China’s Xi vows to work with Trump during meeting with Biden
Chinese President Xi Jinping told President Biden on Saturday that he will work with the incoming administration of President-elect Trump, as the two current leaders spoke on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) forum in Lima, Peru.
The meeting between Biden and Xi marked the first time in seven months the two had spoken, Reuters reported, and may be the last time the two meet on conflicts from cybercrime to trade, Taiwan, the South China Sea and Russia before Trump returns to the Oval Office in January 2025.
Xi told Biden, “China’s goal of a stable, healthy and sustainable China-U.S. relationship remains unchanged,” acknowledging the “ups and downs” between the two countries.
“China is ready to work with the new U.S. administration to maintain communication, expand cooperation and manage differences,” Xi said.
BIDEN, XI MEETING WILL BE FORUM FOR ‘INTENSE DIPLOMACY’ AMID TENSIONS BETWEEN US, CHINA: OFFICIALS
Biden told Xi that maintaining leader-to-leader talks will be vital after Biden leaves office, according to national security adviser Jake Sullivan, who was seen sitting next to Biden during the meeting.
He also acknowledged to the Chinese leader that while the two of them may not have always agreed, their discussions have been “frank” and “candid.”
XI JINPING WARNS TRUMP US WOULD ‘LOSE FROM CONFRONTATION’ WITH CHINA AS RENEWED TRADE WAR LOOMS
China and other members of the G-20 will likely brace for a reboot of Trump’s “America First” policy, placing a heavy emphasis on higher tariffs. Trump famously launched a trade war with China in his first term in 2018, raising tariffs up to 25% on steel, aluminum and other Chinese-made products. China responded with reciprocal tariffs against the U.S. Trump promised to raise tariffs up to 60% on Chinese imports while running for president, although it’s unclear if he would actually go that high.
Biden has aimed to lessen tensions with China, but during his meeting with Xi on Saturday, there appeared to be few signs of breakthroughs on the major issues.
GERMANY BRACES UNDER COLLAPSING GOVERNMENT AND LOOMING TRUMP TRADE WAR
Still, the two agreed that humans, not artificial intelligence, should make the ultimate decisions when it comes to the use of nuclear weapons, the White House noted, marking the first time the two countries have raised the issue.
Biden and Xi also talked about China’s ally, North Korea, which is deepening ties with Russia and even deployed troops in Moscow’s war with Ukraine. The move has raised concerns not just with Washington, but also with European capitals and Beijing.
“President Biden pointed out that the (People’s Republic of China’s) publicly stated position with respect to the war in Ukraine is there should be no escalation, no broadening the conflict, and the introduction of (Democratic People’s Republic of Korea) troops runs foursquare against that,” Sullivan said. “He also pointed out that the PRC does have influence and capacity, and should use it to try to prevent a further escalation or further expansion of the conflict with the introduction of even more DPRK forces.”
Reuters contributed to this report.
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Biden authorizes Ukraine to use US long-range missiles to strike inside Russia
President Biden has authorized Ukraine’s military to use U.S.-provided long-range missiles on targets inside Russian territory, senior U.S. officials confirmed to Fox News on Sunday.
The senior U.S. official said the weapons will mostly focus on the Kursk region of Western Russia. The decision was first reported by The New York Times.
According to the official, Biden’s decision was spurred by the Russian decision to invite 10,000 North Korean soldiers into the fight against Ukraine in Kursk.
Russian President Vladimir Putin has previously said the U.S.’s approval of such missile strikes would constitute an act of war. He has yet to react to Biden’s announcement Sunday.
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The announcement came after Great Britain and France authorized Ukraine to launch SCALP/Storm Shadow missile strikes, according to French outlet Le Figaro.
Biden’s announcement also came just hours after Russia concluded one of its largest missile and drone attacks in months, launching over 200 targeting Ukraine’s power and energy infrastructure.
Putin has previously said that giving Ukraine the green light on missile use would effectively mean that the U.S. and NATO are “in the war.”
“Flight assignments for these missile systems can, in fact, only be entered by military personnel from NATO countries. Ukrainian servicemen cannot do this. And therefore, it is not a question of allowing the Ukrainian regime to strike Russia with these weapons or not. It is a question of making a decision whether NATO countries directly participate in the military conflict or not,” Putin said in September.
