Tag: President

  • Las Vegas gamblers shocked by President Trump visit to casino floor

    Las Vegas gamblers shocked by President Trump visit to casino floor

    President Donald Trump shocked gamblers in Las Vegas when he unexpectedly dropped by a casino floor on Saturday.

    Prior to the surprise visit, Trump had addressed thousands of supporters at the Circa Resort and Casino in Sin City on Saturday afternoon. Photos and video show Trump strolling around the casino floor after the speech, while surrounded by security.

    The crowd began chanting “USA! USA!” as Trump walked past the slot machines. The president was also seen briefly interacting with enthused gamblers.

    TRUMP VOWS TO DELIVER ON ‘NO TAX ON TIPS’ CAMPAIGN PROMISE DURING LAS VEGAS SPEECH: ‘100% YOURS’

    Las Vegas gamblers were shocked by President Trump’s visit to the casino floor on Saturday. (Pool)

    The president also naturally walked up to a craps table where a game was in progress, telling a player to “throw the dice.”

    When journalists shouted questions at Trump, a craps player scolded the press pool and told them, “I’m rolling here.” Trump told a gambler that he was “doing a good job” before leaving.

    TRUMP NOMINATES HEAD OF HIS PERSONAL SECURITY DETAIL, SEAN CURRAN, TO LEAD SECRET SERVICE: ‘A GREAT PATRIOT’

    Las Vegas gamblers shocked by President Trump visit to casino floor

    The crowd chanted “USA! USA” to Trump during his visit on the casino floor. (Pool)

    Trump also said thank you to staff workers holding water trays, shortly after his speech focused on reducing federal taxes for hospitality workers with his “no tax on tips” campaign promise.

    “Any worker who relies on tips [as] income, your tips will be 100% yours,” Trump said to a cheering audience during the speech.

    US-POLITICS-TRUMP

    President Donald Trump delivers remarks on his policy to end taxes on tips in Las Vegas on Saturday. (Mandel Ngan/AFP via Getty Images)

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    “Nationwide, over four million workers depend on tip income, including an estimated 700,000 single moms…here in Nevada…think of it, a quarter of the typical restaurant workers’ pay comes from tips. I didn’t know that,” he added.

    Fox News’ Sarah Tobianski and Sophia Compton contributed to this report.

  • WNBA star DiJonai Carrington flaunts explicit message on pre-game outfit directed at President Trump

    WNBA star DiJonai Carrington flaunts explicit message on pre-game outfit directed at President Trump

    WNBA star DiJonai Carrington sparked some controversy before her Friday night Unrivaled game due to her pre-game outfit selection.

    Carrington was spotted walking into Wayfair Arena in Miami, Florida, wearing a sweatshirt with rapper YG on the front with the name of his old 2016 tour: “The F—Donald Trump Tour.”

    The message, written in red letters with the rapper in the background flipping the middle finger, was clear as Carrington stopped to pose for a photo. 

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    DiJonai Carrington, #21 of the Connecticut Sun, brings the ball up court in the second quarter against the Chicago Sky at Mohegan Sun Arena on September 19, 2024, in Uncasville, Connecticut.  (Mike Lawrie/Getty Images)

    Carrington, whose X page around the election showed pro-Kamala Harris messaging, appears to make it clear how she feels about President Trump with her outfit choice.

    Carrington is a part of the new 3-on-3 Unrivaled league, playing for the Mist, which is one of six clubs within the organization co-founded by fellow WNBA stars Breanna Stewart and Napheesa Collier. 

    DIJONAI CARRINGTON, CAITLIN CLARK’S TEAMMATE APPEAR TO JOKE ABOUT INFAMOUS EYE-POKING INCIDENT

    Carrington was named the WNBA’s Most Improved Player during the 2024 season, receiving 28 of the 67 votes from a national media panel after posting career highs in points (12.7), rebounds (5.0) and assists (1.6).

    But the 2024 season didn’t come without some controversy on the court for Carrington, who was accused of purposefully poking Indiana Fever guard Caitlin Clark, the WNBA’s new superstar and Rookie of the Year, in the eye during a game. 

