Media

From Crowley to Duffy: Inside Trump’s Fox News administration

In a Wednesday, December 4 post on X, formerly Twitter, former Fox News pundit Monica Crowley announced that President-elect Donald Trump had nominated her for assistant secretary of state. Crowley, in her tweet, said she looks forward to working with Trump and Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Florida) — Trump's pick for secretary of state — in 2025.

Because Rubio isn't one of Trump's more controversial nominees, he is likely to receive a bipartisan confirmation from the U.S. Senate next year.

Vanity Fair's Bess Levin, in a biting December 5 column, notes that Crowley is the 12th nominee for Trump's incoming administration who has a Fox News and/or Fox Business background — and she expects that number to keep growing.

READ MORE:MAGA media ramp up 'full-throated defense' of Trump’s embattled defense nominee

"When it comes to the people Donald Trump wants advising him in a second term," Levin argues, "the president-elect has a type. Accused of sexual misconduct? You're a shoo-in for a Cabinet gig. Did time in prison? Step right up. Related to him by marriage? When can you start? Another obvious plus, and one that apparently far outweighs actual experience, is having worked for Fox News or another Fox Corp. subsidiary."

Levin continues, "While Pete Hegseth is the most prominent network personality to have received a nod — in his case, for defense secretary — he's far from the only one Trump has poached from the conservative broadcaster. Others include Sean Duffy for transportation secretary and Janette Nesheiwat for surgeon general, plus multiple additional Fox News contributors."

The Vanity Fair columnist notes that Crowley has been nominated for "a job that deals in foreign diplomacy" but has, according to Media Matters' Matt Gertz, "pushed several bigoted conspiracy theories about President Barack Obama's heritage, including promoting a documentary about his purported 'real father.'"

"After serving as Treasury Department assistant secretary for public affairs during the first Trump Administration," Levin points out, "Crowley (according to Gertz) 'returned to punditry, claiming that the deep state has been trying to destroy Trump through COVID-19…. and assassination attempts.' She was also a contributor to Project 2025."

READ MORE: Why this Dem senator is 'considering voting yes on DeSantis' to replace Hegseth

Bess Levin's full Vanity Fair column is available at this link.

How right-wing media is like improv theater

If you’ve ever wondered how the right-wing media ecosystem operates and why it’s effective, try viewing it as a form of improvisational theater or improv.

In the wake of the 2024 U.S. elections, everyday people and political pundits alike have been trying to make sense of the results and the related observation that many Americans seem to be experiencing very different realities. These realities are shaped by very different media ecosystems.

Democrats tend to trust institutional media and network news more than Republicans. In contrast, Republicans have developed what they see as a more trustworthy and explicitly partisan alternative media ecosystem that has rapidly evolved and flourished in the internet era.

Cultivating robust alternative media has been a political strategy of the right for decades. Given the interactive nature of social media and ongoing investments by the right in digital media, the right-wing media ecosystem has become a highly participatory space filled with influencers, political elites and audiences.

These players engage in year-round conversations that inspire and adapt political messaging. The collaborations are not tightly scripted but improvised, facilitated by the interactivity of digital media.

For all these reasons, we, as researchers of information ecosystems and influencer culture, find it useful to think of right-wing media as a kind of improv theater. This metaphor helps us understand the social and digital structure, culture and persuasive power of right-wing influence, which is reshaping politics in the U.S. and around the world.

Elements of improv in right-wing media

Influencers are the performers in this real-life improv show that plays out on a stage of social media newsfeeds, podcasts, cable newsrooms and partisan online media outlets. The performers include political pundits and media personalities as well as a dynamic group of online opinion leaders who often ascend from the audience to the stage, in part by recognizing and exploiting the dynamics of digital media.

These influencers work together, performing a variety of roles based on a set of informal rules and performance conventions: sharing vague but emotionally resonant memes, “just asking questions” to each other, trolling a journalist, “evidencing” claims with data or photos – sometimes taken out of context – all the while engaging each other’s content.

Just as in improv, performers work daily to find a game from their audience, internet forums and each other. The “game” in improv is a concept or story with a novel element around which a performance revolves. Once a compelling game is found, performers “raise the stakes,” another improv concept where the plot intensifies and expands.

Performers follow a loose script, collaborating toward a shared goal. Digital media environments provide additional infrastructure — the platform features, networks and algorithms — that shapes the performances.

Signature elements of improv include building on audience input and reacting to the other performers.

Their performances, both individual and in interaction with each other, help influencers attract and curate an audience they are highly in tune with. As in improv shows, the political performers may use a technique called a callback: referencing a previous line, exchange or game that the audience is familiar with. Or performers might react to calls from an engaged audience that cheers, jeers and steers the actors as the show unfolds. The audience may also prompt an entire skit by bringing a story to the attention of influencers or politicians.

From this perspective, influence doesn’t just flow from influencers on stage and out to the audience, but also flows from the audience to the influencers. These dynamics make the right-wing media ecosystem extremely reactive. Feedback is instant, and the right “bits” get laughs and likes. Influencers — and political leaders — can quickly adapt their messaging to their audiences’ tastes, preferences and grievances, as well as to the events and trends of the day, unencumbered by the lag of traditional news media.

Actors and audiences in right-wing media also engage in transgressive, controversial or even offensive bits, as they test the boundaries of their shared tastes, expectations and — for the political performers — ideologies.

Like a lot of improv shows, these performances feel intimate and authentic. Audience members can talk to the performers after and sometimes during the show. They can also be invited “on stage” when an influencer elevates their content.

It may be just for a single scene, but there is also opportunity for lucky, savvy or persistent contributors to become part of the theater of influencers. This increases the motivation to participate, the excitement and the sense among audience members that they are truly part of the show.

‘They’re eating the pets’

One example of right-wing media as improv came in fall 2024 when then-candidate Donald Trump baselessly claimed from a debate stage that Haitian immigrants in Springfield, Ohio, were stealing and eating pets.

