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  • Trump’s Cabinet nominees face sharpest bipartisan grilling to date and other takeaways from Thursday’s confirmation hearings



    Washington
    CNN
     — 

    Three of President Donald Trump’s most controversial nominees faced sharp questions in the Senate during hearings Thursday from Democrats as well as several Republican senators in what amounted to the most direct skepticism from GOP senators over Trump’s nominees to date.

    Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Trump’s pick to be Health and Human Services secretary, was pressed on his views on vaccines by GOP Sen. Bill Cassidy of Louisiana, who said he had “reservations” about Kennedy’s past positions on vaccine safety.

    And Tulsi Gabbard, who has been tapped to be the director of national intelligence, faced questions from several Republicans about her views on Russian aggression, US government surveillance and NSA leaker Edward Snowden.

    Asked multiple times by senators in both parties whether Snowden was a “traitor,” Gabbard said repeatedly that he broke the law – but she would not directly say whether he was a traitor.

    Kash Patel, Trump’s nominee to be FBI director, had numerous heated exchanges with Democrats during his hearing Thursday over his past comments about going after Trump’s perceived “deep state” enemies. But Patel found a largely friendly audience among Republicans on the Judiciary Committee, signaling his confirmation is on firmer ground.

    If all Democrats oppose Trump’s nominees, they can only afford to lose three GOP senators on the floor to win confirmation. But Gabbard’s nomination could be in danger of not making it that far – as it would only take one Republican to block her nomination in the Senate Intelligence Committee if all Democrats on the panel oppose her.

    Trump’s allies mounted a significant pressure campaign against on-the-fence Republicans to get Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s confirmation over the finish line, and similar campaigns have been promised toward GOP senators if they oppose any more Trump nominees, such as Gabbard or Kennedy.

    Here are takeaways from a consequential day of Senate confirmation hearings:

    As a Democrat in Congress in 2020, Gabbard introduced legislation supporting Snowden, who leaked a massive trove of classified NSA secrets during the Obama administration. It’s a position that put her directly at odds with senators on the Intelligence Committee from both parties.

    Gabbard was pressed by both Republicans and Democrats about Snowden on Thursday, asked repeatedly whether she believed he was a traitor and whether he betrayed his oath.

    Repeatedly, Gabbard defaulted to an answer that Snowden had “broken the law,” but she declined to say whether his actions amounted to treason.

    Tulsi Gabbard testifies during her confirmation hearing before the Senate Intelligence Committee in the Dirksen Senate Office Building on January 30, 2025 in Washington, DC.

    Sen. James Lankford, an Oklahoma Republican, asked Gabbard the question twice after the DNI nominee didn’t respond directly the first time.

    “Was he a traitor at the time when he took America’s secrets, released them in public and then ran to China and became a Russian citizen?” Lankford eventually asked, in a lengthy line of questioning that described the feelings of members of the intelligence community.

    “I’m focused on the future and how we can prevent something like this from happening again,” Gabbard said.

    Sen. Michael Bennet, a Colorado Democrat, took up Lankford’s line of questioning and repeatedly pressed Gabbard for a yes-or-no answer.

    “Is Edward Snowden a traitor to the United States of America?” Bennet asked.

    “Senator, as someone who has served …” she began.

    Bennet, who appeared angry, interrupted and demanded a yes-or-no answer again.

    “I understand how critical our national security is …” Gabbard responded, once again refusing to answer.

    That wasn’t the only instance where Republicans questioned Gabbard’s views during Thursday’s public hearing. Sen. Jim Moran, a Kansas Republican, told Gabbard he wanted to make certain “that in no way does Russia get a pass in either your mind or your heart or in any policy recommendation you would make or not make.”

    “Senator, I’m offended by the question,” Gabbard responded, saying that “no country, group or individual will get a pass” in her providing a full intelligence picture to the president.

    Moran responded that it was the answer he was looking for, but the exchange underscored the GOP unease about her leading the intelligence community.

    Lankford told reporters later Thursday that he was “kind of surprised” by Gabbard’s response about Snowden and warned that it raised “a lot of questions.”

    “I thought that was going to be an easy softball question, actually,” he said.

    Pressed on if that is problematic for her confirmation, Lankford replied, “I think there were a lot of questions after it, yes.”

    Republican Sen. Todd Young, who also sits on the committee and had pressed Gabbard on Snowden, did not say whether he would back Gabbard’s confirmation. Instead, he told reporters, “I think I’ve got, for now at least, all the information I need.”

    Kennedy appeared Thursday for his second day of confirmation hearings before the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, following Wednesday’s hearing in the Senate Finance Committee.

    Cassidy, the Louisiana Republican who chairs the HELP committee, began Thursday’s hearing addressing his concerns about Kennedy’s vaccine skepticism.

    “It’s no secret, I have some reservations about your past positions on vaccines and a couple other issues,” Cassidy said. “Your past of undermining confidence in vaccines with unfounded or misleading arguments concerns me. Can I trust that that is now in the past? Can data and information change your opinion or will you only look for data supporting a predetermined conclusion?”

    The stark comments suggest that Cassidy, a Republican who practiced medicine for 30 years, could be the senator who stalls Kennedy’s nomination to lead HHS.