    DiJonai Carrington drives toward hoop

    Connecticut Sun guard DiJonai Carrington (21) works around Minnesota Lynx guard Courtney Williams (10) during the second half of game two of the 2024 WNBA Semi-finals at Target Center. (Matt Krohn-Imagn Images)

    Carrington pleaded her innocence after the incident. 

    “I don’t even know why I would intent to hit anybody in the eye,” she said. “That doesn’t even make sense to me.”

    Clark also downplayed the situation when asked about, saying it “wasn’t intentional by any means.”

    Carrington was already not in the good graces of Fever fans, as she provoked them by posting a tweet in late August, which read, “the Indiana fever have the nastiest fans in the W. ew.” The eye-poking incident occurred during Game 1 of the WNBA playoffs match-up between Carrington’s Connecticut Sun and Clark’s Fever.

    DiJonai Carrington warms up

    Connecticut Sun guard DiJonai Carrington (21) warms up before the start of game four of the 2024 WNBA Semi-finals against the Minnesota Lynx at Mohegan Sun Arena.  (David Butler II-Imagn Images)

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    Carrington’s girlfriend, NaLyssa Smith, whom she met after transferring to Baylor, plays alongside Clark on the Fever. 

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  • Pardoned Silk Road founder Ross Ulbricht thanks Trump, calls president ‘a man of his word’

    Pardoned Silk Road founder Ross Ulbricht thanks Trump, calls president ‘a man of his word’

    Ross Ulbricht, founder of the anonymous online marketplace Silk Road, thanked President Donald Trump for giving him a full and unconditional pardon. In a video posted online, a visibly emotional Ulbricht praised Trump for being a “man of his word,” and thanked the president for giving him the “amazing blessing” of freedom.

    “I am so, so grateful to have my life back, to have my future back, to have this second chance,” Ulbricht says in the video. He also said the pardon was an “an important moment for everybody, everywhere, who loves freedom and who cares about second chances.”

    People hold signs in support of jailed darknet market Silk Road founder Ross Ulbricht, as former President Trump attends the Libertarian Party’s national convention in Washington, D.C., May 25, 2024. (Reuters/Brian Snyder / Reuters)

    TRUMP CRYPTO CZAR HAILS EXECUTIVE ORDER, SLAMS BIDEN’S TREATMENT OF INDUSTRY

    Trump announced on his social media platform Truth Social that he called Ulbricht’s mother to inform her of her son’s pardon. The president said it was done “in honor of her and the Libertarian Movement, which supported me so strongly.”

    “The scum that worked to convict him were some of the same lunatics who were involved in the modern day weaponization of government against me,” Trump wrote.

    In a recent appearance on “The Will Cain Show,” Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky, who was pushing for Ulbricht’s release, praised Trump for issuing the pardon. Paul pointed out that the people who used Silk Road to sell drugs got “minor sentences,” while Ulbricht was given two life sentences without the possibility of parole.

    Trump signing executive orders

    President Donald Trump signs a series of executive orders at the White House on Jan. 20, 2025, in Washington, D.C.  (Jabin Botsford /The Washington Post via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    TRUMP SIGNS ‘FULL AND UNCONDITIONAL’ PARDON OF SILK ROAD CREATOR ROSS ULBRICHT

    Ulbricht was convicted after his website Silk Road, which was founded in 2011, was used by those looking to make illegal drug transactions with cryptocurrency. He operated the website from 2011 until his arrest in 2013. In 2015, Ulbricht was sentenced.

    In a 2015 press release, ICE called Silk Road “the most sophisticated and extensive criminal marketplace on the internet.

    Last month, Ulbricht wrote, “For my last monthly resolution of 2024, I intend to study every day and to get up to speed as much as I can as I prepare for freedom.”

    LEFT: Pardoned Silk Road founder Ross Ulbricht RIGHT: President Donald Trump

    LEFT: Ross Ulbricht speaks in an emotional video after being pardoned RIGHT: President Trump signs documents in the Oval Office (@RealRossU/X/REUTERS/Carlos Barria)

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    Trump vowed to pardon Ulbricht during his 2024 campaign, saying he would do it on “Day 1.” This move was seemingly part of Trump’s strategy to win over Libertarian voters.  Trump spoke about commuting Ulbricht’s sentence at both the Libertarian National Convention and the Bitcoin 2024 conference.

