Tag: proving

  • JD Vance’s Capitol Hill connections proving crucial to Trump Cabinet confirmations

    JD Vance’s Capitol Hill connections proving crucial to Trump Cabinet confirmations

    Vice President JD Vance has emerged as a key player in President Donald Trump’s effort to close the deal with senators and move his Cabinet nominees through the at-times difficult confirmation process. 

    Vance is becoming an increasingly trusted voice among Republican senators, sources familiar shared with Fox News Digital. 

    Republicans in the upper chamber also view the vice president as an honest broker in their talks about how to push Trump’s agenda forward, sources added, noting that this had established trust in Vance. 

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    Vice President JD Vance, center, was a key facilitator to getting vulnerable Cabinet nominees past committee. (Getty Images)

    When it came to getting two of Trump’s most controversial nominees past their respective committees, Vance stepped up to assist, sources said.

    Both Director of National Intelligence (DNI) nominee Tulsi Gabbard and Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS) nominee Robert F. Kennedy Jr. faced uncertainty ahead of key hurdles in the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence and the Senate Committee on Finance, respectively. 

    Each committee housed potentially hesitant Republicans, who expressed initial uncertainty about the nominees. During the crucial committee-level votes, Gabbard and Kennedy could not afford to lose even one Republican’s support.

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    Tulsi Gabbard hearing

    Tulsi Gabbard, President Donald Trump’s nominee to be director of national intelligence, arrives to testify during her confirmation hearing before the Senate Intelligence Committee in the Dirksen Senate Office Building on Jan. 30, 2025 in Washington, D.C. (Getty Images)

    Ultimately, Gabbard earned the support of moderate Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, in addition to the last-minute backing of Sen. Todd Young, R-Ind.

    Similarly, Kennedy managed to snag Young’s support before the committee vote, and holdout Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-La., a doctor, announced his plan to vote for the nominee just minutes before it took place. 

    To lock down these votes, a significant effort was underway behind closed doors — which included Vance’s crucial counsel to the senators. 

    The vice president spoke to both Young and Cassidy several times in the days leading up to the recent committee votes that saw Gabbard and Kennedy advance to the Senate floor, the sources told Fox News Digital. In those conversations, Vance talked through any remaining concerns the senators had with the nominees.

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    Bill Cassidy, Todd Young

    Vice President JD Vance had several conversations with both Sen. Bill Cassidy and Sen. Todd Young, right. (Getty Images/ Reuters)

    A number of other administration officials had phone calls with Young and Cassidy, as well, also helping to parse through their lingering doubts.

    Vance’s conversations proved persuasive, in part because of his long-maintained relationships with both senators, whom he served with up until January, the sources detailed. 

    “I think he’s been tasked with this role because of his preexisting relationship with us,” Young told reporters. 

    According to the senator, Vance was respectful and actually “listened a lot more than he talked.”

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    JD Vance will attend an AI summit in Paris, France, a French official said anonymously.

    Vice President JD Vance served in the Senate until last month. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

    The vice president was also “effective” in getting the necessary concessions that Young, in particular, needed to get to a yes on the nominees. 

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    “He came through, he delivered for me, and I’m grateful for that,” Young said, noting he also delivered for Trump. 

    The Indiana senator further explained he has “a certain affinity for Senator Vance,” adding, “He’s a Midwesterner. He is a U.S. Marine. And we share a lot of concerns about people who are left behind and overlooked and underprivileged.”

  • Raising Cane’s founder Todd Graves, Super Bowl LIX parade king, proving New Orleans can be great business hub

    Raising Cane’s founder Todd Graves, Super Bowl LIX parade king, proving New Orleans can be great business hub

    Todd Graves, the billionaire entrepreneur who founded Raising Cane’s, the fastest-growing chicken chain in the country, couldn’t believe what he had been asked before Super Bowl LIX. 

    The city of New Orleans, where he was born, asked him to be parade king on the day before the Super Bowl at Caesars Superdome. 

    “I thought it was a great honor, but when they asked me to do it, at first, I was like, ‘Get one of the Mannings. Get somebody famous,’” he told Fox Business Digital at the Louisiana Legacy Gala Wednesday night. 

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    Todd Graves speaks onstage during Raising Cane’s Louisiana Legacy at Louisiana Now Pavilion Feb. 5, 2025, in New Orleans. (Jonathan Bachman/Getty Images for Raising Cane’s / Getty Images)

    Graves’ entrepreneurial journey was rooted in Louisiana. “The Mothership,” his first Raising Cane’s storefront, was opened in August 1996 near the LSU campus. Years later, Raising Cane’s employs over 50,000 and operates in 33 states. 

    And if you ask Graves, he’ll tell you Cane’s is just getting started. 

    But seeing the commitment to his community in New Orleans, Baton Rouge and the entire state of Louisiana led to him being named parade king. 

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    Graves may not have gotten why they wanted him to be up on that king float, but then it clicked. 

    “They said, ‘We really want to hit on the side of business. You’ve been a business success story here.’ Then, it made sense to me, right? It was like, ‘OK, [New Orleans] is a great place to do business,’” Graves said. 

    “I grew my business here. I grew my family here, and we have a multibillion-dollar enterprise, and we’re just getting warmed up. We’re worldwide now and growing everywhere. It’s some of that, the business component of it. I want people to watch that parade and just watch it on TV and say, ‘You know what? I haven’t been back to New Orleans with my company conferences in 10 years.’ We need that to come back up. So, representing that, I think, is an honor.”

    The Super Bowl is a hub not just for entertainment and football every year, but for business as well. Every big name brand is represented in some capacity, whether it’s having athletes showcasing their products and name on Radio Row or throwing parties throughout the city. 

    And New Orleans is the perfect place to have a party. 

    Todd Graves and Eli Manning laugh

    Todd Graves and Eli Manning speak onstage during Raising Cane’s Louisiana Legacy at Louisiana NOW Pavilion Feb. 5, 2025, in New Orleans. (Jonathan Bachman/Getty Images for Raising Cane’s / Getty Images)

    But helping the community, especially one with such a rich history, is what Graves was a part of on Wednesday night at the Louisiana Legacy Gala, which honored one of football’s greatest, the Mannings.  

    It was announced that Children’s Hospital New Orleans would be renamed Manning Family Children’s in tribute to the family’s longstanding commitment to serving children in the community. 

    And it was announced that Graves donated $1 million to Walker’s Imaginarium, which will be a first-of-its-kind interactive children’s museum within the hospital named after Walker Beery, who fought terminal brain cancer before his death. 

    Graves called Archie Manning his idol and someone he always wanted to emulate in the community and spoke about the hospital’s mission. 

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    “They gave great care for 600,000 kids this year, and they don’t stop at that,” Graves said. “They keep building every year, taking care of more and more children regardless of whether you can afford it or not. For us, and for me living here in the states and one day, God willing, I’m going to have grandkids and great-grandkids, having this world-class care in our backyard is invaluable.”

    Graves and former New Orleans Saints running back Deuce McAllister, who is on the hospital’s board, discussed how the $1 million donation originated. 

    It was at an arm wrestling competition with Eli Manning, the two-time Super Bowl MVP with the New York Giants, at Rao’s in New York City. Manning eventually beat Graves, and as a man of his word, the donation came in. 

    Lou Fragoso, president and CEO of Manning Family Children’s, explained how people like Graves represent what is so important about New Orleans. 

    “We can’t do the work that we do without the support of the community and support of people like Todd and Raising Cane’s. For seven years, we’ve served every child, every time [saying] yes to a child regardless of their ability to afford pay. 

    “That is our mission, but we can’t do it without the support of the community and the things that we’re doing there and what we’ve built over the last 70 years – the medical and surgical side – and then the things we’re doing out in the community. That’s a game changer.

    Todd Graves speaks at press conference

    Todd Graves speaks during Raising Cane’s Louisiana Legacy at Louisiana Now Pavilion Feb. 5, 2025, in New Orleans. (Jonathan Bachman/Getty Images for Raising Cane’s / Getty Images)

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    “It makes me feel privileged to do it,” Graves said. “I work hard at what we do, and the great people in serving great chicken finger meals every day. With that, we’ve done well, and we make income. It’s a privilege to take some of the money that you make and give back to great organizations like Lou leads here. It’s so prideful.”

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