SmartNews

Trump advances plan to fill federal government with 'political cronies'

The largest federal labor union in the U.S. said Friday that tens of thousands of federal workers could soon "have their jobs politicized" and be swiftly fired under a new rule proposed by the Office of Personnel Management.

Under the rule, an estimated 50,000 career civil servants would be reclassified as "at-will" employees, removing civil service protections and making it easier for the federal government to dismiss them.

Keep reading... Show less

'No scalps' policy forces Trump into long-running 'losing streak': Morning Joe host

The revival of the Signalgate scandal will be a test of President Donald Trump's leadership and loyalty to Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, according to MSNBC's Jonathan Lemire.

The defense secretary had already been facing criticism and calls for his ouster for revealing military plans on the commercially available Signal app with a reporter present, and those calls are growing louder after new reporting revealed that he discussed those operations in another group chat that included his wife, brother and personal attorney.

Keep reading... Show less

'Wrecking ball': Analyst warns Trump move is scoring own goal for US

President Donald Trump is cracking down on the ability of international students to attend American schools all around the country, but he's particularly focused on using this policy to starve Harvard University of funding.

Those attacks are killing a golden goose that makes America's higher education system one of the best in the world, wrote Zeeshan Aleem for MSNBC.

Keep reading... Show less

Pope uses final speech to blast Trump policies: 'How much contempt?'

One of Pope Francis’s last acts was to slam President Donald Trump policies.

The pope died early Monday at 88 years old.

Keep reading... Show less

'Unlike anything I've seen': Veteran Pentagon reporter stunned at level of 'infighting'

A veteran Pentagon reporter can't recall a more chaotic environment within the upper echelons of U.S. military leadership as leaks spill out about Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth.

The defense department's former chief spokesman John Ullyot Sunday warned that a month of "total chaos" had left Pentagon leadership "near collapse," and New York Times reporter Greg Jaffe told MSNBC's "Morning Joe" about his new article revealing that Hegseth had been involved in a second group chat to discuss confidential military operations with questionable individuals.

Keep reading... Show less

Pete Hegseth responds to latest Signal scandal — with attack on Democrats

Defense Secretary hit out late Sunday at demands that he be fired after a bombshell report claimed he's shared confidential attack plans on Signal for a second time — on this occasion, with his wife and brother.

The embattled head of the Pentagon reacted to a tweet from the account Democrats.org demanding that he goes.

Keep reading... Show less

Key Trump advisers prepare 'skeptical' report attacking IVF access

A “coalition of people want to see more babies born” in the U.S. — and President Donald Trump is takin note, according to a report from the New York Times.

The nation's birthrate in the United States has been falling since 2007 and Times reporter Caroline Kitchener called it, “A warning of a future in which a smaller workforce cannot support an aging population and the social safety net.” Adding, “If the birthrate is not turned around, [different groups] fear, the country’s economy could collapse and, ultimately, human civilization could be at risk.”

Keep reading... Show less

'Fallen into the trap': Expert warns Trump he made crippling mistake in first 100 days

Donald Trump will cross the 100-day threshold for his second presidency next week and, if history is a guide, his honeymoon period could soon come to an end.

The president has worked quickly to dismantle chunks of the federal government, unraveled post-World War II military and economic alliances and upended global trade networks. His approval ratings are already falling before the public even feels the impact of his sweeping tariffs, wrote former Bill Clinton adviser Doug Sosnick for the New York Times.

Keep reading... Show less

'Near collapse': Insider warns 'month from hell' has left Pentagon in total chaos

A month of “total chaos” has left the top echelons of the Pentagon “near collapse,” a former chief spokesman at the department and an adviser on Donald Trump’s 2016 campaign warned.

The most recent straw was the revelation that department head Pete Hegseth shared confidential attack plans on Signal with his wife and brother — just weeks after he did the same with a journalist.

Keep reading... Show less

‘We don’t have an option not to fight’: How Black women are resisting

< This story was originally reported by Errin Haines of The 19th. Meet Errin and read more of her reporting on gender, politics and policy.

This column first appeared in The Amendment, a biweekly newsletter by Errin Haines, The 19th’s editor-at-large. Subscribe today to get early access to her analysis.

Keep reading... Show less

'Full-blown meltdown at the Pentagon': Hegseth reportedly 'unlikely to remain in his role'

U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, who has been mired in controversy since Donald Trump first nominated him, is now "unlikely to remain in his role," according to his own former department spokesperson on Sunday.

The report includes "remarkable accusations" from a former Hegseth aide and comes the same day as it was reported that the Secretary was involved in a second unsecured Signal chat in which sensitive attack plans were shared. Hegseth was mocked for the reported security misstep.

Keep reading... Show less

'Get in the mud with a pig': Law professor gives lesson on Trump's 'extortion' scheme

A law professor on Sunday explained what she would tell lawyers who are considering cutting a deal with Donald Trump.

The president has inked numerous deals with law firms who have represented interests opposite to his own, sometimes requiring them to perform pro bono services in exchange for avoiding punishments at the federal level.

Keep reading... Show less

'What a disaster!' Internet shocked by Pete Hegseth's latest 'stunning security failure'

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth is in hot water once again after details emerged on Sunday about a purported second unsecured Signal chat in which attack plans were shared.

Hegseth over the weekend got wrapped up in another scandal involving a second, previously unreported, Signal chat in which sensitive attack plans were shared, this time with his wife and his brother, according to a news report.

Keep reading... Show less