Tag: controversy

  • MAGA loyalists take aim at GOP senator as key Trump defense post sparks controversy: ‘Why the opposition?’

    MAGA loyalists take aim at GOP senator as key Trump defense post sparks controversy: ‘Why the opposition?’

    A key Republican on the Senate Armed Services Committee is reportedly on the fence about one of President Donald Trump’s Defense nominees over his stance on a nuclear Iran – a potential roadblock to his confirmation given the GOP’s slim Senate majority. 

    Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., is reportedly hesitant about the nomination of former Defense official Elbridge Colby to serve as the under secretary of defense for policy, a key Defense post that remains unmanned amid the ongoing confirmation process.

    “Senator Cotton is focused on ensuring all defense nominees commit to supporting President Trump’s position that Iran must not have a nuclear weapon, and Cotton will be addressing this in meetings and hearings with the nominees,” a source familiar with the matter told Fox News Digital.

    Colby has previously suggested that the U.S. living with a nuclear Iran is more plausible than countering the country’s nuclear assets, a position that reportedly is causing concern from the key Senator whose support could determine his confirmation.

    MCCONNELL’S MENTAL ACUITY TARGETED BY TRUMP AFTER EX-SENATE LEADER JOINS DEMS AGAINST CABINET NOMINEES

    Sen. Tom Cotton serves on the Senate Armed Services Committee. (Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc)

    Cotton’s potential opposition to the Trump nominee sparked debate among prominent MAGA figures on social media.

    RUMP’S KEY TO CABINET CONFIRMATIONS: SENATE-TURNED-VP VANCE’S GIFT OF GAB

    “Why the opposition to Bridge? What does he think Bridge will do?” Elon Musk wrote in a post on X of reports that Cotton was not on board with the nomination.

    “The effort to undermine President Trump continues in the US Senate @SenTomCotton is working behind the scenes to stop Trump’s pick, Elbridge Colby, from getting confirmed at DOD,” Charlie Kirk, founder of Turning Point USA, said on X. “Colby is one of the most important pieces to stop the Bush/Cheney cabal at DOD. Why is Tom Cotton doing this?”

    “Is Tom Cotton’s resistance to Bridge Colby more about IRI than anything else? As in maybe Cotton’s blocking Colby ain’t that principled. . .” American Majority CEO Ned Ryun posted on X.

    Elbridge Colby

    Elbridge Colby speaks at the National Conservative Conference in Washington, D.C., on Tuesday, July 9, 2024. (Dominic Gwinn)

    “Cotton has other problems that he doesn’t want exposed. He’ll support Colby,” former Trump National Security Advisor Michael Flynn claimed on X.

    Vice President JD Vance expressed support for the Trump nominee, writing that “Bridge has consistently been correct about the big foreign policy debates of the last 20 years.”

    “He was critical of the Iraq War, which made him unemployable in the 2000s era conservative movement. He built a relationship with CNAS when it was one of the few institutions that would even hire a foreign policy realist,” Vance said. 

    Vice President JD Vance delivers a speech during the plenary session of the Artificial Intelligence (AI) Action Summit at the Grand Palais in Paris on Feb. 11, 2025.

    Vice President JD Vance delivers a speech during the plenary session of the Artificial Intelligence (AI) Action Summit at the Grand Palais in Paris on Feb. 11, 2025. (Reuters)

    Colby, who worked in the Pentagon during Trump’s first term, has also received endorsements from other members of the Senate.

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    “.@ElbridgeColby is a fighter who will execute President Trump’s mandate to end decades of DC foreign policy failures and stop forever wars abroad—The reason the establishment fears him is because he’s 100% aligned with Trump’s agenda,” Sen. Bernie Moreno, R-Ohio, wrote on X. “Senate Republicans should confirm him ASAP!” 

    Colby’s Senate confirmation hearing remains unscheduled as the chamber works to confirm more of Trump’s cabinet nominees.

    Fox News Digital reached out to Colby for comment.

  • Team USA stars brace for rivaled showdown vs Canada as tensions rise over national anthem controversy

    Team USA stars brace for rivaled showdown vs Canada as tensions rise over national anthem controversy

    Team USA and Team Canada are facing off in international best-on-best hockey at 8 p.m. ET on Saturday in Montreal, and the stakes are high.

    It is the first time in nine years that NHL players will be able to compete in the bitter rivalry, as the NHL stopped allowing players to play in such an event since the 2016 World Cup of Hockey. 

    “I’ve thought about this game for nine years,” Team USA star Matthew Tkachuk said via Sportsnet. 

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    Team USA forward Matthew Tkachuk (19) celebrates his goal against Team Finland in the third period during a 4 Nations Face-Off ice hockey game at Bell Centre.  (David Kirouac-Imagn Images)

    Adding to what is already going to be a hotly contested game on the ice, there is another part of the highly anticipated matchup that fans will be watching: the national anthems. 

    Prior to Team USA’s 6-1 win over Finland on Thursday, which was also in Montreal, the Canadian fans booed during the playing of “The Star-Spangled Banner.”

    “I didn’t like it. That’s all I got,” Tkachuk said postgame of the boos. 

    And Tkachuk played like someone who didn’t like it as he and his brother, Brady Tkachuk, each scored two goals in the win. 

    The Canadian fans would be wise to not give the Tkachuk brothers or Team USA any more reason to be fired up against team Canada on Saturday, 

    “I think it’s going to be the biggest game that I’ve ever played in my career. I’m really looking forward to that. There’s a big buildup to it. USA vs. Canada is bigger than just the guys on the ice,” Brady said postgame. 