    Cassidy acknowledged that Kennedy is now trying to downplay his anti-vaccine rhetoric despite an extensive, recorded history of his linking vaccines to autism in children, but said that change doesn’t go far enough.

    Kennedy testifies during his confirmation hearing on Thursday.

    During his line of questioning, Cassidy asked Kennedy if he will reassure mothers unequivocally that the measles and hepatitis B vaccines do not cause autism.

    “If the data is there,” Kennedy responded.

    That answer did not satisfy Cassidy: “I know the data is there.”

    Thursday’s hearing also included, like Kennedy’s first hearing, several notable exchanges between Kennedy and Democrats on the committee.

    In a personal and impassioned statement, Sen. Maggie Hassan, a New Hampshire Democrat, revealed her own struggle with her son’s health and the fears she had about Kennedy’s continuing questioning of what has been settled science on vaccines.

    Hassan told the committee that her son, who is 36 years old, has cerebral palsy and that she has agonized over what caused his condition for decades at times relitigating in her mind every action she took in her own pregnancy. She pleaded with Kennedy to see the harm he does when he churns up questions about settled science for parents grappling with their own children’s conditions.

    “Please do not suggest that anybody in this body of either political party doesn’t want to know what the cause of autism is. Do you know how many friends I have with children who have autism?” Hassan continued. “The problem with this witness’s response on the autism cause and the relationship to vaccines is because he is re-litigating and churning settled science so we cannot go forward and find out what the cause of autism is and treat these kids and help these families.”

    During Patel’s hearing in the Senate Judiciary Committee, Democrats pushed the FBI director nominee on a litany of his past public comments, including his vows to prosecute the “deep state,” his skepticism of the January 6 attack on the US Capitol and his friendly ties to the QAnon conspiracy community.

    Patel gave little ground over his previous remarks, frequently claiming he was being quoted in part or out of context.

    Sen. Amy Klobuchar, a Minnesota Democrat, referenced a list in Patel’s 2023 book, “Government Gangsters,” which names 60 people that Patel says are “corrupt actors” who are part of the “deep state.”

    “It has been referred to as an enemies list,” Klobuchar said. “You called them ‘deep state.’”

    “It’s not an enemies list. That is a total mischaracterization,” Patel responded, adding that it was a “glossary” in a book.

    Kash Patel testifies before a Senate Judiciary Committee confirmation hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC, on January 30, 2025.

    Despite Patel’s pushback on Thursday, he and Trump have repeatedly talked about the need to seek retribution against current and former officials that were involved in various investigations into Trump. And Trump has already taken steps to fire, marginalize and punish some former and current officials who fall into this category.

    Klobuchar later pressed Patel about his comments on a podcast last fall to turn the FBI headquarters into a “museum of the deep state.”

    “I deserve an answer to that question. He is asking to be head of the FBI, and he said that their headquarters should be shut down,” Klobuchar said as her time to question Patel expired.

    “If the best attacks on me are going to be false accusations and grotesque mischaracterizations, the only thing this body is doing is defeating the credibility of the men and women at the FBI,” Patel responded. “And any accusations leveled against me that I would somehow put political bias before the Constitution are grotesquely unfair.”

    “Mr. chairman, I’m quoting his own words from September of 2024. It is his own words,” Klobuchar shot back. “It is not some conspiracy. It is what Mr. Patel actually said.”

    Asked about his past praise of the QAnon movement, Patel testified Thursday that he believes it is a “baseless” conspiracy theory.

    And Patel said Thursday that he opposed Trump’s commutations that freed from prison hundreds of convicted January 6 rioters who attacked police officers.

    “I do not agree with the commutation of any sentence of any individual who committed violence against law enforcement,” Patel said.

    Senate Judiciary Chairman Chuck Grassley asked Patel to explain his position on January 6 and respond to critics who said he was anti-law enforcement.

    “I have always respected law enforcement,” Patel replied. “As for January 6, I have repeatedly, often, publicly and privately said there can never be a tolerance for violence against law enforcement.”

    Hegseth was confirmed last week by the narrowest of margins, a 50-50 tie vote broken by Vice President JD Vance because three Republicans – Susan Collins of Maine, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Mitch McConnell of Kentucky – joined Democrats to oppose him.

    That’s the same math Trump’s trio of nominees who testified Thursday likely face, with no Democrats so far directly signaling they will back Gabbard, Kennedy or Patel.

    While Patel appears on solid ground to win confirmation, Gabbard and Kennedy could face a more difficult path.

    Collins could play a key role if she opposes Gabbard’s nomination, as she sits on the Senate Intelligence Committee, where Republicans have a 9-8 majority, meaning Gabbard’s nomination could fail if Collins joins all Democrats in voting against Gabbard.

    Senate Majority Leader John Thune indicated Wednesday to CNN that he didn’t think he could set up a confirmation vote for Gabbard if the committee votes down the nomination.

    After she questioned Gabbard, Collins said it was “too early to tell” whether Gabbard would receive enough committee votes to make it to the full Senate. Asked by CNN’s Manu Raju whether the jury was still out on her support for Gabbard, Collins said, “That’s correct.”

