• Hegseth on Capitol Hill: Vice President-elect JD Vance is conducting meetings with key Republican senators on Thursday alongside Trump’s pick for Secretary of Defense, Pete Hegseth, to build support for his confirmation process. The visit comes as a new police report reveals new details from a sexual assault allegation against Hegseth.
• Gaetz report: Republicans on the House Ethics Committee voted Wednesday not to release the results of their investigation into former Florida Rep. Matt Gaetz, Trump’s attorney general pick, despite growing calls to make the findings public. Vance and Gaetz met with senators on Capitol Hill yesterday.
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GOP Sen. Thom Tillis says Trump team should do more vetting "up front" on Cabinet picks
From CNN's Morgan Rimmer
President-elect Donald Trump’s team should do more vetting of their choices for roles in the administration “up front,” GOP Sen. Thom Tillis said Thursday, as two of Trump’s Cabinet selections face scrutiny over allegations of past wrongdoing.
The North Carolina Republican said he is not planning to meet with defense secretary pick Pete Hegseth today, since Tillis is not on the committee that will be evaluating his nomination.
He refused to weigh in on the new details of the sexual assault allegation against Hegseth, arguing lawmakers should wait to hear why the former “Fox and Friends” host wasn’t prosecuted.
“Wouldn’t the first question of due diligence be: Let’s see the full report, let’s understand the context, and also understand from the prosecutor who chose not to move forward with it, why?” Tillis said.
More from Capitol Hill: Democratic Sen. Richard Blumenthal declared Thursday that Hegseth’s “nomination is doomed.”
“It should never have been made. It was never vetted,” he added.
Meanwhile, Sen. Lindsey Graham, an ally of Trump, refused to talk to reporters, saying only, “I like Pete,” as he entered a hearing.
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Trump’s Education pick was sued for allegedly enabling sexual abuse of children
From CNN's John Towfighi
Linda McMahon speaks during the America First Policy Institute's America First Agenda summit in Washington, DC, in July 2022.
Al Drago/Bloomberg/Getty Images
A recent lawsuit alleges Linda McMahon, who President-elect Donald Trump tapped to lead the Department of Education, knowingly enabled the sexual exploitation of children by a World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) employee as early as the 1980s — allegations she denies.
McMahon is the former CEO of the WWE, which she co-founded with her husband, Vince. As head of the WWE, McMahon oversaw its transformation from a wrestling entertainment company into a publicly traded media empire. She stepped down in 2009 to run for Senate, but she lost in Connecticut in 2010 and 2012.
As McMahon — who co-chairs Trump’s transition team — vies to be confirmed as Education secretary, a recent lawsuit raises questions about her care for children’s safety at the WWE.
The suit alleges McMahon, her husband, the WWE and TKO Group Holdings, the league’s parent company, knowingly allowed employee Melvin Phillips Jr. to use his position as ringside announcer to sexually exploit children.
The filing alleges Phillips would recruit children to work as “Ring Boys,” helping him set up and take down wrestling rings at WWE events. However, the job was a guise for sexually exploiting the children, which Phillips would do even in front of wrestlers and executives in the locker area, the lawsuit alleges. He also would often film his sexual abuse, according to the filing.
The suit was filed in October in Baltimore County, Maryland, on behalf of five John Does, who say they were ages 13 to 15 when Phillips met and recruited them to work as “Ring Boys.” Each of them say they suffered mental and emotional abuse as a result of the alleged abuse.
Senate Republicans are meeting with Hegseth as Trump team aims to build support for confirmation process
From CNN's Morgan Rimmer, Veronica Stracqualursi and Kit Maher
Sen. John Barrasso walks out of the Senate Chamber on Capitol Hill on April 23 in Washington, DC.
Andrew Harnik/Getty Images
Wyoming Sen. John Barrasso, the incoming Senate Majority Whip, met with Donald Trump’s pick to lead the Defense Department, Pete Hegseth, on Thursday.
