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'Insecure': Writer flags telltale signs that Trump fears he's vulnerable

The size of Donald Trump’s election victory has left the president-elect and his allies “insecure,” a columnist wrote Thursday.

And he’s blatantly lying to make sure the country doesn’t see it, the writer added.

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'He's not living in reality': Fox News reports GOP lawmakers lashing out at Trump and Musk

X owner Elon Musk earlier this week killed a bipartisan deal to keep the federal government open, and even many Republicans are reportedly not happy about it.

Writing on X, Fox News reporter Liz Elkind reveals that there is "a LOT of frustration at Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy from rank-and-file House Rs this morning" after the two men publicly killed the bipartisan deal.

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'Coward': Mike Johnson hit with MAGA backlash after cancelling speech with Trump

Fans of President-elect Donald Trump blasted House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) as a "coward" after he suddenly canceled his speech at a major weekend conference with other MAGA celebrities.

Steve Bannon's War Room first reported that Johnson had decided not to speak at AmFest, a conservative conference organized by Charlie Kirk's Turning Point USA, on Friday.

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Johnson in ‘colossal mess’ with ‘no plan’ to avert shutdown amid rising anger: reports

Speaker Mike Johnson and his Republican majority in the House reportedly have "no plan" to avert a shutdown of the federal government—a shutdown that will begin at 12:01 AM Saturday unless they can draft and pass replacement legislation, convince the Senate to pass it, and get President Joe Biden to sign it into law—all in about 36 hours.

"It's a colossal mess," NBC News' Sahil Kapur reported Thursday morning (video below). "This bill looked all set to pass the House and the Senate over the coming days. It had broad bipartisan support after it was inked by Speaker Mike Johnson, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, and leadership in both parties."

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'It'll be a Biden shutdown': Trump tries to shift blame ahead of a potential disaster

President-elect Donald Trump on Wednesday helped to blow up a bipartisan deal to keep the federal government open, and he's already trying to shift the blame.

In an interview with ABC News' Jonathan Karl, Trump reiterated his warning that any government funding package needed to either significantly raise the debt ceiling or even abolish it completely.

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'Very definition of an own goal': Experts admonish Fani Willis for losing Trump case

Legal experts reacted in shock to a Georgia appeals court ruling that disqualified Fulton County district attorney from the election subversion case against Donald Trump and his alleged co-conspirators.

The appeals court found that a “significant appearance of impropriety" was enough to potentially taint the case, which would require the appointment of a special prosecutor to move forward, but the court also ruled that the indictments would stand.

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'How democracies fail': Ex-Republican strategist takes on attack on 'Never Trump' activism

Former Republican strategist Rick Wilson unloaded on one-time "Never Trump" conservative Bret Stephens after he declared this week that he was "done" with the anti-Trump movement.

Writing on his Substack page, Wilson hammered Stephens for dismissing the concerns expressed by anti-Trump conservatives about the president-elect's threat to democratic institutions.

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'This could be the way': Marjorie Taylor Greene backs bid to make Elon Musk speaker

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) came out in support of calls to make billionaire Elon Musk speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives after he led the charge to upend a bill that would have prevented a government shutdown.

In a Thursday post on X (formerly Twitter), Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY) became the first lawmaker to support the idea of Musk as speaker.

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'Complete empty promise': Trump's threats against prosecutors face serious legal challenge

It's no secret that Donald Trump would like to punish the prosecutors who went after him, but legal experts say there are some limits to what he can do to them.

Trump and his team are looking for retribution specifically against Jay Bratt, the counterintelligence chief within the Justice Department's national security division, and possibly his deputy Julie Edelstein, according to two sources familiar with the president-elect's legal team, and he also holds grudges against prosecutors J.P. Cooney and Molly Gaston, who worked in the DOJ’s Public Integrity Section, reported NOTUS.

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'Mayhem is the point': Trump warned he may have made huge mistake by creating D.C. chaos

A state of chaos that left many on Capitol Hill in a frenzy Thursday as an effort to stop a government shutdown was sunk by Republican infighting has been purposefully created, a CNN analysis showed.

And it’s just the start of what’s to come.

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Georgia appeals court disqualifies Fani Willis but refuses to drop case against Trump

An appeals court in Georgia disqualified Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis from prosecuting President-elect Donald Trump and others for allegedly trying to change the outcome of the 2020 presidential election. The court, however, declined to dismiss the case altogether.

In a 12-page ruling, the court said a previous ruling by Fulton County Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee allowing Willis to remain on the case if special prosecutor Nathan Wade withdrew did not prevent an "appearance of impropriety." Willis and Wade admitted to having a romantic relationship.

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'Spectacle' Cabinet hearings could be 'potentially damaging' to Trump momentum: analyst

Noting that there is little expectation that any of Donald Trump's more troublesome nominees to join his Cabinet will fall by the wayside before their Senate hearings, MSNBC host Jonathan Lemire claimed they could become a different kind of problem for the president-elect.

With fellow MSNBC host Jen Psaki predicting the nationally televised hearings of characters like ex-Fox News personality Pete Hegseth and former Rep. Tulsi Gabbard could be fiery, the "Morning Joe" co-host suggested that might not be in Trump's best interest.

"I was talking to Trump officials this week," Lemire began. "[Attorney general nominee] Matt Gaetz, he took himself out of the running there. He realized he had no chance and bailed out privately. The rest have been instructed to fight. This is the strategy from the Trump team; we're not going to ask any of our nominees to withdraw."

ALSO READ: We're watching the largest and most dangerous 'cult' in American history

"I mean, they allow for the possibility that some other damaging revelation could emerge that could change the calculus, but at least for now, they're saying, no, we want a full-court press," he elaborated. "Pressure these republicans, we're seeing that campaign already begin. We want to have these, Trump's choices, get confirmed, which means having those hearings."

"Those hearings, particularly for, you know, Tulsi Gabbard," he added. "Yes, Pete Hegseth, Kash Patel –– add Robert F. Kennedy to the list. They're going to be spectacles that could be potentially damaging to the momentum Trump wants to have coming into office."

Watch below or at the link here.

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Trump's 'wrecking ball' FBI pick is a 'greater danger' than any before him: expert

President-elect Donald Trump's choice of Kash Patel to lead the FBI has led some commentators to warn that he could weaponize the agency against political opponents the way that J. Edgar Hoover once did.

However, a scholar who won the Pulitzer Prize for her biography of Hoover believes this comparison is unfair to the longtime FBI director.

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