    “I need to review the entire hearing,” she said. “I want to make a careful decision.”

    In his closing statement, Cassidy laid out his concerns in frank terms, arguing he has to decide if he believes Kennedy can put decades of vaccine skepticism aside and use his microphone to instill faith in public health and vaccines as the top leader on the issue in the country.

    “With that influence comes a great responsibility. Now my responsibility is to learn and try to determine if you can be trusted to support the best public health,” Cassidy said. “That is why I have been struggling with your nomination.”

    Both Collins and Murkowski stressed the need for vaccine availability and dissemination when they questioned Kennedy on Thursday. After the hearing, Murkowski said she’s yet not yet ready to decide if she can back Kennedy, and she will take her time to evaluate his responses like she always does.

    “This is an important nominee, so it deserves full consideration,” Murkowski said.

    McConnell, the former GOP Senate leader, is seen as a potential swing vote for both Gabbard and Kennedy. He has not said how he will vote on either nominee, but his foreign policy views are considerably more hawkish than Gabbard’s, and his history with vaccines is personal as a polio survivor.

    “The polio vaccine has saved millions of lives and held out the promise of eradicating a terrible disease. Efforts to undermine public confidence in proven cures are not just uninformed – they’re dangerous,” McConnell said in a December statement, which did not name Kennedy. “Anyone seeking the Senate’s consent to serve in the incoming administration would do well to steer clear of even the appearance of association with such efforts.”

    This story and headline have been updated with additional developments.

    CNN’s Devan Cole, Zachary Cohen, Michael Conte, Aileen Graef, Tami Luhby, Hannah Rabinowitz, Manu Raju and Sam Simpson contributed to this report.



    On Thursday, Trump’s Cabinet nominees faced some of the sharpest bipartisan grilling to date during their confirmation hearings. Here are some key takeaways from the intense questioning:

    1. Many nominees faced tough questions from both Democratic and Republican senators, showing a rare display of bipartisan skepticism towards the nominees. This indicates that there are serious concerns about the qualifications and potential conflicts of interest of some of Trump’s picks for key government positions.

    2. Several nominees, including Secretary of State nominee Rex Tillerson and Education Secretary nominee Betsy DeVos, faced scrutiny over their ties to Russia and potential conflicts of interest. Tillerson, in particular, faced tough questioning about his close relationship with Russian President Vladimir Putin and his ties to the oil industry.

    3. Some nominees, such as Attorney General nominee Jeff Sessions and Health and Human Services Secretary nominee Tom Price, faced criticism for their past statements and positions on important issues such as civil rights and healthcare. Sessions, in particular, faced questions about his record on voting rights and immigration.

    4. Despite the tough questioning, most of the nominees stuck to their prepared remarks and defended their qualifications for the positions they have been nominated for. However, it remains to be seen whether their answers will satisfy the concerns of both Democrats and Republicans.

    Overall, Thursday’s confirmation hearings highlighted the intense scrutiny that Trump’s Cabinet nominees are facing and the bipartisan concerns about their qualifications and potential conflicts of interest. It remains to be seen how these concerns will impact the confirmation process moving forward.

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  • How the White House views hearings so far for controversial cabinet picks


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      How the White House views hearings so far for controversial cabinet picks

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    The hearings for some of President Trump’s controversial cabinet picks began this week, including RFK Jr., Tulsi Gabbard and Kash Patel. Washington Post White House reporter Jacqueline Alemany, former Sen. Heidi Heitkamp and Brendan Buck, former Press Secretary to House Speakers Paul Ryan and John Boehner, join José Díaz-Balart to discuss.



The White House has maintained a positive outlook on the hearings for controversial cabinet picks, emphasizing the nominees’ qualifications and commitment to serving the American people.

Despite facing tough questioning from both sides of the aisle, the White House has expressed confidence in the nominees’ ability to effectively carry out their duties and bring about positive change in their respective departments.

While some detractors have raised concerns about the nominees’ past actions or statements, the White House has stood firm in its support, citing their track records of success and dedication to public service.

Overall, the White House views the hearings as a necessary part of the confirmation process and remains optimistic about the outcomes for these controversial cabinet picks.

Tags:

white house, hearings, controversial cabinet picks, views, government, politics, confirmation, senate, nominations, Trump administration, public opinion

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  • Donald Trump’s Cabinet of Revenge


    It was a mega-MAGA morning on Capitol Hill. In a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing, Kash Patel, Donald Trump’s nominee to head the F.B.I., faced hostile questioning from Democrats about his past as a QAnon-adjacent promoter of conspiracy theories and his extensive public vows to exact revenge on Trump’s “deep-state” enemies. In another hearing room, Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., Trump’s nominee to head the Department of Health and Human Services, sparred with skeptical senators from both parties who worried about his record of undermining public confidence in vaccines. And, testifying before the Senate Intelligence Committee, Tulsi Gabbard, Trump’s nominee to serve as the director of National Intelligence, did little to help her nomination—perhaps the most politically uncertain of them all—when she was confronted about her controversial views on everything from Russia’s invasion of Ukraine to Edward Snowden. At the hearing’s start, she preëmptively dismissed the criticism as “lies and smears,” though hours of sharp queries from senators suggested that for Gabbard, as for Patel and Kennedy, the best evidence against her confirmation had come from her own voluble past.

