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'I intend to defend them': Senate Republican warns Trump against government purge

Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-IA), despite being a staunch Donald Trump ally, is warning the president-elect against any plan to go on a mass firing spree of government inspectors general.

In an interview with Politico, Grassley was asked whether Trump should do as some of his allies suggest and conduct a purge of inspectors general, who are responsible for investigating alleged wrongdoing in key executive branch agencies.

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As Trump plans for immigrant roundup, militias are standing by

Written by Amy Cooter, Director of Research, Academic Development, and Innovation at the Center on Terrorism, Extremism, and Counterterrorism

President-elect Donald Trump has reaffirmed that once he takes office he plans to declare a national emergency and use the military on American streets to accomplish his promises to round up and deport millions of undocumented migrants.

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'Won't break the law': 'Morning Joe' panelist doubts Trump loyalists will follow commands

Donald Trump's latest attorney general nominee has called for the prosecution of law enforcement officials who charged the former president with crimes, but panelists on MSNBC's "Morning Joe" said their actions had already passed legal scrutiny.

Pam Bondi told Fox News last year, after Trump's indictment in Georgia, that "the prosecutors will be prosecuted" and "the investigators will be investigated." Host Joe Scarborough raised questions about her fitness to lead the Department of Justice for a president-elect whose campaign was centered around his desire for vengeance against his enemies.

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Lauren Boebert offers $250 personal advice videos and pep talks on Cameo

Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-CO) is asking her fans to pay at least $250 for personal advice and pep talks on the Cameo platform.

In a welcome video, Boebert explained the services she was offering to paying customers.

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Right-wing analysts beg Biden to pardon Trump on his way out the door

A pair of right-wing scholars from the American Enterprise Institute, Marc Thiessen and Danielle Pletka, made a plea to President Joe Biden in The Washington Post on Monday: Pardon Donald Trump on your way out the door.

This comes as Trump's remaining criminal cases appear to be in varying stages of dead or in limbo following his re-election — which they argue should be defeated outright to let America heal.

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'Not fared well': Analyst warns history suggests Trump's headed for a fall

Donald Trump is the first Republican to secure a popular vote victory in the presidential contest since 2004. As such, he feels more confident than he did last time, and has stated that “America has given us an unprecedented and powerful mandate” to issue a wave of new policies through executive power once he takes office.

But he could be heading for a rude awakening, wrote Hayes Brown for MSNBC.

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'Hug goodbye lingered': Writer tells of creepy meeting with 'perfect monster' Pete Hegseth

Columnist Ana Marie Cox has written a scathing takedown of Fox News personality Pete Hegseth, who has been nominated by President-elect Donald Trump to be his new secretary of defense.

Writing in The New Republic, Cox describes Hegseth as "the perfect monster" for an incoming cabinet that she believes looks more like DC Comics' "Suicide Squad" of villains than a typical White House administration.

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Trump's 'political whirlwind' may force 'overreach' that will doom presidency: CNN analyst

Donald Trump's return to the White House will most likely set off a "political whirlwind" in Washington, D.C. — especially if he can place his preferred choices in top administration positions, a CNN analyst wrote Monday.

The president-elect's team has quickly announced a slate of Cabinet nominees that have been questioned as unqualified or even dangerous, and writer Stephen Collinson said some of the most controversial picks face a big test heading into Thanksgiving week.

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States prepare for Medicaid work requirements under Trump

Trevor Hawkins, an attorney at Legal Aid of Arkansas, remembers how busy his job got when the state for a time imposed work requirements on Medicaid recipients: His office was swamped with frantic phone calls from people who said they couldn’t comply with the new rule because they weren’t healthy enough to work or had to care for sick relatives.

“A whole heap of folks, after a month or two, started getting notices saying, ‘Hey, you’re out of compliance, and you’re going to lose your coverage,’” Hawkins told Stateline. For many people, he said, keeping their coverage was “absolutely vital to maintaining their health or getting better so they might work again.”

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'Battle for heart of the Republican Party': MAGA's mastermind refocuses target

After he was released from prison and returned to his "War Room" podcast, Steve Bannon had a decidedly vengeful tone. The former White House chief strategist made it clear that for the MAGA movement, taking revenge against those who had crossed President-elect Donald Trump would be a top priority.

Bannon makes no secret of his total disdain for liberals, progressives and Democrats. But Slate's Molly Olmsted, in an article published Monday, emphasizes that establishment Republicans and non-MAGA conservatives are also a major target of the "War Room" host.

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'What goes around comes around': Expert says Trump's own judges have hindered his agenda

Donald Trump has expressed grand designs of ruling like an autocrat in his second term but, to some extent, he also wants to follow policies more typical of a Republican administration — namely deregulation of the environment, labor and commerce for favored industries.

But there's a potential obstacle to Trump getting his way on this in the courts, wrote former Obama administration aide Cass Sunstein for The Washington Post — and ironically, that obstacle was put in place by Supreme Court justices he appointed.

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'We lost sight': Russian dissidents have warning for anti-Trump Americans

Miriam Elder, a veteran journalist who reported from Russia for nearly a decade, has interviewed dissident Russian journalists who are delivering warnings to Trump-opposing Americans about growing complacent during his second term.

Writing in the New York Times, Elder describes the political apathy that took over much of Russia's middle class after Vladimir Putin fully returned to the presidency in 2012 and promptly cracked down on dissent.

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'Appalling': George Conway has a prediction about 'spineless' GOP senators

Although attorney George Conway has been a prominent figure in the conservative movement for decades, he has made no secret of his total disdain for President-elect Donald Trump and the far-right MAGA movement. Conway aggressively fundraised and campaigned for Vice President Kamala Harris' 2024 campaign, and he predicted the worst when Trump defeated her.

Conway has been vehemently critical of Trump's picks for his second administration. During a late November appearance on The Bulwark's vodcast, the attorney told host Sarah Longwell —another Never Trump conservative who supported Harris — that he has little faith in GOP senators' willingness to reject the president-elect's most "appalling" nominees.

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