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Pete Hegseth’s ‘Fox & Friends Weekend’ co-hosts come to his defense amid allegations
Pete Hegseth’s co-hosts on “Fox & Friends Weekend” defended his character after Sherillyn Ifill, a former NAACP Legal Defense Fund president, declared the Secretary of Defense nominee was a “white supremacist.”
“If he was a white supremacist, I think we’d know and I hope that he has the time, which I’m sure he doesn’t because he’s preparing for his hearings and everything before the Senate, that woman deserves to be sued. That is defamation,” Rachel Campos-Duffy said.
Her fellow host Will Cain adamantly agreed.
“This is one of the people who I feel like I know best in my life who I would vouch for their character. That being said, we do know him best […],” Cain stated.
“That ridiculous opinion is based upon what she accuses him of being against: DEI [Diversity, Equity, Inclusion]. So merit is now racist is what she’s suggesting,” he added.
Cain also addressed concerns about one of Hegseth’s tattoos which was flagged by a fellow National Guard member in the anti-terrorism unit. It reads ”Deus vult,” a term that Cain said means “God wills it.”
The complaint resulted in Hegseth’s removal from duty at President Biden’s inauguration.
“It’s been used by white supremacists concerned it was an indication of an insider threat. This is a saying, by the way. It goes back to 1096,” he argued. “I mean, I read the email. It’s one man’s internet rabbit hole theory.”
Cain described the resurfacing of the issue as “desperate” while Hegseth’s fill-in, Joey Jones, said the effort was spurred by Democrats.
“The Democrat Party would have you believe that serving in the military is some sort of indicator that you are, you know, alt-right, far-right, that you hate the country because you hate the idea of DEI, which attacks the meritocracy of the military,” Jones stated.
“The one thing I do know about Pete Hegseth is if he’s confirmed as Secretary of Defense, he will not seek retribution with his National Guard unit or with that person. He’ll treat everyone the exact same and give them all an opportunity to be the best fighting force our country’s ever seen.”
Lawmakers have questioned Hegseth’s ability to get confirmed, citing his little experience in military leadership and a previous sexual assault allegation.
Trump has not recalled his nomination or publicly addressed the backlash.
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Debt-ridden Harris campaign spent $2.6 million on private flights for staff in October: FEC documents
Vice President Harris’ debt-ridden presidential campaign spent $2.6 million on private flights in the last few weeks of the election season, documents show.
The release of the findings comes as the debt-saddled campaign, which spent $1 billion on the trail, is being scrutinized for the financial decisions it made before losing the Nov. 5 election to President-elect Trump. The campaign is believed to be $20 million in debt.
The eyebrow-raising expenses were listed in a Federal Election Commission (FEC) filing obtained by Fox News Digital. According to the FEC filing, in the month of October alone, the Harris campaign spent $2,626,110 on private flights.
The costs ranged from $3,500 to $940,000 per disbursement, with $2.2 million going to a company named Private Jet Services Group, while $430,000 went to Advanced Aviation Team, a charter flight broker.
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In September, campaign staff spent $3.1 million on private flights, which brings the flight-related expense total to more than $10 million since July.
The expenditures are just a few of several financial decisions for which the campaign has been intensely scrutinized. For example, Harris’ team paid Oprah Winfrey’s production company $1 million after the TV star spoke at a rally Oct. 15.
Harris staffers also gave $4 million to Village Marketing Agency, a company that connects clients with social media influencers. Additionally, FEC records show the campaign spent at least $15 million on “event production.”
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The campaign’s use of private jets has been criticized in recent weeks for both financial and environmental reasons. Private jets emit more greenhouse gases per passenger than commercial flights do, and Harris previously said climate change was an “existential threat.”
“There’s no question we have to be practical. But being practical also recognizes that climate change is an existential threat to us as human beings,” Harris told CNN in 2019. “Being practical recognizes that greenhouse gas emissions are threatening our air and threatening the planet and that it is well within our capacity as human beings to change our behaviors in a way that we can reduce its effects.”
Fox News Digital reached out to the Harris campaign for comment.
Fox News Digital’s Andrew Mark Miller and Aubrie Spady contributed to this report.
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No women in combat roles? Trump’s Pentagon chief pick raises eyebrows
Democrats and veterans groups are taking aim at Trump Defense secretary nominee Pete Hegseth’s belief that women should not serve in combat roles, with at least two crucial GOP senators also asking for answers on his stance.
Hegseth, 44, a Fox News host, has often made questionable comments on the military matters he’d oversee should he be confirmed as Pentagon chief. But his assertions last week have elicited fears that Hegseth’s views could have a chilling effect on women wanting to serve or alienate those currently in uniform.