Prior to Trump referencing them, rumors of pet-eating had been circulating in local Springfield Facebook groups. These claims were amplified when a local neo-Nazi leader discussed the issue in a recorded town hall meeting, which circulated in apps like Telegram and Gab. Influencers who monitor these channels elevated the story, finding a new game with a novel element.

A Reddit post of a photo of a man holding a bird walking down the street was taken out of context by influencers and falsely used as “evidence” of immigrants eating pets. Memes, particularly those made by artificial intelligence, started spreading rapidly, catching the attention of politicians including Sen. Ted Cruz and Rep. Marjorie Taylor-Greene, who shared them. This raised the stakes of the improv game by tying these smaller memes to a larger political narrative about needing to stop migration at the southern border.

The improv act reached its zenith when Trump and then vice presidential candidate JD Vance elevated the claims during the week of the September debate. They presented the claims with both seriousness and a bit of a tongue-in-cheek awareness that the point of the story was not necessarily about immigrants but about the attention the narrative garnered. Vance even acknowledged the whole thing could “turn out to be false.” Veracity was not the point of this improvisation.

Then-candidate Donald Trump elevated baseless claims of immigrants eating pets, a false story that bubbled up through the right-wing media ecosystem.

Growing body of research

The metaphor of right-wing media as improv emerged through research, conversation and collaboration facilitated by the University of Washington’s Center for an Informed Public, where we work.

One of us, Kate Starbird, and colleagues studied the role of political influencers in election-denying rumors after the 2020 election, finding right-wing political campaigns to be participatory efforts that were largely improvised. In related work, media researcher Anna Beers described how a “theater of influencers” on the right could be identified through their interactions with a shared audience.

Doctoral student Stephen Prochaska and colleagues built on sociologist Arlie Hochschild’s work to characterize the production of election fraud narratives in 2020 as “deep storytelling” – telling stories with strong emotional resonance – between right-wing influencers and their online audiences.

In her study of right-wing influencers, one of us, Danielle Lee Tomson, described the performative collaboration between influencers as kayfabe, a performance convention in professional wrestling of wrestlers agreeing on a story arc before a seemingly real wrestling match.

These studies all draw on different theories and apply different methods, but they converge on the ideas of improvisation, style and participatory audiences as integral to the success of right-wing media ecosystems.

A persuasive performance

In political improv, factuality is less important than the compelling nature of the performance, the actors, the big story arc and the aesthetic. The storylines can be riveting, engaging and participatory, allowing audiences to play their own role in a grand epic of American activism.

When considered this way, the persuasive power of right-wing media to everyday Americans comes into fuller focus. When there is a 24/7 chorus of collaborative internet influencers engaging their audiences directly, institutional media begins to feel too far removed and disengaged to have a comparable effect.The Conversation

Danielle Lee Tomson, Research Manager, Center for an Informed Public, University of Washington and Kate Starbird, Professor of Human Centered Design & Engineering, University of Washington

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

MAGA media ramp up 'full-throated defense' of Trump’s embattled defense nominee

With the embattled Pete Hegseth facing allegations of everything from sexual assault (the former Fox News host was never charged with anything and flatly denied the accuser's claims) to public drunkenness and severe alcohol abuse, President-elect Donald Trump is reportedly considering withdrawing his nomination of Hegseth for defense secretary — and nominating Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis instead for that position. Democratic Sen. John Fetterman of Pennsylvania, on December 4, told CNN's Manu Raju he would consider "voting yes" if DeSantis becomes the nominee.

But Hegseth is still Trump's pick for defense secretary, and he has vowed to keep fighting for votes from GOP senators.

During an appearance on The New Republic's "Daily Blast" podcast, Media Matters' Matt Gertz discussed the divide between GOP senators who would like to see someone other than Hegseth as the nominee and far-right MAGA media pundits who are aggressively defending him.

READ MORE:Senate Republicans 'uncertain they can back' Hegseth: report

When Sargent asked Gertz if there is "any way Hegseth survives this," the Media Matters reporter responded, "I think there is."

Gertz told Sargent, "What we're seeing right now is a test of the power that the right-wing media has within the MAGA movement. Some sort of flair clearly went up over the last 24 hours because after largely remaining passive and backing off from the nomination as all of these damning reports came out, people at Fox (News) and throughout the right-wing media have started rallying to Hegseth's defense."

Gertz noted that a "full-throated defense of Hegseth" has been "coming from the MAGA movement," including "people like Charlie Kirk, Jack Posobiec."

The Media Matters reporter predicted that MAGA Republicans will ramp up their demonization of the mainstream media in the weeks and months ahead.

READ MORE: Trump may end America’s place as 'the world’s preeminent cultural and economic force': analysis

"When the media actually reports facts about Trump and his administration and his administration figures and policies," Gertz told Sargent, "MAGA will turn everything into a test of whether Republicans are on the side of the liberal media or on the side of Trump. And since Trump has spent years threatening, in another administration, to use the power of the state against the media, he has raised expectations among the MAGA masses that this will happen. So when these big tests start arising, the pressure will intensify on figures in the government to actually do this stuff — not just talk about it, to do it."

READ MORE: Why this Dem senator is 'considering voting yes on DeSantis' to replace Hegseth

Greg Sargent's full interview with Media Matters' Matt Gertz is available at this link.

'Not a top-tier assassin': UnitedHealthCare CEO shooter lowered mask to flirt with hostel worker

One of photos released by the New York City Police Department of the suspected UnitedHealthcare CEO shooter Thursday showed him smiling with his mask off, according to The Hill.

CNN's Kaitlin Collins reported Thursday evening, "Wow. Per @JohnMillerCNN, among the interviews law enforcement has been conducting, they spoke to a female employee at the hostel who said, at one point, she asked the then-masked man to lower his mask while flirting with him, which is when this photo released by NYPD today was taken."

Rolling Stone reported, "Law enforcement confirmed to CNN that they had interviewed a female employee of the hostel who said she had asked him to lower his neck gaiter face mask while flirting with him. (Security video frames from a Starbucks, released by the NYPD on Wednesday, showed a suspect whose lower face was covered by such a mask.)"