TRUMP’S FIRST CABINET PICKS DECIDEDLY NOT ISOLATIONISTS: UKRAINE, ISRAEL BREATHE A SIGH OF RELIEF
“If this decision is made, it will mean nothing less than the direct participation of NATO countries, the United States, and European countries, in the war in Ukraine,” he added.
Meanwhile, President-elect Trump’s transition team is expected to soon announce a peace envoy to assist in negotiations between Ukraine and Russia. Trump argued on the campaign trail that he could solve the conflict before entering office.
Trump has been rolling out appointee names of those he wants to fill his Cabinet and advise him on top issues at a lightning-quick pace.
Some advisers are reportedly encouraging Trump to push Kyiv to agree to terms that would freeze the frontlines by creating an 800-mile-long demilitarized zone and allow Russia to keep the land it has illegally seized, which amounts to roughly 20% of Ukraine.
It has also been suggested that Kyiv should agree not to pursue NATO membership for 20 years, a stipulation that critics of this plan argue kowtows to Putin.
Fox News Digital reached out to the the White House for additional comment.
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Bevy of immigration programs at risk under Trump mass deportation plan
Immigrants with humanitarian or temporary legal status in the United States are at risk of being rendered effectively undocumented by the incoming Trump administration.
More than 1.5 million people can currently live and work in the country protected both by longtime programs including Temporary Protected Status (TPS) and Biden administration innovations such as the Cuba Haiti Nicaragua Venezuela (CHNV) parole processes.
“Twilight” or “liminal” statuses occupy a gray area between unauthorized presence in the United States and legal permanent immigration paperwork. According to data compiled by the Migration Policy Institute (MPI), the federal government has 3,390,295 grants of liminal statuses, though the number of people protected is almost certainly lower because some foreign nationals may be protected by more than one program.
Without the protections granted by these programs, immigrants who are accustomed to living and working in the United States legally could lose those rights overnight, risking their livelihoods and potentially being detained and deported.
Here are the programs that could be at risk under the second Trump administration:
TPS
TPS is either the most successful humanitarian immigration program in the federal government’s arsenal, or a back door that’s allowed uncontrolled immigration from multiple countries, depending on who you ask.
In reality, TPS is not an immigration program at all. It was set up in 1990 amid increased migration from El Salvador, where death squads run by the U.S.-supported government were terrorizing a segment of the population.
The program was approved with Salvadorans in mind, but it gave the federal government the ability to grant work permits and deferral from deportation to nationals of any designated nation. Countries can be designated for TPS for up to 18 months at a time to avoid deporting people to somewhere going through or recovering from natural or man-made disasters.
TPS holders in most cases can’t adjust their status to become permanent residents, a feature of the 1990 immigration bill that’s perpetuated twilight status for hundreds of thousands of people.
The first Trump administration aggressively targeted TPS, arguing that it had lost its temporary nature and using the example of El Salvador as proof: According to the Congressional Research Service (CRS), 180,375 Salvadorans are still protected by the program.
TPS only protects nationals of a country who were physically present in the United States as of a certain date. For Salvadorans, that date is February 13, 2001, meaning Salvadoran TPS beneficiaries have lived and worked legally in the United States for nearly a quarter century.
But Salvadorans are no longer the largest group of people in TPS; as of March, there are 200,005 active grants of TPS for Haitians and 344,335 for Venezuelans, after the Biden administration included those countries in the program.
That growth — there are 863,880 active TPS grants, according to CRS — could provide the future Trump administration more ammo to argue TPS has been misused.
Since 1990, and more consistently since 2001, successive Republican and Democratic administrations have more or less automatically renewed certain key TPS designations, a practice the first Trump administration sought to end by terminating the designations.
“We’ve seen courts signal skepticism about revoking protections to people who were assured that they’d receive that protection for a certain amount of time, but in terms of whether or not a protection should be extended and who should get protection, the courts have always seen that as a political question, squarely in the realm of the executive branch and its discretion,” said Nayna Gupta, director of policy at the American Immigration Council, adding that the law requires a 60-day period after any termination, and terminations are still susceptible to litigation.
Immigrant advocates are hopeful the Biden administration will issue last-minute renewals for TPS designations in an effort to give beneficiaries at least an 18-month runway before the country designations expire.
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) did not respond to a question on whether TPS extensions are in the works.
But if and when those designations expire, current TPS beneficiaries will be at a relative disadvantage because of the program’s registration requirements and statutory exclusion from a path to citizenship.
“A major concern is that, as opposed to other people in the unauthorized population, who DHS doesn’t know who they are, doesn’t know where they live, someone with TPS, the government knows who they are and what their most recent address is. So if anything, they might be more vulnerable to deportation if and when their status is terminated,” said Kathleen Bush-Joseph, a policy analyst at the Migration Policy Institute.
“But as a general matter, this does all come back to the lack of congressional action on immigration. The executive branch has taken a record number of actions on immigration using the tools that it has available, but these actions are vulnerable to litigation and do not provide a pathway to citizenship, because ultimately, only Congress can provide that.”
DACA
If TPS is the highest-profile statutory humanitarian relief program for foreign nationals, Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) is its executive action counterpart.
DACA was the Obama administration’s most visible immigrant relief effort, an origin story that attracts Democrats and repels Republicans.
But through its lifetime, DACA has gained bipartisan clout because it protects a publicly sympathetic group of people known as “Dreamers.”
Dreamers are undocumented immigrants who arrived in the country as minors — DACA beneficiaries are a subset of Dreamers who fulfilled the program’s requirements, including being born on or after 1981 and arriving before 2007 and passing the relevant background checks.
Because DACA started in 2012 with age-specific rules, the DACA-eligible population has shrunk significantly since its inception. At its peak, the program had more than 800,000 beneficiaries, a number that as of June shrunk to 535,030, according to United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS).
Throughout its lifetime, DACA has faced multiple challenges on its legality, primarily through lawsuits led by red states, and a case is currently under review by the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals. During litigation, DHS has been barred from processing any new DACA applications, increasing the rate of membership attrition.
DACA was first declared illegal in 2021 by a federal judge in Texas, who argued the Obama administration circumvented Congress in its creation by not issuing it as a rule subject to a comments period. In 2023, that same judge ruled Biden’s re-issuing of the program as a rule subject to comments was also illegal.
“DACA is already being litigated, right? We’re waiting for that final decision. So in some ways, like the question of how sound DACA is, is already in the hands of the judiciary,” said Gupta.
That could make a Trump rescission of the program moot, though he did order its termination in 2017, despite faint hopes from immigrant advocates that he would spare Dreamers.
Biden parole programs
A second Trump administration is certain to stop accepting migrants into the country under parole programs started under President Biden, but it’s less clear what will happen to people who have already received parole.
According to MPI numbers, the current administration has granted parole to Cuban, Haitian, Nicaraguan and Venezuelan nationals 531,000 times as of September.
But the Biden administration has also said it will not renew CHNV parole status, forcing beneficiaries to seek a different status, including asylum or TPS.
The first Venezuelan CHNV grants started expiring in October; nationals of the three other countries have until early next year before their parole expires.
The short time frame could make it convenient for the Trump administration to simply wait for parole status to expire rather than acting to terminate it proactively.
Advocates are calling on the Biden administration to extend all possible parole designations, hoping to give current parolees more time before potentially being targeted for deportation.
“Parolees who can receive extensions of parole — in any way in which those can be expedited — those pending requests for parole, that will be hugely helpful. That will mean that on day one, people have protection for a certain amount of time. Of course, this could be terminated at any moment, but it’s more likely that we would just see them expire and the Trump administration not renew them,” said Gupta.
Other parole programs include Uniting for Ukraine — with 214,800 parole orders issued — family reunifications for Colombia, Cuba, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Haiti and Honduras — 58,776 grants — and Operation Allies Welcome, a program that issued 75,000 grants of parole to Afghans who helped the U.S. war effort.
Many if not most of the parolees who entered the United States through those programs are likely to have claimed asylum.
Asylum
The United States asylum system is overwhelmed, with a backlog of more than 2 million cases between immigration courts and USCIS.
But there is significant overlap between asylum, gray area statuses and visas, including green cards.
“The number of people with these statuses who have also applied for asylum is probably really high, so that would really get into a double counting problem,” said Bush-Joseph.
Prospective asylees who have already passed their initial screening — those in the backlog — are protected from deportation by statute, meaning the Trump administration would face significant legal challenges in trying to deport them before their cases are heard.
But immigrant advocates say the incoming administration’s build-up of expectations is already rattling immigrant communities with uncertainty.
“The real challenge for people who are in these temporary protective statuses or temporary parole postures is the absolute uncertainty of whether this administration is going to affirmatively terminate those protections on day one, whether they’re going to do let them run their course and expire and not renew those, whether they’ll just pick a couple and target certain countries,” said Gupta.
“Then, even if those protections evaporate, what does it look like after? Is there a roundup? Is there detention? Is it feasible to remove all those people? And how can they even survive in our community if they lose work authorization, and they have to go into hiding?”
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Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker Vows to Boost Sex Changes to Thwart Trump Agenda
Illinois Democrat Gov. JB Pritzker pledged to launch a campaign to boost radical sex change procedures in his state.
The post Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker Vows to Boost Sex Changes to Thwart Trump Agenda appeared first on Breitbart.
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Library of Congress email systems hacked earlier this year by ‘foreign adversary’
The Library of Congress email systems suffered a substantial hack earlier this year by a “foreign adversary,” Fox News can confirm.
It is unclear if the hack compromised accounts of those who work directly for the House and Senate.
However, Fox News is told that U.S. Capitol Police has referred the matter to the FBI, and it is investigating the scope of the hack.
The hack was described to Fox News as “classic, sophisticated foreign adversary espionage.”
CHINESE SPIES HACKED TRUMP ATTORNEY TODD BLANCHE’S PHONE: SOURCE
This means that the foreign actor conducting the hack was likely trying to get a sense of what types of questions lawmakers and aides ask the Library of Congress about legislation and the answers they receive.
CHINESE HACKERS ATTEMPTED TO BREACH TRUMP AND HARRIS CAMPAIGNS’ CELLPHONE DATA
If successful, such espionage could shed light on the thinking of lawmakers about certain subjects.
Fox is told that it took some prompting by senior Congressional officials to share what went down at the Library of Congress. However, the hack is not believed to have spread to other Congressional systems – like the House and Senate.
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Biden makes historic visit to Amazon rainforest, declares International Conservation Day
President Biden made a historic visit to the Amazon rainforest Sunday to view the Amazon River and the ongoing effects of climate change.
With his visit Sunday, Biden became the first sitting American president to set foot in the Amazon rainforest.
After an aerial tour to view the ecosystems and deforestation, Biden said he was proud to visit the region.
He signed a U.S. proclamation designating Nov. 17 as International Conservation Day.
With President-elect Trump’s election victory, some are concerned that he will rollback some of the climate change efforts done under the Biden administration.
“It’s no secret that I’m leaving office in January. I will leave my successor and my country a strong foundation to build on if they choose to do so,” Biden said from the Amazon.
Last year, the Biden administration designated $500 million for the Amazon Fund, making it the most significant international effort to preserve the rainforest. So far, the U.S. has provided $50 million to the fund and Biden said Sunday the U.S. will provide $50 million more.
A senior Biden administration official said Sunday that it will be up to Trump if he wants to continue their efforts on the front.
“Maybe he’ll come down here and see the forest and see the damage being done from drought and other things and change his mind about climate change,” the official said.
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Lee threatens to not seat Casey in Senate if he continues refusal to concede
Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah., took aim at Sen. Bob Casey over the Pennsylvania Democrat’s refusal to concede the election, arguing that the Senate could refuse to seat him if he continues to rely on “illegal votes.”
“If Bob Casey doesn’t concede, Pennsylvania keeps counting illegal votes, & Casey relies on those votes to claim victory, the Senate could refuse to seat him,” Lee said in a post on X Saturday while citing Article I, Sec. 5, Cl. 1, which states that each “House shall be the Judge of the Elections, Returns, and Qualifications of its own Members.”
The comment comes as Pennsylvania’s Senate race will be decided by a recount after Republican Sen.-elect Dave McCormick won the election by roughly 26,000 votes, or within the one percentage point margin that triggers an automatic recount under Pennsylvania law.
PENNSYLVANIA DEMOCRATS OPENLY ADMIT TO COUNTING ILLEGAL BALLOTS IN MCCORMICK-CASEY RACE
Casey has refused to concede the election despite the contest being called by multiple outlets, instead insisting that a winner be declared after all votes are counted.
But questions remain about the votes Casey is trying to count after the Pennsylvania Supreme Court ruled that ballots that lack required signatures and dates are not allowed to be included in official results, a ruling that is being ignored by Democratic officials in Philadelphia and surrounding Bucks and Montgomery counties.
“I think we all know that precedent by a court doesn’t matter anymore in this country,” Bucks County Commissioner Diane Ellis-Marseglia, a Democrat, said last week. “People violate laws anytime they want. So, for me, if I violate this law, it’s because I want a court to pay attention. There’s nothing more important than counting votes.”
MCCORMICK-CASEY RECOUNT COST TO TOP $1M; GOP SLAMS BLUE COUNTIES DEFYING HIGH COURT
Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Whatley has condemned Democrats in Pennsylvania, accusing the party of attempting to “steal” the election from McCormick.
“Let’s be clear about what’s happening here: Democrats in Pennsylvania are brazenly trying to break the law by attempting to count illegal ballots. They are doing this because they want to steal a senate seat,” he said on X.
Lee, meanwhile, has urged Casey to abandon the fight over the ballots voluntarily and allow McCormick to take his seat in the Senate.
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“Bob Casey, you’re better than this,” Lee said in another post on X. “It’s time to concede.”
The Casey campaign did not immediately respond to a Fox News Digital request for comment.
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House Democrat: Gabbard ‘not a serious pick’ for ‘extraordinarily important position’
Rep. Madeleine Dean (D-Pa.) said in an interview Saturday that former Democratic Rep. Tulsi Gabbard (Hawaii), who has been chosen by President-elect Trump to serve as director of national intelligence, is “not a serious pick” for an “extraordinarily important position.”
“She’s not a serious pick for this extraordinarily important position of national intelligence, overseeing 18 different national intelligence agencies, knowing every single one of the most important secrets that our country has to be able to hold closely,” Dean told MSNBC’s Alex Witt on her show. “It’s a very unserious pick and actually a very dangerous one.”
Trump announced Wednesday that he has selected Gabbard to be director of national intelligence in his next administration.
“For over two decades, Tulsi has fought for our Country and the Freedoms of all Americans. As a former Candidate for the Democrat Presidential Nomination, she has broad support in both Parties – She is now a proud Republican! I know Tulsi will bring the fearless spirit that has defined her illustrious career to our Intelligence Community, championing our Constitutional Rights, and securing Peace through Strength. Tulsi will make us all proud!” Trump said in a statement.
Gabbard has in the past shared content implying that the U.S. has previously had involvement in Ukraine making biological weapons, perpetuating a narrative from the Russians. She also met with Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, who has been accused of the use of chemical weapons on Syrian civilians, seven years ago.
“She will also need to be confirmed by the Senate. Does she have the credentials for such an important position?” Witt asked Dean about Gabbard.
“Well, clearly not,” Dean responded. “Again, with all of these appointments, or at least most, we’re finding that they are not serious picks. This is not a serious person, this is somebody — I served alongside her in the first Congress that I was here, three Congresses ago, when she was on [the House Financial Services Committee] alongside me, literally in my row.”
“She was seldom there, because she was moving on to either visit … mouthing of the talking points of the — Vladimir Putin, or visiting Syrian President [Bashar al-Assad,] but she also just wasn’t there,” Dean added.
The Hill has reached out to the Trump transition team for comment.
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Library of Congress email system hacked earlier this year by ‘foreign adversary’
The Library of Congress email system suffered a substantial hack earlier this year by a “foreign adversary,” Fox News can confirm.
It is unclear if the hack compromised accounts of those who work directly for the House and Senate.
However, Fox News is told that U.S. Capitol Police has referred the matter to the FBI, and it is investigating the scope of the hack.
This is a developing story. Please check back here for more updates.
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