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Trump Pentagon pick had been flagged by fellow service member as possible ‘Insider Threat’
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McCormick-Casey recount cost to top $1M; GOP slams blue counties defying high court
The cost of Pennsylvania’s Senate recount is expected to top $1 million as Republicans seek to prevent three Democratic-friendly counties from counting ballots against the apparent wishes of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court.
Secretary of the Commonwealth Al Schmidt, a Philadelphia Republican appointed by Democratic Gov. Josh Shapiro, said Thursday that automatic recounts are triggered if the unofficial margin is within 0.5%.
GOP Sen.-elect David McCormick and Democratic Sen. Bob Casey Jr. were separated by 0.43% with a maximum 80,000 provisional and mail-in ballots to be counted, Schmidt said in a video address.
In a press call, McCormick representatives analyzed raw data and calculated “zero” path for Casey — recount or not — to overtake their boss.
FETTERMAN DEFENDS CASEY-MCCORMICK RECOUNT; DINGS KARI LAKE
Schmidt said the last automatic recount, between McCormick and cardiothoracic surgeon Mehmet Oz, cost Pennsylvania taxpayers $1.053 million and resulted in Oz moving on to the general election against John Fetterman.
In Casey’s case, about 7 million ballots will be subject to recount, and counties must report their data to Schmidt by Nov. 27.
The trailing candidate in three of the state’s previous eight automatic recounts waived the opportunity.
Pennsylvania’s top legislative Republican also slammed the incumbent for declining to waive the costly recount.
HOCHUL SPURS BIPARTISAN OUTRAGE AMID TOLL REBOOT BEFORE TRUMP CAN BLOCK IT
“Throughout his entire career, Sen. Casey has publicly called for the enforcement of the rule of law and the upholding of judicial norms,” said House Minority Leader Bryan Cutler of Lancaster.
“The facts and the law are clear: The election was free and fair; Dave McCormick is our new U.S. senator; a costly, statewide recount is unnecessary and duplicative; and Democrat-controlled counties are now openly defying the courts and the plain language of the election law to try and overturn a legal election result.”
Cutler said Casey should “immediately” concede and halt the recount and multiple cases of litigation across the state relating to the race.
McCormick’s campaign call foreshadowed news from Bucks, Centre and Philadelphia counties that their boards of election were prepared to count small numbers of undated or misdated ballots.
Republicans said that runs counter to a recent ruling from the 5-2 Democratic majority Pennsylvania Supreme Court.
The high bench declined to rule on the September case’s merits in tossing a lower court ruling that Philadelphia and Allegheny counties should count misdated or undated ballots from a prior election.
The RNC filed an emergency petition with the Supreme Court, urging it to reaffirm its recent decision.
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While the Casey campaign did not immediately return a request for comment, campaign manager Tiernan Donohue told PennLive the campaign was working to ensure all “Pennsylvanians’ voices are heard.”
“McCormick and his allies are working to disenfranchise voters in Pennsylvania and spread misinformation,” Donohue said.
Fox News Digital reached out to officials in Bellefonte, where the Centre County elections board reportedly signaled its intent to count undated ballots.
McCormick and the Pennsylvania GOP have sued Centre County, and a hearing was scheduled for Friday in Bellefonte. The plaintiffs alleged Centre’s decision is “legally erroneous.”
The mostly rural county, home to Penn State University, had been ground zero for Republicans seeking to make inroads in Democratic-friendly areas.
Philadelphia’s city commissioners also voted 2-1 to count about 607 questioned ballots.
In a response to Fox News Digital, the board said several counties voted to count a “relatively small number of undated and incorrectly dated mail ballots” and acknowledged GOP litigation.
“We are reviewing the filings,” Board Chairman Omar Sabir and Lisa Deeley, both Democrats, and Republican Seth Bluestein said in a joint statement.
In Doylestown, Bucks County Board of Elections Chairman Bob J. Harvie Jr. told KYW he’d rather “be on the side of counting ballots than not counting them.”
“The courts, I believe, will take this up. So, we’re going to get sued either way,” he said.
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Larry Kudlow to remain at helm of FOX Business show amid Trump admin reports
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. — FOX Business host Larry Kudlow has no plans to leave his media role amid reports detailing that President-elect Trump was eyeing him for a position in the administration.
“Larry Kudlow recently signed a new deal to continue hosting his eponymous program on FOX Business and has no plans to leave his current role helming one of the highest rated shows on the network,” a Fox News Media spokesperson said Friday.