    TEAM USA STAR MATTHEW TKACHUK DELIVERS STERN ONE-LINER AFTER CANADIAN FANS BOO DURING AMERICAN NATIONAL ANTHEM

    Brady Tkachuk celebrates

    Team USA forward Brady Tkachuk (7) celebrates his goal against Team Finland in the third period during a 4 Nations Face-Off ice hockey game at Bell Centre.  (David Kirouac-Imagn Images)

    “There’s so many people past, present and down the road [that it affects]. We’ve been talking about this game especially. It’s going to be a long couple days [waiting] until it happens, but it’ll be exciting.”

    Team Canada star and Boston Bruins captain, Brad Marchand, wasn’t happy with the boos from Canadian fans during the national anthem. 

    “They should not be booing the Americans during that anthem. They have nothing to do with the political things that are going on. I do feel bad for those guys in that moment. I don’t think it’s right,” Marchand said via The Athletic. 

    “We respect the anthems; I’ll leave it at that,” Team Canada captain Sidney Crosby said via ESPN. 

    Since President Donald Trump’s threat to issue tariffs on Canada and even saying that the country could become the “51st state,” it has been common for boos to be heard during the USA’s national anthem. 

    CANADIAN HOCKEY FANS BOO TEAM USA PLAYERS, NATIONAL ANTHEM AT 4 NATIONS TOURNAMENT IN MONTREAL

    Team USA during anthem

    Charlie McAvoy, #25, Jake Guentzel, #59, Zach Werenski, #8, Auston Matthews, #34, and Jack Hughes, #86 of Team United States stand at their blueline during the singing of the United States national anthem before the 4 Nations Face-Off game between the United States and Finland at Bell Centre on February 13, 2025, in Montreal, Quebec.  (Vitor Munhoz/4NFO/World Cup of Hockey via Getty Images)

    Both Toronto Raptors and Ottawa Senators fans have booed the USA’s national anthem since the tariffs were set to begin. 

    Trump and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau spoke via phone last week just before additional 25% tariffs were to take effect on Canadian goods coming into the United States.

    Trudeau said that Canada will implement a $1.3 billion border plan and appoint a fentanyl czar, in a post to X. 

    Trump had promised to impose a 25% tariff on all Canadian and Mexican goods, as well as a 10% tariff on Canadian energy, as he has long said that the countries have not done enough at the borders. 

    With the Canadian crowd now supporting their own team on Saturday, the boos could be thunderous during the United States national anthem. 

    PANTHERS’ MATTHEW TKACHUCK ‘GRATEFUL TO BE AN AMERICAN’ AS TEAM CELEBRATES STANLEY CUP TITLE WITH TRUMP

    Team USA celebrates

    Team USA forward Brady Tkachuk (7) celebrates with his teammates his goal against Team Finland in the third period during a 4 Nations Face-Off ice hockey game at Bell Centre.  (David Kirouac-Imagn Images)

    Team USA forward JT Miller said the booing gets them fired up. 

    “I think we like it. Not politically, but just in the sense of we know where we’re at, in Canada. I think that fires us up more than anything,” Miller said via the NY Post. 

    Team Canada also won their first game of the tournament, a 4-3 overtime thriller on Wednesday. 

    While their national anthem may not be booed, they will certainly be ready to roll for Saturday night. 

    “It’s a big game,” Team Canada superstar Connor McDavid told reporters after practice on Friday. 

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    Sidney Crosby looks on

    Team Canada forward Sidney Crosby (87) prepares for a face-off against Team Sweden in the second period during a 4 Nations Face-Off ice hockey game at Bell Centre.  (David Kirouac-Imagn Images)

    “Playing the Americans in Montreal, best-on-best tournament, it’s what you dream of.”

    In addition to the excitement of NHL players being able to take part in the USA-Canada hockey rivalry, there is a scenario that if Team USA wins, they can clinch a spot in the final in Boston next Thursday night. 

    It’s safe to say both of these teams will be bringing their best on Saturday night. 

    Fox News’ Louis Casano and the Associated Press contributed to this report. 

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  • Olympic boxer, who was caught in gender controversy, vows to fight boxing org’s lawsuit

    Olympic boxer, who was caught in gender controversy, vows to fight boxing org’s lawsuit

    Imane Khelif, the Olympic gold medalist who was in the middle of a gender controversy at the Paris Games during the summer, vowed to fight back against allegations from the International Boxing Association (IBA).

    The IBA said earlier in the week it will file criminal complaints against the International Olympic Committee (IOC) in the U.S., France and Switzerland over its decision to allow Khelif and Taiwanese boxer Lin Yu-ting to compete in the Games despite disqualifications in its own tournament. World Boxing is the governing body for the Olympics.

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    Imane Khelif of Team Algeria celebrates victory against Anna Luca Hamori of Team Hungary after the Women’s 66kg Quarter-final round match on day eight of the Olympic Games Paris 2024 at North Paris Arena on Aug. 3, 2024 in Paris. (Richard Pelham/Getty Images)

    Both Khelif and Lin won gold medals at the Olympics.

    “For eight years, I have fought for my dream – eyes years of sacrifice, discipline, and perseverance to stand on the Olympic stage and represent my country with pride,” the Algerian boxer said in a statement posted on Instagram. “I have earned my place, and I will continue to stand firm in the face of any challenge.

    “For two years, I have taken the high road while my name and image have been used, unauthorized, to further personal and political agendas through the spreading of and dissemination of baseless lies and misinformation. But silence is no longer an option.

