Archive

2025

Browsing

President Donald Trump is expected to pardon pro-life activists convicted under the FACE Act during President Joe Biden’s administration in the coming days.

The pardons, first reported by The Daily Wire, would apply to activists convicted of protesting near abortion clinics during various demonstrations. The details and scope of the pardons have yet to be revealed.

Thomas Ciesielka, a spokesman for the pro-life law firm the Thomas Moore Society, confirmed plans for the pardon to Fox News Digital.

News of the plan comes just one day before the March for Life, an annual pro-life march that takes place in Washington, D.C.

Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., had called on Trump to pardon activists convicted under the FACE Act since the president was sworn into office.

‘No administration in history has targeted Christians like the Biden Admin. We saw one persecution after another, from shutting down churches during COVID to raiding pro-lifers homes at the crack of dawn. EVERY pro-life prisoner Biden wrongly imprisoned should be pardoned,’ Hawley wrote on X.

Hawley said he spoke with Trump about a potential pardon plan on Thursday morning, saying they had a ‘great conversation.’

Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, has also introduced legislation that would dismantle the FACE Act. Many lawmakers have argued that Democratic administrations have weaponized it against pro-life groups and Christians.

‘97% of FACE Act prosecutions between the years of 1994-2024 were initiated against pro-life Americans; it is laughable to argue that the law hasn’t been weaponized. Let’s put H.R. 589 on the President’s desk and end this once and for all,’ Rep. Chip Roy, R-Texas, said in a statement reacting to the pardon news.

Trump also issued a blanket pardon for nearly all January 6 prisoners shortly after he took the oath of office.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, said on Thursday she can’t support Pete Hegseth to be President Donald Trump’s secretary of Defense. 

‘Given the global security environment we’re operating in, it is critical that we confirm a Secretary of Defense, however, I regret that I am unable to support Mr. Hegseth,’ she concluded in a lengthy statement posted to X. 

In her reasoning, Murkowski cited infidelity, ‘allegations of sexual assault and excessive drinking’ and Hegseth’s previous comments on women serving in the military. 

The behaviors that he has admitted to alone, she said, show ‘a lack of judgment that is unbecoming of someone who would lead our armed forces.’

While Hegseth has admitted to past infidelity, he has denied claims of excessive drinking and sexual assault. 

The Alaska Republican noted that she met with Hegseth ‘and carefully reviewed his writings, various reports, and other pertinent materials.’ 

Further, Murkowski said she ‘closely followed his hearing before the Senate Armed Services Committee and gathered substantial feedback from organizations, veterans, and Alaskans.’

However, ‘After thorough evaluation, I must conclude that I cannot in good conscience support his nomination for Secretary of Defense,’ she said. 

Other GOP senators who have yet to take a public position on Hegseth include Sens. Susan Collins, R-Maine, and former GOP Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky.

Collins told reporters on Thursday, ‘I’ll be releasing a statement shortly.’ 

Hegseth will need a simple majority of the Senate to vote in his favor in order to be confirmed. With the Republicans’ 53-seat majority, he can only afford to lose a handful of the conference. If there is a tie, newly sworn in Vice President JD Vance will be needed to cast the tie-breaking vote. 

The move to oppose Hegseth’s confirmation was not unexpected from Murkowski, who has earned a reputation for occasionally bucking her party. 

Fox News was recently told it was possible Hegseth’s confirmation would need Vance’s tie-breaking vote.In particular, Fox News was told to watch McConnell, Collins and Murkowski on the pivotal confirmation vote. 

If McConnell and Collins join Murkowski in voting nay, Vance will need to come to the Capitol to break the tie and confirm Hegseth as Defense Secretary.

 No Vice President had ever broken a tie to confirm a cabinet Secretary until former Vice President Pence did so to confirm Betsy DeVos as Education Secretary on February 7, 2017. Pence also broke ties to confirm former Sen. Sam Brownback (R-KS) as ambassador for religious freedom in 2018. He also broke a tie to confirm current Budget Director nominee Russ Vought as Deputy Budget Director in 2018.

Over the last few days, Hegseth’s nomination has faced new pressure with the revelation of an affidavit from his former sister-in-law that alleged he made his ex-wife Samantha Hegseth fear for her safety. Additionally, a source familiar told Fox News that Samantha had provided a new statement to the FBI, which alleged ‘Pete Hegseth has had and continues to have a problem with alcohol abuse.’