READ MORE: United Healthcare CEO gunned down outside Manhattan hotel: report

Several journalists and political experts reacted to the news

Crooked Media's What a Day podcast host Jane Costa wrote: "Okay so you're not a top-tier assassin"

New York CNN correspondent Gloria Pazmino replied: "You couldn’t script it if you tried"

Former Republican Rep. Adam Kinzinger (FL) said: "Wow."

READ MORE: CEO’s murder provokes 'dark' humor in response to America’s 'dysfunctional healthcare system'

How this 'relatively competent' MAGA ally shows he’s prepared to be who Trump needs: columnist

One potential addition to President-Elect Donald Trump's administration is Peter Navarro — the former Trump official who served four months in prison earlier this year over his refusal to comply with a congressional subpoena in the January 6 investigation.

In an op-ed published by MSNBC Thursday, MSNBC Opinion writer and editor Zeeshan Aleem submits, "Navarro can serve as a relatively competent lieutenant — at least by Trump’s standards — while the president pursues his promised radical agenda on tariffs and China."

Furthermore, Aleem suggests, "He can also be trusted to help Trump undermine democratic institutions and sit in on top conversations with Trump that could potentially be legally incriminating — and not flip on his boss."

READ MORE: 'I know how you feel about me': Senator swiftly shuts down Postmaster General Louis DeJoy

However, "policy knowledge and more buttoned-up appearance shouldn’t obscure the reality that he is very much a stick of Trumpian dynamite," the MSNBC writer emphasizes.

The MAGA ally " became the first former White House official to be imprisoned for a contempt of Congress conviction," Aleem adds. "In other words, even though Trump didn’t come to Navarro’s rescue, Navarro went to jail refusing to say anything that might strengthen the case against Trump.

"I still have some principles. But not as many as you might think because I don’t have any concern at all about making stuff up about my opponent that isn’t exactly true," Aleem notes that "Navarro wrote in 1998 while reflecting on his many failed efforts to win public office."

Aleem concludes, "Perhaps the best illustration of the kind of figure Navarro is in Trump World — industrious, wonky, obedient — is that even when he was in prison this year for refusing to comply with an inquiry into his involvement in efforts to overturn the election, he was still working on detailed policy proposals for a future Trump administration."

READ MORE: 'You answer to us': Hegseth blasted for saying he only answers to Trump, senators, and God

Aleem's full op-ed is available here.


'Actually, your colleague': CNN host pins GOP senator on Republicans' potential Social Security cuts

CNN anchor Brianna Keilar issued a swift fact-check to Rep. Stephanie Bice (R-OK) on Republicans' potential Social Security cuts.

Rep. Rich McCormick (R-GA) mentioned during an interview earlier this week that "hard decisions" must be made on Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid. He said, "There’s hundreds of billions of dollars to be saved. We just have to have the stomach to take those challenges on."

Speaking with McCormick's GOP colleague, Bice, Keilar mentioned that Vivek Ramaswamy — who Donald Trump selected to lead an initiative to cut government spending — was asked about social security and "would not commit to cuts — instead saying that they would eliminate waste, fraud and abuse."

READ MORE: 'I resigned my position': Former DOJ official leaves LA Times over them 'appeasing Trump'

The CNN anchor noted, "I think those are some of the things you have in mind when you're talking about efficiencies. But when you look at studies of the amount that would save, if it's actually excised, it's puny. I mean, that is not anywhere close to the number that they're talking about with DOGE. Don't you have to cut social security to hit that number?

Bice replied, "You absolutely do not have to cut social security to hit that number. As a matter of fact, Medicare Medicaid is where we should be looking at trying to find efficiencies. Health care costs have skyrocketed, particularly after Obamacare was implemented, and there are opportunities for us to try to find ways to rein in that spending on the health care side. I also think that there is discretionary spending that we should be looking at, that we can we can tackle. But I don't think social security is something that's even being discussed by house Republicans."

Keilar replied, "Well, it is by one, actually your colleague," before showing a clip of McCormick's recent Fox News interview.

The Georgia lawmaker said, "We've got to bring the Democrats in and talk about social security medicaid, medicare there is hundreds of billions of dollars to be saved. and we know how to do it. we just have to have the stomach to actually take those challenges on."

READ MORE: GOP already 'chomping at the bit' to cut Social Security, Medicaid and Medicare: analysis

MSNBC's Ari Melber noted in The Beat with Ari Melber Wednesday night:

The reality is, cutting hundreds of billions from these programs, as McCormick suggested, would cost the American people far more than high prices and inflation. Seniors get an average of almost $2,000 in Social Security per month. They’ve paid into the program for decades. Slashing billions from it will hit them, or the country’s future seniors, hard.

Keilar then emphasized, "I mean, this is something that is being discussed by people who are saying the quiet part out loud."

Bice replied, "He actually didn't say cuts, but there are reforms that can be done to social security to actually shore it up. Look, the reality is, if we don't do something in the next eight years or so social security will become insolvent so we have to do something to protect social security now and into the future."

Watch the video below or at this link.

READ MORE: Trump's nomination of Project 2025 architect means Social Security, Medicare 'are at risk'

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'Vulnerable to hackers': FBI issues 'stark warning' about texts between iPhones and Android

On laptops and desktops, the top competing operating systems have been Windows and Apple's Mac OS. But on smartphones, the battle has been between Android and Apple's iOS (the platform for iPhones).

iOS debuted in 2007, and Android was unveiled the following year.

Now, in late 2024, the FBI is saying that text messages sent between iPhones and Android-oriented devices are facing a security threat.

READ MORE:'It's a joke': Trump appointee Ramaswamy's economic plan blasted by expert

Cheddar, in a video posted on December 5, reported, "Stop sending texts between iPhones and Androids — that's the stark warning from the FBI. The agency says your messages may be vulnerable to hackers."