Kudlow is the host of FOX Business’ “Kudlow,” and previously served as the director of the National Economic Council under Trump’s first administration. He had been floated as a top contender to join Trump’s second administration, as reports spread that the former and upcoming president was eyeing him for a top economic role in his administration, such as overseeing the Treasury Department or again reclaiming his role on the National Economic Council.
Following Trump’s massive victory over Vice President Kamala Harris last week — when he swept the seven battleground states and earned 312 electoral votes and the popular vote — Kudlow praised Trump’s economic policies, shutting down criticisms that the second Trump administration would further drive inflation that spiraled under the Biden administration.
LARRY KUDLOW: PRESIDENT-ELECT DONALD TRUMP IS MOVING AT WARP SPEED TO FORM HIS ADMINISTRATION
“The day after the election, on Wednesday, November 6, the stock market registered its largest rally in history. Mr. Trump is an avid follower of the stock market, as I can attest during his first term — when almost any time I went into the Oval Office, no matter what the agenda, his first question to me would be the stock market,” Kudlow said earlier this week on “Kudlow.”
TRUMP GOES FULL MAGA AS HE PICKS ALLIES AND LOYALISTS TO FILL HIS SECOND ADMINISTRATION
“Stocks can change their minds, but Mr. Trump is well aware that they are a predictor of the future economy — and send thumbs up or thumbs down regarding economic policy. All these Nobel Prize winning economists keep telling people how bad Trump’s agenda is, but the stock market begs to differ. Tax cuts, deregulation, and energy dominance — three key pillars of Mr. Trump’s economic plan — are very bullish for future economic growth and profits. Hence, stocks keep rallying,” he added.
Kudlow joined the first Trump administration in 2018, succeeding Gary Cohn as director of the National Economic Council until 2021. He then joined FOX Business, following the conclusion of the first Trump administration.
TRUMP’S SPEEDY CABINET PICKS SHOW HIS ‘PRIORITY TO PUT AMERICA FIRST,’ TRANSITION TEAM SAYS
In addition to his career in the media, Kudlow served as associate director for economics and planning in the Office of Management and Budget under the Reagan administration, and also as Bear Stearns’ chief economist in the late 1980s and into the ’90s.
Kudlow currently serves as vice chair of the board for the America First Policy Institute, a nonprofit research institute led by former senior leaders from the Trump administration. The group works to advance “policies that put the American people first.”
Trump has been on an announcement blitz since last week as he rolls out his picks for his second administration, including naming high-profile choices such as Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. to oversee the Department of Health and Human Services; Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., to lead the State Department; and Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., as attorney general.
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Outside report calls on UCLA to develop clear plans and policies for major protests
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Ranked choice voting dealt blow by voters, rejected in numerous states
Ranked choice voting suffered a blow as several states, including Nevada, Oregon, Colorado and Idaho rejected measures last week.
In Colorado, Proposition 131 would have created an open primary system for candidates of any party and the top four vote-getters would move on to the general election, after voters ranked their choices from first to last.
“The ranked choice voting movement has pushed really hard to convince everyone it’s a great idea,” data scientist Seth Werfel told Colorado Public Radio. “It has some merits but it’s not a slam dunk, and I think voters are skeptical of anything that they can’t immediately understand.”
In Idaho, Proposition 1 would also have ended the party primary system.
RANKED CHOICE VOTING AND THE LOVE-HATE RELATIONSHIP BOTH DEMOCRATS AND REPUBLICANS HAVE WITH IT
It was rejected by nearly 70% of the voters.
“You need a scandal, you need corruption, you need something that’s happening statewide to make the case to pass something complicated like this,” CalTech professor Michael Alvarez told Boise State Public Radio. “I’m not super deeply immersed in the politics of these various states, but I don’t see that common ‘why’ there.”
Oregon’s ranked choice voting measure, Proposition 117, was rejected by 58% of the voters.
“Voters this year were reluctant to make dramatic changes to the way they vote,” Chandler James, who teaches political science at the University of Oregon, told Oregon Public Radio. “But I don’t think that it spells the end for ranked choice voting in the future.”
TRUMP’S PICKS SO FAR: HERE’S WHO WILL BE ADVISING THE NEW PRESIDENT
A similar measure in Nevada was rejected by 53% of voters. The same measure was passed by nearly 6% in 2022, but Nevada measures that require amendments to the state constitution don’t go into effect until they’re passed in two consecutive elections, according to the Nevada Independent.
