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Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina, the new chair of the National Republican Senatorial Committee, says President-elect Trump is on-board to help the senator in his mission to protect and expand the newly won GOP majority in the Senate.

Scott, who last week was elected by his Republican colleagues as chair of the Senate GOP campaign committee, met with the former and future president at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort in Palm Beach, Florida.

‘Just had a great meeting with President @realDonaldTrump! He’s all in to help the @NRSC keep a Republican majority for his entire four years AND create a generation of opportunity!’ Scott wrote in a social media post on Thursday night.

After losing the Senate majority in the 2020 elections, the GOP flipped four Democrat-held seats earlier this month, and will control the chamber 53-47 when the next Congress convenes at the beginning of the new year.

In his first interview following his election as NRSC chair, Scott told Fox News Digital last week that ‘what we’re going to do is defend the seats that we have and expand the map so that we can increase the majority brought to us by the Trump victory.’

In this month’s elections, unlike in 2016 and 2020, Trump outperformed many of the GOP’s Senate candidates.

Scott told Fox News Digital that he wants Trump to participate as much as he can in the 2026 Senate contests.

‘Every day and every way, President Trump, I know you have a full-time job. I’m going to ask you to have two full-time jobs. Let’s expand this map,’ Scott emphasized.

He said ‘that means that every single day we need President Trump on the campaign trail, doing fundraisers, talking to folks, because this is President Donald J. Trump’s party, and we need to make sure we expand it, from the man to the movement. We need him to do it.’

Scott last year unsuccessfully ran for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination, before ending his bid and endorsing Trump. The senator was a high-profile surrogate for Trump on the campaign trail this year.

While not as favorable as the 2024 Senate map, the 2026 electoral landscape does give the Republicans some opportunities to flip seats.

Democratic Sens. Jon Ossoff of Georgia and Gary Peters of Michigan are up for re-election in two years in key battleground states Trump flipped last week.

And Sen. Jeanne Shaheen of New Hampshire will be up for re-election in a perennial swing state that Trump lost but over-performed from his 2020 showing. In Virginia, where Trump lost by just five points last week, Democratic Sen. Mark Warner will be up for re-election.

‘How do you expand the map?’ Scott asked. ‘You look at Georgia and Michigan and New Hampshire and Virginia. And if you’re stretching – take a look at New Mexico and Minnesota. President Trump was very competitive in those states.’

But Republicans will also have to play defense. GOP Sen. Susan Collins of Maine is up for re-election in a reliably blue state. And Sen. Thom Tills of North Carolina is also up in 2026, in a battleground state that Trump narrowly won.

Scott emphasized that ‘the good news is as long as Susan Collins is running, I think we have a shot to win. Last time, she won by several points. This time, she’ll win by several points. Thom Tillis staying in North Carolina is good for our party.’

In the 2022 election cycle, when the Republicans blew a chance to win back the majority, NRSC chair Sen. Rick Scott of Florida was criticized for a hands-off approach in the GOP Senate primaries. 

This past cycle, now-former NRSC chair Sen. Steve Daines of Montana got involved in Senate Republican nomination battles.

Asked whether the NRSC will take sides in competitive Republican Senate primaries during his tenure the next two years, Scott told Fox News, ‘I think the best thing for us to do is have a family conversation next year about what we’re looking at. How we’re going to defend that map and then make the best decisions we can as it relates to making sure that we end up with more seats than we currently have.’

‘Thank God we’re at 53. I’d like to see 55,’ Scott added. 

Asked whether holding 55 seats was his goal, Scott joked, ‘if it were up to me, we’d have 100 seats.’

Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, who easily won re-election earlier this month in blue-state New York, is expected to take over as chair of the rival Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee. Senate Democrats will hold their leadership elections later this year.

David Bergstein, the DSCC communications director for the past couple of election cycles, told Fox News that ‘in a challenging political environment, Democrats made history. We won multiple races in states won by Trump. We dramatically over-performed the presidential results. And for the first time in over a decade, Senate Democrats have won multiple races in states won by the opposite party’s presidential nominee.’

