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Miami QB Carson Beck has publicly commented on his breakup with social media influencer Hanna Cavinder.
Beck told ESPN the public nature of the breakup has been difficult.
Hanna Cavinder previously said she broke up with Beck because of his behavior.

Miami football quarterback Carson Beck has broken his silence regarding his public breakup with Hanna Cavinder.

‘You make mistakes as a person, but it sucks that you have to go through something like that with someone that you care about, and now it’s all over the Internet,’ Beck told ESPN. ‘Half of what you see in the media is true. Half of what you see is not true. So, people pick their side of the story and run with it. The people that know the truth know the truth. But it’s been difficult.’

The 6-foot-4 quarterback entered the NCAA transfer portal on Jan. 9 and announced his transfer to the Hurricanes one day later on Jan. 10, two decisions that came just weeks after he originally declared for the NFL draft.

With his transfer from Athens to Coral Gables, Beck moved in with Cavinder, who was finishing her second season with the Hurricanes’ women’s basketball team as a graduate student. The breakup between Beck and Cavinder happened after the two had their 2023 Mercedes-Benz E635 and 2025 Range Rover stolen from the house they shared.

‘Obviously, the University of Miami is an amazing campus and I think it was the best decision for him,’ Cavinder told ESPN’s Christine Williamson on ‘SportsCenter’ in February on Beck transferring to Miami. ‘… I’m super excited for him and to be able to watch him play.’

Beck’s comments to ESPN on his breakup with Cavinder are the first comments from both of them since Cavinder confirmed it in a video posted to President Donald Trump’s granddaughter, Kai Trump’s YouTube channel, according to the New York Post. Cavinder and her twin sister, Haley, ran into Kai Trump at a UFC event in Miami.

As noted in the New York Post article, Hanna Cavinder told Kai Trump in the video that the reason she broke up with Beck was because of how he acted around others. She referenced a trip to Nashville they took with Haley and her fiancé, Dallas Cowboys tight end Jake Ferguson, as an example of this.

‘He’d like flip people off at the bar and I’d be embarrassed,’ Hanna Cavinder said in the clip. ‘… I broke up with him and all these cheating (expletive) came out. I had no idea. I didn’t break up with him cause he was cheating, I broke up with him because of who he was.’

In four games at Miami, Beck has bounced back nicely from his underwhelming season last year at Georgia – which ended with a season-ending UCL injury in the SEC championship game – with 972 passing yards and seven touchdown passes with the Hurricanes.

Beck and No. 3 Miami travel to No. 19 Florida State on Saturday, Oct. 4 for a 7:30 p.m. ET kickoff at Doak Campbell Stadium in Tallahassee, Florida.

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Fever star Caitlin Clark said at exit interviews she is finally starting to feel like herself again.
Clark said she plans to rest before jumping back into rehab now that the season is over.
Clark did not have much to say about WNBA commissioner Cathy Engelbert’s alleged remarks regarding her sponsorships.

‘I’ve been working really hard to get back to full health and I feel like, probably, over these last couple of weeks is when I’ve probably started feeling my best.’ said Clark, who suffered a right groin injury on July 15 and, then, as she was preparing to come back, a bone bruise in her left ankle. ‘My ankle didn’t allow me to really see where my groin was at.’

Clark suffered the ankle injury in a workout session in Phoenix on Aug. 7.

‘I just went to kind of make a move and unfortunately my ankle completely rolled all the way forward and probably one of the worst sprains I’ve dealt with,’ Clark said. ‘But I’ve just tried to stay positive best I can, but I honestly feel like I’m in a really good spot.

‘People don’t always realize … when you’re injured, it’s honestly more work than when you’re playing.’

The Fever fell in Game 5 of the semifinals to the Las Vegas Aces in overtime on Tuesday. They had five players, including Clark and Sophie Cunningham, suffer season ending injuries. Kelsey Mitchell also went out in Game 5 with severe lower body cramping. Mitchell said Wednesday she suffered from a rare muscle condition called rhabdomyolysis that is the result of overexertion.

Clark said she plans to rest before jumping back into rehab now that the season is over.

