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Trump pick Dan Bongino 'lost his mind and ran out of DC' following clash: report

FBI deputy director Dan Bongino took off work Friday following a clash with attorney general Pam Bondi over her handling of the Jeffrey Epstein case.

Two sources told Axios that Bongino was increasingly unhappy of Bondi's handling of the matter because he felt she had overpromised and underdelivered information about the disgraced financier's alleged "client list," and three sources said the deputy director was blamed internally for the "missing minute" from surveillance video recorded outside Epstein's jail cell.

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'Absolute bloodbath for Trump': Experts flag 'stunning numbers' in new poll

President Donald Trump has repeatedly declared that he has a mandate from the American people to stem immigration, but a new Gallup Poll reveals attitudes have shifted since he took office.

Gallup posted Friday, "When asked if immigration is generally a good thing or bad thing for the country, a record-high 79% of U.S. adults call it a good thing; a record-low 17% see it as a bad thing."

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'Livid' FBI pick may not return to job over 'disgust' with Pam Bondi: Trump ally

A right-wing influencer who has the ear of president Donald Trump claims to have inside information about alleged turmoil at the FBI's highest levels.

MAGA activist Laura Loomer, who traveled with the president during his 2024 campaign and has met with him at the White House, said Friday morning that FBI Director Kash Patel and deputy director Dan Bongino were furious over Attorney General Pam Bondi's handling of the Jeffrey Epstein case, and she said Bongino was considering resigning in protest.

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'This is a big deal': Legal experts aghast after DOJ bombs Ábrego García hearing

The Justice Department was back in court on Friday as the judge grew more and more frustrated.

After a hearing the day before ended with an annoyed judge who wasn't able to get any straight answers out of a witness, the DOJ was supposed to present documents relating to Kilmar Ábrego García, a Maryland man who the Department of Homeland Security accidentally deported to a brutal prison in El Salvador.

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Dr. Oz spouts blatant lie when pressed on Medicaid cuts in Trump megabill

Mehmet Oz, who President Donald Trump tapped to lead the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, was confronted live Friday over past remarks about Medicaid cuts in the Republican budget bill, and when pressed, falsely suggested that the legislation would actually increase Medicaid funding rather than slash it.

In late April, Oz appeared on Fox News with "America’s Newsroom" host Bill Hemmer, where he was asked to comment on critics of Trump’s budget reconciliation package known as the One Big Beautiful Bill and its potential cuts to Medicaid. Oz avoided giving a direct answer, but argued that the bill was designed to “love and cherish,” as Trump put it, Medicaid.

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Churches will regret taking advantage of new IRS rules on politicking: analyst

Churches thinking of taking advantage of a major IRS flip-flop on the legality of engaging in politics without fear of losing their tax-exempt status may want to reflect hard and deep on how it could affect retaining worshiper and recruiting new ones.

According to Salon columnist Amanda Marcotte, evangelical churches have already suffered significant losses since Donald Trump jumped into politics among those who want to hear more about Jesus and less about the secular world.

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'Slap in the face': GOP governor defies voters and repeals paid sick leave

Missouri's Republican governor on Thursday signed legislation repealing the paid sick leave portion of a ballot measure that the state's voters approved with nearly 60% support in the 2024 election.

The short-lived provision, which will officially be repealed on August 28, required Missouri employers to provide workers with an hour of paid sick time for every 30 hours of work. Businesses with 15 or more employees were required to provide up to 56 hours of earned paid sick time per year, and businesses with fewer than 15 employees were required to provide at least 40 hours of paid sick time.

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Reporter handcuffed as he covers budget meeting in tiny Texas town

"In West Texas, an independent publisher’s arrest sparks First Amendment questions" was first published by The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan media organization that informs Texans — and engages with them — about public policy, politics, government and statewide issues.

Subscribe to The Y’all — a weekly dispatch about the people, places and policies defining Texas, produced by Texas Tribune journalists living in communities across the state.

