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'Not capture a majority': Trump's landslide claims evaporate as final vote counts come in

Coinciding with growing resistance to President-elect Donald Trump's Cabinet nominees is an acknowledgment that, despite claims from Trump and his closest allies, the election "landslide" which he brags beat Vice President Kamala Harris wasn't as big as he says.

According to a report from the New York Times' Peter Baker, as the last votes are tabulated, Trump's popular vote lead over his opponent shrivels. But that hasn't kept the Trump camp from using "landslide" claims to say voters overwhelmingly cleared him to pursue all of his policies.

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'Heads would explode': Key Trump adviser and ex-caddie floats run for Elise Stefanik seat

A key Trump adviser and former caddie is considering running for Congress to replace the MAGA loyalist President-elect Donald Trump wants to represent the U.S. abroad.

Dan Scavino Jr. on Friday floated the idea of chasing the New York seat that will be left vacant should the Senate confirm Rep. Elise Stefanik as the next U.S. ambassador to the United Nations.

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'Tremendous shortage': Border Patrol shrunk drastically during Trump's first term

WASHINGTON – President-elect Donald Trump has promised to hire 10,000 more Border Patrol agents as part of a crackdown on immigration. That may be a tall order.

Days after taking office in 2017, Trump ordered the Border Patrol to add 5,000 agents. By the time he left four years later, the Border Patrol had actually shrunk by 1,084 agents, records from Customs and Border Protection show.

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'Requesting a change in attitude': North Korean leader rebuffs 'love letters' from Trump

President-elect Donald Trump needs to change the tone of his love letters, North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un reportedly said this week.

Kim belittled and rebuffed Trump — who once boasted "'We fell in love, okay? No, really, he wrote me beautiful letters" — and the prospect of reviving nuclear diplomacy with the U.S., the Wall Street Journal reported Friday.

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Trump's new attorney general pick: A corporate lobbyist who did Wall Street's bidding

President-elect Donald Trump's choice to succeed Matt Gaetz as his nominee to lead the U.S. Department of Justice is a registered lobbyist who has worked on behalf of Amazon, Uber, and other corporate giants.

Pam Bondi, the former attorney general of Florida, has lobbied for the same firm as Susie Wiles, Trump's chief of staff pick, according to Senate filings. Bondi also reportedly has ties to the lawyer who represented Trump confidant Elon Musk and Tesla in a federal securities fraud case.

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Attorney details tricks Trump could use to stay in power after 2028

Under the U.S. Constitution, President-elect Donald Trump will be term-limited after he returns to the White House. The 22nd Amendment, ratified in 1951, states, "No person shall be elected to the office of the President more than twice."

The last U.S. president to serve more than two terms was President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, who was elected in a landslide in 1932 and was serving his fourth term when he died in office on April 12, 1945. But the 22nd Amendment has limited post-1940s presidents — from Dwight D. Eisenhower to Ronald Reagan to Barack Obama — to two terms.

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Rebel GOP senators begin to stand up against Trump plan

President-elect Donald Trump has threatened to use a process known as "recess appointments" if GOP senators give him a hard time with his more controversial administration picks, who range from anti-vaxxer conspiracy theorist Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to head the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to former Rep. Tulsi Gabbard — whose critics consider her an apologist for Russian President Vladimir Putin — as intelligence director.

Trump's threat is to force the U.S. Senate into recess, then ram through nominees who were unlikely to be confirmed.

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'He goes out and gets drunk': Ex-Fox News colleague unleashes on Pete Hegseth

A pair of CNN commentators clashed over the sexual assault allegations against Donald Trump's nominee for secretary of defense.

Pete Hegseth has been nominated to lead the Pentagon, but the Trump transition team was reportedly caught off guard by the Fox News host's payoff to a California woman who claims he sexually assaulted her while both of them were intoxicated at a 2017 conservative conference, and a former colleague said she expects more damaging revelations to come out.

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Marjorie Taylor Greene's new gig celebrated by leading progressive: 'She barely shows up'

President-elect Donald Trump is proposing a new federal government agency, the U.S. Department of Government Efficiency, which would be headed by Tesla/X CEO Elon Musk and MAGA businessman Vivek Ramaswamy.

One of the far-right MAGA Republicans Trump would also like to see involved is Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA).

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'Bubble finally popped': Expert says Trump dreams dashed — but 'maximum chaos' remains

The Republican Senate burst President-elect Donald Trump's bubble this week — and left the nation splattered in chaos, a new political analysis contends.

Former Rep. Matt Gaetz's withdrawal from the Trump Cabinet contest proved to the president-elect and the nation that the Republican Party is not his to control absolutely, according to Axios writer Zachary Basu.

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'Tide has changed': Ex-Trump staffer says GOP lawmakers see president-elect as 'lame duck'

A former Donald Trump staffer said the Matt Gaetz flameout showed Republican senators were more willing to oppose the once and future president in his second term.

The Florida Republican withdrew his nomination Thursday after just eight days, three days short of Anthony Scaramucci's 11-day tenure as Trump's communications director – a measure of time he jokingly calls a "Mooch" – and he told CNN that episode shows the president-elect doesn't have control over the incoming GOP majority

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'Not known for keeping secrets': New doubts arise over key Trump Cabinet nomination

A discussion on MSNBC on Friday morning about President-elect Donald Trump's selection of Pam Bondi to replace ex-Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL) as his potential attorney general then turned to other problematic cabinet selections.

According to "Morning Joe" contributor Katty Kay, with Gaetz becoming yesterday's news after the embattled Florida Republican withdrew his name for consideration on Thursday, the spotlight has shifted to Trump's choice of ex-Rep. Tulsi Gabbard to be Trump's pick to be director of national intelligence.

With co-host Scarborough bluntly stating he doesn't think Gabbard will survive scrutiny of her record by Republicans and Democrats alike, Kay claimed her reputation among insiders likely precludes her from landing the highly sensitive intel post.

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"It's interesting talking to people in the intelligence community certainly but also in the national security side, but you're right, Joe, it is Tulsi Gabbard that's provoking more concern actually than [Defense Secretary nominee] Pete Hegseth is," she reported.

"Maybe because people feel at the Department of Defense can work around Pete Hegseth," she elaborated. "Maybe it's because you still have the Secretary of State Marco Rubio as a national security adviser who can mitigate what happens at DOD in terms of that position. But Tulsi Gabbard – from what I have been told is that one thing she's not particularly famous for is keeping secrets."

"There's an irony of putting somebody who has that reputation at the head of the intelligence community," she added.

Watch below or at the link right here.

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'Death knell': Ex-prosecutor highlights 'absolute disqualifier' for Trump's latest nominee

Donald Trump's new attorney general nominee has an absolute disqualifier under her belt, according to a former prosecutor.

Former federal prosecutor Joyce Vance Friday noted the decision of Matt Gaetz, Trump's first pick for A.G., to withdraw his name from consideration.

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