‘I will probably take a little bit of a break here just for maybe a week,’ Clark said. ‘I don’t really want to set back the work I’ve done. I’m just trying to get my body back to full health, some basketball stuff I need to get ready for. But more than anything, I think my main focus is really just getting my body healthy.’

Clark did not have much to say about WNBA commissioner Cathy Engelbert’s alleged remarks regarding her sponsorships. Napheesa Collier said during her Minnesota Lynx exit interview that Engelbert has suggested that Clark should be thanking the league for her financial opportunities.

‘I have great respect for Phee, and I think she made a lot of very valid points,’ Clark said. ‘What people need to understand, we need great leadership at this time across all levels. This is straight up the most important moment in this league’s history, and this league’s been around for 25-plus years, and this is a moment we have to capitalize on.’

Clark was asked if she learned anything from being on the sidelines for most of the season.

‘There was certainly some hard days,’ Clark said. ‘I think it taught (me) how to be a really good leader, how to be a really good teammate and how to empathize for your teammates in certain situations. When you are in the heat of battle, your emotions are high and you feel things differently. … When you’re on the sidelines and you don’t have a jersey on, you can observe and really watch people and learn about people.

‘Probably the biggest lesson I learned … is just how can I show up every single day and pour into them and be there for them. … If I have a teammate that’s injured or hurt or going through a tough moment, I know I’ll always show up for them and be there for them and check in on them because it is incredibly isolating and you don’t realize that until you go through it.’

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Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., accused the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) of endangering women’s health, saying the agency approved another chemical abortion drug without the thorough safety review it had promised.

Hawley argued the move shows both regulatory failure and the influence of a company that refuses to define ‘woman’ in its materials.

‘This is shocking. FDA has just approved ANOTHER chemical abortion drug, when the evidence shows chemical abortion drugs are dangerous and even deadly for the mother. And of course 100% lethal to the child,’ he wrote on X on Thursday afternoon.

Hawley added, ‘FDA had promised to do a top-to-bottom safety review of the chemical abortion drug, but instead they’ve just greenlighted new versions of it for distribution. I have lost confidence in the leadership at FDA.’

Evita Solutions describes its mission as to ‘normalize abortion’ and make it ‘accessible to all.’ On its website, the company says it ‘believes that all people should have access to safe, affordable, high-quality, effective, and compassionate abortion care, regardless of their race, sex, gender, age, sexuality, income, or where they live.’

It adds, ‘We know that you can make the best choice for your body.’

According to the FDA, Evita received approval in a Sept. 30 letter obtained by Reuters.

In an interview with Fox News Digital, Hawley said the FDA’s decision was even more troubling given that its promised safety review has barely begun.

‘I just, I can’t figure out what’s happening at the FDA. I’m totally baffled by it,’ Hawley said.

Fox News Digital has reached out to the FDA and Evita Solutions for comment on the matter.

In another post, Hawley blasted the FDA for partnering with a company that ‘doesn’t even believe there is such a thing as a ‘woman.’’

Evita Solutions now joins GenBioPro in producing the generic version of Mifepristone, the abortion pill originally made by Danco Laboratories. Mifepristone blocks progesterone, a hormone needed to sustain pregnancy, and is followed by misoprostol to complete the process.

The approval comes as abortion drugs face mounting opposition from conservative lawmakers, religious organizations, and pro-life groups.

Religious groups like Inspire Investing and Alliance Defending Freedom have campaigned against the drug, while the Restoration of America Foundation (ROAF) has pressed lawmakers for accountability.

Last month, ROAF called on the Senate Finance Committee to hold Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. accountable at a hearing, demanding answers about the removal of safety protocols for the abortion pill Mifepristone.

In a letter obtained by Fox News Digital, ROAF warned that the rollback leaves women more vulnerable and shifts costs to taxpayers. The group said the Biden-era changes endanger women by allowing abortion pills to be prescribed via telehealth and sent through the mail.

Hawley said the FDA should restore the safeguards put in place under the Trump administration.

‘What needs to happen is the FDA needs to get in line with the president’s policy and put back into place the safety regulations President Trump had. Ditch the Biden approach and go back to President Trump’s approach,’ Hawley said.

Under the Biden administration, the FDA for the first time allowed telehealth prescribing and mail-order delivery of abortion pills. Previously, the agency required Mifepristone to be dispensed in person to screen for complications such as ectopic pregnancy.