Hegseth maintained his denial of any allegations of alcohol, physical or sexual abuse. 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

I have been traveling in the US since 1/15 and attended the CMTA Mid-Winter retreat in Tampa, FL 1/16-1/17 and then moved to Redmond, WA to work from the Stockcharts.com office this week. Unfortunately, the 40-degree (F) temp drop between Tampa and Seattle left me with a cold and a soar throat so I am skipping this week’s video.

On this daily RRG, I have highlighted the tails for XLE and XLY.

In my “best five sectors” series, XLE entered the top-5 this week, replacing XLK which was pushed down to position 6/ Consumer Discretionary still remains the no 1 sector.

The daily tail for XLE really stands out in terms of length and having both the highest RS-Ratio and highest RS-Momentum readings in the universe.

XLY rotated through lagging and has recently started to pick up again.

The reason why XLY still remains the strongest sector can be seen on the weekly RRG below.

On this time frame, XLY is deep inside the leading quadrant and rolling over as it is losing RS-Momentum, so far the loss of relative strength (RS-ratio) remains limited.

The XLE tail is another story, the rotation here suggests weakness as it is rotating back into the lagging quadrant.

The strength on the daily for XLE and the weakness for XLK have caused them to switch positions. So far that has not been very beneficial yet but time will tell.

But while the sector is now one of the best five we may as well take a look at the individual stocks and see if there are any interesting charts to be found.

Energy – XLE

The RRG (weekly) for Energy stocks shows an evenly spread universe with a bit more tails at higher RS-Ratio levels.

While checking the price charts of symbols showing strong RRG characteristics a few came out as potentially interesting.

EQT Corp – EQT

EQT is well inside the leading quadrant and recently started rolling over. However, the upward break in the price chart opened up a lot of upside potential.

A drop back towards or into the support zone between 48-50 would be an ideal time to look for buying opportunities, if we get there. Any newly formed higher low will confirm the strength of the current move.

Coterra Energy – CTRA

CTRA is somewhat similar. Here also a nice upward break out of a long sideways range which is holding up well. Any setback into the former resistance area, now support, should be seen as a renewed entry opportunity.

CTRA still has some resistance waiting around 32, the level of the 2022 peak.

Baker Hughes – BKR

From the cluster of symbols on leading or weakening around 100 on the RS-Momentum scale, BKR shows a promising chart.

The recent break above its previous high is holding up well while relative strength remains strong. The current, mild, loss of relative momentum seems temporary.

EOG Resources – EOG

EOG is located close to the benchmark with a very short tail and it has just crossed back into the leading quadrant. The upward break in the raw-RS line suggests that there is more relative upside underway.

On the price chart, there is serious overhead resistance just below 140 where several highs have lined up over the past three years. But the in-between-lows during that same period are all higher. This builds a very large ascending triangle which is generally a bullish pattern. The trigger will be the upward break above that horizontal barrier.

The long-term implications show up even better on the monthly chart for EOG

Once that upper boundary is taken out EOG will have some serious upside potential.

#StayAlert, –Julius

One reason for Jake Elliott’s kicking woes this postseason? 

Saquon Barkley. 

The Philadelphia Eagles running back is simply doing his job by reeling off long runs that end in the end zone. No player in NFL history has more touchdown runs of more than 60 yards in a season (six, including the playoffs). But his explosive scoring plays have an unintended consequence on the team’s extra-point operation. 

‘You see No. 26 back there. He could take it 80 yards in the blink of an eye,’ Eagles special teams coordinator Michael Clay said Tuesday. ‘We just got to make sure we stay true to our process and not speed up with the adrenaline of the game.’

Both of Elliott’s extra-point misses in the divisional round against the Los Angeles Rams last Sunday came after big runs from Barkley (in the fourth quarter) and Jalen Hurts (a 44-yard dash on the game’s first possession).

All things Eagles: Latest Philadelphia Eagles news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

On the first miss, Clay said Elliott pulled the kick left because he “just got too quick on it.” He added the “sudden change” and not having methodical drives by the offense to go through his usual process on the sideline impacted his accuracy. 

“Nothing overbearing that I saw from him,” he said. 

