President-elect Donald Trump is announcing key positions in his incoming administration as he prepares to return to the White House.
Trump said Florida Republican Rep. Mike Waltzwill be his national security adviser and tapped Pete Hegseth,a veteran and the co-host of Fox & Friends Weekend, to be secretary of defense.
Trump selected former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee to be the next US ambassador to Israel and longtime friend and real estate developer Steve Witkoff to serve as Special Envoy to the Middle East.
Veteran Republican lawyerBill McGinleywill serve as his White House counsel andJohn Ratcliffeas CIA director, the president-elect said.
He has also announced that Tom Homan, who served as the acting director of Immigration and Customs Enforcement in his last administration, will be in charge of the nation’s borders.
On Monday, two sources told CNN he is likely to pick Florida Sen. Marco Rubio as his secretary of state.
Trump’s first key announcement was last week when he said that campaign manager, Susie Wiles, would be his White House chief of staff, the first woman to ever be in that role.
Trump is expected to announce that Stephen Miller, his top immigration adviser, will serve as White House deputy chief of staff for policy, two sources familiar with the plans told CNN.
Taylor Budowich, a longtime adviser to Trump, is expected to be named Deputy Chief of Staff of Presidential Personnel and Communications in coming days, a source familiar with matter tells CNN.
Discussions about a future role for North Dakota governor-turned-Trump-ally Doug Burgum have evolved into that of an “energy czar,” according to two people familiar with the discussions.
GOP Sen. Bill Hagerty of Tennessee, who has called for immediately cutting aid to Ukraine, is under consideration for several posts.
There are several names being batted around for the Treasury role, including Scott Bessent, who prepared Trump for his economic club speeches.
This post has been updated with more details on Trump’s administration picks.
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Mike Huckabee, new US ambassador to Israel, calls for “complete reset” of international relations
From CNN's Aaron Pellish
Mike Huckabee moderates a roundtable discussion with Donald Trump in Drexel Hill, Pennsylvania, on October 29.
Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, who was tapped on Tuesday by President-elect Donald Trump as US ambassador to Israel, called for a “complete reset” of “international relations” when Trump returns to the White House.
Speaking in an interview with Fox News, Huckabee suggested a major reevaluation of diplomatic relationships across the board, laying out what he anticipates for Trump’s foreign policy vision.
Huckabee claimed that Trump’s election victory has already impacted the Middle East conflict, while further teasing a “realignment” of the country’s place in foreign diplomacy.
“You’re seeing a scrambling all over the Middle East of countries suddenly trying to behave differently because they know a new sheriff has come to town,” he said.
Slamming the UN: Huckabee also praised Trump for selecting New York Rep. Elise Stefanik as the next US ambassador to the United Nations, saying she will bring “a great revelation of what’s wrong” at the UN.
Stefanik has frequently criticized the international organization, particularly over its criticism of Israel, and last month said the Biden administration should consider a “complete reassessment” of US funding for the UN if the Palestinian Authority continues to pursue a push to revoke Israel’s UN membership.
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Trump’s defense secretary pick says he was removed from Biden inauguration duty because of tattoo
From CNN's Oren Liebermann
Pete Hegseth, the Fox News anchor who became President-elect Donald Trump’s surprise pick for Defense Secretary, says he was removed from inauguration duty in 2021 because of what he described as a religious tattoo.
In his book “The War on Warriors,” Hegseth wrote that he had served under former Presidents George W. Bush, Barack Obama and Donald Trump. His unit was also tasked to work the inauguration of President Joe Biden on January 20, 2021.
Some context: While the symbol still holds religious and historical significance — the Crusader Cross is included on the flag of the country Georgia — far right groups have seized upon them, using them to represent an anti-Muslim ideology, according to the Anti-Defamation League and the Southern Poverty Law Center, two organizations that study hate groups.
One day before Biden’s inauguration, the National Guard Bureau said it had removed 12 soldiers from inauguration duty following a security vetting process intended to ensure troops do not have any ties to extremist groups.
Two individuals were flagged because of “inappropriate” comments and texts, Gen. David Hokanson, the commander of the National Guard Bureau, told reporters at the time. The other 10 were removed for questionable behavior found during the vetting process.
The National Guard Bureau never identified the soldiers who had been removed from inauguration duty so its unclear if Hegseth was one of those identified. There is also no indication that any follow-on disciplinary action was taken against those who were removed.
Hokanson emphasized that the removal of the Guard members did not indicate they had ties to extremism, but only that they had been “identified” during the process and removed out of an abundance of caution.
CNN has reached out to the National Guard Bureau for comment.
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Elon Musk says new department will have a leaderboard for the "most insanely dumb spending" of tax dollars
From CNN staff
Elon Musk embraces Donald Trump during a campaign rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, on October 5.
Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images
Hours after President-elect Donald Trump announced that Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy will lead the new “Department of Government Efficiency,” the tech billionaire pledged to post all of the department’s actions online for transparency.
He also promised to have a “a leaderboard for most insanely dumb spending of your tax dollars,” adding: “This will be both extremely tragic and extremely entertaining.”
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Senate GOP leader candidates discuss how to handle Trump's demands for recess appointments
From CNN's Morgan Rimmer, Ted Barrett, and Manu Raju
During a private two-and-a-half-hour candidate forum for GOP leaders, Sens. John Thune, John Cornyn and Rick Scott discussed their positions on recess appointments for President-elect Donald Trump’s appointees as well as the looming debt limit fight.
Sen. Markwayne Mullin, who is backing Thune, said their discussion was “very cordial” and that Thune did a “really good job explaining” how they could use recess appointments to get Trump’s nominees confirmed. He added that the debt limit would be a “huge concern” that all three addressed.
Thune’s past criticism of Trump did not come up in the meeting, he also noted.
“There’s so many people in that building, and even so many people in the Trump world that at one time said something negative about President Trump before they got to know him,” Mullin argued, saying that Thune’s past comments are “not a concern.”
Sen. Mike Lee, who organized the forum and endorsed Scott as it ended, said much of the discussion was about the need to return to “regular order” and an open amendment process, where control over legislation would theoretically be divided more evenly amongst senators in the conference.
Thune called it a “fulsome discussion,” but would not say how confident he is feeling ahead of tomorrow. “You never know until the voters vote,” he said.
Cornyn similarly avoided discussing his level of confidence tonight, telling reporters, “I made my pitch to my colleagues, not to you.” Scott insisted that they “had a great conversation” before the elevator doors closed.
Sen. Ron Johnson noted that he would still like to extend the conversation, and push the elections back, and that he raised his concerns – but he believes many of his colleagues are ready to vote.
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CNN Projection: GOP Rep. David Valadao will win reelection in California’s 22nd District
From CNN’s Shania Shelton
Rep. David Valadao participates in the House Republican Conference news conference at the Capitol on September 14, 2022.
Bill Clark/CQ Roll Call/AP
Republican Rep. David Valadao will win reelection in California’s 22nd District, once again defeating Democrat Rudy Salas in a rematch, CNN projects.
Valadao was one of two members of the “Impeachment 10” — the 10 House Republicans who voted to impeach then-President Donald Trump after the January 6, 2021, insurrection at the US Capitol — who returned to Congress following the 2022 midterms.
The California Republican was first elected to Congress in 2012 after serving one term in the state Assembly. He lost his House seat in 2018 to Democrat TJ Cox but then won again in 2020.
California’s 22nd District in the Central Valley is Democratic-leaning and predominantly Latino. President Joe Biden would have won the district by 13 points in 2020. The son of an immigrant from the Azores Islands in Portugal, Valadao has deep roots in the Central Valley, where his family owns several dairies.
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Hegseth pick came down to longstanding relationship and Trump being impressed by his career, sources say
From CNN's Alayna Treene and Jeff Zeleny
Many people in President-elect Donald Trump’s orbit were caught by surprise by his decision to select Pete Hegseth to run the Pentagon, sources familiar with the discussions told CNN.
The sources argued it came down to Trump having a longstanding relationship with Hegseth, noting that Trump always thought he was “smart” and was impressed by his career. Trump also likes that Hegseth is a military veteran and the account of his service in his book, the sources said.
For his first term, Trump had considered Hegseth to potentially lead the Department of Veterans Affairs. However, at the time people close to Trump ultimately convinced him against it.
Unlike many of the other picks Trump has announced to serve in top roles in his administration, the president-elect did not meet with Hegseth at Mar-a-Lago in recent days, one of the sources told CNN. Their discussions over the role were conducted remotely, the source added.
Hegseth didn’t emerge as a top candidate for secretary of defense until Monday, a Trump adviser said, adding that he interviewed for the role over the last 24 hours.
A senior Republican close to Trump and the transition called the choice of Hegseth “a complete surprise,” and not in the line of what has been discussed in multiple meetings. While not discounting Hegseth’s intellect or service, this Republican described the choice as “not what anyone was expecting” and far less serious than others under contention.
The pick is also seen as a response to Trump’s likely choice of Florida Sen. Marco Rubio for State Secretary – which has been criticized by many across MAGA world – as someone to placate the base.
This post has been updated with more information.
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Trump is seriously wrestling with his attorney general decision
From CNN's Kaitlan Collins
Donald Trump speaks during an election night event in West Palm Beach, Florida, on November 6.
Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
As President-elect Donald Trump is narrowing down his choices for top roles in his incoming administration and making congratulatory phone calls to those he’s chosen, one position that’s been at the forefront of his choices remains unsolved tonight: attorney general.
Trump has thought about who he would install at the Department of Justice if he won reelection for months, but now, after meeting with several candidates at his Palm Beach club, the incoming president is still wrestling with his decision, according to three people who have spoken with him.
Trump has solicited the opinions of those in his inner circle at Mar-a-Lago, made phone calls on the matter and met with at least one candidate Tuesday. But he has yet to come to a decision, mainly because no one he’s encountered has checked all of the boxes he’s looking for, one person familiar with his thinking told CNN.
His picks last time: Trump’s fixation with his next attorney general has stemmed from his intense displeasure with the two he nominated during his first term, Jeff Sessions and Bill Barr.
Trump fired Sessions after the midterm elections in 2018 when the two had essentially stopped speaking. And Barr left in December of 2020 as Trump continued to push election lies that Barr had publicly dispelled.
For context: Trump and his team have cited the attorney general as the most important Cabinet position if he is to make good on campaign promises, which include immigration-related executive orders and investigations of his political enemies. The Justice Department is also charged with defending administration actions in court, covering issues from health care to the environment to gun control.
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Trump's pick for defense secretary doesn't think women should have combat roles in the military
From CNN's Haley Britzky
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'We are in a new place': Bernstein reacts to Hegseth's comments about women in combat roles
President-elect Donald Trump’s pick for Secretary of Defense, Pete Hegseth has criticized efforts to allow women into combat roles in the military, accusing the military of lowering standards to allow women into those jobs.
