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DOJ lawyer provides roadmap to slowing down Trump's revenge-minded 'maniacs'

Donald Trump's election victory of Vice President Kamala Harris already has staffers at the Justice Department planning their exits, fearful they will either be fired because they are not considered loyal to him or because they want no part of what is expected to be a wave of investigations of his enemies.

According to a report from Politico, for some career DOJ officials their worst dreams have come true believing the department will be highly politicized in a way it has never been before.

In an interview with Politico's Josh Gerstein, one DOJ prosecutor admitted, "Everyone I’ve talked to, mostly lawyers, are losing their minds. The fear is that career leadership and career employees everywhere are either going to leave or they’re going to be driven out.”

ALSO READ: 'Bloodbath': Inside the MAGA playbook for mayhem after Election Day

According to the report, some staffers were around during the first Trump administration and survived by keeping their heads down, but expect a second round under a vengeful Trump will be near to impossible with Gerstein reporting they "know Trump’s anger at the department has only deepened in the past four years as it launched two unprecedented criminal prosecutions against him."

According to one attorney who plans to stick around, they would like to see others follow suit because, even if they can't derail the Trump vengeance train, they can slow it down.

“You need career people there to make sure that the maniacs in charge just can’t, like, run roughshod over federal laws and DOJ practice,” they explained. “I was able to tone down…briefs in a way that people who would have replaced me, would not have.”

Former White House lawyer Norm Eisen agreed.

"They should absolutely stay,” he advised “That’s easy for me to say because I don’t have to deal with a boss who’s appointed by Donald Trump every day, but I know from my own experience in government that you can’t just show up and snap your fingers. And the continuity of that career civil service staff will be very, very important to the preservation of the republic.”

“Donald Trump has learned about how to manage the federal bureaucracy, so, sure, it’s going to be worse. But that doesn’t mean it will be easy for him, so I think it will be important for people to stay put,” he added.

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'Three early tests' that will dictate Trump’s 'credibility' on the 'world stage': expert

Politico Magazine editor-at-large Matthew Kaminski argues in a Sunday, November 10 article that President-Elect Donald Trump "is a far stronger figure than" he was in 2016, "when he was distrusted by Republican mandarins and despised by Democrats for taking the White House after losing by three million votes."

The MAGA leader is now "stronger at home, and as a result abroad," the former Politico editor-chief-chief emphasizes.

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Trump allies served notice by Arizona AG they'll still face jail time despite threats

During an appearance on MSNBC on Sunday morning to explain how her state will be girding for an onslaught of attacks from incoming president Donald Trump, the Democratic attorney general of Arizona served notice to allies of Trump that their criminal activities will still be prosecuted.

Speaking with MSNBC host Ali Velshi, AG Kris Mayes was asked about reports that the president-elect will try to interfere with how states conduct their business.

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Conservative pundit blasts Trump: 'Sore loser in 2020 is a sore winner in 2024'

Conservative pundit George Will argued that President-elect Donald Trump would not appoint people who previously disagreed with him because he was both a "sore loser" and a "sore winner."

During a Sunday panel discussion on NewsNation, host Chris Stirewalt noted that Trump had indicated he would not give jobs to former United Nations Ambassador Nikki Haley or former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo even though they had served in the former president's previous administration.

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Fox News host turns tables on Lara Trump for claiming Harris lost by 'insulting people'

Fox News host Howard Kurtz called out Republican National Committee (RNC) co-chair Lara Trump after she insisted that Vice President Kamala Harris lost to President-elect Donald Trump by "insulting people."

"If you're running for president of the United States, you better lay out a great plan for the American people and tell them how you're going to make their life better, not just continually attack the opposition," Trump told Kurtz in a Sunday interview on Fox News.

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MAGA lawmaker pushes criminal prosecutions of 'Judge Merchan and his daughter'

Reps. Anna Paulina Luna (R-FL) and Cory Mills (R-FL) floated possible criminal cases against special counsel Jack Smith, Judge Juan Merchan and his daughter, Democratic fundraiser Loren Merchan, over prosecutions of President-elect Donald Trump.

Merchan oversaw a criminal case where Trump was convicted of 34 felonies in New York. Smith brought charges against Trump for trying to subvert the 2020 presidential election and mishandling classified documents.

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'Whoa!' CNN conservative stunned over proposal to transfer power to Harris

A former aide to Vice President Kamala Harris got a reaction out of CNN's resident conservative on Sunday morning when he suggested President Joe Biden turn over the reins of power to his old boss before Donald Trump is sworn in again.

During the panel segment at the end of CNN's "State of the Union," host Dana Bash asked ex-Harris communications director Jamal Simmons what to look for now that the election has been settled.

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'He committed a bunch of crimes': Dem rips Fox News pundit for whining over Trump cases

Fox News pundits battled Sunday over whether prosecutions of Donald Trump's alleged crimes should continue after he won the 2024 election.

During a Fox News Sunday panel discussion, Fox News contributor Mollie Hemingway dismissed Democrats who are concerned about the cases against Trump "going away" after his presidential election.

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Jim Jordan cornered on CNN over 2024 election fraud accusations – until Trump won

Confronted on CNN on Sunday morning, Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH) didn't have much to say when asked what happened to Republican party accusations that the 2024 election would be rife with fraud –– until Donald Trump won.

Speaking with host Dana Bash, the verbose Jordan continuously changed the subject after she pointed that, on election night, former president Trump was still claiming the the election was going to be stolen from him.

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Ex-Pence aide: Trump recruiting 'carnies at the Iowa State Fair' as policy experts

Olivia Troye, a former aide to Mike Pence, revealed that Donald Trump's team aims to replace policy experts with "carnies at the Iowa State Fair."

During a Sunday panel discussion on MSNBC, Troye explained how the incoming Trump administration would use a policy known as Schedule F to replace policy experts serving in government positions.

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'Ridiculous': MSNBC hosts jump on conservative for blowing off Trump's ties to Putin

The chairman of a conservative think tank stepped in it more than once during a visit to MSNBC's "The Weekend" and found himself on the receiving end when he tried to blow off Donald Trump's relationship with Vladimir Putin.

Speaking with co-hosts Symone Sanders Townsend and Michael Steele, Michael Needham of the conservative American Compass was pressed on how President-elect Donald Trump should deal with Putin's continuing war with Ukraine.

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Republicans face a 'double-edged sword' if they seek revenge for Trump: legal expert

Members of Congress bent on getting revenge for the way they think Donald Trump was treated after he left office may be stepping into precarious territory — particularly if they make good on threats to go after special counsel Jack Smith.

In a column for MSNBC, attorney Shan Wu noted a post on X from owner Elon Musk –– now a staunch Trump ally –– that threatened "Jack Smith’s abuse of the justice system cannot go unpunished."

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'Hail Trump!' SNL crew fawns before president-elect in sarcastic post-election show

The Saturday Night Live crew bowed down to Donald Trump in a sarcastic show of praise just days after the election.

And during the spoof honoring of the new president-elect, the cast members heaped blame on their colleagues in case Trump made good on his threats of retribution.

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