Live updates: Trump presidential transition news, Pam Bondi picked as attorney general | CNN Politics

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The latest on Trump’s presidential transition

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Gaetz speaks out after withdrawing as Trump's AG pick
02:11 - Source: CNN

What we're covering

New AG selection: President-elect Donald Trump’s new pick for attorney general is former Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi. Former GOP Rep. Matt Gaetz withdrew from consideration Thursday after Trump told him he didn’t have the Senate votes. Track Trump’s latest Cabinet picks and read answers to readers’ questions about the incoming administration.

Up to the Senate: Bondi’s selection will be subject to Senate approval, but Trump’s allies believe she will have an easier confirmation process. Gaetz was facing significant scrutiny over sexual misconduct allegations, which he denies. Republicans on the House Ethics Committee voted earlier this week not to release the results of their investigation into him. Gaetz said Friday he’s not returning to Congress next year.

•Sentencing postponed: The judge overseeing Trump’s criminal hush money trial indefinitely postponed his sentencing in the case, which was set for next week, as he reviews filings. This is one one of four criminal cases the president-elect faces as he prepares to return to the White House.

16 Posts

CNN interviews Arizona rancher about why he's hopeful Trump will stop migrant crossings in his second term

Arizona rancher Jim Chilton says there may be lawsuits that may postpone President-elect Donald Trump from finishing his border wall, but Chilton, whose ranch runs to the edge of Mexico, guarantees Trump will “finish it and secure the border.”

CNN’s David Culver interviewed the Arizona rancher. Watch below:

The head of the UFC backed Trump. He says he never wants to help another campaign

After embracing President-elect Donald Trump, the Ultimate Fighting Championship chief executive said in an interview this week he won’t help future presidential campaigns, stating he “want[s] nothing to do with politics.”

“I’m never f***ing doing this again,” White told The New Yorker. “I want nothing to do with this s***. It’s gross. It’s disgusting.”

White played a key role in Trump’s second ascension to the White House, helping him reach millions of young male voters. A longtime friend of the president-elect, White stumped for Trump on the campaign trail, praised him at the Republican National Convention and walked alongside him at Saturday’s UFC match at Madison Square Garden.

White also used his connections to leverage appearances for Trump on friendly, right-leaning podcasts with millions of young listeners. White was upfront about his motivation in connecting Trump with so-called manosphere or bro-casters, saying the move was intended to tap into young voters.

“You’re getting conversations in these podcasts, and you yourself, as a young kid, get to really see who Donald Trump is,” White told The New Yorker. “Not the bulls*** you hear from the far-left media.”

In interviews with UFC fans outside Madison Square Garden, young voters told CNN they decided to support Trump after listening to podcasts helmed by Joe Rogan and others influential figures.

Read more on White and Trump here.

Incoming Senate Judiciary Chair Grassley calls Bondi "well regarded"

Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-IA) speaks at a news conference on the Supreme Court at the U.S. Capitol Building on July 19, 2023 in Washington, DC.

Incoming Senate Judiciary Chair Chuck Grassley called President-elect Donald Trump’s attorney general pick Pam Bondi “well regarded” and “experienced” in a post on X dictated in his trademark social media shorthand.

Former Rep. Gaetz says he’s not returning to Congress next year

Former GOP Florida Rep. Matt Gaetz will not return to Congress next year after withdrawing his name as President-elect Donald Trump’s attorney general pick, he said in an interview Friday.

Gaetz told conservative activist and Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk he would serve Trump in a different capacity, which he did not specify.

“I’m going to be fighting for President Trump. I’m going to be doing whatever he asks of me, as I always have. But I think that eight years is probably enough time in the United States Congress.”

Some context: Gaetz abruptly announced he was leaving his Florida seat in the House of Representatives after Trump tapped him for the attorney general role, throwing the fate into question of a House Ethics Committee report on allegations of sexual misconduct against the lawmaker.

When Gaetz announced Thursday that he was withdrawing his name from consideration for attorney general, it set off a scramble among congressional leaders in both parties on whether he could still return to the House next year. Lawmakers and senior aides believed Gaetz could ultimately return in January if he wanted to, according to more than a dozen sources, though it was a complicated question.