Speaking about his book, “The War on Warriors” published this year, Hegseth said in a recent podcast he was surprised “there hasn’t been more blowback” on the book, “because I’m straight up just saying, we should not have women in combat roles.”
Hegseth later added that he took issue specifically with women in “physical, labor-intensive type jobs,” such as those with the Navy SEALs, Army Rangers, Army Special Forces, Marine Special Operations, and jobs such as those in infantry, armor and artillery units.
“I’m talking about something where strength is the differentiator,” he said.
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Senate GOP candidate forum breaks up after 2 and a half hours
From CNN's Morgan Rimmer and Ted Barrett
Republican senators trickled out of the candidate forum about two and a half hours after it began, saying it was drama free and a serious discussion about the way forward for their conference.
Most senators refused to say who they’d support as they left, though Sen. John Hoeven said he’d back Sen. John Thune, and Sen. Marsha Blackburn said she was voting for Sen. Rick Scott.
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Defense Department officials were surprised to hear that Pete Hegseth's will be the next defense secretary
From CNN's Oren Liebermann and Haley Britzky
Pete Hegseth appears on "Fox & Friends" at Fox News Channel Studios in New York in 2019.
Roy Rochlin/Getty Images
Fox News host Pete Hegseth’s name was not among those considered as likely picks for Donald Trump’s Defense Secretary among those in the Defense Department. In fact, his name hardly emerged in the run up to the announcement if at all.
Another defense official who was following the potential picks for the position only learned about the possibility of Hegseth in the hours before the nomination and, like others who spoke on condition of anonymity with CNN, didn’t even know how to react.
But in Hegseth, Trump is likely to have a loyalist leading the department with which he had an often rocky relationship during his first term. Trump feuded with his first Defense Secretary, James Mattis, who resigned in protest after Trump announced an immediate withdrawal of US forces from Syria. Mark Esper, Trump’s other confirmed Defense Secretary, had openly warned about the threat of another Trump administration in the weeks leading up to the election.
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Here's how GOP senators are reacting to Trump's choice for defense secretary
From CNN's Ted Barrett
Republican senators are reacting to President-elect Donald Trump picking Fox News host Pete Hegseth as the next defense secretary. Here’s what they are saying:
Sen. Lisa Murkowski: “Wow,” the Alaska Republican said when told about the pick. “I’m just surprised. I’m not going to comment whether it’s good, bad or indifferent. I’m just surprised, because the names that I’ve heard for secretary of defense have not included” his. She said she did not know if Hegseth would have trouble being confirmed.
Sen. Shelley Moore Capito: “I trust the president to make a good choice,” the West Virginia senator said. Asked if she had any concerns about his qualifications since it’s such an important and significant job, she replied, “it’s a huge job” before walking off.
Sen. Ted Budd: The North Carolina senator, who is also on the Armed Services Committee, called Hegseth “an impressive individual” and said he would not have problems being confirmed. “There’s lot of great options, and I’m certainly going to support President Trump and his agenda, his nominees,” Budd said. Asked if he thinks he’s qualified to run such a major department, Budd said, “Oh I do. They’ll put a great team around him.”
Sen. Todd Young: The Indiana lawmaker, who has been critical of Trump at times, said he wanted to learn more about his the nominee. “I just don’t know much about his background and his vision. I look forward to learning more. I want to give all of President Trump’s nominees fair opportunity to state their qualifications and their vision,” he said.
Sen. Thom Tillis: “Interesting,” the North Carolina lawmaker said.
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Top Democrat on House Armed Services says Pete Hegseth's lack of policy knowledge is "concerning"
From CNN's Manu Raju and Ali Main
Rep. Adam Smith, the top Democrat on the House Armed Services Committee, cast doubt on whether President-elect Donald Trump’s pick for the defense department had the necessary experience.
Smith explained how having a Pentagon leader not familiar with department policy could have an impact on the military’s ability to meet new challenges.
He said he and House Armed Services Committee Chair Mike Rogers agree that the Pentagon needs to be “better at innovation, better at adapting new technologies, more quickly,” as the acquisition process is “incredibly slow.”
“Lack of experience of making the Pentagon bureaucracy work better is a concern,” he said.
He also said the US has a “lot of iron to the fire” in the Middle East, Asia and Ukraine and he sees “no evidence” Hegseth has “any relationship whatsoever with our overseas partners.”
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CNN Projection: Democratic Rep. Mike Levin will win reelection in California
From CNN’s Jack Forrest
Democratic Rep. Mike Levin speaks at an event in Encinitas, California, on June 1.
Allen J. Schaben/Los Angeles Times/Getty Images
Democratic Rep. Mike Levin will hold onto his seat in California’s 49th Congressional District, CNN projects, beating out a challenge from a Republican businessman.
Levin, an environmental attorney, first flipped the southern California seat blue in 2018. He held on against Matt Gunderson, an owner of multiple Orange County car dealerships, in a district that national GOP leaders targeted as a potential flip opportunity.
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Marjorie Taylor Greene blames Johnson for failing to secure a commanding House majority
From CNN's Manu Raju and Ali Main
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene and Speaker Mike Johnson.
Getty Images
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene blamed Speaker Mike Johnson’s leadership for Republicans not yielding a commanding majority of seats in the House of Representatives, saying Americans voted for President-elect Donald Trump’s agenda — not the actions taken by the House GOP.
Greene told CNN she wouldn’t rule out backing a challenger to Johnson, something that would be significant in the January floor vote where Johnson can’t afford to lose more than a handful of votes.
Greene pointed to Trump’s lead over Vice President Kamala Harris in the popular vote, as well as his decisive electoral vote win, and said “that didn’t transfer over to House races, and it should have.”
“We should have a major majority, a super majority, but we don’t,” she told CNN in an interview. “I think it’s based on the performance of this Congress.”
Greene argued the American people approved the “MAGA agenda,” and “that was not the agenda that was focused on in this majority of Republicans.”
Remember: CNN has not yet made projections in enough House races for either party to reach the 218 seats needed to control the chamber, but Republicans are currently just three seats away from keeping the majority.
When pressed on whether Johnson, who has fought to govern with a narrow majority, is to blame, Greene answered, “yes,” referencing the House passing more aide to Ukraine and reauthorizing FISA as instances where the speaker should have pushed back on the will of more moderate members.
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Fox News says Hegseth will no longer host Fox & Friends Weekend
From CNN's Brian Stelter
Fox News has released a statement praising Pete Hegseth’s work at the network and noting that he will no longer be hosting Fox & Friends Weekend.
Hegseth’s deal with Fox ends today, the network said.
Hegseth started with Fox News as a contributor in 2014 and was named the co-host of Fox & Friends Weekend in 2017. He started co-hosting the show on a regular basis in late 2016 and was officially named to the role in January 2017, according to Fox.
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Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez says Democrats could learn from Republicans on messaging strategy
From CNN's Manu Raju and Ali Main
Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez speaks at a press conference in Washington, DC, on November 13, 2023.
Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images
Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez said Tuesday that Democrats could learn from Republicans when it comes to “constant direct communication” with voters, especially when crafting an economic message.
Asked by CNN’s Manu Raju what she takes away from people in her district in New York who voted for both President-elect Donald Trump and her, Ocasio-Cortez answered:
She said the content of the party’s message is “of course, very important,” but expressed the value of “having a laser-focused, class-focused, economic-focused message that is simple, easy to understand in three words, and also digitally and constantly communicated every day.”
Asked about former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s recent suggestion that a Democratic candidate could have had a better chance at winning if President Joe Biden had stepped aside sooner, Ocasio-Cortez answered, “at the end of the day, I think that when it comes to that kind of crystal ball speculation, it’s really hard to tell.”
“It’s important to note that Kamala Harris came very, very close. It is possible for anybody to name any one individual factor as the deciding factor and make their case,” she said, again expressing the importance of delivering for working-class Americans in “clear, tangible ways” that they can feel “in their pockets.”
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Trump picks Kristi Noem as Homeland Security secretary
From CNN's Kaitlan Collins
South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem speaks before Republican presidential nominee former President Donald Trump at a campaign town hall, on October 14, 2024, in Oaks, Pennsylvania.
Noem will be tapped to take over the agency as two key immigration hardliners — Stephen Miller and Tom Homan — are slated to serve in senior roles, signaling Trump is serious about his promise to crack down on his immigration pledges. With his selection of Noem, Trump is ensuring a loyalist will head an agency he prioritizes and that is key to his domestic agenda.
The department saw an immense amount of turmoil the last time Trump was in office. Then, DHS had five different leaders, only two of whom were Senate-confirmed. The agency has a $60 billion budget and hundreds of thousands of employees.
Noem, who previously was a South Dakota representative, will now be tasked with overseeing a sprawling agency that oversees everything from US Customs and Border Protection and Immigration and Customs Enforcement to the Federal Emergency Management Agency and the US Secret Service.
This post has been updated with more details on the appointment.
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Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy to lead "Department of Government Efficiency"
Elon Musk, left, and Vivek Ramaswamy.
Getty Images
President-elect Donald Trump has announced that Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy will lead the new “Department of Government Efficiency.”
“This will send shockwaves through the system, and anyone involved in Government waste, which is a lot of people!” Musk was quoted saying.
The work of the department will end no later than July 4, 2026, Trump said in the release.
“A smaller Government, with more efficiency and less bureaucracy, will be the perfect gift to America on the 250th Anniversary of The Declaration of Independence. I am confident they will succeed!” Trump said in the release.
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California Gov. Gavin Newsom met with Biden at the White House Tuesday, source says
From CNN's Donald Judd
California Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom met Tuesday at the White House with President Joe Biden, a source familiar told CNN.
The meeting comes as Newsom has sought to codify some of his state’s priorities on abortion and climate change ahead of President-elect Donald Trump’s administration, calling state lawmakers for a special session later this year.
NBC was first to report news of Tuesday’s meeting with Biden.
In addition, the source told CNN, Newsom met with senior adviser Steve Ricchetti at the White House Tuesday. The California Democrat is also expected to hold meetings with members of his state’s congressional delegation while in town this week, his office told CNN Monday.
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Trump picks Fox News anchor Pete Hegseth to serve as defense secretary
From CNN's Aditi Sangal
Pete Hegseth is seen at Fox News Channel Studios on August 9, 2019 in New York City.
The co-host of Fox & Friends Weekend “is an Army veteran of Iraq, Afghanistan, and Guantanamo Bay, earning two Bronze Stars and a Combat Infantryman’s Badge,” according to his website.
Hegseth’s name had not been on the initial shortlist of possibilities for the Secretary of Defense position, according to a source familiar.
