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Trump has ‘great meeting’ with DC mayor ahead of inauguration and suggests Canada could become 51st state: Live

Incoming president planning swearing-in ceremony for January 20 and continuing to float idea of merging North American neighbor into United States

Musk vs MAGA war: Trump camp in bitter fight over immigration, foreign worker visas

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Donald Trump has met with Washington, D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser to plan for his inauguration on January 20.

Mayor Bowser wrote on X that she had a “great meeting” with the president-elect and hoped they would find “common ground” after clashing in the past over the policing of the Black Lives Matter demonstrations in D.C. in response to the killing of George Floyd in summer 2020 and then the Capitol riot six months later.

Trump is meanwhile continuing to circulate articles from right-wing media on his Truth Social feed hinting at the prospect of the United States entering merger talks with Canada about it becoming America’s 51st state, capitalizing on Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s rocky end to the year.

The idea was also entertained on Fox News on Monday when Canadian businessman Kevin O’Leary expressed his enthusiasm for the idea in conversation with Trump’s former White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany.

The president-elect has also sought to revive talk about his acquiring Greenland from Denmark in recent days.

Congress will reconvene on Friday after the New Year’s celebrations, when House Speaker Mike Johnson is up for re-election — and appears to be short of support.

In 2020, Trump reported asked his defense secretary about launching missiles into Mexico to “destroy the drug labs” and wipe out the cartels.

Now, the incoming president is reportedly planning to designate cartels “foreign terrorist organizations” — giving the administration the legal pretext to conduct military operations in Mexico.

Ariana Baio explains:

Trump’s plan to name cartels ‘terrorists’ could open door to military operations

President-elect’s latest suggestion threatens to escalate tensions between the U.S. and Mexico

Alex Woodward31 December 2024 19:00

World’s richest man and Trump adviser leans into ultra-right memes with ties to neo-Nazis

Elon Musk has adopted a Pepe the Frog meme for his X profile picture with a new user name that references the neo-Nazi “kek” subculture that was birthed from the extremely online far-right depths of 4chan.

Musk — the 53-year-old world’s wealthiest person and father of 12 — changed his name to “Kekius Maximus” and changed his photo to an illustration of Pepe dressed as a Roman legionnaire playing a video game. Musk is working with Trump’s incoming administration to recommend drastic cuts in federal spending.

Comic artist Matt Furie’s Pepe creation was co-opted as a far-right hate symbol, and he has since tried to swat down its usage and even tried killing off the character. The image has persisted in memes and as a prominent figure among the so-called Groyper movement of young Christian white nationalists.

Musk has come under fire for endorsing Germany’s ultra-right Alternative for Germany, which has flirted with neo-Nazi and white supremacist rhetoric.

Alex Woodward31 December 2024 18:45

Billionaire Bill Ackman says he expects Trump to privatize the nation’s two largest government-owned lenders

Hedge fund billionaire Bill Ackman said he expects Trump to privatize Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, two of the nation’s biggest government-owned mortgage lenders.

Rhian Lubin has more:

Billionaire Bill Ackman expects Trump to privatize two largest US mortgage lenders

The Trump-supporting financier said he believes the president-elect will remove lenders Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac from conservatorship

Alex Woodward31 December 2024 18:35

The long-running lawsuit against Trump for January 6 returns to court... on January 6

Donald Trump has been summoned to appear in a discovery hearing for a long-running lawsuit from members of Congress, Capitol police and the NAACP over his role in the January 6 attack.

The president-elect has been scheduled to appear virtually for a hearing on January 6, four years to the day he failed to stop a mob from storming the halls of Congress, fueled by his lie that the 2020 presidential election was stolen from him.

The lawsuit (Lee v Trump) and a similar civil case (Smith v Trump) accuse Trump and his co-defendants of violating the Ku Klux Klan Act, which intended to combat political violence and intimidation.

In Lee v Trump, the president-elect along with Rudy Giuliani, the Oath Keepers, Proud Boys and others “conspired to incite an assembled crowd to march upon and enter the Capitol of the United States for the common purpose of disrupting, by the use of force, intimidation and threat, the approval by Congress of the count of votes cast by members of the Electoral College.”