    EDUCATION DEPARTMENT CALLS ON NCAA, NFHS TO STRIP AWARDS, RECORDS ‘MISAPPROPRIATED’ BY TRANS ATHLETES

    Algeria's Imane Khelif looks on

    Algeria’s Imane Khelif reacts prior to the match against Hungary’s Anna Luca Hamori in the women’s 66kg quarter-final boxing match during the Paris 2024 Olympic Games at the North Paris Arena on Aug. 3, 2024.  (MOHD RASFAN/AFP via Getty Images)

    “The International Boxing Association (IBA), an organization that I am no longer associated with and which is no longer recognized by the International Olympic Committee, have again made baseless accusations that are false and offensive, using them to further their agenda. This is a matter that concerns not just me but the broader principles of fairness and due process in sport.”

    The IBA cited President Donald Trump’s executive order on transgender athletes to justify the criminal complaints. 

    The IOC reiterated again that Khelif and Lin were not transgender.

    Imane Khelif looks on

    Imane Khelif of Team Algeria readies to compete against Anna Luca Hamori of Team Hungary in the women’s 66kg quarter-final boxing match during the Paris 2024 Olympic Games at the North Paris Arena, in Villepinte, France, on Aug. 3, 2024. (Mehmet Murat Onel/Anadolu via Getty Images)

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    “The two female athletes mentioned by IBA are not transgender athletes,” the organization said Monday.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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  • FOX Sports’ NFL rules analyst Mike Pereira weighs in on ref controversy ahead of Super Bowl LIX

    FOX Sports’ NFL rules analyst Mike Pereira weighs in on ref controversy ahead of Super Bowl LIX

    The conspiracy about NFL referees helping the Kansas City Chiefs has been one of the main conversation topics leading up to Super Bowl LIX. 

    FOX Sports rules analyst and former vice president of officiating for the NFL, Mike Pereira, joined “Fox & Friends” on Friday to weigh in on the discussion. 

    “I mean I think I would say what [NFL Commissioner] Roger Goodell said, which I try not to use harsh words. I understand why they think that, because the numbers point that different and the iffy calls seem to have gone the Chiefs way, but to think that there is intent is really ridiculous and that’s the term that Roger used,” Pereira said. 

    SIGN UP FOR TUBI AND STREAM SUPER BOWL LIX FOR FREE

    Fox Sports College and NFL rules expert Mike Pereira during a Fox Sports media party in advance of Super Bowl LIX. (Stephen Lew-Imagn Images)

    “The officials are out just to manage the game, and they have to make decisions in one 26th of a second, and so they don’t have time to factor in who made the foul, what color the team is. And so really, I understand the concern but it really won’t affect the way they officiate this weekend.”

    Pereira said the Chiefs were a great team and that they teach penalty prevention to their players. Their number of false starts is less, and penalties of that ilk the team works on eliminating. 

    Pereira talked about how NFL teams will prepare for crews, but it is a little bit different to prepare for the Super Bowl crew. 

    “You know this is different too, because teams do prepare for crews, but this is not a crew, this is an all-star crew. So they’ve come from seven different crews, so it’s kind of impossible to judge where they might lean,” Pereira said. 

    HOW TO WATCH SUPER BOWL LIX BETWEEN CHIEFS, EAGLES STREAMED ON TUBI

    Ron Torbert smiles on field

    NFL referee Ron Torbert during the Cincinnati Bengals game against the Los Angeles Rams in Super Bowl LVI at SoFi Stadium. (Mark J. Rebilas-USA TODAY Sports)

    Ron Torbert will be the head referee for Super Bowl LIX. He also was the lead referee for Super LVI, when the Los Angeles Rams beat the Cincinnati Bengals. 

    The umpire is Mike Morton, Max Causey is the down judge, Mark Stewart is the line judge, Mearl Robison is the field judge, Boris Cheek the side judge, Jonah Monroe the back judge and Kevin Brown is the replay official. 

    Cheek is the only other official with Super Bowl experience other than Torbert, as he has officiated in three other Super Bowls. 

    With so many referees in the NFL, Pereira said it was hard to expect exact consistency across all calls. 

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    Referee Carl Cheffers puts his hand on the back of Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes, #15, in the first quarter of the AFC Championship game between the Buffalo Bills and Kansas City Chiefs on Jan. 26, 2025 at GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City, Missouri.

    Referee Carl Cheffers puts his hand on the back of Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes, #15, in the first quarter of the AFC Championship game between the Buffalo Bills and Kansas City Chiefs on Jan. 26, 2025 at GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City, Missouri. (Scott Winters/Icon Sportswire)

    “Look, the parity in terms of number of fouls called this year is closer than I think I’ve ever seen it before. But you have different, you have 128 people, they don’t have the same judgment. So it’s hard to teach consistency or to expect consistency all the way through.”

    There is one thing Pereira wants to see from the officials in the big game.

    “All I care is, you know what, is that they call in the fourth quarter the same way they call the way in the first quarter.”

    With that being said, Pereira said he does not want to talk during the broadcast at all. 

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    Tubi promo

    Super Bowl LIX will be streamed on Tubi. (Tubi)

    “I hope you don’t hear me, I hope you don’t see me! If I don’t mumble a word then that mean’s there is not a controversy,” Pereira said. 

    The Kansas City Chiefs take on the Philadelphia Eagles in the Super Bowl on Sunday at 6:30 p.m. ET on FOX, where the officiating will be closely monitored. 

    FOX’s Super Bowl coverage begins at 1 p.m. ET Sunday. Coverage can be streamed live on Tubi for the first time.