    That this Trump trifecta faced simultaneous confirmation hearings appeared to be a masterstroke in outrage management by the Senate’s Republican scheduling gods: Who could possibly keep track of the overwhelming number of controversies, concerning revelations, and just plain weirdness to come out of the hearings? But, after I watched all three sessions, thanks to the magic of C-SPAN and the Internet, it seemed clear that these three appointments have more in common than just their concurrent hearings: they have perfectly met the qualification that Trump cares most about—a proven record of tearing down the credibility of the institutions that he has chosen them to lead.

    Let’s stipulate that many of Trump’s other nominees are flawed or ill-suited to high office—thin résumés and sizable Fox News contracts might well be the distinguishing characteristic for many in his new Cabinet. But Thursday’s trio stands out for the sheer destructive Trumpiness of their time in public life. Patel once promised that, if he became F.B.I. director, he’d shut down the Bureau’s headquarters and reopen it the next day “as a museum of the ‘deep state.’ ” Kennedy’s long career as a scourge of the scientific establishment includes comparing the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, one of the agencies he would oversee as H.H.S. chief, to “fascism” and its childhood-vaccination program to “Nazi death camps.” Gabbard, as a left-wing congresswoman turned right-wing Trump acolyte, has often questioned foundational conclusions of the American intelligence community. These are not problems as far as the President is concerned—they’re selling points.

    This came through, perhaps unintentionally, in an early moment during Patel’s hearing, when Chuck Grassley, the Senate Judiciary chairman, complained at length about the F.B.I.’s participation in “a political scheme to take down Trump.” Then Grassley went on to address the nominee directly: “They have yet to learn a lesson, and I hope you’ll teach that lesson.” Patel, in other words, is there to wreak payback for Trump. So are the others. These are Cabinet appointments as a form of revenge.

    There was a certain slow-motion-car-crash appeal in watching the contortions of Republican senators like Grassley as they strained to justify or explain away these embarrassing nominations. The most gimmicky approach was that of Thom Tillis, the North Carolina Republican charged with introducing Patel. In an effort to veer away from the many shocking statements Patel has made during television appearances, podcast interviews, and in his own writings, he prepared a handout: “Kash Bingo,” with phrases, such as “enemies list” and “deep state,” that he expected Democrats to harp on in their questions. I’m surprised he didn’t follow Patel’s example and turn the whole thing into a children’s cartoon book. (See “The Plot Against the King,” Patel’s 2022 recounting of the injustices done to Trump, in which he stars as Kash the Distinguished Discoverer.)

    The senators’ squirming was nothing, though, compared with that of the nominees themselves. The most politically costly squirm might have come in Kennedy’s hearing before the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee, when Senator Bill Cassidy, of Louisiana, questioned him. Cassidy, the committee’s chairman and a medical doctor himself, is a key vote in determining whether Kennedy’s nomination succeeds or fails. He opened by acknowledging it was “no secret” that he had “reservations” about Kennedy, then voiced his concern that Kennedy would undermine vaccines in the role of America’s top health official. “Will you reassure mothers unequivocally . . . that the measles and hepatitis-B vaccines do not cause autism?” Cassidy asked. Kennedy started in on a rambling answer about data, but Cassidy cut him off: It was a yes-or-no question. Still, Kennedy would not offer an answer. Up next, Senator Bernie Sanders found himself in an unfamiliar role as a wingman to the conservative Louisianan. “Vaccines do not cause autism,” Sanders said. “Do you agree with that?” Again, Kennedy would not answer. Had he just failed the Cassidy test? Later, Cassidy suggested that might well have been the case. “Your past of undermining confidence in vaccines with unfounded or misleading arguments concerns me,” he said. “Can I trust that that is now in the past?”

    Each of the three nominees tried a similar evasion technique when presented with problematic aspects of their own past. Sometimes, they lapsed into pure brazenness, as when Dick Durbin, the top Democrat on the Judiciary Committee, asked Patel if he was familiar with Stew Peters, a prominent right-wing conspiracy theorist. “Not off the top of my head,” Patel said. Durbin responded dryly, “You’ve made eight separate appearances on his podcasts.” When Amy Klobuchar, the Minnesota Democrat, asked Patel about his so-called enemies list—sixty members of the “Executive Branch Deep State,” many of them Republicans who disagreed with him or who tried to block him from obtaining more powerful positions in Trump’s first Administration, which were listed as an appendix in his 2023 book, “Government Gangsters”—Patel insisted, “It is not an enemies list. It is a total mischaracterization. It is a glossary.”