Fox News Digital’s Jasmine Baehr and Reuters contributed to this report.

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Week 6 of the college football season features several key matchups.
No. 11 Alabama hosts No. 17 Vanderbilt in a rematch of last season’s upset.
No. 3 Miami will travel to face No. 19 Florida State in a Sunshine State showdown.

The Top 25 college football schedule in Week 6 might look fairly tame compared to last weekend’s loaded slate. But that doesn’t mean there won’t be a surprise or two. Our panel of pigskin prognosticators are back to try and figure out where they might happen.

The Saturday headliner features No. 11 Alabama, fresh off its win at Georgia, returning home to take on No. 17 Vanderbilt, as the Commodores look to take down the Crimson Tide for a second consecutive season. The other clash of ranked teams is the Sunshine State showdown as No. 3 Miami heads to Tallahassee to face No. 19 Florida State.

Other games of note include No. 1 Ohio State returning home to meet Minnesota in Big Ten action, a somewhat unexpected battle of unbeatens in the Big 12 with No. 14 Texas Tech visiting Houston, and a couple of playoff teams from a season ago getting together as No. 21 Notre Dame hosts Boise State.

Read on to see what our experts think will happen.

College football Week 6 predictions

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The San Francisco 49ers enjoyed one week with an offense near full health for the first time since Week 1 but they once again appear to be without multiple key contributors.

San Francisco comes into Week 5 with a 3-1 record, tied with the Rams and Seahawks in the NFC West. They are battling to stay atop the division race which is an important factor in the decision regarding Purdy today. With a division battle on deck for the 49ers on ‘Thursday Night Football,’ Niners fans are hopeful their starting signal-caller will be under center.

The 49ers have been battered by injuries; they have experience playing without their top players already. Here’s the latest on Purdy before Thursday’s kickoff at SoFi Stadium against the Rams.

Brock Purdy injury update

The 49ers have ruled out their starting quarterback for today’s game.

The team delivered the discouraging news about Purdy’s status on Wednesday afternoon.

Purdy has been a weekly staple on the injury report since Week 1, when he suffered the initial toe and shoulder injuries and tonight will mark his third missed game already in 2025. He suited up in Week 4 against the Jacksonville Jaguars and played the entire game but the alarms began to sound in the lead-up to tonight’s game when coach Kyle Shanahan shared on Monday that Purdy was sore.

Purdy then failed to participate in practice on Tuesday and Wednesday before the 49ers ruled him out.

San Francisco has been no stranger to playing without its stars on offense this season. Brandon Aiyuk remains out as he works his way back from a torn ACL he suffered in Week 7 last season. All-Pro tight end George Kittle has been sidelined since suffering a hamstring injury in Week 1.

Wide receivers Ricky Pearsall and Jauan Jennings are also set to miss tonight’s game. It will be the second game missed for Jennings and the first for Pearsall in 2025.

49ers QB depth chart

San Francisco’s depth on offense has been tested all season. Here’s a look at how the quarterback room breaks down with Purdy out:

Brock Purdy (injured)
Mac Jones
Adrian Martinez (practice squad)
Kurtis Rourke (non-football injury list)

Martinez will likely join the active roster for Thursday’s game against the Rams. Martinez has been promoted from the practice squad in Jones’ previous two starts. Rourke is unlikely to play at all in 2025 while he recovers from his ACL injury.

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NEW YORK – The New York Yankees will turn to a kid to save their season in Game 3 of their American League wild card series: Cam Schlittler, 24, has just 14 major league starts under his belt, his place in the club’s rotation only recently secured.

Yet Schlittler is a grizzled veteran compared to the cherub the Boston Red Sox will wheel out for this winner-take-all battle Oct. 2.

Who is Connelly Early, you ask?

He’s less than a month removed from his major league debut, which came Sept. 9, which was just a little more than a year since he was toiling for the Class A Greenville (S.C.) Drive in the South Atlantic League.

And now? A win-or-go-home game, before nearly 50,000 in Yankee Stadium, barely two years removed from the University of Virginia.

Nervous, kid?

‘Let’s go. Let’s do it,’ Early said after the Red Sox suffered a 4-3 loss in Game 2, and roughly a couple minutes after pitching coach Andrew Bailey told him it was his ball for Game 3.

