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'It didn't work': Open letter to Melania Trump calls for her to ditch signature initiative

Donald Trump's wife should retire her signature initiative from her first time as first lady if and when she returns to the White House, a columnist wrote Sunday.

Melania Trump popularized a much-ridiculed "Be Best" plan, which was focused on reducing bullying, when she was the first lady. But many observers suggested it fell flat because of Trump's own tendency toward bullying his perceived enemies.

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'Scream out the truth': Lawmaker calls out Trump team's 'violation of federal law'

Donald Trump's transition team was caught in a "violation of federal law," a Democratic lawmaker said on Sunday.

Rep. Kweisi Mfume (D-MD) appeared on MSNBC over the weekend, where he was asked about the president-elect's government takeover.

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'Most corrupt president': Outrage mounts over Trump's latest move in government takeover

Donald Trump's transition has failed to sign ethics agreements, which in turn has reportedly allowed the team to run on "secret money," and the president-elect's critics are outraged.

Trump has been quick to announce his Cabinet nominations over the last two weeks, but he has been slow to reveal the "names of the donors who are funding his transition effort," according to a Sunday New York Times report. This is part of Trump's failure to adhere to ethics norms, which has also reportedly led to his team being left in the dark on key issues.

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'In the dark': Trump team reportedly getting 'blocked' after transition's ethics 'failure'

Donald Trump's transition team has failed to sign important government ethics agreements, leading to his nominees being "blocked" from the agencies they will soon be controlling, according to a report.

Trump hasn't been sworn into office yet but, as one U.S. senator recently said, he's already delaying his legal responsibilities when it comes to signing an ethics agreement that has to be on file before a presidential transition takes place.

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'Historic': Lawmaker calls Trump nominees' sexual misconduct allegations record-breaking

Rep. Jasmine Crockett (D-TX) suggested President-elect Donald Trump had made history by nominating the most people accused of sexual misconduct ever in a new administration.

During a panel discussion on ABC's This Week program, Democratic strategist Donna Brazile noted that Trump was trying to avoid FBI background checks for his nominees.

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Ex-Republican puts GOP on notice that Party may 'become an instrument of its decline'

Donald Trump will force Republican lawmakers to pave the way to their own demise, according to a conservative writer.

New York Times columnist David French, a former writer for the conservative National Review, wrote an article Sunday explaining how, in his view, Trump is forcing GOP members of Congress to give up their Constitutional authority. The piece coincides with the former and incoming president's efforts to subvert the Senate's power by forcing recess appointments for his administration's Cabinet nominees.

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Trump's 'dark money' transition team reportedly 'provoking alarm' with experts

Donald Trump has been quick to announce his Cabinet nominations over the last two weeks, but the president-elect has been slow to reveal the "names of the donors who are funding his transition effort," according to a Sunday New York Times report.

The Times reports:

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Fox News doc disputes subway chokehold defense: White man 'caused the death' of Black man

Fox News medical contributor and forensic pathologist Dr. Michael Baden contradicted the defense of Daniel Penny, a former Marine on trial for allegedly killing street artist Jordan Neely with a chokehold in 2023.

Penny's defense, which rested Friday, argued that Neely's sickle cell trait and marijuana use led to his death. But during a Sunday appearance on Fox News, Baden said that it was Penny's chokehold that had "caused the death" of Neely.

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'Be careful what you ask for': Trump at risk of new investigations opened on his nominees

During an appearance on MSNBC on Sunday afternoon, a former assistant director for counterintelligence at the FBI claimed Donald Trump's decision to only have cursory vetting performed on his Cabinet appointees could blow up in his face.

Beyond being blindsided by revelations of sexual assault allegations levied against Fox News personality Pete Hegseth, targeted to be the new secretary of defense, Frank Figliuzzi claimed members of Congress or President Joe Biden could do what Trump's people won't.