Barrasso called Hegseth a “strong nominee” in a statement released after the meeting and added that Trump’s pick “pledged that the Pentagon will focus on strength and hard power – not the current administration’s woke political agenda.”
Barrasso also noted that “national security nominations have a history of quick confirmations in the Senate. I look forward to Pete’s hearing and a vote on the floor in January.”
GOP Sen. Bill Hagerty of Tennessee also met with Hegseth and Vice President-elect JD Vance. Speaking after the meeting, Hagerty dismissed 2017 sexual assault allegations against the would-be defense secretary. Hegseth denies the assault.
“It’s a case that’s been dismissed,” Hagerty said. “This is just dredging up something to try and smear and discredit a candidate.”
Mississippi Sen. Roger Wicker, the ranking Republican on Senate Armed Services committee, also met with Hegseth, saying afterward that he thinks Trump’s Defense secretary pick will be in “good shape” for confirmation hearings. He said he didn’t discuss specifics of the assault case with Hegseth.
Missouri Sen. Eric Schmitt said earlier Thursday he was “excited about the opportunity” to meet later today with Vance and Hegseth on Capitol Hill and, “We need outsiders.”
Asked about the allegations against Hegseth, Schmitt said, “That’s what our process is for, right?
Tennessee Sen. Marsha Blackburn didn’t respond to questions about sexual assault allegations against Hegseth, but called it “a great meeting” and said “we look forward to supporting him.”
This post has been updated with additional reporting of senators meeting with Hegseth and Vance.
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It's more than 2 weeks after Election Day, and the size of the GOP's slim majority is still undecided
From CNN's Eric Bradner
The US Capitol building in Washington, on Wednesday, November 13.
Graeme Sloan/Bloomberg/Getty Images
Nick Begich’s flip of Alaska’s lone House seat will pad Republicans’ slim House majority — but with several members departing to join President-elect Donald Trump’s administration and just three races left to be decided, the party could enter the new year with very little room for error.
That narrow majority could shape a great deal on Capitol Hill — from how House Speaker Mike Johnson handles a looming government funding fight and unhappiness from his right flank, to who governors consider appointing to fill Senate vacancies — when the new Congress is sworn in on January 3 and Trump takes office 17 days later.
Two weeks post-Election Day, both parties are closely watching a handful of House races in which a winner had not yet been decided. On Wednesday, winners emerged in two of those races: Begich ousted Democratic Rep. Mary Peltola as Alaska tallied its ranked-choice ballots late Wednesday. And, hours earlier, final vote tallies in Ohio padded Democratic Rep. Marcy Kaptur’s narrow edge in the Toledo-based 9th District.
Balance of power: Those outcomes mean Republicans have won 219 House seats to Democrats’ 213, according to CNN’s projections. The undecided races are California’s 13th and 45th districts, where ballots are still being counted, and Iowa’s 1st District, where GOP Rep. Mariannette Miller-Meeks leads by about 800 votes ahead of a recount.
However, Trump is poaching the Republicans who hold — or until recently held — three of those seats, to join his still-forming administration. The president-elect could select more GOP House members as he fills out the remainder of his Cabinet and other administration positions.
So far, he has tapped Florida Rep. Matt Gaetz for attorney general, Florida Rep. Michael Waltz as his national security adviser and New York Rep. Elise Stefanik as his nominee for US ambassador to the United Nations. Gaetz immediately resigned his House seat and said he wouldn’t take his seat in January. Waltz and Stefanik remain House members for now.
Their seats, which are all expected to remain in Republican hands, will be filled via special elections — but when those elections will take place, and when the winners will be seated in Congress, is not yet clear.
House Oversight Chair James Comer “intends to establish a new Subcommittee on Delivering on Government Efficiency (DOGE) for the 119th Congress” a source familiar told CNN, confirming that Greene will chair the subcommittee.