But Trump was struggling to land on a choice for the job and liked Hegseth from his last term when he briefly considered him for Veterans Affairs before being warned that he may not get confirmed, the source said.
CNN’s Kaitlin Collins contributed reporting. This post has been updated.
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Scott's final message before Senate election highlights MAGA world endorsements and Trump-aligned agenda
From CNN’s Ali Main and Danya Gainor
Florida Sen. Rick Scott speaks during the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee on July 16.
Paul Sancya/AP
Sen. Rick Scott pointed to his endorsements and alignment with President-elect Donald Trump as well as his experience as a businessman during a preview of his final message for his colleagues just ahead of Wednesday’s Senate leadership election.
The majority leader hopeful said he is “very appreciative” of the endorsements he’s received from Trump allies, including Elon Musk and Tucker Carlson, and that he would welcome the endorsement from the president-elect himself.
Scott reaffirmed his alignment with Trump’s agenda, suggesting that there is no “need” for a Department of Education and that it should be “disbanded.” He also echoed Trump’s criticism of Federal Reserve Chair Jay Powell.
“Jay Powell has been a disaster,” Scott said. “He’s built up a balance sheet when he shouldn’t have done it. He’s caused an unbelievable misallocation of capital. He should have never had the job.”
Some context: Scott, seen as a long-shot candidate, is up against Sens. John Thune and John Cornyn in the battle to succeed Mitch McConnell. GOP senators will vote on the new majority leader by secret ballot tomorrow.
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Catch up on the latest developments in Congress and the presidential transition
From CNN's Elise Hammond
President-elect Donald Trump announced a flurry of key appointments Tuesday as his Cabinet begins to take shape.
Meanwhile, Senate Republicans are gearing up for a secret-ballot election tomorrow to choose a new leader after the party flipped control of the chamber.
Here’s the latest:
Transition latest: More announcements are on the way, with Trump expected to name a slate of deputy chiefs of staff in the coming days, two sources familiar with the matter told CNN. The State Department has been receiving messages for Trump from foreign governments. However, it can’t share them with Trump’s team until the president-elect signs the memoranda of understanding with the Biden administration, according to two sources familiar with the matter.
Senate GOP leadership elections: Sens. John Cornyn, John Thune and Rick Scottare vying to become the majority leader in the new GOP-controlled Senate with the election, by secret ballot, scheduled for Wednesday.
What the GOP leadership candidates are saying: Thune said he is “feeling good” and published an op-ed on Fox News’ website focused on his vision for the GOP’s new majority. Cornyn vowed to be a leader who would empower the rank-and-file to shape legislation, according to a new letter obtained by CNN. Some GOP senators, meantime, privately voiced frustration with the onslaught of calls coming their way pressuring them to vote for Scott.
What else is happening Wednesday: Trump is expected to meet with House Republicans when he is in Washington, DC, House Speaker Mike Johnson said. That meeting would be before Trump goes to the White House to have lunch with President Joe Biden.
The latest in the House: There are 14 House races that have not yet been projected, and we still do not know who will control the lower chamber of Congress. Republicans are three seats away from holding on to the majority, while Democrats are 12 seats away from taking the chamber. Trump needs to take this into consideration while choosing his Cabinet.
Hush money sentencing: Trump’s lawyers and the Manhattan District Attorney’s office have agreed to delay activity in the hush money case until November 19. Judge Juan Merchan was expected to rule today on whether to overturn the business fraud conviction based on this summer’s Supreme Court ruling on presidential immunity.
Harris back at the White House: Hundreds of White House staffers cheered for Vice President Kamala Harris as she arrived on campus on Tuesday. It marked the first time Harris was coming to the White House post-Election Day with most staff present.
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"It seems likely," Johnson will face challenge to his speaker bid, GOP Rep. Chip Roy says
From CNN’s Annie Grayer
GOP Rep. Chip Roy told CNN “it seems likely” that House Speaker Mike Johnson will face a challenge to his leadership bid on Wednesday.
“I guess we will find out tomorrow,” Roy said when asked who he is voting for.
House Republicans are holding their closed-door leadership elections on Wednesday where Johnson is expected to win, given he only needs a simple majority to hold onto his post. But if Johnson faces any opposition, it could signal he has work to do to get the 218 votes he needs on the floor in January given that Republicans will have a very narrow majority if they do in fact keep control of the House.
What Johnson is saying: Earlier on Tuesday, Johnson said he was confident that he will become speaker on the first ballot in January.
“I’m talking with everyone. Everybody has ideas on how to better improve our processes. And some of the frustrations that we had over the last year with the smallest margin in history with control of only one half of one-third of the federal government will not be our concerns going forward because we have unified government” Johnson said. “I think you’ll have total unity in the party, I really do.”
Roy said he has spoken with Johnson, calling him “a good friend,” and said that he wants to see how the speaker negotiates the rules package and handles the lame-duck session.
Asked whether he is worried about facing retribution from President-elect Donald Trump, who supports Johnson, Roy said, “whatever we do, it’s going to be to ensure that we can actually advance President Trump’s agenda.”
“So I’m sure the president, in the end, will be supportive of what we’re trying to do,” he added.
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Sen. Tommy Tuberville says he will run for reelection in 2026
From CNN’s Manu Raju
Sen. Tommy Tuberville is seen in Washington, DC, on September 14, 2023.
Jack Gruber/USA Today Network
Alabama Sen. Tommy Tuberville, who is up for reelection in 2026, told CNN he’s running for a second Senate term, putting to rest speculation that he wouldn’t run.
Tuberville added: “I want to find out what it’s like to be in the majority. When you’re in the minority, you just get kicked in the mouth every day, you know. And we’ve been kind of sat on the back bench. Now it’s time to take over, see what can be done with President (Donald) Trump.”
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House Republicans will hold leadership election tomorrow. Here's how it will unfold
From CNN’s Haley Talbot, Sarah Ferris and Annie Grayer
The Capitol building is seen in Washington, DC, on November 10.
Daniel Slim/AFP/Getty Images
House Republicans will hold leadership elections tomorrow when Speaker Mike Johnson is expected to be reelected as leader. Some House conservatives are privately discussing whether to float a challenger to Johnson in the speaker’s race, but it would be a symbolic gesture of protest.
Any real fight would come in January when Johnson will need near-unanimity of the conference to keep his gavel.
Here’s what to expect:
At 9 a.m. ET, the GOP candidate forum begins at a DC hotel. President-elect Donald Trump will address House Republicans there and, once he leaves, the forum will continue until lunchtime.
There will be votes on the House floor from 1:30 p.m. to 2 p.m. ET.
Members will go back to the Hyatt at 2:30 p.m. ET to vote for the leadership positions.
Remember: It will be a secret ballot and Johnson needs a simple majority at this point to win.
Here’s what else the conference will vote on:
Majority Leader
Majority Whip
Conference Chair
Vice chair of conference
House GOP policy chair
Conference Secretary
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Trump chooses John Ratcliffe for CIA director
Former Director of National Intelligence John Ratcliffe is seen in Washington, DC, on April 18, 2023.
Win McNamee/Getty Images/File
President-elect Donald Trump has chosen John Ratcliffe to be director of the Central Intelligence Agency.
More on Ratcliffe: Ratcliffe had been high on the list of potential attorney general candidates, sources tell CNN.
He is currently a co-chair at the Center for American Security at the America First Policy Institute, a Trump-linked think tank.
The Texas conservative served as the Director of National Intelligence from 2020 to 2021 — and his appointment served as a key argument for critics who believed that Trump was using the intelligence community to serve his political needs. During his tenure, Ratcliffe publicly released unverified information about Russia’s influence in the 2016 presidential election over the objection of members of the intelligence community. Critics claimed at the time that Ratcliffe was using intelligence to help Trump politically as the 2020 presidential election approached.
Ratcliffe stayed in his position during the 2020 election and presidential transition, during which he personally told Trump and his allies that there was no evidence of foreign election interference or widespread fraud. Years later, he was forced to testify about the experience to a federal grand jury as part of special counsel Jack Smith’s criminal probe into the aftermath of the 2020 election.
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Trump names Bill McGinley as White House counsel
From CNN's Katelyn Polantz
Bill McGinley is seen in 2007.
Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc./Getty Images/File
Veteran Republican lawyer Bill McGinley will serve as White House Counsel, President-elect Donald Trump announced Tuesday.
More on McGinley: McGinley served as White House Cabinet Secretary during Trump’s first administration, and during this election he served as the Republican National Convention’s outside counsel for “election integrity.”
He is a well-known longtime political lawyer, having previously been a partner at two of Washington, DC’s most powerful law firms, the former lobbying powerhouse Patton Boggs and the conservative-leaning behemoth Jones Day. He’s also worked as a lawyer for the Republican party for years, and his current firm has a smaller but well-respected stable of political lawyers.
Trump’s choice of McGinley as White House counsel puts him in line with the credentials of past White House counsels, who typically have ample experience working with major political campaigns on compliance issues and other legal questions, while also having experience in private practice at large corporate defense firms.
This post was updated with more background on McGinley.
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Trump selects Steve Witkoff to serve as special envoy to the Middle East
From CNN's Kit Maher
President-elect Donald Trump announced Tuesday that he has selected his longtime friend and real estate developer Steve Witkoff to serve as Special Envoy to the Middle East in his administration.
Witkoff was golfing with Trump at his Florida golf club when a second assassination attempt occurred in September.
Witkoff is also a chair of Trump’s presidential inaugural committee.
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Democrats need to work on "fundamental issues" after election loss, Senate majority whip says
From CNN’s Danya Gainor
Sen. Dick Durbin speaks during a hearing at the US Capitol in Washington, DC, on July 11.
Bonnie Cash/Getty Images
Those on the left calling for Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor to step down so that President Joe Biden might replace her before the new administration begins is not realistic, Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin said.
“Whoever makes those calls can’t count. Take a look at the calendar and tell me how in the world you can achieve that without setting aside the budget and the Defense Authorization Act and all the other things that need to be done,” Durbin, a Democrat, told reporters Tuesday.
As far as other judges awaiting appointment from Biden, Durbin said that he expects more nominations will come through committee before the end of Congress.
Despite Kamala Harris’ loss to Donald Trump for the presidency earlier this month, Durbin said that he was proud of the vice president and her campaign, and that Democrats now need to focus on the “fundamental issues” that cost them the election.
Sen. Martin Heinrich of New Mexico, a Democrat who was just re-elected, said the party should have honed in on their economic message nationwide, noting that focus worked well for his campaign.
“There were places we did that, but it wasn’t universal across the country, and I think it always needs to be at the core of who we are as Democrats,” Heinrich told CNN, adding that means, specifically, an economic message to “non-college educated, hard-working Americans.”
