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'Minuscule!' White House scoffs at impeachment petition as signatures balloon

The White House has called a grassroots movement seeking the impeachment of President Donald Trump "minuscule" despite the rising number of signatures, according to a Newsweek report.

Nearly 200,000 people have signed the Change.org petition as of Tuesday, which has nearly doubled since January. The petition cites its main concerns and several reasons for launching the campaign:

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Prominent conservative predicts ‘accelerating tide’ of MAGA supporters ditching Trump

Prominent conservative lawyer George Conway made a bold prediction on Tuesday that in the “coming weeks and months,” an "accelerating tide” of MAGA supporters would turn on President Donald Trump as his favorability among Americans continues to sink to historic lows.

Conway’s prediction was prompted by an admission from Scott McConnell, the co-founder of The American Conservative, who on Monday expressed shame and embarrassment for having voted for Trump three times.

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Trump is handcuffing his 'Stop the Steal' lawyer from seeing classified documents: report

Donald Trump’s obsession with proving that the 2020 presidential election was stolen from him apparently has some limits, the Wall Street Journal is reporting

According to the Journal's report, the White House has been pursuing an elaborate investigation into alleged 2020 election improprieties, centered around campaign lawyer Kurt Olsen, who led Trump's failed "Stop the Steal" efforts four years ago. But when Olsen pushed a far-fetched Venezuelan vote-manipulation theory, even Trump officials couldn't maintain a straight face.

Olsen has briefed Trump on various allegations, demanded the declassification of documents, and requested up to $10 million in funding for his investigation. Prosecutors in Atlanta, Phoenix, and other cities have launched criminal investigations based on his theories. Yet Trump has resisted declassifying some documents and hasn't approved Olsen's full funding request — a potential sign of wavering confidence.

The breaking point came when DHS Secretary Markwayne Mullin arranged a Palm Beach meeting between Trump officials and an unlikely duo: Gary Berntsen, a former CIA officer known for hunting Osama bin Laden, and Martín Rodil, a Venezuelan fixer, Raw Story reported.

For nearly three hours, the pair presented a slideshow with diagrams, documents, and videos purporting to show that Venezuelan operatives could manipulate U.S. voting machines to alter 2020 election results.

The reaction was telling: Trump officials were left "speechless" by what they viewed as a waste of time.

"They looked at it in horror," Berntsen said.

Some White House and Justice Department officials have openly disagreed with Olsen's declassification demands and his pursuit of the Venezuela conspiracy theory. The Venezuelan allegations have been briefed to federal prosecutors in Florida and Texas and triggered an investigation in Puerto Rico.

After the U.S. captured Venezuelan autocrat Nicolás Maduro, Trump amplified the Venezuela vote-rigging narrative on social media — contradicting his own team's earlier dismissal of the theory.

'Blindsided' Kristi Noem asks for 'prayers' after husband's cross-dressing scandal

Former Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem was reportedly "devastated" to learn that her husband, Bryon Noem, had an alleged fetish for cross-dressing.

A spokesperson responded to the New York Post after the Daily Mail reported that the former Trump official's husband was obsessed with a "bimbofication" fetish scene.

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Trump flip-flops on nominee as White House scrambles to shore up troubled pick's support

The White House was pushing to reaffirm its support for troubled surgeon general nominee Casey Means on Tuesday after President Donald Trump suggested he could withdraw her nomination.

Trump said this weekend that he would be open to pulling his support for Means, who is the sister of Calley Means, a White House senior adviser, The Hill reported.

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'Conventional wisdom' bucked as Trump-backed candidate trails badly in Alabama GOP primary

President Donald Trump's preferred candidate in Alabama is bucking "conventional wisdom" by trailing badly in Republican primary.

The president endorsed former state GOP chair John Wahl for lieutenant governor in January, but a new poll released Monday shows him in third place behind Secretary of State Wes Allen and state Agriculture and Industries Commissioner Rick Pate, reported AL.com.

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FBI purge backfires: Bondi and Patel facing sweeping political retaliation lawsuit

Attorney General Pam Bondi and FBI Director Kash Patel are facing federal court action over a systematic campaign to purge the bureau of perceived political enemies, according to a lawsuit filed in D.C. District Court, reports CBS News.