Elliott’s point-after miss against the Green Bay Packers the previous Sunday followed a 24-yard catch-and-run by Dallas Goedert that finished a drive in two minutes, 26 seconds. 

Elliott’s only extra-point miss of the regular season came on Nov. 14 against the Washington Commanders, the Eagles’ opponent Sunday in the NFC championship game. 

He’s made all six of his field goals during the postseason but is 2-for-5 on extra points after he finished the season 28-for-36 – the 77.8% conversion rate the second-worst of his career (73.7% in 2020). 

“I don’t think Jake really dwells on it. … He’s the kind of guy that has almost like a golfer’s mindset,” Clay said. “You will hit a bad shot here as a golfer, but how do you bounce back from it?

“It really showed when he missed that first extra point. He bounced back with some good kickoffs and those three field goals to help us put some points on the board.”

Six of Elliott’s eight field-goal misses were from beyond 50 yards, where he finished 1-of-7.  

Eagles head coach Nick Sirianni said during a local Philadelphia radio station interview that he has no hesitation sticking with Elliott. 

“I got a lot of faith in Jake and I know he’s clutch when we need him to be clutch,” Sirianni told 94.1 WIP. 

The snowy and windy conditions Sunday against the Rams weren’t an excuse, Sirianni added, and he commended Elliott for bouncing back after his early miss. Elliott broke a 13-13 tie with a 44-yarder that tailed right but was true from the left hashmark, and he chipped in his final two attempts from 23 and 37 yards out, respectively (but missed the extra point after Barkley’s 78-yard jaunt).

“He misses an extra point early in the game and then nails three field goals, so I think it shows just the opposite that he is able to embrace the adversity,” Sirianni said. “Put it in the past and play the current play and that’s what I love about Jake.”

A fifth-round draft pick by the Cincinnati Bengals in 2017, Elliott resumed kickoff duties from punter Braden Mann – the holder for his kicks – for the final two weeks of the regular season. His main job, however, is to put points on the board, particularly in key moments. 

Elliott’s second missed extra point against the Rams opened the door for a comeback. Had Matthew Stafford and Los Angeles found the end zone on their final drive and won 29-28, talk radio in Philadelphia likely would have had a field day bashing Elliott. 

“I think everybody understands the nature of this business. It’s always production-based,” Clay said. “It’s not where I have to really harp on it. It’s pretty much black and white when you miss or make a kick.

“I’m never too hard on the guys. What’s the point of me beating a dead horse if they already know?”

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

NBA MVP anyone?

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander reached a milestone that has eluded him in his seven years in the league. He finally hit the big 5-0. The big 5-4 in fact, scoring 54 points in just over 37 minutes on the floor Wednesday night.

As the Oklahoma City Thunder, who held off the Utah Jazz 123-114, continue their stronghold on the Western Conference’s No. 1 seed, Gilgeous-Alexander has been turning heads with his All-Star play.

Even more eye-popping, Gilgeous-Alexander didn’t fare well from the 3-point line, hitting just three of 10 attempts.

And he didn’t stop at 54 points. He also pulled down eight rebounds, dished five assists, had three steals and added two blocks.

All things Thunder: Latest Oklahoma City Thunder news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

As the NBA prepares to announce the All-Star Game starters Thursday night, Gilgeous-Alexander’s name is sure to be called. But for the 6-6 shooting guard, the biggest accolade may finally be within his grasp – MVP.

He finished fifth in voting in 2023 and second last season. If he wins, it would mark the seventh year in a row the award has gone to an international player.

Gilgeous-Alexander has had chances to reach 50 points before, but would opt to pass or concentrate on his defense instead of pursuing the mark. In some games, he has sat out the fourth quarter in an effort to keep him fresh for the long grind of an 82-game season.

“It’s more of a mentality thing,” Gilgeous-Alexander said. “I think this season I’ve taken a leap in my mental. In the past, I’ve been hyper focused on efficiency, and in moments I would — not defer, but I would be conscious of it, and I think it would like affect my decision making. And this year, I think I’ve got over the hump of not worrying about efficiency.

“Like, I’m just playing.”

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

American Madison Keys will be seeking her first Grand Slam title after upsetting No. 2 seed Iga Swiatek, 5-7, 6-1, 7-6 (8) in the Australian Open semifinals.