During interview, Gaetz downplays allegations in House ethics report as part of "smear campaign"

Former GOP Florida Rep. Matt Gaetz downplayed the allegations in the House Ethics Committee report as part of a “smear campaign” during an interview Friday.

He went on to blame former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, who Gaetz effectively ousted from his position, for his demise.

“I was dealing with a politically motivated body. They didn’t like me because of what I did to Kevin McCarthy. All of them were handpicked by Kevin McCarthy, and they had an axe to grind. So that was going to serve as at least enough of a basis to delay my confirmation as attorney general,” Gaetz said.

More on the report: The woman who says she had sex when she was a minor with Gaetz told the House Ethics Committee she had two sexual encounters with him at one party in 2017, sources familiar with her testimony tell CNN.

The woman, who was 17 years old at the time, testified that the second sexual encounter, which has not previously been reported, included another adult woman. She also testified to both sexual encounters in a civil deposition as part of a related lawsuit, sources said.

After being asked for comment for this story, Gaetz announced he was backing out as President-elect Donald Trump’s attorney general nominee.

Gaetz has repeatedly denied having sex with a minor and was not charged after the Justice Department investigated these alleged encounters.

CNN’s Paula Reid and Sarah Ferris contributed reporting to this post.

First on CNN: Gaetz responds on camera to withdrawing his name from attorney general consideration

Former GOP Florida Rep. Matt Gaetz responded on camera to withdrawing his name from attorney general consideration during an interview with Charlie Kirk, a conservative activist and Turning Point USA founder.

Gaetz said he supported Pam Bondi and said that she would make a “phenomenal attorney general for Donald Trump.”

He continued, “My good friend Pam Bondi is going to be a phenomenal attorney general for Donald Trump. She has the legal acumen. She hates criminals. She is a bright legal mind and a fellow Floridian. So I think that even though the path will take me to a different station in life and a different place to fight for our agenda, and President Trump, we’ve got a great person in place.”

Gaetz also claimed he had momentum with senators but that the conversations were effectively a distraction as part of an explanation as to why he withdrew his name.

Separately, Gaetz said he would continue to be a part of staffing out the administration. Gaetz has sat in on a number transition meetings and given input to the team.

“I might not lead the league in scoring in the upcoming few months, but I want to lead the league assist. I want to help you find those great folks get them in great position and see the President Trump is a historically successful president,” he said.

Judge postpones Trump’s sentencing in hush money trial indefinitely

Former President Donald Trump appears at Manhattan criminal court May 16 before his trial in New York.

The judge overseeing Donald Trump’s criminal hush money trial has adjourned his sentencing, which was set for next week.

Judge Juan Merchan granted Trump’s request to file a motion to dismiss the case – ordering them to submit their papers by December 2. Prosecutors are ordered to respond by December 9. Trump’s team wanted to have until December 20 to file their paperwork.

The judge also agreed to hold off on issuing his decision on presidential immunity until after he reviews the parties’ filings.

The judge did not set a new sentencing date or make any further statements about the delay.

Trump’s spokesperson called the sentencing delay “a decisive win.”

More on 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. Prosecutors alleged during the trial that Trump was part of an illegal conspiracy to undermine the integrity of the 2016 election. Further, they alleged he was part of an unlawful plan to suppress negative information, including the $130,000 payment. Trump pleaded not guilty.

On Nov. 19, 2024, the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office told Judge Juan Merchan they would agree to delay Trump’s sentencing, set for Nov. 26, to allow time for the anticipated litigation around the president-elect’s expected motion to dismiss the case.

This post has been updated with Trump’s reaction and more background on the case.

Democrats are less optimistic about their party’s future than at any point in past 8 years, new Pew poll shows

Supporters of Democratic presidential nominee Vice President Kamala Harris listen as she is seen in a screen delivering remarks, conceding the 2024 US presidential election to President-elect Donald Trump, at Howard University in Washington, DC, on November 6.