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  • FBI agents’ association ‘optimistic’ about AG Bondi despite early controversy with Trump administration

    FBI agents’ association ‘optimistic’ about AG Bondi despite early controversy with Trump administration

    FIRST ON FOX: The head of the FBI Agents Association (FBIAA) is cautiously optimistic that newly minted U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi will steady the ship at the Department of Justice (DOJ) after turbulent weeks since President Donald Trump took office.

    FBIAA president and CEO Nicole Campa told Fox News Digital in an interview this week that she is eager to see if Bondi will make good on her pledge to end political weaponization at the FBI and the Justice Department. 

    This new leadership could reduce some of the heat agents have felt in recent weeks, she said, citing firings and forced departures of some personnel – as well as a questionnaire requiring agents to detail their roles in the Jan. 6 investigation. 

    Campa pointed specifically to Bondi’s vows to not go after Trump opponents or chase down any so-called “enemies lists,” two promises Bondi cited repeatedly last month during her confirmation hearing.

    BONDI SWORN IN AS ATTORNEY GENERAL WITH MISSION TO END ‘WEAPONIZATION’ OF JUSTICE DEPARTMENT

    Pam Bondi, President Donald Trump’s attorney general nominee, listens during her Senate Judiciary Committee confirmation hearing on Wednesday, Jan 15, 2025. (Jabin Botsford/Washington Post/ Getty)

    “I’m optimistic about her statements moving forward, in that she has stated that people would not be targeted for simply doing their job,” Campa said. “So I think we are optimistic in moving forward.”

    Even so, she added, “there are still real concerns about compiling lists when looking at this stuff and being able to potentially release agents’ names.”

    FBIAA, a voluntary professional association, represents more than 14,000 active and retired FBI special agents. The agency joined nine anonymous FBI employees earlier this week in suing the Justice Department to block access to records of agents involved in the Jan. 6 investigation, citing fears of internal punishment or retaliation, as well as threats to the agents or the agents’ families should their names be made public.

    The judge in the case, U.S. Judge Jia Cobb, is expected to rule on their request for emergency injunctive relief early Friday afternoon.

    DEMS DELAY PATEL COMMITTEE VOTE, DERIDE TRUMP FBI PICK AS DANGER TO US SECURITY

    Agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation walking through crime scene

    The FBI’s interactions with the Council for American-Islamic Relations was restricted due to allegations from the DOJ. (Getty Images)

    The interview comes as rank-and-file DOJ and FBI employees have been roiled by recent firings at DOJ, forced resignations or retirements of FBI personnel and a detailed questionnaire sent to thousands of FBI agents asking them to detail their involvement in the Jan. 6 investigations. 

    Justice Department acting Deputy Attorney General Emil Bove attempted to assuage FBI agents’ fears. He stressed in a recent email that the effort was simply to obtain and review what role agents played in the Jan. 6 investigation, and was not intended to be a precursor to a mass expulsion of employees.

    The lawsuit filed this week emphasized their intent to ensure their identities were not released to the public and that they were not retaliated against for doing their jobs. 

    FBI AGENTS GROUP TELLS CONGRESS TO TAKE URGENT ACTION TO PROTECT AGAINST POLITICIZATION 

    Emil Bove

    Acting Deputy Attorney General Emil Bove, a former Trump attorney, directed the FBI acting director to fire seven specific employees by Monday. (Angela Weiss – Pool/Getty Images)

    Campa underscored these deep-running concerns to Fox News, noting that FBI employees and the agent association “didn’t have much clarification on what that list was going to be utilized for, besides a broad statement of just personnel actions,” when the DOJ issued its request.

    “So it raised a lot of concern within the bureau – mainly because we have seen over the past few weeks the associate U.S. attorneys on the investigation be terminated, and then our seventh floor leadership be presented with ultimatums to either retire or be terminated.” 

    Other former department officials cited similar concerns in recent days, expressing fear that any mass purge of employees could compromise decades of agency experience across the bureau’s more than 52 field offices, who have deep knowledge of complex issue areas ranging from counterterrorism and violent crime to drug trafficking, cartel activity and more. 

    “It takes a really long time to get an agent hired and through the process,” Campa told Fox News Digital, citing the lengthy background check and clearance process, as well as training at Quantico, Virginia. 

    “We can’t just pick somebody up off the street tomorrow and make them an FBI agent,” she said. “So when we lose FBI agents – whether it be through retirement or some sort of ‘mass purge,’ to use a term that’s been thrown around in the media, it will take years and years and years, if not decades, to replace that experience.”

    “That’s scary for everyone at the bureau because we need to be able to have those people standing next to us to be able to get this work done.” 

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    Campa said the “best case scenario” is that the identities of the FBI agents are kept private and that the installation of permanent leadership at DOJ and FBI will resolve the controversy as DOJ commits to a process for looking at the Jan. 6 investigations.

    “I don’t know of an FBI agent who doesn’t stand by their work, so we welcome a review of the work,” she said. “But we are just concerned that it will be done in a thorough and fair manner.”

  • Bud Light hasn’t recovered from Mulvaney controversy, ex-Anheuser-Busch exec says

    Bud Light hasn’t recovered from Mulvaney controversy, ex-Anheuser-Busch exec says

    Bud Light has not yet recuperated from the Dylan Mulvaney controversy, according to a former Anheuser-Busch executive.

    “They haven’t at all [recovered],” former Anheuser-Busch President of Operations Anson Frericks said Tuesday during an interview on FOX Business’ “Varney & Co.” Tuesday. 

    Despite companies backing away from pushing politics through DEI and ESG policies, the damage to Bud Light is still taking its toll as “they continue to shed customers,” Frericks said.  

