Archive

2025

Browsing

As a fellow New Yorker, I had paid attention to Donald Trump for years, long before he got involved in politics.  

When he ventured a comment about foreign policy, people scoffed at him. What did Trump know! National security was the exclusive domain of the experts, not real estate developers or reality TV stars. 

But looking back, Trump was right about all the major foreign policy issues. It was the credentialed elites who got things wrong! 

Here are Trump’s top six:

China

For decades, the consensus opinion was if the U.S. assisted China’s economic growth, it would become a friendly trading partner, and play by the rules – just like Japan, South Korea and the European nations. Trump disagreed. Experts laughed when he claimed China had ripped us off for decades. ‘China raided our factories, offshored our jobs, gutted our industries, stole our intellectual property, and violated their commitments under the World Trade Agreement.’ 

As recently as 2019, Joe Biden scoffed at the idea that China could overtake the U.S. as a world leader, telling a crowd in Iowa City, ‘China is going to eat our lunch? Come on, man.’ The experts were wrong, Trump was right.

American Energy Dominance 

Well before he ran for president in 2015, Trump realized recent advances in oil and gas production would be a strategic game changer for the U.S. and the world. When President Barack Obama left office, oil was at $120/barrel and experts warned the world was running out of oil.  

Trump’s embrace of the U.S. energy industry increased American production and pushed oil down to $40/barrel. Not only did it spur extraordinary American economic growth, it also devastated the economies of Russia and Iran, because they needed oil prices above $90/barrel to fund their governments. When their energy export revenues fell by nearly two-thirds in the Trump years, Russia and Iran were forced to tighten their belts; they couldn’t afford costly wars. 

Biden reversed Trump’s energy policies, and oil prices predictably rose back up to $100 per barrel. Iran used these windfall profits to fund its nuclear program and arm its proxies to attack Israel. Russia used its new-found wealth to attack Ukraine. There is a reason Russia invaded Ukraine during the Obama and Biden presidencies, but not during Trump’s. In the Trump years, they didn’t have the money to pay for expensive wars. 

Iraq and Afghanistan Wars

Democrats and Republicans supported the Afghan and Iraq wars for 20 years. Trump disagreed. As early as 2003, he called the Iraq war ‘a mess.’ Turns out he was right. We shed American blood and spent trillions on two unwinnable, forever wars. 

Iran

Trump pulled out of Obama’s flawed Iran nuclear deal, because it made Iran rich and didn’t stop its nuclear weapons program. He ordered the assassination of Gen. Qassam Soleimani, commander of Iran’s Quds Forces. Instead of fruitless endless negotiations, Trump set out to bankrupt Iran with his energy policy and oil sanctions. 

By the time Trump left office Iran was nearly bankrupt, and its proxy armies weakened.  But President Biden threw Iran a lifeline. He reversed course on American energy production, paid Iran billions and refused to enforce sanctions. Iran used this $100 billion windfall to fund Hamas and Hezbollah in renewed proxy wars against Israel. 

Abraham Accords

For decades, American leaders said we had to settle the Palestinian problem as the first step to a wider Arab-Israel peace. But time and again, the Palestinians refused to negotiate seriously, so peace proved elusive. 

Trump took the opposite approach, and focused on Arab-Israeli peace as the first step. His energy policies lowered global oil prices. Arab leaders realized they could no longer count on oil export revenues alone to fund their government. They needed to diversify their economies, which required peace with Israel. 

Trump also recognized that the younger generation of Arab leaders, schooled in the West and comfortable with more open societies, would be amenable to dramatic social change and to developing economic ties with Israel. The Abraham Accords were the first peace agreements between Israel and the Sunni Gulf states – ever. Trump succeeded where all the experts had failed for decades. 

NATO

American presidents going back to John F. Kennedy complained that our NATO allies were not paying their fair share for our common defense. Obama called them ‘freeloaders.’ Our allies always made excuses, claiming they couldn’t afford to pay the 2% of GNP they had promised, and relied on America to foot the bill for their defense.

Trump hectored, scolded and threatened them until our NATO allies finally increased their defense spending. Turns out they DID have the money after all.  

For years, Washington bureaucrats, politicians and experts have been wrong about the major foreign policy problems confronting the nation. It took an outsider who saw things from a different perspective. Instead of endless rounds of fruitless diplomacy and an open checkbook, Trump used a combination of trade, economics and common sense to reestablish American security. And his second term will be even better.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Even before he takes the oath of office next week, Donald Trump has already accomplished the most incredible comeback in American political history.

In the space of four years, he’s gone from being universally banned by Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Spotify, Snapchat, Instagram, Shopify, Reddit, Twitch, TikTok and Pinterest to most of these companies donating to his inaugural celebration and their CEOs clamoring for invites to dinner at Mar-a-Lago with him.

Trump’s 2024 election, I predict, will still be written about as an epochal event in American history long after everyone reading this today is long gone.
But that’s for future historians to decide.

For the present, Trump’s done something even more remarkable than engineer a 312 electoral vote landslide comeback that will be talked about for generations. His monumental 2024 presidential win has done something Trump’s most ardent critics never believed was possible – he’s produced the least racially polarized presidential win since before the Civil Rights Movement.