"According to reports," Cheddar warned, "Chinese hackers have infiltrated several U.S. network."

In its warning, the FBI wasn't talking about text messages sent from Android users to other Android users or texts between fellow iPhone users — they were strictly warning against Android and iPhone users exchanging texts.

The FBI, according to Cheddar, is recommending that iPhone and Android owners use "encrypted or secure messaging apps like WhatsApp and Signal."

READ MORE: 'Nothing at all historic': Mehdi Hasan debunks false claim that Trump won by a 'landslide'

Watch Cheddar's full video at this link.


Hegseth receives 'special permission' from Trump to launch 'crisis management media tour': report

With former Fox News host Pete Hegseth — President-elect Donald Trump's embattled nominee for defense secretary — facing allegations of sexual misconduct and alcohol abuse, Trump is reportedly considering offering that position to Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis instead.

But Hegseth has vowed to keep fighting for the position. And Hegseth, Mediaite's Diana Falzone reports, has been conducting a "crisis management media tour in a desperate effort to salvage his nomination."

The media tour, Falzone notes, included a "softball interview" with former Fox News host Megyn Kelly and an op-ed for the Wall Street Journal.

READ MORE:'It's a joke': Trump appointee Ramaswamy's economic plan blasted by expert

"In the Kelly interview," Falzone observes, "Hegseth defended himself against an allegation he raped a woman at a Republican conference in 2017, as well as reports that he has a drinking problem, mismanaged funds at two veterans groups he ran, and his long history of cheating on his wives…. The media campaign is a sign of how desperately Hegseth is fighting to remain Trump's nominee to run the Defense Department, amid reports the incoming president is considering dumping him for Florida Governor Ron DeSantis."

A Trump insider told Mediaite that Trump and his transition team gave Hegseth "special permission" to do the media tour in order to "repair his public image."

The insider said, "Pete needs better storylines…. If enough senators say no, Pete is dead."

Falzone notes, "If any further damaging information comes to light, Hegseth is likely cooked. The Trump insider added that if Hegseth's 2017 rape accuser comes forward, it would be 'hard to come back from' and would give wary senators cover to oppose his nomination."

READ MORE: Republicans quietly admit Trump policies could 'prove disastrous' in their areas

Read Mediaite's full article at this link.


'I’ll do my show the way I want!' Scarborough opens with meltdown over David Frum comments

Joe Scarborough — the former Republican congressman-turned MSNBC morning host — opened Thursday's episode of "Morning Joe" with an indignant 20-minute monologue.

According to Mediaite, Scarborough's rant was in response to an article in the Atlantic written by former George W. Bush speechwriter David Frum, who was booted from Wednesday's show after a comment he made about Defense Secretary-designate Pete Hegseth. Frum was asked to leave the show after commenting on an NBC News report in which Hegseth's current and former colleagues at Fox News recalled him frequently showing up on set complaining of hangovers and reeking of alcohol. Frum said: "If you're too drunk for Fox News, you're very, very drunk indeed."

As Frum recalled in his Atlantic essay, a producer warned Frum to not repeat his comments during a commercial break. Frum "said something noncommittal" in response, and "got another round of warning." He was eventually "excused from the studio chair," and Morning Joe co-host Mika Brzezinski read an on-air apology for Frum's "flippant" comment about Hegseth.

READ MORE: 'Acted like the rules didn't apply': Hegseth's coworkers say he often showed up drunk on set

The former Bush White House speechwriter suggested in his essay that Scarborough and Brzezinski were "feeling the chill of intimidation and responding with efforts to appease" in the wake of President-elect Donald Trump's threats of retribution. He also referenced their November visit to Mar-a-Lago in an attempt to "mend fences" with the incoming administration.

"I do not write to scold anyone; I write because fear is infectious. Let it spread, and it will paralyze us all," Frum wrote. "The only antidote is courage. And that’s infectious, too."

Scarborough didn't take kindly to Frum's essay, and vehemently denied that he and his spouse/co-host were acting out of "fear." He also defended he and Brzezinski's trip to Mar-a-Lago, which led to a plummet in viewership.

"Guess what? This is what’s been going on now for several weeks. We went down to talk to the president-elect. And people wrote articles that were just false. But you know what we did? We did the corporate thing. Corporate said, ‘don’t say anything. Just keep your head down.’ What did the royal say? 'Never explain, never complain. We did that,'" he said. "I always have Republicans say, ‘Oh, they’re telling you exactly what to say.’ No! Nobody’s once told me what to say here. Well actually, one person did one time. One leader did one time. I said ‘I’ll tell you what, if you think you can do such a damn good job, why don’t you come here and do the show four hours a day? I’m fine quitting. But I’m gonna do my show. I’ll do my show the way I want to do my show!"

READ MORE: 'Morning Joe' hosts condemn conservative' 'flippant' Hegseth critique after Trump Mar-a-Lago meeting

Click here to read Mediaite's coverage. You can watch Scarborough's monologue below, or by clicking this link.


'Morning Joe' hosts condemn conservative's 'flippant' Hegseth critique after Trump Mar-a-Lago meeting

During Wednesday's segment of Morning Joe, co-host Mika Brzezinski made a point to blast a comment made by conservative guest, Atlantic staff writer David Frum, regarding Donald Trump's controversial defense secretary nominee, Fox News host Pete Hegseth, Mediate reports.

Asked about his thoughts on the MAGA pick — who faces a slew of sexual assault and alcohol abuse accusations — the former President George W. Bush speechwriter said, "Well, just given what one sees on camera, if you’re too drunk for Fox News, you’re very, very drunk indeed. So, that’s alarming. In 1989, President George H.W. Bush nominated John Tower, senator from Texas, for Secretary of Defense. And Tower was a very considerable person, a real defense intellectual, someone who deeply understood defense, unlike the current nominee."