Ranked choice voting is already used statewide in Alaska and Maine and places like New York City, but in Alaska a measure to repeal it looks like it could pass narrowly. Hawaii uses ranked choice voting for some special elections.
And in Missouri, voters approved a constitutional amendment banning ranked choice voting.
“We believe in the one person, one vote system of elections that our country was founded upon,” Missouri state Sen. Ben Brown, who sponsored the measure, previously said in an interview, according to NPR.
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Other states that have bans on ranked choice voting include Louisiana, Alabama, Mississippi, Oklahoma, Kentucky, Montana, South Dakota, Tennessee and Florida.
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Dem says Gaetz can’t ‘resign away’ ethics probe; Mike Johnson says release would not be ‘appropriate’
The office of Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., said former Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., shouldn’t be able to “resign away” an ethics investigation into misconduct allegations, citing Gaetz’s nomination to serve as U.S. attorney general under President-elect Trump.
House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., has pushed for the House Ethics Committee not to release a potentially damaging report on a three-year probe of Gaetz amid allegations of sexual misconduct with a minor and illicit drug use.
Gaetz has denied the claims against him.
Gaetz’s resignation effectively ended the investigation because he is no longer a member of Congress. Speaking with reporters at the U.S. Capitol Friday, Johnson said releasing the report would “open a dangerous Pandora’s box.”
MATT GAETZ FACES GOP SENATE OPPOSITION AFTER TRUMP SELECTION FOR ATTORNEY GENERAL
Durbin spokesperson Josh Sorbe said the senator, who chairs the Senate Judiciary Committee, has pushed for the report’s release to the public.
“There is longstanding precedent for releasing ethics investigation materials after a member resigns, whether in the House or Senate,” said Sorbe. “The now former congressman shouldn’t be able to resign away an ethics investigation involving allegations of grave misconduct, especially when he will be nominated to be our country’s top law enforcement officer.
MATT GAETZ RESIGNS FROM CONGRESS OVER TRUMP NOD TO BE ATTORNEY GENERAL, JOHNSON SAYS
“There is bipartisan support for the Senate Judiciary Committee having access to this information,” he added. “Chair Durbin will continue pursuing it so members of the committee can fulfill their constitutional obligation of advice and consent on this deeply problematic nominee.”
After news broke Wednesday that Gaetz was chosen for the Trump Cabinet, House Ethics Committee Chair Rep. Michael Guest, R-Miss., told reporters the investigation would end if Gaetz were to step down from Congress.
On Friday, Johnson said he won’t be reaching out or speaking with the Ethics Committee to ask it not to release the report when asked by Fox News.
“I don’t know anything about the investigation. The speaker of the House is not involved with those things,” Johnson said. “I am reacting to media reports that a report is currently in some draft form and was going to be released on what is now a former member of the House.”
He added that he didn’t believe releasing the report would be “appropriate.”
“It doesn’t follow our rules and traditions, and there is a reason for that,” said Johnson. “That would open up Pandora’s box, and I don’t think that’s a healthy thing for the institution. So, that’s my position.”
Gaetz’s nomination has come under fire by some considering the allegations against him. Some GOP members of the Senate have said he faces an uphill battle to get confirmed.
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Democrats’ furor over ‘unqualified’ Trump nominees puts Biden’s staffing decisions back in the spotlight
Conservatives are pushing back after Democrats have criticized President-elect Trump’s Cabinet appointments for not being “qualified” by pointing to several examples of members of the Biden-Harris administration and campaign having questionable qualifications for their roles.
In recent days, Democrats in Congress and in the media have blasted Trump Cabinet nominees over their qualifications, including combat veteran Pete Hegseth as secretary of defense; South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem as secretary of homeland security; Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., as attorney general; and Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. as head of the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), among others.
“Three recent Trump nominees – Gaetz, Hegseth, and Gabbard – are far less qualified than Senate confirmation rejects like Bork, Tower, and Mier,” Harvard Professor Lawrence Summers, who served in the Clinton and Obama administrations, posted on X. “I hope that the Senate will do its duty.”
“Pete Hegseth is not remotely qualified to be Secretary of Defense,” Dem. Rep. Jason Crow posted on X.
BIDEN JUDICIAL NOMINEE UNDER FIRE FOR ALLEGED LACK OF LEGAL KNOWLEDGE, EXPERIENCE
“[Pete Hegseth] is not qualified to be the Secretary of Defense. I lead the Senate military personnel panel. All three of my brothers served in uniform,” Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., said, omitting his decades-long military career. “I respect every one of our servicemembers. Donald Trump’s pick will make us less safe and must be rejected.”