    BUD LIGHT SALES STILL SUFFERING IN US A YEAR AFTER CONTROVERSY

    The beer brand stumbled into controversy in 2023 following a partnership with transgender influencer Dylan Mulvaney. The tag team with the influencer sparked outrage from consumers, resulting in a drop in sales, customers and shareholder value. The company also saw itself being surpassed in sales by Michelob Ultra and Modelo Especial. 

    Bud Light sales were down 29.9% year-over-year for the week ending Jan. 20, compared with the same period last year, according to the latest numbers provided to FOX Business by Bump Williams Consulting, which analyzed NielsenIQ data. 

    “I think that’s one of the most interesting parts about this story is that they lost 30% of their customers,” he pointed out. “Millions of customers, billions of dollars of shareholder value over the last couple of years.”

    Bud Light’s 2023 partnership with transgender influencer Dylan Mulvaney saw consumer outrage and an exodus of customers. Former Anheuser-Busch executive Anson Frericks believes the beer brand has yet to recover from the controversy.  (Instagram/Fox News / Fox News)

    The former executive noted how the partnership impacted stocks and how the brand’s efforts to recover with Super Bowl ads would not relieve the pain.  

    “They are advertising Bud Light. And candidly, the commercials are actually pretty good,” he said. “They have Shane Gillis who’s about the opposite of Dylan Mulvaney. You couldn’t have maybe someone more opposite. They have Post Malone, but the problem is they’ve lost a lot of their customers.” 

    BUD LIGHT STILL REELING FROM ‘UNFORCED ERROR’ AS MODELO ESPECIAL AND MICHELOB ULTRA BOTH SURPASSED IT

    He also pointed out the dilemma Bud Light faces regarding its vision. 

    “Their customers are asking them, ‘hey, what is Bud Light going to be moving forward? Is it gonna be more than Shane Gillis and fun in football, or is it Dylan Mulvaney?’”

    “Until the company really comes back and says clearly what Bud Light is going to be? I don’t know if any of their loyal customers are going to come back,” he added. 

    READ MORE FROM FOX BUSINESS

    Fox News Digital’s Breck Dumas also contributed to this report.

  • ‘Spreading Atheism’: Vance warns religious efforts abroad ‘corrupted’ by US bureaucracy amid USAID controversy

    ‘Spreading Atheism’: Vance warns religious efforts abroad ‘corrupted’ by US bureaucracy amid USAID controversy

    Vice President JD Vance slammed U.S. bureaucracy that has “corrupted” aid programs to foreign nations amid the Trump administration’s investigation into USAID waste, directing his ire at a recent revelation that the government had funded a program to promote atheism — or disbelief in God or gods — in Nepal. 

    “In recent years, too often has our nation’s international engagement on religious liberty issues been corrupted and distorted to the point of absurdity,” Vance, who is Catholic, said at the International Religious Freedom Summit in Washington, D.C., on Wednesday. “Think about it: How did America get to a point where we’re sending hundreds of thousands of taxpayer dollars abroad to NGOs that are dedicated to spreading atheism all over the globe? That is not what leadership on protecting the rights of the faithful looks like.” 

    Vance did not mention the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) by name in his speech to the religious crowd and those working to advocate for religious liberty in the U.S. and around the world. 

    The forum was held as USAID faces an apparent dismantling as Elon Musk and his team at the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) pore over the agency’s financial records to suss out government overspending and corruption. 

    USAID’s website was shut down in early February, replaced with a message on Tuesday evening outlining how “direct-hire personnel” will be placed on leave Friday, except those on “mission-critical functions, core leadership and specially designated programs.”

    ‘SESAME STREET IN IRAQ’: USAID’S ‘WASTEFUL AND DANGEROUS’ SPENDING EXPOSED BY SENATOR

    Vice President JD Vance slammed U.S. bureaucracy that has “corrupted” aid programs to foreign nations.  (Getty Images)

    Vance’s comment focusing on nongovernmental organizations using taxpayer funds to promote atheism around the globe is likely referring to a $500,000 grant solicited by the State Department in 2021, under the Biden administration. The grant hit the nation’s radar in 2024, when Republican House lawmakers sounded the alarm that the State Department was participating in a “pattern of obfuscation and denial” related to efforts to promote atheism on the world stage. 

    ‘VIPER’S NEST’: USAID ACCUSED OF CORRUPTION, MISMANAGEMENT LONG BEFORE TRUMP ADMIN TOOK AIM

    Reps. Michael McCaul, R-Texas, Chris Smith, R-N.J., and Brian Mast, R-Fla., wrote in a letter sent to then-State Department Deputy Secretary Richard Verma in May 2024: “We write to address what the Department has now acknowledged were its misrepresentations made to Congress about the scope and nature of programming that – for the first time in US diplomatic history – has sought to promote atheism overseas under the guise of ‘religious freedom.’”

    "In recent years, too often has our nation's international engagement on religious liberty issues been corrupted and distorted to the point of absurdity," said Vice President JD Vance, who is Catholic. 

    “In recent years, too often has our nation’s international engagement on religious liberty issues been corrupted and distorted to the point of absurdity,” said Vice President JD Vance, who is Catholic.  (Getty Images)

    The lawmakers were referring to the State Department’s Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor grant for $500,000, titled “Promoting and Defending Religious Freedom Inclusive of Atheist, Humanist, Non-Practicing and Non-Affiliated Individuals.” Fox News Digital reviewed an archived web link for the grant on Thursday, which detailed that the U.S. was working to “support Religious Freedom globally,” including to “combat discrimination, harassment and abuses against atheist, humanist, non-practicing and non-affiliated individuals of all religious communities.”