In the aftermath of the 2024 elections, Democrats are less optimistic about their party’s future than they’ve been at any point in the past eight years, according to new Pew Research Center polling released Friday.

The poll, which was conducted November 12-17, also finds that views of President-elect Donald Trump continue a pattern seen pre-election: Americans largely express confidence in his plans for the economy, while continuing to rate him negatively on many personal characteristics.

Roughly half (51%) of Democrats and independents who lean toward the party say they’re optimistic, while 49% say that they’re pessimistic about its future. Democratic pessimism is up compared with both 2016, when 38% said they were feeling that way in the wake of Trump’s first presidential victory, and in 2020, when 17% of Democratic-aligned adults described themselves as pessimistic after Joe Biden’s win in 2020. They also didn’t feel this pessimistic in the wake of the 2018 and 2022 midterms.

By contrast, 86% of Republican-aligned adults now call themselves optimistic about the GOP’s future, up from 65% who said the same two years ago. Roughly 8 in 10 said they were optimistic following Trump’s 2016 election and the 2018 midterms, with 74% calling themselves optimistic after Biden’s 2020 victory.

Read more about the polling here.

Trump's pick for AG was at the forefront of a 2012 Supreme Court challenge to the Affordable Care Act

Former Florida attorney general Pam Bondi, who Donald Trump has selected as his attorney general pick, was at the vanguard of the 2012 Supreme Court challenge to President Barack Obama’s health care law and could now be positioned to work to undercut the Affordable Care Act again.

Back in February 2011, when Republican state officials across the country were racing to be the first to test Obamacare at the high court, Bondi and other Florida state attorneys flew to Washington, DC, to screen powerhouse appellate lawyers to represent the state.

As Bondi recounted at the time, she borrowed a conference room at the Washington law firm where her brother was a partner to quickly interview leading candidates. The Florida team selected Paul Clement, a former US solicitor general to President George W. Bush, and they were able to position their case at the forefront of nationwide litigation.

In the end, Florida and the other GOP-led states narrowly lost their case at the Supreme Court in June 2012. The 5-4 decision to uphold the ACA almost went the opposite way. Chief Justice John Roberts switched his vote late in the private negotiations, giving the administration the win.

Though repealing the Affordable Care Act was a top priority of Trump in his first term, the president-elect moved away from vowing to dismantle the landmark health reform law in his 2024 campaign. However, he did repeatedly promise to improve Obamacare — though when asked for details in a September debate, he said he had “concepts of a plan.”

CNN’s Tami Luhby contributed reporting to this post.

Analysis: How this Treasury secretary contender could be a win for private equity

Marc Rowan, a contender for what is arguably the most important economic job in the US government, is the CEO of Apollo Global Management, a behemoth in private equity, an industry notorious for its cutthroat, profit-at-all-costs standards.

The 62-year-old executive’s ascent to Donald Trump’s Cabinet could, if he were nominated and confirmed, represent a major win for one of the most powerful (and often despised) sectors of finance.

As Treasury secretary, Rowan would directly oversee the Financial Stability Oversight Council, which is nominally responsible for policing the “nonbank” financial system, including the private equity industry in which he is currently a major player. The Treasury also houses the IRS and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, or OCC, which regulates banks.

More to the point, Rowan, as Treasury secretary, would be able to ensure that those regulatory bodies continue to treat private equity the way they always have, under administrations of both Democrats and Republicans. That is to say, largely left alone.

“The regulation is really not there,” Bill Lazonick, president of the nonprofit Academic-Industry Research Network, said. “You don’t even know what private equity owns —everything is shielded by various types of transactions and corporate structures.”

It’s impossible to know what kind of Treasury secretary Rowan would be, if he’s picked. It’s hardly uncommon for industry leaders to join the government bodies that regulate the companies they previously worked for, and their reputations are, let’s say, mixed.

Read more on Rowan here.

Here's a look at Trump's Cabinet picks so far — and the roles yet to be filled

President-elect Donald Trump is swiftly shaping his Cabinet for his second term, announcing loyalists to top roles that will need to be confirmed by the Senate.

There are still a handful of key roles he has not selected.

Trump announced that his new pick for attorney general in former Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi after former Republican Rep. Matt Gaetz withdrew from consideration for the job on Thursday.

Here’s a look at where things stand:

Bondi had a reputation for being media savvy and an effective litigator. Here's what we know

Former Florida Secretary of State Pam Bondi speaks during the largely virtual 2020 Republican National Convention on August 25, 2020.

Hours after his first pick to run the nation’s top law enforcement agency Rep. Matt Gaetz dropped out, President-elect Donald Trump named former Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi as his new choice to run the Justice Department.

Here’s a look at her legal history:

  • Bondi practiced law in Florida for over a decade — first as a prosecutor in Tampa and then for eight years as the state attorney general — where she had a reputation for being a media savvy and effective litigator.
  • Elected as Florida’s top prosecutor in the conservative tea party wave, she grew increasingly partisan during her two terms in office, making regular appearances on Fox News and then becoming a top Florida surrogate for Trump during his 2016 campaign.
  • Bondi’s history in court at times touched hot-button issues, repeatedly landing her in the news. She led a failed effort to overturn Obamacare in 2012, and shortly after the deadly shooting at Pulse nightclub in 2016, Bondi defended herself in an interview with CNN’s Anderson Cooper for fighting to preserve Florida’s ban on gay marriage.
  • After leaving the Florida attorney general’s office, Bondi joined Ballard Partners, a lobbying firm with deep ties to Trump and Wiles. There, she represented the country of Qatar from 2019 to 2020, according to documents submitted to the federal government by the firm under the Foreign Agents Registration Act.
  • Most recently, Bondi joined a group of pro-Trump lawyers who filed an amicus brief to a federal appeals court in the special counsel’s classified documents case against Trump. The brief was in support of Trump’s claim that special counsel Jack Smith was unlawfully appointed — a claim that led to Judge Aileen Cannon dismissing all charges against the president-elect earlier this year.
  • Bondi has also reportedly been in the hotseat as the subject of a legal case: a custody battle with a Louisiana family over their St. Bernard, Master Tank, who went missing after Hurricane Katrina. The family told The Tampa Bay Times that Bondi stole the dog, while Bondi accused the family of neglect. That case was settled before trial and Master Tank returned to his family.

Former Rep. Mike Rogers says he can "restore" faith in FBI as Trump considers him to be next director

Mike Rogers speaks at the Ryder Center at Saginaw Valley State University on October 3 in Michigan.

Former GOP Michigan congressman Mike Rogers, who is being eyed by President-elect Donald Trump as a potential option to replace Christopher Wray as FBI director, bluntly declared on Friday that “someone like me” could restore public confidence in the agency.

CNN’s Kaitlan Collins reported last night that while Trump has planned to fire Wray for months if elected, he has struggled in recent days to find a replacement who can both carry out his agenda and be confirmed by the Senate. One potential option would be naming Rogers, a former FBI special agent, as the FBI director, while putting Kash Patel, a controversial MAGA loyalist, in as the deputy FBI director, according to several familiar with Trump’s thinking.

Rogers said that “the culture of the FBI on the seventh floor needs to be changed” and “you can cure the cancer without killing the patient and that’s exactly what needs to happen at the FBI,” after previously stating that the bureau “should not be engaged in politics.”

He criticized Wray for not appearing at a congressional hearing on global threats yesterday.

“I know how to challenge it and I know how to refocus them. That cultural rot has got to go,” he said. He was careful to note during the interview that the president-elect “hasn’t said he’s going to do that yet,” referring to potentially firing Wray.

Trump appointed Wray to lead the FBI in 2017, after firing James Comey three years short of his 10-year term expiring. The 10-year term is designed to keep the FBI director position insulated from political whims.

Analysis: Your questions about Trump 2.0, answered

When we asked CNN readers for their questions about the incoming Trump 2.0 administration, we got a lot of nervous and scared feedback.

People have legitimate worries about President-elect Donald Trump’s promises of mass deportation, how his pledges to cut taxes will affect Social Security benefits and even whether he will leave office in 2029 when his term ends.