Let me repeat that because it’s such a staggering and monumental achievement – Trump’s 2024 presidential victory is the least racially polarized presidential election win since Lyndon Johnson’s in 1964.

That is, White, Black, Asian and Hispanic voters cast ballots that were less racially divisive than at any moment, nearly, in the lives of anyone reading this column today.

Yep, unless you were born in 1946 or before, you’ve never voted in a presidential election where the races were less divided, where Americans of all colors were more similar in their voting habits.

Not Ronald Reagan in 1984, not Barack Obama in 2008, Trump’s win in 2024 brought the races closer together than any election in 60 years.

Doesn’t it seem like this fact should be everywhere?

Yet, astoundingly, I bet many of you haven’t heard or read any discussion of this at all.

That’s because there is often far more money to be made tearing us apart than celebrating how similar we all are.

Indeed, Trump’s popular vote coalition may be the most remarkable achievement of his entire political career and it offers an incredible moment of optimism for those of us who have grown accustomed to constant rancor and division.

With a surge in Hispanic, Asian and Black support, Trump moved all 50 states red, won all seven battleground states, and drove a stake into the toxic cancer of identity politics, the root cause of so much hate and division in our country, hopefully once and for all.

How did this happen? How did the man most in the legacy media have spent nine years attacking as America’s own version of Adolf Hitler manage to bring so many different people from so many different racial backgrounds into his coalition?

I think the answer is simple: many people of all races came to see the lies they’d been told by the legacy media. Many of these voters weren’t just voting for Trump, they were specifically voting against the very people who gave us the Charlottesville hoax and the censorship of the truth during COVID. Trump’s win was a statement in support of free speech and the marketplace of ideas.

It was, of course, also an overwhelming rejection of President Biden’s economic policies, of our wide open border, and of a rise in violent crime and lenient treatment for those guilty of violent crime.

As I’ve been saying for some time, this was an EBC election, economy, border and crime.

Everybody, regardless of race, cares about pocketbook issues, the rule of law, and locking up violent criminals.

How else to explain the dramatic growth in Trump voting support? Remember, back in 2016 Trump won the election with 65.8 million votes. By 2024, he would receive 77.3 million votes. So during a nine-year period when the legacy media mercilessly attacked him and claimed he was HItler, Trump gained roughly 12 million votes.

Where did most of these votes come from?

The data tells us – minorities and young men.

Consider, in 2020 – according to the Wall Street Journal, citing AP votecast data – Joe Biden won Black voters by 83 points. By 2024, Kamala beat Trump by just 67 points among Black voters. That’s a net move of 16% of Black voters toward Trump, a seismic shift in a short period of time.

Hispanic voters moved in Trump’s direction in a massive way too.

In 2020, Joe Biden won Hispanic voters by 28 points. By 2024, Kamala’s margin was just 14, a net gain of 14 points for Trump.

Since 2020, Asian voters, similarly, according to Edison Research, have moved from voting for Biden by 27 points to voting for Kamala by 15 points in 2024, a net gain of 12 points for Trump. 

In an election where each side often fights for a point or two on the margins, a double-digit increase in Black, Hispanic and Asian voters for Trump is a political earthquake.

And where did many of these gains come from for Trump? With young men ages 18 to 29 who voted for him by a whopping 14 points. That’s a huge victory for Trump by any measure, but it gets even more staggering when you consider that Biden won men 18-29 by 15 points in 2020. So young men moved 29 points toward Trump in just four years.

Putting this into further context, the two most conservative voting groups in America by age in 2024 were men 65 and older and men 18-29 – both of those groups backed Trump by margins of more than 14.

What explains this sudden alignment between older and younger men? Especially since older men tend to be much less racially diverse than younger men?

It’s simple, young men of all races are overwhelmingly rejecting woke culture and voting in a similar direction across racial lines.

That is, the identity politics era, especially for young men, is over.
They recognize, better than most, the lies they’ve been fed.

Indeed, data suggests young men 14-17 years old, the next age cohort that will be eligible to vote in 2028 are even more conservative than their older brothers. Republicans, if they run a strong campaign in 2028 and deliver on economic promises, stand to increase margins among these voters.  

There’s been much discussion about how this surge in young male support came to happen – a focus on male-focused podcasts and sports, for instance, by the Trump campaign – but less discussion about what it means when it comes to the racial polarization of America, namely it’s all collapsing.

The race baiters who constantly seek to divide us based on the color of our skin are losing in the marketplace of ideas.

Americans of all races are rejecting their arguments and their divisive tactics.
At long last we are moving closer toward Martin Luther King Jr.’s dream of a free and equal society that isn’t defined by race.

I could write an entire book on this election’s seismic impact – and maybe, I should, but that’s for the future.

For now, as Trump prepares for his inauguration on Jan. 20, what I’d like for all Americans, regardless of race, to know is that at long last, it has been three generations since the racial divide was less pronounced in American presidential politics.

