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Kash Patel ally pushes him to end FBI intel branch key to domestic terror investigations

A former special agent who claims he received financial backing from a foundation associated with Kash Patel, the man nominated by President-elect Donald Trump to serve as the FBI’s next director, has called for the agency to shut down its Intelligence Branch, which plays a strategic role in domestic violent extremism investigations.

Steve Friend, an ex-agent who was suspended in 2022 after complaining about the agency’s use of a SWAT team to arrest a Jan. 6 offender, made the comment on Monday during an interview with podcaster Carl Jackson. He also called on Patel to “get rid of” the agency’s Integrated Program Management system which he claimed “perversely incentivizes the FBI to go after people” to inflate case numbers.

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'Outrageously stupid': MSNBC's Morning Joe pushes back at critics of his Trump meeting

The co-host of MSNBC's "Morning Joe" kicked off Thursday morning with an extraordinary 22-minute combined rant that addressed a blow-up with conservative guest David Frum on Wednesday that then turned into a defense of their highly-criticized meeting with President-elect Donald Trump.

On Wednesday co-host Mika Brzezinski spoke about a comment Frum made about Fox News and the alleged drunk behavior of former employee Pete Hegseth. With Brezinski calling the remark "flippant," Frum left the show and penned a column for the Atlantic to complain about how he was treated, writing, "It is an ominous sign that Morning Joe felt it had to apologize for something I said."

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Trump picks avid poker player and auctioneer to head IRS

President-elect Donald Trump on Wednesday selected former Rep. Billy Long (R-MO), an auctioneer and ardent poker player, to be the country’s next IRS commissioner.

The pick was announced Wednesday on Trump’s Truth Social platform as he continues the rollout of his second-term administration picks. Earlier in the day, he selected billionaire private astronaut Jared Isaacman for NASA chief and later announced Sen. Kelly Loeffler (R-GA) as his choice to lead the Small Business Administration.

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'Muddying the water': Strategist thinks Trump team actively leaking intel to sink Hegseth

Donald Trump and his transition team are firing a warning shot at Fox News personality Pete Hegseth and his troubled nomination for Secretary of Defense by allowing leaks that they are considering other people for the role, Biden White House communications strategist Meghan Hays told a CNN panel on Wednesday.

Hegseth appears not to have the votes among Senate Republicans for confirmation, amid the release of a police report into his alleged history of sexual assault, and colleagues coming forward to say he has a severe drinking problem. He has sat for an interview with Fox News to try to get all of these problems cleared up — but the Trump team is already floating replacing him with Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis.

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Jerry Nadler steps down from influential position and backs Jamie Raskin

Rep. Jerry Nadler (D-NY) will no longer serve as the ranking member of the House Judiciary Committee and is opening the door to Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-MD) to take his place.

The New York Times reports that the 77-year-old Nadler is withdrawing from consideration to be the next top Democrat on the committee after Raskin reportedly garnered enough support from fellow Democrats to take his place.

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United Healthcare CEO gunned down outside Manhattan hotel: report

A masked man shot and killed the CEO of UnitedHealth outside a hotel in midtown Manhattan, according to reports

Insurance executive Brian Thompson had arrived around 6:46 a.m. at the Hilton Hotel for a conference when a gunman who had allegedly been lying in wait for him opened fire and then fled, reported the New York Post.

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'Last ditch effort' by Hegseth to save nomination likely too late: MSNBC analyst

According to MSNBC host Jonathan Lemire, Fox News personality Pete Hegseth's interview scheduled for Wednesday is too little too late as he tries to salvage his chances of becoming Donald Trump's secretary of defense.

The embattled Hegseth is fighting an avalanche of news reports about both his reported drinking problems as well as his treatment of women, which has led influential Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) to cast doubt on Hegseth's future in the incoming Trump administration.

Speaking with "Morning Joe" co-host Joe Scarborough, Lemire claimed Hegseth is hoping for salvation by sitting down for an interview with Fox's Bret Baier on Wednesday.

ALSO READ: Will Trump back the FBI’s battle against domestic extremists? He won’t say.

"A few things here," Lemire began. "First, that NBC News story that suggests that Hegseth would show up on set at Fox smelling of alcohol, one of the reporters behind that story is joining us in a few minutes. You're right to underline Donald Trump's distaste for alcohol, he has said repeatedly he has never drank [sic] in his life, he blames it for the death of his brother, someone he cared about deeply."

"He also judges harshly people who he thinks drink too much," he added before recalling, "Let's remember Rudy Giuliani lost a cabinet post after the 2016 election in part because Trump saw him drinking too much."

"I heard from Republicans yesterday as well, even as Hegseth has been making the rounds on Capitol Hill, that his nomination is in deep danger," he reported. "There could be up to six or more Republican senators, you only need four, who are ready to sink his nomination including Lindsey Graham who normally goes along with whatever Trump wants. Hegseth appearing on Fox later today for an interview, which in a sense may be a last-ditch effort to save that nomination but he's got an uphill climb."

Watch below or at the link here.

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EXCLUSIVE: Senate Dems consider whether Biden should ‘clear the slate’ and pardon Trump

President Joe Biden’s 180-degree flip on Sunday from his promise not to pardon his son Hunter Biden prompted fierce backlash from politicians and pundits, calling the move a “tremendous strategic blunder that will haunt Democrats,” “the worst thing a president could possibly do to his party” and “the biggest public corruption scandal ever.”

While some legal experts have called Biden “justified” in the pardon of his son in anticipation of continued attacks from the incoming Donald Trump administration, departing Sen. Joe Manchin (I-WV) suggested that Biden could make the scales of justice “more balanced” by preemptively pardoning the president-elect.

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Trump's request for hush money dismissal — citing Biden pardon — wasn't for judge: Expert

Legal experts ripped apart Donald Trump's latest request to have his guilty verdict in New York tossed, in which he cited Hunter Biden's sweeping pardon.

Trump's lawyers filed a motion to dismiss the guilty verdict, handed down by a New York state jury in May. The questionable filing prompted legal analysts to post takedowns on social media and say they expected the judge will ignore the request.

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Trump transition team finally agrees to FBI background checks for nominees

Donald Trump has used a private company to perform background checks on some of his appointees to serve in his Cabinet and refused to sign an agreement that he would let the FBI do the checks.

That ended Tuesday when Trump's transition team finally signed a memorandum of understanding with the Department of Justice, agreeing to allow the FBI to conduct background checks, reported legal analyst Aaron Parnas on Bluesky.

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'You’ll pay for it!' Leaked videos show fringe pastors' warnings on interracial marriage

The Arizona Star has obtained videos showing multiple pastors at a Pentecostalism offshoot known as "The Message" that explicitly warns congregants against dating and marrying people of other races or ethnicities.

According to the Arizona Star, The Message was founded in the 1950s by a self-style "prophet" named William Branham, who drew attention not only for his purported faith healings but also preached heavily against racial mixing.

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Secret Service opens fire on suspects attempting break-ins near Biden official's home

Secret Service agents fired gunshots at suspects seen attempting to break into vehicles near Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen's home, according to a report.

The suspects were not hit by the gunfire and fled in their own vehicle Tuesday just after 1:30 a.m. from the Northwest Washington neighborhood where the Biden administration official lives, and they remain at large, reported the New York Post.

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'No easy answer': Report highlights problem that could 'mess with Trump's first 100 days'

President-elect Donald Trump and his party may quickly find themselves engulfed in a battle to fund the federal government that NBC News reports could "mess with" the first 100 days of his second term.

What's more, writes NBC News, there appears to be "no easy answer" to resolve the situation.

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