This post has been updated with remarks from Sen. Martin Heinrich.
CNN’s Morgan Rimmer and Manu Raju contributed reporting.
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Wall Street Journal: A proposed Trump executive order would create panel that could remove generals
From CNN's Kristen Holmes and Michael Williams
A draft executive order under consideration by the Trump transition team would create a so-called “warrior board” comprised of retired military brass who would have the power to review and recommend the removals of three- or four-star officers, The Wall Street Journal reported on Tuesday.
The proposed panel would be in line with President-elect Donald Trump’s campaign vows to rid the military of what he has described as “woke” leaders if he were to be elected president.
A source has confirmed to CNN the existence of the proposal, but a transition official said that this proposal did not originate with the transition team. CNN has not independently reviewed the draft proposal.
Karoline Leavitt, a spokesperson for Trump’s transition team, said in a statement: “The American people re-elected President Trump by a resounding margin giving him a mandate to implement the promises he made on the campaign trail. He will deliver.”
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2 Democratic members of Congress set to join crowded field in New Jersey gubernatorial race
From CNN's Daniel Strauss, Sarah Ferris and Gregory Krieg
Two Democratic House members are poised to announce their respective campaigns for governor of New Jersey in the coming days.
Reps. Mikie Sherrill and Josh Gottheimer are set to join an already crowded field of candidates seeking to follow term-limited Gov. Phil Murphy, a former Democratic National Committee finance chair.
Sherrill plans to announce on Monday and Gottheimer will enter in the “coming days” according to multiple sources with knowledge of their plans.
The 2025 gubernatorial contest in New Jersey is among the first scheduled statewide elections that will take place following last week’s presidential election. Vice President Kamala Harris won the Garden State by more than 5 points against President-elect Donald Trump, down from Joe Biden’s nearly 16-point victory there four years ago.
The state has shown signs of becoming increasingly competitive during the Trump years. Murphy, a big favorite for reelection in 2021, barely hung on to hold off Republican challenger Jack Ciattarelli by about 3 points — an early warning sign of Democratic weakness even in traditionally blue states.
The soon-to-be-announced gubernatorial campaigns were first reported by the New Jersey Globe.
“Both plan to announce their runs for governor in the coming days, ahead of the Annual NJ League of Municipalities gathering in Atlantic City,” a source with knowledge of both members’ plans told CNN.
The announcements fulfill longstanding ambitions of both Gottheimer and Sherrill to seek higher office. Both briefly mulled running for the US Senate last year during the fallout of a corruption scandal centered on former-Sen. Bob Menendez.
Both members are also centrists in the House Democratic caucus with experience running in battleground races. Sherrill is known in the House for her national security background while Gottheimer works closely with his GOP counterparts in the bipartisan Problem Solvers Caucus he co-chairs.
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Top Senate GOP appropriator expresses opposition to extending current government funding levels
From CNN’s Morgan Rimmer
In a sign of the fight to come over government funding, the Senate’s top Republican appropriator, Sen. Susan Collins, expressed her opposition to extending current government funding levels through the end of September.
Current government funding lapses in mid-December, giving congressional leaders and President-elect Donald Trump a choice on whether to finish this year’s business and give President Joe Biden a say, or punt the package until next year, when Trump is in power.
However, punting would force Trump to confront a messy spending fight in his first year in office.
Speaker Mike Johnson told CNN today that he and Trump would discuss how to handle the expiring funding package, but some members of his leadership team are pushing for a stop gap measure that extends current funding until mid-September. Collins opposes that push.
Collins is the vice chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee, which “writes the legislation that allocates federal funds to the numerous government agencies, departments, and organizations on an annual basis,” according to the committee’s website.
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Senate GOP will vote on leadership tomorrow. Here’s how the secret ballot voting will unfold
From CNN's Lauren Fox and Danya Gainor
Sens. John Thunee, Rick Scott and John Cornyn.
Andrew Harnik/Getty Images
Wednesday’s Republican leadership race could take a while to unfold given its contentious nature and the belief by some GOP senators that the election could require multiple rounds of voting.
The candidates: Senate Minority Whip John Thune and Sen. John Cornyn of Texas remain the front-runners in the secret ballot elections. Sen. Rick Scott has received outside endorsements from President-elect Donald Trump’s orbit.
The expected process:
The election starts at 9:30 a.m. in the old Senate chamber.
The races for each leadership post will be voted on in descending order. The vote for Senate Republican leader will be first.
Each candidate can receive up to two nominating speeches, and then deliver their own remarks.
A GOP leadership aide tells CNN there can also be discussion about the candidates following their speeches, which could take some time.
Once discussion concludes, senators will vote by secret ballot. This means no other senator, no staffer and no, not even Trump will know who voted for who.
Then, Senator John Barrasso and his team will tabulate the votes. If no candidate reaches a majority, or 27 votes, then the candidate with the least votes drops off, and they vote again between the remaining two candidates, meaning there could be multiple rounds of voting.
Following the results of the Republican leadership race, the conference will move in order to vote for, GOP whip, conference chair, policy committee, conference vice chair and chair of the National Republican Senatorial Committee.
CNN’s Ted Barrett contributed to this reporting.
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Mike Huckabee once claimed, “There's really no such thing as a Palestinian"
From CNN's Andrew Kaczynski
Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, chosen by President-elect Donald Trump to be the US ambassador to Israel, previously argued there was “no such thing as a Palestinian.”
Huckabee, who has been a strong defender of Israel throughout his career, made the statement during his 2008 presidential campaign, asserting that Palestinian identity was “a political tool to try and force land away from Israel.”
In a video obtained by CNN’s Andrew Kaczynski during Huckabee’s 2015 run for president, Huckabee suggested that if a Palestinian state were to be created, it should be in neighboring countries like Egypt, Syria, or Jordan, rather than within Israel’s borders.
In response to a question from one of the men about the possibility of a Palestinian state existing outside of Israel, Huckabee said he believed this was the preferable option.
“You have Arabs and Persians,” Huckabee continued at the 2008 appearance. “And there’s such complexity in that. But there’s really no such thing. That’s been a political tool to try and force land away from Israel.”
In the video, which was previously published by BuzzFeed, Huckabee added that he thought a Palestinian state could be made out of land in Egypt, Syria, or Jordan.
“My point is, if that’s the issue, if it’s real estate, if you look at a map, and say here is how much Israel has and here is how much the Arab states hold, there is plenty of land.”
CNN reached out to Huckabee and the Trump transition team for comment on whether Huckabee stands by his comments.
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Waltz says America will keep allies close and will not backdown from facing adversaries
From CNN's Kit Maher
Rep. Mike Waltz attends the 2024 Concordia Annual Summit at Sheraton New York Times Square on September 23 in New York City.
Riccardo Savi/Getty Images North
Florida Rep. Mike Waltz said he is “deeply honored” President-elect Donald Trump placed his trust in him to serve as his national security adviser and said that America will “keep its allies close” and will not back down from confronting adversaries.
More background: In the role, Waltz would have to navigate a number of geopolitical conflicts that Trump’s administration will assume as part of his second term, including the Ukraine-Russia and Israel-Hamas wars.
Waltz, a Trump loyalist, is a combat-decorated Green Beret who served in Afghanistan, the Middle East and Africa. He would be the first former Green Beret to hold the role.
CNN’s Kaitlan Collins and Jack Forrest contributed to this report.
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Some GOP senators frustrated with bombardment with phone calls lobbying for Rick Scott
From CNN’s Manu Raju
Sen. Rick Scott speaks to reporters following a cloture vote on the Kids Online Safety Act in the US Capitol Building on July 25 in Washington, DC.
Tierney L. Cross/Getty Images
Republican senators are privately voicing frustration with the onslaught of calls coming their way pressuring them to vote for Florida Sen. Rick Scott — a campaign pushed by MAGA influencers on social media.
Several Senate GOP sources said that the effort is backfiring, given that the races often come down to personal relationships and promises the candidates make to the members to advance their priorities or give them more prominent perches.
Despite the backing on the outside, Scott is seen as a long-shot candidate. Sens. John Thune and John Cornyn are seen as the favorites, but it’s hard to say who has the votes between the two of them since it’s a secret-ballot election.
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McConnell celebrates GOP wins — but warns senators have plenty of work ahead
From CNN's Morgan Rimmer
Sen. Mitch McConnell speaks during a news conference at the US Capitol on November 6, 2024 in Washington, DC.
Kent Nishimura/Getty Images
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell celebrated Republican victories in last week’s elections during his Senate floor remarks Tuesday afternoon.
Congress is back in session for the first time since discovering Republicans would take back the Senate majority next year.
CNN has not projected that Republicans will hold the House majority at this time.
However, McConnell warned that Senate Republicans cannot rest on their laurels, pointing out that they still needs to fund the government, pass the annual national defense policy bill, as well as approve relief for victims of natural disasters across the country.
“I hope to work with the new Senate Republican majority as we begin to clean up the messes left over the last four years. The first opportunities to work together are already upon us. The Senate has a great deal of outstanding business that we have to tackle in the coming weeks,” he said.
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Schumer calls for Democratic Party soul-searching after lackluster election performance
From CNN’s Morgan Rimmer
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer called for Democrats to reflect long and hard on what led to their losses this election cycle during his first remarks on the Senate floor since discovering they’d be in the minority next year.
He added that Democrats should view these results as a “challenge,” as they engage in some soul searching – and noted that after massive losses in 2004, Democrats bounced back, and they will again.
“The American people have presented us with a challenge, and we must answer the call. We have to look at what we did right, what we did wrong, and what we didn’t do but should have done,” he said.
“We’ll have these important and necessary conversations in due course. And everyone must have a seat at the table. We must be honest. We must be practical. And we must never abandon the roots that have defined the Democratic Party for generations,” he continued.
The majority leader also warned Republicans to focus on bipartisanship, and not get too caught up in the idea of the mandate that they won last week.
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Taylor Budowich is expected to be named Deputy Chief of Staff of Presidential Personnel and Communications
From CNN's Kristen Holmes
Taylor Budowich, a longtime adviser to President-elect Donald Trump, is expected to be named Deputy Chief of Staff of Presidential Personnel and Communications in coming days, a source familiar with matter tells CNN.
Budowich served as spokesperson for Trump post presidency before transitioning to the head of the Trump-aligned MAGA, Inc PAC. He joined the campaign in August as deputy campaign manager and travelled with the president daily.
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State Department not able to share messages it receives from foreign governments with Trump right now
From CNN's Kylie Atwood
The State Department has been receiving messages for President-elect Donald Trump from foreign governments — but the department has not been able to share them with Trump’s team, according to two sources familiar with the matter.