    In addition to Ulbricht, Trump issued pardons for pro-life activists convicted under the FACE Act and many Jan. 6 defendants. The pardons for pro-life protesters were issued the day before the March for Life in Washington, D.C., where Vice President JD Vance is expected to speak.

  • President Trump reinstates Mexico City Policy, separates taxpayer dollars and abortions

    President Trump reinstates Mexico City Policy, separates taxpayer dollars and abortions

    An executive order President Donald Trump signed Friday will overturn two Biden memorandums and reinstate the Mexico City Policy, which forbids using taxpayer dollars to fund nongovernmental organizations that perform or promote coercive abortion or involuntary sterilization.

    The Mexico City Policy, initiated by the Reagan administration, has been rescinded by every Democratic president and reinstated by every Republican president since its creation.

    During the Biden administration, the Pentagon paid for service members to travel over state lines for abortions, and Veterans Affairs medical centers were allowed to offer abortion counseling and abortion procedures for service members and their beneficiaries, Fox News Digital previously reported.

    President Donald Trump signs executive orders in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, D.C., Jan. 20.  (Jim Watson/Pool/AFP via Getty Images)

    PRO-LIFE PROTESTERS PARDONED BY TRUMP, FOX CONFIRMS

    The administration also provided abortion access to migrants detained at the border, offering transport of unaccompanied pregnant children to states without abortion restrictions.

    The White House said that, for nearly five decades, Congress annually enacted the Hyde Amendment and similar laws that prevent federal funding of elective abortion, “reflecting a longstanding consensus that American taxpayers should not be forced to pay for that practice.”

    march for life

    Nuns arrive to participate in the annual March for Life Friday in Washington, D.C. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)

    BLUE STATE ‘RESISTANCE’ REPORTEDLY STOCKPILING ABORTION PILLS IN PREPARATION FOR ANOTHER TRUMP TERM

    “However, the previous administration disregarded this established, commonsense policy by embedding forced taxpayer funding of elective abortions in a wide variety of Federal programs,” the White House wrote in a statement. “It is the policy of the United States, consistent with the Hyde Amendment, to end the forced use of Federal taxpayer dollars to fund or promote elective abortion.”

    Biden’s Presidential Memorandum, Protecting Women’s Health at Home and Abroad, was signed Jan. 28, 2021, and alleged the policy’s restrictions negatively affected women’s reproductive health and undermined U.S. partnerships in global health efforts.

    Demonstrators during the People's March,

    Pro-choice supporters hold signs during a rally. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana)

    Trump’s order rescinds two Biden executive actions that promoted access to abortions and included abortion in the definition of “reproductive healthcare.”

    The language in the new order clarified the memorandum is “not intended to, and does not, create any right or benefit, substantive or procedural, enforceable at law or in equity by any party against the United States, its departments, agencies, or entities, its officers, employees, or agents, or any other person.”

    The Center for Reproductive Rights (CRR) told Fox News Digital the policy “will decrease abortion access in countries around the world.”

    “This far-reaching policy defunds health organizations in other countries that provide abortion services or information, even for victims of sexual assault,” CRR said in a statement provided to Fox News Digital. “Many of these critical organizations will likely shutter as a result or be forced to stop providing or even talking about abortion services.”

    marco rubio

    Secretary of State Marco Rubio speaks after being sworn in by Vice President JD Vance in the Vice Presidential Ceremonial Office in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building on the White House campus Tuesday in Washington, D.C.  (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

    CRR representatives also referenced the administration’s Geneva Consensus Declaration Friday night, which is a joint initiative to “secure meaningful health and development gains for women; to protect life at all stages; to defend the family as the fundamental unit of society; and to work together across the UN system to realize these values,” according to a statement from Secretary of State Marco Rubio.

    The CRR called the declaration “an anti-reproductive rights and anti-LGBTQ political statement” that “intentionally misrepresents itself as an official international agreement, and attempts to undermine the broad legal basis for reproductive rights as human rights.”