House Oversight Chair James Comer and Greene, a staunch supporter of President-elect Donald Trump, recently had a meeting with Ramaswamy and his team to discuss the new subcommittee, another source familiar told CNN.
The creation of the new subcommittee establishes a congressional arm to the broader effort by Trump and his allies to make significant cuts to the federal government. The subpanel will examine the salaries and status of members of the federal civil service and intergovernmental personnel among other oversight measures.
Greene said she plans to investigate waste throughout the federal government and hold hearings.
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Trump team issues statement in support of Hegseth after police report reveals details from allegations
From CNN's Kristen Holmes and Dana Bash
Trump-Vance transition spokesperson Karoline Leavitt released a statement in support of Pete Hegseth after a police report obtained by CNN revealed new details from the sexual assault allegation against President-elect Donald Trump’s pick for defense secretary.
“This report corroborates what Mr. Hegseth’s attorneys have said all along: the incident was fully investigated, and no charges were filed because police found the allegations to be false. Pete Hegseth is a highly-respected Combat Veteran who will honorably serve our country when he is confirmed as the next Secretary of Defense, just like he honorably served our country on the battlefield in uniform,” the statement said.
The report does not say that police found the allegations to be false.
CNN previously reported that Hegseth briefed Susie Wiles, incoming White House chief of staff, on the details of the allegations after the initial report.
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Republicans on House Ethics Committee agreed to finish Gaetz report by December 5 meeting, source says
From CNN's Annie Grayer
President-elect Donald Trump's nominee to be attorney general, former Rep. Matt Gaetz, closes a door to a private meeting with Vice President-elect JD Vance and Republican Senate Judiciary Committee members at the Capitol in Washington, DC, on November 20.
J. Scott Applewhite/AP
A majority of Ethics Committee members agreed to have their report on Matt Gaetz finished in time for the panel’s next meeting on December 5, according to a source familiar, as some committee Republicans joined with Democrats on this vote.
Committee Republicans voted against an effort to have the report both finalized and released on December 5, the source said.
This means that members will be voting on whether to release the final report on that date.
Vance is expected to conduct meetings on Capitol Hill today with Hegseth
From CNN's Kit Maher
Vice President-elect JD Vance is expected to conduct meetings with key Republican senators today, this time with President-elect Donald Trump’s pick for Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, according to a source familiar.
Vance and attorney general nominee Matt Gaetz conducted meetings with senators Wednesday.
New details on allegation against Hegseth: A police report obtained by CNN shows a California woman told police that Hegseth physically blocked her from leaving a hotel room, took her phone, and then sexually assaulted her even though she “remembered saying ‘no’ a lot.”
The 22-page report, released by the city attorney’s office of Monterey, California, on Wednesday night in response to a public records request, lays out the competing narratives of what happened in new detail – including conflicting accounts of how intoxicated Hegseth and the woman were, and descriptions of video surveillance showing some of their movements that night.
Hegseth told police that their encounter was consensual, and that he had repeatedly made sure the woman “was comfortable with what was going on between the two of them.”
CNN’s Casey Tolan, Scott Glover and Sara Murray contributed reporting to this post.
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Trump’s team is gaming out an aggressive Latin America strategy to implement mass deportation plan
From CNN's Priscilla Alvarez
Customs and Border Patrol agents load migrants into a vehicle after groups of migrants walked into the US from Mexico at Jacumba Hot Springs, California, on June 5, 2024.
Frederic J. Brown/AFP/Getty Images
President-elect Donald Trump’s team is gaming out an aggressive strategy toward Latin America that will be a crucial element to plans to deport migrants at large scale, according to two sources involved in transition policy discussions.
During his first term, Trump took a hardline — and at times, scatter shot — approach toward the region, which was largely the source of migration to the United States, including levying consequences, like sanctions, and threatening and imposing tariffs.