    The State Department’s announcement for the grant reads: “​​DRL’s goal is to ensure everyone enjoys religious freedom, including the freedom to dissent from religious belief and to not practice or adhere to a religion. By not adhering to a predominant religious tradition, many individuals face discrimination in employment, housing, in civil and criminal proceedings, and other areas especially in the context of intersectional identities.” 

    State Department seal

    The vice president’s comment focusing on nongovernmental organizations using taxpayer funds to promote atheism around the globe is likely referring to a $500,000 grant solicited by the State Department in 2021.  (Celal Gunes/Anadolu Agency)

    The grant was awarded to Humanists International, a UK-based group that works to promote secularism and humanism, a philosophy that does not include a belief in God. 

    The State Department’s funding announcement opportunity detailed how the program was expected to increase “capacity among members of atheist and heterodox individuals to form or join networks or organizations.”  

    FEDS SPENT MILLIONS STUDYING TRANS MENSTRUATION, STRENGTHENING GAY RIGHTS IN THE BALKANS, DATABASE REVEALS

    Fox News Digital reached out to Humanists International on Thursday morning regarding the grant and Vance’s comments but did not immediately receive a reply. 

    Vice President JD Vance said that the Trump administration will not only restore religious liberty but expand it. 

    Vice President JD Vance said that the Trump administration will not only restore religious liberty but expand it.  (Getty Images)

    GOP HARDLINERS RALLY AROUND TRUMP, MUSK SCALING BACK USAID

    But this administration is intent on not just restoring, but on expanding the achievements of the first four years, and certainly in the last two weeks,” he continued. “And in this short period, the president has issued orders to end the weaponization of the federal government against religious Americans.”

    Elon Musk speaks

    Elon Musk is heading up the Department of Government Efficiency.  (Apu Gomes/Getty Images)

    “Pardon pro-life protesters who were unjustly imprisoned under the last administration,” he said. “And importantly, stop the federal censorship used to prevent Americans from speaking their conscience and speaking their mind, whether it’s in their communities or online.”

    “Now, our administration believes we must stand for religious freedom, not just as a legal principle, as important as that is, but as a lived reality both within our own borders and especially outside,” he continued. 

    FLASHBACK: BIDEN ADMIN REPEATEDLY USED USAID TO PUSH ABORTION IN AFRICA

    Vance’s speech was followed by a virtual address from actor Rainn Wilson, who played Dwight Schrute in “The Office,” to discuss his Baha’i faith and the persecution of fellow adherents in Iran. 

    Democrats have seethed over the work of Elon Musk and the Department of Government Efficiency, holding protests outside government offices in Washington, D.C., and across the country. 

    Democrats have seethed over the work of Elon Musk and the Department of Government Efficiency, holding protests outside government offices in Washington, D.C., and across the country.  (Getty Images)

    Government funding directed to left-wing initiatives through agencies such as USAID or the State Department has come under the microscope recently, as DOGE launched investigations to cut government fat. Secretary of State Marco Rubio took over as acting director of USAID on Monday, telling the media that the agency needs to fall in line with Trump’s “America First” policies, which includes using taxpayer funds to strengthen U.S. communities rather than sending cash overseas. 

    Democrats have seethed over DOGE’s work, holding protests outside government offices in Washington, D.C., and across the country to declare that they will fight the efforts tooth and nail. 

    USAID EMPLOYEE SAYS STAFFERS HID PRIDE FLAGS, ‘INCRIMINATING’ BOOKS WHEN DOGE ARRIVED 

     “What we are witnessing here is the biggest heist in American history,” Sen. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md., said on Tuesday during one rally. 

    Musk protest

    People protesting against President Donald Trump and Elon Musk. ( Jeff Kowalsky/AFP/Getty Images )

    “This is the most corrupt bargain we’ve ever seen in American history: Elon Musk gives $250 million to elect Donald Trump, and Donald Trump turns over the keys to United States government to Elon Musk and his billionaire friends and his cronies,” Van Hollen continued in his remarks outside the Treasury Department. 

    “We have to fight this in the courts, we have to fight this in the Congress, we have to fight this in the streets. We need to fight this all over America.” 

    Rep. LaMonica McIver, D-N.J., added, “Shut down the city! We are at war!” 

    Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., said during a news interview of DOGE’s work at USAID, “The level of disrespect actually is criminal, because there are crisis-response teams that are around the world that really rely on having access to their emails – having access to apps that they can utilize if there’s danger to them.” 

    Protesters have slammed Musk as a “fascist” who was not elected to federal office yet holds sway with the White House in his role at DOGE. 

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    Musk trolled Democrats and government employees amid the protests on Wednesday when he changed his X bio to state that he is working as “White House Tech Support” as his DOGE team reviews the federal government’s various computer systems. 

  • Costco, Teamsters, reach ‘tentative agreement’ likely averting strike as company’s DEI controversy rages on

    Costco, Teamsters, reach ‘tentative agreement’ likely averting strike as company’s DEI controversy rages on

    The looming threat of 18,000 Costco store employees heading to the picket lines appears less likely, with the Teamsters labor union announcing Saturday that it has reached a tentative agreement for a new contract with the grocery chain.

    The negotiations come amid Costco standing firm on its Diversity, Equality, and Inclusion (DEI) policies as most companies turn their backs on the controversial initiative.

    “The tentative agreement will be presented to the membership for a vote,” the union, which represents 18,000 Costco workers, wrote in a post on X without providing any details about the agreement with its negotiating committee.