Democrats have also slammed Trump for nominating Kennedy as his HHS secretary despite a resurfaced Politico report revealing that Kennedy was being considered by Obama for Environmental Protection Agency during his 2008 presidential transition.
Since taking office in 2021, Biden has faced criticism from Republicans over several members of his administration who were believed to be lacking key attributes needed to perform the duties they were assigned in addition to scandals.
“The Democrats are melting down over Trump‘s cabinet picks so far, but they had no problem with ‘Mayor Pete’ being appointed Secretary of Transportation with no prior qualifications,” Link Lauren, conservative influencer and political commentator, who served as senior adviser to the Kennedy campaign, told Fox News Digital.
“Trump won the popular vote, the electoral college, the House and the Senate. That is a mandate from the American people that they want systemic change. I understand some of Trump‘s appointees have garnered mixed reactions — even from Republicans. But let’s give Trump’s appointees a chance, then verify in time that they are doing a great job.”
Buttigieg was appointed Biden’s transportation secretary after serving as the mayor of South Bend, Indiana, for eight years, with some questioning at the time whether he had enough related experience for the job. Since taking office, Republicans have amplified those concerns after a series of perceived missteps from Buttigieg, including the fallout from the supply chain crises and the devastating train derailment in East Palestine, Ohio.
WHO ARE TRUMP’S LIKELY TOP CONTENDERS TO LEAD COMMS TEAM, INTERACT WITH THE MEDIA?
“Take Secretary Buttigieg — his only qualifications for the job was a failed presidential campaign and time spent as a university-town mayor,” Bradley Devlin, Politics Editor at The Daily Signal, told Fox News Digital. “From East Palestine to electric chargers, it hasn’t gone well for ‘Mayor Pete,’ but Buttigieg has retained his job because he’s remained loyal to the Biden administration’s attempted radical energy and transportation policies.”
Biden’s national security adviser, Jake Sullivan, who worked as a lawyer before serving as counsel to Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., then an adviser to former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, rose through the ranks into high-profile positions in the Obama administration but has been maligned as unqualified by Republicans over a series of national security blunders that occurred during his tenure, including the botched Afghanistan withdrawal and falsely claiming that the “Middle East region is quieter today than it has been in two decades” days before Hamas killed at least 1,200 Israelis in a vicious attack.
Republicans criticized Sullivan’s role as Biden’s national security adviser, the youngest in history, due to his previous pushing of the “Russia collusion hoax” as part of the Clinton campaign and his role in her State Department office amid the Benghazi cover-up.
Several other Biden officials have faced heated criticism over their qualifications in recent years, including former senior Department of Energy official Sam Brinton, who identifies as nonbinary and was arrested multiple times for baggage theft at airports.
Eric Lipka, who served as a deputy press secretary on the Biden-Harris campaign, sparked controversy earlier this year over his drag queen alter ego “Erotica the Drag Queen.”
Tyler Cherry, who worked in both the Biden White House and the Department of Interior, was hired and promoted despite several social media posts comparing police to “slave patrols,” promoting conspiracies about Russia colluding with Trump and supporting the anti-Israel movement.
TRUMP’S SPEEDY CABINET PICKS SHOW HIS ‘PRIORITY TO PUT AMERICA FIRST,’ TRANSITION TEAM SAYS
Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., when asked on Thursday about the controversy surrounding Trump’s appointment of Gaetz, held up a photo of assistant HHS Secretary Rachel Levine and Brinton asked, “Did you ask Democratic senators about this?”
Levine, the first openly transgender federal official to be confirmed by the Senate, has faced criticism from Republicans on various issues such as sex change surgeries for minors and was labeled by a New York Post op-ed as “America’s No.1 gender extremist.”
Dozens of scientists from universities and environmental groups pushed for the removal of the head of Biden’s U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, claiming she lacked the educational background required to run the agency despite securing Senate confirmation.
“Liberals and progressives bemoaning these nominees’ alleged lack of qualifications are simply looking to protect the system they created — a government of, by and for the ‘experts’ — and that benefits them politically,” Devlin told Fox News Digital.
“This can be seen well beyond Biden’s cabinet picks, too. For example, the first 10 Biden-appointed appellate judges averaged merely 14 authored opinions each from the bench. Trump’s first 12 appellate judges, meanwhile, had averaged 34 over a similar time period — twice as many as Biden’s nominees.”