“I’ve stuck to all my preparation and feel pretty good, so I’m ready to go out there and do it.’

Not a bad plan, because Early has been pretty nasty in his short time in the major leagues.

He relies significantly on a 94-mph fastball in striking out 29 batters in his first 19 career innings. In fact, he struck out 11 in just five innings in his debut, a 1-0 win over the Athletics in West Sacramento.

The Red Sox lost his final three starts, though he did not give up more than two runs in any of them. And his veteran teammates figure he’ll be unbothered by the bright lights and big stakes.

“He reminds me a lot of Roman,” says Red Sox outfielder Jarren Duran, comparing Early to rookie slugger Roman Anthony. “They’re so young but they’re so calm, cool and collected.

“I can’t wait to see him get on the mound tomorrow with that big smile he has when he’s competing.”

Bailey saw a lot of Early scouring the back fields of Fort Myers during spring training, “kind of keeping my eye on him.” The reports continued to glow as Early blazed through a dozen starts at Class AA and a half-dozen more at AAA Worcester before getting the call.

“He’s answered the bell every single time out,’ Bailey said. ‘To say that it’s a shock, no. We kind of knew what we had and there were things he had to put together. He’s done a great job all year long.”

Early’s college career began at Army and, like Paul Skenes at Air Force, he transferred after two years to keep his professional options open. He landed at Virginia, where he went 12-3 and prompted the Red Sox to spend a fifth-round pick on him.

Certainly, Early’s time in the spotlight may be limited in Game 3, given Red Sox manager Alex Cora’s aggressive postseason managing style and the massive stakes of the game. He limited Game 2 starter Brayan Bello to just 28 pitches over 2⅓ innings in Game 2.

At the same time, ace Garrett Crochet, another lefty, powered through the Yankees lineup in Game 1 and compelled manager Aaron Boone to keep lefties Jazz Chisholm and Ben Rice on the bench.

Boone said after Game 2 that Chisholm would start Game 3, but was non-committal, for now, on Rice.

So Early’s plan is simple: Go as long and as hard as he can. His teammates can’t wait to see the results.

“Early’s been amazing,” says reliever Garrett Whitlock, the losing pitcher in Game 2. “Really proud of the stuff that he’s done so far this year. I love watching him pitch, so I’m really excited to see him.’

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The San Francisco 49ers have started the 2025 NFL season strong despite dealing with numerous injuries, including one to their starting quarterback, Brock Purdy.

Purdy suffered toe and shoulder injuries during the 49ers’ Week 1 win over the Seattle Seahawks. The 25-year-old has been in and out of San Francisco’s lineup since, missing Weeks 2 and 3 because of the turf toe malady before returning to action in Week 4.

However, Purdy is, once again, out of the lineup for the 49ers’ Week 5 ‘Thursday Night Football’ matchup against the Los Angeles Rams. His absence is creating questions about whether he will, once again, be forced to miss multiple games or if this is simply a short-week anomaly for the 2023 Pro Bowler.

Here’s what to know about Purdy’s potential return date, as well as how the 49ers quarterback room shapes up behind him.

When will Brock Purdy return?

The 49ers have not provided a concrete timeline for Purdy’s return, but it doesn’t seem like the quarterback will be facing a long-term absence.

Purdy was asked about his toe injury during a Tuesday media availability. He told reporters his injured toe ‘feels a lot better’ than it did after the team’s Week 1 win over the Seahawks.

‘[My] toe’s just a little sore from the game, but nowhere near as bad as after Seattle,’ Purdy said.

The 25-year-old quarterback made it clear he expected some soreness after returning to the field as well. However, he also explained his recovery was impacted by the 49ers’ condensed schedule ahead of ‘Thursday Night Football.’

‘With the quick turnaround, Thursday night game and everything, it’s just tougher,’ Purdy said. ‘You don’t have as many days to get right, heal up and feel better. So, [that’s] just where we’re at.’

Purdy will have a 10-day ‘mini-bye’ to recover from his latest setback. He missed Weeks 2 and 3 because of the turf toe problem before returning to the field in Week 4 against the Jacksonville Jaguars.