‘The outcome of this cycle puts Senate Democrats in the strongest possible position to reclaim the majority in 2026,’ Bergstein touted.

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One league was simply not big enough for Shohei Ohtani and Aaron Judge.

For three years, Major League Baseball’s two biggest stars traded off winning the American League Most Valuable Player award, with Ohtani’s two-way greatness on the mound and at the plate earning him the distinction in 2021 and ’23, while Judge had to hit an AL-record 62 home runs to take the crown in 2022.

Now, after Ohtani left the Los Angeles Angels for the National League and the Dodgers, there’s an award for each of them. And Thursday night, they took ’em home in unanimous fashion.

Ohtani won his first NL MVP and third overall on the strength of the first 50-homer, 50-steal season in major league history, while Judge’s greatest season ever resulted in his second AL MVP awarded by the Baseball Writers’ Association of America.

Ohtani, 30, joins Hall of Famer Frank Robinson as the only players to win MVPs in both leagues after his 54-homer, 59-steal season smashed almost all his career highs. It’s almost like not having to pitch while recovering from a second Tommy John surgery merely galvanized his offensive production.

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He batted a career-best .310 and led the NL in on-base percentage (.390), slugging (.646), OPS (1.036), adjusted OPS (190) and RBI (130). His 134 runs scored and 411 total bases led the major leagues and were career highs.

Yet Ohtani still couldn’t out-slug Judge.

The New York Yankees captain hit 58 home runs, for a moment stirring thoughts of a run at his ’22 record 62 longballs and led the majors in nine other significant offensive statistics, including career bests in WAR (10.8) and OPS (1.159, 223 adjusted).

Judge’s 1.010 career OPS is now tied with Rogers Hornsby for 10th all time, and he joins Alex Rodriguez, Roger Maris, Mickey Mantle, Yogi Berra, Joe DiMaggio and Lou Gehrig as Yankees with multiple MVPs.

NL MVP winner: Shohei Ohtani, Dodgers

The greatest two-way player in baseball might also be the master of reinvention.

When a second Tommy John surgery sidelined Shohei Ohtani from pitching in 2024, it seemed he’d be hard-pressed to add a third MVP to his mantle, what with the novelty of two-way greatness on hold for the year. Yet after signing a $700 million contract and moving from the AL to the NL in joining the Los Angeles Dodgers, Ohtani proved there may be no ceiling in his universe.

Ohtani, 30, was named NL MVP Thursday night after his 54-homer, 59-steal season produced the first 50-50 campaign in major league history. He prevailed in unanimous fashion over New York Mets shortstop Francisco Lindor and Arizona Diamondbacks second baseman Ketel Marte.

In setting the tone as the leadoff man for a club that won 98 games and its first full-season World Series title since 1988, Ohtani became just the second Dodgers position player, along with Cody Bellinger, to win NL MVP since Kirk Gibson claimed the honor for those ’88 Dodgers.

Ohtani also becomes the 11th player in baseball history to win three MVPs, joining former Angels teammates Mike Trout and Albert Pujols. Come 2025, he’ll take aim at a fourth MVP that would place him behind only Barry Bonds’ seven, and who’s to bet against him?

After all, he should be pitching again.  

NL MVP voting results

Shohei Ohtani, Dodgers (30 first-place votes): 420 points
Francisco Lindor, Mets: 263
Ketel Marte, Diamondbacks: 229
Marcell Ozuna, Braves: 134
William Contreras, Brewers: 132
Bryce Harper, Phillies: 130
Chris Sale, Braves: 99
Elly De La Cruz, Reds: 89
Jackson Merrill, Padres: 57
Willy Adames, Brewers: 54

Also receiving votes: Matt Chapman, Giants, 37; Zack Wheeler, Phillies, 31; Mookie Betts, Dodgers, 24; Jurickson Profar, Padres, 23; Kyle Schwarber, Phillies, 15; Manny Machado, Padres, 12; Freddie Freeman, Dodgers, 6; Luis Arraez, Padres, 4; Paul Skenes, Pirates, 3; Teoscar Hernández, Dodgers, 3; Ezequiel Tovar, Rockies, 3; Jackson Chourio, Brewers, 1; Dylan Cease, Padres, 1.

