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President-elect backs away from key campaign pledge on inflation
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Donald Trump has been named Time magazine’s “Person of the Year” following his November election win but has also caused consternation by appearing to back away from his pledge to bring down grocery prices once he takes office, U-turning on a key promise to American voters.
“It’s hard to bring things down once they’re up, very hard,” the president-elect told the magazine, hoping to manage expectations on inflation.
The annual cover – which highlights an individual who has greatly influenced the year, for good or ill – has just been unveiled, bearing an imperious portrait of the Republican against a stark background.
Trump was also named “Person of the Year” in 2016 after beating Hillary Clinton to win election to the White House for the first time.
He celebrated this latest honor by delivering a brief speech and ringing the opening bell at the New York Stock Exchange on Thursday morning.
Trump has meanwhile been continuing to announce nominees to his new administration and gloating over the resignation of FBI Director Christopher Wray, whom he appointed to replace James Comey in 2017, calling his departure a “great day for America” and bemoaning the August 2022 raid on Mar-a-Lago.
The Vermont Senator, a leader in the progressive movement for decades, has said his current term is likely to be his last in Congress.
Sanders, 83, has been a member of the legislative since 1991, first serving as a representative from Vermont before becoming one of the state’s senators in 2007.
He was re-elected in November to another six-year term, but said it would likely be his last when asked by Politico on Tuesday.
“I’m 83 now. I’ll be 89 when I get out of here. You can do the figuring. I don’t know, but I would assume, probably, yes,” Sanders told the outlet.
Ariana Baio has more.
Sanders has been a member of Congress since 1991
A Republican state representative in Missouri has proposed legislation that would allow a person who has pleaded guilty to, or been convicted of, a felony to serve in public office – and has named it, pointedly, after the president-elect.
The “Donald J Trump Election Qualification Act,” introduced by state representative Michael Davis, would repeal a 2015 local law that prevents a person with a felony from becoming a candidate in a local or state-wide election.
If passed, it would allow a person with a criminal record to run for office “if otherwise qualified.”
Ariana Baio reports.
New legislation would repeal a 2015 law that prevents those who were found guilty or pleaded guilty to a felony from running for local or statewide office
Anita Dunn, who left the White House in July for an advisory role on a Democratic super PAC ahead of the presidential election, has expressed her disquiet about the handling of Hunter Biden’s pardon, which she says she approves of in principle, arguing that it would have been “a different story” had the pardon come at the end of the outgoing president’s term.
Biden Sr sent shockwaves through the political world earlier this month when he announced his decision to grant his son clemency, claiming that Hunter had been “selectively, and unfairly, prosecuted” by the Department of Justice.
The timing of the decision has not gone down well with Dunn, one of his longest serving aides.
Rhian Lubin reports.
Longtime Biden aide Anita Dunn said it would have been ‘a different story’ had the pardon come at the end of the term
Right-wing podcaster Benny Johnson has reacted to the mysterious drones appearing over the Garden State in recent weeks by wondering if they were part of a “fake alien invasion” being staged to “steal Trump’s swagger”.
Here’s Justin Baragona with a much-needed explanation.
The pro-Trump YouTuber also claimed that the unknown drones were part of a “massive psyop” to “destabilize” Trump’s administration, adding that the American government has control of alien technology.
Here’s Kelly Rissman with a roundup of the toadying responses from the president-elect’s MAGA cronies to his latest accolade.
Social media users have polarized reactions to Trump being named Time’s ‘Person of the Year’ for the second time
Trump ally Steve Bannon is warning that House Republicans would vote in favor of “massive” tax cuts for the wealthy and corporations while also voting to increase defense spending in a strategy doomed to push the nation even deeper into debt.
Bannon, who has long promoted taxing wealthy individuals and corporations, said the leaderhsip of the key committess will vote that way.
“You watch – every one of them wants increased defense,” he told his podcast guest, Texas Republican Representative Chip Roy, on Tuesday.
“They want to get to a trillion dollars as quickly as possible, and they’re [also] going to vote for massive tax cuts for the wealthy, for the billionaires and corporations.”
Ariana Baio has more.
Bannon has advocated for raising taxes on wealthy individuals and corporations
As soon as its first day in office, the incoming Trump administration is reportedly planning on rescinding a 2011 immigration policy limiting deportation arrests in sensitive locations like schools, churches, and hospitals.
Instead, the administration plans to let Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents make arrests in these locations if they’re related to national security concerns, the arrest of a dangerous felon, or risks of imminent danger or the compromising of a criminal investigation, according to NBC News, which first reported on the alleged plan, citing three anonymous sources familiar with the new administration.
The new brief would also apply to arrests made in other locations like colleges and at events like protests, which could hamper the kind of large-scale pro-immigration protests seen during the first Trump administration.
Here’s more from Josh Marcus.
President-elect has vowed to carry out largest deportation operation in U.S. history upon taking office
Here are a few highlights from the president-elect’s interview accompanying his “Person of the Year” gong.
He says he may not be able to wrestle inflation to the floor after all, claims to see no conflict of interest in giving Elon Musk wide-ranging powers over government and hints that he could yet rein in some of RFK Jr’s more, ahem, eccentric ambitions.
Trump also says “there might be” more detention camps built to temporarily house illegal immigrants.
He adds: “Whatever it takes to get them out. I don’t care. Honestly, whatever it takes to get them out.”
On whether or not he has spoken to Vladimir Putin since winning the election on November 5, Trump says: “I can’t tell you. I can’t tell you. It’s just inappropriate.” (Why not?)
He claims the conflict in Gaza is “easier to solve” than Russia-Ukraine but won’t say what he wants to see from Israel.
“What I want is a deal where there’s going to be peace and where the killing stops”, he tells Time, vaguely.
On trans rights, he says he agrees with the incoming member for Delaware, Sarah McBride, that too much time is spent discussing bathroom access: “I do agree with that. On that – absolutely. As I was saying, it’s a small number of people.”
He also praises under-fire Supreme Court justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito (”incredible”) and says any investigations into his enemies will come at the discretion of Pam Bondi, his nominee for attorney general.
Finally, on whether or not he will pardon January 6 convicts, he says: “I’m going to do case-by-case, and if they were non-violent, I think they’ve been greatly punished.
“And the answer is I will be doing that, yeah, I’m going to look if there’s some that really were out of control.”
Plenty to chew on!
The president-elect declares the day’s trading open.
The president-elect wrapped up his brief remarks at the exchange by pivoting to the economy, pledging a return to American prosperity and concluding with a sad but probably fictional story about an elderly lady forced to return an apple to the refigerator in a grocery store because she could not afford it, promising this would never happen again in America under his leadership.
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