That said, 49ers coach Kyle Shanahan told reporters any decision to return Purdy to the lineup won’t just be about him tolerating the pain with which he is dealing.

‘It’ll come down to do we feel he can play to 100% of his ability and do we feel like he can protect himself with it,’ Shanahan explained.

The 49ers’ next game will be in Week 6 against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. Purdy may have a shot to suit up for that contest if the extra time off helps his toe improve.

Who is the 49ers backup QB?

Mac Jones is the 49ers’ backup quarterback. The 27-year-old signed with the team in free agency after spending the 2024 season as Trevor Lawrence’s backup with the Jaguars.

Jones – the 15th overall pick in the 2021 NFL Draft by the New England Patriots – has fared well in Kyle Shanahan’s system. He led the 49ers to a 2-0 record in two starts in place of Purdy while completing 66.3% of his passes for 563 yards, four touchdowns and one interception.

49ers QB depth chart

The 49ers have four quarterbacks in their organization, but just two are presently healthy. Below is a look at the current pecking order in the team’s quarterback room.

Mac Jones
Adrian Martinez (practice squad)

Purdy would normally top the depth chart if healthy, but his absence has allowed Jones to ascend into the starting role.

Meanwhile, seventh-round rookie Kurtis Rourke was expected to be the third-string quarterback, but he is currently on the non-football injury (NFI) list because of a knee injury. That has opened the door for Martinez, the 2024 UFL MVP, to be elevated from the practice squad and serve as Jones’ backup in Purdy’s absence.

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Office of Management and Budget (OMB) chief Russell Vought and President Donald Trump are in the midst of mapping out cuts to the federal government after lawmakers on Capitol Hill failed to reach a funding bill agreement early Wednesday morning. 

Trump set the stage in the lead-up to the shutdown that the federal government is set to likely see staffing and program cuts under the shutdown, adding in a Thursday message to Truth Social that many federal agencies are a ‘political SCAM.’ 

‘I have a meeting today with Russ Vought, he of PROJECT 2025 Fame, to determine which of the many Democrat Agencies, most of which are a political SCAM, he recommends to be cut, and whether or not those cuts will be temporary or permanent,’ Trump posted. 

‘I can’t believe the Radical Left Democrats gave me this unprecedented opportunity. They are not stupid people, so maybe this is their way of wanting to, quietly and quickly, MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!’ he added. 

Fox News Digital spoke with Heritage Foundation’s director of the Grover M. Hermann Center for the Federal Budget, Richard Stern, Thursday morning to discuss which agencies the OMB chief would likely target for staffing cuts and if such cuts would be permanent. 

How a shutdown enables cuts 

Stern explained to Fox Digital that there are a pair of overlapping issues that lead to the government’s staffing size: agencies are required by various laws to provide certain services to citizens. And, separately, appropriation bills set funding floors on how much money an agency has available to spend on staff payroll. 

During a shutdown, however, there is a lapse in funding, meaning agencies do not have ‘payroll floors from the funding bill,’ leaving the executive branch with discretion on how to continue providing required services to citizens, he explained.  

‘Because the funding bills set effective floors per salary spending, that tends to dictate how many people work for the agencies. In the event of a shutdown, the only requirement on the administration is to ensure that the agencies provide the services and whatnot that are required by law. But those laws don’t say you need, you know, 100 staffers to write a grant or only one staffer,’ Stern told Fox Digital in a phone interview. 

‘They simply say, you know, ‘There’s a grant program that has to go out the door under XYZ parameters.’ So in the event of a lapse in funding, it means that the administration … can lay out a plan saying, ‘Hey, look, you know, we think the Department of Education, for example, could do everything it is legally required to do, but do it with 10% of the workforce,’’ he continued. 

If the administration determines that an agency can fulfill its legally required services to citizens with fewer people, it will subsequently send reduction in force notices, known as RIFs, to staffers. 

‘If the funding was there, and if the funding law required those staff levels, then you wouldn’t be able to RIF,’ he said. ‘But in the lapse of funding, it gives the White House that opportunity.’ 

Permanent changes to the government are in a gray zone, however, as RIFs would not be able to take effect until after 60 days. 

‘Once the RIF notices go out, you … legally need to wait 60 days before the RIF notices can be enacted,’ Stern continued. ‘Really the shutdown would have to last 60 days, beyond that, to actually act on the RIFs.’ 

The Heritage Foundation expert, who also serves as the conservative think tank’s acting director of the Thomas A. Roe Institute for Economic Policy Studies, stressed that any staffing cuts are not an example of government ‘downsizing.’ 

‘It’s not downsizing the activities of agencies,’ he said. ‘It’s not reducing what they make available, what services they provide. It’s simply reducing the workforce that’s providing the same level and the same amount of services.’ 

What agencies could be targeted for cuts? 

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told a gaggle of reporters Thursday that ‘thousands’ of federal employees could be laid off during the shutdown. 

‘Look, it’s likely going to be in the thousands. It’s a very good question. And that’s something that the Office of Management and Budget and the entire team at the White House here, again, is unfortunately having to work on today,’ Leavitt said.

Stern pointed to a handful of agencies that will likely be targeted for layoffs, citing agencies that have ‘mission creeped’ their original purview into regulatory issues, such as the Environmental Protection Agency, as well as other agencies, like the National Science Foundation, that handle grant writing for programs. 

‘Probably the Department of Ed is, is kind of the poster child on this one,’ he said. ‘They’ve been talking about, they quite literally only need 10% or so on the staff.’ 

He also noted the EPA, Department of the Interior and the Department of Labor could face cuts due to the various agencies’ ‘mission creep into a lot of regulations that are quite harmful to the economy, that are quite harmful to just American families.’

‘EPA over … a decade or so, has mission creeped its jurisdiction into more and more regulatory affairs, that just simply, the EPA doesn’t have under a statutory capacity,’ he said. ‘They’re regulating outside of the confines, the charge they were given by law, by Congress. So EPA is another one of those where that makes a lot of sense to cut a lot of the workforce there. Then, at HUD and Department of Labor you have similar things.’ 

Stern said the administration likely is also eyeing agencies such as the National Science Foundation, National Endowment for the Arts and Humanities, and certain aspects of the Department of Housing and Urban Development that are charged with ‘running programs that write grants where there’s an enormous amount of legal discretion on who gets the grant money.’

‘These grants are not serving some critical, or frankly, constitutional role,’ he said, adding the grants often land in the hands of universities and promote ‘left-wing’ ideology on topics, such as transgenderism and climate change. 

What has Trump said on federal cuts?

Trump said during various public remarks Tuesday, as the deadline clock began to run dry, the shutdown presented him with the opportunity for the administration to carry out layoffs as part of a continued mission to slim down the federal government, and snuff out overspending and fraud. Trump, however, repeatedly has stressed he does not support the shutdown, pinning blame on Democrats. 

‘We don’t want it to shut down because we have the greatest period of time ever,’ Trump said from the Oval Office Tuesday. ‘I tell you, we have $17 trillion being invested. So the last person that wants it shut down is us.’

‘Now, with that being said, we can do things during the shutdown that are irreversible, that are bad for them and irreversible by them, like cutting vast numbers of people out, cutting things that they like, cutting programs that they like,’ he continued. 

Republicans have pinned the shutdown blame on Democrats, arguing they refused to fund the budget as an attempt to reinstate taxpayer-funded medical benefits for illegal immigrants. Democrats have countered that claim as a ‘lie’ and cast blame for the shutdown on Republicans. 

‘A lot of good can come down from shutdowns,’ Trump added Tuesday. ‘We can get rid of a lot of things that we didn’t want, and they’d be Democrat things. But they want open borders. They want men playing in women’s sports. They want transgender for everybody. They never stop. They don’t learn. We won an election in a landslide.’ 

Trump’s second administration has spotlighted the size of the federal government as bloated since inauguration day, including the president launching the Department of Government Efficiency to weed out potential fraud, overspending and corruption, and offering federal employees voluntary buyouts in January to leave their posts before rolling out other RIF initiatives across various agencies. 

Fox News Digital reached out to OMB’s office for comment on the anticipated cuts but did not immediately receive a reply. 

Fox News Digital’s Elizabeth Elkind and Anders Hagstrom contributed to this report.

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Former FBI Director James Comey, who was indicted Friday on two federal charges alleging that he issued a false statement to Congress and obstructed justice, previously has called for those who lie under oath to face consequences. 

