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'I think he'll be mad': Ex-Trump aide predicts he's fuming on last-minute Biden move

President Joe Biden issued preemptive pardons to a number of government officials and other individuals whom Donald Trump has threatened to prosecute, and one of his former aides thinks the president-elect might have been granted a favor with the last-minute move.

The outgoing president pardoned 51 individuals, including members of the Jan. 6 committee and police officers who testified before that panel, on Monday morning, hours before leaving office, and former White House aide Alyssa Farah Griffin told CNN that the decision could actually protect Trump from his own worst instincts.

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'Feeling the pressure': GOP already fears 'running out of time' for Trump's agenda

The GOP is only just securing unified control of government — but they already feel the clock ticking to get President-elect Donald Trump's agenda passed, reported Politico on Monday.

This comes at a time when Republicans only barely were able to re-appoint House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) with one of the narrowest House majorities in modern history — and when House and Senate Republicans are bitterly divided and facing chaos over how to use the reconciliation process.

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UK teen pleads guilty to girls' murder that triggered riots

by Paul Ellis with Akshata Kapoor in London

A teenager on Monday pleaded guilty to killing three young girls in a stabbing spree last year that sparked the UK's most violent riots in a decade.

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'Fear of the madman' has allies hoping Rubio can rein in 'crazy' Trump: analyst

As Donald Trump prepares to be sworn in for a second term, allies and opponents of the U.S. are bracing for a return to his unpredictability and hoping Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL), tabbed to the the next secretary of state, will have a calming effect on him.

According to an analysis by the Guardian's Diplomatic Editor Patrick Wintour, foreign leaders and diplomats have been dreading the return of Trump who has been making bold announcements –– with an emphasis on tariffs –– prior to his swearing in and have been hard at work game planning their own "reprisals."

As Wintour pointed out, Trump recently told the Wall Street Journal that President Xi Jinping of China “respects me because he knows I am f--king crazy.”

ALSO READ: Inside the parade of right-wing world leaders flocking to D.C. for Trump's inauguration

The Guardian columnist offered, "Unfortunately, fear of the madman recedes if he does not occasionally do something truly deranged. For that reason, many expect Trump to start his administration fast, trying to unsettle his opponents and prove his America First approach has substance."

That is where Rubio comes in, diplomats hope.

"More generally, European diplomats insist they are not clutching at straws when they say the Trump administration’s policies may be more nuanced than his rhetoric," the report states before adding, "The transcript of Rubio’s Senate confirmation hearing is also being cited as a sign that the US is not about to pull up the drawbridge. His evidence repeatedly referred to the US’s global role and the importance of cultivating alliances, even admitting a preference to cooperate with Mexico over fighting drug cartels."

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Elon Musk's DOGE will be sued minutes after Trump is sworn in: report

X owner Elon Musk will reportedly be hit with a lawsuit within minutes of Donald Trump getting sworn in as president on Monday.

The Washington Post reports that public interest law form National Security Counselors has teed up a complaint alleging that Musk's Department of Government Efficiency ("DOGE") violates a 1972 law requiring White House advisory committees to adhere to standards on disclosure and hiring.

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Biden issues last-minute preemptive pardons to Trump enemies

President Joe Biden issued preemptive pardons to a number of individuals who Donald Trump seemed likely to target for prosecution once he returns to the White House.

The outgoing president announced the pardons of members of the House select committee that investigated the Jan. 6 insurrection, as well as police officers who testified during that probe, and the former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and the head of Trump's response team during the start of the Covid-19 pandemic.

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Back on track': Trump supporters brave freezing conditions to attend rally

Thousands of supporters of US President-elect Donald Trump braved long waits in freezing temperatures, rain and snow to attend a "victory rally" in the US capital on Sunday, saying they were eager to see him get to work.

"I'm happy to be here to support (him)," said Loren Stephenson, 40, pulling an American flag tighter around her head to shield herself from hailstones. "It's been a long day but people are generally in good spirits."

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'Fundamentally asinine': Ex-legislator rips Trump's plan to revive TikTok

CNN's Bakari Sellers ripped Donald Trump's plan to revive the Chinese-owned social media app TikTok, which Congress has banned as a national security threat.

The president-elect has pledged to restore access in the U.S. through an executive order after he's sworn in Monday, but he called for the government to take a 50-percent ownership position in a joint venture to prevent American users' data from being misused, and Sellers flagged that proposal as "fundamentally asinine."

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Trump vows to end 'American decline' at inauguration eve rally

by Danny KEMP

Donald Trump pledged a blitz of presidential actions to end "American decline," telling a fired-up inauguration eve rally on Sunday that he would crack down on woke ideology and immigration.

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'To instill widespread fear is the point': Trump plots Chicago immigration raids

Citing four unnamed sources, The Wall Street Journal reported late Friday that U.S. President-elect Donald Trump's administration intends to start delivering on his long-promised mass deportations with "a large-scale immigration raid" in Chicago, Illinois that "is expected to begin on Tuesday morning, a day after Trump is inaugurated, and will last all week."

"The Trump team intends to target immigrants in the country illegally with criminal backgrounds—many of whose offenses, like driving violations, made them too minor for the Biden administration to pursue," according to the newspaper. "But, the people cautioned, if anyone else in the country illegally is present during an arrest, they will be taken, too."

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Canada vows 'Trump tax' on U.S. in response to tariffs: minister

Americans will be hit by a "Trump tariffs tax" if the U.S. president-elect increases customs duties on Canadian products, the Canadian foreign minister said Friday, pledging a hard-hitting response in any trade war.

Donald Trump, who returns to the White House next week, has said he plans to slap 25 percent tariffs on Canadian imports as part of his economic and foreign policy plans that also target Mexico, China and other trade partners.

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TikTok restores service in U.S., thanking Trump

by Thomas URBAIN / Alex PIGMAN

TikTok restored service in the United States Sunday after briefly going dark, as a law banning the wildly popular app on national security grounds came into effect.

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Bitcoin hits record above $109,000 awaiting Trump

Bitcoin hit a record high above $109,000 on Monday as Donald Trump, who has signaled plans to deregulate the cryptocurrency sector, prepares to be sworn in as U.S. president.

Bitcoin surged to an all-time peak of $109,241 ahead of Trump's inauguration ceremony, before falling back to around $107,500.

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