Here are the best answers from our reporters based on what we know right now for some of the many questions that poured in. Note: We’ve edited some questions for style or to focus them on a single issue. We included first names and state of residence based on the submissions.

Presidents have wide authority to declare a national emergency. Trump declared a national emergency when he was president the first time in order to unlock border wall funding that Congress refused to give him. Plus, President Joe Biden also deployed military personnel to the border to help border officials when a Covid-era policy that allowed the government to quickly turn away certain migrants expired.

How exactly Trump might use the military remains unclear. He has previously said that when he refers to the military, he would focus on National Guard troops and that local law enforcement would be key in his plans. Some states with Republican governors have already deployed National Guard troops to the border.

Trump has also said he could invoke a law from 1798, the Alien Enemies Act — meant to be invoked if the US is at war or if a foreign power threatens to invade or has done so — to help in his deportation plan.

Read more answered questions on Trump here.

Analysis: For Trump, every defeat is a catalyst for the next battle

For Donald Trump, every defeat is just the catalyst for his next battle.

No sooner had the president-elect suffered his first big reversal since winning reelection – when his scandal-tainted pick for attorney general, Matt Gaetz, withdrew Thursday after days of steadily worsening scrutiny over alleged sexual misconduct – Trump doubled down.

In Gaetz’s place, Trump chose Florida’s former attorney general, Pam Bondi, another ultra-loyal MAGA warrior who is one of the most outspoken proponents of his theory that US justice was weaponized against him.

Gaetz – who denies wrongdoing – may be gone, but Trump’s craving for the Department of Justice to act like his personal team of lawyers rather than an independent guardian of the law is showing all signs of remaining intact.

In picking Bondi, Trump has selected another person who will alarm DC’s establishment and will be equally dedicated to doing the boss’ work in defenestrating the DOJ. Bondi has had her own controversies – she once denied that a $25,000 charitable donation Trump sent her was in any way connected to her decision not to pursue action against Trump University.

But she’s got one thing that Gaetz lacked – she’s likely to be far more confirmable in next year’s Republican-led Senate.

Read the full analysis.

Trump has made a second pick for attorney general. Here’s what we know about Gaetz’s withdrawal

President-elect Donald Trump announced Pam Bondi as his new pick for attorney general after former Florida Rep. Matt Gaetz withdrew from consideration yesterday.

Trump called Gaetz Thursday morning and told him he did not have the votes in the Senate to get confirmed based on conversations Trump had with senators, according to a source with direct knowledge of the call.

Here’s what we know about what happened:

  • What Gaetz said: The former lawmaker wrote on social media that his nomination “was unfairly becoming a distraction” and that “there is no time to waste on a needlessly protracted Washington scuffle, thus I’ll be withdrawing my name from consideration to serve as Attorney General.”
  • What Trump said: Reacting to the news, Trump on Thursday said Gaetz was “doing very well” and suggested he has a bright future. Karoline Leavitt, Trump-Vance spokesperson, also said in a statement that Trump is committed to choosing someone “who will strongly defend the Constitution and end the weaponization of our justice system.”
  • Inside the Trump camp: Trump and members of his transition team were notified that Gaetz would be withdrawing before he made the announcement, two sources familiar with the matter told CNN. Many allies and advisers helping with the transition had serious doubts about Gaetz’s ability to make it through Senate confirmation hearings, two sources familiar with the discussions told CNN. Those doubts had been shared directly with Trump.
  • Ethics committee report: There was a belief that more damning information would be coming out from the ethics report, and that members of Gaetz’s orbit learned there might be witnesses who had been interviewed by the committee who had been previously unknown, one source familiar said. Gaetz has denied the allegations investigated by the Justice Department and the committee, including the claim that he had sex with a woman in 2017 when she was a minor.
  • Reaction on Capitol Hill: Several Republican senators said they were glad to see Gaetz withdraw. Multiple sources said that while Gaetz’s meetings with GOP senators on Wednesday were not negative, it became clear that there were too many hard “Nos” from them, and that information expected to come out of the ethics report would likely make confirmation impossible.