For example, Comey once railed against lifestyle icon Martha Stewart, who was convicted of misleading federal investigators, and said her case served as an example to deter others from lying to officials. 

‘The Stewart experience ­reminded me that the justice system is an honor system,’ Comey wrote in his book, ‘A Higher Loyalty,’ released in 2018. ‘We really can’t always tell when people are lying or hiding documents, so when we are able to prove it, we simply must do so as a message to everyone. People must fear the consequences of lying in the justice system or the system can’t work.’ 

‘There once was a time when most people worried about going to hell if they violated an oath taken in the name of God,’ Comey wrote. ‘That divine deterrence has slipped away from our modern cultures. In its place, people must fear going to jail…To protect the institution of justice, and reinforce a culture of truth-telling, she had to be prosecuted.’ 

Comey served as the lead prosecutor who indicted Stewart on charges of obstruction of justice and lying to the FBI in 2003, which stemmed from the FBI’s insider trading investigation into Stewart’s friend’s company, ImClone.

Stewart ultimately was convicted on four counts of obstructing justice and lying to investigators. She was sentenced to five months in prison. 

Comey’s statement in his book aligns with those he made at the time. After the charges were filed against Stewart in 2003, Comey said Stewart’s ‘case is about lying — lying to the FBI, lying to the SEC and investors.’

‘That is conduct that will not be tolerated. Martha Stewart is being prosecuted not because of who she is, but what she did,’ Comey said at a news conference in 2003. 

Stewart took a swipe at Comey in her Netflix documentary called ‘Martha,’ which was released October 2024. 

‘It was so horrifying to me that I had to go through that to be a trophy for these idiots in the U.S. Attorney’s office,’ Stewart said. 

Fox News Digital reached out to Comey for comment and has yet to receive a reply. 

Trump–Comey vendetta back in the spotlight 

Meanwhile, Comey’s feud with President Donald Trump is also back in the spotlight following Comey’s indictment. 

The two men have gone head-to-head against each other for years, dating back to Trump’s first administration amid the FBI’s investigation into whether Russia interfered in the 2016 election, and they have continued to trade barbs during Trump’s second term. 

While Trump has lobbed out terms like ‘sick person’ and ‘untruthful slime ball,’ Comey also has hurled criticism against the president and said he’s not fit for office. 

For example, Comey described Trump as someone who ‘lies constantly about matters big and small and insists the American people believe it,’ and questioned whether Trump embodied U.S. values during an interview in April 2018 with ABC News ahead of the release of his book, ‘A Higher Loyalty.’ 

‘I don’t think he’s medically unfit to be president — I think he’s morally unfit to be president … that’s not a policy statement,’ Comey told ABC News. ‘Again, I don’t care what your views are on guns, or immigration, or taxes. There is something more important than that, that should unite all of us, and that is our president must embody respect and adhere to the values that are at the core of this country, the most important being truth. This president is not able to do that.’ 

That same month Comey attracted the ire of Trump, who accused Comey of being a ‘terrible’ FBI director and that it was his ‘great honor’ to fire Comey. 

‘James Comey is a proven LEAKER & LIAR. Virtually everyone in Washington thought he should be fired for the terrible job he did-until he was, in fact, fired. He leaked CLASSIFIED information, for which he should be prosecuted. He lied to Congress under OATH,’ Trump said in a social media post in April 2018. 

‘He is a weak and untruthful slime ball who was, as time has proven, a terrible Director of the FBI…It was my great honor to fire James Comey!’ Trump said. 

Trump fired Comey in May 2017, just after Comey revealed in March 2017 before the House Intelligence Committee that the FBI had launched a criminal investigation into whether the Trump campaign coordinated with Russia during the 2016 election. 

At the time, Trump said that he had ousted Comey due to his handling of an investigation into former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s use of a private email server.

Comey, who previously identified as a Republican, went on to endorse former President Joe Biden in the 2020 election. He also called for ‘everyone who cares about the rule of law and America’s indispensable role in the world’ to get behind former Vice President Kamala Harris as the Democratic nominee during the 2024 election when she went up against Trump. 