In his second term, the region will continue to play a central role in plans to stem the flow of migration and return people who are undocumented in the US. Deportation often hinges on diplomacy — and has been a steep challenge for the US when dealing with countries where there are frosty relations.
This time around, sources involved and close to the transition say they’re better prepared — as they seek ways to engage in a forceful manner and leverage allies, while also floating the possibility of stiff consequences for countries who don’t comply. Taken together, it’s a return to a hardline approach meant to get countries receiving deportees to comply and attempt to curb migration.
The strategy amounts to relying heavily on Mexico, as the US has traditionally done, to control migration to their northern border, bringing back agreements that barred migrants from seeking asylum in the US if they passed through certain countries, and working closely with Panama to stop the flow of migrants through the Darien Gap.
Vice President-elect JD Vance speaks on his cellphone as he arrives for private meetings at the Capitol in Washington, on Wednesday.
Ben Curtis/AP
After rarely being seen in public in the two weeks since he delivered a brief, 46-second victory speech on election night, JD Vance reemerged this week to play one of the most important roles he will be expected to fill as Donald Trump’s No. 2: His point person on Capitol Hill.
The first-term Ohio senator has been tasked by the president-elect to help oversee his policy priorities and ensure lawmakers don’t stand in the way of enacting his agenda, multiple sources familiar with the discussions told CNN. That includes a concerted push to shore up support for Trump’s Cabinet picks, starting with two of the most controversial, both of whom face allegations of sexual misconduct that they deny.
Yesterday, Vance brought former Florida Rep. Matt Gaetz, Trump’s choice for attorney general, to the Hill to meet with the senators who will be crucial during his confirmation process. And today, he’ll do the same for former Fox News host Pete Hegseth, Trump’s pick to run the Department of Defense.
The effort marks an early test of Vance’s influence in the Senate, a body he joined less than two years ago. His ability to help secure the confirmation of Trump’s Cabinet choices, especially the most unorthodox ones, will be a key measure of the vice president-elect’s political acumen and sway.
Trump received first intelligence briefing since winning the presidential election last week, according to sources
From CNN's Katie Bo Lillis
President-elect Donald Trump received his first intelligence briefing since winning the 2024 election last week, according to two sources familiar with the matter.
The Office of the Director of National Intelligence declined to comment or confirm the briefing. It is not clear whether he has received additional briefings since.
The Trump transition team did not respond to request for comment.
More about these briefings: Traditionally, the intelligence community briefs incoming presidents and vice presidents — along with two advisors of their choosing — once they are elected. In 2016, Trump was accompanied by New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie and retired Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn. It’s not clear who, if anyone, accompanied him last week.
The nominee for each party is also typically offered intelligence briefings during the campaign. Trump told the Daily Mail in August that he was declining those briefings so that he could not be accused of leaking classified information.
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New details revealed on sexual assault allegation against Trump's defense secretary pick
From CNN’s Casey Tolan, Scott Glover and Sara Murray
Fox anchor Pete Hegseth appears during an interview on "FOX & Friends" at Fox News Channel Studios in New York, in August 2019.
John Lamparski/Getty Images/File
A California woman told police that Trump Cabinet pick Pete Hegseth physically blocked her from leaving a hotel room, took her phone, and then sexually assaulted her even though she “remembered saying ‘no’ a lot,” a police report obtained by CNN shows.
The 22-page report, released by the city attorney’s office of Monterey, California, on Wednesday night in response to a public records request, lays out the competing narratives of what happened in new detail – including conflicting accounts of how intoxicated Hegseth and the woman were, and descriptions of video surveillance showing some of their movements that night.
Hegseth, who President-elect Donald Trump has named as his pick for secretary of defense, told police that their encounter was consensual, and that he had repeatedly made sure the woman “was comfortable with what was going on between the two of them.”
Seven years after the alleged assault, questions over what happened that night could jeopardize Hegseth’s nomination and seem likely to be central in his upcoming confirmation hearing.