And “in doing so, the Defendants each intended to prevent, and ultimately delayed, members of Congress from discharging their duty commanded by the United States Constitution” to approve the results of the election, the lawsuit argues.

The judge presiding over the lawsuit also set a schedule to hear how his “immunity” defense comes into play, with deadlines that extend into the first few months of his second presidency.

Trump’s “immunity” motion is due January 24, plaintiffs’ opposition is due February 28, and Trump’s reply is due April 4.

Alex Woodward31 December 2024 18:00

White House staffers describe mood as ‘depressing’ as Biden fights for legacy and pushes idea he could have beaten Trump

Bide staffers are reporting a “depressing” mood around the White House in the final weeks of the president’s term as he tries to rescue his legacy.

The Independent’s Katie Hawkinson in Washington, D.C. has more:

White House aides describe mood as ‘depressing’ in President Biden’s last days

‘He really thought he was going to win,’ a Democratic donor and friend to the outgoing president said

Alex Woodward31 December 2024 17:50

Congresswoman, 68, retires to set better example for aging politicians

New Hampshire Representative Annie Kuster has told The Boston Globe that she hopes some of her colleagues will be inspired to leave Congress when their time is up, adding that she wishes President Joe Biden had stepped aside to make way for the much younger Kamala Harris much earlier than he did.

Gustaf Kilander has more.

Congresswoman, 68, retires to set better example for aging politicians

‘I think there are colleagues — some of whom are still very successful and very productive — but others who just stay forever,’ noted New Hampshire Representative Annie Kuster

Joe Sommerlad31 December 2024 17:35

How MAGA is ringing in the New Year

Ivanka Trump and Matt Gaetz are among the Trump World favorites bidding goodbye to 2024 on social media.

But for tireless anti-Biden grandstander James Comer, New Year’s Eve is just another day at the office...

Joe Sommerlad31 December 2024 17:15

Trump gets shot, the Harris ‘Brat’ summer and MAGA’s White House return: The political moments that defined 2024

Donald Trump bleeding on stage, Joe Biden dropping out of the race and MAGA moving back into DC were just some of the top political moments that 2024 had to offer.

But those were hardly the only ones.

Lil Jon bringing the Democrats to their feet in Chicago, politicians showing up on Saturday Night Live and talking trash (both literally and metaphorically) filled the headlines.

Here’s Ariana Baio with a look back at the top political moments of the last year and some of the memorable scenes you may have forgotten.

2024’s memorable political moments include Trump getting shot and winning election

One presidential election, two assassination attempts and hundreds of rallies filled the 2024 political headlines. But it didnt’ stop there

Joe Sommerlad31 December 2024 16:55

Democrats and Republicans are already looking to 2028 – here’s who’s in the running

As the nation gears up for a second Donald Trump presidency, the battle for 2028 has already begun.

The president-elect, who has jested numerous times about serving a third term, will not be on the ballot in 2028.

“I suspect I won’t be running again, unless you do something,” Trump reportedly told his GOP House colleagues as they met ahead of congressional leadership elections shortly after his election win.

“Unless you say, ‘He’s so good, we have to just figure it out.’”

Unfortunately for Trump, it’s a highly unlikely scenario, and so Republicans and Democrats are already looking to their next candidates – and the competition is wide open.

Here’s Rhian Lubin with a look at some of the top contenders for the 2028 presidency.

Democrats and Republicans are already looking to 2028 — here’s who’s in the running

The president-elect, who has jested numerous times about serving a third term, will not be on the ballot in 2028

Joe Sommerlad31 December 2024 16:35

Republican Chip Roy hints he could oppose Mike Johnson for speaker

Trump will not like this at all, having already been annoyed by the Texans’ objections during the congressional spending bill scrap before Christmas.

Johnson’s candidacy will be voted upon on Friday and he can only afford one GOP rebellion, given his party’s narrow majority of 219 to 215.

But, as it stands, Thomas Massie has already indicated that he is a “no” while Andy Harris, Victoria Spartz, Andy Biggs and Tim Burchett have all said they are currently undecided.

Here’s a ticking off for Roy and his ilk from another ex-speaker, Newt Gingrich.

Joe Sommerlad31 December 2024 16:15

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