So as the inauguration nears, I’m incredibly optimistic about what Trump will accomplish for all of us, but even more astounded by what he’s already done – bringing the races closer together than we’ve been in three generations.

That doesn’t mean America’s perfect, but it certainly does suggest that we are continuing to form a more perfect union where all of us can be judged by the content of our character and not by the color of our skin.  

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Rep. Elise Stefanik, R-NY., will soon appear before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee to seek confirmation for her role in President-elect Donald Trump’s Cabinet as the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations. 

Several former diplomats who spoke to Fox News Digital say that an immediate concern for an incoming U.N. ambassador should be reigning in U.S. expenditures at the world body. Outflows to the organization grew from $11.6 billion in 2020 to $18.1 billion in 2022, when the U.S. covered one-third of the total U.N. budget.

A former senior U.S. diplomat told Fox News Digital on condition of anonymity that, with ‘many different tasks in front of her, [Stefanik] will need to be selective about what she really wants to pursue.’ The diplomat cited chief areas of concern as cronyism and corruption, and employing more Americans at the U.N.

He said the U.N. is ‘an organization that doesn’t align often with U.S. foreign policy,’ which makes it ‘kind of weird to be pouring in all this money,’ and then ‘seeing a lot of anti-American sentiment and support of causes that we take issue with.’

Anne Bayefsky, director of the Touro Institute on Human Rights and the Holocaust and president of Human Rights Voices, called for Trump’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) team, headed by Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy, ‘to halt funding for the U.N. that is totally antithetical to American interests. This immediate cost-saver of billions ought to be low-hanging fruit. At the General Assembly, the United States has but one vote of 193 member states and is routinely and overwhelmingly outvoted by an undemocratic, anti-American, and anti-Israel mob on key issues. But as soon as we lose, we turn around and pay for all the lawfare and antisemitic schemes those very same resolutions concoct.’

‘DOGE – for which the money is the matter – should have no such inhibitions when it comes to taxpayer dollars being used to fund dangerous and lethal U.N. output,’ Bayefsky said. ‘The days of the United Nations as a global money-launderer for terrorists and antisemites dressed up as human rights experts and refugees need to stop right now.’ 

A spokesperson for Rep. Stefanik, when asked about her plans for reforming the U.N. if confirmed, told Fox News Digital that ‘Elise Stefanik is deeply honored to earn President Trump’s nomination to serve as United States Ambassador to the United Nations. She looks forward to earning the support of her Senate colleagues and working through the confirmation process. Once confirmed, she stands ready to push for needed reform and advance President Trump’s America first, peace through strength national security agenda on the world stage on day one at the United Nations.’ 

To aid the reform effort, Hugh Dugan, former National Security Council adviser on international organizations and U.S. diplomat at the world body, created DOGE-U.N., which he says mimics the ‘methodology and purpose’ of DOGE. 

While Dugan said that DOGE-U.N. is ‘a standalone resource,’ he explained that he hopes it can be a tool for collaboration and ‘save [DOGE] some of the upfront analytical work’ about which outlays need to be examined more closely.

Dugan is working to ‘identify some practicable early wins’ that show ‘the potential for making the U.N. more efficient and cost-saving.’ This includes reviewing the U.N. procurement manual ‘to avoid corruption and malfeasance’ and ‘make sure that there’s a sense of consequences attached to all procurement matters on behalf of the American taxpayer.’ Dugan said that DOGE-U.N. will also look into ‘where and how the U.N. has been evolving into its own Deep State, and more or less ignoring and overlooking the member states’ desires and will and need for efficiency and accountable resource management.’ 

The U.S. ‘can’t be passive shareholders’ in the U.N., Dugan said. ‘We need to develop better competency in Washington, better guidance, more dedicated resources to these dry matters, because if the U.S. doesn’t show up with these questions and concerns and criticisms, no other country will.’

Though Dugan says that DOGE-U.N. is ‘trying to stick with attacking inefficiencies,’ he said there is the possibility of addressing funding to programs that are ‘impossible to support from a policy point of view.’ To that end, Dugan said that ‘strong accountability’ for the secretary-general’s use of U.S. resources is vital to ensure the U.N. does not ‘play a shell game with our contributions and continue to fund even those things we don’t like.’ 

While U.S. departments have independent inspectors general who search for waste and fraud, Dugan noted that the secretary-general directs the U.N.’s Office of Internal Oversight Services (OIOS), which means that the secretary-general can choose whether the findings of U.N. investigations should be ‘publicized or kept quiet.’

Peter Gallo, formerly an investigator with the OIOS, told Fox News Digital that the independent oversight function lacks independent oversight and said that the investigative function should be taken ‘out of the hands of the U.N.’ Gallo said that ‘in the immediate term,’ he would suggest making investigations ‘subject to independent oversight, and every dollar they spent subject to review.’ 

The extent to which employees of the U.N. Relief and Works Agency for Palestinian Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) have been affiliated with terror organizations is especially concerning to Gallo, who says investigations into the issue have been neither transparent nor independent.

Dugan said he believes that stepping back from the organization would be counterintuitive, adding that China is ‘more than willing to swoop in and fill whatever leadership vacuum we don’t fill and they will use that opportunity to promote their own hegemonic ambitions.’