Keys, the No. 19 seed, rallied after facing a match point against Swiatek, a five-time Grand Slam champion, in a match that took two hours and 38 minutes.

The 29-year-old Keys advanced to her second career Grand Slam final. She lost the 2017 U.S. Open final to Sloane Stephens.

“Yeah, I’m in the finals,” Keys said after the match. “That match was just such high level and she played so well and I felt like I was just fighting to stay in it. I kind of really ran with the second and then the third was just a battle. To be able to be standing here and be in the finals is absolutely amazing and I’m so excited that I get to be here on Saturday.’

Swiatek was serving at 6-5 and 40-30 but hit a shot into the net, and her serve was broken after a double-fault, leading to the tiebreaker.

Swiatek also had a chance for the victory in the tiebreaker and was leading 8-7 but Keys won three straight points to reach the final.

Keys to face Aryna Sabalenka 

Keys’ opponent in the final will be Aryna Sabalenka, the world’s No. 1 player. Sabalenka, the two-time defending champion, beat Paula Badosa 6-4, 6-2 in the semifinal for her 20th straight victory in the Australian Open. She will also hold on to the No. 1 ranking for the 15th straight week no matter what happens in her match against Keys.

“I have goosebumps. I’m so proud of myself. I’m proud of my team that we were able to put ourselves in such a situation,” Sabalenka said. “If I’ll be able to put myself in the history (books), it’s going to mean a lot. It’s going to mean the world to me.”

She is seeking the first three-peat down under by a woman since 1999, when Martina Hingis finished off the last of her three straight victories at the tournament.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

American Madison Keys is in a Grand Slam final for the first time in eight years after holding off No. 2 seed Iga Swiatek, 5-7, 6-1, 7-6 (10-8) in the Australian Open semifinals.

She will face two-time defending Australian Open champion and world No. 1 ranked player Aryna Sabalenka, who beat Paula Badosa 6-4, 6-2 in her semifinal match.

Keys rallied back after saving a match point and being down in the third set tiebreaker against Swiatek, a five-time Grand Slam champion, to advance to her first Grand Slam final since losing to Sloane Stephens in the 2017 U.S. Open. The 29-year-old Keys, seeded No. 19, played in her third straight three-set match and will vault back into the Top 10 of the WTA rankings next week.

Sabalenka has won 20 straight matches in Melbourne and is seeking to become the first woman to win three Australian Open titles in a row since 1999, when Martina Hingis pulled off the feat.

Sabalenka holds a 4-1 edge over Keys in their previous meetings. Their last meeting was at the China Open in October, with Sabalenka scoring a 6-4, 6-3 win in their Round of 16 match.

How Madison Keys reached the finals

Here is No. 19 seed Madison Keys’ path to her meeting with Aryna Sabalenka at the Australian Open:

First round: Def. Ann Li (USA) 6-4, 7-5
Second round: Def. qualifier Elena-Gabriela Ruse (ROU) 7-6 (1), 2-6, 7-5
Third round: Def. No. 10 Danielle Collins (USA) 6-4, 6-4
Fourth round: Def. No. 6 Elena Rybakina (KAZ) 6-3, 1-6, 6-3
Quarterfinals: Def. No. 28 Elina Svitolina (UKR) 3-6, 6-3, 6-4
Semifinals: Def. No. 2 Iga Swiatek (POL) 5-7, 6-1, 7-6 (10-8)

How Aryna Sabalenka reached the semifinals

Here is No. 1 seed Aryna Sabalenka’s path to her meeting with Madison Keys at the Australian Open:

First round: Def. Sloane Stephens (USA) 6-3, 6-2
Second round: Def. Jessica Bouzas Maneiro (ESP) 6-3, 7-5
Third round: Def. Clara Tauson (DEN) 7-6 (7-5), 6-4
Fourth round: Def. (14) Mirra Andreeva 6-1, 6-2
Quarterfinals: Def. (27) Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova 6-2, 2-6, 6-3
Semifinals: Def. (11) Paula Badosa (ESP) 6-4, 6-2

How to watch Madison Keys vs. Aryna Sabalenka

Time: The match is scheduled to begin at 3:30 a.m. ET on Saturday (7:30 p.m. in Melbourne).

