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Trump hits major ally with huge 'penalty' for support of Russia

President Donald Trump will hit a major U.S. ally with a massive new tax as a punishment for its alliance with Russia, he announced Wednesday.

Despite Trump cultivating a close friendship with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, a conservative leader who recently visited the White House and has held joint rallies with Trump, the president unleashed an attack on him on Truth Social.

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'God, why am I here?' Flight attendants cried as Trump deportees beaten on planes

Now that he’s free, Leonardo José Colmenares Solórzano, a 31-year-old Venezuelan, wants the world to know that he was tortured over four months in a Salvadoran prison. He said guards stomped on his hands, poured filthy water into his ears and threatened to beat him if he didn’t kneel alongside other inmates and lick their backs.

Now that he’s free, Juan José Ramos Ramos, 39, insists he’s not who President Donald Trump says he is. He’s not a member of a gang or an international terrorist, just a man with tattoos whom immigration agents spotted riding in a car with a Venezuela sticker on the back.

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Rapid-fire Trump social barrage spreads yet another conspiracy theory: 'I believe in Q'

President Donald Trump shared a follower's QAnon conspiracy meme Wednesday in a rapid-fire social media posting spree as the Jeffrey Epstein scandal continues to bear down on him.

The president shared a barrage of responses to his post Tuesday night demanding Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-IA) ram through his judicial nominees over the objections of Democratic senators. One of those replies came from a QAnon adherent.

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Obscure law could force Trump to expose all on Epstein: Dems

Senate Democrats are planning to invoke a 1928 law that should compel the Department of Justice to turn over the files they are withholding from the public on convicted pedophile Jeffrey Epstein.

According to a report from the New York Times, the move by the Democrats will put Republicans on the Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee on the spot with a vote to invoke what is known as the "rule of five."

The Times' Michael Gold is reporting a federal law codified in 1928 contains the “rule of five,” a provision that compels government agencies to provide relevant information if "any five members of that committee, which is the chamber’s chief oversight panel, request it."

The law was designed to allow the party in the minority to receive information in a roundabout way because they don't have the authority to issue a subpoena.

The report adds that provision has rarely been used and may be subject to a court challenge from the very litigious Donald Trump administration. The Democrats are expected to introduce it.

"If the Trump administration were to ignore the Democrats’ request, the resulting legal battle would likely force Senator John Thune, Republican of South Dakota and the majority leader, to decide whether to choose between backing the administration or defending the Senate’s constitutional prerogative for congressional oversight," the Times' Gold is reporting.

In a letter to the administration, the Democratic senators wrote, "After missteps and failed promises by your Department regarding these files, it is essential that the Trump administration provide full transparency."

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'So hot!' Don Jr. gushes over bizarre AI image of denim-clad dad

Donald Trump Jr. posted a bizarre gushing over his dad as he shared a denim-clad AI image of the 79-year-old president with the comment, “so hot!”

The president’s son was inserting himself into the Sydney Sweeney advertising firestorm.

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'X-tortion': Trump accused of forcing advertisers to give millions to ex-ally Musk's X

The Trump administration is weaponizing federal agencies to prop up right-wing media in an unprecedented assault on free speech — with the Federal Trade Commission now forcing advertisers to return to Elon Musk's X platform through a controversial merger condition, an expert wrote Wednesday.

In a stunning break from traditional practice, the FTC announced it would only approve a massive ad agency merger if the combined company agrees to never "refuse to place ads on websites for political reasons," journalist Julia Angwin wrote for the New York Times.

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'DeSantis is the black hole': Florida hides records of college cooperation with ICE

At least 15 Florida universities have quietly signed agreements to voluntarily cooperate with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) — but how those partnerships are being implemented remains largely hidden from view.

Among the first to formalize such a partnership was New College of Florida, a small public liberal arts college whose board of trustees got a conservative makeover by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis in 2023.

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'We're done': White House insiders panic as they admit Epstein furor 'never going to die'

White House insiders warn Donald Trump's presidency is crippled if just a tiny part of his MAGA base fails to get over the Jeffrey Epstein mess that's swirled for more than a week.

Talking to The Washington Post, officials close to Trump said that, though the bulk of his hardcore support seems to be swinging back to him after major outrage, the expectation is that the crisis will never fully go away.

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'Witch hunt!' Hegseth snaps at probe that threatens to destroy future plans

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth lashed out at the results of a bipartisan-ordered review of his part in what has become known as "Signalgate," where he put military personnel in potential danger during what was supposed to be a surprise attack against Houthi rebels.

According to the report that came out last week, Hegseth and the White House's contention that he did not error by broadcasting details of the assault on the unsecure Signal app was a cover-up for the former Fox News personality's national security face-plant.

The Washington Post is reporting that the review comes at an inopportune point for the embattled Hegseth, who is looking beyond his current, and tenuous job, at the Pentagon.

According to the Washington Post, late on Tuesday, Hegseth's spokesperson fell back on the Donald Trump playbook while attempting to dismiss the new criticism.

The inspector general review was ordered by Sens. Roger Wicker (R-MS), chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, and Jack Reed (D-RI), and was blown off by Pentagon spokesman Sean Parnell, who labeled it "clearly a political witch hunt."

He added, "This entire exercise is a sham, conducted in bad faith and with extreme bias.”

The Post's Dan Lamothe also reported the Trump appointee may already have bigger plans after leaving the administration.

"The inspector general’s findings are expected as people who know Hegseth increasingly question what his long-term plans are. He has discussed seeking political office in his adopted home state of Tennessee, including running for governor, according to people familiar with the matter," he wrote, before adding that may be problematic since Tennessee law requires candidates to live in the state for seven years before running for office.

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'Look like fools': DOJ whistleblower urges lawyers to stand up to Trump

Hundreds of employees at the Department of Justice have been pushed out this year for a variety of reasons, although many of them aren't even sure why they were fired.

The firings have spread fear across the DOJ workforce, which has also been demoralized by carrying out President Donald Trump's agenda, reported NPR.

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'Poisoned the well': Ex-prosecutor warns Trump DOJ's lack of credibility will haunt him

President Donald Trump has backed himself into a deep corner on the Jeffrey Epstein case, according to one analyst.

Former federal prosecutor Daniel Richman argued in a recent op-ed for The New York Times that Trump's obsession with loyalty could make it more difficult for him to keep his base together as he tries to distance himself from the Epstein saga. Trump's demand that federal officials like the F.B.I. Director Kash Patel and Attorney General Pam Bondi sell the base a baseless story about Epstein to MAGA is a prime example, Richman argued.

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Fed won't 'escape Trump unscathed' — and is about to cave: analyst

President Donald Trump's public pressure on the Federal Reserve appears to be working, according to a new report.

The Wall Street Journal reported on Tuesday that governors Christopher Waller and Michelle Bowman, both of whom are Trump appointees, are considering dissenting in the next Fed meeting. That would mark the first time in nearly three decades that governors would vote against the chairman.

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Tsunami alerts issued for entire West Coast after massive 8.8 earthquake

An 8.8 magnitude earthquake in Russia triggered tsunami alerts across the Pacific Ocean and the U.S. West Coast.

The U.S. Geological Survey says the earthquake happened 85 miles off the east coast of Russia's Kamchatka Peninsula at a depth of nearly 12 miles.

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