    Not all of the attacks, incidentally, came from Democrats. In the Intelligence Committee, senators from both parties pushed Gabbard to say whether she believed Snowden’s leaks about the National Security Agency’s surveillance programs made him a “traitor.” She declined to answer when James Lankford, a Republican of Oklahoma, asked her. He asked again. “I’m focussed on the future,” Gabbard replied. Then Michael Bennet, a Colorado Democrat, asked her the same question—four different times. “That is not a hard question to answer when the stakes are this high!” he said at one point, but she again refused to answer. By the time Todd Young, a Republican from Indiana and a key vote on Gabbard’s nomination, asked whether Snowden had harmed American national security, he was the fourth senator to push her on the issue. “It’s notable you didn’t say yes,” Young told her. “It would befit you and be helpful to the way you are perceived to the members of the Intelligence Committee if you would at least acknowledge that the greatest whistle-blower in American history, so-called, harmed national security.”

    As if the three hearings didn’t provide enough distractions, President Trump walked into the White House briefing room late on Thursday morning for a press conference on the previous night’s tragic plane crash over the Potomac, the first deadly accident involving a commercial airliner near Washington, D.C., since 2009. He read prepared remarks calling the country “one family” in the face of tragedy. Then he looked up and discarded the platitudinous talking points to bash his Democratic predecessors, air-traffic controllers themselves, and an amorphous “diversity push,” baselessly suggesting that all were somehow responsible for the crash. He said that Pete Buttigieg, the Biden Administration’s Transportation Secretary, had run the agency “right into the ground with his diversity,” and insisted that both Barack Obama and Joe Biden had rejected his proposed standards to insure that only those air-traffic controllers of the “highest intellect” could be hired. “Their policy was horrible, and their politics was even worse,” he said.

    These were hardly the consoling words needed by a grieving nation. But, in the end, Trump’s performance was, perhaps, the day’s most revealing, with little of the obfuscation that came from his nominees on Capitol Hill. Trump said loud and clear what those surrounding him often try to hide on his behalf: He does not care about facts. He does not care about leading the country. He will seek political advantage in anything, even the death of sixty-seven people in a horrific accident in the second week of his Presidency.

    It was hard to turn back to the confirmation hearings after listening to him. The MAGA-palooza in the Senate, after all, was but a reflection of Trump himself—these are his nominees, his choices, the fights that he has chosen to pick. He overshadowed any of the crazy or outrageous or disturbing things they had to say with his own words. Gabbard, Kennedy, and Patel are not the crisis in America set off by his reëlection, they are the consequences of it. Trump is the crisis—is, was, and will continue to be. Want to know how the next four years are going to go? Rewatch, if you can stand it, that press conference. This is it. 



    In the aftermath of the 2020 election, Donald Trump has put together a Cabinet of Revenge, filled with loyalists and allies who will stop at nothing to enact his agenda and settle scores with his political adversaries.

    Leading the charge is Trump’s new Chief of Staff, Rudy Giuliani, who has been tasked with overseeing a campaign of retribution against those who have crossed the former President. Joining him is Secretary of State Ted Cruz, who has been given the green light to pursue a hardline foreign policy that puts America first, no matter the consequences.

    In charge of domestic affairs is Attorney General Bill Barr, who will use the full force of the Justice Department to go after Trump’s enemies and protect his allies. And overseeing the economy is Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin, who will ensure that Trump’s business interests are protected and his financial backers are taken care of.

    With this Cabinet of Revenge in place, Donald Trump is poised to continue his crusade against those who have dared to oppose him, no matter the cost. And as the country braces for what comes next, one thing is clear: the reign of Trump is far from over.

    Tags:

    Donald Trump, Cabinet, Revenge, Politics, Administration, Government, Trump Administration, Revenge Cabinet, President Trump, US Politics, Political Revenge, Cabinet Members, Trump Presidency, Revenge Agenda, Political Retribution, Trump Administration Members

    #Donald #Trumps #Cabinet #Revenge

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  • Armed man arrested at Capitol after threatening to kill Trump Cabinet members, police say



    Washington
    AP
     — 

    A Massachusetts man was arrested on weapons charges after he visited the US Capitol on Monday and told police that he wanted to kill top Republicans, including billionaire investor Scott Bessent on the day the Senate confirmed him as President Donald Trump’s Treasury secretary, according to a Tuesday court filing.

    Ryan Michael English, 24, of South Deerfield, Massachusetts, was arrested at the Capitol after he approached police and said he had knives and Molotov cocktails in his possession and wanted to surrender, according to a Capitol police officer’s affidavit. Investigators said they found a folding knife, two homemade firebombs and a lighter in English’s possession.

    English also told police that he came to the Capitol to kill Bessent, the affidavit says.

    Investigators searched English’s car and found material for making a homemade explosive device, police said.

    English told investigators that he traveled from Massachusetts to Washington, DC, intending to kill other Republican political figures — Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and House Speaker Mike Johnson — and to burn down the Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank, according to police.

    “These actions were specifically to ‘depose’ these political offices and send a message,” the affidavit says.

    English changed his target to Bessent after reading an internet post about his confirmation hearing, according to police.

    The Senate confirmed Bessent on a 68-29 vote, with 16 Democrats voting in favor of the South Carolina resident.

    English was arrested on charges of unlawful receipt; possession or transfer of a firearm; and of carrying a firearm, a dangerous weapon, an explosive or an incendiary device on Capitol grounds.

    Court records don’t name an attorney for English. A telephone message left with a possible relative of English wasn’t immediately returned.