AL MVP winner: Aaron Judge, Yankees

One Bronx Bomber will command so much of the spotlight this winter. But Thursday night, we were reminded that Aaron Judge remains the baddest man in pinstripes – and the American League.

Judge won his second AL Most Valuable Player award, earning unanimous support from the Baseball Writers Association of America, and became the seventh New York Yankee to earn multiple MVP awards.

His first came in 2022, when Judge broke the AL record for home runs set by one of those two-time winners – Roger Maris – and then hit the free agent market. Not only did the Yankees retain him with a nine-year, $360 million contract, they also named him captain.

Two years later, the captain is again king: Judge hit a major-league best 58 home runs and exceeded his career highs in several categories, most notably with a 1.159 OPS and 10.8 WAR. And he formed a beautiful medley with lefty slugger Juan Soto, who finished third in MVP voting after hitting a career-high 41 home runs himself.

Now, it is Soto on the market, and Judge has advocated for his return. Soto will well exceed Judge’s free-agent haul, perhaps exceeding a half-billion dollars in value. Yet Judge once again proved he’s the one setting the on-field standard in the AL. 

AL MVP voting results

Aaron Judge, Yankees (30 first place votes): 420 points
Bobby Witt Jr., Royals: 270
Juan Soto, Yankees: 229
Gunnar Henderson, Orioles: 208
José Ramírez, Guardians: 184
Vladimir Guerrero Jr., Blue Jays: 99
Tarik Skubal, Tigers: 93
Jarren Duran, Red Sox: 90
Yordan Alvarez, Astros: 75
Brent Rooker, Athletics: 40

Also receiving votes: Emmanuel Clase, Guardians, 36; Cal Raleigh, Mariners, 12; Rafael Devers, Red Sox, 5; Anthony Santander, Orioles, 4; Jose Altuve, Astros, 1; Tyler Holton, Tigers, 1; Seth Lugo, Royals, 1; Corey Seager, Rangers, 1; Framber Valdez, Astros, 1.

MLB MVP winners

2024: Aaron Judge (Yankees), Shohei Ohtani (Dodgers)
2023: Shohei Ohtani (Angels), Ronald Acuña Jr. (Braves)
2022: Aaron Judge (Yankees), Paul Goldschmidt (Cardinals)
2021: Shohei Ohtani (Angels), Bryce Harper (Phillies)
2020: José Abreu (White Sox), Freddie Freeman (Braves)
2019: Mike Trout (Angels), Cody Bellinger (Dodgers)
2018: Mookie Betts (Red Sox), Christian Yelich (Brewers)
2017: Jose Altuve (Astros), Giancarlo Stanton (Marlins)
2016: Mike Trout (Angels), Kris Bryant (Cubs)
2015: Josh Donaldson (Blue Jays), Bryce Harper (Nationals)
2014: Mike Trout (Angels), Clayton Kershaw (Dodgers)
2013: Miguel Cabrera (Tigers), Andrew McCutchen (Pirates)
2012: Miguel Cabrera (Tigers), Buster Posey (Giants)
2011: Justin Verlander (Tigers), Ryan Braun (Brewers)
2010: Josh Hamilton (Rangers), Joey Votto (Reds)
2009: Joe Mauer (Twins), Albert Pujols (Cardinals)
2008: Dustin Pedroia (Red Sox), Albert Pujols (Cardinals)
2007: Alex Rodriguez (Yankees), Jimmy Rollins (Phillies)

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For as much as it was a “dream job” for Kenny Dillingham to become the head coach at Arizona State, he inherited a complete mess at his alma mater. 