Three seasoned FBI investigators — Jamie Garman, Blaire Toleman, and Michelle Ball — have sued after being terminated for their work on special counsel Jack Smith's investigations into President Trump. But the litigation signals something far broader: a coordinated political purge affecting at least 50 FBI employees, with numbers expected to grow.

The lawsuit, filed against Bondi and Patel, is the second such case this month targeting the Justice Department over retaliatory firings connected to the 2020 election investigation, code-named "Arctic Frost."

"Defendants, the current Director of the FBI, Kashyap P. Patel, and Attorney General Pamela J. Bondi, have, since the beginning of 2025, embarked on a public campaign to oust Plaintiffs from federal service because Defendants perceived them to be political opponents—as if fidelity to the law and the proper execution of assignments were somehow hostile partisan acts," the complaint alleges.

The three named plaintiffs represent a proposed class action that could expand dramatically. The lawsuit estimates at least 50 former agents have been terminated in a similar manner, and that number is expected to grow.

"Defendants have fired more than 50 FBI employees on the basis of their perceived political affiliation, without providing them any modicum of due process, and while disparaging their reputations and service in public statements around the time of the firings," the lawsuit states.

The scope of alleged political retaliation extends far beyond Trump investigators. The proposed class encompasses employees fired for perceived support of Black Lives Matter, displaying LGBTQ pride flags, maintaining friendships with disfavored employees, being targeted by far-right media personalities, and having internal messages flagged by artificial intelligence reviews.

Several former agents have already filed separate complaints over their terminations, including a group of former agents who knelt during 2020 racial justice protests in an effort to prevent violence following George Floyd's death — actions now apparently deemed grounds for federal dismissal.

Former White House insider predicts Trump's next Iran move: 'Less bad outcome'

President Donald Trump has signaled he is likely to retreat from the ongoing Iran war, a former White House insider said on Tuesday.

Bill Kristol, conservative analyst and editor-at-large for The Bulwark, shared what he thinks Trump and his administration will do next as the war now reaches the fifth week.

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Trump's latest rant spells 'beginning of the end of the US': conservative commentator

A prominent conservative journalist and commentator was taken aback by President Donald Trump’s latest rant Tuesday morning, going as far as to say that the president’s remarks marked “the beginning of the end of the U.S. empire.”

Earlier on Tuesday, Trump erupted at the United Kingdom over its refusal to join the United States in its war against Iran. Writing on social media, Trump told the United Kingdom to “build up some delayed courage” and “take” control of the Strait of Hormuz, a critical shipping route where Iran has restricted access to U.S.-aligned vessels, and that the United States has been unable to re-open by itself.

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Trump seen as 'thrashing around for ideas' to escape Iran quagmire during latest interview

According to Financial Times columnist Ed Luce, Donald Trump spent an inordinate amount of time during their Monday interview grasping for clues on how to bring his war on Iran to a close.

Calling into MS NOW’s “Morning Joe,” Luce elaborated on more details from his chat with the embattled president who reportedly jumped from topic to topic.

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Karoline Leavitt melts down over double chin turkey photo

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt was the latest person in the Trump administration to demand photographers remove a photo she deemed unflattering, according to reports on Tuesday.

Leavitt was apparently unhappy with an image of herself, a turkey and her son around Thanksgiving and disliked it so much that she reached out to the agency that captured it, The New Republic reported. Since then, the image has been removed from Agence France-Presse's collection and also scrubbed from Getty's archive.

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'Cashing in on religion': JD Vance faces backlash after hyping his new Christian book

Vice President JD Vance faced backlash online after encouraging people to pre-order his new Christian book.

"I've been writing this book for a long time, and I'm honored to finally be able to share the full story with you all," Vance explained in a social media post on Tuesday. "Communion is about my personal journey and how I found my way back to faith."

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Pete Hegseth pressed to reassure 'Americans who love their president' as war drags on

After giving a rah-rah speech about the US war on Iran, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth was put on the spot by a reporter from the Daily Caller to reassure his MAGA base with rumors of a possible land invasion hanging in the air.

Toward the end of his Pentagon press conference, Hegseth was asked by conservative journalist Reagan Reese about the chokehold on oil at the Strait of Hormuz before being pressed with, “Without asking you to comment on things that you can't talk about, what is your message to Americans who love the president and strongly believe in him, but are very worried about this notion of boots on the ground?”

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