Typically, the State Department facilitates the incoming calls and shares messages for the president-elect during a transition. Due to that routine practice, foreign governments are accustomed to reaching out to the department to share messages with the incoming team.
What’s the holdup? CNN has reported that Trump has not signed memoranda of understanding (MOUs) with the Biden administration to unlock transition activities with the government agencies. As a result, there is currently no working relationship between the State Department’s transition team and the Trump transition team.
Former Trump administration officials expressed no concern about those messages. They presume that the countries Trump wants to be in contact with right now already have ways to get messages to him.
The State Department is also not facilitating phone calls for Trump with world leaders. The agency, however, is keeping track of who calls, a State Department spokesperson said.
The State Department’s typical role enables the president-elect’s team to sync up with the US government resources, but it does not ensure that the calls are secure. Even when the State Department serves as the facilitator, the calls take place on an open line, according to sources familiar with the process. In order for the calls to be secure, both parties would have to have access to a secure phone.
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Families of US hostages held by Hamas look to Trump for new hope
From CNN's MJ Lee
More than a year into the Israel-Hamas conflict and on the heels of last week’s US presidential election, some of the families of US hostages captured by Hamas are turning to one man with renewed hope: President-elect Donald Trump.
Ruby Chen, whose son Itay was a 19-year-old soldier in the Israeli military when he was killed on October 7, is still waiting for the return of his son’s remains. Chen, along with family members of a handful of other dual US-Israeli hostages — some of whom have been confirmed dead — plan to meet with national security adviser Jake Sullivan at the White House today.
Chen told CNN Tuesday that with Trump now poised to return to the White House for a second term, he is not alone in hoping that the next US president — who has famously marketed himself throughout his career as the ultimately dealmaker — might be able to accomplish what President Joe Biden has failed to thus far: securing the return of the American hostages.
Chen added that he would be glad to see a social media post from Trump about the hostages, which he would take as a serious indication of the president-elect’s dedication to the issue.
The families of the American hostages have had numerous meetings with top American officials from both parties throughout the course of the conflict. They have yet to meet with Trump or Vice President-elect JD Vance, according to Chen.
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“We still have a lot of work to do” after 2024 loss, Harris tells White House staff
From CNN's Donald Judd
Vice President Kamala Harris returned to the White House campus Tuesday to thank staff for their work while telling a group of staffers gathered on the steps of the Eisenhower Executive Office Building, “We still have a lot of work to do.”
The vice president told her staff she was very grateful to each person, adding she was “sending you all my love and thanks,” before headed into the West Wing.
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DeSantis faces early pressure to replace Rubio's potential open Senate seat with Trump’s daughter-in-law
From CNN's Steve Contorno
Lara Trump speaks during the Conservative Political Action Conference at Gaylord National Resort Hotel And Convention Center on February 22 in National Harbor, Maryland.
Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images
Donald Trump has yet to officially name Florida Sen. Marco Rubio as his pick for secretary of state, but there’s already pressure on Florida’s governor to appoint the president-elect’s daughter-in-law to fill Rubio’s Senate seat if he is announced.
Alabama Republican Sen. Katie Britt floated the idea to Axios, touting Lara Trump’s “historic win” while co-chair of the Republican National Committee. Florida GOP Rep. Anna Paulina Luna, a close ally of Trump, also posted on X that Lara Trump “needs to be the nominated replacement” by Gov. Ron DeSantis.
Two sources close to DeSantis told CNN that DeSantis was aware of the interest in having Lara Trump fill the seat and that there was already a pressure campaign to force his hand. However, the sources were unsure if the Florida governor would ultimately acquiesce.
DeSantis and Trump: The president-elect and governor have maintained a fraught relationship that blew into a full-blown rivalry during the GOP presidential primary. While DeSantis helped fundraise for Trump over the summer, he didn’t make any appearances on the campaign trail, and the two were on opposite ends of a contentious ballot referendum to legalize recreational marijuana in their shared home state.
During the summer, when Rubio made Trump’s shortlist for vice president, CNN reported that DeSantis’ chief of staff and former campaign manager James Uthmeier was at the top of his list for the seat.
Under Florida law, whoever DeSantis picks would remain in the US Senate until the next statewide election in 2026.
According to the US Constitution, a senator must “be an Inhabitant of that State for which he shall be chosen.” Lara and Eric Trump purchased a house in the tony south Florida community of Jupiter in 2021.
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Trump announces Mike Huckabee as next US ambassador to Israel
From CNN's Kit Maher
Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee moderates a roundtable discussion with Donald Trump at the Drexelbrook Catering & Event Center on October 29, in Drexel Hill, Pennsylvania.
Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
President-elect Donald Trump announced Tuesday that he has selected former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee to serve as United States ambassador to Israel.
Huckabee’s daughter, current Arkansas Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders, formerly served as Trump’s press secretary during his first administration.
Huckabee has been a strong defender of Israel throughout the course of his career — including what he says is the country’s claims to the West Bank.
His selection will come as a welcome culmination of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s long mission to shore up ties to American Evangelical Christians. He’s been a supporter of Israeli settlements in the West Bank, including laying a cornerstone for a new neighborhood in one of the largest Israeli settlements in the West Bank, just east of Jerusalem, in 2017.
He told CNN’s Oren Lieberman at the time that he rejected the use of the word “settlements.”
“I think Israel has title deed to Judea and Samaria,” said Huckabee, using the Biblical terms for the West Bank. “There are certain words I refuse to use. There is no such thing as a West Bank. It’s Judea and Samaria. There’s no such thing as a settlement. They’re communities, they’re neighborhoods, they’re cities. There’s no such thing as an occupation.”
This post has been updated with additional details about Huckabee’s background.
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Trump officially announces Mike Waltz as national security adviser
From CNN's Kit Maher
President-elect Donald Trump officially announced GOP Florida Rep. Mike Waltz as his national security adviser Tuesday afternoon in a statement.
“Mike has been a strong champion of my America First Foreign Policy agenda, and will be a tremendous champion of our pursuit of Peace through Strength!” Trump added.
Waltz’s wife, Dr. Julia Nesheiwat, a combat veteran, formerly served as Homeland Security adviser during Trump’s first administration.
CNN reported yesterday that Trump had picked Waltz for the position, according to a source familiar. In the role, Waltz will have to navigate a number of geopolitical conflicts that Trump’s administration will assume as part of his second term, including the Ukraine-Russia and Israel-Hamas wars.
Thune's final pitch to be the next GOP leader: Make the Senate work and advance Trump's agenda
From CNN’s Morgan Rimmer and Haley Talbot
Senate Minority Whip John Thune is expected to highlight a few themes over the next day as he closes out his campaign for majority leader, a source familiar with the conversations tells CNN. GOP lawmakers will vote tomorrow in the Senate via secret ballot.
Thune and Texas Sen. John Cornyn remain the front-runners in the secret ballot elections, despite outside endorsements from President-elect Donald Trump’s orbit for Sen. Rick Scott. Separately, incoming new members told CNN today that they are undecided, seemingly making this a very open race.
Here’s what the South Dakotan is telling undecided members he will do:
Prioritize individual spending bills to avoid the typical year-end rush
Try to open up the floor process, allow for amendments and work bills through the conference to enhance buy in
Boost communication with Republicans across Washington
Set up a meeting weekly with the House speaker and regularly meet with Vice President-elect JD Vance
Create a robust plan to try and advance Trump’s agenda during an issues conference before the end of the year
Making his case: During an appearance on Fox Radio Tuesday, Thune argued that his experience in GOP leadership and his close ties with colleagues across the chamber make him the best candidate for leader and most prepared to implement Trump’s policy agenda. Notably, Cornyn has also served as whip and is a member of McConnell’s leadership team.
When asked about Trump’s push for the Senate to confirm his cabinet as quickly as possible, even if that includes recess appointments, Thune replied that they are going to do “whatever it takes to get the president’s nominees across the finish line.”
This post has been updated with additional information.
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Washington, DC, is prepared to welcome Trump administration, mayor says
From CNN's Elise Hammond
The mayor of the nation’s capital said that Washington, DC, is “prepared to welcome” the new Donald Trump administration and said that there will be a smooth transition in January.
Washington, DC, Mayor Muriel Bowser said the city is preparing for the inauguration. She said her office has communicated with Trump’s team about the inauguration and planning about the event will continue over the next few months.
“We are proud to host such an event and work with the United States Secret Service and federal partners and welcome our federal Americans to come to Washington, DC, at that time,” she said at news
Bowser that she has worked with three different presidential administrations and lawmakers from both parties during her time in office. She said she intends to collaborate again to do what is in the best interest of the city.
“With the new administration, we will continue to uphold our vision for our city,” she said, adding that they welcome discussions with the incoming Trump administration about the federal workforce and buildings and parks that are on federal property in the district.
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Trump expected to name a slate of deputy chiefs of staff in coming days, sources say
From CNN's Kristen Holmes and Alayna Treene
President-elect Donald Trump is expected to name a slate of deputy chiefs of staff in the coming days, two sources familiar with the matter told CNN.
Among them are some of his top campaign advisers, including James Blair, Dan Scavino and Stephen Miller.
CNN previously reported Miller would be tapped to be White House deputy chief of staff of policy.
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Staffers welcome Harris back to the White House following election loss
The White House confirmed to CNN that staffers had gathered outside the Eisenhower Executive Office Building to greet the vice president.
The vice president had come to the White House on Monday, an aide said, but Tuesday marked the first time Harris was coming to the White House post-Election Day with most White House and EEOB staff present — given that Monday was a federal holiday.
Harris is scheduled to have lunch with President Joe Biden Tuesday afternoon.
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Incoming GOP senators undecided on who they will back in race for Republican leader of the chamber
From CNN’s Morgan Rimmer, Ted Barrett and Manu Raju
Incoming Republican senators, who are at the US Capitol today to attend new member orientation, are not saying who they will back in the race to replace longtime Senate GOP Leader Mitch McConnell — and several say they are still undecided.
Senator-elect Bernie Moreno of Ohio told CNN that he will support someone “who is 100% on board with President (Donald) Trump’s agenda,” and “somebody who can bring the caucus together to advance that agenda and make sure they sequence it properly and everybody’s voice is heard.”
Moreno noted that he had had many conversations with each of the three candidates, Sens. John Thune, John Cornyn and Rick Scott, and that he’ll support one of them.
Several said that they are undecided, including Senator-elect John Curtis of Utah and Gov. Jim Justice of West Virginia. Senator-elect Tim Sheehy of Montana would not say who he is backing, and neither would Dave McCormick, who said he is “just happy to be here for orientation.”
CNN has not projected a winner in McCormick’s race, but Senate Republicans have invited him to vote in their leadership elections, and the National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC) posted a photo of McCormick holding up his place card from orientation calling him “Senator-elect Dave McCormick.” Democratic incumbent Sen. Bob Casey has not conceded in the race.
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Trump converted his 2024 campaign committee into a new leadership PAC. Here's what that means
From CNN's David Wright
President-elect Donald Trump has converted his presidential campaign committee into a leadership PAC, a move that will allow him to continue to raise and spend funds for political purposes, even as he is constitutionally barred from running for president again.
According to new filings with the Federal Election Commission, Trump converted his principal campaign committee, “Donald J. Trump for President 2024, Inc.” into a leadership PAC called “Never Surrender, Inc.” on November 12.
Leadership PACs are flexible vehicles for political fundraising and spending. Federal candidates or federal officeholders can create them — in addition to a traditional campaign committee, or as a replacement for such a committee — and use them to raise money and direct those funds to allies or other political causes.
Unlike super PACs, however, leadership PACs cannot receive unlimited contributions from megadonors, and face more restrictions on their activities in elections.
“Never Surrender, Inc.” becomes the second leadership PAC that Trump now controls, joining the “Save America” leadership PAC that Trump formed shortly after the 2020 election. He used it to cover tens of millions of dollars in legal fees stemming from several criminal cases that he faced after leaving office.
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Cornyn vows to include non-leadership members in pitch to colleagues for Senate role
From CNN’s Manu Raju
Sen. John Cornyn, who is a candidate for majority leader, vowed to be a leader who would empower the rank-and-file to shape legislation, according to a new letter obtained by CNN.
In the letter, Cornyn lays out a list of practices he said he would adopt to let the Senate work its will on Trump’s agenda.
“In order to Make America Great Again, we must Make the Senate Work Again,” he told his colleagues.
Cornyn is running against Texas Republican Sen. John Thune and Florida GOP Sen. Rick Scott. Earlier, Thune told reporters he is “feeling good” about the Senate leadership election tomorrow.
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ExxonMobil opposes Trump's plan to exit Paris climate agreement, spokesperson says
“A second US exit from the Paris climate agreement will have profound implications for the United States’ efforts to reduce its own emissions and for international efforts to combat climate change,” an ExxonMobil spokesperson told CNN in a statement. “We advocate for policy that accounts for security, affordability, reliability and environmental stewardship — not drastic changes that could hinder the progress being made today.”
Leaving the Paris climate agreement again would create uncertainty, Exxon CEO Darren Woods told the Wall Street Journal and New York Times in interviews at the United Nations climate summit in Azerbaijan. The oil giant was supportive of President Joe Biden’s 2021 decision to rejoin Paris.
Woods told the New York Times he thinks government should create incentives for fossil fuel companies to transition to clean energy.
“The government role is extremely important and one that they haven’t been successfully fulfilling, quite frankly,” he told the Times.
As CNN has reported Trump’s transition team is preparing to withdraw the US from the Paris Climate Agreement again — something Trump vowed to do on the campaign trail.
“I don’t think the stops and starts are the right thing for businesses,” Woods told the Wall Street Journal. “It is extremely inefficient. It creates a lot of uncertainty.”
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Trump expected to meet with House Republicans Wednesday
From CNN’s Haley Talbot, Aileen Graef and Manu Raju
House Speaker Mike Johnson, joined by Chair of the National Republican Congressional Committee Rep. Richard Hudson, House Majority Whip Rep. Tom Emmer and House Majority Leader Rep. Steve Scalise, speaks during a news conference on the results of the 2024 election outside of the US Capitol Building on November 12 in Washington, DC.
Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
President-elect Donald Trump is expected to meet with House Republicans Wednesday when he is in Washington, DC, House Speaker Mike Johnson said Monday.
Johnson said the plans are tentative, but Trump expressed a desire to meet with House Republicans while he was in town for his meeting with President Joe Biden.
“President Trump is going to meet with President Biden at the White House. And so it was suggested, in fact, I think it was — he said it first before I did — but that he wanted to come and visit with House Republicans,” he said.
The meeting would be in the morning before Trump goes to the White House, Johnson said.
House races: Johnson also said he has spoken with Trump about the narrow margin the Republicans are likely to govern with in the House as the president-elect plucks members of Congress to serve in his administration.
Johnson was also adamant he has Trump’s support to remain speaker, insisting that the president-elect backs him and isn’t concerned about problems on the floor.
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Thune says he's "feeling good" about Senate leadership race
From CNN’s Lauren Fox and Danya Gainor
GOP Whip John Thune of South Dakota told reporters he is “feeling good” about the Senate leadership election tomorrow.
The Republican senator is running against GOP Texas Sen. John Cornyn and Florida GOP Sen. Rick Scott.
The latter has received several MAGA-world endorsements. Thune didn’t answer when asked if those endorsements could cost him.
On Tuesday morning, Thune published an op-ed on Fox News’ website focused on his vision for the GOP’s new majority.
Thune argued that Republicans must prioritize backing President-elect Donald Trump’s border policies, bringing down prices, increasing domestic energy production, and passing tax legislation, as Trump’s 2017 tax law is set to expire next year.
“We have an ambitious agenda, and it will take all of us – each and every Republican – working together with President Trump’s leadership to achieve it,” added Thune. “If we don’t successfully execute on our mandate, we risk losing the coalition that swept Republicans into office up and down the ballot.”
While he acknowledged that he expects Senate Republicans will “have disagreements along the way,” he called on them to “listen to each other” and embrace their differences. “This Republican Party listens to our voters and celebrates the marketplace of ideas,” he added.
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It's a week after Election Day, and 14 House races have yet to be called
From CNN staff
The US Capitol building is seen in Washington, DC on November 11.
CNN has not yet projected a winner in 14 House races. As of Tuesday morning, there are an estimated 790,000 votes remain to be counted, mostly in California. The remaining states include Alaska, Arizona, Iowa, Maine, Ohio and Oregon.
Republicans are three seats away from retaining the majority, while Democrats are 12 seats away from taking the chamber.
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Trump wants to shut down the Department of Education. Here's a look at the possible wide-reaching impacts
From CNN's Katie Lobosco
In this August 2020 photo, a person walks past the US Department of Education in Washington, DC.
Erin Scott/Bloomberg/Getty Images
President-elect Donald Trump has pledged to abolish the Department of Education.
On the campaign trail, he repeatedly pointed to the agency as a symbol of federal overreach into the everyday lives of American families.
In 1979, then-President Jimmy Carter, a Democrat from Georgia, signed legislation making the Department of Education a Cabinet-level agency – fulfilling a campaign pledge he made to one of the country’s largest teachers’ unions, the National Education Association.
Previously, federal education programs were housed in other agencies. Trump has not said exactly how he would want to shut the department down – which would require an act of Congress – or what would happen to federally funded education programs if he did.
Incoming New Jersey senator says Democrats failed to respond to voters' distrust in government
From CNN’s Morgan Rimmer and Manu Raju
Rep. Andy Kim speaks on the third day of the Democratic National Convention at the United Center in Chicago.
Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty Images
Rep. Andy Kim, New Jersey’s new Democratic senator-elect, told CNN that Democrats failed to respond to anxiety from voters who are concerned about government ineffectiveness.
Kim said while speaking with voters, he saw “just how much people were just feeling really unsettled about their lives. You know, they talk about it as, like, this deep anxiety.”
He also highlighted distrust in government as a key issue for the Democrats.
“I think that they were deeper — just distrust and a lot of problems that people are facing right now that just don’t feel like government right now is at all tackling that in any meaningful way. So it’s gonna, it’s gonna be a big effort to try to re-earn some of that trust,” he said.
He noted that while incumbency worked against Democrats, “there is something deeper, not just about this particular last four years, but just writ large, in terms of how the Democratic Party is engaging, and I think that that’s something that we need to sort out.”
Vice President Kamala Harris had a much tighter race in New Jersey than had been expected, though she still won the state.
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Decision on Trump’s New York hush money conviction delayed
From CNN's Paula Reid and Jeremy Herb
Donald Trump attends his criminal trial at Manhattan Criminal Court in New York City on May 30.
Justin Lane/Pool/AFP/Getty Images
Donald Trump’s lawyers and the Manhattan District Attorney’s office have agreed to delay activity in the hush money case until November 19 to give the president-elect’s lawyers time to make new arguments on how his election victory impacts the case.
Judge Juan Merchan was expected to rule Tuesday on whether to overturn the business fraud conviction based on this summer’s Supreme Court ruling on presidential immunity.
The judge granted the motion for the district attorney’s office to file its views on the appropriate steps going forward by 10 a.m. ET on November 19.
Trump’s attorney Emil Bove argued the charges should be dismissed.
“The stay, and dismissal, are necessary to avoid unconstitutional impediments to President Trump’s ability to govern,” Bove wrote.
More about the case: Trump was first indicted in March 2023 by the Manhattan district attorney on state charges related to a hush money payment to an adult-film star in 2016. On May 30, he was found guilty on all 34 counts of falsifying business records in the first degree by 12 jurors. Trump pleaded not guilty.
Merchan announced on September 6 that he would sentence Trump on November 26 — if necessary — saying that part of his reason for the delay was to avoid the appearance that the sentencing was intended to influence the November election.
This post has been updated with additional background on the Trump case.
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A top Goldman Sachs executive is advising Melania Trump on East Wing staffing
From CNN's Kayla Tausche and Betsey Klein
Lights are on at the world headquarters of Goldman Sachs in New York on in January 2023.
Peter Morgan/AP/File
John Rogers, the executive vice president and secretary to the board of directors at Goldman Sachs, is advising former and incoming first lady Melania Trump on staffing the East Wing for Donald Trump’s second term, according to two people briefed on the role.
Rogers is providing advice to Mrs. Trump in his personal capacity while still serving in his roles at the bank. The two have gotten to know each other through Rogers’ role as chairman of the White House Historical Association.
His role in advising staffing comes amid questions about how Melania Trump will build out her team. Compared to other modern first ladies, Trump’s first term employed a skeletal staff in the East Wing, with less than a dozen full-time staffers. Trump has also lamented aides deemed to be disloyal, including Stephanie Winston Wolkoff, who secretly recorded the then-first lady expressing frustration at criticism for her husband’s policy of separating families at the US-Mexico border while also needing to perform traditional first lady roles.
“I was in the White House before. When you go in, you know exactly what to expect. You know what kind of people to get – that they are on your team, that they have the same vision as me and to serve me because they serve the country,” she said in a recent interview with Fox News.
President-elect Trump has long seen a curriculum vitae, including Goldman Sachs, as a gold standard for potential hires. Gary Cohn, once a president and chief operating officer at the bank, ran Trump’s economic policy during his first term. Dina Powell McCormick, a partner at the bank, served as deputy national security adviser before returning to the bank to run its relationships with sovereign wealth funds. Trump’s first Treasury secretary, Steven Mnuchin, had worked at the bank for 17 years in various roles.
