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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."

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Doctors in Congress brace for Dr. Oz and RFK Jr.'s 'crazy ideas'

Like more than 72 percent of Americans using community water systems, Sen. John Barrasso (R-WY) — an orthopedic surgeon, three-term senator and former host of the “Senate Doctors” show — has consumed fluoridated water.

“I grew up with it. Still have my teeth,” Barrasso told Raw Story while riding the tram underneath the U.S. Capitol this week.

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'Nightmare scenario': Hush Money judge stuns with latest Trump trial ruling

The decision to stay sentencing in president-elect Donald Trump's criminal hush money trial has spurred cries of justice denied on the left — and cheers of celebration on the MAGA right.

New York Justice Juan Merchan on Friday postponed indefinitely a sentencing hearing initially scheduled for Nov. 26 — and in doing so triggered an uproar over Trump's ability to circumvent the usual course of the law.

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'More than meets the eye' in new ruling from Trump's hush money judge: MSNBC legal expert

Moments after New York State Judge Juan Merchan postponed President-elect Donald Trump's sentencing hearing on felony fraud convictions, MSNBC legal analyst Lisa Rubin argued it contained key information.

Sitting down with host Ana Cabrera on Friday, Rubin explained a deep read of the filing revealed some clues where the case might be going.

"What is your read on this new motion or filing from the judge? " the MSNBC host asked.

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'He goes out and gets drunk': Ex-Fox News colleague unleashes on Pete Hegseth

A pair of CNN commentators clashed over the sexual assault allegations against Donald Trump's nominee for secretary of defense.

Pete Hegseth has been nominated to lead the Pentagon, but the Trump transition team was reportedly caught off guard by the Fox News host's payoff to a California woman who claims he sexually assaulted her while both of them were intoxicated at a 2017 conservative conference, and a former colleague said she expects more damaging revelations to come out.

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'Death knell': Ex-prosecutor highlights 'absolute disqualifier' for Trump's latest nominee

Donald Trump's new attorney general nominee has an absolute disqualifier under her belt, according to a former prosecutor.

Former federal prosecutor Joyce Vance Friday noted the decision of Matt Gaetz, Trump's first pick for A.G., to withdraw his name from consideration.

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Trump warned by GOP senator that Tulsi Gabbard faces a hard road to confirmation

Now that scandal-plagued ex-Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL) has stepped aside as Donald Trump's nominee to be attorney general, Republicans are sending out signals that his other cabinet nominees will be receiving increased scrutiny after the "botched" selection.

In a report from the Wall Street Journal, there is evidence that GOP lawmakers –– particularly those in the Senate who will have a vote on key cabinet positions –– are moving on to equally problematic nominees including Department of Defense nominee Pete Hegseth, Health and Human Services secretary, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and, particularly Tulsi Gabbard who was chosen to be Trump’s director of national intelligence.

According to the Journal's Aaron Zitner and Natalie Andrews, "Some Republican senators are voicing private concerns about Gabbard, who would be Trump’s director of national intelligence, according to one person familiar with the matter, raising the prospect of a new round of scrutiny for Trump’s picks."

ALSO READ: It's time for Democrats to declare class warfare

In an interview Sen. Thom Tillis (R-NC) was blunt about the prospects of Gabbard, a former Democrat who served in the House, due to her questionable views on American allies and enemies.

“I’m going to have to have a very compelling story for anybody who’s going to influence policy in Ukraine,” Tillis stated. “At DNI, I don’t know if that’s her or not, but when I get into the nomination process, I have no intention of supporting anybody who equivocates on support for Ukraine.”

Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman Jack Reed (D-RI) also said with Gaetz gone, Gabbard has a mountain to climb, saying scrutiny will "shift to these national-security picks, and that will, I think, raise additional questions about fitness.”

You can read more right here.

GOP says good riddance to Gaetz — with most refusing even to say his name

WASHINGTON – Republicans on Capitol Hill are privately celebrating after former Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL) withdrew his nomination for attorney general. Publicly, many won’t even say his name.

“So you don’t even want to talk about Matt Gaetz?” Raw Story asked the incoming chair of the Senate Judiciary Committee in a cramped Capitol elevator.

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'More dangerous than any': Op-ed warns terrifying aspect of Trump pick is being missed

The most dangerous aspect lurking within President-elect Donald Trump's chosen Cabinet isn't what is garnering the most attention — and most people are unaware of it, an Atlantic columnist opined Thursday.

Staff writer Jonathan Chait argued Thursday the most alarming part of Fox News pundit Pete Hegseth's nomination to serve as Defense secretary is not the sex abuse accusation made against him, or the lack of experience, or his history of defending war criminals.

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'Kills me to hear this!' Matt Gaetz AG drop-out triggers massive MAGA meltdown

Matt Gaetz triggered a massive MAGA meltdown on Thursday when he announced he'd withdrawn his name from President-elect Donald Trump's Cabinet contest.

Gaetz's decision not to let accusations he had sex with a minor serve as a "distraction" from Trump's ascent into the White House spurred outrage and disgust — at Democrats.

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Gaetz withdrew nomination minutes after being told CNN planned to air damning new claim

Former Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL) reportedly withdrew his nomination to be President-elect Donald Trump's next attorney general just minutes after CNN asked him about reports of a second sexual encounter with a 17-year-old girl.

Moments after Gaetz announced on X that he was withdrawing his nomination, CNN's Paula Reid noted the network had informed him it was going to report that the House Ethics Committee had heard allegations that he had sex with a 17-year-old girl at least two times.

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