Dugan said he hopes that DOGE-U.N.’s findings will ‘serve the administration’ and ‘help them identify valuations that have been overlooked, and principally to help us create the resource that the world needs so that China cannot abscond with it.’

A recent topic of debate at the U.N. illustrates the divergence of the organization from U.S. interests. 

In January 2024, the U.S. ended contributions to UNRWA until March 2025 after evidence emerged that members of the agency participated in the attacks of Oct. 7, which killed 1,200, including 45 Americans.

In October, the Israeli Knesset banned UNRWA from operating within Gaza, the West Bank and East Jerusalem, given mounting evidence of Hamas infiltration in UNRWA.

In December, a resolution came before the Fifth Committee of the U.N. General Assembly, which is responsible for budgetary and financial matters. The resolution suggested that the International Court of Justice create an advisory opinion on Israel’s UNRWA ban, citing Israel’s ‘obligations…to ensure and facilitate the unhindered provision of urgently needed supplies’ and ‘of basic services and humanitarian development assistance.’

The U.S. voted against the resolution. However, on a related vote about funding the estimated $298,900 required to carry out the resolution, the U.S. simply abstained.

When asked about the discrepancy in its votes, a U.S. Department of State spokesperson told Fox News Digital that the U.S. ‘has consistently demonstrated opposition to this request for an advisory opinion, including voting against the relevant General Assembly resolution. The budget is a separate matter.  The role of the U.N. General Assembly’s Fifth Committee is not to second-guess mandates authorized by other U.N. bodies.’ 

Bayefsky told Fox News Digital that the State Department’s comment represents a ‘twisted, indefensible strategy’ by the Biden administration. ‘When it comes to spending our money via the U.N.’s budget committee, allegedly the U.S. role is not to ‘second-guess.”

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Thursday accused Hamas of backing out of a cease-fire deal to release hostages and bring a pause to more than a year of fighting. 

Netanyahu’s office said Thursday his Cabinet won’t meet to approve the Gaza cease-fire deal until Hamas backs down from what it called a ‘last minute crisis.’

Netanyahu’s office accused Hamas, without elaborating, of trying to go back on part of the agreement in an attempt ‘to extort last minute concessions.’ 

The Israeli Cabinet was set to ratify the deal Thursday.

President Biden joined Vice President Kamala Harris and Secretary of State Antony Blinken for a Wednesday news conference announcing that the deal would roll out in three phases. 

Biden said the first phase will last six weeks and ‘includes a full and complete cease-fire, withdrawal of Israeli forces from all the populated areas of Gaza, and the release of a number of hostages held by Hamas, including women and elderly and the wounded. And I’m proud to say Americans will be part of that hostage release and phase one as well. And the vice president and I cannot wait to welcome them home,’ he said. 

In exchange, Israel released hundreds of Palestinian prisoners, Biden said, and Palestinians ‘can also return to their neighborhoods in all areas of Gaza, and a surge of humanitarian assistance into Gaza will begin.’

Fox News Digital’s Efrat Lachter and The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

This is a developing story. Check back for updates. 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Rep. Pete Aguilar, a top Democrat who served on the congressional committee investigating President-elect Donald Trump’s alleged efforts to overturn the 2020 election, isn’t expecting any favors from the outgoing commander-in-chief. 

He said he thinks a preemptive pardon from President Joe Biden, protecting him from Trump’s potential retaliation, is unnecessary because the Jan. 6 committee ‘didn’t do anything wrong.’ 

‘I don’t think a pardon is necessary. I stand by the work that we did,’ on the committee, Aguilar told reporters at the Capitol Tuesday.

The California Democrat also said that he has ‘not sought a pardon,’ nor has he spoken to anyone at the White House about one. Fox News Digital reached out to Aguilar to inquire whether he would accept one, if it were granted to him, but did not hear back.   

Lawmakers who served on the House committee investigating Jan. 6 have been split about the importance of a preemptive pardon. Some fear it will set a bad precedent for future presidents and assert that the Constitution’s speech and debate clause provides adequate protection against criminal prosecutions, or civil lawsuits, over their legislative work. Others, meanwhile, have welcomed the idea of a pardon, fearing ‘retribution’ from Trump.

Rep. Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., chairman of the former Jan. 6 committee investigating Trump, said he spoke with the White House last month about the potential of issuing pardons for lawmakers who served on the committee, and said he would accept a pardon from Biden if it were granted to him.

‘I believe Donald Trump when he says he’s going to inflict retribution on this,’ Thompson said this week. ‘I believe when he says my name and Liz Cheney and the others. I believe him.’

Other than Thompson, no other members of the committee have indicated they will accept a pardon granted to them by Biden. However, they have stopped short of saying whether they would decline one.

‘I’ve not been in touch with the White House. I’ve not sought one,’ Rep. Zoe Lofgren, D-Calif., who served on the committee, said Tuesday. 