Semafor was first to report Rogers’s role.
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Potential attorney general pick says if federal employees don’t support Trump’s agenda, "They should leave"
From CNN's Michelle Shen
In this September 2022 photo, lawyer Mark Paoletta walks with conservative activist Virginia "Ginni" Thomas, not seen, to a room at the O'Neill House Office Building in Washington, DC.
J. Scott Applewhite/AP
Conservative lawyer Mark Paoletta, whom CNN has reported has been pitched to President-elect Donald Trump as a potential attorney general, said on Fox News on Tuesday that federal employees who do not support Trump’s agenda should leave government.
His words echo previous statements in a post on X Monday.
“Those employees who engage in so-called ‘resistance’ against the duly-elected President’s lawful agenda would be subverting American democracy,” Paoletta wrote.
Speaking to Fox, Paoletta also weighed in on the upcoming ruling by New York Judge Juan Merchan, who oversaw the hush money trial against Trump and will decide on Tuesday whether to grant the president-elect’s motion to dismiss his conviction in the case. Trump is citing the US Supreme Court’s decision on presidential immunity that limits what evidence can come before a jury.
“I think he (Merchan) should dismiss it today, yes, the Supreme Court had to step in and make a ruling that every American, every legal person understood that the president is immune. The president did nothing wrong, the left drummed up these, invented these crimes, and so hopefully it’s put to bed today,” Paoletta said.
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Senate GOP leader hopeful Cornyn won't say if he's concerned about the race
From CNN's Lauren Fox and Manu Raju
Sen. John Cornyn walks to a vote in the Senate Chambers at the US Capitol on February 7, in Washington, DC.
Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images
Sen. John Cornyn, who is vying for GOP leader, told CNN in a brief hallway interview this morning that he is “excited for January” and has talked to President-elect Donald Trump “many times,” as recently as two days ago.
But Cornyn wouldn’t engage in whether he’s worried that Sen. Rick Scott of Florida, long seen as a long shot in this race, is getting a slew of MAGA-world endorsements.
“I’m not gonna do this in the press,” Cornyn said.
But the lobbying has already been in full force today as the GOP leader candidates plan to have a flurry of meetings with their colleagues — and later pitch the full Senate GOP at a closed-door meeting at 6 p.m. ET where each candidate will make his case ahead of the secret-ballot vote tomorrow.
There are plenty of senators who are still undecided.
Bernie Moreno, the incoming Ohio senator, told CNN he hasn’t made a decision on which candidate he will support. Says it’s one of “the most important decisions” he’ll make. And also said he would only serve two terms.
He met with Cornyn this morning.
This post has been updated with additional details.
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Gallego and McCormick now invited to Senate orientation
From CNN's Morgan Rimmer
(L-R:) Arizona Democratic U.S. Senate candidate, Rep. Ruben Gallego walks offstage with his wife Sydney after speaking at an Arizona Democratic election night watch party on November 5 in Phoenix, Arizona. Republican Pennsylvania Senate candidate David McCormick arrives to speak during an election night watch party, on November 6 in Pittsburgh, PA.
Mario Tama/Getty Images/Gene J. Puskar/AP
According to a spokesperson from Majority Leader Chuck Schumer’s office, “Ruben Gallego and David McCormick have been invited to attend orientation,” which begins Tuesday.
Previously, Schumer’s office said that neither had been invited, as their races had not been called yet. CNN has still not projected if McCormick will defeat Democratic incumbent Sen. Bob Casey.
Senate Republicans and Independents from across the political spectrum had called for McCormick to be included in new member orientation, with GOP Sen. Mike Lee insisting that he and several of his colleagues would escort McCormick into the building if necessary. They also invited McCormick to participate in GOP conference elections on Wednesday.
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Blinken heads to Europe as diplomats gear up for next Trump administration
From CNN's Kylie Atwood and Jennifer Hansler-
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken delivers remarks on "American Diplomacy for a New Era" at the Foreign Service Institute (FSI) in Arlington, Virginia, on October 30.
Tierney Cross/AFP/Getty Images
Secretary of State Antony Blinken is traveling to Brussels Tuesday as President-elect Donald Trump’s possible moves on support for Ukraine, NATO and tariffs raise serious questions and concerns among European officials.
The trip comes a week after the US presidential election and as European leaders brace for another four years of Trump. In the wake of the US election, European leaders like France’s Emmanuel Macron pledged “a more united, stronger and more sovereign Europe,” even as governments like Germany’s Olaf Scholz are on the brink of collapse.
Trump and his running mate, JD Vance, have cast strong doubts on continued US commitment to Kyiv as the war drags on more than two-and-half years after Russian forces launched a full-scale invasion. Moreover, Trump has made comments that suggest the US could pressure Ukraine to accept an uneasy truce with Russia. During his campaign, Trump also indicated he would only adhere to NATO’s mutual defense commitment for countries who are contributing enough of their annual budgets to defense.
During the campaign, Trump said “one of the presidents of a big country” at one point asked him whether the US would still defend the country if they were invaded by Russia even if they “don’t pay.”
“No, I would not protect you,” Trump recalled telling that president. “In fact, I would encourage them to do whatever the hell they want. You got to pay. You got to pay your bills.”
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Trump's EPA pick questioned scope and severity of climate change in 2014 interview
From CNN’s Ella Nilsen
Lee Zeldin speaks at the Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum during a rally held by Republican presidential nominees in Uniondale, New York, on September 18.
Brendan McDermid/Reuters
President-elect Donald Trump’s pick for the Environmental Protection Agency questioned the scope and severity of climate change in 2014 comments.
CNN asked Zeldin’s spokesperson whether he still holds those views, and whether he agrees with the overwhelming scientific consensus that climate change is real and a serious problem.
“Congressman Zeldin was an outspoken leader in the House advocating for clean air and clean water throughout his time in Congress,” Zeldin’s spokesperson Daniel Gall told CNN in a statement.
Under President Joe Biden and former President Barack Obama, tackling climate change has become one of the main charges of the EPA. The agency finalized several major rules that would make power plants, vehicles and oil and gas operations slash their planet-warming pollution that comes from burning coal, oil and gas. One of Zeldin’s first tasks will likely be starting the process to overturn several of those regulations.
Zeldin on Monday told Fox News that he will pull back “left-wing” regulations and focus on “unleashing economic prosperity” through the agency.
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Analysis: Trump’s emerging team of loyalists is primed for a fast start in his second term
From CNN's Stephen Collinson
The U.S. Capitol building in Washington, D.C., on November 11.
Francis Chung/POLITICO/AP
Donald Trump is doing exactly what his sweeping election win entitled him to do by systematically building a governing team in his own hardline MAGA image.
What may end up as the modern age’s most right-wing West Wing will target Washington elites and undocumented migrants, seek to shred the regulatory state and tell the rest of the world that, from now on, it’s America First.
The shape of Trump’s second administration is emerging from his Mar-a-Lago resort, where he’s being feted by club members amid a circus atmosphere enlivened by the presence of the world’s richest man, Elon Musk.
Each of the president-elect’s new picks for top jobs has been enough to send shudders down liberals’ spines. And that was part of the point.
Given Trump’s unpredictability, no staff pick is ever certain until it’s official. And even then, many staff don’t last long.
But each selection or anticipated pick so far has one thing in common: Ultra-loyalty to Trump, especially during his indictment-strewn post-presidency. Each person is known for paying the kind of exaggerated homage in television interviews that the president-elect adores. A sense of betrayal often burned in Trump’s first term when members of government prioritized their oath to the Constitution over their fealty to him.
Trump will have to choose the rest of his Cabinet without upsetting the balance of power in the House
From CNN's Sarah Ferris
Plenty of House Republicans are privately jockeying for President-elect Donald Trump’s Cabinet. There’s one big problem: Speaker Mike Johnson can’t afford to lose their votes in the next Congress.
At least a dozen more House members — including Armed Services Chairman Mike Rogers and Transportation Chairman Sam Graves — have been discussed as other picks.
But even as the House GOP conference remains one of his strongest bases of support in Washington, the Trump team won’t be able to poach many more of those lawmakers without risking Johnson losing control of what could be another slim majority in 2025. CNN has not yet projected control of the chamber.
“We have a lot of talent. There’s a lot of people who would be really, really good at this stuff,” he said. But, he added, referring to the speaker: “You have to give Mike some room to operate.”
The stock market is embracing Trump's return. The bond market has some concerns
From CNN's Matt Egan
Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange during the morning trading on November 7, in New York City.
Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images
Donald Trump is returning to the White House, and the stock market is loving it.
Investors, relieved to have a clear-cut election winner and fired up about the prospect of tax cuts and deregulation, have sent US stocks zooming higher.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed above 44,000 on Monday for the first time ever. The S&P 500 last week notched its best week of the year and third-best presidential election week since 1928.
Big bank stocks have spiked on hopes of a lighter regulatory touch. Private prison companies are going to the moon as investors bet that mass deportations will boost demand for their services. And the crypto space is on fire as Trump has gone from a bitcoin skeptic to a believer.
And yet the bond market has some concerns that Trump’s tax cuts could add trillions to the national debt and his massive tariffs and other policies could stoke inflation.
US Treasuries, sniffing out a potential Trump win, sold off in the weeks before Election Day. And bonds kept selling last week as the full scale of Trump’s victory sent shockwaves around the world.
Treasury rates, which move opposite prices, have spiked, causing mortgages and other debt to get even more expensive.
Here’s what some of the those promises could mean:
Mass deportations: Trump’s most aggressive promise is the rounding up and deportation of millions of undocumented immigrants. Expect Trump to come into office with a series of executive orders already written to reinstate border policies unwound by the Biden administration. What’s not clear is how exactly Trump will go about closing the US border and whether it will include the US military, the National Guard or local law enforcement agencies. Trump’s adviser Stephen Miller said on Fox News to expect deportations to begin the moment Trump is again president on January 20, 2025.
Move agencies out of DC: At the end of his first term, Trump planned to reclassify a large portion of the federal civilian workforce to make it easier to fire federal workers. The Biden administration has put some roadblocks in place to ward against such reclassification, but Trump promises in an Agenda47 video on his website to immediately begin working to reinstate it so that he can “remove rogue bureaucrats.” He says he will also “clean out all of the corrupt actors” in the national security and intelligence apparatus and “immediately” move federal agencies out of the nation’s capital.
Taking power away from Congress: One of his big plans to challenge current governing norms that’s gotten less attention is his pledge to seize some power over government spending from Congress. In another video on his campaign website, Trump says he would try to reassert the principle of “impoundment,” by which a president can reject spending instructions from Congress and use taxpayer money in other ways. Congress reined in presidents with a law after the Nixon administration, but Trump says he will challenge it and take more power for the president.
