Week. 

“Once again, Biden is hiding billions by not disclosing the details about the dollars his deputies are doling out using loosely defined deals referred to as ‘other transaction agreements,’ or OTAs,” she explained. 

GUN RIGHTS GROUPS ASK SUPREME COURT TO STRIKE DOWN STATE’S ‘ASSAULT WEAPONS’ BAN

Sen. Joni Ernst

U.S. Sen. Joni Ernst, R-Iowa, speaks with reporters following the Senate Republicans weekly policy lunch on Capitol Hill in Washington on March 6, 2024. REUTERS/Bonnie Cash

These agreements amount to “sweetheart deals,” the Iowa senator said. 

In fiscal years 2020-2022, the GAO found that more than $40 billion was reported by agencies under the term’s umbrella. The office further noted that about $10 billion was seemingly related to the COVID-19 pandemic, but that the expenditures weren’t reported to the GAO as such. It also detailed that agencies appeared to use different strategies in reporting transactions as OTAs. Per the GAO, “Policymakers and the public will continue to lack complete spending information and transparency of OTAs,” until they are considered federal rewards and held to that reporting standard. 

FDNY UNION BOSS BREAKS SILENCE ON STAFF CHEERING TRUMP, BOOING LETITIA JAMES

The Treasury Department is seen near sunset

The Treasury Department is seen near sunset in Washington, Jan. 18, 2023.  (AP Photo/Jon Elswick, File)

Ernst slammed the Treasury Department, in her statement to Fox News Digital for suggesting that OTA spending should not be reported to USASpending.gov because it isn’t currently defined as a federal award. 

She cited the Federal Funding Accountability and Transparency Act of 2006, noting that it states “federal financial assistance and expenditures” totaling more than $25,000 should be reported. 

SENATE REPUBLICANS DEMAND DOCS, INFO ON ILLEGAL IMMIGRANT CHARGED WITH LAKEN RILEY’S MURDER

Iowa Senator Joni Ernst speaks at a podium in the halls of Congress

Sen. Joni Ernst, R-Iowa, speaks during a press conference following a luncheon with Senate Republicans in the U.S. Capitol Building May 2, 2023 in Washington, DC.  (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

“Seems pretty clear to me!” Ernst said. 

Because of this, she said she plans to give the department her monthly “Squeal Award.” The purpose of the recognition is to identify and call out “wasteful” expenses. 

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President Joe Biden’s fiscal year 2025 budget, which was released Monday, includes borrowing $16.3 trillion. According to the White House, the amount would be partially offset by taxes raised on corporations and the nation’s highest earners. The Biden administration has said his budget proposal would actually lower the national deficit by $3 trillion over 10 years. 



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Trump heading to Ohio with his GOP clout on the line in contentious Republican Senate primary


Former President Donald Trump heads to Ohio on Saturday to support the Republican Senate candidate he’s endorsed in the state’s increasingly contentious GOP primary.

The former president – who is expected to sweep Tuesday’s four Republican presidential primaries and caucuses and formally become his party’s 2024 presumptive nominee – on Saturday will headline a rally in Dayton, Ohio, for businessman Bernie Moreno. 

Trump’s trip will come three days before the March 19 primary. The rally was announced Monday night by a pro-Moreno group titled Buckeye Values PAC.

The move came hours after state Sen. Matt Dolan – one of the two other major contenders, along with Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose, in the Senate primary – was endorsed by two-term Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine, a former longtime U.S. senator and state attorney general.

SIX KEY SENATE SEATS REPUBLICANS AIM TO FLIP IN NOVEMBER 

Late last week, Dolan – a former top county prosecutor and Ohio assistant attorney general whose family owns Major League Baseball’s Cleveland Guardians – also landed the backing of former Sen. Rob Portman. DeWine and Portman are considered top members of Ohio’s Republican old guard or establishment.

LOCKING IT UP: TRUMP, BIDEN, EXPECTED TO CLINCH PRESIDENTIAL NOMINATIONS TUESDAY

“Matt Dolan has a vision for the future. He listens. He fights. And, he knows how to get results for Ohio,” DeWine said in endorsing Dolan.

Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine arrives for a news conference

Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine arrives for a news conference, Dec. 29, 2023, in Columbus. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

Dolan, who along with Moreno is making his second straight bid for the Senate in Ohio, has highlighted that he’s a supporter of Trump’s policies but not the former president’s personality.

Moreno, an immigrant who arrived in the U.S. legally from Colombia who later became a successful Cleveland-based businessman and luxury auto dealership giant, was endorsed by Trump in December.

Trump’s endorsement of now-Sen. JD Vance just ahead of the 2022 Ohio GOP Senate primary helped boost Vance to victory. Vance last year backed Moreno, which was seen as a prelude to the eventual Trump endorsement.

JD Vance and Donald Trump in Ohio

Former President Donald Trump welcomes JD Vance, Republican candidate for U.S. senator for Ohio, to the stage at a campaign rally in Youngstown, Ohio., Sept. 17, 2022. (AP Photo/Tom E. Puskar)

Andy Surabian, a senior Moreno campaign adviser who’s close to Trump’s political orbit, emphasized in a social media post that “the Ohio Senate race is officially Team America First vs Team RINO.”

RINO is a term used to insult some in the GOP as “Republicans in name only.”

There’s been a dearth of public polling in the Republican Senate primary and the three major campaigns are treating the race as a dead heat ahead of next week’s primary. Millions have been spent by the campaigns and aligned super PACs to flood the airwaves with negative attack ads.

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The winner of the GOP primary will face off in November against longtime Democratic Sen. Sherrod Brown.

Brown, who is the only Democrat to win statewide in Ohio over the past decade, is being heavily targeted by Republicans in a state that was once a premiere battleground before shifting red.

Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio

Sen. Sherrod Brown during Senate votes in the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 23, 2024. (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)

Democrats currently control the U.S. Senate with a 51-49 majority, but Republicans are looking at a very favorable Senate map in 2024, 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.

Five others seats are in key swing states narrowly carried by President Biden in 2020: Arizona, Michigan, Nevada, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.

As Trump locks up the GOP presidential nomination, he’s once again exerting increasing control over the Republican Party. 

On Friday, a top Trump ally and the former president’s daughter-in-law were installed as chair and co-chair of the Republican National Committee. On Monday, the new regime at the RNC pushed roughly 60 current staffers out the door.

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



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Hur testifies Biden ‘willfully retained classified materials,’ but prosecutors ‘had to consider’ mental state


Ex-Special Counsel Robert Hur testified Tuesday that President Biden “willfully retained classified materials,” but said he “had to consider” the president’s “memory and overall mental state” when determining whether to bring charges against him.

Hur, who testified publicly before the House Judiciary and Oversight Committees Tuesday, explained that he did not bring charges against the president despite the willful retention of classified records about military and foreign policy in Afghanistan and other countries, among other records related to national security and foreign policy, which Hur said implicated “sensitive intelligence sources and methods.”

BIDEN RETAINED RECORDS RELATED TO UKRAINE, CHINA; COMER DEMANDS ‘UNFETTERED ACCESS’ AMID IMPEACHMENT INQUIRY

“My team and I conducted a thorough, independent investigation,” Hur testified. “We identified evidence that the President willfully retained classified materials after the end of his vice presidency, when he was a private citizen.” 

Robert Hur, Joe Biden

Special Counsel Robert Hur and President Joe Biden. (Getty Images)

“This evidence included an audiorecorded conversation during which Mr. Biden told his ghostwriter that he had ‘just found all the classified stuff downstairs.’ When Mr. Biden said this, he was a private citizen speaking to his ghostwriter in his private rental home in Virginia,” Hur continued. “We also identified other recorded conversations during which Mr. Biden read classified information aloud to his ghostwriter.”