‘Kamala Harris made me feel like it’s finally morning in America,’ Comey wrote in a post on X in August 2024. 

More recently, Comey and Trump sparred after the former FBI director posted a photo on Instagram in May depicting shells arranged on a beach to spell out ’86 47.’ The term ’86’ can mean getting rid of something or someone, and Trump is the 47th president. 

Following backlash from Trump allies who interpreted Comey’s post as a threat to remove Trump, Comey said that the thought hadn’t crossed his mind and he opposed ‘violence of any kind.’ 

Still, Trump didn’t buy Comey’s explanation. 

‘He knew exactly what that meant,’ Trump told Fox News. ‘A child knows what that meant. If you’re the FBI director and you don’t know what that meant, that meant assassination.’ 

Following Comey’s indictment, Trump said in a social media post Friday that Comey is ‘one of the worst human beings this country has ever been exposed to,’ and labeled the former FBI director a ‘DIRTY COP.’ 

The charges against Comey are tied to his testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee in September 2020 regarding the FBI’s investigation into Russia’s interference in the 2016 election. Meanwhile, Comey has denied the allegations leveled in the charges against him, and said that he is ‘not afraid.’ 

‘My family and I have known for years that there are costs to standing up to Donald Trump, but we couldn’t imagine ourselves living any other way,’ Comey said in an Instagram video. ‘We will not live on our knees, and you shouldn’t either. Somebody that I love dearly recently said that fear is the tool of a tyrant, and she’s right.’

Fox News’ Audrey Conklin contributed to this report. 

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A conservative watchdog says Trump’s much-hyped DOGE cuts are a drop in the bucket compared to America’s ballooning entitlement spending.

OpenTheBooks, a conservative fiscal watchdog group, released a report on Thursday showing that mandatory spending for Medicare and Social Security vastly outweigh any cuts to discretionary spending ushered in by the Trump administration.

The report was released as lawmakers clash over government funding, with the fight centered on Democratic plans to expand Obamacare.

‘Government shutdowns offer taxpayers a much-needed reality check on the massive scale of federal spending and our unsustainable debt and deficits,’ OpenTheBooks CEO John Hart said in a statement to Fox News Digital. ‘Policymakers need to wake up and take a much closer look at safety net spending, which is the largest share of our budget and is highly susceptible to fraud.’

 

Of the $6.9 trillion spent by the federal government in 2024, $912 billion went to Medicare, and $1.5 trillion went to Social Security, according to OpenTheBooks. 

Meanwhile, OpenTheBooks highlights the rescission package passed by Congress in July, which largely focused on cuts to the United States Agency for International Development, saved around $9 billion and DOGE cuts saved taxpayers around $150 billion. 

‘The amounts of disputed savings in 2025 pale in comparison to our spending on safety net programs,’ the OpenTheBooks report states. ‘If the flow of money in the federal government could be viewed from a jet cruising at 30,000 feet, Medicare would be the Mississippi River and Social Security would be the Columbia River while USAID and ‘woke’ spending programs would be barely visible, tiny streams.’

In particular, OpenTheBooks zeroed in on just one aspect of Medicare funds — those that are allocated for prescription drug coverage. The fiscal watchdog found that the top 1,000 providers in the system are linked to more spending in 2024 — $10.9 billion — than was saved by the July rescission package. According to OpenTheBooks’ findings, the top ten providers are associated with nearly the same amount of savings ushered in by the Trump administration’s $1.1 billion in cuts to PBS and NPR.   

‘We are not implying that any of these providers are engaging in anything other than lawful conduct on behalf of Medicare beneficiaries,’ the report asserts. ‘Yet, it is also true that healthcare spending in the United States is grossly inefficient and fraudulent at a large scale. In June, the Department of Justice charged 324 defendants for defrauding Medicare of $14.6 billion. Meanwhile, last year, the Wall Street Journal reported that insurers ‘pocketed $50 billion from Medicare for diseases no doctor treated.’’

OpenTheBooks’ report argues that if American taxpayers want to understand the costs, benefits, vulnerabilities and potential savings, related to federal government spending, then they must fight for transparency.

‘When taxpayers see where their money is flowing, especially in times of heated debates and shutdowns, they can hold policymakers accountable to better direct its flow,’ the report concludes. 

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