Hegseth was not charged with a crime in connection with the allegation. His attorney has acknowledged that Hegseth later entered into a settlement agreement with his accuser that included an undisclosed monetary payment and a confidentiality clause.
Trump's pick for intel chief harbors significant distrust of agencies she would oversee
From CNN's Katie Bo Lillis, Jeremy Herb and Daniel Strauss
Tulsi Gabbard speaks before Republican presidential nominee former President Donald Trump at a campaign rally at Madison Square Garden in New York, on October 27.
Tulsi Gabbard, then in the midst of a failed bid for the Democratic nomination for president, met with Daniel Ellsberg, a military analyst who leaked the Pentagon Papers to The New York Times and The Washington Postin the 1970s and was charged with violations of the Espionage Act. He argued to her that it should be unconstitutional to charge officials who leak classified information to media outlets with espionage.
Gabbard agreed, declaring the practice “insanity.” Later that year, she introduced a bill in the House called the “Protect Brave Whistleblowers Act,” designed to shield people like Ellsberg. She wrote two more bills that same week supporting Julian Assange and Edward Snowden, who were behind two of the biggest US national security leaks of the 21st Century.
Trump’s selection of Gabbard to run the Office of the Director of National Intelligence has quickly drawn scrutiny because of her relative inexperience in the intelligence community and her public adoption of positions on Syria and the war in Ukraine that many national security officials see as Russian propaganda.
But where she is perhaps most at odds with the agencies she may soon be tasked with leading is her distrust of broad government surveillance authorities and her support for those willing to expose some of the intelligence community’s most sensitive secrets.
Republicans on House Ethics Committee block report on Gaetz from being released. Here's what happened yesterday
From CNN's Sarah Ferris, Annie Grayer and Manu Raju
The House Ethics Committee Chairman Michael Guest rushes past reporters without speaking after his panel met to consider the investigation of former Rep. Matt Gaetz, at the Capitol in Washington, on Wednesday.
J. Scott Applewhite/AP
Republicans on the House Ethics Committee fell in line behind GOP leaders and voted Wednesday not to release the results of their investigation into Donald Trump’s attorney general pick, Matt Gaetz.
The GOP’s decision to block the findings — against the will of Democrats on the panel — raises major questions about what happens to the highly secretive information that the ethics panel has already collected on Gaetz.
Here’s a recap:
What happened in the meeting: Members took multiple votes on whether to release the report the probe into Gaetz, according to source. They voted on releasing it as is, even if it’s not final yet. That was deadlocked on partisan lines, the source said. They also voted on releasing the finalized version report, which also failed along partisan lines, the person said.
What could be in the report: CNN had earlier reported that two women testified to the House Ethics Committee that they were paid for “sexual favors” by Gaetz, according to a lawyer for the two women.
What the committee will do now: The Ethics Committee will continue to work on finishing the report, which the panel’s chairman, Rep. Michael Guest, has said isn’t complete. The status of the report was a major point of discussion in the meeting. While the investigation is complete, lawmakers of both parties have sparred over whether it is technically complete.
What Democrats are doing: Democrat, Rep. Steve Cohen, formally declared on the floor his plans to file a privileged resolution to attempt to make the report public. It’s unclear whether Cohen has drafted a measure that will pass the strict procedural standards, but if it does, Speaker Mike Johnson will be forced to bring it to the floor within two legislative days.
What’s next for the committee: The committee voted to meet again in December, when Republicans on the panel hope to have a finalized report, according to two people familiar with the discussions.
Gaetz on Capitol Hill: The former lawmaker was on Capitol Hill alongside Vice President-elect JD Vance ahead of the Cabinet confirmation process in the Senate. A transition official described his meetings with senators as “productive.” Gaetz is facing serious questions of misconduct so the meetings are particularly important for him to explain why he deserves senators’ support.
In other news, Trump forged ahead with his presidential transition, announcing a list of loyalists for top roles. On Wednesday he announced the following selections: