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'Some people just can’t help themselves': Karl Rove's jab at Vance irks Trump adviser

A senior advisor to former President George W. Bush ruffled the Trump campaign's feathers on Thursday evening when he flippantly commented that the outgoing head of the top super PAC for Senate Republicans "dragged" Sen. J.D. Vance (R-OH) "across the finish line."

Steven J. Law, who served as Sen. Mitch McConnell's (R-KY) chief of staff, is leaving his position as CEO of the Senate Leadership Fund, The New York Times reported. His move coincides with McConnell's exit as the Republican leader in the Senate and will allow incoming chamber leader Sen. John Thune (R-SD) to pick his own ally for the organization.

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NASA pick is an 'extreme admirer' of Elon Musk — and money may soon flow to SpaceX: writer

Donald Trump's selection of a billionaire private astronaut to head up NASA was likely inspired, if not requested, by tech billionaire Elon Musk, Ross Andersen wrote for The Atlantic — and more importantly, the appointment could permanently enshrine the federal government's reliance on Musk's businesses for spaceflight and space research.

Jared Isaacman, 41, is "a pal and an extreme admirer of Musk’s," wrote Andersen, who effuses praise for the fellow billionaire and says he's "solving the world’s problems."

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'Disappointed': Business groups turn on Trump after he ignored 'better' labor choices

Concerns from some Republican lawmakers over President-elect Donald Trump’s pick to become the nation’s next labor secretary has spread to the business community.

The pro-union record of Rep. Lori Chavez-DeRemer’s (R-OR) rattled Republicans on Capitol Hill after Trump tapped her to oversee the Labor Department. And now employers nationwide are looking for alternative avenues to ensure “business-friendly contacts” are installed at other key government departments and within the administration, Politico reported Thursday.

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'Most important thing' Biden did this week had 'nothing to do' with Hunter: Columnist

President Joe Biden garnered national headlines this week when he pardoned his son Hunter — but a Washington Post columnist argued Thursday evening it was something else he did that was "most important."

"The most important thing President Joe Biden did this week had nothing to do with his son Hunter," columnist Eugene Robinson wrote. "It was his trip to Angola, which sought to put the United States back on the map in a region where much of the world’s future will be shaped."

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'It’s appropriate': Dem senator backs Biden pardon — for Trump

Sen. John Fetterman (D-PA) told reporters on Thursday that he supports President Joe Biden's controversial pardon of his son Hunter on federal tax and gun charges — and that he'd similarly like to see a pardon issued for President-elect Donald Trump, NBC News reported.

Fetterman said the cases against Hunter, who has been a subject of Republican investigation for years as they tried to tie his international business dealings to some sort of wrongdoing by his father, were “politically motivated” and “weaponized for political gain,” something that some legal experts have also argued as the charges Hunter was convicted of are rarely charged as standalone crimes — and he compared it to Trump's conviction in Manhattan for falsifying business records to interfere with the 2016 presidential election.

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‘Sympathy for dictators’: Dozens of national security experts 'alarmed' by Trump pick

Dozens of the nation’s former national security officials say they are “alarmed” about President-elect Donald Trump’s nomination of Tulsi Gabbard as the Director of National Intelligence (DNI), the top official overseeing the entire U.S. Intelligence Community. They are calling for closed-door sessions during the confirmation process so senators can “consider all information available to the U.S. government” regarding the former member of Congress.

The ex-officials cite what they say is Gabbard’s lack of experience and her “sympathy for dictators,” which “raises questions about her judgment and fitness.”

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'Un-American': Expert blasts bill seeking to pay residents $1K to catch illegal immigrants

A proposed bounty hunter program in Missouri would pay residents $1,000 per person to catch illegal immigrants in the state, according to reports.

Senate Bill 72, which was pre-filed in the Missouri Legislature this week, calls for creating a system where violations can be reported through a telephone hotline, email and online reporting portal, according to a summary of the bill.

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MAGA salivates at prospect of Nancy Mace taking down 'double-talking RINO' Lindsey Graham

Rep. Nancy Mace (R-SC) has ambitions for higher office — and it's getting some prominent Trump fans on social media excited that they can take down Sen. Lindsey Graham in a primary.

According to NOTUS, multiple sources close to Mace say she "has been discussing two positions: South Carolina governor or a Senate race." At the moment, according to the report, Mace is "particularly looking at the governor’s seat, which Henry McMaster has held since 2017 when he replaced Nikki Haley after she was appointed to be Donald Trump’s ambassador to the United Nations."

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House lawmakers vote on whether to release Gaetz report

House lawmakers have reportedly voted against releasing an Ethics Committee report into allegations against former Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL).

The vote held Thursday comes after the Ethics Committee met privately and discussed whether to release the report, NBC News reported.

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'This is ridiculous!' Jim Jordan indignant over Dems' 'crazy' pardon ideas

House Judiciary Committee Chair Jim Jordan (R-OH) reacted with indignation at the idea that some Democrats want outgoing President Joe Biden to issue pre-emptive pardons for certain lawmakers and former officials likely to face reprisal from a Donald Trump administration.

Jordan's statement, during an interview with Fox Business' Larry Kudlow on Thursday, comes after Biden issued a controversial pardon for his son Hunter, from federal tax and firearm charges — and as Trump moves to put the FBI in the hands of Kash Patel, a MAGA conspiracy theorist who has vowed to "come after" members of the press and Trump's political opponents.

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Project 2025 architect pledges $1M to urge GOP senators to push through Hegseth: report

Kevin Roberts, the architect of the highly controversial Project 2025, is constructing a new effort to shore up support for President-elect Donald Trump’s embattled pick to lead the Department of Defense, according to new reporting.

Roberts, president of the Heritage Foundation, said Thursday the right-wing group would commit $1 million to urge Republican senators to support Pete Hegseth despite serious questions surrounding his past treatment of women and alcohol abuse hanging over his confirmation, according to The Associated Press.

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Kash Patel ally pushes him to end FBI intel branch key to domestic terror investigations

A former special agent who claims he received financial backing from a foundation associated with Kash Patel, the man nominated by President-elect Donald Trump to serve as the FBI’s next director, has called for the agency to shut down its Intelligence Branch, which plays a strategic role in domestic violent extremism investigations.

Steve Friend, an ex-agent who was suspended in 2022 after complaining about the agency’s use of a SWAT team to arrest a Jan. 6 offender, made the comment on Monday during an interview with podcaster Carl Jackson. He also called on Patel to “get rid of” the agency’s Integrated Program Management system which he claimed “perversely incentivizes the FBI to go after people” to inflate case numbers.

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'Tony Soprano Syndrome': Writer warns MAGA has an antihero problem

Republicans supporting President-elect Donald Trump have fallen into a trap that The Atlantic's Adam Serwer called "Tony Soprano Syndrome" — comparing the very people they support to run government to fictional characters, unaware they were obviously meant to be the bad guys.

"As Trump reshapes the nation in his image, some of his supporters seem inclined to turn cautionary tales on their head, empathizing with villains or antiheroes to such a degree that they miss the point of these stories entirely," wrote Serwer — including when the writers of the stories make it completely obvious.

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