The program was still reeling from the tenure of Herm Edwards that ended amid an investigation that resulted significant NCAA sanctions. Edwards was fired three games into the 2022 season that finished 3-9 – the school’s worst winning percentage since 1946. In the aftermath, Dillingham’s first season ended with the same record. Five-star quarterback Jaden Rashada – a top recruit for the school – didn’t pan out and left the program after one season. 

The second season wasn’t supposed to be much better. Arizona State was picked to finish last place in its first season in the Big 12, and Dillingham, the youngest Power Four coach at age 34, was ranked the worst coach in his new conference. 

Instead, Dillingham has orchestrated a complete turnaround, guiding the Sun Devils into the thick of the chaotic Big 12 title race and a chance to make the College Football Playoff. 

If this is the first week you’ve paid any attention to the Sun Devils this season, don’t worry; like Desmond Howard revealed on ‘College GameDay” last week, not many were aware of how good Arizona State has been. It went into the game at Kansas State with a silent four wins in five games. 

The Wildcats were a touchdown favorite and considered one of the top contenders in the Big 12, but Arizona State blitzed them with a 21-0 start and won convincingly. The Sun Devils are now 8-2, are in the College Football Playoff rankings at No. 21 with conference leader Brigham Young set to visit the desert in a game with playoff implications that would have been considered more than unlikely at the start of the season..

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PLAYOFF PREDICTION: Colorado enters field, Alabama grabs first-round bye

Dillingham played coy on whether he saw this success coming, pointing to the fact they’re a few plays away from just having six wins or being undefeated. But he sensed some special was building when his team faced Mississippi State in the second game of the season, when they scored 27-points in the first half in a comfortable win over the Bulldogs.

He saw the physicality and the passion, but what stuck out was the camaraderie.

“It kind of confirmed that we got something about ourselves,” Dillingham said.

Clearly that something is a team capable of playing meaningful postseason football, but the Sun Devils don’t seem all too interested in what number is beside their name. When Dillingham told his team they were ranked, he said they just booed. The coach finds the sudden hype comical and only helpful in recruiting, not winning. The message to team leaders last week was ‘don’t get lost in the sauce.’

“Nobody cares. Nobody in three years is going to say, ‘Remember when ASU was ranked No. 21 in week 11 in 2024?” Dillingham said. “It’s an irrelevant thing.”

Irrelevant at this point, sure, but the ranking does speak to the tremendous job Dillingham has done in turning the program around.

One bright spot last season was the emergence of running back Cam Skattebo, who spent two seasons at Sacramento State joining the program. Skattebo was a unique all-purpose player last season, rushing for 758 yards and also starting one game at quarterback, while playing receiver and punting, This season, he has become one of the top rushers in Division this season with 119.3 yards per game on the ground. 

“Oh man, he is a dangerous running back,” BYU head coach Kalani Sitake said of Skattebo. ‘He’s physical but you can tell he is having fun out there. It’s been a pleasure watching him play,”

In addition to its potent running game, what’s really helped the Sun Devils on offense is keeping the ball. They’ve only turned it over seven times this season, among the top 10 in the country. Ball security will be especially important against BYU, which is sixth in the country in the forced turnovers with an average of two takeaways a game. 

The loss BYU suffered to Kansas also put the Cougars in dangerous territory. They fell to No. 14 in the playoff rankings – still in position to reach the playoff with a Big 12 title but not without it – meaning there’s a sense of urgency to win out. After seeing how devastating a loss was, Dillingham sees BYU having a chip on its shoulder.

“They definitely have an advantage when it comes to mindset based off of last week’s game. They’re going to come into this game like it’s the Super Bowl, which it is,” he said.

Not many people in August would have thought BYU vs. Arizona State would have playoff implications, yet it’s just another example of how wide open the Big 12 is. The Cougars are in first place, but they’re tied with surging Colorado, with Arizona State and Iowa State just behind. 

There’s an argument the conference isn’t the strongest – the champion will likely be the only playoff team – but the expanded postseason allows for teams that would have been afterthoughts to have legitimate hype.