    “The reinstatement of President Trump’s Global Gag Rule (GGR) and rejoining of the Geneva Consensus are direct assaults on the health and human rights of millions of people around the world,” said Rachana Desai Martin, CRR chief government and external relations officer. 

    Schumer at contraception press conference outside Capitol

    Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., speaks during a news conference in front of the U.S. Capitol May 21, 2024, in Washington, D.C. (Alex Wong/Getty Images)

    “We saw the devastating impact of the GGR during the last Trump administration when contraception and vital reproductive services were cut off,” Martin added. “There was a spike in pregnancy-related deaths, reproductive coercion and gender inequality worldwide. Many clinics and health programs shuttered, leaving vulnerable populations with nowhere to get birth control, pregnancy care and other vital health services.”

    Live Action, a global human rights movement dedicated to ending abortion, posted on X after the order was signed.

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    “The Mexico City policy which ensures American tax dollars do not fund killing children internationally through abortion has been reinstated by President Trump!” the post said.

    Fox News Digital requested comment from Planned Parenthood and Physicians for Reproductive Health but did not immediately receive a response.

  • Plea to President Trump: Tell Cuba to hand over terrorist killers

    Plea to President Trump: Tell Cuba to hand over terrorist killers

    They gathered for a moment of silence at 1:19 pm, the moment the bomb exploded.

    The attack 50 years ago today was aimed at the heart of American liberty. 

    It targeted a place where our nation was forged during the revolution and where George Washington took his leave knowing the future of his new nation was secured.

    On December 4, 1783, nine days after the British evacuated New York City, Washington held a banquet at Fraunces Tavern in lower Manhattan to bid farewell to his troops.

    ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY, DECEMBER 4, 1783, WASHINGTON BIDS FAREWELL TO HIS TROOPS AT FRAUNCES TAVERN IN NYC

    On January 24, 1975, the Puerto Rican separatist group, the FALN, planted a bomb that ripped through the historic site at lunchtime, killing four and wounding more than 50 others in lower Manhattan. Sixty-six-year-old banker Harold Sherburne, 28-year-old businessmen Alex Berger and 32-year-old James Gezork were killed.

    “They were really attacking the American people,” says Joe Connor, whose father, Frank, was a 33-year-old banker who was killed in the terrorist attack.

    “They attacked Fraunces Tavern because that’s where George Washington bade farewell to his officers after the Revolutionary War, where the Sons of Liberty met and was a symbol of American liberty and justice and freedom, and they couldn’t abide by that.”

    A bomb explodes at Fraunces Tavern. Four people were killed and more than 50 were injured. The FALN, a Puerto Rican nationalist group, claimed responsibility. (New York Daily News via Getty Images)

    Joe was 9 years old the day his father was killed, and in the decades since, he has dedicated his life to bringing justice for his father and the other victims. He is the author of “Shattered Lives: Overcoming the Fraunces Tavern Terror,” which is also now a documentary. Connor has, with other families, elected officials and law enforcement, waged a mission to hold the terrorists to account.

    No one has ever been charged in the attack, but the man believed to be the terrorist group’s chief bomb maker, Willie Morales, escaped to Cuba, where he has lived along with an estimated 50 other U.S. fugitives. A bill in Congress named for Joe’s father and New Jersey State Trooper Werner Foerster, who was killed by Black Liberation Army militant Joanne Chesimard, aka Assata Shakur, who also is on the lam in Cuba, demands Havana return the fugitives.

    ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY, OCTOBER 25, 1944, FIRST KAMIKAZE SUICIDE PILOTS ATTACK US NAVY IN WORLD WAR II

    “It’s a very concise, clear bill demanding the return,” says Connor. “There has been a mystique about the Castro regime and Che Guevara, of some fanciful romantic view of these people. But they were nothing but Marxist thugs and were waging their own war on the United States for many, many years.”

    In his final days in office, former President Joe Biden removed Cuba from the State Department list of State Sponsors of Terrorism.

    President Donald Trump immediately put Havana back on the list, and in his first term also vowed to put pressure on Cuba to return Morales and the other fugitives.

    Marco Rubio

    Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., attends a campaign rally for former President Donald Trump at Trump National Doral Golf Club July 9, 2024, in Doral, Fla. (Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

    During his U.S. Senate confirmation hearing, U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio called for Cuba to cough up the criminals who remain on the lam.

    “There are fugitives of American justice, including cop killers and others who are actively hosted in Cuba and protected from the long arm of American justice by the Cuban regime. So, there is no doubt in my mind that they meet all the qualifications for being a state sponsor of terrorism,” Rubio said.

    Over the last two decades, FALN members have been granted clemency, as if the years that passed lessened their crimes. President Barack Obama commuted the 70-year sentence of Oscar Lopez Rivera, who was convicted of seditious conspiracy and charged with other crimes. President Bill Clinton offered clemency to the terrorist group’s imprisoned members, which eleven accepted in 1999.

    NYPD SAYS ‘NOT A TERRORIST ATTACK’ AFTER 10 SHOT OUTSIDE NYC EVENT SPACE ON NEW YEAR’S DAY

    At a ceremony marking the bombing, New York City Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch said the bombing “was terrorism in its purest form, meant to frighten, intimidate, to injure, maim and kill in order to achieve their political purpose.

    “For 50 years, no one has been held accountable for this attack, which remains an open investigation by the NYPD and the Joint Terrorism Taskforce,” Tisch said. “Our department never forgets.”

    Jessica Tisch Is Sworn In As New NYPD Commissioner

    Jessica Tisch speaks after being sworn in as the next commissioner of the New York Police Department during a ceremony at One Police Plaza Nov. 25, 2024, in New York City.  (Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

    Before the ceremony marking the bombing, there was an emotional luncheon attended by family members, dozens of former FBI agents, survivors of the bombing and others.

    Joe Connor’s son, Frank, named for his grandfather and who is studying to be a priest, gave the benediction.

    “We remember the four men who were killed 50 years ago today in this very place, and all of those whose lives were cut short by terrorism.”

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    Joe noted how the gathering was being held by the door where the bomb, which consisted of ten pounds of dynamite, was placed inside an unassuming briefcase.

    “Cuba has to eventually turn these people over, and the only way that will happen is by keeping them on the State Sponsor of Terrorism list and by keeping the pressure on Cuba,” he says. “This is the moment to do it.”

  • South African president signs controversal land expropriation law

    South African president signs controversal land expropriation law

    South African President Cyril Ramaphosa signed into law a bill that will allow the government to seize land without having to pay compensation, which some in the government say is a threat to private ownership.

    The law, which replaces the pre-democratic Expropriation Act of 1975, “outlines how expropriation can be done and on what basis” by the state, the government says, according to the BBC. 

    Ramaphosa’s party, the African National Congress, or ANC, hailed the law as a “significant milestone.” However, some members of the government have signaled they will challenge the legality of the law. 

    INCOMING TRUMP ADMIN, CONGRESS SHOWDOWN LOOMS WITH SOUTH AFRICA OVER SUPPORT FOR RUSSIA, US FOES

    Cyril Ramaphosa, president of South Africa, delivers a speech during a plenary session in Congress Hall during the 55th annual meeting of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, Jan. 21, 2025.  (Michael Buholzer/Keystone via AP)

    The country’s majority Black citizens own just a small fraction of farmland more than 30 years after the end of apartheid. Most landowners are part of the White minority, according to the news report. 

    The new law allows for the expropriation of land without compensation only in circumstances where it is “just and equitable and in the public interest.”

    That includes when the property is not being used and there’s no intention to either develop it or if it poses a public safety risk. 

    “In terms of this law, an expropriating authority may not expropriate property arbitrarily or for a purpose other than a public purpose or in the public interest,” Vincent Magwenya, the president’s spokesperson, said in a news release. 

    MISSING NORTH CAROLINA STUDENT BROOK CHEUVRONT, 20, FOUND DEAD IN SOUTH AFRICA 

    Table Mountain in South Africa

    Table Mountain in Cape Town, South Africa, in July 2023 (Xabiso Mkhabela/Xinhua via Getty Images)

    “Expropriation may not be exercised unless the expropriating authority has without success attempted to reach an agreement with the owner or holder of a right in property for the acquisition thereof on reasonable terms,” he added. 

    The Democratic Alliance (DA), the second-largest party in the government, said it “strongly opposes” the law and was consulting with its lawyers.

    It says that while it supports legislation addressing land restitution, it takes issue with the process followed by the country’s parliament to enact the law, the BBC report states. 

    South Africa Flag

    South Africa’s ANC party has fielded candidates facing corruption charges. (Reuters/Mike Hutchings)

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    The Freedom Front Plus party, which defends the rights of South Africa’s White minority, vowed to challenge the law and do “everything in its power” to have it amended if it is found to be unconstitutional.

  • Colombia president decrees emergency powers to restore order in coca region wracked by rebel combat

    Colombia president decrees emergency powers to restore order in coca region wracked by rebel combat

    Colombia’s president issued a decree Friday giving him emergency powers to restore order in a coca-growing region bordering Venezuela that has been wracked in recent days by a deadly turf war among dissident rebel groups.

    President Gustavo Petro’s decree, which can be extended, gives him 90 days to impose curfews, restrict traffic and take other steps that would normally violate Colombians’ civil rights or require congressional approval.

    AT LEAST 80 PEOPLE KILLED IN NORTHEAST COLOMBIA AS PEACE TALKS FAIL, OFFICIAL SAYS

    It is the first time in more than a decade that a Colombian president has used such an extreme measure and underscores the seriousness of the current conflict in a country that for decades was paralyzed by political violence.

    However, it applies only to the rural Catatumbo region near the border with Venezuela, where the Colombian state has struggled for decades to gain a foothold. In the past week, at least 80 people have been killed and an estimated 36,000 more displaced as fighting intensifies between the National Liberation Army, or ELN, and holdouts from the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC.

    Police patrol in Tibu, Colombia, Tuesday, Jan. 21, 2025, following guerrilla attacks that have killed dozens of people and forced thousands to flee their homes in the Catatumbo region.  (AP Photo/Fernando Vergara)

    Petro’s conservative opponents have criticized the move, accusing the former guerrilla of riding roughshod over the constitution. But some activists have celebrated it, saying they are hopeful the move translates into better infrastructure, health care and schools in the traditionally lawless region.

    “Why are the armed groups here? Because the last government hasn’t made investments. They’ve abandoned us,” Jaime Botero, an activist in the town of Tibu, told The Associated Press.

    Earlier this week Petro reactivated arrest orders against 31 top ELN commanders that had been suspended as part of an effort to woo the the Cuban revolution-inspired insurgency into a peace deal to end its 60 year war against the state. Petro also suspended all peace talks, which have advanced slowly since he took office in 2022.

    The ELN has traditionally dominated in Catatumbo but has been losing ground to holdouts from the FARC, a guerrilla group that largely disbanded after signing a peace deal in 2016 with the government.

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    The current conflict is spilling across the border into Venezuela, where some of those fleeing the violence have sought refuge.

    The current whereabouts of the ELN peace negotiators is unknown. But Cuba’s government this week said they are not there, leading some to speculate they may be hiding in Venezuela, which is one of the sponsors of Petro’s peace initiative with the ELN.

  • Newsom-Trump war of words still simmering as president arrives in California to survey wildfires

    Newsom-Trump war of words still simmering as president arrives in California to survey wildfires

    When President Donald Trump lands in California on Friday to survey the devastating wildfires that have ravaged metropolitan Los Angeles this month, the state’s Democratic governor will be among the officials greeting him.

    But Gov. Gavin Newsom is showing up uninvited.

    “I look forward to being there on the tarmac to thank the president, welcome him, and we’re making sure that all the resources he needs for a successful briefing are provided to him,” Newsom told reporters on the eve of Trump’s stop in Los Angeles.

    Since the fires, which have killed nearly 30 people and forced tens of thousands to flee their homes, broke out earlier this month, Trump has repeatedly criticized Newsom’s handling of the immense crisis. He has accused the governor of mismanaging forestry and water policy, and pointing to intense backlash over a perceived lack of preparation, he has called on Newsom to step down.

    UNINVITED NEWSOM SAYS HE’LL BE ON TARMAC TO GREET AND BRIEF TRUMP

    People watch the smoke and flames from the wildfires in the Pacific Palisades neighborhood on Jan. 7, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.  (Tiffany Rose/Getty Images)

    “Gavin Newscum should resign. This is all his fault!!!” Trump charged in a social media post on Jan. 8, as he repeated a derogatory name he often labels the governor.

    And in his first Oval Office interview since returning to power in the White House, Trump told Fox News’ Sean Hannity this week, “This fire was just raging, and then it would catch to another area, another area, another area.”

    “It took a week and a half — and I’ve never seen anything like it. We look so weak,” Trump argued in the appearance on Fox News’ “Hannity,” as he pointed towards his repeated claim that a main reason the blazes raged was because firefighters didn’t have access to water.

    TRUMP PLEDGES FEMA OVERHAUL DURING STOP IN HURRICANE RAVAGED WESTERN NORTH CAROLINA

    Trump and some top Republicans in Congress have pushed toward placing conditions on continuing the massive federal wildfire aid to California in order to force policy changes.

    Newsom on Thursday signed a $2.5 billion state relief package. But California will need much more help from the federal government.

    California Governor Gavin Newsom (right) tours the downtown business district of Pacific Palisades as the Palisades Fire continues to burn on January 8, 2025, in Los Angeles, California. 

    California Governor Gavin Newsom (right) tours the downtown business district of Pacific Palisades as the Palisades Fire continues to burn on January 8, 2025, in Los Angeles, California.  (Eric Thayer)

    “I don’t think we should give California anything until they let water flow down from the north to the south,” Trump said in his Fox News interview.

    Newsom, the governor of the nation’s most populous state, one of the Democratic Party’s leaders in the resistance against the returning president, and a potential White House contender in 2028, has pushed back, as the two larger-than-life politicians trade fire.

    The governor has noted that reservoirs in the southern part of California were full when the fires first sparked, and has argued that no amount of water could tackle fires fueled by winds of up to 100 miles per hour.

    Newsom has also charged Trump has spread “hurricane-force winds of mis-and-disinformation.

    President Donald Trump boards Air Force One for the first time since his inauguration

    U.S. President Donald Trump boards Air Force One as he departs for North Carolina at Joint Base Andrews in Maryland, January 24, 2025.  (Leah Millis/Reuters)

    And in a letter to Congress last week, Newsom emphasized that “our long national history of responding to natural disasters, no matter where they occur, has always been Americans helping Americans, full stop.”

    The wildfires are far from the first time Newsom and Trump have taken aim at each other. Their animosity dates back to before Trump was elected president the first time in 2016, when Newsom was California’s lieutenant governor.

    The verbal fireworks continued over the past two years, as Newsom served as a top surrogate on the campaign trail for former President Biden and then former Vice President Kamala Harris, who replaced Biden as the Democrats’ 2024 standard-bearer last summer.

    Following Trump’s convincing election victory over Harris in November, Newsom moved to Trump-proof his heavily blue state.

    “He is using the term ‘Trump-Proof’ as a way of stopping all of the GREAT things that can be done to ‘Make California Great Again,’ but I just overwhelmingly won the Election,” Trump responded.

    While pushing back against Trump’s attacks amid the wildfires, Newsom also knows he needs to work with the president.

    Gavin Newsom, Donald Trump, and Jerry Brown

    President Donald Trump (center) looks on with California Gov. Jerry Brown (right) and Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom, as they view damage from wildfires in Paradise, California on November 17, 2018.  (Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images)

    Newsom, who two weeks ago invited Trump to come to California to survey the damage, said in a statement on Monday following the inauguration ceremony, “I look forward to President Trump’s visit to Los Angeles and his mobilization of the full weight of the federal government to help our fellow Americans recover and rebuild.”

    He emphasized “finding common ground and striving toward shared goals” with the Trump administration.

    “In the face of one of the worst natural disasters in America’s history, this moment underscores the critical need for partnership, a shared commitment to facts, and mutual respect – values that enable civil discourse, effective governance, and meaningful action,” the governor said.

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    Veteran California-based political scientist Jack Pitney at Claremont McKenna College noted that “this is a very difficult balance” for Newsom.

    “As a governor of California, he needs to work with the president to get federal aid for the state. As a national political figure, he feels pressure to attack Trump. It’s hard to do both of those at the same time,” Pitney told Fox News.

  • Poland president says Trump’s ‘comeback’ reverses the ‘hurt, damage’ done by Biden

    Poland president says Trump’s ‘comeback’ reverses the ‘hurt, damage’ done by Biden

    The President of Poland, Andrzej Duda, is expressing his hope for clear and efficient international relations under President Donald Trump’s second administration – the alleged opposite of what the European nation faced with the Biden White House.

    “I belong to those European politicians and to those European observers who are looking at the comeback of President Donald Trump to the White House in a very calm way,” President Duda told FOX Business’ Maria Bartiromo via translator at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.

    During his first week in the Oval Office, Trump reversed many of the policies penned during President Joe Biden’s tenure, including export limitations on artificial intelligence chips to Poland.

    “In Poland, we have a feeling that we have been hurt by this decision,” Duda said, “and there is a deep sense of disappointment with this policy and decisions taken by President Biden and his administration.”

    TRUMP OUTLINES TAX CUT PLANS, TELLS WORLD ECONOMIC FORUM ‘MAKE YOUR PRODUCT IN AMERICA’

    “As a result of that decision, Poland has found itself among the countries which are not in the first tier of U.S. allies. So we have been pushed to second or even third tier of those countries who are not very highly trusted by the United States. So it is also my feeling, my personal feeling that it has caused some hurt and damage here in Poland,” he expanded.

    Poland President Andrzej Duda tells FOX Business’ Maria Bartiromo how President Donald Trump will make the Central European country a “first tier” ally again. (Getty Images)

    Duda met with Trump last April in New York where they had “a very long discussion” about the expected foreign policy changes between the two nations. 

    In Friday’s “Mornings with Maria” appearance, Duda said he’s awaiting the “continuation” of Trump’s “experience” gained during his first four years as president.

    “He has brought forward very clear arguments concerning relations between the United States and European countries, especially those rich countries, those very affluent countries. And the arguments that President Donald Trump has presented have been very logical and very clear,” Duda noted. 

    “And I do believe that Donald Trump is right.”

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    Poland and the U.S. share similar views on domestic border security, according to Duda, and both countries are “determined” to end Russia’s war on Ukraine which began nearly three years ago. 

    “[Trump] is very much determined and he’s got this very out-of-the-box view of politics. So if he’s saying that, I believe that this is going to come true,” Duda said, “it is going to happen.”

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  • President Trump, Melania board Air Force One for first time in 4 years, photo shows

    President Trump, Melania board Air Force One for first time in 4 years, photo shows

    President Donald Trump and First Lady Melania Trump were photographed Friday boarding Air Force One for the first time in four years. 

    Trump and his wife — who was wearing a green jacket and aviator sunglasses — were seen getting onboard the aircraft at Joint Base Andrews in Maryland.  

    The president is heading to North Carolina to survey damage from Hurricane Helene last September. 

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    Trump and the first lady board Air Force One at Joint Base Andrews in Maryland on Jan. 24. (Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images)

    “We’re going to North Carolina. It’s a horrible thing, the way that’s been allowed to fester. And we’re going to get it fixed up. Should have been done months ago from the hurricane that took place almost four months ago,” Trump told reporters after leaving the White House. “North Carolina has been treated very badly.” 

    TRUMP TO VISIT CALIFORNIA AFTER RIPPING ‘IDIOT’ NEWSOM ON WILDFIRE 

    Trump prepares to board Air Force One

    Trump and the first lady are welcomed by Air Force Col. Angela Ochoa, second right, on arrival to board Air Force One at Joint Base Andrews in Maryland on Friday. (Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images)

    “So we’re stopping there and we are then going to go to Los Angeles and take a look at a fire that could have been put out if they let the water flow but they didn’t let the water flow, and they still haven’t for whatever reason. So, I think we’re going to have a very interesting time,” Trump added. 

    President Donald Trump boards Air Force One for the first time since his inauguration

    Trump boards Air Force One as he departs for North Carolina. (Leah Millis/Reuters)

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    Trump was last photographed stepping off Air Force One on Jan. 20, 2021, while Joe Biden was being sworn in as president that day.