He added, though, that “we did not, however, identify evidence that rose to the level of proof beyond a reasonable doubt. Because the evidence fell short of that standard, I declined to recommend criminal charges against Mr. Biden.” 

But Hur said he “needed to explain why” he declined prosecution. 

This image from Special Council Robert Hur’s investigation released by the Department of Justice on Thursday, February 8, 2024 shows Joe Biden’s garage storage closet in his Delaware home on December 21, 2022.

This image from Special Council Robert Hur’s investigation released by the Department of Justice on Thursday, February 8, 2024 shows Joe Biden’s garage storage closet in his Delaware home on December 21, 2022. (U.S. Department of Justice)

“I had to consider the president’s memory and overall mental state, and how a jury likely would perceive his memory and mental state in a criminal trial,” Hur testified. “These are the types of issues prosecutors analyze every day. And because these issues were important to my ultimate decision, I had to include a discussion of them in my report to the attorney general.”

SPECIAL COUNSEL CALLS BIDEN ‘SYMPATHETIC, WELL-MEANING, ELDERLY MAN WITH A POOR MEMORY,’ BRINGS NO CHARGES

Hur, in his report, described Biden as a “sympathetic, well-meaning elderly man with a poor memory” — a description that has raised significant concerns for Biden’s 2024 re-election campaign.

“The evidence and the President himself put his memory squarely at issue. We interviewed the President and asked him about his recorded statement, ‘I just found all the classified stuff downstairs.’ He told us that he didn’t remember saying that to his ghostwriter,” Hur said. “He also said he didn’t remember finding any classified material in his home after his vice presidency. And he didn’t remember anything about how classified documents about Afghanistan made their way into his garage.” 

Rep. Jim Jordan

Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, chairman of the House Judiciary Committee leaves the Republican caucus meeting at the Capitol in Washington, Thursday, Oct. 12, 2023. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana) (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana)

Hur defended himself, though, saying his assessment in the report “about the relevance of the President’s memory was necessary and accurate and fair.” 

“Most importantly, what I wrote is what I believe the evidence shows, and what I expect jurors would perceive and believe. I did not sanitize my explanation. Nor did I disparage the President unfairly,” Hur testified. “I explained to the Attorney General my decision and the reasons for it. That’s what I was required to do.” 

Hur’s opening statement came after House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jim Jordan began the hearing by playing a video of Biden speaking about the former special counsel’s report the day it was released. 

“Mr. Hur produced a 345-page report. But in the end, it boils down to a few key facts. Joe Biden kept classified information,” Jordan said. “Joe Biden failed to properly secure classified information. And Joe Biden shared classified information with people he wasn’t supposed to. 

House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer

Chairman James Comer, R-Ky., of the House Oversight and Accountability Committee.  (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)

“We’re going to play a short video of President Biden’s press conference after your report was released,” Jordan added. “Because there’s things in this press conference that the United States says that are directly contradicted by what you found in your report.” 

A transcript of President Biden’s interviews with Robert Hur appears to contradict Biden’s claim that the former Special Counsel had asked him about the date of Beau Biden’s death. 

BIDEN FUZZY ON DATES, FUMBLED DETAILS IN INTERVIEWS WITH SPECIAL COUNSEL HUR

But Ranking Member Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y., blasted former President Trump — who was charged by Special Counsel Jack Smith related to his alleged mishandling of classified records. Trump pleaded not guilty. 

The former president and presumptive 2024 GOP nominee posted on Truth Social before Hur’s testimony, saying the Justice Department gave Biden a “free pass.” 

Jerry Nadler House Judiciary Committee

House Judiciary Committee Ranking Member Jerry Nadler, D-N.Y. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File)

“Big day in Congress for the Biden Documents Hoax,” Trump wrote on his Truth Social account. “He had many times more documents, including classified documents, than I, or any other president, had. He had them all over the place, with ZERO supervision or security. He does NOT come under the Presidential Records Act, I DO.”

“The DOJ gave Biden, and virtually every other person and President, a free pass. Me, I’m still fighting!!!” Trump added.

Trump, on the other hand, was charged out of Special Counsel Jack Smith’s investigation related to his retention of classified materials. Trump pleaded not guilty to all 37 felony charges out of Smith’s probe. The charges include willful retention of national defense information, conspiracy to obstruct justice and false statements. 

Nadler played a video of clips of Trump speaking, putting into question his “mental state.” 

Rep. Jamie Raskin, D-Md.

Rep. Jamie Raskin, D-Md., speaks during a House Committee on Oversight and Accountability hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC, on September 28, 2023. The hearing is the first formal hearing regarding the US House impeachment inquiry into US President Joe Biden. (Photo by MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images)

“That is a man who is incapable of avoiding criminal liability. A man who is wholly unfit for office… a man who, at the very least ought to think twice before accusing others of cognitive decline,” Nadler said of Trump, adding that Hur’s report “represents the complete and total exoneration of President Biden.” 

Meanwhile, House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer, R-Ky., in his opening statement reminded that his panel has subpoenaed ex-White House counsel Dana Remus, and tied Hur’s testimony into the larger House impeachment inquiry against the president. 

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Comer, for months, has been demanding answers on whether the classified records Biden improperly retained were related to countries that his family did business with. 

House Oversight Committee Ranking Member Jamie Raskin, D-Md., though, piggy-backed Nadler’s opening statement, bringing the conversation back to Donald Trump. 

This is a developing story. Please check back for updates. 



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Gun rights group asks Supreme Court to review Illinois assault weapons ban


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FIRST ON FOX — A gun rights group representing over 2 million members and activists has asked the U.S. Supreme Court to decide whether Illinois’ strict rifle ban is constitutional.

Gun Owners of America (GOA) and its sister organization, the Gun Owners Foundation, on Monday filed a petition for certiorari with the Supreme Court in their challenge to the Protect Illinois Communities Act (PICA). The groups, representing Illinois gun owners, argue the law imposes an unconstitutional, sweeping ban on hundreds of commonly owned and lawfully used rifles and ammunition magazines. 

“GOA has been at the forefront of this challenge since before the bans even took effect, and while our goal was never to have to end up before the Supreme Court, we were fully prepared to do so,” said Erich Pratt, senior vice president of Gun Owners of America. 

“We urge the Justices to hear the pleas of millions of Americans in Illinois and several other states nationwide who cannot purchase many of the commonly owned semiautomatic firearms available today because of the unconstitutional laws passed by anti-gun politicians,” Pratt said. 

ILLINOIS GUN GROUPS REPORT CONFUSION, ‘CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE’ AFTER DEADLINE PASSES TO REGISTER ‘ASSAULT’ WEAPONS

Illinois Governor J. B. Pritzker

Illinois Gov. J. B. Pritzker signed sweeping legislation into law in 2023 implementing a ban on hundreds of makes and models of rifles and ammunition magazines. (John Nacion/WireImage)

The strict gun control law, signed by Democratic Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker last year, carries penalties for anyone who, “Carries or possesses… Manufactures, sells, delivers, imports, or purchases any assault weapon or .50 caliber rifle.”  

Those who legally possess a banned weapon under the law must register it with the Illinois State Police.

The law also includes statutory penalties for anyone who “sells, manufactures, delivers, imports, possesses, or purchases any assault weapon attachment or .50 caliber cartridge.”

Any kit or tools that are used to increase the fire rate of a semiautomatic weapon are also banned, and the legislation includes a limit for purchases of certain magazines.

ILLINOIS ENACTS 320 NEW STATE LAWS, INCLUDING BAN ON SEMI-AUTOMATIC WEAPONS AND INDOOR VAPING

Illinois state capitol

The Illinois legislature passed the Protect Illinois Communities Act in 2023 in response to the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in New York State Rifle & Pistol Association, Inc. v. Bruen. (Chicago Tribune/Getty Images)

A federal judge in the Southern District of Illinois had initially ruled in favor of the plaintiffs, finding PICA did not respect the Second Amendment rights of Illinois residents. District Judge Stephen Patrick McGlynn, a Trump appointee, blocked the state from enforcing the “assault weapons” ban, finding it not only restricted the right to self-defense, but in some cases, “completely obliterated that right by criminalizing the purchase and the sale of more than 190 ‘arms.’” 

But the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals overturned McGlynn’s ruling on May 5, 2023, and permitted the law to take effect on Jan. 10, 2024. 

Law-abiding gun owners faced a Jan. 1 deadline to register their so-called assault weapons with the state police. However, Illinois Second Amendment groups reported mass confusion from gun owners and large rates of noncompliance. 

ILLINOIS ASSAULT WEAPONS BAN BACK IN EFFECT AS COURTS PLAY PING PONG WITH GUN CONTROL

Pistols and rifles on display in an Illinois gun store

Semiautomatic guns are displayed for sale at Capitol City Arms Supply, Jan. 16, 2013, in Springfield, Illinois. (AP Photo/Seth Perlman, File)

Of the over 2.4 million Firearm Owner Identification (FOID) cardholders, there have only been 112,350 disclosures filed as of Dec. 31, 2023, according to state police data. Another 29,357 disclosures were in the process of being completed as of Jan. 6.

Gun rights activists previously told Fox News Digital that apparent high rates of noncompliance came from a mix of ignorance of what the law requires and civil disobedience.

Now, they hope the Supreme Court will weigh in on their side. 

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“JB Pritzker and his colleagues in the Illinois General Assembly openly defied the Supreme Court and the Constitution when they passed their ‘emergency’ bill to ban so-called ‘assault weapons,'” said Sam Paredes, a board member of the Gun Owners Foundation.

“We are optimistic the justices will choose to hear the case and make clear once and for all that ‘assault weapons’ bans on tens of millions of commonly owned rifles are wholly out of line with the Second Amendment.”  

Fox News Digital’s Houston Keene contributed to this report.



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Mississippi’s primaries kick off as voters weigh in on 4 US House seats, 1 Senate seat


Mississippians head to the polls with party primaries for all four of the state’s U.S. House seats and one U.S. Senate seat.

Polls are open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. CDT Tuesday. If runoff elections are needed, they will be held April 2. The general election is Nov. 5.

Here’s a look at the candidates who are vying for the nominations.

MISSISSIPPI CITY, POLICE DEPARTMENT UNLAWFULLY JAILING PEOPLE OVER UNPAID FEES THEY CAN’T AFFORD: DOJ

HOUSE DISTRICT 1

Rep. Trent Kelly is unopposed for the Republican nomination in north Mississippi’s 1st Congressional District. He is a former district attorney and has been in the House since winning a 2015 special election. Kelly is a member of the House Armed Services Committee.

Dianne Dodson Black and Bronco Williams are competing in the Democratic primary.

Black is a business owner and was the Democratic nominee in the 1st District in 2022. She says she wants to support President Joe Biden’s economic policies, restore abortion rights and limit access to semi-automatic rifles.

U.S. Rep. Trent Kelly

U.S. Rep. Trent Kelly is seen at a rally on Nov. 1, 2019, in Tupelo, Miss. Kelly is unopposed in the Mississippi Republican Party primary, which is on March 12, 2024, for the 1st Congressional District seat. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis, File)

Williams, a theater and Spanish teacher, says he wants the U.S. to invest in alternative energy sources, improve transportation and increase access to health care.

HOUSE DISTRICT 2

Rep. Bennie Thompson is unopposed for the Democratic nomination in the 2nd Congressional District, which encompasses most of the city of Jackson and rural areas in the Delta and along the Mississippi River. Thompson has been in the House since he won a 1993 special election. He is the ranking Democrat on the House Homeland Security Committee.

The three candidates in the Republican primary are Ron Eller, Andrew Scott Smith and Taylor Turcotte.

Eller is a military veteran and physician assistant who ran unsuccessfully for the Republican nomination in the 2nd District in 2022. He says he supports construction of a U.S.-Mexico border wall and expansion of domestic energy production.

Smith has worked in farming and commercial real estate. He says he wants to rejuvenate agriculture, rebuild infrastructure, reinforce the southern U.S. border and require more transparency in government.

Turcotte has worked in advertising and as a regional sales manager for a vacuum cleaner company. She says she is running because she wants to secure the U.S. borders.

HOUSE DISTRICT 3

Republican Rep. Michael Guest is unopposed in the primary and the general election in central Mississippi’s 3rd Congressional District. Guest is a former district attorney who was first elected to the U.S. House in 2018. He is chairman of the House Ethics Committee and vice chairman of the Homeland Security Committee.

HOUSE DISTRICT 4

Rep. Mike Ezell faces two challengers in the Republican primary in south Mississippi’s 4th Congressional District.

Ezell is a former sheriff and was first elected to the House in 2022. He has voted to impeach Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas and to end U.S. military assistance to Ukraine. Former President Donald Trump endorsed him this year.

Carl Boyanton and Michael McGill are challenging Ezell in the Republican primary.

Boyanton has owned a produce distribution company. He ran unsuccessfully for the Republican nomination for the 4th District U.S. House seat in 2020 and 2022. He says he wants to enact term limits, eliminate some federal agencies and limit government spending.

McGill is a military veteran. He says he wants to improve power grids, highways and other infrastructure, increase funding for mental health services and eliminate pay disparities between women and men.

Craig Elliot Raybon is unopposed for the Democratic nomination in the 4th District.

SENATE

Sen. Roger Wicker faces two challengers in the Republican primary — Ghannon Burton and Dan Eubanks.

Wicker was appointed to the Senate in 2017 by then-Gov. Haley Barbour after fellow Republican Trent Lott stepped down. Wicker is an attorney and served in the Mississippi state Senate before winning a U.S. House seat in north Mississippi in 1994. He is the ranking member of the Armed Services Committee and has pushed to expand shipbuilding for the U.S. military. He has been endorsed by Trump.

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Burton is a military veteran. He says he believes the 2020 presidential election was rigged, and he criticizes Wicker for voting to certify the results. Burton says he wants to close the U.S. border but he believes “globalists want it open.” Burton says he believes COVID-19 vaccines are poison.

Eubanks is a state representative and a Presbyterian pastor. He says he believes “J-6ers” — people charged in the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the U.S. Capitol — have been denied due process and are “rotting away in jail.” Eubanks says he wants to reduce federal spending and he believes Wicker’s record is “anything but conservative.”

Ty Pinkins is unopposed for the Democratic nomination. He is an attorney and ran unsuccessfully for Mississippi secretary of state in 2023. He says he wants to fight poverty and improve access to health care.



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Republicans and Democrats fight for Ohio as former swing state’s political landscape shifts


For more than half a century, Ohio was one of the most important states to watch during presidential election years, a place where both parties competed vigorously for support from voters who were often genuinely undecided.

Then came Donald Trump.

Beginning in 2016, Ohio became reliably Republican as more and more voters embraced the New York businessman’s brash brand of politics. When Trump won the state in 2020 without clinching the White House, he became the first to win Ohio but lose the presidency since the state sided with Richard Nixon over John F. Kennedy in 1960. With that, the Buckeye State’s bellwether status was officially unrung.

OHIO GOV. DEWINE MAKES ENDORSEMENT IN UBER-COMPETITIVE SENATE RACE

Now there are hints that the dynamic may be shifting again after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned federal constitutional protections for abortion. Ohio voters responded last year to the 2022 ruling by overwhelmingly approving an amendment enshrining abortion rights in the state constitution. They did so after swarming polls to defeat a Republican effort that would have made doing so more difficult. The state also legalized recreational marijuana.

There’s a risk of overinterpreting the results from 2023, but the victories have encouraged Democrats defending a pivotal U.S. Senate seat this year.

Last August’s GOP-backed effort to make amending Ohio’s constitution harder showed Ohioans that “Republican politicians were not on their side,” said Ohio Democratic Party Chair Elizabeth Walters.

People call out issues during early in-person voting in Cincinnati

Nikko Griffin, left, and Tyra Patterson, right, call out to arriving voters for several issues, including legalizing recreational marijuana, at a parking lot during early in-person voting in Cincinnati on Nov. 2, 2023. Ohio voters overwhelmingly supported enshrining abortion rights and voted to legalize recreational marijuana, encouraging Democrats who are defending a U.S. Senate seat in a state that’s twice supported Donald Trump by wide margins. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster, File)

“The Democratic Party isn’t getting ahead of themselves after just one election, but it does provide some hope that steadily, and with a lot of work, Ohioans could drift more to the left than to the right in upcoming elections,” she said.

Democrats’ most immediate concern is re-electing three-term U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown. He’s unopposed in the March 19 primary as Republicans hash out who will run against him, but Brown is viewed as among the nation’s most vulnerable Democrats in November’s general election, when voters also will cast ballots for president and Congress.

Delaware County voter Janelle Tucker, 53, said as she perused the floral section of a Kroger on Tuesday that she can’t predict how Ohio will vote this fall. She’s a Democrat and a “big fan” of Brown but said she just doesn’t know what will happen.

“Ohio used to be sort of the pulse of the voter, and it’s not anymore,” she said. “It’s fascinating because it seems like the voter strongly approved women’s rights, but the representatives don’t support the voters.”

Since Trump, Tucker said, “I feel like I don’t know my community anymore.”

Brown stands as a rare Democrat to be elected statewide in Ohio. Republicans control every statewide non-judicial office, both chambers of the state Legislature with supermajorities and the Ohio Supreme Court — and they have for years.

Mark Weaver, a long-time Ohio-based Republican consultant, said, “Anyone who suggests that Ohio has become purple again is going to have to offer up evidence other than 2023.”

He chalked up the resounding success of November’s Issue 1, which guaranteed an individual’s right “to make and carry out one’s own reproductive decisions,” to abortion rights groups outraising and outspending their anti-abortion opponents, therefore driving more left-leaning voters to the polls.

Unless those same groups put similar millions into Brown’s race, Ohio will “return to its reliable red state results,” Weaver said.

That’s what happened in 2022, when then-Democratic U.S. Rep. Tim Ryan ran what was widely considered a textbook campaign for the Senate seat vacated by Republican Rob Portman, only to lose by more than 6 points to Republican venture capitalist and “Hillbilly Elegy” author JD Vance. Vance had been backed by Trump.

But Ryan failed to garner the financial support from national Democrats that Brown is receiving. The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee has committed at least $10 million to re-elect him and Montana Democratic Sen. Jon Tester.

David Niven, an associate professor of political science at the University of Cincinnati, said Brown has a shot at keeping his seat if he focuses on abortion in a way that connects with voters.

AFTER EAST PALESTINE TRAIN DERAILMENT, TOXIC CHEMICALS DID NOT NEED TO BE BURNED OFF, NTSB SAYS

Brown, acutely aware of the issue’s potential to help him, has wasted no time contrasting his stance on abortion with those of his Republican opponents: Cleveland businessman Bernie Moreno, Secretary of State Frank LaRose and state Sen. Matt Dolan.

“I have always been clear about where I stand: I support abortion access for all women,” he wrote in a text to voters the week after the November referendum. “I know where my opponents stand, too: All three would overturn the will of Ohioans by voting for a national abortion ban.”

Moreno, LaRose and Dolan each celebrated the overturning of Roe v. Wade, which returned abortion policy to the states, but now support a 15-week federal abortion limit that’s been cast as a compromise by influential anti-abortion groups. The Ohio Republicans’ stances vary on imposing limits even earlier and on allowing exceptions later in pregnancy.

Abortion is also a hot topic in three closely watched Ohio Supreme Court races, where Democrats are defending two sitting justices and dreaming of flipping a third open seat to take control of the seven-member court. The future of Ohio abortion law could be forged there, and on other states’ high courts, as the legal questions surrounding abortion rights are hashed out.

Niven’s takeaway from 2023? “If the Democrats could make elections strictly about issues, they would win,” he said.

Supporting evidence for that theory can be found in Ohio’s suburbs, which may prove pivotal again.

In 2018, Brown lost three suburban counties — Butler, outside Cincinnati; and Delaware and Licking, outside Columbus — where the abortion rights issue went on to win last November. In two others where Issue 1 lost narrowly — the Cincinnati area’s Clermont and Warren counties — the abortion question outperformed Brown’s 2018 percentage by double digits.

All five of those counties voted for Trump in 2020.

At the Keystone Pub & Patio in Delaware County, Ken Wentworth, 53, said he isn’t sure what the future holds. He feels conflicted himself. A moderate Republican, he said he voted for marijuana legalization last year and “chickened out” and abstained on the abortion issue.

“My friends that are Democrats, they aren’t like kinda Democrats, they’re Democrats with all capital bold letters,” he said. “And, on the Republican side, they are right-wing times a hundred.”

He said he remains undecided in the Senate race and doesn’t like his choices for president, either, though he would support Trump over Biden if no other alternative emerges.

Independent voter Michelle Neeld, a 43-year-old factory worker from rural Morrow County, voted yes on both abortion rights and marijuana legalization last year. She doesn’t want to see Trump back in the White House but says she wouldn’t vote for Biden.

She does feel Ohio is moving to the left. “I think it’s getting there,” she said.

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Christopher McKnight Nichols, an Ohio State University professor of history, said the roughly 57% support received by both Ohio ballot issues in November “shows just how weak many of those conservative issues are with actual Republican voters.” He said it will likely prompt a “reconfiguration” within the state GOP.

Ohio Republican Party Chair Alex Triantafilou said that, given the GOP’s longstanding success in the state, he believes some within the party are overconfident — “and I’ve shared that privately and publicly with our party faithful.”

“I think anybody who ignores the results of 2023 does so at their own peril,” he said. “So, I’m not an overconfident Republican. I do think we’re going to do well. I do believe (if he’s the nominee) President Trump will do well in Ohio. But I think we have our work cut out for us.”



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Defying Trump, House GOP plans to forge ahead with TikTok bill that could ban app


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House Republican leaders are expected to vote Wednesday on a bill that could lead to a nationwide ban on TikTok, even as former President Trump appears to undermine efforts to restrict the app.

Fox News Digital has learned that the House of Representatives is expected to take the bill up under suspension of the rules, meaning it bypasses the usual procedural hurdles in exchange for raising the threshold for passage from a simple majority to two-thirds.

The bill passed through the House Energy and Commerce Committee in an unprecedented bipartisan 50-0 vote on Thursday. 

GOP LAWMAKERS PRESS TIKTOK CEO ON ‘DELUGE OF PRO-HAMAS CONTENT’ ON PLATFORM

Trump Mar-a-Lago

Republican presidential candidate and former President Trump expressed wariness about banning TikTok. (Win McNamee/Getty Images)

Later that same day, Trump posted on his Truth Social app, “If you get rid of TikTok, Facebook and Zuckerschmuck will double their business. I don’t want Facebook, who cheated in the last Election, doing better. They are a true Enemy of the People!”

The measure would ban TikTok from online app stores if its parent company, ByteDance, does not divest from it within 165 days. ByteDance is a Beijing-headquartered tech company that critics say is under the influence of China’s ruling communist party, a claim the company has denied.

But top U.S. officials have warned that TikTok likely gives the Chinese government access to mountains of sensitive American user data, even as the company insists guardrails are in place to prevent that.

Trump’s hesitance about a ban appears to be a shift from his earlier position as president, when he tried to block the app in the U.S. in 2020.

He said in a CNBC interview Monday morning that “there’s a lot of good and there’s a lot of bad” with TikTok. 

KEVIN O’LEARY OFFERS TO BUY TIKTOK AND TURN IT INTO A ‘NEW AMERICAN COMPANY’ IF PROPOSED BAN ADVANCES

House Republicans

House GOP leaders are aiming to put a bill on the floor Wednesday that would ban TikTok in U.S. app stores if ByteDance does not divest from it. (Alex Wong/Getty Images)

Trump conceded he still believes TikTok is a national security threat but added, “[Y]ou have that problem with Facebook and lots of other companies, too.” 

“When you talk about highly sophisticated companies that you think are American, they are not so American, they deal in China … if China wants anything from them, they will give it, so that’s a national security risk also,” Trump said.

But Republicans who spoke with Fox News Digital brushed off concerns that Trump, as de facto leader of the GOP, could sway House leaders and other members away from their support of the bill.

“Trump was right about the national security problem posed by TikTok in 2020. And he’s right today that just pushing TikTok users onto Facebook isn’t the answer. That’s why our bill is the right path forward; it surgically removes CCP control and creates an opportunity to put TikTok in better hands,” one of the bill’s leaders, House China Select Committee Chair Mike Gallagher, R-Wis., told Fox News Digital.

BILL BANNING TIKTOK APP HEADED TO HOUSE AFTER UNANIMOUS COMMITTEE VOTE

Mike Gallagher

Rep. Mike Gallagher (Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)

A senior GOP aide told Fox News Digital that a majority of lawmakers are “already convicted” on the issue of TikTok.

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“This is a security threat, and they’re going to do what they can to prevent that. They’ll argue that we’re just asking that it be purchased by [a company in a non-adversarial country], we’re actually not shutting it down. … So, I don’t think a lot of people are necessarily swayed at the moment,” the senior GOP aide said. “[Trump] has been supportive of something like this in the past. I think that people will just kind of roll with that in mind.”

House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., and House GOP Conference Chair Elise Stefanik, R-N.Y., two of Trump’s highest-ranking Capitol Hill allies, did not respond when asked for comment on Trump’s criticism of the bill. Both have suggested their support.



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Locking it up: Trump, Biden, expected to clinch GOP, Democrat, presidential nominations in Tuesday’s primaries


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President Biden and former President Donald Trump are expected to make their 2024 general election rematch official on Tuesday.

That’s when the Democratic incumbent and his Republican predecessor in the White House are all-but-certain to officially clinch the two major party presidential nominations, as Georgia, Mississippi, and Washington State hold primaries.

With no major challengers left, both Biden and Trump are expected to collect all or nearly all the delegates up for grabs in Tuesday’s contests, putting each of them over the top and making them the Democratic and Republican presumptive presidential nominees.

BIDEN, TRUMP, SWEEP SUPER TUESDAY CONTESTS AS THEY MOVE CLOSER TO CLINCHING NOMINATIONS

Photo illustrations of President Biden (left) and former President Donald Trump

Trump swept 14 of the 15 GOP primaries and caucuses a week ago, on Super Tuesday – which moved him much closer to officially locking up the 2024 Republican presidential nomination. And Trump’s last rival for the nomination – former U.N. ambassador and former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley – dropped out of the race the day after Super Tuesday.

WHERE THE 2024 PRESIDENTIAL NOMINATION RACES STAND

Trump currently has 1,075 delegates. He needs 1,215 to lock up the nomination.

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 Ga. (AP Photo/Mike Stewart) (AP Photo/Mike Stewart)

Fifty-nine GOP delegates are up for grabs in Georgia, with 40 at stake in Mississippi and 43 in Washington State. Nineteen more delegates are up for grabs in Hawaii, which holds a Republican presidential caucus later in the evening. 

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In the Democratic nomination race, Biden has 1,866 delegates. The president, who also swept 14 of 15 contests last week, needs 1,968 to clinch renomination.

President Biden is expected to clinch the 2024 Democratic nomination on Tuesday

President Joe Biden, left, speaks to supporters during a visit to a campaign field office, Monday, March 11, 2024, in Manchester, N.H. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci) (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

Georgia should put Biden over the top if he captures all 108 delegates up for grabs. Thirty-five Democratic delegates are at stake in Mississippi, with another 92 in Washington State.

Both Biden and Trump made campaign stops Saturday in Georgia, which is also a crucial general election battleground state. Georgia was one of a half dozen states that Biden narrowly carried four years ago as he defeated Trump to win the White House.

The rematch between Biden and Trump is the first for the White House since 1956 – when Republican President Dwight D. Eisenhower defeated former Democratic Gov. Adlai Stevenson of Illinois as they faced off for a second time.

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



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Johnson chastises Biden for ‘regret’ on calling Laken Riley murder suspect ‘illegal’: ‘What an embarrassment’


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House Speaker Mike Johnson blasted President Biden as an “embarrassment” for seemingly apologizing to Laken Riley’s accused killer instead of to the slain student’s family. 

“The president is cowering to his base and showing deference to a man who deserves none. This man is an illegal immigrant who brutally murdered Laken Riley. President Biden should be apologizing to Laken’s family. What an embarrassment,” Johnson wrote on X on Sunday, responding to Biden’s interview with MSNBC’s Jonathan Capehart that aired Saturday.

At the urging of Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., Biden, during an off-script moment in his State of the Union address on Thursday, decried Riley’s killing by “an illegal.” The president later backtracked during his interview with Capehart, saying he should have instead used the word “undocumented” to describe Jose Ibarra, a Venezuelan national charged with murdering Riley, an Augusta University nursing student who was out for a run on the University of Georgia campus last month. 

The White House said Monday that Biden “did not apologize.”

“There was no apology anywhere in that conversation,” principal deputy press secretary Olivia Dalton told reporters aboard Air Force One. “He did not apologize. He used a different word.”

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement confirmed that Ibarra illegally crossed the border near El Paso, Texas, and was released into the U.S. for further processing in September 2022. He was later arrested and released in New York City for allegedly endangering a child about a year later.

BIDEN TORCHED FOR CLAIMING ‘UNDOCUMENTED’ IMMIGRANTS ‘BUILT THIS COUNTRY’ AFTER SAYING SAME OF MIDDLE CLASS

Biden and Johnson split image

House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., criticized President Biden walking back describing Laken Riley’s accused murderer as an “illegal.” (Getty Images)

The Athens-Clarke County Police Department confirmed Ibarra and his brother had been cited for shoplifting in Georgia in October 2023, months before Riley’s slaying. 

Ibarra is charged with the felonies of malice murder, murder, kidnapping, false imprisonment, aggravated assault, aggravated battery and concealing the death of another, as well as the misdemeanor of physically hindering a 911 call, according to the affidavit filed on Feb. 23. According to charging documents, Ibarra is accused of “disfiguring” Riley’s skull

ICE CONFIRMS GEORGIA STUDENT MURDER SUSPECT ENTERED US ILLEGALLY, WAS PREVIOUSLY ARRESTED IN NYC

“I shouldn’t have used illegal, I should’ve … it’s undocumented,” Biden told Capehart. “And look, when I spoke about the difference between Trump and me, one of the things I talked about on the border was his – the way he talks about vermin, the way he talks about these people polluting the blood. I talked about what I’m not going to do, what I won’t do. I’m not going to treat any, any, any of these people with disrespect. Look, they built the country.”

Laken Riley posted held by Trump rally attendee

Trump supporters hold images of Laken Riley before he speaks at a rally in Rome, Georgia, on March 9, 2024. (Elijah Nouvelage/AFP via Getty Images)

Notably, former President Donald Trump, the GOP presidential nomination frontrunner, slammed Biden’s walk-back at a rally. Torching Biden for mixing Riley’s first name up with USC head football coach Lincoln Riley, Trump said Biden “went on television and apologized for calling Laken’s murderer an illegal,” drawing boos from the crowd. 

Trump, who spoke to Riley’s parents backstage at the rally, doubled down on his choice of language. 

“They have a new name that’s even worse. You know what the new name is? Neighbor,” Trump said. “A newcomer to our country … are we going crazy or what? Is this country going crazy? How about that one, ‘newcomer’ … no, he was an illegal. And I say he was an illegal alien. He was an illegal immigrant. He was an illegal migrant. And he shouldn’t have been in our country, and he never would have been under the Trump policy.”

Biden addressed Riley’s parents during the State of the Union address while also asking, “But how many thousands of people are being killed by legals?”

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“To her parents, I say: My heart goes out to you. Having lost children myself, I understand,” he said. 



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Schumer clip resurfaces showing him rip ‘illegal aliens’ amid Biden walking back using term for alleged killer


Democratic Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer is facing backlash on social media over a resurfaced clip that seemingly contradicts President Biden’s recent comment where he walked back calling Laken Riley’s alleged killer an “illegal.”

“People who enter the United States without our permission are illegal aliens and illegal aliens should not be treated the same as people who enters the U.S. legally,” Schumer said during a 2009 speech. 

“Illegal immigration is wrong, plain and simple. Until the American people are convinced that we will stop future flows of illegal immigration we will make no progress on dealing with the millions of illegal immigrants who are here now,” Schumer said. “When we use phrases like undocumented workers we convey a message to the American people that their government is not serious about combating illegal immigration which the American people overwhelmingly oppose. If you don’t think it’s illegal you’re not going to say it. I think it is illegal and wrong.”

Schumer drew criticism over the weekend from conservatives in light of President Biden referring to the illegal immigrant who allegedly killed 22-year-old nursing student Laken Riley as an “illegal” in his State of the Union address before later walking back that term after many in his party took issue with it.

LAKEN RILEY MURDER SUSPECT’S SECOND BROTHER WAS TWICE DEPORTED BEFORE SETTLING IN GEORGIA

Schumer Riley

L – Laken Riley R – Chuck Schumer (Getty Images)

“This is Democrat senate majority leader Chuck Schumer from 2009 talking about how unacceptable illegal immigration is,” Outkick.com founder Clay Travis posted on X. “Now Dems say it’s unacceptable to even use the word illegal. Things everyone said just a few years ago are now considered unacceptable.”

“Democrats really used to want to stop illegal immigration,” conservative comedian Tim Young posted on X. “Here’s Chuck Schumer in 2009 telling us all how ‘illegal immigration is wrong.’ What changed?”

LAKEN RILEY’S MOTHER SPEAKS OUT ABOUT ‘AVOIDABLE TRAGEDY’ AFTER DAUGHTER’S FUNERAL

“Schumer and Pelosi had it exactly right about calling illegal immigration illegal,” Texas Republican Gov. Greg Abbott posted on X, referring to separate comments now-former House Speaker Pelosi made during a press conference over a decade ago. “Now they change their position to appease the far left progressive agenda. Their actions imperil our country.”

“Do we have a commitment to secure the border? Yes. What are the options that we have available to us, let’s make sure they work,” Pelosi said during a 2008 press conference. While Pelosi went on to use the term “undocumented” in 2008, she followed up by saying the government did “not want any more coming in.”

“Because we do need to address the issue of immigration and the challenge we have of undocumented people in our country,” she continued. “We certainly do not want any more coming in.”

Speaker Nancy Pelosi speaking

On Friday, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi claimed that farmers in Florida need illegal immigrants to stay in their state and “pick the crops.” (Fox News )

Pelosi recently downplayed Biden’s “illegal” comment during a CNN interview by saying, “Now he should have said undocumented, but that’s not a big thing, ok? What’s the big thing?” 

Aaron Bennett, a spokesperson for Pelosi, told Fox News Digital that “While Speaker Emerita Pelosi backs bipartisan legislation that includes the toughest and fairest reforms to secure the border in decades, Governor Abbot only backs Donald Trump, who directed MAGA Republicans to kill the deal because he thinks that will help him politically.”

Missouri Republican Senator Eric Schmitt referred to the comparison of Schumer in 2009 and Biden today as “unbelievable” in a post on X.

“Despicable,” Center for Renewing America Senior Fellow Mark Paoletta wrote on X

Schumer appeared to defend Biden last week when pressed during an interview on “The View” about Biden’s use of “illegal.”

“Look, he showed in his heart how he feels for immigrants. He showed that he knows immigrants contribute greatly to America. He talked about our long history with immigrants and even showed real empathy for the family that lost a loved one in Georgia. So I think that Joe Biden comes out really well on the immigration issue in this speech,” Schumer said.

WHITE HOUSE SAYS BIDEN ‘ABSOLUTELY DID NOT APOLOGIZE’ FOR CALLING LAKEN RILEY’S ALLEGED KILLER AN ‘ILLEGAL’

Over the weekend, Biden was pressed by MSNBC’s Jonathan Capehart about the backlash he has received from some Democrats for using “illegal” to refer to Jose Ibarra, a Venezuelan national charged with murdering Riley, an Augusta University nursing student who was out for a run on the University of Georgia campus last month.

“And I shouldn’t have used illegal, I should’ve, It’s undocumented,” Biden recently told NBC News after members of his party criticized him for using the term “illegal” to describe the alleged killer.

“And look, when I spoke about the difference between Trump and me, one of the things I talked about on the border was his – the way he talks about vermin, the way he talks about these people polluting the blood. I talked about what I’m not going to do, what I won’t do,” Biden said. “I’m not going to treat any, any, any of these people with disrespect. Look, they built the country. The reason our economy is growing, we have to control the border and more orderly flow. But I don’t share his view at all.”

Joe Biden at the State of the Union split image

Joe Biden at the State of the Union split image (Getty Images)

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Biden was blasted by top Republicans over the weekend for walking it back, including House Speaker Mike Johnson calling it  an “embarrassment.”

While Biden said over the weekend that he had “regret” over the use of the term “illegal” in his major speech, White House spokesperson Olivia Dalton disputed a reporter’s characterization of Biden apologizing on Monday, saying, “First of all, I want to be really clear about something: the president absolutely did not apologize.”

“There was no apology anywhere in that conversation. He did not apologize. He used a different word,” she added.

Schumer’s office did not respond to a request for comment from Fox News Digital. 

Fox News’ Danielle Wallace and Jeffrey Clark contributed to this report.



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FDNY union head weighs in on NY AG booing incident


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The union leader who represents employees of the New York City Fire Department (FDNY) spoke with Fox News on Monday about a recent booing incident involving its firefighters.

Last Thursday, New York Attorney General Letitia James was heckled during an FDNY ceremony at the Christian Cultural Center’s Brooklyn location in East New York.

When James walked towards the podium, some audience members began shouting, “Trump! Trump! Trump!” 

The booing incident happened following the AG’s prosecution of the former president.

FDNY ‘LOOKING INTO’ STAFF WHO BOOED NY AG LETITIA JAMES, CHEERED FOR TRUMP AT CEREMONY 

Letitia James at FNDY ceremony

James spoke at the promotion ceremony, which saw 65 uniformed members from Fire Operations, EMS Operations and Bureau of Fire Investigation, along with 29 members of the Bureau of Fire Prevention and 34 civilian employees sworn in to their new roles. (FDNY)

Andrew Ansboro, who serves as President of the Uniformed Firefighters Association of Greater New York, told Fox News that, to his knowledge, no FDNY members have turned themselves in.

The labor union head also disclosed that no one has been charged with a violation yet. It is unclear what exact violation the firefighters could be accused of, or how they could be reprimanded. The FDNY has a catch-all clause about “unbecoming conduct” that may be used in this situation.

“Before they find anyone liable, they are going to have to hold themselves accountable for failure to supervise,” Ansboro warned.

He also said that firefighter ceremonies have had a “carnival-like” atmosphere in the past.

“Maybe they shouldn’t host it at a church,” he added.

The FDNY has been investigating to determine who participated in the booing. 

“Oh, c’mon, we’re in a house of God. Simmer down,” James said at the podium after she was met with boos. “Thank you for getting it out of your system.” 

FDNY TELLS FIREFIGHTERS TO PROTEST ‘ON YOUR OWN TIME’ AFTER BOOING NY AG LETITIA JAMES, CHEERING TRUMP: REPORT

NY AG Letitia James with her arms up

New York Attorney General Letitia James told the crowd to “simmer down.”  (FDNY)

Ansboro also noted that event organizers could have told firefighters to “lock it up,” – which is a term used to tell firefighters to stop.

“At any moment they could have shouted, ‘Lock it up,’ – before, during or after,” he continued. “It only seems like hours later they felt they needed to act.”

FDNY Spokesman Jim Long previously told Fox News Digital that his department isn’t “hunting anyone down” over the incident.

“We’re looking into those who clearly broke department regulations,” Long explained on Sunday. “It has nothing to do with politics. It’s about professionalism at an official event held in a house of worship.”

James filed a lawsuit against Trump last year, accusing him of inflating his real estate assets and thereby committing fraud. In February, the judge ruled in James’s favor and ordered Trump to pay a $350 million fine.

“The scale and the scope of Donald Trump’s fraud is staggering and so too is his ego,” James said last month. “And his belief that the rules do not apply to him. Today, we are holding Donald Trump accountable.”

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Fox News Digital reached out to the FDNY about Ansboro’s latest comments.

Fox News Digital’s Stephen Sorace and Bradford Betz contributed to this report.



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Dozens of RNC staffers slashed in shakeup


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Former President Donald Trump’s newly installed leadership team at the Republican National Committee on Monday began the process of pushing out dozens of officials, a senior RNC source confirmed to Fox News.

Roughly 60 RNC staffers who work in the national party committee’s communications, data, and political departments are being asked to resign, including a handful of senior staff, sources say.

The move came hours after the Trump campaign on Monday took operational control over the RNC.

It comes as the new leadership aims to merge parts of the RNC with the Trump 2024 presidential campaign.

PARTY TAKEOVER: TRUMP INSTALLS TOP ALLY AND DAUGHTER-IN-LAW AT RNC

Trump, Whatley

Newly elected RNC chair Michael Whatley, and co-chair Lara Trump on stage at the RNC spring gathering in Houston, Texas on March 8, 2024. (Paul Steinhauser/Fox News)

The former president’s picks to serve as RNC chair and co-chair – Trump ally and North Carolina GOP chair Michael Whatley and daughter-in-law Lara Trump – were unanimously confirmed on Friday by voice votes as the RNC met in general session in Houston, Texas.

Whatley, who was the RNC’s general counsel, succeeded longtime chair Ronna McDaniel, whom Trump picked to steer the national party committee after he won the White House in 2016. Her departure on Friday came after Trump earlier this year repeatedly urged changes at the committee – after lackluster fundraising last year and his opposition to the RNC’s presidential primary debates – which essentially pushed McDaniel out the door.

WHO IS NEW TRUMP-BACKED RNC CHAIR MICHAEL WHATLEY?

Trump also installed campaign adviser Chris LaCivita as RNC chief of staff. LaCivita, a longtime Republican strategist and RNC veteran, will continue to keep his role as one of the two top advisers steering Trump’s 2024 presidential campaign.

“The RNC today. It’s not going to look the same next week. There’s obviously going to be changes,” LaCivita told reporters on Friday. But he declined to get into details.

Donald Trump wins big on Super Tuesday

Republican presidential candidate former President Donald Trump speaks at a Super Tuesday election night party Tuesday, March 5, 2024, at Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Fla. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

Friday’s RNC meeting came in the same week Trump swept 14 of the 15 GOP primaries and caucuses on Super Tuesday – which moved him much closer to officially locking up the 2024 Republican presidential nomination. 

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It also comes just two days after Trump’s last rival for the nomination – former U.N. ambassador and former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley – dropped out of the race.

Trump is expected to formally clinch the nomination on Tuesday, as four more states hold primaries and caucuses.

Fox News’ Rich Edson contributed to this story.

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



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Ohio Gov. DeWine makes endorsement in uber-competitive Senate race


Republican Gov. Mike DeWine of Ohio parted ways with Donald Trump on Monday and endorsed state Sen. Matt Dolan over Trump-backed businessman Bernie Moreno in the state’s three-way GOP primary for a U.S. Senate seat.

In breaking ranks with the former president, DeWine called Dolan the party’s best shot at defeating Democratic incumbent Sherrod Brown in November.

Brown is viewed as one of the Senate’s most vulnerable Democrats seeking reelection this fall, while Dolan has cast himself as a moderate Republican and the only candidate in his primary who didn’t actively seek Trump’s endorsement.

OHIO GOP SENATE CANDIDATE TOUTS KEY PRO-2A GROUP’S ENDORSEMENT: ‘ONLY CANDIDATE’ VOTERS ‘CAN TRUST’ ON GUNS

In a letter to fellow Ohioans, DeWine and his wife Fran urged them to vote for Dolan. They praised Dolan for his “service, experience, and integrity,” and wrote: “He listens. He fights. And, he knows how to get results for Ohio.”

DeWine’s decision highlights continued divisions between establishment Republicans in the one-time battleground state and the party’s increasingly dominant pro-Trump flank, which twice chose him for president by strong margins. Ohio’s state GOP was the first in the nation to endorse Trump for president this year.

Only about two weeks ago, DeWine told reporters he didn’t plan any endorsement in the GOP primary, which also features Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose, his fellow state officeholder. But that was before the March 19 primary edged ever closer with no apparent runaway leader and a large swath of Republican voters still undecided.

Gov. DeWine

Ohio Governor Mike DeWine speaks at a campaign stop at The Mandalay event center on November 4, 2022 in Moraine, Ohio.  (Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

Moderate former U.S. Sen. Rob Portman similarly weighed in late in the contest, endorsing Dolan on Friday.

DeWine’s move is less likely to hurt Moreno, who has campaigned heavily on the Trump endorsement, than LaRose, a former Green Beret and second-term state officeholder who has been working to carve out a winning lane in the race.

LaRose frequently points out that Moreno and Dolan are millionaires, having self-funded their campaigns to the tune of a combined $10 million, while he is merely a “thousandaire.” Moreno made his fortune in Cleveland, first building a luxury auto sales business and later in blockchain technology, which generates “blocks” of information or transactions into ledgers that are secure and transparent. Dolan’s family owns baseball’s Cleveland Guardians.

Moreno campaigned Monday throughout central Ohio with Trump-backed South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem. He’s also enjoyed support on the campaign trail from other big-name Trump allies, including Donald Trump Jr. His endorsements also include Ohio’s Trump-backed Republican U.S. Sen. JD Vance, pro-Trump fighter U.S. Rep. Jim Jordan, Sens. Rand Paul of Kentucky and Ted Cruz of Texas, and former House Speaker Newt Gingrich.

But DeWine’s decision suggested such conservative backing may not be enough against Brown, a three-term senator who’s been one of the state’s most reliably elected politicians for decades.

DeWine, too, has such a legacy — having served as a former state legislator, congressman, U.S. senator and lieutenant governor. He won reelection by a 25% margin in 2022, carrying 85 of Ohio’s 88 counties.

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Republicans view Brown, among the most liberal members of the Senate, as particularly vulnerable this year because of the unpopularity of the same-party president, Joe Biden, and Ohio’s tack to the political right in recent years.



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Biden says no executive orders to address border crisis


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President Biden said he doesn’t plan on taking executive action to address the record numbers of migrants coming into the United States through the southern border after indicating that he might, following failed efforts to find a legislative fix. 

Biden was asked Monday about the possibility of unilaterally adding safeguards to the U.S.-Mexico border, a move that would be reminiscent of controversial actions taken by former President Donald Trump when he took office. 

“I’m counting on the border action happening by itself, them passing it,” he told reporters on Air Force One after visiting New Hampshire, referring to a legislative fix to the problem. 

MIGRANTS CAUGHT ON NEW VIDEO STREAMING DOWN REMOTE CALIFORNIA MOUNTAINSIDE TO ILLEGALLY CROSS THE BORDER

Biden on Air Force One

President Joe Biden walks down the steps of Air Force One at Andrews Air Force Base, Md., on Monday after returning from a trip to New Hampshire.  (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)

Biden appeared to be considering executive action to tackle the ongoing border crisis after a bipartisan Senate bill failed to gather the proper support. An administration source previously told Fox News that the president was considering executive action to restrict the ability of migrants to claim asylum, but that it’s one of “several” plans being looked at.

On Monday, when a reporter reminded Biden that Congress can’t come to a bipartisan agreement, he said: “Well they haven’t yet, they haven’t yet. I’m helping them.”

Fox News Digital has reached out to the White House. 

BLOODTHIRSTY VENEZUELAN GANG TREN DE ARAGUA SETS UP SHOP IN US AS BORDER AUTHORITIES SOUND ALARM 

Upon taking office, Biden revoked dozens of executive orders issued by Trump to secure the southern border. At the time, the moves were praised by immigration activists and Democrats. 

The president has repeatedly blamed Republicans for the border bill’s failure, accusing the GOP of putting partisan politics ahead of national security. 

“No executive action, no matter how aggressive, can deliver the significant policy reforms and additional resources Congress can provide and that Republicans rejected,” White House spokesperson Angelo Fernandez Hernandez said last month. “We continue to call on Speaker [Mike] Johnson and House Republicans to pass the bipartisan deal to secure the border.”

Joe Biden at border

President Joe Biden walks with U.S. Border Patrol agents along a stretch of the U.S.-Mexico border in El Paso Texas, Sunday, Jan. 8, 2023.  (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)

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Nearly 7.3 million migrants have illegally crossed the southwest border under President Biden’s watch, a number greater than the population of 36 individual states, a Fox News analysis found.

Fox News Digital’s Adam Shaw and Chris Pandolfo contributed to this report. 



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CIA, intel director struggle to say if Israel is actually ‘exterminating’ Palestinians


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When questioned by Sen. Tom Cotton on Monday, national security officials grappled with whether they believe Israel is engaged in the systematic destruction of the Palestinian people. 

During the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence’s annual Worldwide Threats hearing — which was interrupted several times by protesters demonstrating for a ceasefire between Israel and the terrorist group Hamas — Cotton asked both CIA Director William Burns and Director of National Intelligence Avril Haines if Israel was “exterminating” Palestinians in Gaza.

SENATE REPUBLICANS HAMMER BIDEN’S $7.3 TRILLION BUDGET REQUEST AS ‘LIBERAL WISH LIST’

Senator Tom Cotton

Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., listens during the confirmation hearing for Lieutenant General Timothy Haugh, nominee to be the Director of the National Security Agency, and Michael Casey, nominee to be the Director of the National Counterintelligence and Security Center, in the Senate Intelligence Committee on Wednesday, July 12, 2023. (Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)

“Some of our audience members are accusing you of pretty serious conduct,” Cotton said, referencing the protesters. 

DEMOCRAT SEN WARNER CEDES ‘TRUMP WAS RIGHT’ ON TIKTOK BEING ‘ENORMOUS’ NATIONAL SECURITY ISSUE

“I want to give you a chance to respond to what’s been said,” he continued. “Is Israel exterminating the Palestinian people?”

Burns responded: “I think there are a lot of innocent civilians in Gaza who are in desperate conditions right now.” He added that there are also hostages in “desperate circumstances.”

CIA Director William Burns speaks

CIA Director William Burns speaks on “Addressing the Global Threat Landscape” during an event as part of the Trainor Award ceremony at Georgetown Hotel and Conference Center on Feb. 2, 2023 in Washington, D.C. (Alex Wong/Getty Images)

When pressed by Cotton, Burns said, “No,” and said he understands Israel’s need to respond to the Oct. 7 terrorist attack. But, he said, “I think we also have to be mindful of the enormous toll that this has taken on innocent civilians in Gaza.”

HOUSE GOP LEADERS TEAR UP BIDEN’S NEW $7.3T BUDGET PROPOSAL: ‘RECKLESS SPENDING’

The Arkansas Republican then turned the question toward Haines, asking her opinion. 

“I really don’t have anything to add to what Director Burns has said,” she explained, adding that she fully endorsed his response. 

Director of National Intelligence Avril Haines arrives for an official State Dinner in honor of India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi, at the White House in Washington, DC, on June 22, 2023. (Stefani Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images)

When Cotton asked Burns if Israel was starving children, as protesters claimed, the CIA director said, “I think the reality is that there are children who are starving.”

SPEAKER JOHNSON SLAMS BIDEN FOR ‘REGRET’ ON CALLING LAKEN RILEY MURDER SUSPECT ‘ILLEGAL’

The senator pressed him as to whether this was Israel’s doing, to which Burns didn’t respond. 

Tom cotton

Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., leaves a meeting with the Senate Republicans at the Capitol building on Nov. 16, 2022 in Washington, DC.  (Getty Images)

“They’re starving,” Burns reiterated. 

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Cotton then stated for the record that he doesn’t believe Israel or any of the national security witnesses are either “exterminating the Palestinian people or starving Palestinian children.”

The senator told Fox News Digital afterward that he was “disappointed” by their answers. 



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