Trump’s push for ‘Judge Dredd’ Matt Gaetz shows agenda to disrupt

Donald Trump is calling around Republican senators to make the case for his most debated cabinet pick — Matt Gaetz for attorney-general.

Trump knew that Gaetz, a former Florida congressman, faced a fight to be confirmed in the Senate as America’s top law officer. However, the president-elect does not have a plan B after rejecting his transition team’s shortlist of candidates, whom he deemed unlikely to carry out the far-reaching restructuring of the Department of Justice that he wants.

The battle has become a test of strength between the Senate, which is reluctant to be steamrolled and is balking at several unconventional nominees, and Trump, who never likes to concede defeat and believes he won an election mandate to put his own stamp on the way the government is run.

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Trump’s border czar Tom Homan clarifies exactly how military will be used for mass deportations, debunks frenzied liberal speculation

President-elect Trump’s new border czar is giving more clarity on exactly how the military will be used to aid in the mass deportations of illegal immigrants that the incoming administration has promised.

Tom Homan, who served as the acting director of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) during Trump’s first term, debunked frenzied speculation from some liberals that the military could be deployed to arrest people on US streets — saying that service members would be used for “non-enforcement” duties.

“They certainly can handle transportation, whether that’s ground transportation or air transportation… and certainly help building infrastructure,” he told The Post.

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Trump’s Team Sets Sights on New FBI Leadership

Donald Trump’s transition team is ramping up plans to replace FBI Director Christopher Wray before the end of his 10-year-term, the start of what the president-elect hopes will be a major shake-up of the agency that has been his perennial punching bag.

Vice President-elect JD Vance on Tuesday tucked an announcement of the search at the end of a social-media post that began with him referring to someone as a “mouth breathing imbecile.”

Vance said he had recently met with Trump to interview people to be the bureau’s director, in the search for a candidate who would “dismantle the deep state.” He later deleted the post.

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Why they’re terrified of Trump’s cabinet picks

Here we go again. Only a few weeks after the US presidential election, and even before he has re-entered the White House, Donald Trump has whipped up another storm of criticism.

The latest furore is over the president-elect’s nominees for his cabinet – especially Pete Hegseth for secretary of defence, Tulsi Gabbard for director of national intelligence, Matt Gaetz for attorney general and Robert F Kennedy Jr for head of Health and Human Services. These controversial picks seemed almost designed by Trump to wind up his critics. ‘I would describe it as God-tier level trolling’, said Democratic senator John Fetterman.

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Two Weeks After the Election and the Change in the Political Climate Is Already Profound — in Some Respects Hilariously So

It is not yet two weeks since the election, but the change of atmosphere is profound and in some respects hilarious. Where eight years ago, the idea of Trump winning a presidential election was so preposterous that with broad immediate approval and vivid anticipation, and the complicity of the FBI, other Justice Department officials, and the intelligence agencies, and the knowledge of the outgoing president and vice president, the Hillary Clinton campaign financed a fraudulent and defamatory lie that Trump had colluded with the Kremlin to win the election.

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Why didn’t Jews vote for Trump?

Other minorities abandoned the Left

On 28 June 1969, patrons at the Stonewall Inn, a gay bar in Greenwich Village, fought back against the police harassing them. This was the signal event in the formation of the modern Gay Rights Movement. More than half a century later, homosexuality, then illegal, is now an accepted part of American Life.

On October 7, 2023, savages murdered, raped, and kidnapped 1,200 Israeli citizens. American Jews reacted by voting for the Democrats.

This November, blacks, Hispanics, gay and straight Americans decided they’d had enough of Government corruption, incompetence, malversation, contempt, and crime and voted for a return to common sense and the protections of the Constitution. They forsook identity politics, save to identify themselves as Americans. Absent from the roll call of groups rebranding themselves as citizens were the Jews.

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SecDef Pete Hegseth Will Be a Welcome Injection of Vitamin I (Infantry)

While the nomination of Pete Hegseth stunned me at first, upon further reflection its genius became clear. Donald Trump isn’t bringing Pete Hegseth, a decorated Infantry major and longtime Fox host, into the Pentagon to don the green eye shades and closely manage every element of the military behemoth like a reborn Robert McNamara. Trump hired Hegseth to channel George Patton and apply a jump boot to the buttocks of our deadweight military along with an injection of combat arms leadership and attitude.

h/t DS

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Trump Confirms Plan To Use Military Assets For Mass Deportation

President-elect Donald Trump indicated Monday that his incoming administration was preparing to declare a national emergency to mobilize military assets to crack down on illegal immigration and secure the border.

Trump responded “TRUE!!” to a Truth Social Post from Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton saying that the second Trump administration was “prepared to declare a national emergency and will use military assets to reverse the Biden invasion through a mass deportation program.”

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Ramaswamy outlines DOGE’s vision to bring ‘sweeping change’ to bureaucracy: ‘Restoring… accountability

Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) incoming co-leader Vivek Ramaswamy laid out the new agency’s vision during an exclusive interview with Fox News’ Maria Bartiromo on Sunday, telling the “Sunday Morning Futures” host the aggressive cost-cutting strategy will begin with executive action and lay the groundwork for Congress to do its part.

“The failures of the executive branch need to be addressed because the dirty little secret right now is the people we elect to run the government, they’re not the ones who actually run the government. It’s the unelected bureaucrats in the administrative state that was created through executive action. It’s going to be fixed through executive action,” he said.

h/t DS

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Trump’s immigration crackdown is expected to start on Day 1

In his first 100 days, President-elect Donald Trump plans to begin the process of deporting hundreds of thousands of people. He is expected to end parole for people from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua and Venezuela. And he is likely to undo a policy that significantly constrained deportations for people who weren’t deemed threats to public safety or national security.

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Are Muslim Americans really feeling buyer’s remorse over Trump?

“Trump’s pro-Israel cabinet picks upset Muslims who voted for him,” reads a Reuters headline from this week. In the piece, a range of Muslim Americans who voted for the President-elect lament that he has chosen several cabinet officials who favour a strong security relationship with Israel and who have downplayed the rights of the Palestinians.

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Trump’s Triumph—a Turning Point for Europe?

We are witnessing a sea change of political currents both in America and in Europe. Donald Trump’s sweeping election victory has sent shock waves through the liberal establishment on both sides of the Atlantic. But it is a salutary shock.

It forces the European political class , and the German in particular, to abandon some of their illusions and forces us to become more grown up and self-reliant in matters of economic and security policy. Trump’s brutal way of formulating American national interests is refreshing. It tears away the veil of fake moralising and ideological kitsch that have obscured our perception of realities and actual global power issues.

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How a Republican in Canada views Trump: ‘Not asking for anything crazy’

The incoming Donald Trump administration and Republicans in Congress still see Canada as a friend and ally, but will continue to press Ottawa on addressing border security and defence spending, a prominent conservative advisor says.

Georganne Burke, who has worked in both U.S. and Canadian politics and supported Trump’s return to the White House, says those two issues in particular will be major sticking points in the Canada-U.S. relationship unless the Liberal government shows it’s willing to act in the ways Trump wants.

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Richer, safer, at peace with itself and its neighbours – what Trump might do for America and the world

Few people in history have had more words written about them than Donald Trump. And perhaps it is in the nature of things that much of what is written is uninformed, half-informed or mal-informed.

But reading British reactions to Trump’s historic re-election landslide this month, it is still striking how little effort there is in this country actually to understand what Trump is about or what he wants to achieve.

Just one reason why this is strange is that Trump tends to say what he wants in very plain English. And then he does what he says he’ll do.

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