‘It would be the wrong precedent to set. I don’t want to see each president hereafter on their way out the door giving out a broad category of pardons,’ Sen. Adam Schiff, D-Calif, who also served on the committee, said in an interview with CNN earlier this month. Former GOP Illinois Rep. Adam Kinzinger made the same argument as Schiff, but went a step further, saying that he did not want one.

Rep. Jamie Raskin, D-Md., said during a live event this week hosted by Politico that he wasn’t sure what the right call for Biden was. 

‘Different people have different feelings about the whole pardon thing because there are these outrageous threats that are being leveled against people just for doing their jobs, like Jan. 6 prosecutors at the Department of Justice,’ Raskin said. He added that ‘in a just world’ there would be no need for a pardon because the committee did nothing wrong.

‘I’m glad we’ve got a wise president with wise people around him who will be able to figure that out,’ Raskin said.  

During Biden’s final interview as president with a print publication last week, he indicated that preemptive pardons for Trump’s political foes were still under consideration. Biden also noted in the interview that he had personally urged Trump not to ‘try to settle scores’ when he met with the president-elect at the White House following his November election victory.  

Trump has referred to Thompson and other members on the Jan. 6 committee as ‘thugs’ and ‘creeps.’ During an interview on NBC’s ‘Meet The Press’ last month, Trump accused the members on the committee of destroying evidence, adding that ‘everybody on that committee … should go to jail.’

‘They lied. And what did they do? They deleted and destroyed a whole year and a half worth of testimony. Do you know that I can’t get — I think those people committed a major crime,’ Trump told NBC’s Kristen Welker.

On Tuesday, the Justice Department released a 137-page report outlining the details of Special Counsel Jack Smith’s investigation into Trump’s alleged efforts to overturn the 2020 election. Due to Trump’s election victory, prosecutors were forced to drop the case, but the report, according to Smith, shows how Trump allegedly used ‘lies as a weapon to defeat a federal government function foundational to the United States’ democratic process.’

The Jan. 6 committee concluded its work after roughly a year and a half of investigations with a final report that determined Trump played a central role in the events that led to the siege on the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021 and that there was enough evidence for federal prosecutors to convict him. The report included several criminal referrals that the committee ultimately passed on to the Department of Justice. 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Former FBI Special Agent Nicole Parker, who worked hand-in-hand with Trump’s pick for attorney general, said Pam Bondi is a ‘woman of integrity’ who, if confirmed, would prosecute fairly and stick to the U.S. Constitution.

Parker told Fox News Digital that she worked with Bondi after the February 2018 Stoneman Douglas massacre in Parkland, Florida, which stole the lives of 17 students. She noted that Bondi’s ‘tender heart’ and boots-on-the-ground attitude assisted the community during the tragic mass shooting.

‘At the time, Pam was serving as the attorney general, and I was an FBI Special Agent assigned to the Violent Crime Squad. And I was responding to that tragic, just absolutely heartbreaking incident, and Pam Bondi made her way down to South Florida as quickly as possible, and she was there for her constituents in this dark moment of need,’ she said.

‘What really inspired and touched me about Pam is that she has a very tender heart, and she has a lot of compassion, and she genuinely cares about the people that she serves,’ Parker said. ‘She has that very fine and delicate balance of being very tough and strong but also having a soul and having compassion and caring for the victims that she’s helping.’

Parker pointed to Bondi’s years of experience as Florida’s top cop, saying that ‘her number one goal is to serve and protect the American people.’

‘Based on her track record in Florida, it’s very obvious to me that she will be tough on crime, and she will make America safe again. And her loyalty, No. 1, is to the Constitution and to the truth,’ she said. ‘And that is what we need in an attorney general. She’s not just about saying what needs to be said to get where she needs to go. No, she is a woman of integrity, and she’s going to stand up for what is true.’

Bondi is a Trump loyalist with close ties to the president-elect and has been by his side since his first term in office. She also represented Trump during his first impeachment, serving as one of his lawyers, and remaining a vocal advocate.

On Wednesday, many of Bondi’s questions surrounded the extent of loyalty she has to the incoming president. Parker spoke of Bondi’s personal integrity and class, which she believes will be marks of her Cabinet role, if confirmed.

‘Based on my personal experience with her, she is a woman of integrity. She is a woman of class. She is brilliant. She is smart. She is kind, and she has compassion, and she genuinely cares,’ she said. ‘And I think she’s doing the right thing for the right reasons. And I think she will do a fantastic job as she always has.’

‘Based on my personal experience with her, she is a woman of integrity. She is a woman of class.’

— Nicole Parker, former FBI special agent

Trump’s pick to lead the Department of Justice promised in her congressional hearing to end the weaponization of the justice system, saying she ‘will not target people’ based on their political affiliation.

‘I think that is the whole problem with the weaponization that we have seen in the last four years and what’s been happening to Donald Trump,’ Bondi said. ‘They targeted Donald Trump. They went after him, actually, starting back in 2016, they targeted his campaign. They have launched countless investigations against him. That will not be the case if I am attorney general. I will not politicize that office. I will not target people simply because of their political affiliation.’

Parker echoed Bondi’s words, telling Fox News Digital that she’s going to ‘stand up for what is right.’