In 2023, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., blasted the qualifications of Biden’s judicial appointments saying in a press release, “The American people deserve the best and brightest. The Democrats are producing… something else.”
“Xavier Becerra, HHS – not a doctor, he’s a lawyer, ex-attorney general of California Jared Bernstein, Chair of Council of Economic Advisors – not an economist, Bachelor’s degree in music, masters in sociology,” FOX Business Evening Edit anchor Liz McDonald posted on X.
“Jennifer Granholm, Energy Secy – no energy background, Michigan Governor Gina Raimondo, Commerce Secretary – No trade background, Gov of Rhode Island Deb Haaland, Interior Secy – New Mexico Congressman,” she continued.
Conservative radio host and Fox News host Mark Levin pointed to Democratic vice presidential candidate Tim Walz as evidence that Democrats have been hypocritical on the issue of cabinet qualifications.
“The Democrat Party nominated and supported Tim Walz for vice president,” Levin posted on X.
“I don’t want to hear from that party or its media that any of the Trump nominees are unqualified for their posts. They have demonstrated that they have no standards at all when it comes to selecting even a vice-presidential candidate. Every Trump nominee has a solid record. Perspective is very important.”
The White House did not respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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5 takeaways from Trump’s emerging Cabinet
President-elect Trump has made quick work of pulling together a Cabinet and group of senior aides for his incoming administration, roiling Washington with some of his more controversial picks in the process.
Trump issued a flurry of nominations and appointments during his first full week as president-elect, sending lawmakers scrambling to react.
Here are five takeaways from Trump’s Cabinet thus far.
Trump prioritizes loyalty
The president-elect has long made clear that loyalty is paramount for anyone in his orbit, and his Cabinet picks thus far are a sign that he is rewarding those who have stayed on his good side.
Nearly every nominee or appointment Trump has made to date has been an individual who has defended the president-elect in some capacity, endorsed him on the campaign trail or stuck by him during some of his more turbulent moments.
Four Cabinet nominees – Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-N.Y.) for United Nations ambassador, Lee Zeldin for Environmental Protection Agency administrator, Doug Collins for Veterans Affairs secretary and John Ratcliffe for CIA director – were part of his impeachment defense team in 2020.
Former Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) has been one of Trump’s most brash and vocal defenders since 2016. Gaetz abruptly resigned from Congress when Trump rocked Washington by announcing the Florida Republican as the pick for attorney general.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and Tulsi Gabbard were prominent surrogates for Trump on the campaign trail after endorsing him as former Democrats. And Trump’s own personal criminal attorneys, Todd Blanche and Emil Bove, were picked for top jobs in the Justice Department after representing him during the hush money trial earlier this year.
The assembled administration is a far cry from the “team of rivals” that formed the first batch of top officials in Trump’s first term.
“It does seem like this group is a closer knit group of people,” Marc Short, who served as Trump’s first legislative affairs director, said on MSNBC. “Now, you may not like the people they’re coming forward with, but at the same time I think they’ve moved pretty quickly.”
Some nominees undercut agencies they’re tasked to lead
Multiple nominees for Cabinet positions have used rhetoric in the past that would undercut the mission of the agencies they have been put forward to lead.
Gabbard, the former Democrat tapped to serve as director of national intelligence, has been accused of parroting Russian propaganda about the war in Ukraine and refused to label Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad a war criminal after he was implicated in using chemical weapons on civilians.
Gaetz has in the past called for defunding the FBI and introduced legislation that would have eliminated the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives. Both agencies are housed within the Justice Department and would be under his purview as attorney general.
Trump’s pick to lead the Pentagon, Pete Hegseth, has come under scrutiny for writing in his book published earlier this year that women were less suited than men to serve in combat roles. He has also been critical of the Pentagon’s efforts to embrace diversity and equity. If confirmed, Hegseth would preside over the millions of men and women employed by the Defense Department.
And Kennedy, who has been chosen to lead the Department of Health and Human Services, has for years spread anti-vaccine conspiracies, promoted the consumption of raw milk and pushed unproven treatments for COVID-19 like ivermectin. If confirmed, Kennedy would have broad authority over the nation’s health and regulatory agencies that approve vaccines, manage Medicare and Medicaid and conduct research into treatments for various diseases.
A quicker pace and clearer vision than 2016
When Trump won the White House in 2016, he and his team appeared to be caught flat-footed and were slow to ramp up efforts to staff a new administration.
Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie (R) was ousted as head of the transition shortly after the election, and Trump paraded candidates in and out of Trump Tower for the press to see. He did not name his first Cabinet picks until Nov. 18, 2016, 10 days after the election.
By contrast, Trump has moved at a rapid clip to nominate not just his main Cabinet officials, but second-tier officials at the Justice Department and senior staff at the White House all within roughly one week of his victory over Vice President Harris.
Allies took it as a clear indication that Trump knows what he’s looking for this time around.
“I think the transition is in obviously a much better place than it was in 2016, because four years in the wilderness wasn’t wasted,” said Sean Spicer, who served as White House press secretary during Trump’s first term.
“The plans, the personnel, the process were all thought about, and the people that he is surrounding himself with now are all committed to advancing the agenda,” he continued. “He doesn’t have to wonder anymore about their commitment to the agenda.”
Tests lie ahead for Senate confirmations
Trump’s nominees – Gaetz, Gabbard and Kennedy in particular – are going to pose a test for Republicans in the Senate and provide a barometer of how independent those lawmakers intend to be from the incoming president.
Republicans are poised to hold 53 seats in the Senate beginning in January, meaning any Trump nominee can afford three GOP defections, assuming they get no Democratic support. Vice President-elect JD Vance (R-Ohio) would break any 50-50 ties.
Senators in particular often speak about the importance of the institution serving as a serious body and a check on the House and the executive. But Trump’s convincing victory in the election may increase the pressure on lawmakers to bend to the president-elect’s will.
Trump started the pressure campaign on Senate Republicans before even putting forward any names, pushing for whoever became GOP leader to approve of recess appointments, a procedure that would allow the president to essentially sidestep the confirmation process for any controversial nominees.
Sen. John Thune (R-S.D.), who was elected Republican leader this week, hasn’t ruled out recess appointments, but has also acknowledged they could be procedurally difficult to achieve if there is enough GOP opposition.
“All this is a process. But I don’t think any of those things are necessarily off the table. I think we have to have all the options on the table,” Thune told Fox News.
“And these nominees deserve their day in court. They deserve a hearing, a confirmation hearing, an opportunity to be vetted,” he added. “And the Senate will perform its constitutional role under advise and consent.”
Key positions still to come
While many of the highest profile nominees have already been announced, there are still several Cabinet-level positions and top White House jobs Trump is expected to fill in the coming days.
The most notable is his economic team. Trump must still announce picks for Treasury secretary, Commerce secretary and U.S. Trade Representative.
Scott Bessent and Howard Lutnick are viewed as the finalists for Treasury, while Robert Lighthizer, who served as Trump’s trade representative during his first term and is a strong advocate for the use of tariffs, is likely to land a job in the new administration.
There are also still openings for the Department of Agriculture, the Department of Transportation and the Department of Housing and Urban Development. Trump pledged on the campaign trail to shutter the Department of Education, but doing so would require congressional approval. It’s unclear if Trump intends to nominate a secretary for the department in the meantime.
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Former White House aide: Cabinet picks show Trump’s ‘drunk on power’
Sarah Matthews, a former spokesperson for President-elect Trump, said his recent Cabinet picks stem from him being “drunk on power.”
In an MSNBC appearance Friday afternoon, Matthews said the narrative of Trump playing “4D chess” by making distracting nominations is “hilarious.”
“That’s not what’s happening. He knows that he is drunk on power right now because he feels like he was given a mandate by winning the popular vote,” she said. “He has control of both chambers of Congress, and he doesn’t have to worry about running for reelection.”
Matthews also said Trump does not want to “please the establishment,” and his choice to nominate now-former Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) does exactly that.
“He wants someone who’s going to be a loyalist and who’s going to do his bidding at the Department of Justice,” she said. “He doesn’t want an independent DOJ.”
Other controversial Cabinet appointments include Fox News host and Army veteran Pete Hegseth as Defense secretary and anti-vaccine activist Robert F. Kennedy Jr. as the head of the Department of Health and Human Services.
Incoming Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.) has said the choices face difficult paths to confirmation in the Senate, warning that “none of this is gonna be easy.”
Leading up to the election, Matthews criticized Trump and backed Vice President Harris in her bid for the White House, joining her fellow ex-Trump White House officials Alyssa Farah Griffin and Cassidy Hutchinson in their efforts.
The Hill has reached out to the Trump campaign for comment.
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