Tag Archives: administration

‘We’ve lived this nightmare before’: Foreign lawmakers unite against Trump ‘catastrophe’

Dozens of political leaders throughout Latin America are condemning US President Donald Trump’s recent boat-bombing campaign, which began in the Caribbean last month and has since spread to the Pacific Ocean.

In a letter posted by Progressive International on its X account, Latin American leaders from across the region expressed deep concern over Trump’s extrajudicial killings of alleged drug traffickers. They warned that this campaign threatens peace and stability in Latin America and could serve as a pretext for further military intervention in the region.

“The Trump administration is escalating a dangerous military buildup off the coast of Venezuela, deploying naval forces in the Caribbean in preparation for potential armed intervention,” the letter stated. “The pretext is familiar. President Trump justifies intervention in Venezuela as a means to combat ‘cartels,’ celebrating lethal strikes against fishermen accused of carrying drugs.”

The lawmakers drew parallels between the current militarism and past US actions that had destabilized their nations. “We have lived this nightmare before,” they emphasized. “US military interventions of the 20th century brought dictatorships, disappearances, and decades of trauma to our nations. We know the terrible cost of allowing foreign powers to wage war on our continent. We cannot—we will not—allow history to repeat itself.”

They called upon “all organized political forces across Latin America and the Caribbean” to unite in preventing another “catastrophe” from unfolding. “Across our political contexts, we share a common cause: the sovereignty of our nations and the security of our peoples,” the letter concluded. “We must stand together now.”

Over the past seven weeks, the US military has carried out at least nine attacks on boats in the Caribbean and Pacific Oceans, resulting in the deaths of at least 37 people. Although the administration claims these vessels were involved in illegal drug smuggling, it has provided no evidence to substantiate these assertions.

Adding to the concern, both President Trump and Vice President JD Vance have made remarks suggesting that it would be dangerous “to even go fishing” in the Caribbean, indicating the potential risk to civilians in these strikes.

Colombian President Gustavo Petro condemned the incidents this past weekend, stating that the Trump administration had “committed a murder” following a boat attack that killed Colombian citizen Alejandro Carranza. Carranza had been out on a fishing trip when the US military struck his vessel.

The boat strikes have drawn criticism not only from leaders in Latin America but also from multiple US-based legal experts who have accused the administration of engaging in an extrajudicial murder spree. Experts highlight that the US has traditionally treated drug trafficking as a criminal matter—not an act of war warranting military force.

In response to these developments, the Center for Economic and Policy Research (CEPR), a US-based think tank, announced on Thursday the launch of a new project to track “US militarism, aggression, and intervention in Latin America and the Caribbean.” This initiative will monitor “US strikes on boats, threats against Venezuela and Colombia, and other aspects of US interventionism in the region under the second Trump administration.”
https://www.rawstory.com/donald-trump-venezuela/

Cook County District 130 custodial workers call for superintendent’s removal

Custodians and maintenance workers for Elementary District 130, serving Alsip, Blue Island, Crestwood, and Robbins, are calling for the removal of the district’s superintendent and assistant superintendent of human resources amid ongoing union contract negotiations.

SEIU Local 73 stated that the district has canceled two contract bargaining sessions since negotiations began this summer. However, union conflicts with Superintendent Colleen McKay and Assistant Superintendent of Human Resources Carrie Tisch date back to 2022.

“The administration has repeatedly retaliated against union stewards and workers, and employees have been punished for alleged violations and then terminated for those same supposed violations,” the union said in a news release Tuesday.

Field organizer Doug Taylor highlighted one of the union’s main concerns: a hostile work environment for custodians and maintenance workers that includes racial discrimination. He noted that administrative officials have prohibited workers from speaking any language other than English during disciplinary hearings and have disallowed the use of interpreters.

“Advocates are not allowed to speak Spanish in a sidebar with the people they’re representing,” Taylor said.

SEIU Local 73 represents 50 custodians and maintenance workers within District 130, with 95% of those workers being people of color, the union added. Taylor also accused district officials of demonstrating a pattern of harassing and targeting union stewards.

Requests for comment from McKay, Tisch, and district board members were not immediately returned.

Union members have publicly spoken out against what they describe as racist and retaliatory practices at recent board meetings. However, as of Tuesday, they have reportedly lost faith in McKay and Tisch, Taylor said. The union’s petition calling for the removal of the superintendent and assistant superintendent has garnered over 900 signatures.

“When we were looking at options to make progress for our members, this was the step that we chose to involve the community,” Taylor explained.

