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DOJ sends Congress list of names who appear in Jeffrey Epstein files, defends redactions in 6-page letter
But the lack of context — with DOJ not specifying how or why each name appears — immediately drew criticism from lawmakers who said the list risks lumping together vastly different types of references. -
Hillary Clinton admits migration ‘went too far,’ became ‘disruptive and destabilizing’
Hillary Clinton conceded that loose immigration policies in the US and other Western countries “went too far,” while calling for the issue to be “fixed in a humane way.” -
Obama blasts LA homeless ‘atrocity’ in jab at Gavin Newsom
“That’s a losing political strategy.” -
California dreamin’ migrants better off in front of SF judges than LA ones
The dream of staying in California is no longer a lock for thousands of asylum seekers — and the luck of the draw often has been decided by whether a person is in San Francisco or Los Angeles. But the decision on whether a person gets to remain in the United States often comes down… -
Trump says regime change in Iran would be the ‘best thing that could happen’
“For 47 years, they’ve been talking and talking and talking. In the meantime, we’ve lost a lot of lives while they talk.” -
Ted Lieu makes wild claim about Trump and Epstein — but doesn’t disclose unhinged source
The wild accusations came during a hearing on the Epstein files. -
Rep. Nicole Malliotakis begs Supreme Court to stop Dems from scrapping NYC’s sole GOP House seat
Rep. Nicole Malliotakis (R-NY) officially asked the US Supreme Court to step in and protect New York’s lone Republican-held House seat from a “baseless” legal attack seeking to redraw the district ahead of the midterm elections. In an emergency application filed Friday with Justice Sonia Sotomayor, lawyers for Malliotakis argued that a lower court’s “indefensible”… -
Noem backs SAVE America Act, slams ‘radical left’ opposition to voter IDs and proof of citizenship
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem on Friday made the case for the passage of the SAVE America Act, accusing opponents of the bill of favoring access to the ballot box for illegal immigrants.
Noem was in the Phoenix area where she pushed the Trump administration’s efforts to shore up election integrity and voter security.
She touched on the Save America Act, a bill that would require proof of U.S. citizenship to register to vote, photo identification to vote in federal elections, and for states to remove non-citizens from their voter rolls. She noted that wide majorities of Republicans and Democrats approve of the legislation.
MURKOWSKI BREAKS WITH GOP ON VOTER ID, SAYS PUSH ‘IS NOT HOW WE BUILD TRUST’
However, she criticized the bill’s opponents, who say it will disenfranchise millions of voters.
“Each of the arguments that have been laid out to criticize this bill are baseless speculation from the radical left because they want illegal aliens to vote in our elections,” Noem told reporters during a press conference. “They want to disenfranchise American citizens by telling them that their votes don’t matter. There’s only one reason that anyone would oppose this bill, and that’s because they would want to cheat.”
“They want illegal people and aliens in this country to be able to vote for them, and to rob the United States citizens of their vote,” she added. “And that’s why they resist us at every single level.”
REPUBLICANS, TRUMP RUN INTO SENATE ROADBLOCK ON VOTER ID BILL
Congressional Democrats have characterized the bill as an effort to disappear millions of American off voter rolls, with Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., calling it “Jim Crow 2.0,” a term used by some to describe modern so-called voter suppression laws.
During her remarks, Noem mentioned a handful of illegal immigrants who were registered to vote in various states.
“There is no room in our election system for people that aren’t Americans,” she said. “There is no room in our election system for fraudsters and foreign influence.”
The secretary also called for Arizona to clean up its voter rolls, noting that DHS Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements (SAVE) can be used to do just that. The program assists local, state and federal agencies to determine the citizenship and immigration status of individuals.
“Maybe people who’ve passed away, people that aren’t citizens, people that don’t live here,” she said. “That would make sure that in your next election, when people are casting their votes, they know they’re voting for the right decisions and that those votes are counted, and they’re counted appropriately, and someone else didn’t get to weigh in on their leadership.”
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Trump: ‘We don’t run from anybody’ in blasting Biden over Afghanistan withdrawal
President Donald Trump Friday sharply criticized former President Joe Biden’s handling of the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan, calling it an “embarrassment” and arguing his administration would not have left military equipment behind.
“You remember that where they left all the military equipment behind? We didn’t. We wouldn’t have left anything,” Trump said while speaking at Fort Bragg, North Carolina. “We were going to get out with dignity and strength, respect. We looked like we were running. We don’t run from anybody. That was a Biden embarrassment.”
Trump also questioned why aircraft were not flown out of the country.
“We don’t leave equipment behind. We don’t leave jets behind,” he said. “I said, why do you leave those jets behind, sir? I thought it was cheaper to leave it behind. You know, $150 million plane. All they had to do is put a little jet fuel in there and fly it to wherever they want to fly it.”
He said the U.S. military had been rebuilt during his first term and is now stronger than ever.
“So with the help of everyone in this room, America is the strongest military on the face of the earth. We rebuilt it. We really did,” Trump said. “We rebuilt it in my first term.”
FOUR YEARS AFTER ABBEY GATE, VETERANS WHO SAVED CIVILIANS DEMAND ACCOUNTABILITY
TRUMP HAILS ‘GREAT AND VERY BRAVE’ UK SOLDIERS AFTER SLAMMING NATO ALLIES’ AFGHANISTAN SERVICE
His remarks came during a visit that honored the special operators involved in the operation to capture former Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, which he contrasted as an “extraordinary military operation.”
The U.S. completed its withdrawal from Afghanistan in August 2021 after nearly 20 years of war. The evacuation followed a February 2020 agreement negotiated during Trump’s first term that set a timeline for U.S. forces to leave the country.
Biden oversaw the final withdrawal as Taliban forces rapidly seized control of Afghanistan, culminating in a suicide bombing at Kabul’s airport that killed 13 U.S. service members and roughly 170 Afghan civilians.
Biden has argued that he was bound by the withdrawal agreement negotiated during Trump’s first term and faced the choice of completing the pullout or sending more U.S. troops back into combat. Trump has rejected that claim, saying his deal with the Taliban was “conditions-based” and that he would not have withdrawn if the Taliban failed to meet its commitments.
Fox News Digital reached out to Biden Friday for comment and has yet to receive a reply.
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‘Doubling down on stupid’: Newsom, AOC, trash Trump at European summit as they raise 2028 profiles
Two of President Donald Trump’s top Democratic critics are using appearances at a high-profile European gathering to blast the Republican president’s agenda and beef up their foreign policy chops on the world state ahead of possible 2028 White House runs.
“Donald Trump is temporary,” California Gov. Gavin Newsom said Friday during a climate change discussion at the Munich Security Conference in Germany. “He’ll be gone in three years.”
And Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York, during a town hall at the prestigious conference, pointed to Trump and charged, “We are seeing our presidential administration tear apart the transatlantic partnership, rip up every democratic norm.”
Newsom and Ocasio-Cortez are the most well known of a small group of potential Democratic presidential contenders using appearances in Munich to criticize Trump’s international agenda and offer a contrast to Vice President JD Vance, the perceived 2028 Republican front-runner, who delivered a scathing attack on Europe during his speech at the security forum last year.
NEWSOM STOP IN KEY PRESIDENTIAL PRIMARY STATE SPARKS MORE 2028 SPECULATION
The other Democrats with likely national ambitions making the rounds at the confab and meeting with international leaders are Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, Sens. Ruben Gallego and Mark Kelly of Arizona and Chris Murphy of Connecticut, and former Commerce Secretary. Gina Raimondo.
Ocasio-Cortez pointed to her fellow Democrats in Munich and said, “I think many of us are here to say we are here, and we are ready for the next chapter, not to have the world turn to isolation, but to deepen our partnership … and increase commitment to integrity to our values.”
JD VANCE SAYS ‘DUMBEST’ DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATE WILL WIN NOMINATION IN 2028
Newsom, who is speaking at his third major international conference in recent months, following appearances last month at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland and late last year at a world climate conference in Brazil, hammered Trump over climate policy, arguing the president is “doubling down on stupid.”
“Never in the history of the United States of America has there been a more destructive president than the current occupant of the White House in Washington, D.C.,” Newsom charged. “Donald Trump is trying to turn back the clock.”
THE 2028 WHITE HOUSE RACE IS ALREADY UNDERWAY
Fox Digital has reached out to the White House for a response to the jabs from Newsom and Ocasio-Cortez.
Ocasio-Cortez, during the first of her two appearances at the conference, was asked by the town hall moderator, “When you run for president, are you going to impose a wealth tax or a billionaire’s tax?”
Responding with a laugh, the four-term federal lawmaker then said, “I don’t think that anyone — that we don’t have to wait for any one president to impose a wealth tax… That needs to be done expeditiously.”
Matthew Bartlett, who served at the State Department during the first Trump administration, told Fox News Digital that “the regular foreign policy crowd is turning into something of a cattle call for 2028 as numerous Democrats take Munich to articulate their vision and try to develop some sort of foreign policy credential as the next presidential race is on the horizon.”
And Terry Shumaker, who served as U.S. ambassador to Trinidad and Tobago during the Clinton administration, noted that the appearances in Munich by the potential candidates “gives them experience, confidence, and something to refer back to on the campaign trail when they’re asked about their foreign policy experience.”
And Shumaker, a longtime New Hampshire-based attorney and Democratic Party activist, said it also signals to the world “that Trump is not a monolith. That there’s another side of the story in the United States.”