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Hawaii fire survivors outraged after Kristi Noem accuses them of sexual favors

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem sparked outrage by dramatically misrepresenting a study about survivors of the 2023 Hawaii wildfire in Maui and claiming that "1 in 6" survivors exchanged sexual favors for basic supplies.

The statistic, drawn from a limited survey of just 70 Filipino women, has become a political weapon in the Trump administration's ongoing campaign to dismantle the Federal Emergency Management Agency. Noem was speaking at a FEMA Review Council meeting on Wednesday, Honolulu Civil Beat reported.

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'Self-inflicted wound': Expert says Trump just made a 'massive unforced error'

President Donald Trump walked into a "massive unforced error" by failing to deliver the salacious details his MAGA supporters believed he had promised about the Jeffrey Epstein case.

The Department of Justice and FBI issued memos this week stating they had found no evidence that the notorious sex trafficker and longtime Trump friend had kept a "client list," which many of the president's followers believed would expose his opponents, but CNN's Harry Enten said the move had backfired badly by angering his base and firing up interest in the late financier's crimes.

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'Tacky and crass': GOP candidate slammed for fundraising off devastating tornado

TOPEKA — Gov. Laura Kelly objected to Republican governor candidate Jeff Colyer’s fundraising appeals tied to a devastating tornado that tore through Pratt, Stafford and Reno counties in May.

In a letter obtained by Kansas Reflector, Kelly criticized Colyer for issuing two fundraising messages in June that alleged Kelly’s response to the storm fell short of expectations after an EF3 tornado barreled into the communities of Grinnell and Plevna. Damage to buildings and equipment was substantial, but no one was killed.

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Marco Rubio accused of major 'own goal' after comment about mass firings

Comments made by Secretary of State Marco Rubio on Friday before thousands of State Department were expected to get pink slips drew the attention of MSNBC's Jonathan Lemire and the New Yorker's Susan Glasser.

With the Supreme Court giving Donald Trump's administration cover to pursue mass firings, Rubio went ahead with the a purge in a department he called "bloated" and then added he was rooting out adherents of a "radical political ideology."

That led to raised eyebrows on MSNBC's "Morning Joe."

"The mass firings are a part of a reorganization of the agency that includes closing or merging more than 300 bureaus and offices," Lemire prompted his guest. "The plan was unveiled by Secretary of State Marco Rubio back in May. He called his department 'bloated' and said that the changes would better align it with core American values and root out pockets of 'radical political ideology.'"

"First of all, that quote is a remarkable quote from Marco Rubio, formally, not only an establishment type Republican, but a huge proponent of diplomacy and American soft power around the world," Glasser offered. "You know, the flip-flop by Marco Rubio is one of the more dramatic, if underappreciated stories in Trump 2.0."

"And you know that quote, what does it do? It underscores the idea that it's not just a kind of an inward-looking, isolationist foreign policy that the Trump administration is pursuing right now, Jonathan. But it's actually a war against radical political ideology. It's 'that's the enemy within,' this is a modern day version, essentially, of a kind of McCarthyism that you're seeing," she added.

"I think this administration isn't so much focused on countering adversaries overseas as it is in a series of loyalty purges from within," she later elaborated. "We just heard those horrifying statistics about FEMA and not only the vacancies there, but the idea that the secretary of Homeland Security would want to be personally signing off on minor decisions because they don't trust federal government employees."

"But, of course, Russia and China have radically expanded their presence overseas in countries around the world in order to counter the United States and its soft power, so this is like an own goal once again," Glasser told the host.

You can watch below or at the link here.

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GOP strategist predicts Trump will buck his MAGA base in key Senate race

Republican strategist Melik Abdut made a bold prediction Friday that President Donald Trump will ultimately buck his MAGA base in a competitive Texas primary race by endorsing Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX) over his challenger Ken Paxton, the state’s attorney general and longtime Trump faithful.

“It is clear that in the state of Texas, a fight is on hand, and me personally, I would actually much rather have John Cornyn remain in his seat than Ken Paxton,” Abdut said, speaking on CNN Friday. “And the National Republican Senatorial Committee tends to agree with me on that.”

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