Other issues raised by the union include the administrators’ rejection of proposals to provide custodians and maintenance workers with clear guidance during lockdowns or law enforcement incidents.

“Currently, they don’t know what their role would be in the school,” Taylor said. “So they just want training, that’s all.”

The union has also gained support from elected officials. State Rep. Bob Rita called for an investigation into “allegations of racism, retaliation and anti-union practices” in a union news release dated October 6.

State Sen. Willie Preston, who began his career as a union janitor, stated, “I know what it feels like to go to work, work hard, and have no respect at the end of the day.”

“Let me be clear to District 130: These workers do their jobs, but you need to clean up your act today,” Preston said.

In addition, union members voiced their concerns at a recent Blue Island City Council meeting. Mayor Fred Bilotto said in the union news release that the issues raised about District 130 leadership “deserve immediate attention.”

“As a union member, educator, and school administrator, I urge the District 130 administration and board to address these allegations and enter into serious negotiations with the union,” Bilotto said.

Meanwhile, Taylor emphasized that the union will continue to raise these concerns publicly until the school board is compelled to take action.

“We’ll continue to raise the issues until we are satisfied that we’re making good progress,” he said.

For further information, contact ostevens@chicagotribune.com.
https://www.chicagotribune.com/2025/10/23/district-130-custodial-union-superintendents-removal/

Jack Smith And Allies Are Making New Moves As Republicans Mount Pressure

Former special counsel Jack Smith and his allies are leveraging their experience prosecuting President Donald Trump to criticize his administration and launch new legal campaigns.

Two top prosecutors for former special counsel Jack Smith, Molly Gaston and J. P. Cooney, have launched their own law firm, Gaston & Cooney. According to their website, the firm will focus on helping state and local governments enforce “public corruption” laws, criminal defense, and supporting clients subject to congressional investigations.

Gaston and Cooney worked on Smith’s election interference case against Trump, which was dropped when Trump won the 2024 election. They were subsequently fired from the Department of Justice amid suggestions that they should face disbarment.

Meanwhile, Smith himself is already facing an ethics investigation by the Office of Special Counsel (OSC), an independent federal investigative and prosecutorial agency. Trump’s nominee to lead OSC, Paul Ingrassia, withdrew from consideration on Tuesday after failing to secure “enough Republican votes.” This occurred in the wake of leaked messages published by Politico.

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https://dailycaller.com/2025/10/23/jack-smith-and-allies-are-making-new-moves-as-republicans-mount-pressure/

Trump plows past concerns over East Wing demolition — and envisions an even bigger ballroom than initially planned

(CNN) — President Donald Trump has proceeded with enormous latitude as he constructs his massive new ballroom, bypassing concerns raised by preservationists and so far stopping short of seeking approval from the commission overseeing construction on federal buildings to tear down the entirety of the White House East Wing.

The ballroom is now expected to be larger than initially planned, according to multiple sources familiar with the matter. The president has shown visitors two flat tabletop models, at times quizzing the room on which version they preferred: the smaller one or the larger one. Most answered that the bigger one was better, to which Trump agreed.

While it’s not clear how much larger, Trump said Wednesday that the ballroom is expected to cost a projected $300 million, seemingly in line with a larger structure. Previously, the administration had put the cost at $200 million.

The project has drawn outcry and led to questions about whether the president was within his legal authority to dismantle entire sections of the executive mansion. Not all of Trump’s own team was set on the project at the start, one source familiar with the internal conversations told CNN.

At the beginning, some aides and advisers thought it was too big of a task to undertake, and attempted to explain how difficult and lengthy the process was likely to be. But once it became clear the president wasn’t going to give up on the idea — which he’s been musing about for the better part of 15 years — everyone quickly got onboard.

The White House says it will submit plans for the ballroom construction to the National Capital Planning Commission, but insists the body doesn’t have purview over the decision to knock down the East Wing. Some former members of the panel have questioned that assessment. And one of the nation’s premier historic preservation organizations is calling for an immediate halt to the leveling of the East Wing.

But there appeared little standing in the way of the president’s decision to move ahead with the audacious, multi-year project. Now the demolition is well underway, making it seem unlikely the plans will be reversed.

“In order to do it properly, we had to take down the existing structure,” Trump said Wednesday in the Oval Office when questioned about the project. A scale model of the White House grounds with the ballroom prominently jutting out from the East Colonnade sat on the table in front of him.

He said after a “tremendous amount of study with some of the best architects in the world,” the determination was made that “really knocking it down” the East Wing would be necessary. “It was never thought of as being much,” he said. “It was a very small building.”

On Wednesday, track excavators continued their work ripping into the former home of the office of the first lady, the White House calligrapher, and some military aides. The demolition was proceeding quickly, with roughly half the structure now reduced to a grey pile of cement and twisted rebar. Staffers in those departments have been relocated to other areas on the complex.

The East Wing’s wood-paneled foyer has long been the main point of entry for visitors attending social events at the White House, as well as those going on tours of the building. The section emerged in its current form in 1942.

Officials said the rest of the East Wing is likely to be demolished by the end of the week.

In some ways, the cries of disapproval are coming too late. Renderings released by the White House in July showed the ballroom sitting atop where the East Wing used to sit, and an official press release at the time stated it would sit “where the small, heavily changed, and reconstructed East Wing currently sits.”

Trump said anyone outraged or concerned he was taking steps without being frank about his intentions were misplaced. “I haven’t been transparent? I’ve shown this to everybody that would listen,” he said in the Oval Office.

Still, images of the building torn to pieces this week have caused shock, particularly as Trump tests his authority in nearly all aspects of the presidency — not least of which is the building he lives and works in.

The project began ramping up over the summer, one source said, and weekly meetings to discuss the project began. The president himself has been involved in these meetings, which have also included Chief of Staff Susie Wiles, the White House Military Office, the Secret Service, an architecture team, and other staffers internally who have been tasked with helping move the project along quickly, the source said.

The White House said in late July that McCrery Architects and its CEO James McCrery would take the lead in the design of the addition. A few days later, McCrery was spotted alongside Trump on the White House roof surveying the area on the South Grounds where the ballroom will go.

Trump’s aides were prepared for pushback on the ballroom and sought to review what was legally required to complete the project, the source said.

Ultimately, administration officials determined the White House would only need approval from the National Capital Planning Commission, which oversees federal construction projects in Washington and its neighboring states, Virginia and Maryland.

However, officials said the commission has jurisdiction only when “vertical” construction begins and does not oversee demolition.

Trump recently appointed White House staff secretary and loyalist Will Scharf to chair the commission. White House deputy Chief of Staff James Blair and another Trump aide were also appointed to the commission at the same time.

Scharf said during a meeting of the commission last month the body would eventually be involved in the project, but not until after the East Wing was demolished.

“I know the president thinks very highly of this commission, and I’m excited for us to play a role in the ballroom project when the time is appropriate for us to do so,” he said.

The commission, which is closed amid the ongoing government shutdown, was created by Congress in 1924 and is comprised of 12 members. Three are appointed by the president, along with the chairman, with the rest of the seats reserved for federal agencies, such as the National Park Service, and representatives from the District of Columbia.

Projects reviewed by the NCPC in recent years include changing the perimeter fence around the White House grounds and a tennis pavilion Trump installed during his first term. The fence, in particular, took several years before it was ultimately approved; officials said it was a necessary change because people kept jumping over the previous one and running toward the North Portico.

L. Preston Bryant Jr., who served as chairman of the NCPC for nearly a decade, described a three-stage process that typically unfolds for federal projects, beginning with early consultations that he described as collaborative.

“The Commission staff very much wants a potential project to get started on the right foot. This early consultation stage is very important,” he told CNN.

The project goes through subsequent phases — conceptual, preliminary approval, and final approval — before the process is complete.

Bryant said he couldn’t remember a time when demolition was separated from the approval process in the way the Trump White House has done.

“That was not my experience during my time at NCPC,” Bryant said. “If there’s to be demolition, that’s part of the project. The demolition element is inherent in the overall project. Demo is not separated from construction. It’s part of it.”

Rebecca Miller, the executive director of the DC Preservation League, said demolishing the East Wing before a formal submission of the ballroom plans essentially starts the project before a formal review process.

“Most concerning is that they’re just tearing down the East Wing without any public submission as to what is going to be built in its place,” she said. “And that’s where the National Capital Planning Commission, or the Commission on Fine Arts, or the public, would have their input into the design of the property, its compatibility with the White House, and how to mitigate or minimize the impact on the current historic resource.”

“We’re in this kind of zone where there’s nothing that prevents the demolition, but we’ve also not seen what the submission is,” Miller added.

Other laws and rules also appear not to apply to the White House. President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the National Historic Preservation Act in 1966, which details the process by which stakeholders should be brought in for large public projects. But the law excludes the three pillars of US government — the Capitol, the Supreme Court, and the White House — from its provisions.

The Shipstead-Luce Act of 1930 also requires that alterations to buildings in the national capital area, including the White House, must be presented to the Commission of Fine Arts. The language, however, refers to buildings facing the White House and not the White House itself.

For Trump, the concerns about the new ballroom appear unconvincing.

Sitting in the newly gilded Oval Office as the machines were working away outside, he held up a pile of paper renderings showing the plans, including the Louis XIV-style interior that closely resembles the ballroom at Mar-a-Lago.

“You see it goes beautifully with the White House,” Trump proclaimed. “I mean, the mix is beautiful.”

© 2024 The-CNN-Wire™ & ©.
https://wsvn.com/news/politics/trump-plows-past-concerns-over-east-wing-demolition-and-envisions-an-even-bigger-ballroom-than-initially-planned/

Senate confirmation-scarred Trump nominees find other homes in the administration

“I do have a Nazi streak in me from time to time, I will admit it,” he wrote last year in a text message group chat with Republican strategists and influencers.

Regardless, at least at the time of publication, Ingrassia remains the White House’s liaison with the Department of Homeland Security after being moved in February from the Department of Justice following problems with Attorney General Pam Bondi’s chief of staff. The White House did not respond to the Washington Examiner’s request for comment.

Ingrassia’s withdrawal — Trump’s 49th this year — comes after the hiring, firing, and rehiring of Marko Elez, the Department of Government Efficiency staffer under Elon Musk who had administrator-level access to U.S. Treasury payment systems that dispersed more than $5.45 trillion last fiscal year before he was terminated.

“I would not mind at all if Gaza and Israel were both wiped off the face of the Earth,” Elez wrote in 2024 on a now-deleted anonymous social media account. “Just for the record, I was racist before it was cool.”

Elez was reinstated a day later after Vice President JD Vance defended him on his own social media account, despite Elez also saying, “Normalize Indian hate.” Notably, Vance’s wife, Usha Vance, is the country’s first Asian American and Hindu American second lady. Trump expressed his support for Elez in a later press conference.

Republican strategist Charlie Black conceded that Trump keeping Ingrassia in the White House has created a political optics problem for his administration. “But they don’t mind taking heat for their loyalists,” the founding chairman of Prime Policy Group told the Washington Examiner. “[They] are already under pressure from the press.”

To that end, Republican strategist Alex Conant contended that if Democrats continued to underscore Ingrassia, “eventually the president might be annoyed by the distraction and make a change.”

“But the Democrats haven’t shown any ability to keep sustained attention on anything since Trump’s term began,” the former communications director for Secretary of State Marco Rubio’s 2016 presidential campaign told the Washington Examiner. “Between the shutdown, upcoming elections, and Trump’s daily announcements, it seems unlikely that this will stay at the top of the news for long.”

Republican strategist Doug Heye was similarly uncertain whether Trump would relent to pressure related to Ingrassia; however, he had concerns about the White House’s employment process. “It sure seems, ‘Have you ever praised the Nazis?’ now has to be a part of the political job application process,” the former Republican National Committee communications director told the Washington Examiner.

Democratic strategist Jim Manley said, “In any other administration, someone like this would have a less than zero chance of continuing to serve after withdrawing his name from consideration to be confirmed by the Senate.”

“But the Trump folks don’t play by the same rules as everyone else, and they sure as heck don’t care about the optics of a guy like Ingrassia continuing to serve the president,” the former communications director for the late Sen. Harry Reid (D-NV) told the Washington Examiner. “I mean, they have a real problem here — if they fire him for holding extremist views, then a whole bunch of others are going to come under fire as well for holding the same extremist views.”

Vance just last week defended the Young Republicans New York chapter’s group chat — which involved state leaders and at least one Trump administration aide — that included questionable comments such as, “I love Hitler.”

“The reality is that kids do stupid things, especially young boys,” Vance said during an episode of The Charlie Kirk Show taped at the White House after Trump posthumously awarded Kirk the Presidential Medal of Freedom. “They tell edgy, offensive jokes. That’s what kids do. And I really don’t want us to grow up in a country where a kid telling a stupid joke — telling a very offensive, stupid joke — is cause to ruin their lives.”

The other optics issue created for Trump by Ingrassia’s withdrawal is the administration’s recent embrace of cancel culture. Vance, for example, last month implored people to report anyone welcoming Kirk’s death to their respective employers. The State Department has canceled visas for the same reason as well.

At the same time, President Ronald Reagan biographer Craig Shirley compared Ingrassia to the Democratic nominee to become Virginia’s next attorney general, Jay Jones. Jones sent text messages in 2022 to a Virginia Republican lawmaker about shooting then-state House Speaker Todd Gilbert and wishing death upon his children.

“The despicable and actionable comments of Jones in the VA AG race gives political cover to almost everybody,” the former Republican strategist told the Washington Examiner. “The Left is losing at everything, and deep down they know our ideas are better than their ideas, which has led to their mindlessness, including opposing everybody and everything, regardless.”

Democrats have simultaneously encountered another optics issue, this one with Maine Democratic U.S. Senate primary candidate Graham Platner, who has had to cover up a Nazi symbol tattoo.

Ingrassia’s withdrawal also comes after Trump has found administration positions for other nominees whom the Senate would not have confirmed.

Ed Martin, Trump’s former interim U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia, is another nominee who did not have enough support to be confirmed by the Senate, withdrawing his candidacy in May after Sen. Thom Tillis (R-NC) announced he would not endorse him over comments regarding Jan. 6. Days later, Martin announced he would become the Justice Department’s pardon attorney, a position through which he has investigated the Biden administration’s pardons and former President Joe Biden’s use of an autopen.

The day before Martin’s withdrawal, Trump’s original nominee to become the U.S. Surgeon General, Janette Nesheiwat, withdrew her candidacy after conservative activist Laura Loomer emphasized discrepancies with her medical education. Nesheiwat claimed to have been educated at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, instead of the American University of the Caribbean.
https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/white-house/3860139/senate-confirmation-scarred-trump-nominees-other-homes-administration/

Depending on China for rare-earths is one of our dumbest mistakes — and must be corrected PRONTO

In the 1960s, conservative intellectual James Burnham wrote a book arguing that the decline of Western civilization was a self-imposed choice. His volume, famously titled *The Suicide of the West*, desperately needs an update—one that includes an epilogue about the United States’ growing dependence on China for the mining and processing of rare earth elements. This vulnerability ranks as one of the most fantastically self-damaging strategic missteps of our time.

China is exploiting its advantage in trade negotiations with the United States by restricting the supply of rare earths to gain leverage. A key focus of President Donald Trump’s recent meeting with Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese was forging an agreement to jointly invest in critical-minerals projects. There has to be more where that came from. The United States must push on all fronts to address this truly dangerous strategic vulnerability.

Rare earth materials are crucial for manufacturing cars, smartphones, drones, medical devices, and, most importantly, high-tech weapons. For example, approximately 800 pounds of rare earths go into making a single F-35 fighter jet. Between 2019 and 2022, the Government Accountability Office reports, the United States imported more than 95% of the rare earths it consumed—and overwhelmingly from China.

It would be one thing if we relied on Norway or Canada—both allied nations with whom we have no prospect of military conflict (despite the occasional presidential joking about annexation). Instead, China, an adversary bent on surpassing the United States as a global power, is the country we are most likely to confront in a potentially ruinous war.

This scenario echoes the 1930s, when Imperial Japan imported 80% of its oil from the United States, even as it hurtled toward collision with American forces. Today, we are repeating that dynamic, except without a good reason, and playing the role of resource-starved Japan.

It’s a little like King Harold needing Norman goodwill to supply his men with shields in 1066 or Lord Nelson requiring French materials to build his ships of the line in 1798.

Not so long ago—in 1991—the United States was the biggest supplier of rare earths. Then, China undertook a concerted and highly successful effort to wrest the mining and processing of rare earths out from under us. It handed out tax rebates to boost production, bought a key U.S. rare-earths business, and shipped its equipment to China. Over time, it squeezed out the U.S. rare-earths industry and has maneuvered to maintain its dominance ever since.

This is industrial policy as highly consequential geopolitics.

There is no alternative but to respond in kind, which the Trump administration, to its credit, is now undertaking. According to Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, the administration will establish a price floor for the domestic rare-earths industry. The Defense Department has taken an equity stake in our largest rare-earths miner, with more such moves anticipated.

Public-private cooperation, akin to what characterized Trump’s Operation Warp Speed, is necessary, along with the relaxation of permitting and environmental restrictions. It will take years to make up lost ground, but with enough resources and staying power, this problem is solvable.

Friendly countries have ample supplies of rare earths. The bigger challenge is processing—the sector where China holds an almost complete monopoly. Processing requires specialized know-how and considerable time to build facilities. Still, this is not a technical or logistical challenge on the scale of, say, the Manhattan Project.

Of all the elements of our post–Cold War vacation from history—when defense spending, geography, and supply chains were no longer considered paramount—the outsourcing of the rare-earths industry to China was the most improvident.

If nothing else, China’s recent use of rare earths as a weapon in trade disputes is a cautionary signal of what could come during a more momentous conflict. We can’t say we weren’t warned.

X: @RichLowry
https://nypost.com/2025/10/20/opinion/depending-on-china-for-rare-earths-is-one-a-dumb-mistake-we-must-correct-pronto/

Jesus Cast Down the Mighty from Their Thrones. So Should We

In the past week, the Trump administration brokered a deal that secured the release of Israeli hostages and Palestinian prisoners. While the terms of the long overdue ceasefire are being contested, this is a groundbreaking accomplishment for which I’m deeply thankful.

However, this short-term peacemaking victory abroad was quickly undermined by the administration’s bellicose rhetoric and actions at home. President Donald Trump has repeatedly abused his ability to declare emergencies and seize power under the pretense of maintaining law and order.

For example, he declared immigration emergencies to further militarize the U.S.-Mexico border and label drug cartels as terrorists. He also declared a “trade emergency” to justify and impose costly tariffs, and an energy emergency to greenlight new drilling projects and bypass regulations.

Most alarmingly, he has falsely declared a “crime” emergency to federalize and deploy National Guard troops to additional cities.
https://www.realclearreligion.org/2025/10/20/jesus_cast_down_the_mighty_from_their_thrones_so_should_we_1141997.html

Chinese Tech Giants Halt Stablecoin Plans after Regulatory Push: Report

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Coinbase has invested in CoinDCX, highlighting the growing potential of India’s retail cryptocurrency market and signaling increased involvement from global players.
https://www.financemagnates.com/cryptocurrency/chinese-tech-giants-halt-stablecoin-plans-after-regulatory-push-report/

Fascinating Background – The CIA Was Misleading Witkoff and Kushner on Key Intelligence About Hamas During Critical Phase of Peace Negotiations

A fascinating hour-long interview with Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner sheds light on the backstory of the Israel-Hamas peace agreement in Gaza. During the discussion, Witkoff and Kushner detail the step-by-step process they followed as they engaged the leaders of Qatar, Turkey, and Egypt.

One particularly striking moment occurs when Witkoff reveals that the CIA was briefing both him and Kushner multiple times a day. However, the intelligence they received from the CIA was exactly the opposite of what the Emir of Qatar and the Presidents of Turkey and Egypt were telling them. In other words, the CIA intelligence was completely at odds with the reality on the ground.

**WATCH:** What Witkoff and Kushner are describing highlights precisely why “outside government” emissaries play a vitally necessary role in circumventing the control agenda of the U.S. Intelligence Community. This example is stunning in its magnitude, especially when considered within the importance of the moment.

On a positive note, with Witkoff making this candid public statement, we can now add a major data point to President Trump’s well-known skepticism toward the CIA. This aligns with previous assertions from figures like Marco Rubio and Tulsi Gabbard, who have expressed similar concerns about intelligence reliability.

The example of the CIA getting it wrong—and misleading the administration—has long-range ramifications that extend beyond the Hamas case. Given this context, it’s reasonable to feel optimistic that President Trump remains cautious about trusting CIA intelligence, particularly regarding the Russia-Ukraine conflict.

This insight underscores the ongoing debate about intelligence transparency and reliability at the highest levels of government.
https://theconservativetreehouse.com/blog/2025/10/19/fascinating-background-the-cia-was-misleading-witkoff-and-kushner-on-key-intelligence-about-hamas-during-critical-phase-of-peace-negotiations/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=fascinating-background-the-cia-was-misleading-witkoff-and-kushner-on-key-intelligence-about-hamas-during-critical-phase-of-peace-negotiations

Professors weigh in on Trump administration’s demands for universities

On “Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan,” three professors from leading universities shared their perspectives on a significant development in higher education policy.

Representing the University of Virginia, the University of Arizona, and the University of Southern California, these experts discussed the Trump administration’s initiative requiring colleges to sign a nine-page “compact.”

This agreement asks institutions to commit to the administration’s higher education priorities. In return, colleges would receive preferred access to federal funding.

The conversation delved into the implications of this move for colleges and the broader impact on higher education in the United States.
https://www.cbsnews.com/video/professors-weigh-in-on-trump-administrations-demands-for-universities/