‘I think that’s something, sadly, that’s been lacking recently, especially in this administration,’ she said. ‘I know that for myself, having worked in the FBI, we reported to the Department of Justice and [current Attorney General] Merrick Garland, and it seemed that the goal was more pleasing this current administration. And I was very flabbergasted by some of the Democrats’ questions because they talked about their concern that she might politicize the Department of Justice. And I thought, ‘Where have you been the last four years?’ The Department of Justice has been politicized at a level that I have never seen before, and I’ve been with the FBI for close to 13 years.’

‘We are sick and tired of this two-tier system of justice. Americans just want fairness,’ Parker said. ‘They want Lady Justice to be blind again. And they want an attorney general that’s going to enforce the laws equally and fairly.’

Parker said that she believes that, if confirmed, Bondi will prioritize cracking down on human traffickers, violent crime, counterterrorism and illegal drug use plaguing the nation.

‘She is walking in to a situation where, in my opinion, the Justice Department has been focused on many of the wrong priorities for the last several years,’ she said. ‘We need to stop the political charade, and we need to get back to protecting the people.’

‘I think that she has a very clear vision and understanding of what her goals and priorities are,’ Parker said of Bondi. ‘And I think she made it very clear that she’s not there to push people’s political and social agendas like we’ve seen in the past.’

She also noted that state attorneys general ‘crave strong leadership’ and want to see a revival of trust in the top prosecuting agencies.

‘I appreciate that Bondi unequivocally expressed her appreciation for the excellent agents, law enforcement officers who are carrying out their duties with honor and put their lives on the line every day to protect Americans and uphold the Constitution. I worked shoulder to shoulder with some outstanding prosecutors and agents who work tirelessly behind the scenes,’ Parker said. 

‘The rank and file, those doing the heavy lifting, welcome Bondi’s arrival as the next AG,’ she said. ‘They crave strong leadership and anxiously await an AG with a strong track record of holding criminals responsible and who will regain the trust of the American people.’

Bondi said in her opening statement that if confirmed as attorney general, she will return the Justice Department ‘to its core mission of keeping Americans safe and vigorously prosecuting criminals.’

‘That includes getting back to basics: gangs, drugs, terrorists, cartels, our border and our foreign adversaries,’ she said.

Bondi said that, like Trump, she believes the DOJ is on the cusp of a new golden age.

‘Lastly and most importantly, if confirmed, I will fight every day to restore confidence and integrity to the Department of Justice and each of its components – the partisanship, the weaponization – will be gone. America will have one tier of justice for all,’ she said.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

AMES, Iowa — The Iowa State vs. Kansas basketball game hardly needs any added introductions.

With plenty of fans lining up hours ahead of tip-off and some even camping overnight to reserve their spot in line, their patience was rewarded with a marquee 74-57 win for the Cyclone faithful.

The hype was already in place for this matchup of Big 12 rivals, but it continued to build as the Cyclones took the court for the first time as the No. 2-ranked team in the country against the 10th-ranked Jayhawks.

Dishon Jackson added 17 points, four rebounds and a block off the bench. Brandton Chatfield earned his first start as a Cyclone, replacing Jackson on Wednesday night.

Tamin Lipsey and Joshua Jefferson each had 10 points. Jefferson also had 12 rebounds.

It was a back-and-forth start to the game until Jones hit back-to-back 3-pointers to get the soldout crowd going and give the Cyclones a 15-11 lead with 11:12 left in the first half. Iowa State never relinquished the lead from there and after those two baskets, it started to tighten up its effort on the boards and defensive end.

Iowa State closed the first half with an 8-0 run to take a 40-30 lead over the Jayhawks.

Kansas had shown an ability to make key defensive adjustments at halftime in recent outings. The Jayhawks held both Cincinnati and Arizona State to fewer than 15 second-half points in their last two games entering Wednesday.

The Jayhawks didn’t make it easy after the break, holding Iowa State to 9-of-28 shooting (32.1%) in the second half, but the Cyclones worked through offensive lulls. They drew fouls to get to the free-throw line and had a counter for every Kansas push.

Kansas went on a 9-0 run, while Iowa State had a five-minute scoring drought early in the second half. The Jayhawks capitalized on Cyclone turnovers and offensive struggles to trim the deficit down.

Jefferson substituted back into the game and broke the drought with a post-up finish, and Kansas answered back with a Flory Bidunga basket to trim the Iowa State lead down to 44-41 with 13:59 left.

That would be the closest the Jayhawks would get to catching the Cyclones.

Kansas cut the lead down to five points twice, but Iowa State would get on a timely run to extend its lead. A four-point series between a Demarion Watson free throw and a Lipsey 3-pointer ignited the Hilton Coliseum crowd, as Iowa State took a 61-52 lead going into the under-4 media timeout.

An 11-0 Cyclone run in the closing minutes sealed the victory.

Iowa State improves to 15-1 overall and 5-0 in Big 12 Conference play. The Cyclones are headed on the road for their next game at West Virginia on Saturday. Tip-off is scheduled for 5 p.m. ET.

