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'No more': House GOP leader urges Trump to stop taking Cabinet picks from Congress

As President-elect Donald Trump makes his first key appointments to his incoming administration, one top House Republican is asking him to stop cutting into the GOP's numbers in the lower chamber of Congress.

NBC News reported that the president-elect has announced several House Republicans will be joining his Cabinet. Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-NY), who is the chair of the House Republican Conference, will be the next U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations, while Rep. Mike Waltz (R-FL) will be his National Security Advisor. Former Rep. Lee Zeldin (R-NY) — who left Congress in 2023 — will be joining the incoming Trump administration as its Environmental Protection Agency administrator.

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MAGA's future collapse could come from gains Trump is currently celebrating: CNN analysis

Donald Trump's electoral gains paradoxically offer Democrats a glimmer of hope in the next few elections, according to a new analysis.

The former president picked up wins in urban, suburban and rural counties and improved on his vote share in 49 of the 50 states, with improvements in 90 percent of all U.S. counties. But a new CNN analysis suggests the magnitude of those gains is the result of a factor that might work against Republicans next time.

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Here's how Dems could blunt MAGA's wrath on a key constituency for 2 years: report

President-elect Donald Trump is expected to install new leadership at the Department of Labor that will be significantly more hostile to unions than President Joe Biden's administration has been.

However, labor and employment law firm Jackson Lewis has posted an analysis showing that Democrats in the United States Senate right now could do something to protect unions from the full brunt of MAGA wrath — if they get to work quickly.

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'Proved herself': MAGA congresswoman urges Marco Rubio be replaced by Lara Trump in Senate

Republican National Committee co-chair Lara Trump could become a U.S. senator if Gov. Ron DeSantis (R-FL) takes the advice of Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R-FL).

After Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL) was named President-elect Donald Trump's incoming Secretary of State nominee, Luna told right-wing podcaster Benny Johnson that the RNC co-chair should replace him in the Senate.

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‘No excuse’: Dems have just weeks to get dozens of Biden’s judicial nominees confirmed

As Congress enters the lame duck session Tuesday with Republicans set to take the majority in both chambers and the White House next year, Senate Democrats have just a few weeks to get dozens of President Joe Biden's remaining judicial nominees confirmed. Barring impeachment, a federal judge is appointed for life and cannot be forcibly removed.

U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) is urging her colleagues to prioritize judicial confirmations.

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'MAGA backlash': Trump supporters reportedly triggered by news of Cabinet pick

News that President-elect Donald Trump could select Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL) as secretary of state has triggered an almost immediate "MAGA backlash," according to a new report.

"MAGA-minded" warriors — among them allies of Trump’s former director of national intelligence Ric Grenell — have already begun to panic and cast doubt about whether he was truly chosen by Trump, Politico reported Tuesday.

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Trump re-works campaign committee to allow him to fundraise without reelection push: CNN

Under the constitution, Donald Trump's presidency has to end after the completion of his second term in office, meaning he cannot fundraise for a reelection campaign.

CNN's David Wright on Tuesday noted a shift in Trump's campaign into a leadership political action committee (PAC).

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This 'very nihilistic' MAGA argument is paving the way for autocracy: journalist

The New Yorker's Susan Glasser this week outlined how a second Donald Trump term is likely to go, and she warned to beware of what she described as "nihilistic" arguments aimed at forcing opponents to let their guards down.

In an interview with The New Republic, Glasser said that Trump supporters were cynically dismissing concerns about a slide into authoritarian rule because he never turned into Adolf Hitler during his first term — while overlooking the fact that he only was accused of leaving office after inciting a deadly riot at the United States Capitol in a last-ditch bid to illegally remain in power.

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'It's coming': The View host expects Trump's Cabinet picks to get far worse

The co-hosts of "The View" are shocked to see what they think are reasonably rational appointees to Donald Trump's Cabinet — but they warn it won't continue.

Ana Navarro, who was once a Republican strategist, said that she came up in Florida GOP politics with Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL) and they still share many of the same opinions about foreign policy.

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'Simply destroy the records': Pro-Trump AG lobs federal court attack at Jack Smith

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton is showing his support for President-elect Donald Trump by lobbing a federal court attack at special counsel Jack Smith, court records show.

Paxton on Monday demanded a Texas federal court judge issue an emergency order forcing Smith to preserve all records of the two criminal court cases he brought against Trump, federal documents show.

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'Clearly paid off': Expert admits Trump stumbled onto a winning legal tactic

Donald Trump's legal strategy seems to have paid off now that he's been re-elected as president without serving time behind bars for the crimes he's accused of committing, an expert said Tuesday.

The former president has been indicted four times on 88 criminal charges, and while he's awaiting sentencing on 34 felony counts in the New York hush-money case, the other prosecutions have seemingly stalled out or ended altogether after he successfully prevented them from moving forward, reported CNN.

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Trump 'border czar' vows to deploy U.S. military for sprawling mass deportation plan

President-elect Donald Trump's incoming "border czar," Tom Homan, revealed that the U.S. military would be involved in a plan to conduct mass deportations in the new administration.

During a Tuesday interview on Fox Business, host Maria Bartiromo asked Homan how he would deal with sanctuary cities that refuse to cooperate with Trump's deportation scheme.

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3 reasons why a Trump White House might not be a disaster for Ukraine

Among the first world leaders to speak with Donald Trump following his election victory on Nov. 5, 2024 was Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. Congratulating the U.S. president-elect, Zelenskyy expressed confidence in the “potential for stronger cooperation” between the two nations.

Others are less sure. For many foreign policy observers, Trump’s victory – together with his lukewarm attitude toward NATO, criticism of the amount of U.S. aid being sent to Ukraine and vows to reach a deal to end the ongoing war in Eastern Europe – has stoked uncertainty over Washington’s commitment to doing everything it can to support Ukraine repel Russian invaders.

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