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Trump set to be named Time’s ‘Person of the Year’ with 40 days to inauguration: Live

Trump was named Time’s ‘Person of the Year’ in 2016 after winning his first presidential election

Oliver O'Connell,Joe Sommerlad,Ariana Baio
Thursday 12 December 2024 00:05 GMT
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Jimmy Kimmel wades in on Donald Trump’s latest administration

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President-elect Donald Trump is expected to be named Time magazine’s “Person of the Year” after winning the presidential election for the second time, according to Politico

The annual cover, which highlights an individual who has greatly influenced the year, is set to be unveiled on Thursday morning. But sources familiar with the matter say the president-elect is expected to grace the cover.

This will mark the second time Trump has been named Time’s “Person of the Year,” and to celebrate, he will reportedly ring the opening bell of the New York Stock Exchange on Thursday morning.

The honor comes as Trump continues to fill out his administration before he takes office January 20.

So far, the president-elect has announced nominations for most key roles – many of which are filled by his close allies, longtime friends or members of his family.

Earlier this week, Trump announced he would appoint his son’s fiance, Kimberly Guilfoyle, to serve as ambassador to Greece.

Trump ‘can’t guarantee’ tariffs won’t hurt Americans

Donald Trump can’t promise the sweeping set of tariffs he has threatened to impose on the nation’s major trading partners won’t hike consumer prices.

During an interview on Sunday with NBC News, anchor Kristen Welker asked the president-elect about the widespread economic consensus that his plans to tariff China, Mexico, and Canada risk triggering inflation and raising prices.

“I can’t guarantee anything,” Trump said. “I can’t guarantee tomorrow.”

Josh Marcus reports.

Trump says he’s ‘can’t guarantee’ tariffs won’t hurt Americans

Trump said tariffs ‘make us rich,’ even as economists predict measures would raise prices for consumers

Oliver O'Connell10 December 2024 20:30

ANALYSIS: Netanyahu makes it clear — Biden is no longer in charge

John Bowden reports:

Is Joe Biden still calling the shots in the Middle East? That certainly doesn’t seem to be what Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel’s Trump-loving prime minister, is saying.

Washington awoke this week to news that broke early Sunday morning of the fall of the Assad regime — an end to one of the most murderous and oppressive dictatorships in the world, one that had persisted since the 1970s through consecutive US administrations which opposed it.

As Syrians celebrated across Damascus and elsewhere in the country, other powers in the region took action. Citing a supposed threat from anti-Israel militant groups in a country now undergoing a massive political upheaval, Israeli troops occupied five villages across the Golan Heights, an area in Syria’s southwest. It also struck countless other targets across the country.

Continue reading...

Netanyahu has made it clear: Biden’s no longer in charge

US-Israel policy appears to now be fully running through Mar-a-Lago after shocking developments in the Golan Heights, writes John Bowden

Oliver O'Connell10 December 2024 20:00

Trump and DeSantis spoke about Lara Trump and vacant Florida Senate seat

President-elect Donald Trump has spoken to his former primary rival, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, about appointing his daughter-in-law, Lara Trump, to the senate seat that’s expected to be vacated by secretary of state nominee Senator Marco Rubio, according to The Wall Street Journal.

Lara Trump, 42, stepped down from her post as co-chair of the Republican National Committee Sunday. She took the role earlier this year to help her father-in-law get elected to a second term.

Gustaf Kilander reports.

Trump talked to DeSantis about giving Lara Trump a Florida Senate seat

President-elect’s daughter-in-law says she’s ‘always happy to have’ Trump last name

Oliver O'Connell10 December 2024 19:40

Biden: Trump dismantling ‘strongest economy in modern history’ would be a ‘major mistake’

President Joe Biden on Tuesday said he is bequeathing President-elect Donald Trump what he described as “the strongest economy in modern history” and “the envy of the world” while warning that efforts by the next administration to roll back his economic policies would result in great harm to Americans’ pocketbooks.

Andrew Feinberg reports from Washington, DC.

Oliver O'Connell10 December 2024 19:31

Thune says McConnell ‘is fine’ after fall

Oliver O'Connell10 December 2024 19:28

Mitch McConnell fell during Senate lunch

Republican Senator Mitch McConnell fell during a Senate lunch today.

A medical team with a wheelchair was seen entering his office. Outgoing minority leader McConnell, 82, has had medical issues in the past. He was escorted back to his office by Senate Republican Conference Chair John Barrasso, who hosted the lunch meeting, The Hill reports.

There are also reports that McConnell was seen with a cut on his face.

Oliver O'Connell10 December 2024 19:25

Profile: Scott Pressler — gay conservative political activist vowing to turn New Jersey red

Scott Presler, the gay conservative political activist who took credit for helping Donald Trump turn Pennsylvania red, is now vowing to do the same in New Jersey.

The last time the Garden State voted for a Republican presidential candidate was in 1988, but Presler thinks the tides are turning.

With New Jersey’s gubernatorial race less than a year away, the controversial campaigner is on a mission to turn the blue state red.

Rhian Lubin reports.

Who is Scott Presler? Gay conservative activist vowing to turn New Jersey red

With New Jersey’s gubernatorial race less than a year away, the controversial campaigner is on a mission to turn the blue state red

Oliver O'Connell10 December 2024 19:00

Watch: Biden says he learned something from Trump

Oliver O'Connell10 December 2024 18:40

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