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'We lost sight': Russian dissidents have warning for anti-Trump Americans

Miriam Elder, a veteran journalist who reported from Russia for nearly a decade, has interviewed dissident Russian journalists who are delivering warnings to Trump-opposing Americans about growing complacent during his second term.

Writing in the New York Times, Elder describes the political apathy that took over much of Russia's middle class after Vladimir Putin fully returned to the presidency in 2012 and promptly cracked down on dissent.

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'It's bad!' CNN panelist uses Elon Musk's own resume to shut down Republican's praise

New York Times journalist Lulu Garcia-Navarro on Monday shut down Republican operative Matt Gorman's praise of X CEO Elon Musk over his ambitions to drastically alter the federal government.

During a panel discussion on CNN, Gorman argued that Musk and his so-called "Department of Government Efficiency" would find ways to "make government work better" — and then added that he was "interested to see what they come up with."

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Your holiday mail is at risk as USPS copes with alarming rise of theft and security issues

As Americans flood the mail with holiday cards and gifts, their valuables and personal information remain at risk for theft due to internal bad actors and issues with deploying modernized technology, according to two recent reports from the United States Postal Service’s Office of Inspector General.

Thefts committed by U.S. Postal Service employees spiked to 1,790 closed cases in fiscal year 2023, and totaled 5,961 closed internal mail theft cases between October 1, 2019, and September 30, 2023, according to an Oct. 30 report.

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'Are you trying to kill us?' MAGA voters complain about Trump's 'depressing' nominees

Some of Donald Trump's most loyal supporters aren't forgetting how upset they are about two key nominees for his upcoming presidential administration.

Trump said on Friday that he had chosen Dr. Janette Nesheiwat, a physician and Fox News medical contributor, as his surgeon general. Raw Story reported the following day that some of the former and incoming president's biggest fans were not happy about it.

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'Most corrupt president': Outrage mounts over Trump's latest move in government takeover

Donald Trump's transition has failed to sign ethics agreements, which in turn has reportedly allowed the team to run on "secret money," and the president-elect's critics are outraged.

Trump has been quick to announce his Cabinet nominations over the last two weeks, but he has been slow to reveal the "names of the donors who are funding his transition effort," according to a Sunday New York Times report. This is part of Trump's failure to adhere to ethics norms, which has also reportedly led to his team being left in the dark on key issues.

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Ex-Republican puts GOP on notice that Party may 'become an instrument of its decline'

Donald Trump will force Republican lawmakers to pave the way to their own demise, according to a conservative writer.

New York Times columnist David French, a former writer for the conservative National Review, wrote an article Sunday explaining how, in his view, Trump is forcing GOP members of Congress to give up their Constitutional authority. The piece coincides with the former and incoming president's efforts to subvert the Senate's power by forcing recess appointments for his administration's Cabinet nominees.

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Marjorie Taylor Greene threatens to remove 'toilets in Africa' with help of Elon Musk

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) vowed to support Elon Musk's so-called Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) by investigating NPR and "toilets in Africa."

"Elon Musk will be leading the newly created Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE, under the Trump administration, aimed at cutting at least $2 trillion said to be government waste of taxpayer money," Fox News host Maria Bartiromo explained during an interview with Greene on Sunday.

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'You don't care?' ABC host stunned as GOP senator shrugs off FBI checks for Trump picks

ABC host Jonathan Karl pressed Sen. Bill Hagerty (R-TN) after he suggested that FBI background checks for President-elect Donald Trump's nominees weren't necessary.

During a Sunday interview on ABC's This Week program, Karl noted that Sen. Joni Ernst (R-IA) had called for an FBI background check for defense secretary nominee Pete Hegseth, who faced sexual misconduct allegations.

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'This creep needs to go away': Critics panic as 'unemployed' Matt Gaetz hints at next step

Former Republican U.S. Representative Matt Gaetz caused a stir on Saturday as he hinted about his next steps in the political world after withdrawing his name from consideration as Donald Trump's next Attorney General.

Trump nominated Gaetz for the top legal spot despite Gaetz having limited legal experience and never having served as a prosecutor. Gaetz removed himself from the nomination process after hitting speed bumps, including those related to a yet-to-be-released ethics report surrounding allegations about drug use and child sex trafficking.

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'Bizarre': Kellyanne Conway reportedly confronted a 'shaken' Meghan McCain over old grudge

Kellyanne Conway, the former senior counselor and current confidante to Donald Trump, confronted fellow conservative Meghan McCain over comments McCain made about Conway's marriage on The View, according to a Saturday report.

Conway, who is now divorced from the anti-Trump conservative attorney George Conway, was appearing at the same event alongside McCain, who was once a host on The View and is now a podcaster. It was like a scene from "Real Housewives," according to the Daily Beast.

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'Some voters feel betrayed' as Trump gives 'middle finger' to campaign promises: analyst

Donald Trump promised during his presidential campaign that he had nothing to do with Project 2025, and wanted nothing to do with it, but his embrace of figures close to the conservative plan to overhaul the federal government could be upsetting some of his voters, according to a political analyst.

Alexi McCammond, who serves as an opinion editor for the Washington Post and has previously commented on Trump's relationship to the MAGA base, appeared on MSNBC on Saturday. The host, Alex Witt, asked about Trump appointing those with close ties to Project 2025.

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'Booo!' Trump fans say they are 'disheartened' after he gives 'slap in the face to MAGA'

Donald Trump made an announcement about his upcoming administration, and his biggest fans are not happy about it.

Trump said on Friday that he had chosen Dr. Janette Nesheiwat, a physician and Fox News medical contributor, as his surgeon general. She also "serves as a medical director at CityMD, a network of urgent care centers in New York and New Jersey," according to Politico's reporting.

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'It will be panic time': Trump's plans are painting House Republicans into a corner

President-elect Donald Trump's decision to cherry-pick multiple members of House Republican caucus to fill spots in his administration is setting off alarms with GOP insiders that he is making House Speaker Mike Johnson's job even more difficult than it has already been for the Louisiana Republican.

According to a report from the New York Post, the GOP has a slim majority with several seats still up in the air and the number of Republican lawmakers are steadily dwindling as they become part of Trump's new White House team.

That shortage of Republican lawmakers is also being compounded by the slowness of filling the soon-to-be empty seats.

ALSO READ: The America-attacking Trump is coming for our military — and then he's coming for us

According to the Post, "The picks– – New York Rep. Elise Stefanik and Florida Reps Mike Waltz and Matt Gaetz are in reliably red districts and can only be filled after a special election process which could leave them vacant for months," noting that Gaetz will neither be in the House or at Department of Justice resigning and then withdrawing his name from consideration under a cloud.

According to one GOP House insider, with such a slim margin, important votes coming up could be a struggle.

“I think it was a concern once he started tapping people from the House and the California races haven’t even been called yet. That could be two more seats the Dems flip,” they explained.. “When Trump spoke to the House Republican conference [last week] he said, I’d love to tap 15 of you but I have to wait."

Another aide added, “It will be panic time when the first spending bill happens in the new year."

The Post report adds, "Even reelecting Rep. Mike Johnson as speaker will be a heavier lift. Kentucky Rep. Thomas Massie and Georgia Rep Marjorie Taylor Greene have both rumbled in recent months about ousting him from the job."

You can read more here.