“I’m straight up just saying that we should not have women in combat roles,” Hegseth said on “The Shawn Ryan Show” podcast. “It hasn’t made us more effective, hasn’t made us more lethal, has made fighting more complicated.”
He added: “We’ve all served with women, and they’re great. But our institutions don’t have to incentivize that in places where, traditionally — not traditionally, over human history — men in those positions are more capable.”
The comments quickly were picked up after Trump’s surprise announcement choosing Hegseth on Tuesday, with combat veteran Sen. Joni Ernst (R-Iowa) telling reporters she wanted clarification on his stance.
“Even a staff member of mine, she is an infantry officer . . . she is a tough woman, so he is going to have to explain it,” said Ernst, top Republican on the Senate Armed Services emerging threats subcommittee.
A spokesperson from Ernst’s office later told The Hill that she looks forward to visiting with Hegseth.
Incoming Senate Armed Services Committee Chair Roger Wicker (R-Miss.) also said he wants to learn more about Hegseth’s position.
“We’ve gotten to the point where women are involved in almost every part of military service,” he told Politico, adding that he would “look into exactly what [Hegseth’s] point of view is.”
But Sen. Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.), an Iraq war veteran and Purple Heart recipient, had far more pointed words:
“Where do you think I lost my legs?” Duckworth said on CNN Wednesday.
Duckworth, who was one of the first women to fly combat missions as an Army helicopter pilot, lost both her legs and some mobility in her right arm after her aircraft was hit by a grenade in 2004.
“Look, he’s not qualified to serve as Secretary of Defense, and obviously, he’s made these comments about how he doesn’t think women should be in combat. . . . I ask him, how does that strengthen our nation’s military?”
She added: “We can’t go to war today without our women military members,” she said, noting there are more than 225,000 active-duty women serving in the military right now.
The Trump transition team didn’t respond to requests for comment about Hegseth’s remarks about women in combat.
Women have been in combat roles for the better part of three decades beginning in 1991 and 1993, when Congress repealed the law barring women from combat aircraft and ships, respectively.
That was followed by the Navy in 2010 reversing its policy banning women from submarines, and the 2013 repeal of the Combat Exclusion Policy, allowing women to serve in ground combat units.
A few years later in 2015, former Defense Secretary Ash Carter opened all military combat positions to female service members. Such progress has allowed women to fill about 220,000 jobs previously off-limits to them, such as special operations, infantry, armor, and reconnaissance units.
Today, women account for about 17.5 percent of the military’s active-duty force, according to 2022 data from the Defense Department.
Hegseth — a decorated veteran who served as an Army National Guard infantry officer with tours in Afghanistan and Iraq and at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba — in the past has accused the military of lowering standards for women to enter combat jobs.
“Women shouldn’t be in combat at all,” Hegseth said in a June interview with conservative commentator Ben Shapiro. “They’re life-givers, not life-takers. I know a lot of wonderful soldiers, female soldiers, who have served, who are great. But they shouldn’t be in my infantry battalion.”
In his remarks last week, Hegseth also suggested that allowing women to fight has led to more casualties on the battlefield.
“Everything about men and women serving together makes the situation more complicated, and complication in combat, that means casualties are worse,” Hegseth said.
The comments drew the ire of veterans organizations and Democrat lawmakers, who argued women have competed and succeeded on the same playing field as their male counterparts. They also worried Hegseth’s views, should he be confirmed, would have a negative effect on women looking to join the armed forces at a time when the military has struggled with recruitment.
Allison Jaslow, the chief executive of Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America who deployed to Iraq in 2004 as a platoon leader, believes the women in combat have proven tougher than many of their male counterparts.
“Need proof? Look at the women who’ve graduated from Ranger School, which is so grueling that around half of the men who enter it fail out,” she said in a statement to The Hill. “Those women deserve a Secretary of Defense who is aware of that reality and also ensures that the culture in the military embraces that reality – especially as we still continue to confront a recruitment crisis.”
Joanna “JoJo” Sweatt, a Marine Corps veteran and the national organizing director for Common Defense, a progressive veterans group, said the organization’s women’s veteran caucus had been discussing Hegseth’s expected nomination with frustration.
“His on-record dismissal of diversity initiatives and resistance to acknowledging the contributions of women and LGBTQ service members signals a dangerous regression to a culture that undervalues and undermines our voices, service, and sacrifices,” she said. “Hegseth’s stance disregards the progress made toward a more inclusive military that reflects the diversity of the country it defends.”
Sweatt, who joined the service in 1997 as female Marines were being infused into combat support roles, was a radio operator and deployed to Iraq in 2003.
She said one member pointed out that the question of women in combat is a completely different can of worms, as “we’ve always served in combat, it’s just that our stories were never told. Many were behind enemy lines or on the front providing a variety of direct support and many posing as men firing on the front lines.”
Current House Armed Services Committee Chair Adam Smith said Hegseth’s appointment would be “a step background.”
“Every person who puts on the uniform deserves respect, gratitude, and a fair chance to serve. Trump’s appointment of Pete Hegseth is a step backward. I’ll stand up against any attempt to deny respect or restrict the right to serve based on gender,” Smith wrote on X.
Hegseth could face a tough path to confirmation, as Republicans will hold only a slim majority in the Senate and his past comments and relatively untested status may serve as obstacles.
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Lawyer for Defense Secretary Nominee Pete Hegseth Says Sexual Assault Accuser ‘Was the Aggressor’
Tim Parlatore, lawyer for Trump Defense Secretary Nominee Pete Hegseth, said in an exclusive interview with Breitbart News that sexual assault allegations from seven years ago — in 2017 — were “completely investigated” at the time and that he is “completely and totally innocent.”
The post Lawyer for Defense Secretary Nominee Pete Hegseth Says Sexual Assault Accuser ‘Was the Aggressor’ appeared first on Breitbart.
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Gov. JB Pritzker vows Illinois will boost sex changes after decisive Trump victory
Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker pledged Saturday to keep his state open to transgender treatment after the issue, particularly regarding minors, became a bone of partisan contention during the presidential election.
The billionaire governor, whose family is deeply involved in the transgender movement, posted the tweet to mark Transgender Awareness Week.
“This Transgender Awareness Week, I want you to know that I see you and have your back as governor,” wrote Pritzker. “Illinois has enshrined protections for gender-affirming care to meet this moment — and because of that, you will have a home here always.”
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His state is one of several, including Minnesota and California, critics say foster a climate that encourages some children to seek so-called “gender-affirming care.”
Pritzker’s cousin, Jennifer, was born a male but now identifies as a female and is an outspoken proponent of transgender treatment. Jennifer (née James) Pritzker was a lieutenant colonel in the United States Army National Guard and is a father of three.
Jennifer Pritzker also leads the Chicago-based Tawani Foundation, which awards grants to organizations that support “gender and human sexuality,” according to its website. The Pritzker family fortune was made in Hyatt Hotels.
“Continuing my family’s tradition of putting personal philanthropy into service for the public good, the Tawani Foundation strives to make grants that empower the organizations we support to realize and build on their missions,” Jennifer wrote on the foundation’s website.
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Illinois is one of the most progressive states in the nation when it comes to minors who identify as the opposite sex.
Gov. Pritzker enacted guidance through the Illinois Department of Human Services (IDHR) in December 2021 about non-discrimination protections for “transgender, nonbinary and gender nonconforming students” under the Illinois Human Rights Act of 1979.
“Ensuring every Illinois student has access to a safe, validating learning environment where they can be their true self is a top priority for my administration,” Pritzker said in a release. “This guidance from the Illinois Department of Human Rights will provide students, caregivers, and educators another tool to ensure classrooms are welcoming, affirming, and inclusive for all students.”
In Illinois, biological males can compete with females under Pritzker’s guidance in school or club sports.
Additionally, “use of restrooms, locker rooms and changing rooms may not be restricted based upon a student’s physical anatomy or chromosomal sex. A student must be permitted to access restrooms or bathrooms, locker rooms and changing rooms that align with their gender-related identity and without having to provide documentation or other proof of gender,” according to the IDHR.
Pritzker’s policy clarifies that “discomfort or privacy concerns of other students, teachers, or parents” are “not valid reasons to deny or limit the full and equal use of facilities based on a student’s gender-related identity.”
The 2024 presidential election’s nationwide GOP mandate is giving Democrats who publicly supported “gender-affirming” policies for minors pause.
In a February 2023 video, President-elect Trump said, “I will then ask Congress to permanently stop federal taxpayer dollars from being used to promote or pay for these procedures and pass a law prohibiting child sexual mutilation in all 50 states.”
In Illinois, Medicaid can cover gender transition surgeries and drugs for those who are 21 years or older under Gov. Pritzker.
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Pritzker’s office did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.
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Alex Marlow: RFK Will Actually Follow Scientific Method of Testing and Transparency
On Friday’s broadcast of the Fox Business Network’s “Kudlow,” “Alex Marlow Show” host and Breitbart Editor-in-Chief Alex Marlow said that HHS nominee Robert F. Kennedy Jr. will actually follow the scientific method by testing hypotheses and providing transparency about information.
The post Alex Marlow: RFK Will Actually Follow Scientific Method of Testing and Transparency appeared first on Breitbart.
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