He added, "And it emerged that Tower had a drinking problem. And when he was drinking too much, he would make himself a nuisance or worse to women around him. And for that reason, his nomination collapsed in 1989. You don’t wanna think that our moral standards have declined so much that you can say, 'Let’s take all the drinking, all the sex-pesting, subtract any knowledge of defense, subtract any leadership. And there’s your next Secretary of Defense for the 21st century.'"

READ MORE: Here’s who Trump might pick for defense secretary if Hegseth withdraws

Brzezinski responded to Frum's claim by making a disclaimer to viewers later on in the episode.

"Before we go to break, a little earlier in this block, there was a comment made about Fox News in our coverage about Pete Hegseth and the growing number of allegations about his behavior over the years and possible addiction to alcohol or issues with alcohol," Brzezinski said.

"The comment was a little too flippant for this moment that we are in," she continued. "We just wanna make that comment as well. We wanna make that clear. We have differences in coverage with Fox News and that’s a good debate that we should have often. But right now, I just wanna say to say there are a lot of good people who work at Fox News who care about Pete Hegseth and we’ll wanna leave it at that."

READ MORE: Hawley throws Hegseth under the bus: 'Not 100% clear who Trump really wants right now'

Watch the video below or at this link.


'I’ve never paid hush money': CNN’s Tapper fact checks GOP senator on Hegseth allegations

Senator Eric Schmitt (R-MO) on Wednesday defended Donald Trump's defense secretary nominee, Pete Hegseth, amid the Fox News host's piling sexual assault and alcohol abuse allegations.

CNN's Jake Tapper asked the Missouri senator why he's not concerned by the Trump pick's past.

"If a track record of numerous infidelities and alleged sexual misconduct, and alleged problems with alcohol, that he's either denied or said doesn't represent him anymore — this is who he is," Tapper began. "Would you hire somebody that that had these descriptions about who he was to run your office given what we know is a fact and the allegations? I mean, do you not really have any concerns?"

READ MORE: Why this Dem senator is 'considering voting yes on DeSantis' to replace Hegseth

Schmitt replied, "Well, you kind of mix two words there together there, Jake, which is the fact of the allegations. Let's look at these in two different buckets. The first is the 2017 incident that you referenced. The prosecutor — the female prosecutor — decided not to move forward with charges. I'd be interested to see as a former prosecutor myself — attorney general of Missouri — what other surrounding documents and memoranda might exist that related to that decision not to charge."

The GOP lawmaker continued, "And then secondly, now you have again, a bunch of anonymous folks not even coming forward, who are in the shadows claiming something. And I just don't think that's a that's a reason why you would dismiss somebody from a very important role like this.

Tapper replied, "Well, I said the facts and the allegations, because the facts of the infidelities of how he has run his personal life are just facts, and frankly, as a married man and a father, absolutely disgraceful. But beyond that, there are these allegations he paid hush money to his accuser in California. I've never paid hush money to anybody."

Schmitt concluded, "Well, he settled a lawsuit that, again, the underlying charges were deemed by a prosecutor as baseless, and those are the facts. But again, people are entitled to ask these questions. He's entitled to give an answer, and he's answering those questions."

READ MORE: Here’s who Trump might pick for defense secretary if Hegseth withdraws

Watch the video below or at this link.

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Why this Dem senator is 'considering voting yes on DeSantis' to replace Hegseth

As Donald Trump defense secretary pick, Pete Hegseth, remains under fire amid allegations of sexual assault and alcohol abuse against him, some Democrats, like US Senator John Fetterman (R-PA), explained why he would consider "voting yes" on one of Hegseth's potential replacements: Florida Governor Ron DeSantis.

CNN's Manu Raju on Wednesday reported, "There are a lot of Republican senators who simply are holding their cards close to their vest. They are concerned about these allegations and uncertain about whether Pete Hegseth could actually do the job as secretary of defense and want to hear him discuss in length and in public about these allegations of misconduct, the sexual assault allegation, which he denies, as well as what happened at a time when he ran that veterans group several years ago, in which the New Yorker reported about misconduct, personal misconduct, drunkenness on the job and the like."

Raju continued, "Hegseth behind the scenes has been denying those allegations, and that has alleviated some concerns. But some members still, like Shelley Moore Capito of West Virginia, said she does not know how she will ultimately vote if and when that time comes. Now, there's also discussion about whether there will be a replacement. Donald Trump, we're told, has been looking at possible replacement candidates in case hex's nomination collapses. One of them, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis. That's someone who, in fact, some Democrats are signaling they could be open to supporting, if that nomination comes forward."

READ MORE: 'Standards have evolved': Senator 'leaning yes' on Hegseth despite misconduct allegations

CNN then showed a clip of Raju asked Fetterman whether or not he'd consider DeSantis.

"I'm considering voting yes on Desantis if he finally admits that he has lifts in his boots," the Pennsylvania lawmaker said. "I'm sure he does. You know, maybe three inches or four inches at least."

Watch the video below or at this link.

- YouTubewww.youtube.com

READ MORE: Pete Hegseth’s mom urges 'female senators' to ignore media reports and confirm him as SecDef

GOP senator suggests Hegseth wasn’t an adult 7 years ago: 'It doesn’t matter'

US Senator Markwayne Mullin (R-OK) suggested on Wednesday that Donald Trump defense secretary pick Pete Hegseth was not an adult seven years ago — although the MAGA nominee was 37 years old.

Associated Press congressional reporter Farnoush Amiri wrote via X: "Asked Sen. Mullin if Hegseth gave members assurances following reports of excessive drinking: 'Listen, all of us, at least all of us, have a time to grow up. We’re nominating Pete for who he is today not for what he did seven years ago or five years ago or whatever it was.'"

Amiri then noted, "I followed up that not all of us are trying to become Secretary of Defense and he said: 'It doesn’t matter we all have a period of time where you got to grow up. So it's what he can do today moving forward.'"

READ MORE: Pete Hegseth’s mom urges 'female senators' to ignore media reports and confirm him as SecDef

The New Yorker reported on Monday that Hegseth had a reputation of drinking on the job in a previous role.

A new report NBC News published on Wednesday noted that the right-wing host's Fox News co-workers say Hegseth "was known for showing up to work with alcohol on his breath and dealing with hangovers."

One source told NBC that the Trump pick "smelled like alcohol and talked about being hung over as recently as this fall."

While some Republican lawmakers — like Senators Joni Ernst (R-IA) and Susan Collins (R-ME) — are skeptical of confirming Hegseth, others, like Mullin and Senator Kevin Cramer (R-ND) don't see a problem with the allegations.

READ MORE: 'Standards have evolved': Senator 'leaning yes' on Hegseth despite misconduct allegations

'Total mess': White House reporters express 'annoyance, frustration' over Trump Briefing Room shakeup

President-elect Donald Trump has made no secret of his contempt for the mainstream media, which he has repeatedly described as "the enemy of the people" and providers of "fake news."

Moreover, far-right MAGA conspiracy theorist Kash Patel — Trump's pick to replace Christopher Wray as FBI director — has even said that journalists who rejected claims that the 2020 election was stolen from Trump should face criminal prosecution.

Trump, after losing to now-President Joe four years ago, falsely claimed that he was the real winner — a claim that has been repeatedly debunked. And Patel, during a 2023 interview with "War Room" host Steven Bannon, threatened, "Yes, we're going to come after the people in the media who lied about American citizens, who helped Joe Biden rig presidential elections. We're going to come after you. Whether it's criminally or civilly, we'll figure that out. But yeah, we're putting you all on notice.”

READ MORE:Chomsky at 96: The linguist, educator and philosopher's massive intellectual and moral influence

According to The Hill's Dominick Mastrangelo, Trump and his allies are planning to "dramatically change" the White House's James Brady Briefing Room by favoring "podcasters, internet personalities and media deemed more friendly to him" over traditional mainstream outlets like The New York Times and The Washington Post. The overtly pro-Trump media, Mastrangelo reports, would be placed near the front — while the Times and the Post wouldn't.

In an article published on December 4, Mastrangelo explains, "Reporters covering The White House, in conversations with The Hill this week, described a feeling of annoyance, frustration and dread at such an idea."

Mastrangelo notes that traditionally, NBC, CBS, ABC, The Associated Press, CNN, and Reuters have "occupied the first row of the James Brady Briefing Room" while "other larger outlets like The Wall Street Journal, CBS News Radio, NPR, The New York Times, The Washington Post and Bloomberg have seats in the second row."

Reporters for The Hill, according to Mastrangelo, have been placed in the fourth row during Biden's presidency.

READ MORE: Data shows dire election postmortems could soon be in store for GOP: columnist

A White House reporter, interviewed on condition of anonymity, told The Hill, "It would be a total mess. I would expect people would probably boycott the briefings, though that would put certain outlets in a tough spot deciding if they want to go along with what the Trump people are trying to pull."

Veteran White House reporter Julie Mason told The Hill, "If they think they're going to end White House reporting by throwing everyone out or clearing out the first three rows, good luck, because that's not how that works. They would really beclown themselves if they put three rows of Gateway Pundit clones in the briefing room."

Mason continued, "This administration wants to be taken seriously.… By doing this you make a joke of the briefing. It just makes the whole thing look ridiculous."

READ MORE: 'Check please!' Political experts mock second Trump nomination withdrawal

Read Dominick Mastrangelo's full report for The Hill at this link.


Senate Republicans 'uncertain they can back' Hegseth: report

As sexual assault allegations pile up against Donald Trump defense secretary nominee Pete Hegseth, Republican lawmakers are questioning whether the Fox News host will make it through the confirmation process.

CNN's Manu Raju reported via X: "New on Pete Hegseth’s tough road to confirmation. [Senator] Joni Ernst (R-IA), a victim of sexual assault, plans to have a 'really frank and thorough conversation' with Hegseth amid misconduct allegations."

READ MORE: 'Liberals winning': Ann Coulter blasts 'sleazy' Pete Hegseth over alleged 'serial' adultery

Raju continued, "Roger Wicker, incoming chairman, told me of the whistleblower report detailed in the New Yorker article about his time running veterans group: 'I’m sure I’ll see it.'"

The New Yorker published a bombshell report Monday revealing that in addition to the sexual assault allegations against him, Hegseth is allegedly known to have been drunk "on the job" on several occasions.

Additionally, the CNN reporter noted that [Senator] Susan Collins (R-ME) says the FBI should investigate the Hegseth allegations," while "several" Republicans are "uncertain they can back" the Fox News host.

In opposition to his colleagues, Senator Kevin Cramer said earlier today that "standards have 'evolved' since the last Defense nominee was voted down in 1989," adding, "I'm interested in who Pete Hegseth is today."

READ MORE: 'Standards have evolved': Senator 'leaning yes' on Hegseth despite misconduct allegations


'Standards have evolved': Senator 'leaning yes' on Hegseth despite misconduct allegations

Despite facing allegations of sexual assault, “aggressive drunkenness,” financial mismanagement of veterans’ organizations, and a report his colleagues “smelled alcohol on him before he went on air,” at Fox News “as recently as last month,” U.S. Senator Kevin Cramer (R-ND) stated Tuesday that the standards for confirming presidential cabinet nominees have “evolved.” As a result, he indicated he is inclined to support Pete Hegseth’s nomination as Donald Trump’s next U.S. Secretary of Defense.

Saying that “of course” the multiple allegations against Hegseth are “concerning,” Senator Cramer told CNN’s Manu Raju (video below) on Tuesday, “I look forward to visiting with Pete, and I’m interested in who Pete Hegseth is today, and who he is going forward.”

Raju added that later, Senator Cramer “told me … that he is leaning yes, in supporting Pete Hegseth’s nomination, and I asked him if the standards have now changed in the United States Senate? Remember the last time the Senate voted down a defense secretary nominee or any cabinet nominee was in 1989. That was John Hightower over allegations of womanizing and also excessive drinking, including drunkenness.”

“And Cramer told me, ‘yes, the standards have evolved.’ And he says, ‘grace abounds,’ and he wants to see if Hegseth is in fact is a different person going forward.”

READ MORE: Trump Lining Up Billionaire Defense Investor and Megadonor to Be Number Two at Pentagon

Tuesday evening NBC News reported that “Ten current and former Fox employees say Trump’s pick for defense secretary drank in ways that concerned his co-workers.”

“Two of those people said that on more than a dozen occasions during Hegseth’s time as a co-host of ‘Fox & Friends Weekend,’ which began in 2017, they smelled alcohol on him before he went on air. Those same two people, plus another, said that during his time there he appeared on television after they’d heard him talk about being hungover as he was getting ready or on set.”

“One of the sources said they smelled alcohol on him as recently as last month and heard him complain about being hungover this fall,” NBC News added.

On Sunday, The New Yorker published a bombshell report revealing in part that a “previously undisclosed whistle-blower report on Hegseth’s tenure as the president of Concerned Veterans for America, from 2013 until 2016, describes him as being repeatedly intoxicated while acting in his official capacity—to the point of needing to be carried out of the organization’s events.”

READ MORE: How Democrats and Republicans Look at Hunter Biden’s Pardon and One for J6ers

“The detailed seven-page report—which was compiled by multiple former C.V.A. employees and sent to the organization’s senior management in February, 2015—states that, at one point, Hegseth had to be restrained while drunk from joining the dancers on the stage of a Louisiana strip club, where he had brought his team. The report also says that Hegseth, who was married at the time, and other members of his management team sexually pursued the organization’s female staffers, whom they divided into two groups—the ‘party girls’ and the ‘not party girls.’ In addition, the report asserts that, under Hegseth’s leadership, the organization became a hostile workplace that ignored serious accusations of impropriety, including an allegation made by a female employee that another employee on Hegseth’s staff had attempted to sexually assault her at the Louisiana strip club. In a separate letter of complaint, which was sent to the organization in late 2015, a different former employee described Hegseth being at a bar in the early-morning hours of May 29, 2015, while on an official tour through Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio, drunkenly chanting ‘Kill All Muslims! Kill All Muslims!'”

That New Yorker report also alleges that a “trail of documents, corroborated by the accounts of former colleagues, indicates that Hegseth was forced to step down by both of the two nonprofit advocacy groups that he ran—Veterans for Freedom and Concerned Veterans for America—in the face of serious allegations of financial mismanagement, sexual impropriety, and personal misconduct.”

Mother Jones on Monday published “A Running List of the Allegations Against Pete Hegseth.”

The article, which has not been updated yet to include the latest NBC News allegations, characterizes them under the headings: “Mismanagement, a Drinking Problem, and Sexually Inappropriate Behavior,” “Rape Allegation,” and, “His Mother Called Him ‘an Abuser of Women’.”

CNN’s Manu Raju also talked with U.S. Senator Susan Collins (R-MA), who said, “As I’ve repeatedly said to you, I believe that we need an FBI background check to evaluate the allegations. We need to have the normal committee process of questionnaires, and questionnaires about this background and we also need to have a public hearing.”

Watch the video below or at this link.


READ MORE: SCOTUS Ethics Code Debate Split Liberal and Conservative Justices Amid ‘Legitimacy Crisis’

'Check please!' Political experts mock second Trump nomination withdrawal

Florida's Hillsborough County Sheriff Chad Chronister — Donald Trump's nominee to serve as Administrator of the Drug Enforcement Administration — withdrew from the running on Tuesday, making him the second of the president-elect's nominees to drop out.

Former Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL) withdrew his name from attorney general nomination amid piling sex trafficking allegations against him last month.

Chorister wrote via X:

To have been nominated by President-Elect @realDonaldTrump to serve as Administrator of the Drug Enforcement Administration is the honor of a lifetime. Over the past several days, as the gravity of this very important responsibility set in, I’ve concluded that I must respectfully withdraw from consideration. There is more work to be done for the citizens of Hillsborough County and a lot of initiatives I am committed to fulfilling. I sincerely appreciate the nomination, outpouring of support by the American people, and look forward to continuing my service as Sheriff of Hillsborough County.

READ MORE: 'More trouble': GOP senators troubled by sexual misconduct allegations against Trump nominees

Independent journalist Marcy Wheeler replied: "Trump: Okay already. We'll do FBI Background Checks after all. Chad Chronister: Check please!"

The View Co-host and Republican political analyst Ana Navarro commented: "This is a damn shame. Sheriff Chronister is widely respected in Florida and is one appointee actually qualified for the position."

Grant Stern, executive director of Occupy Democrats, wrote: "Trump's DEA appointee Hillsborough County Sheriff Chad Chronister already gave up on his nomination after the 'gravity' of the new position set in. Gravity is one of the few guardrails left against Trump.

Politico senior legal affairs reporter Josh Gerstein added: "Another person Trump won't be able to fire in 6-12 months"

READ MORE: 'House of Cards': Why Trump nominees’ 'incompetence' matters the 'least'


'Liberals winning': Ann Coulter blasts 'sleazy' Pete Hegseth over alleged 'serial' adultery

As Donald Trump's defense secretary pick, Fox News host Pete Hegseth, faces sexual assault allegations, longtime right-wing commentator Ann Coulter is blasting the MAGA pick on allegations of adultery, Mediaite reports.

"In all of this talk about whether Pete Hegseth is an abuser of women, no one even mentioned that he is a serial adulterer! Are we a society that doesn’t care about adultery anymore?"

Per NJ.com, "Documents surfaced after his nomination that accused Hegseth of sexual assault in 2017. A woman told police that she was sexually assaulted after he took her phone, blocked the door to a California hotel room and refused to let her leave, according to a detailed investigative report made public late."

READ MORE: 'Going to come after you': Inside a Cabinet pick's lawsuit against a former Trump official

But that's not Coulter's main concern.

"Adultery hasn’t even been mentioned," she said on a recent episode of Unsafe with Ann Coulter podcast.

According to Mediate, the conservative host continued:

And Pete Hegseth is well known to have now been married on his third marriage. Gets married, gets his wife pregnant, little kids at home or kid at home — I don’t know the details. Starts having sex with his producer, dumps his first wife, married his producer, gets her pregnant. Again, she’s either pregnant or she’s home with kid or kids, and then commits adultery on her. Dumps the second wife, and now, I guess is, let’s hope happily married to his third wife. The fact that it was three times, and this sleazy, and everyone at Fox News knew about it is one thing. But seriously, does no one-, no one is even mentioning the adultery! I’m sorry, this is liberals winning. This is liberals changing our culture in this subtle and insidious way where the only rules that matter are the feminist rules, not the rules that have protected women for millennia, like don’t cheat on your wife.

READ MORE: Two GOP senators are openly rejecting 'ideas Trump explicitly campaigned on'

Mehdi Hasan rips Nikki Haley over Biden jab: 'You hated Trump'

Former South Carolina governor and failed 2024 Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley was slammed on Monday over criticizing President Joe Biden's decision to pardon his son Hunter Biden on federal gun and tax related charges.

"Biden pardons his son, which he promised not to do," Haley wrote via X. "Not just for the crime at hand but for everything going back 11 years. Then skips town and goes to Africa. This is why no one trusts politicians. Democrats stop trying to justify this. It only makes you look more out of touch. Politics at its worst."

Former MSNBC host Mehdi Hasan replied, "You hated Trump. Then worked for Trump. Then attacked Trump. Then sucked up to Trump. Then ran against Trump. Then voted for Trump. But sure, the Hunter Biden pardon is politics at its worst and most unreliable. Gotcha."

READ MORE: Laura Ingraham pins MAGA adviser on whether Trump would accept pardon from Biden: 'Come on'

Earlier on Monday, Hasan also slammed several Democratic lawmakers who also criticized Biden's decision, calling it "the wrong decision," according to Politico. The progressive commentator insisted "this is why Republicans win."

Other political experts also took aim at Haley's claims.

Center for Economic and Policy Research senior economist Dean Baker said: "The president-elect tried to overthrow the government and is promising to pardon his accomplices."

American Enterprise Institute emeritus scholar Norman Ornstein added: "You forgot that she said nothing when Trump pardoned Russian assets, grifters, cronies and assorted horribles. Including Charles Kushner. And has said nothing about Kushner's nomination as Ambassador to France."

READ MORE: Mehdi Hasan slams congressional Dems: 'This is why Republicans win'

Data shows dire election postmortems could soon be in store for GOP: columnist

If recent political history is any indication, examinations into Republican electoral defeats up and down the ballot may not be far off, according to a political columnist.

In fact, they could be one presidential election cycle away.

Take for example the elections in 2008, 2016 and 2020, when voters gave the prevailing party governing trifectas, MSNBC columnist Michael A. Cohen wrote.

Of course, the GOP was handed the coveted political situation this year, but four years ago it was Democrats who were handed back control of Congress and the White House after Republicans wrestled it away in 2016, the same way Democrats turned the tables in 2008, Cohen noted.

“Quite simply, it might not be long before the election postmortems are being written about the GOP,” Cohen told readers in an opinion piece published Monday for MSNBC.

While Cohen is not doubting the scope of the “bad outcome” the 2024 elections produced for the Democratic Party, he says the data shows some bright spots for the party, including that “Democrats outperformed the presidential ticket in several key Senate races.”

“The Democrats’ defeat has led to a host of postmortems and renting on what went wrong and what the party needs to do differently going forward,” he wrote. “But a deep dive inside the numbers suggests that while the election results were bad for Democrats, they aren’t quite as awful as they seem.”

He continued to establish his argument by reminding readers that Democrats were facing “an uphill battle” this year in the face of anti-incumbent sentiment worldwide and that President-elect Donald Trump’s victory was not the landslide win that MAGA world wanted to portray.

“His margin of victory, 1.6 points, was the fifth-smallest in the last 100 years,” Cohen noted.

The columnist concluded by writing that even as Democrats “lost four Senate seats and control of the chamber, considering the 6-point shift in national voting and Trump’s victory, they did better than expected.”

“Going forward, the ubiquity of the occasional Trump voter should concern Republicans,” according to Cohen, a senior fellow and co-director of the Afghanistan Assumptions Project at the Center for Strategic Studies at the Fletcher School, Tufts University. “Can they hold the White House — and their advantages in the House and Senate — if Trump is not on the ticket (and constitutionally, he cannot run for president again)?”


Laura Ingraham pins MAGA adviser on whether Trump would accept pardon from Biden: 'Come on'

Longtime Fox News host Laura Ingraham on Monday night pressed Jason Miller — senior adviser to Donald Trump — on whether the president-elect would accept a pardon from President Joe Biden.

The Ingraham Angle host raised the question during a conversation about President Biden's Sunday, December 1 pardon of his son, Hunter Biden, on his federal gun and tax related charges — which both Republican and Democratic lawmakers have condemned.

"Jason, would Donald Trump accept a pardon from Joe Biden?" Ingraham asked the MAGA staffer, referring to the president-elect's list of legal troubles.

READ MORE: Why the Hunter Biden pardon is 'justified' — according to legal experts

"At this point, I don’t know what Joe Biden is gonna pull. I think it’s nonsense," Miller insisted. "If it’s some aspect of some PR play, he might try to do it. But President Trump did absolutely nothing wrong. That’s why everything is disappearing. That’s why he’s focused on actually serving for this second term here."

Dissatisfied with the Trump adviser's response, Ingraham said, "Wait, would President Trump say ‘no’ to a pardon, though? Come on."

Miller replied, "I’m not gonna go and put words in the president’s mouth. Everyone sees exactly what’s going on. This is a complete media manipulation by Joe Biden."

Watch the video below or at this link.

READ MORE: 'Particularly worrisome:' One of Trump’s Cabinet nominations troubles critics more than others

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