Eugene Rapay covers Iowa State athletics for the Des Moines Register. Contact Eugene at erapay@gannett.com. Follow him on X at @erapay5.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

A four-team College Football Playoff would have omitted the nation’s best team from the bracket. The bigger playoff saved this Ohio State vs. Notre Dame matchup.
Try now, after what we’ve seen, to imagine a playoff without Ohio State or Notre Dame in the field. Sounds pretty bland.
No matter which team wins national championship game, it will have earned the glory with four consecutive victories.

The 12-team College Football Playoff format saved Ohio State and Notre Dame. Good for them. Good for us, too, that the boredom of the four-team playoff became relegated to the past, and the expanded playoff afforded these teams a path to the grand stage.

This four-round bonanza instituted this year supplied a national championship matchup worthy of this most dramatic season, and, after four consecutive playoff victories, no one should debate whether the victor earned the crown.

Neither Ohio State nor Notre Dame would have made a four-team playoff based on the final College Football Playoff committee rankings. The Irish ranked No. 5, and the Buckeyes were No. 6, but try now, after what we’ve seen, to imagine a playoff without Ohio State or Notre Dame. Sounds pretty unfulfilling after how these teams have performed in the postseason.

NIL era calls for College Football Playoff of more than four teams

College football didn’t really require a playoff of this size when super squads like 2019 LSU or 2020 Alabama ran roughshod over opponents from September through January. That landscape of college football evolved, though, after the introduction of NIL and transfer freedom. We’re left with fewer juggernauts and more championship contenders.

Consider what the pairings would have been in a four-team playoff. Based on the final playoff rankings, the semifinals would have featured Oregon against Penn State and Georgia against Texas.

In other words, rematches of conference championship games. Pretty lame, right?

In reality, I suspect the playoff committee would have sprinkled in a dose of hocus-pocus to avoid those rematches. Maybe, Texas and Penn State would have flipped in the rankings to create a pair of Big Ten vs. SEC semifinals, or, perhaps, Notre Dame would have wedged its way into a four-team field.

Any way you slice it, though, a four-team playoff would not have included two-loss Ohio State.

And, as the Buckeyes proved these past few weeks, any playoff that didn’t include Ohio State would not be a showcasing of the nation’s elite.

The playoff tripling in size from four to 12 teams sparked some concern among fans and media types that this broader bracket would increase the chance of an undeserving national champion emerging.

Multiply the playoff from two rounds to four rounds, and you up the opportunity for fluky results, shenanigans or injuries that could bounce a deserving front-runner while an underdog finds a glass slipper.

That’s not what happened in this playoff, though. Ohio State and Notre Dame are no Cinderella. They’re well-resourced blue bloods steeped in talent, playing their best ball at the season’s close.

The committee underseeded Ohio State at No. 8, when it had built the résumé for a No. 5 seed, awarded to the playoff’s top at-large team. They Buckeyes didn’t reach this stage through shocking upsets or repeated hijinks. They flat whipped their first two opponents, Tennessee and Oregon, before showing more fourth-quarter mettle than Texas in the semifinals.

They’re here because they’re really stinkin’ good, and because a late-November loss in a rivalry game no longer dooms a really stinkin’ good team.

The Buckeyes, throughout three playoff games, demonstrated they’re the nation’s most talented team, playing to form after a couple of regular-season hiccups.

“Very, very grateful” for this playoff format, Buckeyes coach Ryan Day said. “I do think the new format has allowed our team to grow and build throughout the season, and as much as losses hurt, they really allow us as coaches and players to take a hard look at the issues and get them addressed.”

Notre Dame coach Marcus Freeman should feel gratitude, too.

The Fighting Irish improved throughout the season. They recovered from an inexplicable Week 2 loss to Northern Illinois. That stunning result might have eliminated the Irish from a four-team playoff. It certainly would have restricted the Irish from national championship contention in the Bowl Championship Series era.

Ohio State or Notre Dame would be deserving national champion

The committee, in the four-team playoff era, used to say it aimed to select the four best teams, but you could spot that hogwash from a country mile away last season, when the committee omitted Georgia after the uber-talented Bulldogs lost one time, to Alabama, in the SEC championship game.

Would Georgia’s playoff inclusion have altered the outcome of Michigan winning the national championship? Not sure about that, but after watching Michigan pick clean Washington and leave the Huskies for bones in the title game, I came away thinking we got robbed of the playoff matchup we deserved, Michigan vs. Georgia.

If the four-team playoff persisted into this season, the national championship could have pitted Oregon against Georgia. Might have been a decent game, too, but that game wouldn’t have included the nation’s best team.

So, yeah, increasing the playoff field from four to 12 meant squabbling over whether SMU or a three-loss SEC team “deserved” the final bid, and when the Mustangs got smacked in a first-round CFP loss, the bellyaching reached a fever pitch.

The downside of a 12-team playoff showed its face: The résumé of those final at-large teams can be a bit squishy. The upside, though, is that a top team that suffers a puzzling loss (see Ohio State’s loss to Michigan or Notre Dame’s loss to Northern Illinois) doesn’t become persona non grata from the playoff.

