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Ex-FBI head referred for criminal charges over Catholic targeting claims

The Oversight Project has recommended that the Department of Justice formally charge former FBI Director Christopher Wray, according to an exclusive report from The Blaze.

The referral, which was sent to the Justice Department on Thursday, is looking to hold Wray accountable for his role “in the apparent cover-up but for his alleged false or misleading statements to Congress regarding the infamous FBI memo targeting traditional Catholics,” the Blaze said.

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'No movement': MAGA moans as speaker drags feet on J6 probe

WASHINGTON — The Jan. 6, 2021 attack is once again the talk of Capitol Hill.

While Democrats are hanging replica plaques across the Capitol pressuring Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) to display an official congressionally-mandated plaque honoring Capitol Police officers for defending the Capitol on Jan. 6, President Donald Trump continues quietly pressuring Republican congressional leaders to formally investigate the bipartisan select Jan. 6 committee that disbanded in 2023.

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'Getting crazier': Legal analyst jarred by hearing in wrongful deportation case

Former federal prosecutor Paul Butler found the recent hearing with Kilmar Ábrego García to be "crazy and getting crazier."

Ábrego is the Maryland man who was arrested and deported to a prison in El Salvador, despite an immigration judge ruling that he could not be sent back to that country. In court, the Justice Department admitted that his deportation was an "administrative error." The judge in the case asked the prosecutor at the time why the government couldn't return him to the country. The prosecutor made it clear he has never been given a straight answer.

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GOP test ran its new health plan in deep red state. It was a disaster

Congressional Republicans, looking for ways to offset their proposed tax cuts, are seeking to mandate that millions of Americans work in order to receive federally subsidized health insurance. The GOP tax and budget bill passed the House in May, and Senate Republicans are working feverishly to advance their draft of federal spending cuts in the coming days.

Georgia, the only state with a Medicaid work mandate, started experimenting with the requirement on July 1, 2023. As the Medicaid program’s two-year anniversary approaches, Georgia has enrolled just a fraction of those eligible, a result health policy researchers largely attribute to bureaucratic hurdles in the state’s work verification system. As of May 2025, approximately 7,500 of the nearly 250,000 eligible Georgians were enrolled, even though state statistics show 64% of that group is working.

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'God spared your life' to bomb Iran: Trump touts praise from Christian leader

President Donald Trump touted the praise of a Christian leader who claimed God prevented his assassination so he could order a strike on Iran.

In a Thursday post on Truth Social, Trump shared a message from Ralph Reed, the former chairman of the Georgia GOP and founder of the Faith and Freedom Coalition.

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Karoline Leavitt waffles on major Trump deadline: 'Not critical'

With President Donald Trump’s 90-day pause on reciprocal tariffs set to expire July 9, White House spokesperson Karoline Leavitt said Thursday the deadline was “not critical,” despite Trump’s earlier assertion that an extension likely wouldn’t be necessary.

“The deadline is not critical, the president can simply provide these countries with a deal if they refuse to make us one by the deadline,” Leavitt said, speaking during a White House press briefing. “That means the president can pick a reciprocal tariff rate that he believes is advantageous for the United States and for the American worker, and he will continue to do that.”

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'She should be ashamed!' Karoline Leavitt launches diatribe at CNN reporter

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt launched an over-the-top diatribe aimed at CNN reporter Natasha Bertrand.

The rant came after a reporter asked a question about how effective the strike was on Iranian nuclear facilities.

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Trump 2020 fake electors architect disbarred in New York

Kenneth Chesebro, an attorney who plotted to use fake electors to overturn the 2020 presidential election on behalf of President Donald Trump, was disbarred in the state of New York this week.

In an order obtained by Lawfare's Anna Bower on Thursday, a panel of judges noted that Chesebro had pleaded guilty to conspiracy to file false electors in Georgia.

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'Kind of numb': DeSantis delivers blunt putdown of GOP-led Florida legislature

Gov. Ron DeSantis threw out the V word on Thursday and warned state legislators he is getting ready to use his line-item veto power.

During a lengthy press conference on higher education held on the campus of Florida Atlantic University, the Republican governor took shots at the Legislature for not passing a budget on time. He also noted that the final $115.1 billion budget includes enough local projects for individual lawmakers to leave him “kind of numb.”

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'More cavities': RFK Jr. expects kid tooth decay from his anti-fluoride crusade

Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. admitted that children would likely see an uptick in cavities over his crusade to have fluoride removed from drinking water.

The admission came during a Thursday interview on Fox News with Kennedy and Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt (R).

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'This feels different': Conservative says new scandal knocked Trump off-kilter

Conservative writer Charlie Sykes claimed in a new article that President Donald Trump has been so unnerved by the Iran scandal fueled by his own administration's claims that he can focus on nothing else.

So far, only one of 17 intelligence agencies released reports on the possible effects of last weekend's bombing, yet the Trump administration continues to call it a raging success. When the press has questioned exactly how Trump knows Iran's nuclear capabilities have been wiped out, the president has been going ballistic.

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Trump could manipulate Fed with early 'backseat driver' nomination: WSJ

According to White House insiders, Donald Trump could jump the gun and nominate his choice to replace Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell months earlier than is traditional which could have a huge impact on financial markets and proposed interest rate changes.

In an exclusive report from the Wall Street Journal, the president already has his eye on several candidates and could make an announcement at any time, almost 11 months before Powell's term is up.

Among those candidates, the Journal is reporting, former Fed governor Kevin Wars, Trump adviser and frequent cable news guest Kevin Hassett and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent are names that are being floated.

As the report notes, previous nominations have been announced three to four months prior to an expiration of a term, and an early announcement could be disruptive to the Fed's work.

RELATED: 'He hates me': Trump complains Fed chairman won't budge out of personal grudge

Should Trump make an early move, any pronouncements from Powell could be undercut by the incoming chair who will likely parrot whatever the president wants them to say.

According to the Journal's Brian Schwartz and Nick Timiraos, "An early announcement could allow the chair-in-waiting to influence investor expectations about the likely path for rates, like a backseat driver, attempting to steer monetary policy before Powell’s term ends."

Although Bessent has gone on record stating that no announcement would be forthcoming until September, the president appears to have other plans, according to some.

“I know within three or four people who all I’m going to pick,” he told reporters on Wednesday at the NATO summit. “He [Powell] goes out pretty soon, fortunately, because I think he’s terrible.”

You can read more here.

'Volcano is about to erupt': Ex-Trump insider warns about president's next plans

Donald Trump is planning to "lie" to Congress, according to an ex-insider to the president.

Lev Parnas, a former "trusted operative" to the U.S. president, recently flagged evidence of Trump's "cognitive decline."

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