Speaking with host Alex Witt, the former FBI official explained, "Be careful what you ask for, you might get it. If you want an FBI vetting process that tells you risk and threat qualifications and competency and reputation, you're going to get it, and he may not like the answers. "

ALSO READ: The America-attacking Trump is coming for our military — and then he's coming for us

"I think that's the chief reason he's [Trump] avoiding it," he added before elaborating, "With regard to why President Biden or the Senate Judiciary Committee might want to do this now, I do have an answer for that: the answer is they can do it."

Noting he did research on the topic, he added he, "...looked at the executive orders through history, through Clinton, Obama, looked at two pertinent memorandums of understanding (MOUs), between DOJ and Senate Judiciary, DOJ and the White House."

"Really important, a presidential transition act of 1963 that says a president can request nominee background investigations from the FBI when nominees' names are announced," he added. "What's my argument? The nominees names have been announced. If Trump isn't going to comply with the existing protocols and practices, then we should comply with it and ask the Senate and the White House to request it now."

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'A tax on the consumer': Rand Paul decimates Trump's tariff plan

Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY) said he opposed President-elect Donald Trump's plan to place tariffs on imported goods because it would be "a tax on the consumer."

The Republican lawmaker came out against the proposal during a Sunday interview on CBS after host Margaret Brennan asked if he supported billionaire hedge fund CEO Scott Bessent to be Treasury secretary.

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'Hey, you can’t do this': Expert blows hole in Musk and Ramaswamy's big plans

In a column expressing skepticism what Donald Trump's proposed "Department of Government Efficiency" will be able to accomplish, an expert at the Brookings Institution, who played a key part in former Vice President Al Gore's "Re-inventing Government" initiative, told the Washington Post's Dan Balz that the incoming administration is in for a dose of political reality.

With the president-elect selecting wealthy entrepreneurs Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy to head up the off-the-cuff department, Elaine Kamarck pointed to multiple instances where cuts would be unpalatable to Trump's MAGA fans.

ALSO READ: The America-attacking Trump is coming for our military — and then he's coming for us

As Balz wrote, Musk and Ramaswamy "have huge ambitions and no humility about what they are undertaking," before adding, "What they have talked about amounts to a wholesale attack on federal agencies designed to eliminate thousands of regulations, reduce the federal workforce by an order of magnitude that could cripple the delivery of vital services, and effect cost savings that would amount to nearly one-third of the federal budget, or the entire discretionary part of the budget and then some."

Karmack cited the Border Patrol, with 19,000 Border Patrol agents, and asked where the cuts would come from when border security was the main plank of the Trump campaign.

According to Balz, "There are about 1,800 air traffic controllers, she said. Would Trump’s team cut that workforce significantly, causing potential flight cancellations and disruption?" with Kamarck predicting " “It will take about a week and Congress will say, ‘Hey, you can’t do this."

"And how deeply would he try to cut the workforce at the Social Security Administration, at the risk of checks not being sent out promptly or other breakdowns in a program that he has otherwise vowed not to touch?" Balz asked.

With Ramaswamy and Musk boasting, "We expect to prevail," Balz wrote, "Those words no doubt reflect the aggressive approach the president-elect and his advisers hope to take once he is sworn in. Meanwhile, executive branch employees are bracing for what could be coming and opponents are preparing to resist through legal and other channels. Whether Trump’s shock troops, led by Musk and Ramaswamy, are truly ready will be known soon."

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'A problem': Pete Hegseth's former Fox News colleague believes Trump nominee raped woman

Fox News contributor Leslie Marshall revealed she had worked with former host Pete Hegseth, President-elect Donald Trump's nominee for defense secretary, and she believes that he is a rapist.

In a Fox News segment on Sunday, host Howard Kurtz noted that Hegseth was accused of rape in 2017 by a woman who went to the police, "and a rape kit confirmed the sexual encounter."

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'Unqualified to be your babysitter': Fox News pundit rips Matt Gaetz over sex allegations

Fox News pundits Ben Domenech and Leslie Marshall agreed that former Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL) was unqualified to be a babysitter or drive teenage girls in an Uber because he had been accused of having sex with a 17-year-old girl.

During a Sunday panel discussion on Fox News, Domenech agreed with Gaetz's decision to withdraw as President-elect Donald Trump's nominee for attorney general.

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