Yes, president-elect Donald Trump is legally required to sign an ethics agreement Less than a week after Donald Trump was elected the 47th president, news headlines published by CNN and other outlets claimed he still had not disclosed conflicts of interest and signed an ethics ... 11/15/2024 - 8:58 am | View Link
Florida AG Moody says FEMA violated civil rights of Trump supporters Moody filed the lawsuit in federal court after reports that a FEMA supervisor directed aid workers to avoid going to homes in Lake Placid that had yard signs supporting Trump. 11/15/2024 - 2:24 am | View Link
Florida Attorney General Alleges FEMA Violated Civil Rights Of Trump Supporters Florida Attorney General Ashley Moody has filed a federal lawsuit accusing the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) of civil rights violations against supporters of President-elect Donald Trump ... 11/14/2024 - 11:35 pm | View Link
Trump's victory over Harris proves 'Second Amendment won,' gun rights groups say The "American people clearly elected a pro-gun presidential ticket" in President-elect Donald Trump and Vice President-elect JD Vance, one gun rights advocate tells Fox News Digital. 11/13/2024 - 1:45 am | View Link
Will Trump’s hush money conviction stand? A judge will rule on the president-elect’s immunity claim A Manhattan judge is poised to decide whether to uphold Donald Trump's hush money verdict or dismiss it on presidential immunity grounds. Judge Juan M. 11/11/2024 - 6:07 am | View Link
During this year’s campaign, Donald Trump disowned Project 2025, the Heritage Foundation agenda that would transform the federal government’s enforcement powers into political weapons while selling off the rest to the highest bidder, by swearing he didn’t know who was behind it. But now that voting is over, he’s finding the plan a handy way to fill positions in his incoming administration.
Carr is ready to punish media companies for coverage he dislikes.
On Sunday, Trump announced he would nominate Brendan Carr to lead the Federal Communications Commission.
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Inside Donald Trump’s hermetically sealed bubble of supporters, it’s become something of a given that the former and future President can simply bypass Congress and magically fill his Cabinet with the loyalists of his choosing.
President-elect Donald Trump’s decision to pick Matt Gaetz as Attorney General has cast a spotlight on the embattled Florida lawmaker’s legal and ethical troubles.
Gaetz, a fierce defender of Trump and critic of the Justice Department, now finds himself poised to lead the very agency that investigated him for allegedly sex trafficking a minor—an investigation that ended without charges but will loom large over his political future.
One of the greatest ballet stars in the world dies by losing his balance. Not suspicious at all.
Source: The Guardian
The acclaimed Russian ballet dancer Vladimir Shklyarov has died aged 39.
Shklyarov died after falling from the fifth floor of a building on Saturday, a spokesperson for the Mariinsky Theatre told the news outlet Fontanka at the weekend.
The spokesperson, Anna Kasatkina, told Russian media that Shklyarov had been taking painkillers for a back injury and had been scheduled to undergo spinal surgery on Monday.
While a federal investigation has been launched to investigate the dancer’s death, “the preliminary cause” has been ruled an accident, the Russian news agency RIA Novosti reported.
"A stupid, unbearable accident" that just happens to occur with great frequency in Mother Russia, especially among those who criticize Putin's war in Ukraine.
Shklyarov condemned Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in a now-deleted Instagram post from March 2022, declaring his opposition to “all kinds of military actions.”
“It is impossible to watch everything that is happening today without tears,” Shklyarov wrote.
In contrast to Olga Smirnova, a star ballerina of the Bolshoi Ballet who fled Russia and moved to Europe, Shklyarov continued performing in Russia and refrained from further commenting on the war.read more
WASHINGTON — President-elect Donald Trump’s nominee for defense secretary, Pete Hegseth, has reignited a debate that many thought had been long settled: Should women be allowed to serve their country by fighting on the front lines?
The former Fox News commentator has made it clear, in his own book and in interviews, that he believes men and women should not serve together in combat units.