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Marjorie Taylor Greene: Matt Gaetz will prosecute vaccine 'crimes against humanity'

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) predicted that former Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL) would prosecute vaccine-related "crimes against humanity" if he becomes President-elect Donald Trump's next attorney general.

During a House Oversight Committee hearing on pandemic preparedness on Thursday, Greene accused the federal government of using "the American people's hard-earned tax dollars to create viruses that can be unleashed on the world like COVID-19 was."

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'They just won't do it': Trump faces rebellion from officials he wanted in administration

Matt Gaetz's nomination for attorney general may scare off many Justice Department veterans who were around for Donald Trump's first presidency.

Many former DOJ officials were initially excited or at least open to returning to senior roles or as U.S. attorneys, but dozens of those veterans told Bloomberg they are reconsidering whether to sign up again after the president-elect tapped the widely disliked Florida Republican to lead the agency.

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'Beyond-worse-case' Trump scenario is 'now upon us': columnist

The Atlantic's Jonathan Chait expected President-elect Donald Trump's second term to be bad -- but even he found himself in awe at the picks that Trump has made for his cabinet.

In his latest piece, Chait marvels at the figures that Trump wants to bring into his cabinet, including Fox News personality Pete Hegseth, scandal-plagued former Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL), and former Rep. Tulsi Gabbard (R-HI).

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'Hope he's right!' CNN panelist casts doubt on conservative optimism for Trump nominees

Donald Trump shocked nearly everyone on Capitol Hill with his choices for attorney general and director of national intelligence, and a pair of panelists on CNN disagreed over how their nominations would play out.

The president-elect chose former lawmakers Matt Gaetz to lead the Justice Department and Tulsi Gabbard to head up U.S. spy agencies, and conservative commentator Shermichael Singleton believes he'll face an uphill battle getting them confirmed.

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'Don’t go light on this stuff': Legal expert provides road map to 'destroy' Matt Gaetz

In a column for Above The Law, a longtime litigator suggested that, should Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL) make it to the point where he sits down before the Senate Judiciary Committee to face questioning before becoming the next Attorney General, Democrats will have a wealth of options to create havoc with his nomination.

Using news that the Republican-dominated House Ethics Committee has a highly damaging report related to underage sex and drug accusations levied against the Florida Republican that might be available, Mark Herrmann suggested Democratic senators –– or even Republicans opposed to Gaetz's nomination -- should make use of it.

As he wrote, both detailed and broad-based questions put to Gaetz while he is under oath could lead to him invoking his Constitutional right from self-incrimination or create the risk of perjury.

ALSO READ: Why Trump voters should be held accountable for their choice

"I don’t know whether [Donald ] Trump is doing this to own the libs or to confirm that he’s a moron. Either way, the Democrats’ strategy in response to this nomination is obvious: Make Matt Gaetz repeatedly pled the Fifth Amendment right not to incriminate himself during the confirmation hearing," he wrote before adding, "This idea is remarkably easy to execute."

Noting that House Ethics Committee has made it clear they were examining evidence and allegations “including sexual misconduct, illicit drug use, accepting improper gifts and obstructing investigations into his conduct,” Herrmann wrote questions to Gaetz that should stick to those topics.

"Don’t go light on this stuff. Explore it in detail. Learn precisely what sexual misconduct is being investigated, and ask about a dozen questions on that topic," he advised before adding, "Once the questioner was done with sexual misconduct, the questioner should ask a similar series of questions about whether Gaetz has used illicit drugs. And accepted improper gifts. And obstructed investigations into his conduct."

As he noted, these lines of questioning can easily fill the five minutes allotted to each senator in a confirmation hearing.

More to the point, he said, Gaetz's answers or non-answers, will likely be the major news event of the day putting GOP lawmakers on the spot if Gaetz gets a vote on the floor on the Senate floor.

"The questions would (properly) cause Gaetz not to be confirmed, and they would embarrass Trump for even having considered this preposterous idea," he predicted before adding, "Liberals shouldn’t simply scream about what an insane nomination this is. They should wait for the confirmation hearing and then slowly and methodically destroy Gaetz as a nominee."

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Judge puts Jan. 6 trial on hold for the guy who warned him of 'retribution'

Two federal judges agreed to postpone the trial of two alleged Jan. 6 attackers, one of which threatened "retribution."

Politico reported Thursday that not many have been willing to put trials on hold under the guise of potential pardons and clemency from President-elect Donald Trump when he enters office. U.S. District Judges Rudolph Contreras and Carl Nichols claimed they wanted to put trials on hold to save court resources.

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Conservative calls on Mike Johnson to block Trump plan to 'eviscerate' Senate rules

A conservative legal activist who landed in hot water during Brett Kavanaugh's confirmation hearings called on House speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) to ensure that Donald Trump's second-term nominees be subjected to the same scrutiny as the U.S. Supreme Court justice.

Ed Whelan, a distinguished fellow Ethics and Public Policy Center, published an op-ed Thursday in the Washington Post urging the House speaker to block an attempted power grab by the president-elect that would bypass the legislative check on executive appointees.

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With trifecta secured, GOP already eyeing destructive healthcare cuts

Having secured control of both chambers of the U.S. Congress and the White House starting in January, Republicans are making no secret of their intention to pursue sweeping healthcare cuts that would raise costs and imperil insurance coverage for millions of people across the country.

Rep. Jodey Arrington (R-Texas), chairman of the House Budget Committee, told reporters earlier this week that the GOP is looking to use the filibuster-evading reconciliation process to pursue cuts to "mandatory programs"—a category that includes Medicare, Medicaid, and Social Security.

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Indicted lawyer lobbied for Trump to hire Gaetz behind chief of staff's back: report

Republican lawyer Boris Epshteyn, who in June pleaded not guilty to nine felony charges related to his 2020 effort to overturn Arizona’s electoral vote in favor of former president Donald Trump, lobbied the president-elect to pick Matt Gaetz as attorney general, Politico’s Meridith McGraw reports.

Trump shocked officials at the Department of Justice Wednesday when he announced Gaetz as his pick for attorney general. Shortly after, Gaetz resigned from the House of Representatives where he served four terms as representative for Florida’s 1st congressional district.

The Bulwark’s Marc Caputo on Wednesday reported Trump sees Gaetz as “a loyal, longtime adviser, an acid-tongued debate champ, and an aggrieved target of the feds.” And, according to McGraw, the plan to nominate Gaetz for attorney general came together “just hours before it was announced.”

READ MORE: 'Email Putin all our war plans': Experts blast Trump for picking 'Russian spy' Gabbard as intel chief

“[The plan] was hatched aboard Trump’s airplane en route to Washington, on which Gaetz was a passenger,” Politico reports. “… Boris Epshteyn played a central role in the development, lobbying Trump to choose Gaetz.”

Trump’s chief of staff, Susan Wiles, “was in a different, adjacent room on the plane, apparently unaware,” Politico adds.

Trump tapped Wiles as chief of staff last week, making her the “first woman to ever hold the title,” CNN reports.

At the time, Trump’s selection of Wiles “eased some worries from the left about the president-elect’s early intentions.”

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'Order in the Senate!' Sparks fly as Rand Paul derails GOP-backed hurricane relief bill

Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY) clashed with Sen. Thom Tillis (R-NC) over a bill to provide disaster relief funding to parts of Virginia and North Carolina recently devastated by a hurricane.

In a Senate floor speech on Thursday, Tillis called for the relief bill to be passed by unanimous consent. However, Paul demanded an amendment to pay for the bill with funds from green energy programs. The Kentucky senator also complained about unrelated bills that funded the defense of Ukraine.

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'Highly damaging' Matt Gaetz ethics report 'could be leaked today': report

A House Ethics Committee report into Trump attorney general nominee Matt Gaetz could soon see the light of day.

Miami Herald reporter Julie K. Brown, whose work exposing the crimes of Jeffrey Epstein won her a George Polk Award, reports that "sources for Miami Herald/McClatchy confirm that the Ethics Report" into Gaetz is "highly damaging" and "could be leaked today."

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Trump’s defense nominee says he was ‘deemed an extremist’ by military in unearthed video

Pete Hegseth, the host of the weekend edition of “Fox & Friends,” is President-elect Donald Trump’s nominee for U.S. Secretary of Defense — one of the most powerful positions not only in the country but also in the world. Critics, and even some Republican U.S. Senators, are shocked by the choice, with some pointing to what they see as his lack of qualifications and his apparent far-right Christian nationalist ties, as causes for concern.

The London-based nonprofit, Action on Armed Violence (AOAV), issued a statement on "Hegseth’s associations with Christian nationalist movements," and warned of his "ties to extreme Christian theologies ... [that] have raised alarms about the direction of Trump’s potential administration."

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'Unaware': Trump's next chief of staff reportedly left out of Matt Gaetz decision

President-elect Donald Trump appears to have announced he wanted Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL) to be his next attorney general without consulting his next chief of staff — even though she was just in another room of his airplane, according to a new report.

Trump's controversial decision to place Gaetz — the subject of a sex-trafficking investigation — at the top of the Justice Department seems to have been made without the knowledge of Susie Wiles, Politico reported Thursday.

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