Why the Fed will face fundamental challenges under Trump
From CNN's Elisabeth Buchwald
President-elect Donald Trump’s return to the White House already carried the potential for sweeping changes to the Federal Reserve. But now a growing question is not how the central bank will operate under Trump, but ifit’ll continue to operate at all.
Elon Musk, a key Trump backer who is expected to have considerable sway in helping shape Trump’s policies, included a “100” emoji while resharing Republican Sen. Mike Lee of Utah’s post on X calling for abolishing the Fed.
“The Executive Branch should be under the direction of the president,” Lee wrote Thursday in the post, hours after Fed Chair Jerome Powell told reporters he wouldn’t resign if Trump asked him to.
Asked where Trump stands on the matter, Trump-Vance transition spokesperson Karoline Leavitt told CNN: “Policy should only be deemed official if it comes from President Trump directly.”
Calls to abolish the Fed are hardly new. Former congressman Ron Paul, who ran for president once as a Libertarian and twice as a Republican, published a book in 2009 titled “End the Fed.”
Then in June, Republican Rep. Thomas Massie of Kentucky and Lee introduced corresponding bills aimed at uprooting the nation’s central bank and shifting its responsibilities to the Treasury Department.
But thus far, Trump has not publicly voiced his support for dismantling the Fed. On the campaign trail, he has, however, advocated for changing the central bank’s rulebook, to the dismay of many economists.
Governor of North Dakota Doug Burgum speaks during the final campaign rally for Donald Trump before election day at Van Andel Arena in Grand Rapids, Michigan, on November 4.
Kamil Krzaczynski/AFP/Getty Images
Less than a week into the Trump transition — with some of the most critical personnel decisions still underway — the president-elect has elevated a new class of candidates: the czars.
Discussions about a future role for North Dakota governor-turned-Trump-ally Doug Burgum have evolved into that of an “energy czar,” according to two people familiar with the discussions, with a broad mandate to run an interagency process that advances President-elect Donald Trump’s energy agenda. CNN reported on Friday that Burgum was under consideration for a role as energy czar.
Burgum had been in contention for a Cabinet-level position, like running the department of Interior or Energy, CNN previously reported. But in recent days, those conversations distilled into a role that would give Burgum oversight of policy without being encumbered by tens of thousands of employees or labyrinthine processes.
It’s just the latest example of a prominent Trump contender discussing a role that operates in the sphere between the agencies and the incoming president, a bid to skirt bureaucratic processes and exert more power over their portfolios. It also means those candidates — not burdened by a lengthy Senate confirmation process — can launch their work on day one.
Some background: The term “czar” has come to refer to a political appointee with a specific problem to solve. President Barack Obama appointed more than two dozen officials with that title, often used informally, to tackle issues like how to close Guantanamo Bay, contain the spread of Ebola and account for the vast stimulus spending during the Great Recession. President Joe Biden, too, appointed czars to help manage the response to the COVID-19 pandemic and the supply chain snarls that erupted as a result.
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Biden has just passed environmental legislation that Trump may struggle to dismantle
From CNN's Ella Nilsen
The Environmental Protection Agency just finalized one of the Biden administration’s only outstanding climate rules, aimed at cracking down on leaks of methane — a potent planet-warming gas with an outsized impact on the climate.
The rule, proposed nearly a year ago, was mandated by the Inflation Reduction Act, which could make it more difficult for the second Trump administration to dismantle.
The new rule charges high-emitting oil and gas producers a fee for wasting methane above a certain threshold by venting or flaring it into the atmosphere instead of capturing it. The methane fee will be charged by the federal government until the companies fix the leaks.
This fee was paired with financial incentives for oil and gas companies to fix leaky pipelines or infrastructure.
Some background: Methane is an odorless and invisible gas that has more than 80 times the warming power of carbon dioxide. Methane is the main component of the gas that heats our homes and powers our stoves, and it’s one of the main byproducts of oil and gas drilling.
It’s also dramatically warming the planet. An international body of scientists has concluded that the concentration of methane in the atmosphere is higher now than any time in at least 800,000 years. It’s responsible for as much as a third of the global warming the planet has experienced so far, according to the EPA.
The rule could prove tricky for the incoming Trump administration to overturn because the program was included in Biden’s climate law, which passed Congress in 2022. Undoing it would take another act of Congress; while not impossible if Republicans take the House of Representatives, it could be an uphill climb and take longer than if the Trump administration were acting on its own.
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Trump won't be president for months, but he already looms large over Congress
From CNN's Sarah Ferris, Lauren Fox and Clare Foran
President elect Donald Trump speaks at a campaign rally at McCamish Pavilion on October 28, in Atlanta, Georgia.
Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images
Donald Trump won’t be leading the United States until January. But the president-elect will have fingerprints over every piece of the lame-duck session of Congress.
A week after Election Day, lawmakers are returning to Capitol Hill to the fast-approaching threat of a government shutdown — which will require a legislative fix — as well as to internal Republican Party leadership contests that Trump is already wielding influence over.
For now, it remains an open question what strategy House Speaker Mike Johnson will pursue for the funding fight. Trump and his team haven’t yet informed GOP leaders how he wants to proceed on those key issues, including the December 20 government spending deadline, according to two people familiar with the discussions.
While many Republicans would prefer Johnson strike a spending deal with Democrats during the lame-duck Congress, plenty of conservatives are urging the GOP to punt everything until Trump has the reins in 2025 — a fight that could complicate Johnson’s road to the speakership in January if Republicans hold the House.
Pushing the funding fight to next year would put Trump in position to have far greater say. But Republicans would risk a chaotic fight in Congress that could dominate the early days of Trump’s second term in office, leaving little time for the GOP to address other priorities.
If Republicans decide to punt on that sweeping spending package, it will cut into critical floor time, which the Senate will need to confirm Trump’s nominees next year, and could interfere with the GOP’s plans to pass a sweeping tax and economic package.
Senate GOP will vote on leadership tomorrow, while control of the House is still unknown. Catch up here
From CNN staff
Republican lawmakers are vying to become the majority leader in the new GOP-controlled Senate. The leadership election is expected to take place on Wednesday and will be submitted via a secret ballot, meaning that senators can vote anonymously.
Florida Sen. Rick Scott — the long-shot candidate who is winning support of a handful of conservative senators and MAGA influencers — is jockeying for the job. But Scott is still a significant underdog, with GOP Whip John Thune of South Dakota and Sen. John Cornyn of Texas seen as the favorites.
Senate state of play: Late Monday night, CNN projected that Democratic Rep. Ruben Gallego will win the closely watched seat in Arizona, defeating Republican Kari Lake to become the state’s first Hispanic senator. Gallego will succeed retiring independent Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, a onetime Democrat who still caucuses with her former party.
Winning the US Senate majority is a victory for Republicans, who have been locked out of the majority in the chamber since 2021. With one race still to be declared — Pennsylvania — Republicans will have at least 52 seats in the chamber.
There are 14 House races that have not yet been projected, and we still do not know who will control the lower chamber of Congress. Republicans are three seats away from holding on to the majority, while Democrats are 12 seats away from taking the chamber.
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How the South Korean president is preparing for Trump's "golf diplomacy"
From CNN's Yoonjung Seo and Jessie Yeung
President elect Donald Trump plays during the pro-am round of the Bedminster Invitational LIV Golf tournament in Bedminster, New Jersey, on July 28, 2022.
Seth Wenig/AP
As countries around the globe prepare for a second Donald Trump presidency, one world leader is teeing up a carefully calibrated diplomatic strategy.
In South Korea, President Yoon Suk Yeol “recently began practicing golf again for the first time in eight years, in preparation for ‘golf diplomacy’ with President-elect Trump,” the presidential office told CNN.
It said Yoon had done so “following the advice of those around him,” but declined to say when the president practiced golf.
Since winning the US election, Trump has maintained a frenetic schedule as world leaders call to congratulate and court the incoming US leader, with analysts watching to see who will clinch a first meeting.
And golf has long proved to be a reliable pathway to Trump. The game is the profit engine of his business empire: his golf courses and the companies associated with them rake in hundreds of millions of dollars, according to a CNN investigation in 2018.
Trump visited more golf courses than any recent president during his first year in office in 2017, spending weekends at his properties in Florida, New Jersey and Virginia, sometimes bringing lawmakers or business leaders with him.
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Indonesia’s new leader posts video of his call with Trump
From CNN's Helen Regan
Indonesia’s new President Prabowo Subianto posted a video of his phone call congratulating Donald Trump on his reelection, during which the former special forces commander referenced his American “training” and called the US-president elect “sir” multiple times.
Prabowo, who is in Washington to meet President Joe Biden, posted the almost three-minute phone conversation on his official social media channels Monday.
“Wherever you are I’m willing to fly to congratulate you personally, sir,” Prabowo said in the video. Trump can be heard replying: “That’s so nice. We’ll do that anytime you want.”
The US president-elect said he was “proud” of Prabowo for doing a “great job” in Indonesia.
“All my training is American, sir,” Prabowo replied, in an apparent reference to the officer training he received in the United States in the 1980s.
It is not clear whether Prabowo will meet with Trump while he’s in the US.
Some background: Prabowo was banned from the US in 1998 after he was dismissed from the military over alleged human rights violations following the fall of the late dictator Suharto, his former father-in-law. The ban was later waived.
During the Cold War, Indonesia was a member of the US-led anti-Soviet bloc, a period that saw the Indonesian military carry out huge anti-communist purges and massacres.
In recent decades, Indonesia has adopted a foreign policy of non-alignment, which means it does not side with one bloc or power on global affairs. But the resource-rich nation, which has the world’s largest nickel reserves, is also seen as a big prize for influence in Asia.
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Senator-elect Democrat thanks Arizona Republicans who voted for him
From Veronica Stracqualursi
Arizona Democratic Senate candidate Ruben Gallego, speaks during a watch party on election night, November 5, in Phoenix, Arizona.
Ross D. Franklin/AP
Democratic Rep. Ruben Gallego on Monday thanked Republicans who voted for him in the Arizona Senate race, saying, “they took a chance on me.”
Gallego will win Arizona’s US Senate seat, according to a projection from the CNN Decision Desk, beating GOP nominee and Trump ally Kari Lake to replace Kyrsten Sinema.
Asked what he’d fight against with a Republican White House and Senate majority, Gallego said:
On what lessons Democrats can take from his win and this election cycle, Gallego said:
Gallego, who will be the first Latino senator from Arizona, vowed to “fight to fix a broken immigration system and security” and to “lower costs on everything, gas, groceries, rent and more.” He promised to support veterans and defend abortion rights.