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Trump revokes security protection for COVID advisor Fauci

U.S. President Donald Trump said Friday that he has revoked security protection for Anthony Fauci, his former COVID advisor who has received death threats over his handling of the pandemic.

"You can't have a security detail for the rest of your life because you worked for government," Trump told reporters in North Carolina, where he was on a visit to inspect flood damage.

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'Petty': CNN reports 'high-ranking ex-Trump officials' mad after security details stripped

CNN's Jamie Gangel smacked president Donald Trump's decision to cancel security details for some of his former administration officials after they criticized him.

The newly inaugurated president revoked Secret Service protection for former national security adviser John Bolton, as well as former secretary of state Mike Pompeo and his former top aide Brian Hook, less than a day after returning to office, and the change went into effect hours after they were notified in spite of assassination threats against them.

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Christian leaders making good on 'threat legal scholars have been warning about': reporter

Although President Donald Trump tried to soften his party's image on abortion rights during the 2024 presidential campaign, many of his hardcore evangelical supporters are pushing his administration to take drastic action to curb access to abortion medications.

Mother Jones reporter Julianne McShane flags a letter sent this week from major anti-abortion activists to the Department of Justice requesting the enforcement of the Comstock Act to prevent the distribution of the drug mifepristone.

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'The lies impact people's lives': Fact checker shreds Trump claims about disaster aid

President Donald Trump spoke to reporters during a visit to review hurricane damage in North Carolina, and CNN's Daniel Dale was ready with a fact check afterward.

The president met with reporters Friday morning in Fletcher, one of the areas devastated last fall by Hurricane Helene, and he floated the idea of eliminating the Federal Emergency Management Agency through executive order and making Canada the 51st state, and Dale lamented that he was providing false and misleading information during the ongoing disaster.

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French mother sentenced to life for daughter's starvation death

A French woman was sentenced on Friday to life in prison for starving to death her daughter, who died of a heart attack in 2020 at the age of 13 after years of abuse.

Sandrine Pissarra, 54, was convicted of inflicting acts of torture and barbarity against her daughter Amandine at the trial in the southern city of Montpellier.

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'Everyone wanted a piece': Inmate describes being incarcerated with Luigi Mangione

Vaughn Wright — who's currently incarcerated in Pennsylvania — wrote in an op-ed published by the Prison Journalism Project Thursday that Luigi Mangione's temporary stay at State Correctional Institution at Huntingdon, Pennsylvania, changed the way prisoners there can share their stories with media.

Wright described the scene inside the prison when NewsNation host Ashleigh Banfield arrived to interview Mangione — as a slew of other news outlets "set up shop" outside the building.

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'Shove it': Canadians revolt after Trump says they'd have better health care as 51st state

President Donald Trump once again made a pitch to Canadian voters to join America as its "51st state" -- and was met with immediate backlash by Canadian citizens.

During his trip to North Carolina, Trump once again mused about incorporating Canada into America and even promised they'd have "much better health care coverage" if they joined.

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Trump makes bizarre 'hit with a baseball bat' comment about Democratic senator

President Donald Trump made an odd remark about Sen. Adam Schiff (D-CA) looking as if he'd been beaten with a baseball bat.

The president spoke to reporters Friday morning in Fletcher, North Carolina, where he was touring areas devastated by Hurricane Helene last fall, and he floated the idea of eliminating the Federal Emergency Management Agency through executive order, making Canada the 51st state and wondering whether Schiff – one of his most prominent enemies – had been victimized by violence.

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Newark mayor decries 'egregious' warrantless ICE raid

Federal agents with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement carried out a warrantless raid on Thursday targeting a local establishment in Newark, New Jersey, according to Newark Mayor Ras Baraka—who decried the move as an "an egregious act" in violation of the U.S. constitution.

Federal agents detained both undocumented residents and citizens, including a U.S. military veteran, Baraka said in a statement Thursday.

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Senate poised to confirm Fox News host for U.S. defense secretary

by Sebastian Smith

The U.S. Senate appeared poised Friday to narrowly confirm former Fox News host Peter Hegseth for defense secretary, with opponents saying Donald Trump's pick has nowhere near the experience for the huge job and a disturbing history of heavy drinking and domestic abuse.

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'Risk of overreach': Even some of RFK Jr.'s own advisers getting nervous about his plans

Anti-vaccine conspiracy theorist Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has been nominated to oversee the Department of Health and Human Services under the second Trump administration but even some of his advisers are worried that he'll take things too far if he manages to get confirmed.

Politico reports that there is real concern that Kennedy will restrict access to vaccines at the HHS, which could lead to an explosion of diseases among children.

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Republicans panicking Pete Hegseth nomination will 'backfire' on Trump: former GOP adviser

Appearing on MSNBC with host Ana Cabrera on Friday morning a former senior GOP congressional adviser stated the Senate Republicans are expressing dismay that the hearing on secretary defense nominee Pete Hegseth is being rushed and it could lead to a disaster.

Speaking with the host hours before the whole Senate will vote on the embattled former Fox News personality's future in Donald Trump's Cabinet will be decided, Rina Shah explained that there is a feeling that the proceedings should be slowed down.

"I'm hearing right now from Republicans who feel sort of like this is not the pace at which they feel comfortable with from the Senate side," she explained. "You do see people who want to exhibit that caution, that restraint when going for some nominee that has a complex background like Hegseth."

ALSO READ: Fox News has blood on its hands as Trump twists the knife

"You know, complex is putting it as an understatement here," she elaborated. "It seems like there's been a steady drip-drop of information. And of course, his attorneys will say, and anyone defending him will say, people in his past have an axe to grind but I think it's more problematic than that when we're asking this man to come from the private life to a public life and lead the greatest military in the world."

"We've got to make sure he's a man of great character and integrity, but also doesn't have these kind of modern day issues that could seep into leadership and change military culture," she continued. "So that is, again, what's being whispered about right now."

You can watch below or at the link here.

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Kansas House speaker says he restricted press access to give staff better seats

TOPEKA — House Speaker Dan Hawkins for the first time Thursday provided a public explanation for his decision to remove journalists from the House floor except to take photos from the back and side walls of the chamber.

Hawkins broke from decades of precedent before the start of the session by banning reporters from a press box area where they could take notes and photos, interact with staff and write their stories. When his aide informed Statehouse reporters of the new press restrictions, she described them as “significant changes.”

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