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ICE makes stunning claim Congress doesn't get to oversee facilities due to shutdown

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials now claim that the federal government shutdown means they are no longer required to allow members of Congress into their facilities for inspection, Politico reported on Monday.

Officials are providing two reasons for this, according to the report: First, ICE officials "have informed lawmakers that they simply don’t have the staff or funding to support those visits. Lawmakers have previously been legally allowed to demand them as part of their oversight duties, which includes monitoring conditions and communicating with detainees facing deportation."

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House Republican slams 'disturbing' pace of big MAGA probe

Rep. Wesley Hunt (R-TX) bashed the GOP on Monday for slow-walking a high-profile investigation that the MAGA base expects them to execute during President Donald Trump's second term.

During an interview on MAGA influencer Benny Johnson's eponymous podcast, Hunt said Republicans have not been focused on re-investigating the Jan. 6 insurrection and releasing new evidence and footage of the event. He said Republicans appear uninterested in fighting back against the narrative surrounding Jan. 6.

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'Cartoon villain': Ex-senator skewered over new role 'strong-arming' communities for Trump

A former Democratic senator once known for a purported “independent streak” now says she is working “hand in glove” with the Trump administration to force communities to allow the construction of energy-devouring artificial intelligence data centers.

As reported by YourValley.Net, former Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (I-AZ) recently attended a planning and zoning commission meeting in the city of Chandler, Arizona, in which she warned local officials that a massive data center would be built in their community whether they wanted it or not.

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'Escalating pattern': AG urged to launch criminal probe into Trump feds' 'brutality'

A legal advocacy group requested on Monday that Illinois officials open criminal investigations into the “unlawful” conduct of federal agents deployed to Chicago by President Donald Trump.

Free Speech For People, a national pro-democracy nonprofit, called on state Attorney General Kwame Raoul, Cook County State’s Attorney Eileen O’Neill Burke, and Chicago Police Superintendent Larry Snelling to probe what it called “an escalating pattern of criminal activity by federal agents” over the past two months of Trump’s "Operation Midway Blitz," which was launched in early September, and which the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) says has resulted in the arrests of more than 1,500 people.

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Federal workers must now 'clearly' show support for Trump on year-end reviews: report

The Trump administration has added a new requirement to its performance reviews this year that requires workers in the Department of Health and Human Services to produce evidence that they “clearly and demonstrably support implementation” of President Donald Trump's agenda, according to a new report.

HuffPost reported on Monday that "tens of thousands" of HHS employees have received notice that the new requirements will be on their end-of-year reviews. The new metric, dubbed “Faithful Support of Administration of the Law and the President’s Policies,” is one of four new "critical elements" added to their performance reviews, according to the report.

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'Unbelievable': MAGA erupts as Kirk killer allowed to wear 'civilian clothes' in court

MAGA fans melted down on Monday after a judge ruled that Tyler Robinson, who is accused of killing conservative activist Charlie Kirk during a speaking engagement at a Utah university in September, is allowed to wear street clothes during his trial.

The New York Post reported on Monday that Robinson's lawyers requested that he be allowed to wear civilian clothing during the trial. Judge Tony Graf of Utah's Fourth District Court ruled in favor of the motion but denied another motion that would have allowed Robinson to attend trial without shackles or restraints, according to the report.

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'You're dead liberal': Feds accused of pointing gun and making shocking remark at citizen

A federal immigration agent brandished a gun at a protester while taunting him, according to a newly filed civil rights lawsuit.

According to Gregory Royal Pratt of the Chicago Tribune, the agent "pointed a gun at a U.S. citizen protesting and told him 'bang, bang,' and 'you’re dead liberal.'"

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'Flying under the radar': Ex-Cabinet member sounds alarm on Trump's obscure new order

Former Labor Secretary and class warrior Robert Reich took to social media on Monday to sound the alarm about something "flying under the radar that you should know about."

There's a new directive from Trump, NSPM-7, or National Security Presidential Memorandum number seven, that Reich said, "could make it a crime to criticize him."

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'Catastrophic': Trump admin accused of hiding ‘biggest premium hike in history’

More than half of the Democratic Party caucus in the US Senate on Monday accused the Trump administration of covering up massive planned premium increases that are going to hit Americans who buy their health insurance through Affordable Care Act exchanges.

In a letter to Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services administrator Mehmet Oz, the senators charged that his agency has “failed to open early window-shopping” the week before the start of open enrollment, which they said has left “millions of Americans who buy their own insurance on Healthcare.gov... unaware of the catastrophic premium hikes barreling towards them.”

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Retired colonel makes explosive claim feds covered up killing of American journalist

Retired US Col. Steve Gabavics went public Monday with an account he had previously only spoken about anonymously—the story of his investigation into an Israeli soldier’s killing of Palestinian-American journalist Shireen Abu Akleh in 2022 and the unsuccessful attempts he made to ensure the US State Department would accurately report his findings: that Abu Akleh was intentionally shot.

Gabavics previously discussed his experience investigating Abu Akleh’s killing just days after it happened in a documentary produced by Zeteo News, but he wasn’t named in the film. On Monday, he came forward publicly for the first time in an interview with the New York Times to discuss the case he said has “bothered [him] the most” of any he investigated during his 30-year military career.

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Trump's DOJ shocks with 'significant' walk-back of court claim

The Justice Department was forced to walk back a significant claim it made in court that proved false.

In submitting a list of "undisputed facts," the Justice Department alleged that the situation in Oregon was so dangerous "that nearly a quarter" of Federal Protective Services had to be diverted to Portland.

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Trump trolled by Ontario official after being hit with brutal ad during World Series

A Canadian official Monday brutally trolled President Donald Trump after he put out an ad that aired during the World Series and led Trump to call off trade talks with its North American neighbor and impose new tariffs.

Ontario Premier Doug Ford called it "the best ad I ever ran," Newsweek reports.

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White House grows 'frustrated' with Trump Cabinet member amid leaked 'internal wrangling'

Secretary of Transportation Sean Duffy is beginning to anger the White House as drama over his temporary position as administrator of NASA and the "internal wrangling" over the future of the critical agency spills out into the open, CNN reported on Monday.

"Duffy ... has said privately that he would like to not only hold the space chief title permanently, but also fold NASA into the Department of Transportation, one source told CNN," said the report — all of which is causing "frustration" for the White House. "Duffy now has competition as Jared Isaacman – the Elon Musk associate whose nomination for the position was pulled by Trump earlier this year – has re-emerged as a candidate for the top job at NASA."

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