    In a shocking turn of events, an armed man was arrested at the Capitol after allegedly threatening to kill Trump Cabinet members. According to police reports, the man was carrying a loaded weapon and had made explicit threats against several members of the Cabinet.

    This incident has raised concerns about the safety and security of government officials, as well as the potential for violence in our nation’s capital. It serves as a stark reminder of the dangers that can arise when individuals resort to violence to express their political beliefs.

    Authorities are currently investigating the motives behind the man’s threats and are taking steps to ensure the safety of all government officials. It is imperative that we take threats of violence seriously and work together to prevent any further incidents from occurring.

    We must condemn this type of behavior and work towards finding peaceful and constructive ways to express our grievances. Violence is never the answer, and we must all strive to uphold the values of democracy and respect for one another. Let us hope that incidents like this serve as a wake-up call for us all to come together and find common ground.

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  • Tracking Trump cabinet confirmations – so far | Trump administration



  • Pam Bondi

    Role offered: Attorney general

    Pam Bondi, the first female attorney general of Florida and a lawyer for Trump during his first impeachment trial, replaced the president’s first pick, Matt Gaetz, to head the justice department.

    At her 15 January hearing, Bondi, 59, insisted she would ensure the justice department would remain independent. At the same time, she failed to say that Trump lost the 2020 election.


  • Doug Collins

    Role offered: Veterans affairs secretary

    Doug Collins, the former Georgia representative who defended Trump during his first impeachment trial, was nominated by Trump to be secretary of veterans affairs.

    During his 22 January hearing, Collins pledged to “take care of the veterans” should he succeed in the confirmation process.


  • Elise Stefanik

    Role offered: UN ambassador

    The New York representative Elise Stefanik was selected by Trump to be the ambassador to the UN. Floated as a possible Trump running mate, Stefanik is the highest-ranking woman in the Republican conference in the House of Representatives.

    During her confirmation hearing, Stefanik endorsed Israeli claims of biblical rights to the entire West Bank, aligning herself with positions that could complicate diplomatic efforts in the Middle East.


  • Russ Vought

    Role offered: Office of management and budget chief

    OMB chief during Trump’s first term in office, Russ Vought has been deeply involved in Project 2025.

    During a 15 January hearing, Vought declined to fully commit to distributing congressionally approved funds, specifically US military aid to Ukraine.


  • Brooke Rollins

    Role offered: Agriculture secretary

    If confirmed, Brooke Rollins would lead a 100,000-person agency that would carry out an agenda with implications for American diets and wallets, both urban and rural.

    Rollins was president of America First Policy Institute, a group helping lay the groundwork for Trump’s second administration.


  • Chris Wright

    Role offered: Energy secretary

    Trump named Chris Wright, an oil and gas industry executive with no political experience, to lead the US Department of Energy.

    During a 15 January confirmation hearing, Wright faced criticism for disputing the ties between climate change and more frequent or severe wildfires, and for calling wildfire concerns “hype” and dismissing their connection to climate policies.


  • Doug Burgum

    Role offered: Interior secretary

    Trump named Doug Burgum, governor of North Dakota, as his pick for secretary of the interior.


  • Scott Turner

    Role offered: Department of Housing and Urban Development secretary

    Photograph: Mark Schiefelbein/AP

    Scott Turner is a former NFL player and White House aide. He ran the White House Opportunity and Revitalization Council during Trump’s first term.


  • Howard Lutnick

    Role offered: Commerce secretary

    Photograph: Evan Vucci/AP

    Trump nominated Howard Lutnick, co-chair of his transition team, to be his commerce secretary. Lutnick has uniformly praised the president-elect’s economic policies, including his use of tariffs.


  • Lori Chavez-DeRemer

    Role offered: Labor secretary

    Photograph: Jemal Countess/UPI/Rex/Shutterstock

    Trump tapped the Oregon Republican for labor secretary, a position that would oversee the department’s workforce and its budget, and would put forth priorities that affect workers’ wages, health and safety, the ability to unionize and employers’ rights to fire workers, among other responsibilities.


  • Robert F Kennedy Jr

    Role offered: Secretary of health and human services

    Trump has named Robert F Kennedy Jr his secretary of health and human services. In a statement, Trump said Kennedy would protect Americans from “harmful chemicals, pollutants, pesticides, pharmaceutical products, and food additives” that have caused a health crisis.


  • Linda McMahon

    Role offered: Education secretary

    Trump named Linda McMahon, co-chair of his transition team, his pick for education secretary. Trump, who previously promised to dismantle the Department of Education, said McMahon would work to “expand ‘choice’” across the US and send education “back to the states”.


  • Tulsi Gabbard

    Role offered: National intelligence director

    Trump announced Tulsi Gabbard, a former Democrat, as his nominee for director of national intelligence.


  • Jamieson Greer

    Role offered: US trade representative

    Trump lauded Jamieson Greer for his role enacting the USMCA, a revamped trade pact between the US, Mexico and Canada, and imposing tariffs on China. If confirmed, Greer will be tasked with reining in the trade deficit and opening up “export markets everywhere”.