    Shoppers outside a Costco store in Bayonne, New Jersey, US, on Saturday, Dec. 9, 2023. Costco Wholesale Corp. is scheduled to release earnings figures on December 14. Photographer: Angus Mordant/Bloomberg via Getty Images (Angus Mordant/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    O’LEARY RIPS COSTCO FOR BUCKING DEI TREND: ‘BAD FOR BUSINESS’

    Reuters, citing a memo sent to employees this week, reports that Costco is set to increase pay for most of its hourly U.S. store workers to more than $30. 

    According to the memo, the company will increase hourly pay for its top-of-the-scale employees over the next three years. Pay will rise by $1 to $30.20 in the first year and an extra $1 each in the subsequent two years. The bottom-of-the-scale employees will also get an increase of 50 cents to $20.

    Teamsters members at Costco voted overwhelmingly in favor of a strike on Jan. 20 if a new three-year contract agreement could not be reached by midnight last night when the current contract expired.

    The strike would affect 50 Costco stores across New York, New Jersey, Virginia and Washington. Costco has 617 stores nationwide. 

    The workers are looking for better wages, benefits, and work rules amid the company making a record $7.4 billion profit in its most recent fiscal year, which ended on Sept. 1.

    The grocery wholesaler, who has long held a pro-worker image, has been locked in a protracted battle with the Teamsters union, which represents 18,000 of Costco’s 219,000 U.S. worker base. 

    The Teamsters are accusing the grocery club of not sharing its record 2024 profits – which doubled since 2019 – with its workers and have claimed Costco has engaged in “illegal and reckless behavior,” including kicking union reps out of stores, preventing employees from wearing Teamster buttons and changing the locks on union bulletin boards.

    Talks broke down in January when Costco refused to reach a card check agreement. Card checks would make it easier for workers to join unions by eliminating secret ballots. About 85% of Costco’s unionized employees voted to authorize a strike.

    STATE AGS WARN RETAIL GIANT COSTCO FOR DOUBLING DOWN ON ‘DISCRIMINATORY’ DEI

    Teamsters President Sean O’Brien recently threw down the gauntlet to Costco executives.

    “Costco has two choices: respect the workers who made them a success or face a national strike,” O’Brien said in a statement.

    “Costco Teamsters deserve an industry-leading contract that reflects the company’s massive profits. If Costco thinks they can exploit our members while raking in billions, we’ll shut them down.

    The talks come as Costco doubles down on its DEI policies. 

    While big companies like Target, McDonald’s and Walmart backed off from their DEI policies, Costco shareholders voted last week to reject an anti-DEI proposal brought by activist shareholder group National Center for Public Policy Research. The measure would have required the wholesale grocery chain to issue a report on the risks associated with their DEI policies. 

    Costco Wholesale

    O’Leary Ventures Chairman Kevin O’Leary declared Costco “nuts” during Wednesday’s “The Big Money Show” for not ditching DEI arguing it is bad for business.  (Photo by Tayfun Coskun/Anadolu via Getty Images / Photographer: Ting Shen/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    At its annual meeting recently, more than 98% of shares voted against the proposal.

    During his first week in office, President Donald Trump issued an executive order directing the termination of discriminatory practices in the federal government and encouraging termination in the private sector. Following the order, attorneys general from 19 states urged Costco to turn away from its DEI policies. 

    READ MORE FROM FOX BUSINESS

    O’Leary Ventures Chairman Kevin O’Leary declared Costco “nuts” during Wednesday’s “The Big Money Show” for not ditching DEI arguing it is bad for business. 

    “They’re nuts if they think I want them fighting the federal government on policy,” O’Leary said. “I don’t care who took that poll when there’s no way you’d get that result today. You don’t fight the attorney general in multiple states, you got to be out of your mind.”

    Reuters contributed to this report.

  • Costco teamster workers set to strike this week as company embroiled in DEI controversy

    Costco teamster workers set to strike this week as company embroiled in DEI controversy

    As Costco finds itself embroiled in a public battle over its controversial DEI policies, a much larger fight is looming with 18,000 store employees set to head to the picket lines if the grocery chain can’t agree to a new contract by Friday.

    “If Costco actually respects its employees, it will give our 18,000 members the wages, benefits and work rules that they have been demanding for months,” a Teamsters spokesperson told Fox News Digital. 

    The grocery wholesaler, who has long held a pro-worker image, has been locked in a protracted battle with the Teamsters Union, which represents 18,000 of Costco’s 219,000 U.S. worker base. The Teamsters are accusing the grocery club of not sharing its record $7.4 billion profits with its workers. The Teamsters have accused Costco of engaging in “illegal and reckless behavior” including kicking union reps out of stores, preventing employees from wearing Teamster buttons and changing the locks on union bulletin boards.

    STATE AGS WARN RETAIL GIANT COSTCO FOR DOUBLING DOWN ON ‘DISCRIMINATORY’ DEI

    Around 18,000 Costco workers may go on strike Friday.  (Lindsey Nicholson/UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Talks finally broke down in January when Costco refused to reach a card check agreement. Card check is a process that would make it easier for workers to join unions by eliminating secret ballots. Eighty-five percent of Costco’s unionized employees voted to authorize a strike. The strike would affect 50 stores across the US in New York, New Jersey, Virginia and Washington. 

    As the Costco board voted overwhelmingly to reject an anti-DEI measure brought by activist investors at their shareholders meeting last Friday, workers rallied just outside their Washington offices – signaling the real fight was yet to come.

    “Costco has two choices: respect the workers who made them a success or face a national strike. Costco Teamsters deserve an industry-leading contract that reflects the company’s massive profits. If Costco thinks they can exploit our members while raking in billions, we’ll shut them down,” Teamsters President Sean O’brien said in a statement.

