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'Worst-case scenarios are really bad': Trump reportedly on track to 'betray' his base

Donald Trump is on the verge of betraying some of his strongest supporters in rural America, a report suggests.

The president-elect has threatened to impose sweeping tariffs that could wreck agricultural producers, who also depend labor from the undocumented migrants that he intends to deport by the millions. That combined with a purported intention to slash spending on Medicaid and education could devastate small-town communities, reported The Atlantic.

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'Still Republican': Sen. Lisa Murkowski scrambles after saying 'not attached to' GOP label

Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-AK) on Thursday was forced to clarify that she’s "still a Republican" after saying moments earlier that she was "more comfortable" without a party label than with "an identity as a Republican," Politico reported.

The comments from the moderate senator, who has come under fire from MAGA world for her potential opposition to President-elect Donald Trump’s nominees, came during a discussion in Washington hosted by the group No Labels.

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Woman jailed after using shooting suspect's catchphrase as insurance company denied claim

A Florida woman was charged after police said she threatened an insurance company with the phrase "delay, deny, depose."

An arrest affidavit obtained by WFLA said the FBI contacted the Lakeland Police Department on Tuesday with information about an alleged threat.

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Official report refutes 'Fedsurrection' claim

A report from the Department of Justice's Office of Inspector General found "no evidence" to support the claims of Republican officials who alleged undercover FBI agents provoked the riot at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.

In a comprehensive report released Thursday, the DOJ watchdog said it had reviewed evidence and testimony following the Jan. 6 riot, but there were no "undercover employees in the various protest crowds, or at the Capitol, on January 6."

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'On day one': A list of the things Donald Trump says he'll do his first day in office

As with 2016, President-elect Donald Trump has made sweeping promises of what he intends to accomplish on his first day in office.

It took about a week for Trump to pen an executive order to ban people from coming into the U.S. from predominantly Muslim countries. The courts immediately stopped it, and after months of litigation, it had to be rewritten to include at least one non-Muslim country.

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'Eye-opening episode': Ex-Trump aide says Dems turned one issue against president-elect

During a discussion on the decision of FBI Director Christopher Wray to step down from his job before Donald Trump retakes the reins of the government, a former official in Trump's first administration recalled when Trump fired ex-Director James Comey and it blew up in his face.

Speaking to the panel, former White House Communications Director Mike Dubke explained that when Trump got rid of Comey he felt that Democrats, still angry at Comey for giving Trump's first campaign a boost with his investigation comments about Hillary Clinton, would be pleased.

That did not turn out to be the case and it came back to haunt the now-president-elect.

ALSO READ: Agenda 47: Alarm sounded about Trump’s dystopian plans for his second term

As the conversation turned to both Republicans and Democrats having concerns about the FBI, Dubke interjected, "I will add this from my time in the White House, it was during the Comey firing that the pure power politics of that firing really came home for Trump because he thought when he was moving forward with this, that [Sen. Chuck] Schumer and [Rep. Nancy] Pelosi, because of what Clinton said and and the views of Democrats about the election in 2016, he thought they'd applaud this."

"When he made those calls and they turned that around and made this all about Russia and made this all about pure power politics, that, I think, was an eye-opening episode for the president," he added.

You can watch below or at the link.

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Kari Lake tapped to lead federal broadcasting agency in new Trump administration

President-elect Donald Trump has tapped election denier and two-time failed Republican candidate Kari Lake to lead Voice of America in his new administration.

Trump made the selection Wednesday night, ending speculation that Lake, a former TV news anchor turned MAGA favorite, would be selected as the incoming president’s ambassador to Mexico. She will instead serve as director of the government-funded media agency Voice of America, which produces overseas broadcasts that have traditionally remained nonpartisan.

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Exclusive: GOP senators reveal Fox News staff have launched lobbying blitz for Hegseth

As Vice President-elect Sen. J.D. Vance walked the marble halls of the Capitol this week and attended Wednesday's Republican Conference lunch to advocate for Donald Trump's defense secretary nominee, Pete Hegseth, the host's colleagues back at Fox News were also working the phones.

At least two senators have been contacted by people who work with the Fox and Friends Weekend co-host.

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Trump expected to be named Time's 'Person of the Year' — again

President-elect Donald Trump will be named Time magazine's "Person of the Year," according to reports.

Time was expected to make the announcement Thursday morning, Politico reported on Wednesday.

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FBI Director Chris Wray announces resignation ahead of Trump taking office

FBI Director Christopher Wray announced his intention to resign ahead of President-elect Donald Trump's inauguration.

Fox News correspondent David Spunt confirmed that Wray was informing FBI staff of his decision on Wednesday.

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Trump pick Pete Hegseth moves to get in front of 'hit piece' on acceptance to West Point

Donald Trump's defense secretary nominee Pete Hegseth appeared to try to get ahead of a report indicating that he was not accepted to West Point.

The former Fox News host graduated from Princeton University in 2003 and was then commissioned as an infantry officer in the Army National Guard, but he posted a copy of a letter on X purportedly showing he was accepted to the United States Military Academy by its superintendent, which he says contradicts a forthcoming report by ProPublica.

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'No obedience in advance': Alvin Bragg said to have shown 'no intention of going quietly'

A lot of Donald Trump's legal problems vanished when he won the presidency, but one Trump prosecutor isn't backing down, a legal expert said Wednesday.

Former federal prosecutor Joyce Vance raised the discussion, pointing to Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg's recent legal filing indicating that he isn’t ready to let Trump off the hook in his fraud case involving hush money payments to adult film star Stormy Daniels.

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Nancy Mace says she was 'physically accosted' and injured at Capitol 'by a pro-tr*ns man'

A man is facing charges after police said he attacked Rep. Nancy Mace (R-SC), leaving her with a brace on her wrist.

The Capitol Police said Tuesday that they arrested a James McIntyre, 33, of Illinois, just after 6 p.m. Tuesday after a Congressional staffer reported an incident in the Rayburn House Office Building. House Division officers and agents with the Threat Assessment Section "tracked down the suspect," police said in a statement to Axios.

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