What a difference 365 days can make. Arizona State has gone from a team just trying to stay afloat to now playing meaningful football in November. The Valley is building with anticipation for a coach that has shown how much love he has for the school he grew up rooting for and attended. 

For most of the past two seasons, there were swaths of empty seats inside Mountain America Stadium. Now, they’ll be playing against BYU in front of a sellout crowd in one of the program’s biggest games in the past decade. 

“We haven’t had one like this yet since I’ve been here,” Dillingham said. “This is going to be the game where people can really feel it.”

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Israel’s U.N. Ambassador Danny Danon tells Fox News Digital that his country is keeping its ‘eyes open’ for any potential aggression from Iran during the Trump transition period, adding it would be a ‘mistake’ for the Islamic Republic to carry out an attack. 

The comments come after Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi vowed earlier this week that Iran would retaliate against Israel for the strategic airstrikes it carried out against Tehran on Oct. 26. Araghchi was quoted in Iranian media saying ‘we have not given up our right to react, and we will react in our time and in the way we see fit.’ 

‘I would advise him not to challenge us. We have already shown our capabilities. We have proved that they are vulnerable. We can actually target any location in Iran. They know that,’ Danon told Fox News Digital. 

‘So I would advise them not to make that mistake. If they think that now, because of the transition period, they can take advantage of it, they are wrong,’ he added. ‘We are keeping our eyes open and we are ready for all scenarios.’ 

Danon says he believes one of the most important challenges for the incoming Trump administration will be the way the U.S. deals with Iran. 

‘Regarding the new administration, I think the most important challenge will be the way you challenge Iran, the aggression, the threat of the Iranian regime. I believe that the U.S. will have to go back to a leading position on this issue,’ he told Fox News Digital. 

‘We are fighting the same enemies, the enemies of the United States of America. When you look at the Iranians, the Houthis, Hezbollah, Hamas, all those bad actors that are coming against Israel… that is the enemy of the United States. So I think every American should support us and understand what we are doing now,’ Danon also said. 

Danon spoke as the U.S. vetoed a draft resolution against Israel at the U.N. Security Council on Wednesday. 

The resolution, which was overseen by Algeria, sought an ‘immediate, unconditional and permanent cease-fire’ to be imposed on Israel. The resolution did not guarantee the release of the hostages still being held by Hamas within Gaza. 

‘It was a shameful resolution because… it didn’t have the linkage between the cease-fire and the call [for] the release of the hostages. And I want to thank the United States for taking a strong position and vetoing this resolution,’ Danon said. ‘I think it sent a very clear message that the U.S. stands with its strongest ally with Israel. And, you know, it was shameful, too, to hear the voices of so many ambassadors speaking about a cease-fire but abandoning the 101 hostages. We will not forget them. We will never abandon them. We will continue to fight until we bring all of them back home.’ 

Fox News’ Benjamin Weinthal contributed to this report. 

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Rep. Elise Stefanik, R-N.Y., met with 10 senators in the first two days of meetings while courting approval as President-elect Donald Trump’s nominee for U.S. ambassador to the United Nations. 

Stefanik, the current House GOP chair, communicated her record supporting Israel and combating antisemitism to Republican senators as the upper chamber must approve her appointment to Trump’s Cabinet. 

Kicking off the road to confirmation, Stefanik met with Sens. Katie Britt, R-Ala., MarkWayne Mullin, R-Okla., Jim Banks, R-Ind., Tim Scott, R-S.C., Shelley Capito, R-W.Va., on Wednesday.

Then, on Thursday, Stefanik, the fourth-highest ranking House member, met with Sens. Steve Daines, R-Mt., Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., Susan Collins, R-Maine, and John Barasso, R-Wyo. 

Stefanik posted photos of her meeting with each senator on X, saying their discussions centered around standing with Israel, combating antisemitism and supporting Trump’s ‘America First peace through strength national security policies.’ 

McConnell, the outgoing Senate majority leader, said in a statement that ‘the world’s largest international organization is in dire need of a wake-up call, and Representative Stefanik is uniquely well-suited to deliver it.’ 

‘In a forum corrupted by authoritarians where cowardly majorities hector the embattled Jewish state of Israel, the next U.S. Ambassador must speak with uncompromising moral clarity,’ McConnell said. ‘I am particularly encouraged that the President-elect’s nominee shares my commitment to holding UNRWA accountable for its role in the horrors of October 7th and keeping U.S. taxpayer dollars clear of such vile complicity.’ 

‘I look forward to the Senate’s timely consideration of Representative Stefanik’s nomination. I hope and expect she will be a proud proponent of an American foreign policy based on peace through strength,’ McConnell added. 

The meetings came at the same time the International Criminal Court (ICC) issued arrest warrants Thursday for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and former Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant for ‘crimes against humanity and war crimes,’ including the use of starvation as a method of warfare and targeting civilians. President Biden condemned the move as ‘outrageous,’ and the Pentagon said it ‘fundamentally rejects’ the decision by the ICC, which ‘does not have jurisdiction over this matter.’ 

‘Whatever the ICC might imply, there is no equivalence – none – between Israel and Hamas,’ Biden said. 

Stefanik has been a staunch supporter of Israel as it continues its offensive against Hamas terrorists in Gaza in response to the Oct. 7 attacks, as well as other Iran-backed terrorist groups in the region. 

Last month, Stefanik demanded a ‘complete reassessment’ of U.S. funding for the United Nations and called to stop financial backing for the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA). 

Biden had suspended funding to UNRWA after the agency fired several staffers in Gaza who Israeli authorities accused of participating in the Oct. 7 attacks. 

However, the congresswoman derided how the Biden-Harris administration ‘has sent over $1 billion to UNRWA since 2021, filling the coffers of this terrorist front.’ 

‘This must end,’ Stefanik said in a statement on Nov. 4. ‘Just as President Trump did, and I have consistently advocated for, we must permanently cut off funding to UNRWA which instills antisemitic hate in Palestinians, houses weapons for terrorists, and steals the aid they are supposed to be distributing.’

The United States contributes 22% of the United Nations budget, and therefore is the world body’s largest single donor. 

Through her position on the House Education and the Workforce Committee, Stefanik also has fought against surging antisemitism on American college campuses in the wake of Oct. 7 and held the presidents of Ivy League universities to account for failing to condemn calls for the genocide of Jews by anti-Israel protesters. 

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The Trump-Vance transition team has still not signed documents required to formally begin the transition of power, the White House says. 

Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre told reporters Thursday that ‘Our teams continue to stay in touch’ and ‘as of now… the Trump-Vance transition team has not yet entered into the agreements with the White House and the General Service Administration (GSA).’ 

Not signing the documents means the government can’t provide security clearances and briefings to incoming administration officials and the FBI can’t screen Trump’s picks for the Cabinet and other key posts. The agreements also provide ‘office space, IT equipment, office supplies, fleet vehicles, mail management, and payment of compensation and other expenses,’ according to the GSA. 

‘President Biden met with the president-elect to show that transition of power and obviously offering, any assistance, needed to make sure that happens in a way that is peaceful, obviously, and efficient,’ according to Jean-Pierre. 

‘So were going to continue to engage with the Trump transition team, to ensure that we do have that efficient, effective, transition of power,’ she added. ‘And in those conversations, we certainly are stressing that the White House and the administration stand ready to provide assistance and that access to services and information certainly outlined in the GSA, and the White House memorandum of agreement. So, those conversations continue. And we want this to go smoothly, and that’s what we’re trying to get to.’ 

The continued delay on agreeing to start the formal transition process may eventually force senators to vote on Trump’s Cabinet picks without the benefit of the usual background checks, the Associated Press reported. 

That process is designed to uncover personal problems, criminal histories and other potential red flags that would raise questions about a nominee’s suitability for key jobs. 

It’s unclear why the documents haven’t been signed yet.  

Transition spokesman Brian Hughes said earlier this month that the team’s ‘lawyers continue to constructively engage with’ lawyers and officials from President Joe Biden’s outgoing administration and promised updates ‘once a decision is made.’ 

The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

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Outgoing Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., announced that he will chair the Senate Rules Committee as well as the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Defense during the 119th Congress.

‘America’s national security interests face the gravest array of threats since the Second World War. At this critical moment, a new Senate Republican majority has a responsibility to secure the future of U.S. leadership and primacy,’ McConnell said in a statement. 

‘I intend to play an active role in this urgent mission as Chairman of the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Defense, and I look forward to working closely with incoming Chair Susan Collins to accomplish our shared goal,’ he noted.

Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, is currently the vice chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee and the ranking member of the Appropriations Subcommittee on Defense. 

‘The Senate Rules Committee will also have important work to accomplish in the 119th Congress, and I look forward to leading it as Chairman,’ McConnell said in the statement.

‘Defending the Senate as an institution and protecting the right to political speech in our elections remain among my longest-standing priorities. Ranking Member Deb Fischer has done an outstanding job advancing these causes, and I know she will remain a key partner in the committee’s ongoing work,’ he noted.

McConnell, 82, has served in the U.S. Senate since 1985, which means he will soon reach his 40-year-anniversary in the chamber. His current term ends in early 2027.

While he has helmed the Senate GOP since 2007, McConnell announced earlier this year that his current term as Senate Republican leader would be his last in the position.

Sen. John Thune, R-S.D. has been tapped to succeed McConnell in the role next year. 

Republicans won the Senate majority during the 2024 elections — Thune will be Senate majority leader.

‘John Thune’s election is a clear endorsement of a consummate leader. The confidence our colleagues have placed in John’s legislative experience and political skill is well deserved,’ McConnell said in a statement.

‘The American people elected Republicans to restore stability and order after four years of Washington Democrats’ failure. John Thune will take the reins with a tremendous opportunity to lead this transformation, and Senate Republicans stand behind him, ready to get to work,’ he added.

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‘Wintry mix’ turned into a lot of lake-effect snow during the second half of the ‘Thursday Night Football’ game between the Cleveland Browns and Pittsburgh Steelers at Huntington Bank Field.

It’s a cinematic and fun football aesthetic for those of us watching on TV while cozy in our warm homes.

Take a look at the wild winter wonderland scenes from Cleveland :

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Los Angeles Dodgers star Shohei Ohtani may have won his third MVP award on Thursday, but Decoy, the Dodgers’ most valuable pup, stole the show.

Ohtani capped off his historic 2024 season with the Dodgers where he became the first player in MLB history with a 50-homer, 50-steal season before winning his first World Series title with the National League Most Valuable Player award on Thursday. Dodgers veteran pitcher Clayton Kershaw delivered the news to his teammate during the Baseball Writers’ Association of America (BBWAA) Awards.

The broadcast cut to Ohtani sitting on the couch with his wife, former professional basketball player Mamiko Tanaka, who he married in February. Sitting between the couple was their beloved Kooikerhondje pup, Decoy.

Ohtani and Mamiko clapped and applauded, but the celebration appeared to be too much for Decoy. He quickly jumped off the couch and darted out of the frame to the surprise of both Ohtani and Mamiko.

MLB MVP WINNERS: Aaron Judge, Shohei Ohtani claim baseball’s top award in unanimous fashion

All things Dodgers: Latest Los Angeles Dodgers news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

Decoy has become the Dodgers’ unofficial mascot this season. He was featured in Ohtani’s bobblehead, which depicted the slugger holding Decoy, and he became the first dog to throw out a first pitch on Aug. 28. Decoy was on hand for the Dodgers’ World Series parade and celebration ceremony earlier this month.

Ohtani’s third MVP award marks his first in the National League. He won two with the Los Angeles Angels in the American League before joining the Dodgers this season. Ohtani, 30, joins Hall of Famer Frank Robinson as the only players to win MVPs in both leagues after his 54-homer, 59-steal season smashed almost all his career highs. 

He batted a career-best .310 and led the NL in on-base percentage (.390), slugging (.646), OPS (1.036), adjusted OPS (190) and RBI (130). His 134 runs scored and 411 total bases led the major leagues and were career highs.

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There’s this thing about kickstands, they flip up as easily as they do down.

They’re inherently temporary, a steady support when needed and easily retracted when escaping. 

“You know what a kickstand is? That means I’m resting,” Colorado coach Deion Sanders said earlier this week. “We ain’t going nowhere. We’re about to get comfortable.”

To this I say: who cares where Sanders coaches football in 2025? At Colorado, a college football blue blood or with the NFL’s Dallas Cowboys. 

We should only care that he does more. 

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More Deion, more Prime. More of that unique brand and bravado to impact others outside his orbit of here and now. This is going to sound absurd, but I don’t think Deion fully comprehends the power of Prime away from the field.  

Deion is the ultimate Man in the Arena. And now it’s time, in the words of Teddy Roosevelt, to dare greatly.

He’s too far into this coaching thing now. It has transcended far beyond blocking and tackling.

Two years ago, when Deion was entertaining the idea of leaving what he quickly built at Championship Subdivision school Jackson State for an Bowl Subdivision job, I said Auburn would be foolish to not hire him. He grew up in the south, was a prep legend at North Fort Myers High School in Florida and an All-American at Florida State.

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PLAYOFF PREDICTION: Colorado enters field, Alabama grabs first-round bye

If anyone knew the south and how to recruit the talent-rich footprint, and at the very least stress Alabama and then-coach Nick Saban, it’s was Deion. More than that, he could be a change agent on the biggest stage in college football: the mighty SEC. 

That’s where this story begins and ends, where the presence and full promotional might of Deion can work wonders.

If Deion were the coach at Auburn, his big, bold personality could’ve convinced – wait, willed – SEC presidents to play annual non-conference games against HBCU schools, those million dollar paydays for guarantee games alleviating financial strain for some of the 54 football-playing institutions. Maybe even allowing them to survive and thrive. 

That doesn’t mean he can’t do the same at Colorado and the Big 12, even though the level of financial investment is clearly different. It doesn’t mean he can’t do much more in the NFL, where 32 of the richest, savviest businessmen and women run the most efficient, money-making sports machine on the planet.

The NFL makes $12.4 billion annually in media rights deals. Read that again: $12.4 billion.

It wouldn’t take much for a change agent to get the ear of an influential owner — I don’t know, say, Cowboys king Jerry Jones — and convince him (and by proxy, the other 31 owners) of the greater good in direct financial support of football-playing HBCUs.

Two years ago when Deion arrived at Colorado, he told USA TODAY’s Jarrett Bell that he was a “hope agent.” He has also proven, at the FBS level, that he has the coaching thing figured out. 

Jackson State was a mess when Deion arrived, on and off the field. Locker room, practice field, weight room, stadium; all out of date. All changed (rehabbed or replaced) by the Prime brand and bravado. 

At one point, Jackson State had sponsorship deals with Under Armour, Pepsi, American Airlines and Proctor and Gamble — a smorgasbord of American advertising.

Deion won two Southwest Athletic Conference championships at Jackson State before leaving for downtrodden Colorado, and in Year 2, is two wins from playing for a spot in the College Football Playoff and making fools of those who believed it couldn’t be done (ahem, guilty).

But this is more than Deion, the coach. The is Prime, the hope agent. 

It doesn’t matter where Deion coaches in 2025. All that matters is how he affects the game on and off the field. 

If Colorado does reach the CFP, Deion’s presence will loom even larger on the sport’s biggest stage, in its first 12-team playoff. It’s an advertising bonanza made in heaven. 

Prime, the hope agent, can’t let that moment go to waste if he returns to Colorado — or flips the kickstand and leaves for the NFL.

He’s too far into this coaching thing to not dare greatly now.

Matt Hayes is the senior national college football writer for USA TODAY Sports Network. Follow him on X at @MattHayesCFB.

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