    WHY AN ACTIVIST INVESTOR SAYS THE BATTLE AGAINST COSTCO DEI REGIME ISN’T OVER

    Costco entrance

    Costco is the first company known to have gone from $0 to $3 billion in sales in fewer than six years. (PATRICK T. FALLON/AFP via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    “What I can tell you is our contract with this company expires at midnight on Friday, and the reason Costco has made so much money over the past few years is its workers,” the Teamsters spokesperson told Fox News Digital. 

    Costco didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment. 

    The potential strike comes as 19 states’ attorneys general called on Costco to drop their DEI policies, writing that the grocery chain must “end all unlawful discrimination imposed by the company through diversity, equity, and inclusion,” in a letter sent to Costco CEO Ron Vachris.

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    When asked if the Teamsters thought that the wholesaler was picking a public fight about DEI to deflect attention away from its labor dispute, their spokesperson told Fox News Digital “I can’t really speculate as to why Costco makes certain decisions.”

  • Trump’s Davos comments reignite debanking controversy

    Trump’s Davos comments reignite debanking controversy

    President Donald Trump on Thursday called out one of America’s largest banks during a question-and-answer session with its CEO during the World Economic Forum, accusing the bank of not offering financial services to conservatives and rekindling a dispute over political debanking.

    Trump told Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan during the session, “You’ve done a fantastic job, but I hope you start opening your bank to conservatives, because many conservatives complain that the banks are not allowing them to do business within the bank – and that included a place called Bank of America… They don’t take conservative business.”

    “And I don’t know if the regulators mandated that because of [President Joe] Biden or what,” Trump continued, “But you and [JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon] and everybody – I hope you’re going to open your banks to conservatives, because what you’re doing is wrong.”

    Banks including Bank of America and JPMorgan Chase have disputed allegations that politics contributed to decisions to close bank accounts.

    TRUMP CONFRONTS BANK OF AMERICA CEO FOR NOT TAKING ‘CONSERVATIVE BUSINESS’

    President Donald Trump criticized leading U.S. banks over alleged debarking practices during remarks to the World Economic Forum. (Bill Pugliano/Getty Images / Getty Images)

    “We serve more than 70 million clients and we welcome conservatives,” a Bank of America spokesperson told FOX Business. “We are required to follow extensive government rules and regulations that sometimes result in decisions to exit client relationships. We never close accounts for political reasons and don’t have a political litmus test.”

    A JPMorgan spokesperson said in a statement that the bank would “never close an account for political reasons, full stop. We follow the law and guidance from our regulators and have long said there are problems with the current framework that Washington must address.”

    “We welcome the opportunity to work with the new Administration and Congress on ways to remove regulatory ambiguity while maintaining our country’s ability to address financial crime,” the spokesperson said.

    CONSERVATIVE GROUP TAKES AIM AT WALL STREET IN REPORT CLAIMING BIG BANKS HAVE UNDERCUT FIREARMS INDUSTRY

    Brian Moynihan on Mornings with Maria

    Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan was in attendance during Trump’s Q&A at the World Economic Forum. (Photo by John Lamparski/Getty Images / Getty Images)

    In recent years, Republican attorneys general have sent letters to banks seeking explanations for debanking decisions involving various conservative organizations or businesses involved in controversial industries, like gun dealers.

    Last year, a group of 16 attorneys general wrote to Wells Fargo about the closure of a Florida gun dealer’s account and said they believe the company used debanking as “a political tool to extend the policies of the Biden administration throughout the country.”

    State financial officers have also raised concerns about debanking practices with Wall Street banks, as a group of more than a dozen state treasurers, auditors and controllers wrote to JPMorgan Chase last year to “convey our concern that the bank is engaged in what appears to be politically motivated debanking of certain industries, individuals, and groups.”

    STATE FINANCIAL OFFICERS CALL ON JPMORGAN CHASE TO ADDRESS POLITICALLY MOTIVATED DE-BANKING

    JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon

    JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon said banks should be able to tell clients more about why they’ve been debanked. (Victor J. Blue/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    “President Trump is right and I’m glad he is bringing light to the unethical and most likely unlawful behavior of some of the nation’s largest financial institutions,” Montana Attorney General Austin Knudsen told FOX Business. “For years big banks, including Bank of America, have been debanking and discriminating against conservative and religious groups in favor of the left’s woke agenda.” 

    “As Attorney General, I have been calling them out, demanding answers and action from them and I will continue to do everything I can to hold them accountable and bring their bad behavior to light. It’s refreshing to have a President who recognizes the problem and is joining the effort to stop it.”

    REPUBLICAN AGS DEMAND WELLS FARGO ANSWER FOR ABRUPTLY CLOSING GUN DEALER’S ACCOUNT, OTHER WOKE POLICIES

    Ticker Security Last Change Change %
    JPM JPMORGAN CHASE & CO. 265.95 +3.11 +1.18%
    BAC BANK OF AMERICA CORP. 46.39 +0.60 +1.31%
    WFC WELLS FARGO & CO. 77.43 -0.11 -0.14%

    Federal laws and financial regulations can prompt banks to close accounts over concerns about things like money laundering or illicit financial activities, and one prominent bank leader thinks that firms should be able to be more forthcoming with clients about why such decisions are made.

    JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon appeared on the firm’s “The Unshakeables” podcast and said in a discussion about challenges crypto firms have encountered with debanking that banks are not allowed to tell clients why they were debanked and their accounts closed.

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    “I think we should be allowed to tell you,” Dimon said. “When we report stuff, the federal government should probably know about it and there should be far clearer lines about what we have to do and what we don’t have to do or things like that.”

    FOX Business’ Breck Dumas contributed to this report.