Now, we’re left with two teams that proved their qualifications for this national championship game. A worthy champion will emerge Monday in Atlanta, and we won’t be left to wonder whether the committee omitted the nation’s best team from the bracket.

Blake Toppmeyer is the USA TODAY Network’s national college football columnist. Email him at BToppmeyer@gannett.com and follow him on X @btoppmeyer. Subscribe to read all of his columns.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

An Italian professional soccer club fired its falconer for posting pictures of his prosthetic penis online after he underwent surgery for a penile implant, according to the club and media reports.

According to a statement released by Società Sportiva Lazio (SS Lazio) on Monday, the Rome-based club said it was surprised to see the images of Juan Bernabè and announced he had immediately been removed from the club.

Bernabè, 56, posted the photos of his prosthetic penis on his private social media accounts, multiple outlets including the Associated Press and the Athletic reported. In the post, which included the caption ‘a wonderful operation,’ Bernabè can be seen at the Nuova Villa Claudia clinic in Rome with his appendage protruding under a bedsheet, according to the Athletic.

The club said it is aware fans could be disappointed about the eagle’s absence at upcoming home games.

The eagle, a bird that is symbolic of ancient Rome, traditionally flies over Stadio Olimpico before SS Lazio’s home games. Bernabè is the instructor of Olympia, a white-headed eagle SS Lazio adopted in 2010, Reuters reported.

Juan Bernabè: ‘I’ve never regretted anything’

While speaking to an Italian radio show called ‘La Zanzara’ on Monday, Bernabè explained why he got the procedure done and if he regretted posting the explicit images online.

Bernabè told host, journalist Giuseppe Cruciani, that he got the surgery done for non-medical reasons and it was purely for sexual gratification.

When Cruciani asked the ex-falconer whether or not he regretted posting the pictures that ultimately got him fired, Bernabè responded, ‘Absolutely not,’ the Athletic reported.

“I’ve never regretted anything, let alone doing something that has a medical purpose,’ Bernabè said, per the Athletic. ‘For me, nudity is normal. I grew up in an open-minded family of naturists. I don’t understand what’s pornographic about the photo.”

Juan Bernabè performed a fascist salute in 2021

SS Lazio suspended Bernabè in 2021 when he was filmed performing a fascist salute at the end of a match and chanting “Duce, Duce,” which was the name used to praise former fascist Italian leader Benito Mussolini, the Associated Press reported.

“I admire him so much,” Bernabè said about Mussolini during Monday’s radio interview, per the AP.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

President Biden is ending his tenure in the White House on a ‘sad’ note after ‘lying to the nation’ and taking credit for a cease-fire deal between Israel and Hamas during his farewell address on Wednesday evening, a Trump transition official said. 

‘Joe Biden is going out sad. Lying to the nation trying to take credit for a deal that all parties credit President Trump for making happen. Biden has had well over a year to secure the release of these hostages and peace. He failed. Trump succeeded,’ a Trump transition official told Fox News Digital on Wednesday evening. 

War has raged in the Middle East since October of 2023, with Israel and Hamas coming to a ceasefire agreement on Wednesday that also ensured the release of hostages. 

Biden delivered his final address to the nation on Wednesday evening, where he took a victory lap for the cease fire in his opening remarks. 

‘My fellow Americans, I’m speaking to you tonight from the Oval Office. Before I begin, let me speak to important news from earlier today. After eight months of nonstop negotiation, my administration – by my administration – a cease-fire and hostage deal has been reached by Israel and Hamas. The elements of which I laid out in great detail in May of this year,’ Biden said. 

‘This plan was developed and negotiated by my team, and will be largely implemented by the incoming administration. That’s why I told my team to keep the incoming administration fully informed, because that’s how it should be, working together as Americans,’ he continued. 

Credit for reaching the agreement, however, was bolstered by the incoming Trump administration, according to sources who told Fox Digital that a recent meeting between Trump’s incoming Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu reportedly played a pivotal role in the deal. 

Netanyahu also thanked Trump on Wednesday for ‘his assistance in advancing the release of the hostages.’

‘Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu spoke this evening with US President-elect Donald Trump and thanked him for his assistance in advancing the release of the hostages and for helping Israel bring an end to the suffering of dozens of hostages and their families,’ the official Prime Minister of Israel X account posted. 

‘The Prime Minister made it clear that he is committed to returning all of the hostages however he can, and commended the US President-elect for his remarks that the US would work with Israel to ensure that Gaza will never be a haven for terrorism.’

The X account added later: ‘Prime Minister Netanyahu then spoke with US President Joe Biden and thanked him as well for his assistance in advancing the hostages deal.’ 

When asked who the history books would remember for championing the ceasefire deal earlier Wednesday, Biden balked at the suggestion Trump and his team spearheaded the effort. 

‘Who in the history books gets credit for this, Mr. President, you or Trump?’ Fox News’ Jacqui Heinrich asked Biden at Wednesday afternoon’s White House news conference.

‘Is that a joke?’ the president responded.

‘Oh. Thank you,’ Biden responded when Heinrich said it was not a joke, and then walked away.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS