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Vance Exposes DEI ‘Scandal’ Involving Air Traffic Controllers

Vice President JD Vance offered insight into President Donald Trump‘s comments about how DEI policies were a factor in the deadly mid-air collision between an American Airlines jet and Army Black Hawk Helicopter near Reagan National Airport in the Washington, D.C., area last week.

Fox News anchor Maria Bartiromo asked Vance if he had any evidence that any of the employees at the control were “DEI hires” during a “Sunday Morning Futures” interview.

“No, the president’s been very clear about this. This is not saying that the person who was at the controls is a DEI hire,” Vance replied, adding: “Let’s just say, first of all, we should investigate everything. But let’s just say the person at the controls didn’t have enough staffing around him or her because we were turning people away because of DEI reasons. There is a very direct connection between the policies of the last administration and short-staffed air traffic controllers. That has to stop.”

Vice President @JDVance on DEI hiring practices at the FAA 🎯

“There’s a very direct connection between the policies of the last administration and short-staffed air traffic controllers…That is a scandal. Thankfully, it's a scandal that the president has stopped." pic.twitter.com/e5NYUYCSlq

— Andrew Surabian (@Surabees) February 2, 2025

Vance continued his answer by responding to the media coverage of Trump’s remarks in the wake of the tragedy in which 67 people were killed.

“By the way, it’s so funny to me. The media has picked up on this — not you, of course, Maria — but others have picked up on this. The president made very clear that he wasn’t blaming anybody, but he was being very explicit about the fact that DEI policies have led our air traffic controllers to be short-staffed. That is a scandal,” Vance said. “Thankfully, it’s a scandal that the president has stopped.”

The New York Times revealed that an internal preliminary report from the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) said that staffing at the tower at the time of the collision was “not normal for the time of day and volume of traffic.” Also mentioned by the newspaper was that the controller who was dealing with helicopters around the airport was also instructing planes that were landing and departing, tasks typically assigned to multiple people.

Earlier in the interview, Vance explained how he believed DEI policies of the Obama and Biden administrations “contributed” to the current situation.

“We have a massive shortage of air traffic controllers. And, in fact, there have been a number of lawsuits from people who would like to become air traffic controllers against the Obama and Biden administration who basically said, we were told not even to apply because of the color of our skin, because they were white people who wanted to be air traffic controllers, and under the DEI regime of the Biden administration, they weren’t welcome.”

Vance said that means the “we don’t have the best and the brightest sometimes in these positions” and “even more importantly than that, even when we do get really good people, they’re going to be way overstressed because they’re working long hours, because air traffic controllers are short-staffed.”

Hearkening back to his time in the Senate, Vance noted that he served on the Commerce, Science, and Transportation Committee.

“We knew for years that we had a shortage at air traffic control,” Vance said. “Well, part of the reason why we had a shortage at air traffic control is because we were telling our air traffic controllers not to hire people because of the color of their skin. That is a scandal, and it is a scandal, thankfully, that has stopped under the leadership of President Trump. It’s why I’m actually optimistic about aviation safety, but it’s also why we have had way too many near misses and unfortunately a fatal crash just a couple days ago.”

Weekend Warrior: Elon Musk Reveals How DOGE Is Cutting Billions In Spending Every Day

The Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) appears to have gotten off to a fast start during the first two weeks of President Donald Trump‘s second term.

Elon Musk, who leads DOGE, delivered a number of updates on his social media platform, X, on Friday and into the weekend about what it takes to cut government spending by billions of dollars a day.

He shared a post from DOGE that showed a list of more than 100 “DEI related contract cancellations” that resulted in more than $1 billion worth of “savings.”

Updated data on DEI related contract cancellations with full detail: https://t.co/hEBk62KQvN pic.twitter.com/kcPATigb3x

— Department of Government Efficiency (@DOGE) January 31, 2025

Musk posted about cutting the federal deficit.

“Reducing the federal deficit from $2T to $1T in FY2026 requires cutting an average of ~$4B/day in projected 2026 spending from now to Sept 30,” Musk said in the original post. “That would still result in a ~$1T deficit, but economic growth should be able to match that number, which would mean no inflation in 2026. Super big deal.”

Reducing the federal deficit from $2T to $1T in FY2026 requires cutting an average of ~$4B/day in projected 2026 spending from now to Sept 30.

That would still result in a ~$1T deficit, but economic growth should be able to match that number, which would mean no inflation in…

— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) January 31, 2025

He later responded to the original post with updates.

“I am cautiously optimistic that we will reach the $4B/day FY2026 reduction this weekend,” Musk said. He added in a second post: “None of this would be possible without President @realDonaldTrump.”

None of this would be possible without President @realDonaldTrump https://t.co/OGCWYxJAqb

— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) February 1, 2025

With a third, Musk said: “Obviously, there will be EXTREME opposition from the grifters!! And they will make it sound like we’re cutting funding to save baby pandas when we’re actually cutting funding to fraudsters, wastrels & terrorists … This is only possible because of President @realDonaldTrump.”

Obviously, there will be EXTREME opposition from the grifters!!

And they will make it sound like we’re cutting funding to save baby pandas when we’re actually cutting funding to fraudsters, wastrels & terrorists 🤣🤣

This is only possible because of President @realDonaldTrump. https://t.co/OGCWYxJAqb

— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) February 1, 2025

A report from Reuters said aides to Musk locked government workers out of computer systems at the Office of Personnel Management.

Asked if the report was true, and given plaudits if it was, Musk replied with a smiling “winking face” emoji.

😉

— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) February 1, 2025

The Daily Wire’s Luke Rosiak posted about how the General Services Administration “surrendered” after a deputy to Musk “deleted huge swaths of code dedicated to virtue-signaling rather than mission, such as its ‘inclusion bot’ that lectured staff.”

Musk said in response to Rosiak: “Deleted.”

Deleted https://t.co/o0C9neqJcG

— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) February 1, 2025

Rosiak also posted about how “Federal government-wide computer office @18F, which to this day has a transgender flag as its logo, also deleted where its employee handbook instructed employees to explain what they look like at each meeting so blind people could know if there was sufficient racial diversity.”

Musk said in reply: “The nightmare is Over.”

The nightmare is over https://t.co/YgIhyysBbQ

— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) February 1, 2025

Conservative activist Robby Starbuck posted about DOGE and the Treasury Department.

“The highest ranking Treasury official, David A Lebryk, is resigning rather than complying with a request by @DOGE for access to audit where they’ve spent trillions of dollars a year,” Starbuck wrote. “Why would career bureaucrats fear an audit by @elonmusk and @doge to see where we can save money?”

Musk said in response: “The @DOGE team discovered, among other things, that payment approval officers at Treasury were instructed always to approve payments, even to known fraudulent or terrorist groups. They literally never denied a payment in their entire career. Not even once.”

The @DOGE team discovered, among other things, that payment approval officers at Treasury were instructed always to approve payments, even to known fraudulent or terrorist groups.

They literally never denied a payment in their entire career.

Not even once. https://t.co/kInoGWdw4C

— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) February 1, 2025

There were other posts about DOGE throughout the weekend.

💯

They are government-funded non-governmental organizations – living oxymorons! https://t.co/qg49sUD7fD

— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) February 1, 2025

Live by executive order, die by executive order

— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) February 1, 2025

 

😎 https://t.co/6EU2FA8hXI

— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) February 2, 2025

Doge will fix it

— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) February 2, 2025

Noted

— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) February 2, 2025

@DOGE is on the warpath. pic.twitter.com/HjrqteZ3mZ

— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) February 2, 2025

 

In one of his most viral comments of the weekend, Musk revealed a major weakness of the bureaucracy that he is trying to shrink.

Very few in the bureaucracy actually work the weekend, so it’s like the opposing team just leaves the field for 2 days!

Working the weekend is a superpower 😂 https://t.co/VgyBk1nJIO

— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) February 1, 2025

Great idea

— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) February 1, 2025

“Very few in the bureaucracy actually work the weekend, so it’s like the opposing team just leaves the field for 2 days! Working the weekend is a superpower,” he said.

Musk added later: “DOGE is working 120 hour a week. Our bureaucratic opponents optimistically work 40 hours a week. That is why they are losing so fast.”

Very few in the bureaucracy actually work the weekend, so it’s like the opposing team just leaves the field for 2 days!

Working the weekend is a superpower 😂 https://t.co/VgyBk1nJIO

— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) February 1, 2025

DOGE is working 120 hour a week. Our bureaucratic opponents optimistically work 40 hours a week. That is why they are losing so fast. https://t.co/dXtrL5rj1K

— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) February 2, 2025

Senate Confirms Trump’s ‘Energy Dominance’ Champion Doug Burgum For Interior

On Thursday, the GOP-led Senate confirmed former North Dakota Governor and businessman Doug Burgum to become Interior secretary, a big step forward for President Donald Trump‘s “energy dominance” agenda.

The final vote was 79-18, with many Democrat members joining with their Republican colleagues in supporting Burgum’s nomination to the Cabinet role in Trump’s second term. Another three senators did not vote.

On X, Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-SD) said he looked forward to working with Burgum to “protect our public lands and leverage some of America’s greatest assets for a safer, more prosperous future.”

Governor Burgum knows that America’s natural resources are our greatest national asset.

I look forward to working with him to protect our public lands and leverage some of America’s greatest assets for a safer, more prosperous future. pic.twitter.com/wdQWN13hqi

— Leader John Thune (@LeaderJohnThune) January 30, 2025

Burgum ran for the Republican presidential nomination in the 2024 race, but dropped out and endorsed Trump. He was reportedly a finalist to become Trump’s running mate before now-Vice President JD Vance got the nod.

In November, Trump announced that he picked Burgum to lead the Department of Interior, which manages public lands and deals with Native American relations, as well as a new National Energy Council.

🚨 STATEMENT FROM PRESIDENT DONALD J. TRUMP: pic.twitter.com/F0M9AQa5yB

— Trump War Room (@TrumpWarRoom) November 15, 2024

“Doug Burgum will protect our Nation’s Natural Resources, restore our fabulous Oil and Gas advantage, and Make America, and its Energy, Dominant and Great Again!” Trump said in a statement.

In his confirmation hearing for Interior, Burgum testified about Trump’s “energy dominance” vision. He argued that shutting down U.S. energy production to help the global environment was a “false tradeoff.”

Interior Secretary nominee Doug Burgum on how he would help to make President-elect Trump's vision of American energy dominance come to fruition. pic.twitter.com/FtDPITYafu

— CSPAN (@cspan) January 16, 2025

Burgum advanced out of committee by an 18-2 vote. His final confirmation vote was very bipartisan, but it fell short of the unanimous show of support that Secretary of State Marco Rubio received.

CIA Director John Ratcliffe, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, DHS Secretary Kristi Noem, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy, and EPA head Lee Zeldin have also been confirmed.

Other nominees are still working their way through the Senate. Democrats have sought to impede the confirmation process, such as forcing procedural votes, an effort that has earned stern rebukes from the GOP.

By Jan. 30th, Obama had 22 members of his admin confirmed, 19 of which were expedited votes.

As of this morning, Trump has 7 confirmed, & today, Democrats are delaying yet another confirmation vote.

I’ve got news for Dems: late nights and long hours won’t stop us. We WILL…

— Rick Scott (@SenRickScott) January 30, 2025

Among the next Cabinet picks poised to get a confirmation vote is Christopher Wright, Trump’s nominee to lead the Department of Energy. Wright was also chosen to serve as a member of the National Energy Council.

“This team will drive U.S. Energy Dominance, which will drive down Inflation, win the A.I. arms race with China (and others), and expand American Diplomatic Power to end Wars all across the World,” Trump said.

Report Suggests Airport Tower Understaffed At Time Of Collision, Had Been For Years

New details indicate the air traffic control tower at Reagan National Airport in the Washington, D.C., area was understaffed when a nearby helicopter collided with a passenger jet on Wednesday night.

An internal preliminary report from the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) said that staffing at the tower was “not normal for the time of day and volume of traffic,” according to The New York Times.

“The tower was nearly a third below targeted staff levels, with 19 fully certified controllers as of Sept. ***2023***… The shortage — caused by ***years*** of employee turnover and tight budgets, among other factors — has forced many controllers to work up to six days a week…” https://t.co/f78yCtL21j

— Jerry Dunleavy IV 🇺🇸 (@JerryDunleavy) January 30, 2025

The newspaper said the controller who was dealing with helicopters around the airport was also instructing planes that were landing and departing, tasks which are typically assigned to multiple people.

Also mentioned by The New York Times was how the Reagan airport tower had been understaffed for years, part of a nationwide shortage that has led to many controllers working long hours, up to six days a week.

The newspaper further explained that the Reagan airport tower was nearly a third below targeted staff levels, with 19 fully certified controllers as of September 2023 reported to Congress in an FAA workforce plan.

Search efforts in the Potomac River began immediately after the mid-air crash between an American Airlines jet with 60 passengers and four crew on board and an Army Black Hawk Helicopter carrying three soldiers.

President Donald Trump said on Thursday afternoon, “Sadly, there are no survivors. This was a dark and excruciating night in our nation’s capital and in our nation’s history and a tragedy of terrible proportions.”

President Trump on DCA helicopter-plane crash: "Sadly, there are no survivors. This was a dark and excruciating night in our nation's capitol and in our nation's history and a tragedy of terrible proportions." pic.twitter.com/ZzeXygwpAr

— CSPAN (@cspan) January 30, 2025

National Transportation Safety Board officials said their agency plans to release a preliminary report on the D.C. crash “within 30 days” followed by a final report when an investigation has been completed.

The mid-air collision follows the Senate confirmations in the past week of Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy, both of whom have responded to the tragedy.

“What happened today should never have happened. I want the families of the victims to know that they have my word: I will not rest until you have the truth,” Duffy said in a series of posts to X.

“I will find answers to how this happened. I have directed every relevant agency to immediately investigate what went wrong, and I will not tolerate delays or bureaucratic excuses,” the secretary added.

He concluded by saying: “If there was negligence, incompetence, or failure anywhere in the system, we will find it — and I will fix it. I will provide further updates as we uncover the facts.”

Senate Confirms Lee Zeldin To Be Trump’s EPA Administrator

On Wednesday, Lee Zeldin received Senate confirmation to become administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), the latest of President Donald Trump‘s second-term nominees to get approval from the upper chamber of Congress.

The GOP-led Senate voted 56-42 to confirm Zeldin, a former Republican congressman from New York, to take on the Cabinet role. Sens. John Fetterman (D-PA), Ruben Gallego (D-AZ), and Mark Kelly (D-AZ) broke ranks and voted for Zeldin with their GOP colleagues. Two Democrat senators did not vote.

“CONFIRMED! Thank You to the 56 Senators for your vote and confidence,” Zeldin said in a post to X. “Grateful to President [Trump] for having the faith in me to be part of his Cabinet as [EPA] Administrator. Make America Great Again!”

✅ CONFIRMED! Thank You to the 56 Senators for your vote and confidence.

Grateful to President @realDonaldTrump for having the faith in me to be part of his Cabinet as @EPA Administrator. 

Make America Great Again!🇺🇸

— Lee Zeldin (@LeeMZeldin) January 29, 2025

Trump announced that he was nominating Zeldin, who served eight years in the House and ran a competitive but unsuccessful campaign against New York Democrat Governor Kathy Hochul in 2022, for the EPA administrator position back in November.

“Lee, with a very strong legal background, has been a true fighter for America First policies. He will ensure fair and swift deregulatory decisions that will be enacted in a way to unleash the power of American businesses, while at the same time maintaining the highest environmental standards, including the cleanest air and water on the planet,” Trump said.

“He will set new standards on environmental review and maintenance, that will allow the United States to grow in a healthy and well-structured way,” Trump continued, adding, “I have known Lee Zeldin for a long time, and have watched him handle, brilliantly, some extremely difficult and complex situations. I am very proud to have him in the Trump Administration, where he will quickly prove to be a great contributor!”

Zeldin testified in a confirmation hearing earlier this month and later advanced out of the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee by an 11-8 vote. He is the seventh person to obtain Senate approval to join Trump’s second-term Cabinet after Secretary of State Marco Rubio, CIA Director John Ratcliffe, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, and Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy.

WATCH: EPA Administrator Nominee Lee Zeldin Opening Statement pic.twitter.com/uRlhx7OrDP

— CSPAN (@cspan) January 16, 2025

Other nominees are still working their way through the Senate. Democrats have sought to impede the confirmation process, such as forcing procedural votes, an effort that has earned stern rebukes from the GOP.

“It’s day 10 of Pres. Trump’s admin, & Senate Democrats are still using every trick in the book to delay & obstruct Pres. Trump’s team,” Sen. Rick Scott (R-FL) said in a post to X, adding that former President Barack Obama “had 22 nominees confirmed by now! Trump only has 7. Pres. Trump needs his full team in place to help make America great again. We won’t stop until every last nominee is confirmed.”

Trump Signs Laken Riley Act Into Law

On Wednesday, President Donald Trump signed into law the “Laken Riley Act,” a bill that requires federal officials to arrest non-U.S. nationals accused of violent and theft-related crimes in the United States.

The immigration legislation was passed through the GOP-led House and Senate with bipartisan support. It is the first bill that Trump has signed into law during his nascent second term in the White House. Under the law, the Homeland Security Department is directed to detain “certain aliens” charged with, convicted of, or who admit to certain theft-related or violent offenses. It also authorizes states to sue over immigration enforcement.

🚨 Trump signs the Laken Riley Act, his first bill signed into law as the 47th President. pic.twitter.com/dZECmVaY34

— Daily Wire (@realDailyWire) January 29, 2025

Laken Riley was a 22-year-old Georgia nursing student who was killed last year. An illegal immigrant from Venezuela, Jose Ibarra, was convicted of murdering Riley and sentenced to life in prison. Amid the ensuing national outcry, it was revealed that Ibarra had been previously arrested for other offenses, but he was released in New York before federal authorities could issue a detainer.

“To Laken’s family, we will keep Laken’s memory alive in our hearts forever,” Trump said at a signing ceremony at the White House. “Everyone’s hearts. With today’s action, her name will also live forever in the laws of our country. And this is a very important law. This is something that has brought Democrats and Republicans together — that’s not easy to do. Laken did it. Laken did it. America will never, ever forget Laken Hope Riley.”

"Laken's name will live forever in the laws of our country.

America will never, ever forget Laken Hope Riley."@realDonaldTrump pic.twitter.com/87v2cox691

— Daily Wire (@realDailyWire) January 29, 2025

Border czar Tom Homan, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, GOP lawmakers, and Sen. John Fetterman (D-PA) were in attendance, as were members of Riley’s family. The Daily Wire’s Mary Margaret Olohan recorded video of Riley’s mother weeping as she delivered remarks, thanking Trump and the lawmakers who sponsored the bill.

Laken Riley’s mother weeps as she thanks President Trump for keeping his promises and honoring the memory of her daughter: pic.twitter.com/HhxPIpmhzq

— Mary Margaret Olohan (@MaryMargOlohan) January 29, 2025

On the campaign trail last year, Trump met with family and friends of Riley. He also posted on social media when Ibarra was convicted in November on 10 charges, including murder, kidnapping, and aggravated assault with intent to rape Riley. “JUSTICE FOR LAKEN RILEY!,” Trump exclaimed, adding that it was “time to secure our Border, and remove these criminals and thugs from our Country, so nothing like this can happen again!”

The “Laken Riley Act” initially focused solely on theft-related crimes for the detention requirement, in addition to empowering states to sue over alleged immigration infractions. Both chambers of Congress ultimately passed the bill with GOP amendments that added violent offenses, including assault of a police officer, to the detention section.

Although the legislation received bipartisan support, Democrat opponents warned that non-citizens simply accused of crimes might not get due process if it became law and that it would be a boon to private prisons.

After Democrats Delay, AG Nom Pam Bondi Advances To Full Senate

Pam Bondi, who is President Donald Trump‘s pick to be U.S. attorney general, cleared a key hurdle in the Senate confirmation process after Democrats placed a temporary hold on her nomination last week.

On Wednesday, the Judiciary Committee voted 12-10 along party lines to favorably report Bondi to the full Senate. Leadership may now move toward a final confirmation vote, for which Bondi will need a simple majority.

The Senate Judiciary Committee has favorably reported Pam Bondi’s nomination for Attorney General. Next stop: the Senate floor! ⚖️ pic.twitter.com/D2TqRUyO5r

— Senate Judiciary Republicans (@SenJudiciaryGOP) January 29, 2025

“Congrats to my good friend [Pam Bondi]!” Sen. Rick Scott (R-FL) said in a post to X, responding to the panel’s vote. “She will do an incredible job, and I look forward to voting yes on her confirmation on the Senate floor.”

Judiciary Democrats said, “Republicans just advanced Trump’s attorney general nominee to the full Senate, despite her clear intent to side with wealthy special interests and Donald Trump over the American people.”

BREAKING: Senate Judiciary Republicans just advanced Trump’s attorney general nominee to the full Senate, despite her clear intent to side with wealthy special interests and Donald Trump over the American people.

— Senate Judiciary Democrats 🇺🇸 (@JudiciaryDems) January 29, 2025

The Senate Judiciary Committee had planned to meet on Bondi’s nomination last week, but the panel announced that its Democrat members instituted a seven-day hold — a move allowed under the rules.

Bondi, a former GOP attorney general of Florida, testified before the panel in a confirmation hearing earlier this month and discussed her priorities if she were confirmed to lead the Department of Justice.

“I will fight every day to restore confidence and integrity to the Department of Justice and each of its components,” Bondi said. “The partisanship, the weaponization, will be gone. America will have one tier of justice for all.”

Also during her confirmation hearing, Bondi made waves when she clashed with some of the Senate Judiciary Committee’s Democrat members, including Sens. Adam Schiff (D-CA) and Alex Padilla (D-CA).

“Senator, what I can tell you is that I will never play politics,” Bondi declared in an exchange with Schiff. “You’re trying to engage me in a ‘gotcha.’ I won’t play politics with any ongoing investigation like you did.”

The GOP-led Senate has so far confirmed six Cabinet nominees for Trump’s second term despite efforts by the Democrats to impede the process, such as forcing procedural votes, and has several more under consideration.

Bondi’s nomination advanced to the full Senate as Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Trump’s pick to become Secretary of Health and Human Services, appeared for a confirmation hearing before the Finance Committee.

Senate Ahead Of ‘Obama Standard’ In Confirming Trump 2.0 Nominees, Thune Says

The GOP-led Senate is ahead of the “Obama standard” when it comes to confirming President Donald Trump‘s Cabinet nominees, Majority Leader John Thune (R-SD) said on Sunday.

During an interview on “Sunday Morning Futures” nearly a week into Trump’s second term, Fox News anchor Maria Bartiromo pressed Thune about the confirmation process, which Democrats have prevented from being conducted in a more speedy manner by forcing procedural votes and employing other delay tactics.

“Why haven’t we seen more confirmations sooner? It certainly feels like the 53 Senate majority Republicans are allowing the 47 Senate minority Democrats to confirm the confirmation hearing process. Is that right?” Bartiromo asked, incorporating the 45 Senate Democrats with the pair of independents who caucus with them.

Today on @SundayFutures with @MariaBartiromo, Senate Majority Leader @LeaderJohnThune spoke about the Senate confirmation process for President Trump's cabinet nominees.@FoxNews pic.twitter.com/J4EY5xIZzw

— SundayMorningFutures (@SundayFutures) January 26, 2025

“Well, actually, we’re ahead of schedule. We’re going back to what is the Obama standard,” Thune replied, adding that former president Barack Obama “got 12 of his Cabinet nominees through in 15 days. It took Trump 43 days to get his first 12 through back in 2017” for his first term.

“So we are pushing hard. And, obviously, there are constraints that are imposed by the rules of the Senate. The minority in the Senate has ways that can slow things down and drag it out,” Thune said.

“But we’re actually, at the current point, ahead of the Obama standard,” the majority leader continued. “And so we’re going to keep moving aggressively, moving quickly, forcing people to stay and to take votes on weekends, which we did this weekend.”

He added: “We will get them in place as quickly as we possibly can. But we are on the schedule that we laid out and one that I think enables these folks to get through the process in time to deliver for the president and for the American people.”

The Senate has so far confirmed Marco Rubio to be U.S. Secretary of State, John Ratcliffe to be CIA director, Pete Hegseth to be defense secretary, and — in a vote on SaturdayKristi Noem to be homeland security secretary.

Scott Bessent, Trump’s treasury secretary nominee; and Sean Duffy, the nominee to become transportation secretary are expected to get confirmation votes in the coming days.

Thune said that installing “new leadership” at federal agencies and departments are needed to implement Trump’s second term agenda.

“Of course, we’re starting with the national security positions, which are critically important with everything that’s going on in the world and everything that’s going on at our southern border, which is why it was important that we get Governor Noem in at DHS,” Thune said.

“But, as we move forward, we have got Treasury, Bessent coming up, Sean Duffy at DOT, a whole bunch more that we’re queuing up, teeing up to get done. And it’s just really important that they get in place, Maria, because you have a window of time. This doesn’t come along all that often and sometimes doesn’t last that long,” he added.

Thune concluded: “And so we want to make sure the president has his team in place so he’s able to deliver on the agenda that he talked with the American people about and that they voted for in November.”

Vance Breaks Tie To Confirm Pete Hegseth For Pentagon

On Friday evening, the GOP-led Senate confirmed Pete Hegseth to become Donald Trump‘s defense secretary, ending a dramatic confirmation process for the high-profile figure who aims to revitalize the U.S. military.

The final vote was 51-50. Former Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) along with Sens. Lisa Murkowski (R-AK) and Susan Collins (R-ME) joined with Democrats and the two independents who caucus with them in opposing the nomination, leaving Vice President JD Vance to cast the tie-breaking vote.

#BREAKING: U.S. Senate CONFIRMS Pete Hegseth to be Secretary of Defense, 51-50. @VP Vance breaks tie, second tie-breaking vote on Cabinet nominee in history. pic.twitter.com/6TiVfYQxR6

— CSPAN (@cspan) January 25, 2025

This was the second time in which a vice president broke a tie for a Cabinet nominee. The first instance happened in 2017 when then-Vice President Mike Pence cast the tie-breaking vote for Betsy DeVos to become education secretary in Trump’s first administration.

“I thought I was done voting in the senate,” Vance, a former U.S. senator from Ohio, quipped in a post to X as he traveled to the U.S. Capitol.

I thought I was done voting in the senate 😂

— JD Vance (@JDVance) January 25, 2025

Hegseth, 44, is an Army National Guard veteran and former Fox News host who has experience leading veteran advocacy groups. He also has written a number of books, including one focused on how the military has gone woke.

At a time when the Pentagon is contending with low recruitment and several failed audits in a row, Hegseth testified in his confirmation hearing that Trump wants him to restore a “warrior culture” and predicted troops would “rejoice” when lethality and war fighting come back into focus.

“I know the troops will rejoice.”

Pete Hegseth discusses ridding the military of the “woke yoke” from the Biden Administration. pic.twitter.com/YAekxplDzv

— Daily Wire (@realDailyWire) January 14, 2025

 

Hegseth’s bid to become defense secretary was not without drama as a number of misconduct allegations emerged during the Senate confirmation process. Senators who rejected Hegseth’s nomination raised concerns about those claims, his stance on women serving in the military, and his leadership experience. Hegseth’s defenders insisted he was the “fighter” the Department of Defense (DOD) needs to get back on track.

Democrats’ pointless stall tactics are putting our national security at risk. @PeteHegseth is the fighter we need and the right person to get the Department of Defense back on track. We must CONFIRM HIM TODAY, NO MORE OF DEMOCRATS’ DELAYS! pic.twitter.com/lNZYk10Ysa

— Rick Scott (@SenRickScott) January 23, 2025

During his confirmation hearing this month, Hegseth testified that there was a “coordinated smear campaign orchestrated in the media” driven by anonymous sources. Hegseth also said he was “not a perfect person, but redemption is real, and God forged me in ways I know I’m prepared for.”

While the final vote was taking place, Hegseth posted on X a letter to Sen. Thom Tillis (R-NC), who had not committed to supporting his nomination until moments later. The letter pushed back on allegations by Hegseth’s former sister-in-law, Danielle Dietrich, including that he abused his ex-wife Samantha. Samantha herself previously rejected the abuse claims.

pic.twitter.com/k4t74Gzwva

— Pete Hegseth (@PeteHegseth) January 25, 2025

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From the beginning, I have been clear about my position: if President Trump’s nominees were reported favorably out of the relevant committees, I would support their confirmation on the Senate floor absent new material information about their qualifications. Once Pete Hegseth’s…

— Senator Thom Tillis (@SenThomTillis) January 25, 2025

Hegseth is now the third Cabinet nominee to be confirmed by the Senate since Trump was sworn into office for a second term on Monday. The other two are Secretary of State Marco Rubio and CIA Director John Ratcliffe. South Dakota Governor Kristi Noem, who is Trump’s nominee to become Secretary of Homeland Security, could follow as soon as this weekend.

Upon announcing the nomination for defense secretary in November, Trump said Hegseth “has spent his entire life as a Warrior for the Troops, and for the Country. Pete is tough, smart and a true believer in America First.” He added, “With Pete at the helm, America’s enemies are on notice – Our Military will be Great Again, and America will Never Back Down.”

Trump also noted that Hegseth believes in “peace through strength” and said he “will be a courageous and patriotic champion” for the U.S. military.

“I am elated at the confirmation of Pete Hegseth,” Republican Study Committee Chairman August Pfluger (TX) told The Daily Wire. “Hegseth understands our military’s fundamental objective: projecting precise, overwhelming force that instills respect and caution in our adversaries.”

He added that under Hegseth’s leadership at the DoD, “We will ensure we can effectively deter our enemies and restore the warfighting readiness that was compromised under the Biden administration. I am confident America will re-emerge as the undisputed global military superpower with President Trump and Secretary Hegseth’s leadership. America is back–stronger, more lethal, and more resolute than ever before.”

EXCLUSIVE: House Republicans Unveil New Bill To Rename Dulles Airport After Trump

House Republicans are moving forward with a new bid to rebrand one of the major airports in the Washington, D.C., metropolitan area to take on the name of President Donald Trump, The Daily Wire can exclusively reveal.

Less than a week after Trump began his second term and declared that the “golden age of America” was beginning, freshman Rep. Addison McDowell (R-NC) unveiled a bill that would rename Washington Dulles International Airport in Virginia as the Donald J. Trump International Airport.

“We have entered the golden age of America largely thanks to President Trump’s leadership,” McDowell said in a statement. “It is only right that the two airports servicing our nation’s capital are duly honored and respected by two of the best presidents to have the honor of serving our great nation.”

The bill, which can be seen here, is just two pages long.

In one provision, it says Dulles Airport “shall after the date of the enactment of this Act be known and designated as the ‘Donald J. Trump International Airport.'” And, in a second part, it says “any reference in any law, regulation, map, document, paper, or other record of the United States to the airport referred to” in the first provision “shall be considered to be a reference to the Donald J. Trump International Airport.”

Reps. Guy Reschenthaler (R-PA), Brandon Gill (R-TX), Riley Moore (R-WV), and Brian Jack (R-GA) are joining McDowell in introducing the legislation. Reschenthaler led a previous endeavor to rename Dulles Airport after Trump in the last Congress, but his virtually-identical bill did not get any further than being referred to the House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure.

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With Republicans now in control of both chambers of Congress and Trump serving as president, the legislation could fare better this time around.

“President Donald J. Trump, the greatest president of my lifetime, was just sworn into office for a second term after a historic landslide victory,” Reschenthaler declared in a statement. “This legislation will cement his status in our nation’s capital as our fearless commander-in-chief, extraordinary leader, and relentless champion for the American people.”

Moore said: “President Trump has been the most consequential politician in my lifetime. His agenda to lift up the forgotten men and women of America reverberates so strongly with the people of my district and so many across the country. I’m proud to be co-leading this bill with Congressman McDowell and hope to see it voted on the floor of the People’s House soon.”

Dulles Airport, which celebrated its 60th anniversary in 2022, was named after Secretary of State John Foster Dulles, who served under President Dwight D. Eisenhower. The last time Republicans moved to rename Dulles Airport after Trump, Democrats lashed out at the proposal.

“This idea is ridiculous, but sadly real,” now-former Rep. Abigail Spanberger, a Democrat running to become Virginia governor, said in a post to X. “Congress must act on pressing issues like reauthorizing the FAA and passing the national security supplemental. Yet this is what a Member of House Republican leadership focuses on — renaming Virginia’s Dulles airport after Trump.”

In anticipation of another political clash, McDowell quipped to The Daily Wire: “Democrats are all for changing genders — so why not change the name of an airport? Honoring President Trump’s legacy at Dulles is an easy decision. Democrats want to change the names of genders — Republicans want to honor real leadership, easy enough.”

Senate Confirms John Ratcliffe As Trump’s CIA Director

On Thursday, the GOP-led Senate confirmed the nomination of John Ratcliffe to become CIA director in President Donald Trump‘s second term.

The final tally was 74-25, with many Democrats joining with Republicans in voting for Ratcliffe, who is the second Trump Cabinet nominee to be confirmed after Secretary of State Marco Rubio was approved unanimously earlier this week. A simple majority was needed for confirmation.

Ratcliffe is a former House Republican from Texas who served as director of national intelligence at the end of the first Trump administration.

During his confirmation hearing last week, Ratcliffe testified that he demonstrated his “record in terms of speaking truth to power and defending the intelligence community and its good work” when he stood firm against efforts to discredit the Hunter Biden laptop story.

“In 2020, when a chairman of an intelligence committee misrepresented that a laptop owned by then-candidate [Joe] Biden’s son was somehow a Russian intelligence operation and 51 former intelligence officials used the imprimatur of IC authority to go along with that, I stood in the breach. I stood alone and told the American people the truth about that,” he said.

CIA Director Nominee @JohnRatcliffe: “In 2020, when a chairman of an intelligence committee misrepresented that a laptop owned by then candidate Biden’s son was somehow a Russian intelligence operation… I stood in the breach. I stood alone and told the American people the truth… pic.twitter.com/5d75IK13BG

— Trump War Room (@TrumpWarRoom) January 15, 2025

The Senate Intelligence Committee advanced Ratcliffe’s nomination by a 14-3 vote with bipartisan support. However, earlier this week, Sen. Chris Murphy (D-CT) objected to a so-called time agreement that would have allowed a final confirmation vote to have taken place on Tuesday.

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Murphy said he wanted a “full” debate that lasted a couple of more days while insisting that some members had “serious concerns” that the CIA pick would not be able to “distance himself from the political interests of President Trump.” Intelligence Chairman Tom Cotton (R-AR) rejected Murphy’s claim about Democrats needing more time and surmised that “what this is really about is trying to drag out all of these nominations to play procedural games, as we’re about to, with Pete Hegseth’s nomination to try to deny President Trump his Cabinet in a prompt and timely fashion.”

My message to obstructionist Democrats:

Don’t make plans this weekend. We’re going to get President Trump’s nominees confirmed the easy collegial way, or apparently the hard way. pic.twitter.com/DJrA09bTqk

— Tom Cotton (@SenTomCotton) January 21, 2025

 

The Senate could hold a confirmation vote on Hegseth, who is the nominee to become defense secretary, as early as Friday after GOP leadership took procedural steps to set it up in the face of Democrat resistance to speed up consideration of Trump’s Cabinet picks. South Dakota Governor Kristi Noem, who is Trump’s nominee to become Secretary of Homeland Security, may be next with a final vote over the weekend.

 

Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-SD) warned Democrats against slowing down efforts to confirm Trump’s nominees, saying on X: “As I’ve repeatedly said, Senate Republicans are ready to work as long as needed to confirm President Trump’s nominees. Nights. Weekends. Recesses.”

Senate Republicans Erupt Over Dem ‘Stalling’ Of Trump Nominees

Leading Senate Republicans have been delivering fiery rebukes as their Democrat colleagues slowed down the process of confirming President Donald Trump‘s Cabinet nominees for his nascent second term in the White House.

After Sen. Chris Murphy (D-CT) objected to a so-called time agreement that would have allowed a final vote on John Ratcliffe‘s nomination to become CIA director on Tuesday, Majority Leader John Thune (R-SD) voiced his dismay in remarks on the Senate floor while stressing that the upper chamber would press ahead with Trump’s picks.

“We’ve now wasted a whole day where we could have been acting on that nomination,” Thune said, adding that the question before the Senate was “do we want a vote on these folks on Tuesday or vote on them on Friday, Saturday and Sunday? Because that’s what we’re going to do. This can be easy or this can be hard.”

Thune highlighted that Ratcliffe, a former House Republican from Texas who served as director of national intelligence at the end of Trump’s first term, sailed through the Senate Intelligence Committee by a 14-3 vote with bipartisan support.

“This is about America’s national security interests. And we’re stalling,” Thune continued. “So that’s not going to happen. We’re going to file cloture on them. You can force us to stay here, staying around here. And we can vote on these things Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday. But we’re going to vote on them.”

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As I’ve repeatedly said, Senate Republicans are ready to work as long as needed to confirm President Trump’s nominees. Nights. Weekends. Recesses. pic.twitter.com/yLl2hIo0pc

— Leader John Thune (@LeaderJohnThune) January 22, 2025

Thune also took procedural steps that will pave the way to final confirmation votes in the coming days for Ratcliffe’s nomination, as well as South Dakota Governor Kristi Noem’s nomination to become Homeland Security secretary and Pete Hegseth’s nomination to become Defense secretary — both of whom have advanced out of committee, too.

With a post to X featuring a video of his remarks, Thune suggested there could even be recess appointments. Trump has advocated for installing his own nominees in such a manner, during a recess, if the Senate fails to confirm them in a “timely manner.”

In rejecting the Senate Republicans’ bid to proceed more swiftly with a confirmation vote on Ratcliffe’s nomination, Murphy said he wanted a “full” debate that lasted a couple more days while insisting that some members had “serious concerns” that the CIA pick would not be able to “distance himself from the political interests of President Trump.”

But Senate Intelligence Chairman Tom Cotton (R-AR) wasn’t buying it. He rejected Murphy’s claim about Democrats needing more time to discuss Ratcliffe’s nomination and surmised that “what this is really about is trying to drag out all of these nominations to play procedural games, as we’re about to, with Pete Hegseth’s nomination to try to deny President Trump his Cabinet in a prompt and timely fashion.”

My message to obstructionist Democrats:

Don’t make plans this weekend. We’re going to get President Trump’s nominees confirmed the easy collegial way, or apparently the hard way. pic.twitter.com/DJrA09bTqk

— Tom Cotton (@SenTomCotton) January 21, 2025

So far, the GOP-led Senate has approved just one of Trump’s Cabinet nominees: now-former senator from Florida, Marco Rubio, who on Tuesday was sworn in to office as U.S. Secretary of State after being confirmed by a unanimous vote on Monday.

While some delays may be due to paperwork, the Senate Judiciary Committee announced that Democrats pushed back a meeting to vote on advancing the nomination of Pam Bondi to become U.S. attorney general by a week with a hold allowed under the rules.

Senate Democrats Put Arbitrary Hold On Pam Bondi Nomination

Senate Democrats have pushed back the schedule to consider the nomination of Pam Bondi, who is President Donald Trump‘s nominee to be U.S. attorney general, by at least a week.

On Tuesday, the Judiciary Committee sent out a notice announcing that a planned Wednesday meeting, at which members could have voted to advance Bondi’s nomination to the full Senate, had been called off.

“Per Judiciary Committee Rule I.3, any member of the Committee may request an item on the Committee’s agenda be held over for a minimum of seven days. Holds are common practice in the Senate Judiciary Committee,” the notice said.

RELATED: Trump Says Dems ‘Will Try All Sorts Of Tricks’ To Delay Cabinet Confirmations

“Pursuant to this rule, the Minority will hold Bondi’s nomination for seven days. As a result of this hold, which goes into effect tomorrow, the Committee will not meet in person for this week’s executive business meeting,” the advisory added.

The Judiciary Committee, which is led by Chairman Chuck Grassley (R-IA), said it expects to convene next week on January 29 and hold a final vote on Bondi’s nomination at that time.

Bondi, a former attorney general of Florida, testified before the Judiciary Committee in a confirmation hearing last week.

“If confirmed, I will fight everyday to restore confidence and integrity to the Department of Justice and each of its components,” Bondi said. “The partisanship, the weaponization, will be gone. America will have one tier of justice for all.”

Bondi made waves when she clashed with some of the committee’s Democrat members, including Sens. Adam Schiff (D-CA) and Alex Padilla (D-CA).

“Senator, what I can tell you is that I will never play politics,” Bondi said at one point to Schiff. “You’re trying to engage me in a ‘gotcha.’ I won’t play politics with any ongoing investigation like you did.”

As of press time, the GOP-led Senate has confirmed just one of Trump’s Cabinet nominees: now-former senator from Florida, Marco Rubio, who on Tuesday was sworn in to office as U.S. Secretary of State.

Other nominees are working their way through the confirmation process.

John Ratcliffe, Trump’s nominee to become CIA director, expected to get a final confirmation vote as early as later on Tuesday.

Punchbowl News reporter Andrew Desiderio posted on X that Democrats are “plotting” a slowdown of the nomination of Pete Hegseth to be defense secretary after he advanced out of committee on Monday.

Trump Nominee Elise Stefanik Blasts ‘Anti-Semitic Rot’ Within The United Nations

Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-NY), who is President Donald Trump‘s nominee to become U.S. ambassador to the United Nations (UN), called out the “anti-Semitic rot” within the international organization.

During her confirmation hearing before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on Tuesday, Stefanik put the UN on blast for its conduct pertaining to Israel, a U.S. ally that is still trying to secure the freedom of all hostages taken by Hamas after the group’s October 7 terrorist attack in 2023.

“If you look at the anti-Semitic rot within the United Nations, there are more resolutions targeting Israel than any other country, any other crisis combined,” Stefanik said as she answered a question from Sen. Dave McCormick (R-PA).

.@EliseStefanik: "If you look at the anti-Semitic rot within the United Nations, there are more resolutions targeting Israel than any other country, any other crisis combined… We need to be a voice of moral clarity on the UN Security Council." pic.twitter.com/ANjUmyj7TU

— Trump War Room (@TrumpWarRoom) January 21, 2025

The nominee took aim at the UN Women group for “failing to condemn Hamas’ terrorist attack and terrorist regime against innocent civilian women using rape and targeting women. Specifically taking them hostage.”

Stefanik said she was “overjoyed” that three women held captive by Hamas were recently freed as part of a ceasefire deal, stressed that the U.S. needs to “stay committed” to get all the hostages released, and noted that she has met “many hostage families.”

With the UN ambassadorship, Stefanik said, “We need to be a voice of moral clarity on the UN Security Council and at the United Nations at large for the world to hear the importance of standing with Israel, and I intend to do that.”

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Stefanik also mentioned it will soon be 50 years since the UN’s “disgraceful ‘Zionism is Racism’ resolution” and noted how she wanted to follow the example of then-U.S. ambassador Daniel Patrick Moynihan, who “spoke out strongly” against it.

Trump “has a tremendous record when it comes to standing with Israel,” Stefanik added, “whether it’s the Abraham Accords, whether it’s his commitment to combating anti-Semitism, or recognizing Jerusalem as the eternal capital of Israel. ”

In response to the remarks, the Republican Jewish Coalition said Trump had sent a “clear message” by nominating Stefanik — “that we will stand by our cherished ally Israel and fight back against the vile antisemitism running rampant in Turtle Bay” — and advocated for her confirmation.

Senate Passes Amended Version Of The Laken Riley Act

On Monday, the GOP-led Senate passed an amended version of the “Laken Riley Act,” a bill that would require federal officials to arrest non-citizens who are charged with crimes in the United States.

The legislation was approved by a 65-34 vote in the upper chamber. Twelve Democrats joined with Republicans to vote in favor of the bill, including Sen. John Fetterman (D-PA) and others from battleground states.

Senate approves Laken Riley immigration bill as amended. Now goes to the House.

12 Dems YES: Cortez Masto NV, Fetterman PA, Gallego AZ, Hassan NH, Kelly AZ, Ossoff GA, Peters MI, Rosen NV, Shaheen NH, Slotkin MI, Warner VA, and Warnock GA. pic.twitter.com/FmtK5DgkUm

— Jamie Dupree (@jamiedupree) January 20, 2025

Now, if the lower chamber approves the Senate bill in its amended form, the measure can be sent to the White House.

“This critical legislation will strengthen public safety and protect our communities. I’m looking forward to President Trump signing this life-saving legislation,” Sen. Katie Britt (R-AL) said in a post to X.

As originally written, the bill would direct the secretary of Homeland Security to detain illegal immigrants charged with, convicted of, or who admits to theft-related crimes.

One amendment from Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX) that passed added “the assault of a law enforcement officer offense, or any crime that results in death or serious bodily injury to another person” to the list.

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The Senate also broadened the scope of the bill with “Sarah’s Law,” a provision sought by Sen. Joni Ernst (R-IA) and named after an Iowan killed by an illegal immigrant nine years ago.

“It requires detention and bars bail [for] illegal immigrants who have been accused of killing someone, such as via drunk driving,” Fox News reporter Chad Pergam said of “Sarah’s Law” in a post to X.

Another part of the bill allows states to sue federal officials for “injunctive relief” if certain immigration actions or policies harm their citizens. The Senate rejected a Democrat amendment that sought to rein in this section.

The legislation was named after Laken Riley, a 22-year-old Georgia nursing student who was killed last year. A 26-year-old illegal immigrant from Venezuela, Jose Ibarra, was convicted of murdering Riley and sentenced to life in prison.

A House version of the same bill passed the lower chamber with the support of 216 Republicans and 48 Democrats earlier this month. However the Senate took up its own version, which was always going to need its own House vote.

Senate Advances Pete Hegseth’s Nomination To Become Defense Secretary

Pete Hegseth, who is President Donald Trump‘s nominee to be secretary of defense, cleared a key hurdle on Monday in his endeavor to be confirmed by the Senate.

The Armed Services Committee voted 14-13 along party lines to send Hegseth’s nomination to the full Senate after his confirmation hearing took place last week.

CNN’s Manu Raju reported details on what transpired with the vote, alluding to some of the controversies fueled by anonymous sources that Hegseth has battled against during the confirmation process:

“The GOP-led Senate Armed Services Committee approved the nomination of Pete Hegseth as defense secretary along party lines, capping an intense debate within the panel over the former Fox News host and military veteran’s fitness for the critical position.

The closed-door vote was 14-13.

The GOP waived a rule requiring seven days’ notice for a committee vote. Rs said it’s crucial to get a defense nominee confirmed. Ds believe it’s an effort to get the votes before any new allegations emerge.”

Raju also noted that Republicans hope to confirm Hegseth this week. It appears Hegseth will have enough GOP votes to be confirmed to Trump’s Cabinet.

“I just voted to advance Pete Hegseth’s nomination to the Senate floor,” Sen. Jim Banks (R-IN) said in a post to X. “There is no time to waste. The Senate should confirm Hegseth NOW!”

I just voted to advance Pete Hegseth’s nomination to the Senate floor. There is no time to waste. The Senate should confirm Hegseth NOW! pic.twitter.com/W49rxi6jXW

— Senator Jim Banks (@SenatorBanks) January 20, 2025

The Armed Services Committee vote on Hegseth’s nomination took place in the hours after the Inauguration Day ceremony in which Trump was sworn in to begin his second term in the White House.

Another of Trump’s Cabinet picks, Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL), flew through the Foreign Relations Committee in a unanimous vote that put him one step closer to becoming secretary of state.

The full Senate voted unanimously to confirm Rubio’s nomination on Monday night, making him the first of Trump’s Cabinet nominees to be confirmed by the upper chamber.

Other nominees also were advanced through committee on Monday. They included: John Ratcliffe, Trump’s nominee to become CIA director; and South Dakota Governor Kristi Noem, the secretary of homeland security nominee.

Also on Monday evening, the Senate passed the immigration-focused “Laken Riley Act.” A version of the bill already passed the House, but the lower chamber will now consider the legislation as amended by the Senate.

Elon Musk Celebrates Trump Supporters For Saving ‘The Future Of Civilization’

While delivering an enthusiastic speech after the Inauguration on Monday, Elon Musk told fellow supporters of President Donald Trump they helped assure the “future of civilization.”

Musk, a tech executive who is poised to help lead the new administration’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), touted Trump’s 2024 election win at a Capital One Arena rally in Washington, D.C.

“This is what victory feels like! Yea!” Musk exclaimed. “This was no ordinary victory. This was a fork in the road of human civilization.”

“It is thanks to you that the future of civilization is assured,” Musk said moments later. “We’re going to have safe cities — finally! — safe cities, secure borders, sensible spending. Basic stuff. And we’re going to take DOGE to Mars!”

The crowd roared in response.

“I mean, can you imagine how awesome it will be to have American astronauts plant the flag on another planet for the first time?” Musk asked.

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After simulating planting a couple of flags into the ground, he added, “Yea! How inspiring would that be?”

One of the many companies that Musk runs is SpaceX, which aims to one day send people to Mars and beyond. Musk suggested last year that the first crewed flights to Mars could happen by 2028.

Trump briefly talked about sending the first humans to the planet Mars as part of his inaugural address at the U.S. Capitol.

“We will pursue our manifest destiny into the stars, launching American astronauts to plant the Stars and Stripes on the planet Mars,” Trump said to a round of applause.

Musk attended Trump’s inauguration alongside Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, a fellow billionaire with a space company, as well as Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg and Google CEO Sundar Pichai.

Elon Musk’s reaction to Trump saying today: “We will pursue our manifest destiny into the stars by launching American astronauts to plant the Stars and Stripes on the planet Mars.” pic.twitter.com/XMLQC2OTuu

— Sawyer Merritt (@SawyerMerritt) January 20, 2025

He looked thrilled, giving two thumbs up and clapping, when Trump made the comment about Mars.

Also during his Capital One Arena speech, Musk spoke about how people need things to inspire them. And he told the audience that he would work his “a** off” for them.

“I really will,” Musk declared. “I’m super fired up for the future. It’s going to be very exciting. As the president said, we’re going to have a ‘golden age.’ It’s going to be fantastic.”

Trump is expected to deliver remarks at the Capital One Arena event, too, and sign a number of executive orders at a desk now bearing the presidential seal in front of the crowd of nearly 20,000 people.

Treasury Nominee Scott Bessent Schools Dem Senator On ‘Energy Race’ With China

Scott Bessent, President-elect Donald Trump‘s nominee for treasury secretary, responded to a Democratic lawmaker’s claim that the United States is facing off against China in an “arms race in clean energy.”

The retort occurred on Thursday during a confirmation hearing held by the Senate Finance Committee. Bessent responded to Sen. Ron Wyden (D-OR), who began his final question by touting the “biggest transformation on clean energy in American history”—an apparent reference to the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA).

“That is our package that basically said the tax code as it relates to energy is a broken-down mess. And we basically said we’re going to have a technology-neutral system: the more you reduce carbon, the bigger your tax savings,” Wyden said.

“Now there is a big effort in the Trump administration to reverse it. I think that’s going to be bad for the economy, but it is going to be damn good for China because we are in an arms race in clean energy with them. Are you going to be on the side of people who want to unravel this?” he asked.

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“Sen. Wyden. Just so we can frame this for everyone in the room, China will build a hundred new coal plants this year. There is not a clean energy race, there is an energy race,” Bessent began.

“China will build 10 nuclear plants this year. That is not solar. I am in favor of more nuclear plants and I would note that the IRA as scored by the CBO is wildly out of control in terms of spending on the upside,” he added, referring to the Congressional Budget Office.

“Well, first of all, the clean energy package does protect nuclear because members on both sides of the aisle in this room wanted it to be that way,” Wyden replied.

“But if you’re going to talk about fossils, the United States has achieved a greater level of energy security than we’ve had in generations,” the senator continued. “Oil and gas production is at record highs. And it’s not just that, but it’s about clean energy. And I’m very troubled by your position denying that we’re in an arms race with China on clean energy, because we definitely are.”

Senate Amends Laken Riley Act To Add More Crimes Requiring Detention Of Illegal Immigrants

On Wednesday, the GOP-led Senate amended the “Laken Riley Act,” a bill that would require federal officials to arrest illegal immigrants charged with crimes in the United States.

Seventy members, including Republicans and Democrats, voted in favor of expanding the legislation’s list of criminal offenses that would lead to mandatory detention of “inadmissible aliens.”

Another 25 senators voted against the amendment from Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX), all Democrats and the two independents who caucus with them. Several other members did not vote.

The bill, which got approved by the House last week, would direct the secretary of Homeland Security to detain illegal immigrants charged with, convicted of, or who admits to theft-related crimes.

With the amendment included, the list now also mentions “the assault of a law enforcement officer offense, or any crime that results in death or serious bodily injury to another person.”

The Senate also rejected an amendment from Sen. Chris Coons (D-DE) to “strike” a section authorizing state attorneys general to sue federal immigration officials for alleged detention violations.

Laken Riley was a 22-year-old Georgia nursing student who was killed last year. An illegal immigrant from Venezuela, Jose Ibarra, was convicted of murdering Riley and sentenced to life in prison.

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A press release from Rep. Mike Collins (R-GA), who reintroduced the Laken Riley Act for the new Congress, said the bill “directly addresses one of the federal policy failures” related to the murder.

Ibarra was “previously cited for shoplifting by the Athens Police Department,” it said. “If local law enforcement had called ICE, and ICE issued a detainer and picked him up, Laken would be alive.”

Dozens more amendments have been proposed, including two from Judiciary ranking member Dick Durbin (D-IL) that would exempt Dreamers and give them and others a path to citizenship.

But C-SPAN’s Craig Caplan reported that Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-SD) has filed cloture on the bill, setting up a vote to advance it and limit amendments, with a 60-vote threshold.

Whatever new version of the Laken Riley Act may ultimately pass through the Senate would need another vote by the House before it could be sent to the president to possibly sign the bill into law.

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