  • Kelly Loeffler

    Role offered: administrator of the Small Business Administration

    Trump named former senator Kelly Loeffler to head the Small Business Administration. He said she will use her business experience to “reduce red tape” and “unleash opportunity” for small businesses.


  • Mehmet Oz

    Role offered: Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services administrator

    Photograph: Andrew Kelly/Reuters

    Trump tapped Dr Mehmet Oz to serve as the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) Administrator, adding that he would work closely with Robert F Kennedy Jr.


  • Brendan Carr

    Role offered: Chair of the Federal Communications Commission

    Trump tapped Brendan Carr to be the chair of the Federal Communications Commission, the independent agency that regulates telecommunications.

    In a statement, Trump said Carr “is a warrior for Free Speech, and has fought against the regulatory Lawfare that has stifled Americans’ Freedoms, and held back our Economy”.


  • Kash Patel

    Role offered: FBI director

    Trump nominated the “deep state” critic Kash Patel to be FBI director. He has called for leadership of the federal law enforcement agency to be fired as part of a drive to bring federal law enforcement “to heel”.



  • As the Trump administration continues to fill key positions in the government, tracking the confirmation process of his cabinet members is crucial. Here is a rundown of the confirmations so far:

    1. Secretary of State: Rex Tillerson was confirmed on February 1, 2017, by a vote of 56-43.

    2. Secretary of Defense: James Mattis was confirmed on January 20, 2017, by a vote of 98-1.

    3. Secretary of the Treasury: Steven Mnuchin was confirmed on February 13, 2017, by a vote of 53-47.

    4. Attorney General: Jeff Sessions was confirmed on February 8, 2017, by a vote of 52-47.

    5. Secretary of Homeland Security: John Kelly was confirmed on January 20, 2017, by a vote of 88-11.

    6. Secretary of Health and Human Services: Tom Price was confirmed on February 10, 2017, by a vote of 52-47.

    7. Secretary of Education: Betsy DeVos was confirmed on February 7, 2017, by a vote of 51-50 with Vice President Mike Pence breaking the tie.

    These are just a few of the key cabinet positions that have been confirmed so far. Stay tuned for updates on the confirmation process of other Trump administration nominees.

    Tags:

    Tracking Trump cabinet confirmations, Trump administration, Trump cabinet, confirmation hearings, cabinet members, government appointments, political updates, White House news, Senate confirmations, Trump nominees, presidential appointments, administration updates

    #Tracking #Trump #cabinet #confirmations #Trump #administration

  • Tracking Trump’s Cabinet Confirmations – The New York Times



    This page will be updated as President Trump’s cabinet nominees are confirmed by the Senate.

    E.P.A. administrator

    Lee Zeldin

    Transportation secretary

    Sean Duffy

    Treasury secretary

    Scott Bessent

    Homeland security secretary

    Kristi Noem

    Defense secretary

    Pete Hegseth

    C.I.A. director

    John Ratcliffe

    Secretary of state

    Marco Rubio

    Agriculture secretary

    Brooke Rollins

    Commerce secretary

    Howard Lutnick

    Education secretary

    Linda McMahon

    Energy secretary

    Chris Wright

    Health and human services secretary

    Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

    Housing and urban development secretary

    Scott Turner

    Interior secretary

    Doug Burgum

    Attorney general

    Pam Bondi

    Labor secretary

    Lori Chavez-DeRemer

    Veterans affairs secretary

    Doug Collins

    Director of national intelligence

    Tulsi Gabbard

    Director of the Office of Management and Budget

    Russell T. Vought

    S.B.A. administrator

    Kelly Loeffler

    U.N. ambassador

    Elise Stefanik

    U.S. trade representative

    Jamieson Greer



    In this post, we will be discussing the latest updates on the confirmation process for President Trump’s cabinet nominees. Stay tuned for all the latest developments as we track the progress of these key appointments.

    Tags:

    1. Trump cabinet confirmations
    2. New York Times
    3. Trump administration
    4. Government appointments
    5. Political news updates
    6. Cabinet nominees
    7. Senate confirmations
    8. Presidential appointments
    9. White House updates
    10. US politics

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  • Johnson tells ‘UpFront’ he’s pushing for recess appointments of Trump cabinet picks


    U.S. Sen. Ron Johnson says he’s pushing his GOP colleagues to pursue recess appointments to quickly confirm President Trump’s cabinet nominees.

    “Democrats are going to keep running out the clock here and denying President Trump the confirmed secretaries for his departments. I mean, it’s pretty grotesque from my standpoint,” Johnson said on WISN’s “UpFront,” which is produced in partnership with WisPolitics. “If Democrats won’t cooperate, allow these individuals who are going to be confirmed in a timely fashion, President Trump needs to get his team in place, and if that means recess appointments, that’s the route we should take.”

    Entering the second week of the Trump administration, Johnson, a member of the Senate Homeland Security Committee, said he was unaware of any increased immigration enforcement currently underway in Wisconsin.

    “The Trump administration is going after people that are a real danger to society, the real criminals,” Johnson said. “In those law enforcement actions, if they find people in this country illegally, they’ll also be caught up in the law enforcement actions.

    “Local law enforcement ought to cooperate with federal law enforcement,” Johnson added when asked if state and local officials should be prosecuted if they obstruct deportation efforts.

    Last week, a federal judge halted Trump’s executive order ending birthright citizenship, a move Johnson said he backed.

    “I understand his opinion,” Johnson said, referring to the judge. “It’s what conservative judges do, they apply the law as they interpret it. From a standpoint of just international law, we’re only one of the very few nations that allow birthright citizenship. I know why we passed the 14th Amendment. I think it definitely applied in that circumstance. Supporters then, I’m not sure the people passing the 14th Amendment, would anticipate wide open borders and this flood of illegal immigrants coming uncontrolled into this country, somewhat incentivized by birthright citizenship. So, times have changed. We’ll see how this is adjudicated in the courts.”

    On Trump’s sweeping Jan. 6 pardons, Johnson said he would have been more cautious.

    “There was a grotesque miscarriage of justice throughout the Biden administration,” Johnson said. “Certainly as it relates to people that participated in Jan. 6, a lot of that misjustice had to be rectified. I would have probably gone at it a little more cautiously. But in the end I think President Trump said let’s just pardon them all. I don’t have a real problem. I think the people who did commit violent acts, I’m not sure I would have pardoned them, but I think they served jail time, and you have to really take a look at what jail time they served versus, for example, violent criminals in New York and California that are just being let on the streets.”

    Attorney General Josh Kaul says he is “not intimidated” by the new Trump administration and Justice Department memo calling for local officials to be prosecuted if they obstruct deportation efforts, calling it a “disastrous first week in office.”

    “These are intimidation tactics,” Kaul told “UpFront.” “I’m not intimidated. I know that my colleagues in other states are not intimidated because we uphold the law, and we’re going to do what’s in the best interest of the people of our state.”

    The Dem AG said he has not been in touch with any ICE or federal officials but explained what he sees as the state’s role in federal immigration enforcement.

    “The issue that’s going to come up is when we have discretionary decisions to make, how are we going to allocate law enforcement resources?” Kaul said. “So at the Department of Justice, our focus is on investigating and prosecuting the most significant cases or cases where there’s nobody else who can step up and bring an investigation or prosecution, and I don’t want to see resources to be diverted away from homicide investigations or the investigations of other serious crimes to make state law enforcement agencies sort of deputies for a federal agency.

    “Certainly, if there’s somebody who has committed some horrific, violent crime and there’s an effort to deport them, nobody wants to see those folks remain in the country,” Kaul added. “But at the same time, I don’t want to see some of the extreme stuff we’ve seen from the Trump administration, like potentially having immigration raids at churches or schools, against people who themselves have committed no crime other than being here undocumented.”

    Assembly Speaker Robin Vos said Republicans will introduce legislation that would “require that everyone has to follow the law and cooperate with ICE.”

    “I’ve seen the speaker’s comments in the press, but we haven’t seen any potential bill drafts,” Kaul said. “And that’s unfortunate because if you want to have effective law enforcement efforts, having collaboration, and having an opportunity to think through bills and make sure they’re effective is a good thing. What I think we’re seeing instead is an effort to play politics with this issue, and that’s concerning, particularly when we have police chiefs and sheriffs around the state of Wisconsin who make judgments every day about how to use their resources most effectively. That’s who I want to see making decisions about law enforcement resources, not Robin Vos and not the Legislature.”

    Madison-based attorney Peter Moyers, who represented several Jan. 6 defendants in Minnesota and Wisconsin, said Wisconsin client Charles Walters was surprised by Trump’s pardon.

    “He had always said, look, ‘I know I was wrong,’” Moyers told “UpFront.” “‘I shouldn’t have been in there. I just don’t think I did that much damage,’ and he was certainly prepared to take his lumps and take his punishment, which he saw something he had coming.”

    Walters was still awaiting sentencing. Prosecutors say he kicked through fencing and confronted police.

    “We now live in the digital age, and a lot of this is stuff that no pardon or commutation or anything like that can erase,” Moyers said. “You can still find out all about it. Unfortunately, this is going to be all my client’s top Google hits for their name, maybe for the rest of their lives.”

    Moyers says he’s politically “on the left” and learned himself from his clients.

    “On Jan. 6, 2021, I was really upset, I was horrified, and even though I’m a criminal defense lawyer I said in my heart I don’t care what happens,” Moyers said. “I think all these people need to be put in prison. And then, as always happens in my work, you meet people and you see that it’s a little more complex than that. And it put me in contact with a lot of people that I otherwise might not even spend time with because they think so differently than I do. And so, you know, it was kind of an odd way for me to meet people who think very differently than I do. It gave me some insight into as divided in this country as people are, people sometimes screw up.”

    See more from the show.



    In a recent interview on ‘UpFront’, Senator Johnson revealed his plans to push for recess appointments of several of President Trump’s cabinet picks. Stay tuned for more updates on this developing story. #Johnson #Trump #CabinetPicks #UpFront

    Tags:

    • Johnson
    • UpFront
    • recess appointments
    • Trump cabinet picks
    • government appointments
    • political news
    • current events
    • US politics
    • executive branch
    • Senate confirmation

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