TV: It will be broadcast live on ESPN and will be available to stream online on ESPN+. You can also stream the match on Fubo, which is offering a free trial.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has defended Elon Musk after media outlets described a gesture that the Tesla CEO made at President Donald Trump’s inauguration rally on Monday as a Nazi salute.

Netanyahu took to X on Thursday to post that Musk is ‘being falsely smeared.’

‘Elon is a great friend of Israel,’ the prime minister said. ‘He visited Israel after the October 7 massacre in which Hamas terrorists committed the worst atrocity against the Jewish people since the Holocaust. He has since repeatedly and forcefully supported Israel’s right to defend itself against genocidal terrorists and regimes who seek to annihilate the one and only Jewish state.’ 

Netanyahu went on to thank Musk for his support.

Musk made the gesture in question while speaking to a crowd of MAGA faithful at the Capital One Arena in Washington, D.C.

‘This is what victory feels like! And this was no ordinary victory, this was a fork in the road for human civilization… I just want to say thank you for making it happen, thank you. From my heart to yours,’ an ebullient Musk said as he placed his hand over his own heart and reached out to the crowd.

PBS News Hour fired out a post on X that said the Tesla CEO ‘gave what appeared to be a fascist salute,’ while the Jerusalem post wrote, ‘US billionaire Elon Musk appeared to make a Heil Hitler salute at the Washington DC Trump parade on Monday, following Trump’s inauguration.’

CNN host Erin Burnett played the clip of the gesture and called it an ‘odd salute.’

Musk addressed the controversy Wednesday on X, which he owns, writing, ‘The radical leftists are really upset that they had to take time out of their busy day praising Hamas to call me a Nazi.’

On Thursday, Musk poked fun at the reports in another post on X.

‘Don’t say Hess to Nazi accusations! Some people will Goebbels anything down! Stop Gőring your enemies! His pronouns would’ve been He/Himmler! Bet you did nazi that coming,’ Musk wrote, adding a crying laughing emoji.

The Anti-Defamation League also defended Musk in a statement saying that the tech billionaire had made an ‘awkward gesture in a moment of enthusiasm, not a Nazi salute.’

‘In this moment, all sides should give each one another a bit of grace, perhaps even the benefit of the doubt and take a breath,’ the statement said. 

Fox News Digital’s David Spector contributed to this report.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Leading the House Republican communications policy under a president like President Donald Trump, who is known to frequently air his thoughts on the public stage, is likely not an easy task.

However, Rep. Lisa McClain, R-Mich., the new House GOP Conference chair, argues that the outspoken commander in chief makes her job easier – in part, because of his simple but ubiquitous tagline.

‘If you take a look at the last election cycle, Republicans had the winning message, and it was simple, it was consistent, and it was easily repeatable, right?’ McClain said. ‘So, ‘Make America Great.’ Make America ‘blank’ again. Make America strong again. Make America energy independent. It was simple and it was concise. And the message worked so well that it didn’t matter if you were in a [moderate or heavily Republican] district.’

‘Everyone’s not trying to reinvent the wheel. They have a playbook that they can all sing from, so to speak.’

McClain, now the No. 4 House GOP leader, has been in senior leadership for just over three weeks, but she has largely shunned the solo stage that comes with the role in favor of shining that spotlight on lesser-known members of the GOP.

She has co-authored op-eds with rank-and-file lawmakers and promoted interview opportunities on issues that affect their home states. McClain told Fox News Digital that she saw her job as elevating the existing qualities that helped members of the conference win their elections.

‘People want to help. They want to be engaged. They want to feel part of something. And I think my job as conference chair, I can help give them a platform,’ she said. 

Like Trump, she made her living in business before coming into politics. Before being elected to Congress in the 2020 races, McClain ran a 700-person financial planning company in her home state of Michigan.

When asked why she decided to run, McClain joked, ‘I blame it on my daughter.’

‘So we have Sunday dinner, and that’s kind of my time to hold court,’ she recalled. ‘I was on my soapbox about something. And my daughter Ryan looked at me… ’You can either be part of the problem or part of the solution.’ She was being sassy. ‘Why don’t you run for Congress and do something about it?’ So that kind of planted the seed.’ 

However, since being elected, McClain said she has carried at least one lesson over from the business world – relationships.

‘We are stronger together as a team. And the more people you have on the team, the better you are,’ she said.

Just this week, she and a team of House GOP leaders sat down with Trump to discuss his agenda.

Those relationships extend past her fellow lawmakers, however. 

Her predecessor, Rep. Elise Stefanik, R-N.Y. – whom McClain heaped praise on during her interview – was known to operate with a tight circle and largely kept the media at arm’s length.

However, McClain is known for her open demeanor with journalists, both through informal chats on Capitol Hill and occasionally sparring with members of the media on more difficult issues.

‘You want to tell a story, I also want to tell a story. So if we work together, as long as we’re fair or respectful to each other, I think we can work together to help shape that narrative on what the story is we’re trying to tell,’ McClain said. ‘Because at the end of the day, if I don’t share my narrative with you on what’s the story we’re trying to tell, you’re going to come up with a story on your own. So why wouldn’t we work together to share that story? It just makes sense.’

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Former White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre gave Americans a look behind the podium in a telling Vanity Fair piece published on Tuesday. 

Jean-Pierre, who chose to keep her personal life private while working in the Biden-Harris administration, revealed a private health battle that put significant weight on her and her family.

Jean-Pierre recalled attending the Bidens’ first state dinner in December 2022, saying it was ‘the first time the administration felt a dinner was safe to host since the pandemic began.’ That evening Jean-Pierre was accompanied by her mother, who told her that it was ‘the happiest day of my life.’

The state dinner was the last time Jean-Pierre ‘recognized my mother as the woman I grew up with.’ Unfortunately, things took a turn, and just a couple of months later, her mother was diagnosed with stage II colon cancer. Jean-Pierre found out that her mother was sick while visiting Poland with then-President Joe Biden.

‘My mother has always been a private person. When she finally acquiesced to reality, she told me: ‘Don’t tell anyone. Do not tell the president I have cancer,’’ the former press secretary wrote.

Biden was supposedly ‘one of only a few people at the White House’ who knew about what Jean-Pierre’s mother was going through. Jean-Pierre said Biden ‘showed up for me’ during the difficult time.

While navigating her mother’s care alongside her siblings, Jean-Pierre was driving to New York ‘every weekend I could to see my mom,’ only to return late at night to catch ‘a few hours of sleep’ before heading to the White House.

Despite serving in a very public-facing role in the Biden-Harris administration with her ‘second full-time job’ coordinating her mother’s care, Jean-Pierre explained that being a ‘private person’ is only one of the reasons why she did not make her mom’s cancer battle public. The former press secretary said she was also working under the ‘weight’ of being a ‘first.’

‘I’m the first Black press secretary. The first person of color press secretary. The first openly queer press secretary. The first Haitian American immigrant press secretary. The first press secretary to be all of the above. Being a first meant that my responsibilities were beyond those in the job description, the load heavier. I bear a certain responsibility to the communities I represent,’ Jean-Pierre wrote.

Jean-Pierre also claimed that she believed sharing her mother’s diagnosis would have been seen ‘as an excuse’ because ‘society doesn’t allow women of color to be vulnerable at work. When you’re a first, you don’t get the benefit of the doubt.’

During her time in the White House briefing room, Jean-Pierre faced criticism for a series of embarrassing and controversial moments.

In one of her more infamous moments, Jean-Pierre accused the media and others of making ‘cheap fakes’ that made Biden ‘appear especially frail or mentally confused.’ As the American people wondered if the commander in chief was capable of carrying out the duties of his office, Jean-Pierre was gaslighting them by chalking it up to ‘misinformation’ and ‘disinformation.’

After Biden spoke out against Georgia’s voting laws, dubbing them ‘Jim Crow 2.0,’ Jean-Pierre raised eyebrows with her claim that ‘high turnout and voter suppression can take place at the same time.’

Jean-Pierre was also tasked with walking back denials of the possibility that the president would pardon his son, Hunter Biden. Once the president issued his son’s pardon, despite repeatedly vowing not to do so, Jean-Pierre explained the pivot by saying that the ‘circumstances have changed.’ She also placed the blame on then-President-elect Trump, saying that the president was trying to protect his son from Republican ‘retribution.’

In May 2022, Jean-Pierre took over for her predecessor Jen Psaki, who served as Biden’s press secretary for nearly a year and a half. When handing the reins over to Jean-Pierre, Psaki called her successor a ‘remarkable person’ before listing her qualifications for the position. 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS